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What Buddhists Believe
IN SEVENTEEN WEB-PAGE PARTS WEB-PAGE SIX
Chapter 6 |
K.Sri Dhammananda
Venerable Dhammananda was born on March 18,
1919 to the family
of Mr. K.A. Garmage in
the village of Kirinde,
Matara in southern
Ceylon. Like most
children born during the
British colonial
period, he was given the
English name of Martin.
He was the eldest
in a family of three
brothers and three sisters
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Chapter 6 BUDDHISM VIS-A-VIS OTHER APPROACHES
Is Buddhism Similar to
Other Contemporary
Teachings in India?
The Dhamma realized by
the Buddha was unheard
before.
The Buddha said in His
first sermon, the
Dhammacakka Sutta, that
the Dhamma which
He preached was unheard
of before. Knowledge
of the Dhamma which arose
was clear to His
vision, to His knowledge,
to His wisdom,
to His penetration, and
to His Enlightenment.
Some people claim that
the Buddha did not
preach a new doctrine but
merely reformed
the old teaching which
was existing in India.
However, the Buddha was
no mere reformer
of Hinduism as some protagonists
of this
ancient creed make Him
out to be. The Buddha's
way of life and doctrine
were substantially
different from the way
of life and the religious
beliefs people had in India.
The Buddha lived,
taught and died as a non-Vedic
and non-Brahmanic
religious Teacher. Nowhere
did the Buddha
acknowledge His indebtedness
to the existing
religious beliefs and practices.
The Buddha
considered Himself as initiating
a rational
religious method, as opening
a new path.
In fact He had revolutionized
the religious
way of life in a dignified
manner.
That was the main reason
why many other religious
groups could not agree
with Him. He was condemned,
criticized and insulted
by the most noted
teachers and sects of the
Vedic-Brahmanic
tradition. It was with
the intention of destroying
or absorbing the Buddha
and His Teaching,
that the Brahmans of the
pre-Christian era
went so far as to accept
the Buddha as an
Avatara or incarnation
of their God. Yet
some others despised Him
as a vasalaka, a
mundaka, a samanaka, a
nastika and sudra.
(These words were used
in India during the
Buddha's time to insult
a religious man).
There is no doubt that
the Buddha reformed
certain customs, religious
duties, rites
and ethics and ways of
living. The greatness
of His character was like
a pin-point that
pricked the balloon of
false beliefs and
practices so that they
could burst and reveal
their emptiness.
But as far as the fundamental,
philosophical
and psychological teachings
are concerned,
it is groundless to say
that the Buddha had
copied ideas from any existing
religion at
that time. For instance,
the idea of the
Four Noble Truths, the
Eightfold Path and
Nibbana, were not known
before His coming.
Although the belief in
kamma and rebirth
was very common, the Buddha
gave quite logical
and reasonable explanations
to this belief
and introduced it as natural
law of cause
and effect. Despite all
these the Buddha
did not ridicule any sincere
existing religious
belief or practice. He
appreciated the value
in many where he found
Truth and he even
gave a better explanation
of their beliefs.
That is why He once said
that the Truth must
be respected wherever it
is. However, He
was never afraid to speak
out against hypocrisy
and falsehood.
Is Buddhism a Theory or
a Philosophy?
The enlightenment of the
Buddha is not a
product of mere intellect.
During the time of the
Buddha there were
many learned men in India
who pursued knowledge
simply for its own sake.
These people were
full of theoretical knowledge.
Indeed, some
of them went from city
to city challenging
anyone to a debate and
their greatest thrill
was to defeat an opponent
in such verbal
combats. But the Buddha
said that such people
were no nearer to the realization
of the
truth because in spite
of their cleverness
and knowledge they did
not have true wisdom
to overcome greed, hatred
and delusion. In
fact, these people were
often proud and arrogant.
Their egoistic concepts
disturbed the religious
atmosphere.
According to the Buddha,
one must first seek
to understand one's own
mind. This was to
be done through concentration
which gives
one a profound inner wisdom
or realization.
And this insight is to
be gained not by philosophical
argument or worldly knowledge
but by the
silent realization of the
illusion of the
Self.
Buddhism is a righteous
way of life for the
peace and happiness of
every living being.
It is a method to get rid
of miseries and
to find liberation. The
Teachings of the
Buddha are not limited
to one nation or race.
It is neither a creed nor
a mere faith. It
is a Teaching for the entire
universe. It
is a Teaching for all time.
Its objectives
are selfless service, good-will,
peace, salvation
and deliverance from suffering.
Salvation in Buddhism is
an individual affair.
You have to save yourself
just as you have
to eat, drink and sleep
by yourself. The
advice rendered by the
Buddha points the
Way to liberation; but
His advice was never
intended to be taken as
a theory or philosophy.
