by Ghanshyam Savani on Sun Dec 18, 2016 8:24 pm
Whenever you use the word “trust” you always ask, “In whom?” as if trust needs an object. No, trust does not need any object. Trust is a state of your being; it is not object-oriented. A man who does not believe in God can trust, and a man who believes in God may not trust; God is not so important, not necessarily needed. For example, Buddha trusts; he does not believe in God. Mahavira trusts; he does not believe in God. Lao Tzu trusts; he neither believes in God nor disbelieves in God; he never talks about God, God is almost irrelevant.
Then trust is something which happens in you, it has no outer reference. Trust is your relaxed state of being. Trust means be yourself: don’t do anything which goes against your nature. You can call nature “God” or you can call God “nature”; it is just a question of preference. If you are a theist, call nature “God”; if you are an atheist, perfectly good, call God “nature” - but trust remains the very foundation of a real life.
-Osho, The Secret: Life in an Empty Canvas
Thanks and Regards...
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Ghanshyam Savani
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Ghanshyam Savani on Sun Dec 18, 2016 8:25 pm; edited 1 time in total