Transcript Buddhism
Buddhism
Basic Data
Christianity
Buddhism
Adherents
2 billion (32%)
376 million (6%)
Leading Person
Jesus
Siddhartha Gautama
Holy Book
Bible
Tripiṭaka (Sūtra Piṭaka, Vinaya
Piṭaka, Abhidharma Piṭaka)
Clergy
Bishops, Priests
Sangha (monks)
House of Worship
Church
Temple
Theology
Monotheistic-Trinitarian
Non-Theist
Soteriology
Passion of Christ; Baptism
Nirvana
Holidays
Easter
Christmas
Pentecost
Buddhist New Year (April)
Vesak (Buddha’s birthday)
Magha Puja
Fasting
Lent (Advent)
Full moon days & holidays
Basic Data
Who is a Buddhist?
About 376 million persons are “traditional Buddhists”
They have taken refuge in the Three Jewels, those
following all of the precepts of Buddhism laid down by
the Buddha,)
About 1.2 billion includes "natural Buddhists" (as well
as secular/nominal Buddhists)
They lack specific ceremony
They do not profess belief in another religion
Terms
Arahant: one who achieves nirvana
Anatman: the state of nonsoulness that, according to
the Buddha, was the natural state of humanity
Dalai Lama: Leader of Tibetan Buddhism and, until
1950, the spiritual and political ruler of Tibet
koan: literally means, "case study"; a riddle, tale, or
short statement used by Zen masters to bring
students to sudden insight
Nirvana: literally means, “cessation,” “extinction,”
"blowing out," or "extinguish"; cessation of human
individuality and suffering
Sangha: Buddhist monastic order
Samsar: Cycle of Rebirth; the endless reincarnation of
sentient beings
The Four Noble Truths -- 1) Life in samsara is suffering;
2) This has a cause; 3) It may be ended; 4) There is a
path for ending it.
The Eight-fold Path -- Eight categories of a) social
behavior, b) meditation behavior, c) attitude & belief - the path to end suffering
Trance (dhyana [Japanese: zen]) -- The state of the
mind as it truly "sees"
Selfhood: The "permanent identity" that the mind, in
its ignorance, ascribes to things (and to itself)
Atman: the soul; the core of "self" erroneously
ascribed to mental activity
Bodhisattva -- An enlightened being who remains in
the Cycle in order to "ferry" other beings to nirvana
Pure Consciousness/Thoughts/Mind: The three levels
of mental activity: an existing flow of sentience;
atom-like thoughts; the intellect
Bodhi: Enlightenment; Awakening to the awareness
of one's Ignorance
Prajna: Wisdom; the clear perception of the world as
Emptiness
The Five "Skandhas" -- The five elements which join to
form the illusory identity of a human being: 1) material
form; 2) feelings; 3) perceptions; 4) impulses; 5)
consciousness
Karma -- The value of mental acts (which are linked to
behavior), in relation to their effect on increasing or
decreasing Ignorance [for example, "selfish" acts are
bad: they reinforce attachment to "self"]
Three “Schools” of Buddhism
Mahayana: literally means, "the expansive way," or
"the big raft"; the largest branch of Buddhism; those
Buddhist which take the Boddhisattva as the ideal
(the major form of Buddhism in China, Korea, and
Japan)
Three “Schools” of Buddhism
Theravada: literally means, "the tradition of the
elders"; the smaller branch of Buddhism; the
Buddhists which take the Arhat as the ideal (currently
most popular in Southeast Asia)
Zen Buddhism: Form of Mahayana Buddhism that
teaches that the real truth about life comes from
intuitive flashes of insight
Siddhartha Gautama
(Buddha)
Early Life
Born in 5th Century BC (BCE)
Lived 80 years
Lived in the foothills of the Himalayas
Son of a wealthy landowner or nobleman
Named
Siddhartha = “wish-fulfiller” or “one who reaches his
goal”
Gautama = family name
Buddhist Legend
“The epics embellish [Gautama’s] birth story as an
immaculate conception in which a white elephant
carrying a lotus flower entered his mother’s womb in
her dream.” (Fisher, 130)
“He is portrayed as the reincarnation of a great being
who had been born many times before and was
drawn to earth once again by his compassion for all
suffering beings.” (ibid.)
Important Details
Raised in the Hindu religion
Raised in luxury, never needing or wanting for
anything
KEY: Did not know suffering or poverty
Trained in the martial arts
Married with a son (named “Rahul”=chain)
Became disillusioned with riches, ease, marriage
Four Sights Legend
At the age of 29, when he was most disillusioned “the
gods arranged for him to see the ‘four sights’ that his
father had tried to hide from him” (Fisher)
I. A bent over old man (old age)
II. A sick person (suffering)
III. A dead man (death)
IV. A monk seeking eternal pleasure instead of
temporal (material, fleeting) pleasure
Four Sights Impact
Shook Siddhartha out of his lethargy, apathy and
disillusionment
Showed him the impermanence of life and existence
Showed him the existence of suffering, old age, death
and renunciation
Four Sights: Result
Renounced wealth
Left wife and newborn son
Shaved head (sign of penance, grief)
Became a wandering ascetic
Homeless poverty, as a beggar
Common for Hindus who seek of spiritual truth
Six years of extreme abnegation
Exposure, breath retention, bed of brambles, severe
fasting
Middle Way
After six years, Siddhartha concluded that neither
luxury nor extreme abnegation
Both are temporal
Both are temporary “fixes” and do not provide real
relief
Suffering is in the mind more than in the body
Suffering is the result of “existence” and “being”
Key: escape existence and being
Conclusion: Middle Way (all things in moderation)
Enlightenment
To solve “theodicy” (problem of suffering) Gautama
tried meditation
Sixth lunar month, night of a full moon
Underneath a Gaya tree
The bodhi Gaya
Experience “Supreme Enlightenment”
Recall all four previous lives
Entered nirvana
Result of Enlightenment
Gautama became the Buddha
He realized that the cycle (samsar) of life and rebirth
is a cycle of suffering
One merely goes from one life of suffering to another
He also realized that enlightenment was the way to
break the cycle, the way to end suffering
His new life goal: to teach this way, or path, to others
Mara (evil in human form) tried to convince him that
his insights should not be taught; they were too
complex and too difficult
Later Years
Gautama spent the last 45 years of his life as a
peripatetic teacher
The essence of his teaching
Four Noble Truths (about suffering)
Eight-fold Path (liberation from suffering)
Volunteer teacher with nothing but a begging bowl
Rahul emulated his father’s life of poverty and
spiritual dedication (one of the first monks)
Later Years
Gautama’s stepmother became the first Buddhist nun
Buddha at first resisted female monks, but then gave
into the request of his stepmother and 500 other
women
Break from Hinduism: women may also achieve
enlightenment
Gautama renounced all forms of killing
Break the cycle of death for all sentient beings
End suffering by living at peace with the world
Death
Died after eating food that accidentally contained
poisonous mushrooms
Designated no successor
Dharma (way of life) and self-discipline were his
“successors”
His bones (relics) were taken to 10 locations in India
where temples of veneration were built
Pilgrimage sites