When He was questioned
as to what theory
He propounded, the Buddha
replied that He
preached no theories and
whatever he did
preach was a result of
His own experience.
Thus His Teaching does
not offer any theory.
Theory cannot bring one
nearer to spiritual
perfection. Theories are
the very fetters
that bind the mind and
impede spiritual progress.
The Buddha said, 'Wise
men give no credence
to passing theories. They
are past believing
everything they see and
hear.'
Theories are product of
the intellect and
the Buddha understood the
limitations of
the human intellect. He
taught that enlightenment
is not a product of mere
intellect. One cannot
achieve emancipation by
taking an intellectual
course. This statement
may seem irrational
but it is true. Intellectuals
tend to spend
too much of their valuable
time in study,
critical analysis and debate.
They usually
have little or no time
for practice.
A great thinker(philosopher,
scientist, metaphysician,
etc.) can also turn out
to be an intelligent
fool. He may be an intellectual
giant endowed
with the power to perceive
ideas quickly
and to express thoughts
clearly. But if he
pays no attention to his
action and their
consequences, and if he
is only bent on fulfilling
his own longings and inclinations
at any
cost then, according to
the Buddha, he is
an intellectual fool, a
man of inferior intelligence.
Such a person will indeed
hinder his won
spiritual progress.
The Buddha's Teaching contains
practical
wisdom that cannot be limited
to theory or
to philosophy because philosophy
deals mainly
with knowledge but it is
not concerned with
translating the knowledge
into day-to-day
practices.
Buddhism lays special emphasis
on practice
and realization. The philosopher
sees the
miseries and disappointments
of life but,
unlike the Buddha, he offers
no practical
solution to overcome our
frustrations which
are part of the unsatisfactory
nature of
life. The philosopher merely
pushes his thoughts
to dead ends. Philosophy
is useful because
it has enriched our intellectual
imagination
and diminished dogmatic
assurance which closes
the mind to further progress.
To that extent,
Buddhism values philosophy,
but it has failed
to quench spiritual thirst.
Remember that the chief
aim of a Buddhist
is to attain purity and
enlightenment. Enlightenment
vanquishes ignorance which
is the root of
birth and death. However,
this vanquishing
of ignorance cannot be
achieved except by
the exercise of one's confidence.
All other
attempts, especially mere
intellectual attempts
are not very effective.
This is why the Buddha
concluded: 'These [metaphysical]questions
are not calculated to profit;
they are not
concerned with the Dhamma;
they do not lead
to right conduct, or to
detachment, or to
purification from lusts,
or to quietude,
or to a calm heart, or
to real knowledge,
or to higher insight, or
to Nibbana.' (Malunkyaputta
Sutta _ Majjhima Nikaya)
In place of metaphysical
speculation, the Buddha
was more concerned
with teaching a practical
understanding of
the Four Noble Truths that
he discovered:
what Suffering is: what
the origin of Suffering
is; what the cessation
of Suffering is; how
to overcome Suffering and
realize final Salvation.
These Truths are all practical
matters to
be fully understood and
realized by anyone
who really experiences
emancipation.
Enlightenment is the dispelling
of ignorance;
it is the ideal of the
Buddhist life. We
can now clearly see that
enlightenment is
not an act of the intellect.
Mere speculation
has something alien to
it and does not come
so intimately into contact
with life. This
is why the Buddha placed
great emphasis on
personal experience. Meditation
is a practical
scientific system to verify
the Truth that
comes through personal
experience. Through
meditation, the will tries
to transcend the
condition it has put on
itself, and this
is the awakening of consciousness.
Metaphysics
merely ties us down in
a tangled and matted
mass of thoughts and words.
Is Buddhism Pessimistic?
Buddhism is neither pessimistic
nor optimistic
but a realistic religion.
Some critics argue that
Buddhism is morbid,
cynical, hovering on the
dark and shadowy
side of life, an enemy
of harmless pleasures,
and an unfeeling trampler
on the innocent
joys of life. They see
Buddhism as being
pessimistic, as fostering
an attitude of
hopelessness towards life,
as encouraging
a vague, general feeling
that pain and evil
predominate in human affairs.
These critics
base their views on the
First Noble Truth
that all conditioned things
are in a state
of suffering. They seem
to have forgotten
that not only had the Buddha
taught the cause
and end of Suffering, but
he had taught the
way to endSuffering. In
any case, is there
any religious teacher who
praised this worldly
life and advised us to
cling to it?
If the founder of this
religion, the Buddha,
was such a pessimist, one
would expect His
personality to be portrayed
on more severe
lines than has been done.
The Buddha image
is the personification
of Peace, Serenity,
Hope and Goodwill. The
magnetic and radiant
smile of the Buddha which
is said to be inscrutable
and enigmatic, is the epitome
of His doctrine.
