Hey, sorry for taking so long to get back to you. I've been kinda' busy this week, but it's more that I'm just really good at procrastinating.
Just for the record: Attaining inner peace through meditation is a time-honoured Christian tradition. Ask any catholic monk.
Meditation is absolutely a time-honored tradition in the Christian faith. But meditation as it's understood in Kung Fu Panda (or, rather, the Eastern philosophy to which the movie alludes) is far different from the meditation of Catholic monks.
As I've come to understand it, meditation in the most commonly used sense is an emptying of one's mind- a sort of therapeutic dropping of worries because it's calming to let them go. I suspect, though I haven't tried it myself, that this form of meditation does indeed bring relaxation- peace, if you will- for the duration of one's meditation, and probably at least some time thereafter.
The meditation of Catholic monks, is, in a sense, an opposing concept, and still very similar to it. In Christian meditation, one does not empty their mind, but instead focuses it on God (or something godly- a doctrine, a passage of scripture, perhaps a combination of these things).
And I do believe God wants us to focus on Him- to learn more about Him, to follow Him more closely, etc. As an example of this calling, Psalm 77:12 says "I will meditate also of all thy work, and talk of thy doings." There are at least eight other places in the Psalms where meditation is mentioned as a good practice.
But as I am a Christian, I believe that even this meditation can not, in and of itself, provide a person with true inner peace. It is my opinion that one must know Jesus and confess Him. Without salvation, inner peace is not attainable.
Godly meditation helps to facilitate inner peace by fostering spiritual growth and keeping a person mindful of God. So it is, of course, beneficial once a relationship with God is established. Because of this, Catholic monks meditate along with other people who read their Bibles and pray to God (let me not oversimplify things, of course. There are many reasons to read the Bible and pray).
Now, maybe I've got it wrong, and Kung Fu Panda refers to a meditation which is not an emptying of one's mind, but rather a focusing on another concept. At any rate, I know there are people who exercise this form of meditation.
Even then, my answer doesn't change. If, as I believe, meditation on God is not enough to bring one inner peace, then I also believe that meditation on something other than God isn't enough to bring one inner peace either. It may, again, bring a temporary peace, but not anything substantial.
As for the movie: You might have noted it takes place in China and thus it shows Chinese culture. They eat with chopsticks, practise Kung Fu and believe in Taoism. Nobody is forced - or tempted - to change one's believe system by watching it.
Yes, Taoism can be easily associated with the Chinese. But it seems to me the way of all religions that one doesn't have be a member of the right culture to hold a religious belief associated with it.
And inner peace is a very cross-cultural concept. If somebody in Switzerland gets the idea that they should seek a means for inner peace, and they hear that Taoism proposes a method for attaining it, it would make sense if they tried to get a better feeling for Taosim or maybe even practiced some of its teachings.
Again, I confess that most children aren't interested in inner peace. But there are definitely some who, later in life, will become interested (I actually think everyone eventually looks for it, even though it doesn't always go by that name). If Kung Fu Panda suggests a method for attaining inner peace, why should they care that Kung Fu Panda referenced Chinese philosophy? Good philosophy (if it is indeed good. You know my opinion) is good philosophy.
Certainly, as you said, nobody is forced to changed their belief system after watching this movie. The presentation of a belief, by definition, isn't a coercion. But I do believe that some could be tempted. The culture associated with Kung Fu Panda not only doesn't stand in the way of the philosophies it presents, it could also very easily help the presentation.
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