Buddhism and the Buddha: An
introduction to Buddhism and Buddhist Philosophy, including the Theravada,
Mahayana, and Vajrayana (or tantric) schools, the Four Noble Truths,
the Eightfold Path, and the Dharma. You
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format. For links to other articles, please scroll
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Buddhism
is a philosophy espoused by Prince Siddhartha approximately
530 BCE, which focused on understanding the path to salvation in a
world of constant suffering. Siddhartha was given the name the Buddha,
which means "enlightened one," by his followers.
There
are two main branches of Buddhism with different practices, but they
all have some fundamental similarities. They believe that Siddhartha
was the son of a powerful king, and that his father brought him up
surrounded by all the pleasures of the world, isolated in the palace,
so that Siddhartha would never know sorrow. The prince grew up, married,
and had a child, always surrounded by luxury.
But
one day, the prince rode through the city outside the palace, and
he witnessed suffering for the first time. He saw an elderly man,
a diseased man, a corpse and a hermit. The first three sights filled
him with dread and despair, while the last sight filled him with peace.
For the first time he experienced unhappiness and he wondered why.
Siddhartha
slipped out of his palace in the middle of the night, leaving behind
his wife and son, and became a hermit determined to find the cause
of suffering. He met sages and yogis, meditated and contemplated for
six years. He performed great austerities in order to understand the
path to enlightenment.
After
six years of searching, Siddhartha came to the understanding that
"unhappiness is the result of desire and attachment to material items."
That is when he became known as the Buddha.
The
Buddha taught that everything changes in the world, yet desire makes
us crave for eternal material pleasures. When the pleasures wither
away, we are unhappy. True happiness arrives when one accepts that
change is the ultimate reality of the material world, and that nothing
lasts forever.
The
Buddha taught that understanding this led to enlightenment, and that
enlightenment is the path to breaking free from samsara or
material existence. This breaking free is called nirvana.
The
teachings of the Buddha are often referred to as the Dharma,
but this is also often translated as the Truth or the Wheel of the
Law.
Basic
Precepts in Buddhism:
The
Buddha did not try to explain whether there was an ultimate God or
not, or what the proper rituals and sacrifices were to achieve oneness
with God. Instead, he taught that we must strive through our own efforts
to achieve liberation from anguish and suffering. The Buddha espoused
an easily understood philosophy, based on the Four Noble Truths:
The
first is that all impermanent objects and beings are subject to suffering.
The
second truth is that the arising of suffering comes from our own ignorance
and attachment to impermanence.
The
third truth is the realization that there is an end to this suffering
and anguish, and that end is the knowledge of the ultimate reality.
The
fourth truth is that the Eightfold Path is the way to achieving
this ultimate reality. The Eightfold Path consists of the following:
1)
Developing Right View or Right Understanding. This means knowing
and understanding the Four Noble Truths.
2)
Right Thinking or Right Aim, meaning to strive for Perfect
Wisdom, or the understanding of ultimate reality. The goal should
be to overcome delusion and achieve freedom of mind.
3)
Adhering to Right Speech, meaning to refrain form lying, slander,
perjury, or hurtful speech.
4)
Right Action. To avoid taking the life of or killing any living
creature. To abstain from stealing and sensual or sexual misconduct.
To abstain from all hurtful or vengeful acts.
5) The fifth part is Right Living, which means to abstain from
all evil ways of living; to abstain from all evil methods of livelihood.
6)
Right Effort, which means to conquer all hurtful, vengeful
or evil states of mind they may have already arisen, and to develop
and maintain good states of mind. Such states of mind would include
loving kindness for all beings, compassion and pity for all creatures,
sympathetic joy and equanimity.
7)
Right Mindfulness. This means to cultivate dispassion, detachment,
calm, tranquility, and indifference to all that is impermanent and,
thus, not of the ultimate reality. To disregard all that is perceived,
remaining dispassionate from both the pleasures as well as the pains
arising from the creation of senses and sensuality.
8)
The eighth part is Right Concentration, which means to develop
one-pointedness of mind through intense meditation and reflection.
Karma
Karma
is usually translated as the law of cause and effect. That
we suffer at present because of past harmful or spiteful actions.
Karma underlines the importance of all individuals being responsible
for their past and present actions. When taking actions, it is best
to look at what effect this will have on others, and why is it that
we are taking these actions.
Wisdom
In
Buddhism, wisdom is the experience and understanding of the impermanence
of material things and that those tat are impermanent are not a part
of the ultimate reality. Buddhism strives to balance both wisdom and
compassion.