To the worried and the
frustrated, His smile
of Enlightenment and hope
is an unfailing
tonic and soothing balm.
The Buddha radiated His
love and compassion
in all directions. Such
a person can hardly
be a pessimist. And when
the sword-happy
kings and princes listened
to Him, they realized
that the only true conquest
is the conquest
of the Self and the best
way to win the hearts
of the people was to teach
them to appreciate
the Dhamma---Truth.
The Buddha cultivated His
sense of humor
to such a high degree that
His bitter opponents
were disarmed with the
greatest ease. Often
they could not help laughing
at themselves.
The Buddha had a wonderful
tonic; He cleaned
their systems of dangerous
toxins and they
became enthusiastic thereafter
to follow
in His footsteps. In His
sermons, dialogues
and discussions, He maintained
that poise
and dignity which won for
Him the respect
and affection of the people.
How can such
a person be a pessimist?
The Buddha never expected
His followers to
be constantly brooding
over the suffering
of life and leading a miserable
and unhappy
existence. He taught the
fact of suffering
only so that He could show
people how to
overcome this suffering
and move in the direction
of happiness. To become
an Enlightened person,
one must have joy, one
of the factors that
the Buddha recommended
us to cultivate. Joy
is hardly pessimistic.
There are two Buddhists
texts called the
Theragatha and Therigatha
which are full
of the joyful utterances
of the Buddha's
disciples, both male and
female, who found
peace and happiness in
life through His Teaching.
The king of Kosala once
told the Buddha that
unlike many a disciple
of other religious
systems who looked haggard,
coarse, pale,
emaciated and unprepossessing,
His disciples
were 'joyful and elated,
jubilant and exultant,
enjoying the spiritual
life, serene, peaceful
and living with a gazelle's
mind, light-hearted.'
The king added that he
believed that this
healthy disposition was
due to the fact that
'these Venerable Ones had
certainly realized
the great and full significance
of the Blessed
One's Teachings'(Majjhima
Nikaya).
When asked why His disciples,
who lived a
simple and quiet life with
only one meal
a day, were so radiant,
the Buddha replied:
'They do not repent the
past, nor do they
brood over the future.
They live in the present.
Therefore they are radiant.
By brooding over
the future and repenting
the past, fools
dry up like green reeds
cut down [in the
sun](Samyutta Nikaya).
As a religion, Buddhism
preaches the unsatisfactory
nature of everything in
this world. Yet one
cannot simply categorize
Buddhism as a pessimistic
religion, because it also
teaches us how
to get rid of this unhappiness.
According
to the Buddha, even the
worst sinner, after
paying for what he has
done, can attain salvation.
Buddhism offers every human
being the hope
of attaining his salvation
one day. Other
religions, however, take
it for granted that
some people will be bad
forever and have
an eternal hell waiting
for them. In that
respect, such religions
are more pessimistic.
Buddhists deny such a belief.
Buddhism is neither optimistic
nor pessimistic.
It does not encourage man
to look at the
world through his changing
feelings of optimism
and pessimism. Rather,
Buddhism encourages
us to be realistic: we
must learn to see
things as they truly are.
Is Buddhism Atheistic?
Atheism is associated with
a materialistic
doctrine that knows nothing
higher than this
world.
The Buddha has condemned
godlessness by which
He meant the denial of
worship and renunciation,
the denial of moral and
social obligations,
and the denial of a religious
life. He recognized
most emphatically the existence
of moral
and spiritual values. He
acclaimed the supremacy
of the moral law. Only
in one sense can Buddhism
be described as atheistic,
namely, in so
far as it denies the existence
of an eternal
omnipotent God or God-head
who is the creator
and ordainer of the world.
The word 'atheism',
however, frequently carries
a number of disparaging
overtones or implications
which are in no
way applicable to the Buddha's
Teaching.
Those who use the word
'atheism', often associate
it with a materialistic
doctrine that knows
nothing higher than this
world of the senses
and the slight happiness
it can bestow. Buddhism
advocate nothing of that
sort.
There is no justification
for branding Buddhists
as atheists, nihilists,
pagans, heathens
or communists just because
they do not believe
in a Creator God. The Buddhist
concept of
God is different from that
of other religions.
Differences in belief do
not justify name-calling
and slanderous words.
Buddhism agrees with other
religions that
true and lasting happiness
cannot be found
in this material world.
The Buddha adds that
true and lasting happiness
cannot be found
on the higher or supramundane
plane of existence
to which the name of heavenly
or divine world
is given. While the spiritual
values advocated
by Buddhism are orientated
to a state transcending
the world with the attainment
of Nibbana,
they do not make a separation
between the
'beyond'and the 'here and
now'. They have
firm roots in the world
itself, for they
aim at the highest realization
in this present
existence.
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