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Osho on What is the greatest danger to religion?

What is the greatest danger to religion?

The greatest danger to religion is not the atheist, but the false believer who replaces authentic inquiry with conditioned responses, turning prayer into mere parroting and reverence into habit.

— Osho
According to Osho, the greatest danger to religion is not the atheist but the false believer—the conditioned, fear-driven, greedy, and imitative 'yes' fashioned by parents, priests, and society. Pseudo-belief, like Pavlovian reflex, replaces authentic inquiry, turning prayer into parroting and reverence into habit. Honest atheistic 'no' can mature into a truthful 'yes'; counterfeit faith corrodes religion from within.

The real threat is people who blindly say yes out of fear and habit, not honest doubters who are still searching.

In His Own Words

From the Discourses

Passages where Osho speaks to this question — each links to the complete discourse.

Mrityoma Amritam Gamaya · Discourse 9
1979-08-09 · Pune · Hindi · English translation

Osho, what is the relationship between meditation and patience?

If you sit to meditate to remove mental restlessness, you will keep looking back again and again: “Has it gone yet?” And the irony is that when you begin to meditate, restlessness will increase. Because what has been repressed will start surfacing; catharsis will begin. The rubbish you have kept hidden within and never allowed to express—meditation will break open those doors too. It will clean the house. Dust piled up for years, for births, will rise again; there will be gusts and storms. For a while even the little peace you had will be lost. Then you will panic: “I came for peace, and even what I had is gone.” Without patience, you could even become unhinged, because meditation brings such a great storm. The disease is not from a day or two; it’s from lifetimes. Meditation will break through all the layers to reach your innermost core. In…
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From Ignorance To Innocence · Discourse 12
1984-12-10 · Lao Tzu Grove · English

Osho, what is the greatest harm that the so-called religions have done to humanity?

Just a single hit, and what you are -- you may be acting a Buddha, a Christ, a Krishna -- it will disappear, just by a simple hit on your head. Imitation cannot go to your being, it is going to remain just on the surface. You can practice it for thirty years, forty years.... There are monks who have been practicing for fifty years. There are monasteries, Catholic monasteries, where once a monk enters, he never comes out; and thousands of people are living in such monasteries. What are they doing? Continually trying, making an effort somehow to become a little bit like Christ; if not the whole Christ, even a partial Christ will do. But that imitation is not going to help. It may give you a pseudo, phony mask, but scratch it just a little bit and you will find your real person is still there. You…
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Athato Bhakti Jigyasa · Discourse 8
1978-01-18 · Pune · Hindi · English translation

Osho, why has human faith in religion waned?

Then there is a further fall. This is when, around Buddha, people hear, oppose, accept. Then two-and-a-half thousand years pass. One generation hands it to the next. Those who had heard from Buddha, or at least seen him—some hint of truth must have reached their ears; some touch of Buddha’s presence must have touched them; some color of Buddha must have fallen upon their souls—however slight, it fell. Then their sons and their sons’ sons believe because the fathers believed, the forefathers believed, people have always believed—and then belief becomes blind belief. What you call religions are superstitions. They should have been bid farewell long ago. New editions of truth descend from the sky every day. A new Koran descends every day. God has not grown tired, has not exhausted Himself with Mohammed. Jesus is not God’s only son—as Christians say, the only begotten. Nor did God come to an…
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Ajhun Chet Ganwar · Discourse 18
1977-08-07 · Pune · Hindi · English translation

Osho, what is the first experience of samadhi like?

You will know only when it happens. It cannot be said; at most a few hints can be given. It is as if, in the dark, a lamp is suddenly lit. Or as if a dying patient, right at the edge of death, suddenly finds a medicine that works; life’s wave, life’s thrill spreads again—so it is. As if a corpse becomes alive—such is the first experience of samadhi. It is the taste of nectar. The experience of the ultimate music. But it will be only when it happens; and only then will you understand. You will not understand by my saying it. It is as with love. How can anyone explain it? To someone who has never loved, never known love, no matter how many explanations you offer—he will hear it all and still ask, “I haven’t understood; please explain a little more.” It is like explaining light to…
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Es Dhammo Sanantano · Discourse 100
1977-06-09 · Pune · Hindi · English translation
But religion is dangerous. There is nothing more dangerous on earth than religion. Yet you often see the timid becoming religious. The weak, the impotent, become religious—on their knees, praying, praising, frightened; their god is only the distilled essence of their fear. So surely, what these people call religion cannot be religion. Religion is the name of living dangerously. Religion means a continual adventure. Religion means not settling for the old and the well-trodden. It is the search for the new, the original. Religion means inquiry. Religion means an intense longing, a thirst to know. Religion means refusing secondhand and stale fare. Until you know by your own experience, you will not be satisfied. Religion is not content with the Vedas until one’s own Veda is born. Religion is not in smriti (memory) nor in shruti (what is heard); religion is in direct realization.
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