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BUDDHISM

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Story of stay at home or travel the country (India) ... the senses; you must harbor no ill will toward anyone and harm no living creature. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BUDDHISM


1
BUDDHISM
2
TID BITS
  • Began in India 500 years B.C.
  • People had become disillusioned with other
    beliefs such as Hinduism.
  • 376 million worldwide

3
Buddha
  • Buddhisms founder
  • Means Enlightened One
  • Story of stay at home or travel the country
    (India).
  • During this time he saw pain, death, poverty,
    and old age.
  • Known as the Great Renunciation

4
Buddha
  • He began meditating on these things under a fig
    tree.
  • During this time he supposedly reached Nirvana.
  • Stayed there for seven days and night under the
    tree of wisdom.
  • Buddha later died at the age of 80
  • However he left behind the beliefs of Buddhism.

5
Four Noble Truths
  • 1) Existence of suffering Birth is painful, and
    death is painful disease and old age are
    painful. Not having what we desire is painful,
    and having what we do not desire is also painful.

6
Four Noble Truths
  • 2) Cause of Suffering- It is the craving desire
    for the pleasures of the senses, which seeks
    satisfaction now here, now there the craving for
    happiness and prosperity in this life and in
    future lives.

7
Four Noble Truths
  • 3) Ending of Suffering- To be free of suffering
    one must give up, get rid of, extinguish this
    very craving, so that no passion and no desire
    remain.

8
Four Noble Truths
  • This leads to the end of all pain by way of the
    eightfold path.

9
Eightfold Path
  • 1) Right views- you must accept the 4 noble
    truths and the eightfold path.
  • 2) Right resolve- you must renounce the pleasures
    of the senses you must harbor no ill will toward
    anyone and harm no living creature.
  • 3) Right speech- do not lie do not slander or
    abuse anyone. Do not indulge in idle talk.

10
Eightfold Path
  • 4) Right Behavior- Do not destroy any living
    creature take only what is given to you do not
    commit any unlawful sex act.
  • 5) Right Occupation- You must earn your
    livelihood in a way that will harm no one.
  • 6) Right Effort- You must resole and strive
    heroically to prevent any evil qualities from
    arising in you and to abandon any evil qualities
    that you may possess.

11
Eightfold Path
  • 6) (Continued) Strive to acquire good qualities
    and encourage those you do pocess to grow,
    increase, and be perfected.
  • 7) Right Contemplation Be observant, strenuous,
    alert, contemplative, free of desire and of
    sorrow.
  • 8) Right Meditation When you have abandoned all
    sensuous pleasures,

12
Eightfold Path
  • 8) (Continued) all evil qualities, both joy and
    sorrow, you must then enter the four degrees of
    meditation, which are produced by concentration.

13
Sacred Scriptures
  • The Three Baskets
  • Contains rules for highest class of Buddhists,
    the discourses of Buddha, and Buddhist theology.
  • Nirvana- Almost impossible to define but is
    basically a blissful spiritual condition where
    the heart extinguishes passion, hatred, and
    delusion. It is the highest spiritual condition
    on can attain (Handbook 322).

14
After Death
  • To Buddhism, however, death is not the end of
    life, it is merely the end of the body we inhabit
    in this life, but our spirit will still remain
    and seek out through the need of attachment,
    attachment to a new body and new life.

15
After Death
  • Where they will be born is a result of the past
    and the accumulation of positive and negative
    action, and the resultant karma (cause and
    effect) is a result of ones past actions.

16
After Death
  • This would lead to the person to be reborn in
    one of 6 realms which are heaven, human beings,
    Asura, hungry ghost, animal and hell.  Realms,
    according to the severity of ones karmic actions,
    Buddhists believe however, none of these places
    are permanent and one does not remain in any
    place indefinitely.

17
After Death
  • So we can say that in Buddhism, life does not
    end, merely goes on in other forms that are the
    result of accumulated karma. Buddhism is a belief
    that emphasizes the impermanence of lives,
    including all those beyond the present life. 
    With this in mind we should not fear death as it
    will lead to rebirth.
  • http//www.urbandharma.org/udharma5/viewdeath.html

18
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