Retrieved de https://studentshare.org/religion-and-theology/1615278-reflection-paper-on-jainism
https://studentshare.org/religion-and-theology/1615278-reflection-paper-on-jainism.
Section/# Jainism The houseless man represents Jainism due to the fact that it is by living the honorable and self denial that is indicative of the life of aestheticism helps to engage the reader with the type of reward that is provided within the temporal life for those that follow the precepts and teaching. Furthermore, the texts of Jainism that describe this situation of “houselessness” describe a man who is circumspect. In other words, by denying the things that are temporal, a level of ultimate freedom is derived in which the believer can escape the bounds of the fleeting and temporal.
Without such things to bind him/her to the earth, a form of “houselessness” is derived whereby the individual is at last free to experience religion and self development. Such a construct is of course similar to the other major world religions of Christianity and Buddhism to name but a few. The appreciation for the ways in which trials and difficulties serve to define and eventually liberate the individual from the constraints that otherwise define life is ultimately a construct that can and should be appreciated by all individuals of faith.
Furthermore, the construct of self denial is emphasized. As a means of this self denial, the reader can contemplate further the level to which self denial and deprivation as a function of finding true meaning and concentration can be derived.
Read More