Compassion
In
Buddhism, Compassion means to strive for an understanding that all
beings are in a situation similar to ours, and that we should thus
be ready to sympathize and provide caring. By using wisdom to understand
the true nature of ourselves, we can better use compassion to understand
the true nature of others.
The
Two Main Branches of Buddhism:
As
mentioned above, both of the major branches of Buddhism believe in
the above story of prince Siddhartha reaching enlightenment. However,
they vary in the role of this in the grand Buddhist cosmos. The
two major branches are Theravada (meaning "Path of the Elders"),
and Mahayana (meaning "Great Vehicle").
Theravada
Buddhism is practiced in Burma, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and other
parts of South East Asia. It is often called Southern Buddhism because
of the path it took through Southern India to Southeast Asia. This
system remains true to the original teachings of Prince Siddhartha,
(also known as Sakyamuni Gautama Buddha), that are found in
the Pali scriptures. The Four Noble Truths and the Eight-Fold Path
are the main focus of the school.
They
believe that the Buddha was a man who liberated himself through meditation
and contemplation. They look upon him as a teacher as opposed to a
deity, and so images of the Buddha in these lands are revered or venerated,
not worshipped. In this system, each individual must strive to liberate
oneself through enlightened actions. Neither gods nor magic spells
can assist the process.
The
Mahayana school is known as the Greater Vehicle because it
incorporates many of the concepts found in Hinduism and in the original
Tibetan religious beliefs. It is practiced in East Asia, especially
in Tibet, China and Japan. It reached these lands via Central Asia.
This
system introduced new metaphysical concepts such as the notion of
"nothingness" or "sunya" through Sanskrit
scriptures written by scholars such as Nagarjuna, Asanga,
Vasubandhu and Asvaghosha. Hsuan-tsang of China
visited India in search of these texts which were then translated
into Chinese and Japanese.
This
system also introduced the concept of Bodhisattva and the goddess
called Tara. People no longer had to take up difficult vows
to attain 'nirvana'; they could simply earn merits and liberate themselves
by worshipping Bodhisattvas who, in their infinite compassion, worked
for human welfare.
Buddhism
in Thailand:
The
Thai form of Buddhism is sometimes called Lankavamsa (meaning
Singhalese or Sri Lankan lineage) because it was introduced to the
13th century Sukhothai Kingdom by monks from Sri Lanka. This
form of Buddhism grew as the Sukhothai Kingdom expanded over Northern
and Central Thailand.
However,
Ayuthaya in central Thailand grew into a pwerful kingdom, and
eventually annexed Sukhothai in 1376. The Thai Kings of Ayuthaya made
conquests over areas of central Thailand formerly held by the Khmer
Empire, which had been practicing a blend of Buddhism and Hinduism
much more akin to Mahayana Buddhism than to the Sri Lankan form. The
Ayuthaya kings incorporated many of these beliefs into the Buddhism
they had inherited from Sukhothai. This has had a lasting effect on
Thai Buddhism to this day.
It
is ironic to note that during Dutch persecution in Sri Lanka during
the 18th century, the ordination lineage of monks there broke down.
It was Thailand (then known as Siam) that restored the Sangha (brotherhood
of monks) in Sri Lanka. Hence, the main sect of Buddhism in Sri Lanka
is known as Siam Nikaya (meaning Siam Sect)
Vajrayana
or Tantric Buddhism:
The
Vajrayana system is a sect of Mahayana Buddhism, and represents
the occult branch of Buddhism that is today practiced mainly in Tibet
and some parts of Bhutan and Nepal.
Also
known as Tantric Buddhism, it owes its origin to the scholar
Padmasambhava who went to Tibet from Bengal. He assimilated
Hinayana and Mahayana doctrines of Buddhism with the pagan Bon
religion of Tibet and the occult practices of Tantric Hinduism.
Thus
beside meditation and contemplation, Vajrayana also prescribes the
visualization of Buddhas passionately embracing their shaktis and
the use of ritual diagrams (mandalas), special chants (mantras),
specific postures (mudras) and sexual practices (maithuna)
to attain enlightenment and liberation.
The
idea of these practices is not to indulge the senses. The aim is to
experience and understand the fleeting nature of the material world.
A true adept or siddha thus becomes fully aware that material existence
or 'samsara' is no different from spiritual release or 'nirvana'.
One
does not have to run away from the world to be free - one can embrace
the material world and still be spiritually free.
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