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BUDDHISM

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Title: BUDDHISM


1
BUDDHISM
2
(No Transcript)
3
Location of Buddhism
4
Buddhism World Status
  • Buddhism 360 million
  • 6 of world population
  • Fifth largest world religion
  • Christianity 32
  • Islam 22
  • Hinduism 15
  • Secular/Non-religious 14

5
Buddhism
  • Origin
  • History
  • Main Tenets
  • Worldview
  • Differences with Christianity

6
Origin of Buddhism
  • Began in the 7th century BC
  • Buddha is a title signifying The Enlightened
    One or The Awakened One
  • Title given to Siddartha Gautama who was born in
    563 B.C. died 483 B.C.
  • Biography of his life does not appear until
    several hundred years later
  • His life was the last of 500 reincarnations

7
Origin of Buddhism
  • Siddartha Gautama was born into a wealthy family,
    some propitious signs accompanied his birth
  • Father protected him and groom him to be a king.
  • Father allows him to take a chariot ride but
    decrees all poor and suffering be hidden however
    the gods assume human form so he sees an old man
    near death, a man disfigured by disease, a
    funeral procession of decomposing body, and a
    monk who has renounced the world.
  • Decided to forsake his status and wealth and seek
    the meaning of life at 30 years old Vedantic
    tradition.

8
Origin of Buddhism
  • First quest for enlightenment
  • Under the mentoring of two Brahman hermits, Alara
    and Uddaka
  • They were unable to tell him how to put an end to
    the cycle of rebirths
  • Second quest for enlightenment
  • Asceticism with five companions
  • Decided that self-mortification did not lead to
    self-realization but only enfeebled body mind

9
Origin of Buddhism
  • Enlightenment obtained
  • Devoted himself to the simple life of intense
    mental discipline
  • After prolong meditation after seven years while
    sitting under a fig tree received the answer to
    his quest
  • Decides to share his way of enlightenment and
    begins to preach
  • Converts five followers family
  • Legend has him ascend into heaven but died after
    eating spoiled pork given as an offering
  • Buddhists would probably say that words cannot
    truly describe Prince Gautamas enlightenment

10
History of Buddhism
  • Collection of Teachings and Split
  • First council of followers shortly after his
    death collected his teachings
  • Called Tripitaka, lit. meaning three baskets
  • Second council ( 380 B.C.)
  • Some argued for a greater role for the laity
  • Less strict discipline
  • Split between Theravada and Mahayana ( 200 B.C.)

11
History of Buddhism
  • Theravada Buddhism
  • Name derived from an expression meaning
    tradition of the elders
  • Retained emphasis religion centered on monks
  • Also called Hinayana (little raft) in distinction
    to Mahayana
  • Height of Theravada was in 3rd century B.C.
  • Now mainly in Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia
  • Most other areas have Mahayana Buddhism
  • Mainly a religion for monks

12
History of Buddhism
  • Theravada Monks (bikhus)
  • Only ones who can obtain nirvana
  • They the focus of religious practice
  • Laitys primary religious work is to support the
    monks
  • Ordination
  • Shave head and put on orange robes
  • Vow to follow the Ten Precepts

13
History of Buddhism
  • Theravada Monks Ten Precepts
  • Not to take a life
  • Not to steal
  • Not to commit sexual immorality
  • Not to lie
  • Not to drink intoxicating beverages
  • Not to eat in excess or after noon
  • Not to attend entertainment, e.g. dancing,
    singing, drama
  • Not to decorate ones self or use cosmetics
  • Not to sleep in high or wide beds
  • Not to touch any gold or silver

14
History of Buddhism
  • Theravada Monks Life
  • Usually live in a monastery
  • Most of day in meditation
  • Object of meditation on the total impermanence of
    all existence
  • Focus to avoid being distracted
  • Begging for food in the morning
  • When monk attains full realization he is an
    arhat or holy man.
  • At death enters nirvana
  • Buddha is perfect in all his incarnations and
    arhat isnt

