Can the acceptance of sin give birth to self-abasement?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"True acceptance of one's sin is a doorway to liberation, while self-reproach is merely the ego's struggle to maintain its facade. In the light of genuine acknowledgment, shame dissolves and self-hatred fades away."
According to Osho, true acceptance of one’s sin never breeds self-abasement. Self-reproach arises when ego resists admitting wrongdoing yet is compelled to concede, or confesses strategically to gain spiritual rewards. Genuine admission is egoless, open enough for everyone to know, and thus dissolves shame. Forced or cunning acknowledgment nourishes pride and guilt; authentic seeing ends inner self-hatred.
If you honestly own your mistakes without pride or bargaining for benefits, you won’t hate yourself; self-hate comes from grudging or fake admissions.
Why this matters practically
- Replaces toxic guilt with clear, healing awareness.
- Builds integrity: say truths you’re willing for anyone to know.
- Undercuts ego games in spirituality, enabling real change.
- Builds integrity: say truths you’re willing for anyone to know.
- Undercuts ego games in spirituality, enabling real change.
AI Confidence Score: 98%
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