15
History of Buddhism
  • Buddhas
  • Twenty five Buddhas
  • All came to teach the same way of enlightenment
  • Idea emerged there is a Buddha in the final
    stages of preparation to come to earth.
  • Called Maitreya
  • A Bodhisattva i.e. Buddha-in-the-making
  • He will usher in a golden age of enlightenment
    for all

16
History of Buddhism
  • Theravada Buddhism the Laity
  • Secondary participants
  • Goal is to live a good life
  • Follow the first five of the ten precepts
    (special occasions will follow eight)
  • Store up merit (good karma) for a better
    incarnation
  • May even earns some time in heaven between
    incarnations
  • Universe consists of many levels and higher
    levels are states of bliss worthy of pursuing but
    not nirvana
  • Recitation of Three Refuges
  • I seek refuge in the Buddha
  • I seek refuge in the Dharma (duty as in following
    teachings)
  • I seek refuge in the sangha (order of bikhu or
    monks)
  • Care for the monks (bikhu)

17
History of Buddhism
  • Theravada Buddhism the Laity
  • Three main obligations
  • Recitation of Three Refuges
  • I seek refuge in the Buddha
  • I seek refuge in the Dharma (duty as in following
    teachings)
  • I seek refuge in the sangha (order of bikhu or
    monks)
  • Care for the monks (bikhu)
  • Food, material for clothing and other necessities
  • Care for the temples
  • Usually erected by lay peoples contributions
  • Statue of generous donor with monk robe place in
    temple
  • Traditionally, contribute by buying gold leafs to
    be added to statue of Buddha

18
History of Buddhism
  • Theravada Buddhism the Laity
  • Position of Buddha statue hands
  • Left hand open and on lap
  • Right hand direct to the earth
  • Calling on earth to witness to his Buddhahood and
    steadfastness (other positions, e.g. teaching,
    protecting)
  • Folk religion
  • Laity deify Buddha and worship him
  • Knowledgeable Buddhist do not claim they worship
    him
  • Storing Merit
  • Can become a bikhu for a period of time
  • Rite of passage in puberty rites

19
History of Buddhism
  • Mahayana Buddhism
  • Means big raft because it accommodates large
    number of people, monks and laity
  • Innovations
  • Sunyata (void) is interpreted as absolute
    compassion, Benevolent compassion is the
    ultimate motivating force of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Multiplication of divine beings
  • Lotus Sutra and other scriptures
  • Other schools

20
History of Buddhism
  • Mahayana Buddhisms Innovations
  • Multiplication of divine beings
  • Multiple Buddhas and Bodhisattvas
  • Manushi Buddhas achieved enlightenment on earth
  • Died and in Nirvana so not accessible
  • Dhyani Buddhas attained enlightenment in heaven
  • Have not died and are accessible
  • I.e., Amithaba of the Pure Land School
  • Bodhisattvas many Buddhas-in-the-making
  • In Mahayana mythology these are divine beings in
    heaven who forgo entry into nirvana until the
    last soul is redeemed from hell which is the
    lower levels of incarnation.
  • Available in heaven with much merit stored up to
    assist people in need

21
History of Buddhism
  • Mahayana Buddhisms Innovations
  • Lotus Sutra and other scriptures
  • Proliferation of Mahayana writings
  • Lotus Sutra has the highest stature
  • Core teachings attributed to Gautama (Called
    Sakyamuni sage of the sakya clan to
    differentiate him from other Buddhas)
  • Sakyamuni was a manifestation of the true
    celestial Buddha
  • All human beings have potential to reach
    Buddhahood
  • References to specific Buddhas and Bodhisattvas
    by name
  • Asserts that Hinayana is only for selfish
    uncaring people

22
History of Buddhism
  • Mahayana Buddhisms Innovations
  • Other schools
  • Tendai (rationalist)
  • Pure Land (compassionate)
  • Zen (intuitive
  • Nichiren (chanting)
  • Vajrayana (lamaist of Tibet)
  • Shingon (combination of Tendai and Vajrayana)
  • Ryobu (combination of Shinto and Shingon
  • See Winfried Corduans chart, p. 230

23
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Tendai (rationalist school)
  • Provide compromise between variations
  • Organized by Chinese monk, Chih-I
  • 6th century A.D.
  • Teachings
  • Superiority of Lotus Sutra inspired scripture
  • Unity of reality all reality is equally a part
    of Buddhas nature
  • Reality is sunyatta and maya at the same time
  • Universal salvation all people will attain
    Buddhahood
  • Because all are a part of the same Buddha nature
  • Meditation to receive true insight into true
    reality

24
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Pure Land Schools (multiple)
  • Buddha Amida (Japanese name for Dhyani Buddha)
  • Mythology has Amida while going through his
    incarnations overwhelmed with human suffering
    that he vows to provide a way of salvation for
    all people.
  • Became a Buddha and was able to provide salvation
  • Created a paradise in western regions of heaven
    (pure land, Buddha field, or western paradise)

25
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Pure Land Schools (multiple)
  • Anyone who trusts in Buddha Amida can enter at
    death
  • In paradise anyone can reach nirvana (equivalent)
  • Some schools say must recite nembutsu (I bow down
    to the Buddha Amida) to enter paradise
  • Jodo-shin-shu (Japan) recite nembutsu only to
    express gratitude
  • No demands on followers other than to show Amida
    their thankfulness
  • Worship performed by clergy, services have
    chanting, meditation, and adoration

26
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Zen Origins
  • Arose in 6th century A.D. in response to Tendais
    rationalist speculation
  • Claims its origin come from Gautama (as do they
    all)
  • Essence of it is enlightenment without words or
    explination
  • Story of Buddha standing before his pupils
    waiting for him to teach, one pupil, Mahakasyapa
    understood and smiled and just looked at him.
  • Traditional founder is Bodhidharma, Indian monk
    that emigrated to China a thousand years after
    Mahakasyapa
  • Cut off eyelids and meditated at wall for three
    years and hit on head and then gained
    enlightenment

27
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Zen Schools
  • Two major schools in Japan, Master Soto Master
    Rinzai
  • Soto saw enlightenment gain gradually
  • Rinzai saw a lengthy preparation time then gained
    abruptly
  • All Zen schools
  • Clear ones mind of conceptual clutter that
    impedes insight
  • D. T. Suzuki summary of Zen
  • Special transmission outside of scriptures
  • No dependence on words or letters
  • Direct pointing to the soul of man
  • Seeing ones nature attainment of Buddhahood

28
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Zen Scriptures and experience
  • Platform Sutra not considered authoritative nor
    source of belief
  • Zen knowledge only transmitted from master to
    pupil and he can only direct him to see what he
    can see
  • Enlightenment referred to as satori
  • Satori is when a person has direct, unmediated
    insight into the self, the world and truth
    (Corduan, 233).

29
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Zen Enlightenment
  • Dualistic thinking hinders enlightenment
    meaning making distinction and classifying things
    according to rational categories.
  • Categories what is real, what is really real,
    and what is not really real
  • Zen accepts reality as it is given (or perceived)
  • Four ways to satori
  • Zazen meditation cross-legged, straight back,
    focus on thought provided by master

30
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Four ways to satori
  • Zazen meditation cross-legged, straight back,
    focus on thought provided by master
  • Mondos stories of past great Zen masters and
    how they received enlightenment so pupil can
    learn how he may gain enlightenment
  • Koans conundrumsriddles without answers (they
    supposedly carry the answer in them after one
    stops thinking analytically)
  • What is the sound of one hand clapping?
  • Does a dog have Buddha nature?
  • How crooked is straight?
  • Cultural activities such as art, martial arts,
    haiku poetry

31
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Nichiren Shoshu (Soka Gakkai)
  • Founded by Japanese monk Nichiren from Tendai
    school
  • 13th century
  • Determined all other traditions wrong
  • Return to Sakyamuni and true Buddhist teaching
  • Nichiren was persecuted and about to be executed
    but a natural disaster free him, good omen so
    gather disciples
  • Split into many sub-schools

32
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Soka Gakkai
  • Nichiren Shoshu means the true Nichiren
  • Revived in 1930s in Japan as Soka Gakkai
    society for the creation of values
  • Most popular after Pure Land Buddhism

33
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Soka Gakkai Teachings
  • Enlightenment available to everyone regardless of
    previous incarnations and current status and can
    be achieved in just a few years
  • Ten states of life must be traveled from lowest
    to highest
  • Persons state at death determines his karma and
    thus his next incarnation
  • Those who attain Buddhahood finish incarnations

34
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Soka Gakkai Ten States of Life
  • Hell, anger, animality, hunger, tranquility,
    rapture, learning, realization, Bodhisattva, and
    Buddhahood
  • Progress from worst of human experience to
    physical, mental and then pure consciousness of
    enlightenment
  • Key to enlightenment
  • Chanting (diamoku) I bow down to the beautiful
    teaching of the Lotus Sutra
  • Gohonzon piece of paper with diamoku worship
    when copy brought out at the temple (original in
    Japan)
  • Improve physical life by putting in harmony with
    universe
  • Lay movement, no priests, interested in social
    justice

35
History of Buddhism
  • Other Schools of Mahayana Buddhism
  • Vajrayana (Tibetan Buddhism)
  • Means diamond vehicle
  • Considered the third division of Buddhism
  • Also known as Lamaism
  • Sublime philosophy and meditation
  • Folk more concerned with magical practices to
    control evil spirits

36
History of Buddhism
37
History of Buddhism
38
Tenets of Buddhism
  • Relationship to Hinduism
  • Gods have no place in teachings and are
    themselves in need of enlightenment
  • Accepted samsara, karma, and ultimate (though the
    later is different)
  • Some Hindu schools hold the atheistic view of
    Brahman
  • Eliminated the caste system and the Vedas as
    authoritative
  • This is what was against orthodox Hinduism

39
Tenets of Buddhism
  • Four Truths
  • Truth of suffering all forms of existence are
    subject to physical and mental suffering
  • The cause of suffering is desire desire for
    possession and selfish enjoyment of every kind,
    particularly the desire for separate, individual,
    existence.
  • Suffering ceases when selfish desires are
    denounced and ceases
  • The eightfold path leads to enlightenment

40
Tenets of Buddhism
  • Eightfold Path path of perfect detachment also
    known as the middle way because it avoids both
    self-indulgence and self-mortification
  • This path leads to the cessation of suffering
  • This path allows a person to escape from the
    cycle of rebirth
  • To accomplish this task was a fulltime commitment
    so formed an order of monks

41
Tenets of Buddhism
  • The Eightfold Path
  • Right Views
  • Right Desires
  • Right Speech
  • Right Conduct
  • Right Mode of Livelihood
  • Right Effort
  • Right Awareness
  • Right Meditation

42
The Eightfold Path
  • The Right Views
  • This involves acceptance of the four truths and a
    resolute rejection of unworthy attitudes and
    acts, such as covetousness, lying and gossip.

43
The Eightfold Path
  • Right Desires
  • The thoughts are to be free from lust, from
    ill-will, and from cruelty. Free from desire
    from selfish possessions. Desire for achieving
    highest ends.

44
The Eightfold Path
  • Right Speech
  • Ones speech should be plain and truthful,
    abhorring lying, tale-bearing, and harsh or vain
    talk. Words must be gentle, soothing to the ear,
    penetrating to the heart, useful, rightly timed,
    and according to the facts.

45
The Eightfold Path
  • Right Conduct
  • To follow this path one must practice charity and
    abstention from killing any living thing, from
    stealing, and from unlawful sexual intercourse.
  • While morality forms the basis of the higher
    life, wisdom completes it.

46
The Eightfold Path
  • Right Mode of Livelihood
  • This path requires harming no one and being free
    from luxury. Each must take up work which will
    give scope to his abilities and make him useful
    to his fellow men.

47
The Eightfold Path
  • Right Effort
  • Press forward in four directions 1) avoid
    increasing evil 2) overcome evil 3) develop
    meritorious conditions (detachment, investigation
    of law, concentration, rapture) 4) bring
    meritorious conditions which already exist to
    maturity and perfection.

48
The Eightfold Path
  • Right Awareness
  • Four fundamentals of awareness
  • Contemplation of the transitory nature and
    loathsomeness of the body
  • Contemplation of the feelings of oneself and
    others
  • Contemplation of the mind
  • Contemplation of phenomena

49
The Eightfold Path
  • Right Meditation
  • Concentration on a single object with all
    hindrances overcome
  • Purpose is to be purified from all distractions
    and evils and filled with rapture, happiness and
    equanimity.
  • Ultimate goal is to pass beyond sensation of
    either pleasure or pain into a state transcending
    consciousness, ultimately attaining full
    Enlightenment (state of perfection)

50
Tenets of Buddhism
  • Main purpose of Buddhism
  • Escape from suffering
  • Escape from cycle of rebirth
  • Reach Nirvana cease to exist or realize ones
    self-extinctedness Nirvana (lit. blown out
    unconditional state of liberation, release from
    the cycle of rebirth-redeath determined by karma
  • No ultimate reality (Brahman) behind illusion but
    nothingness (sunyata the void).
  • No Atman (No soul in people)
  • Karma in Buddhism the actions of body or mind
    which produce a fixed consequence for the present
    life or the future life.

51
Buddhist Shrine
  • A1 Body of Buddha
  • A2 Sacred Text
  • A3 Stupa mind of Buddha
  • B1 Drinking water
  • B2 Feet washing water
  • B3 Rice Flowers
  • B4 Rice Incense
  • B5 Butter lamp or Candle
  • B6 Scented water to annoint
  • B7 Rice and Food
  • B8 Conch Shell - Ting-shag

52
Theravada Buddhist Worldview
Suffering/Desiring
53
Mahayana Buddhism Worldview
Individual
The Buddha
Compassion
Heaven/Hell
54
Important Terms
  • Karma Cause and effect (what you sow is what
    you reap) good deeds do not cancel out evil
    deeds
  • Impermanence everything changes and goes
    through cycle of birth, growth, decay, and death.
    No such thing as death. The world of phenomena,
    the very universe itself, has a purely relative
    existence, and this lack of absolute reality,
    applies to the individuals self. There is
    nothing eternal or immortal inside a mans body.

55
Important Terms
  • Nirvana is an ethical state, a condition which
    eliminates any future rebirth, the extinction of
    desire, the final release from suffering.
  • Anatman ultimate non-self
  • Sunyata the void

56
Important Terms
  • Gautama refused to answer about the existence
    after death. There is, disciples, a condition,
    where there is neither earth nor water, neither
    air nor light, neither limitless space, nor
    limitless time, neither any kind of being,
    neither ideation nor non-ideation, neither this
    world nor that world. There is neither arising
    nor passing-away, nor dying, neither cause nor
    effect, neither change nor standing-still.
    (Sacred Books of the Buddhists, Vol. II, 54)

57
Christianity Buddhism
  • Both seek enlightenment
  • Both empathize with suffering
  • Individuals are of value
  • Committed relationships
  • Emphasis on living live and loving
  • Moderation
  • Value of life
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