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Kelowna Buddhist Temple Mailing Address: P.O. Box 22092, RPO Capri Centre Kelowna, B.C. V1Y 9N9
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INTRODUCTION TO BUDDHISM Life Of The Buddha Over
2,500 years ago, in the shadows of the snow-covered Himalayan Mountains,
Siddhartha Gautama, the future Buddha was born.
He was born as the prince of the Sakya Kingdom.
Soon after Siddhartha’s birth, his mother, Queen Maya, passed
away, leaving his Aunt Prajapati and his father, King Suddhodana to raise
him. The prince was raised
with tender-loving care. From his birth, he was given an abundance of
material luxuries. He was
taught and trained by the best educators of the time. In
spite of the fact that Siddhartha’s material wants were fulfilled, the
prince became increasingly meditative and detached from his material
surroundings. His sensitivity
to life grew and he became distressed by the paradox of existence itself.
However, it was when he saw four visions of an aged man in agony; a
man infested with disease; a corpse followed by weeping mourners; and a
serene peaceful mendicant, that he resolved to leave the comfort of his
surroundings in search of Truth and Enlightenment.
He was then twenty-nine years old. On
one moonlit night with his horse, Kanthaka, and his personal servant
Channa, he slipped out of his castle, leaving behind his wife Yasodhara,
his son Rahula and his father’s kingdom.
He renounced his princely position and all of his privileges and
became a simple mendicant, a seeker in search of the True Reality. The
scriptures tell us that Siddhartha traveled eastward seeking the guidance
of two noted sages, Arada Kalama and Udraka Ramaputra, in the hopes of
finding deliverance through their guidance.
However, he found their knowledge and their teachings to be
inadequate for the supreme enlightenment.
He then wandered onto a place called Uruvilva where he practiced
rigorous self-mortification in the hopes of emancipation from the world of
Samsara (undulation of life). For
six long years he diligently practiced various forms of asceticism but to
no avail. At the end, he
found himself only in utter confusion and physical exhaustion. Not
discouraged by his failure in ascetic practices, he then resolved to
follow his inner instinct by meditating cross-legged under a tree, which
later became known as the Bodhi tree.
He said “though [my] skin, sinew and bone may dry up as it will,
my flesh and blood may dry in my body, but without attaining complete
enlightenment I will not leave this seat.” Many
were the nights of torment by Mara, the inner temptations and doubts, but
he pressed on, overcoming Mara and its temptations.
It is said that Siddhartha gradually entered into first, second,
third and the final dhyana until his consciousness merged into the
ultimate consciousness of True Reality.
The revelation of the True Reality took place and he became the
Perfectly Awakened One, the Buddha. With
triumphant voice he cried out:
I ran my course unceasingly seeking the maker of the House
painful in birth again and again. House
builder! I behold thee now,
again a house thou shalt not build; all the rafters are broken now, the
ridge-pole also is destroyed. My
mind, its elements dissolved. He
was then thirty-five years old.
For
several days after his awakening, he contemplated at the foot of the Bodhi
tree in deep meditation. But
soon, out of compassion for all sentient beings, he proclaimed the
difficult task of revealing the Buddha Dharma [the teachings].
At the deer park in Baranasi [now Sarnath], the Buddha delivered
his first instruction to his former friends, the five ascetics.
He laid down to them the basic doctrine of the middle way.
This first address of the Buddha is called “The setting in motion
of the wheel of truth.” It
also was the time when the Order of the Sangha was established. For
45 years, the Enlightened One journeyed from place to place along the
River Ganges, teaching many paths to the ultimate emancipation from the
world of Duhkha. These
teachings included his instructions to his father, King Suddhodana, his
wife Yasodhara, and his son Rahula, and the rest of the Sakya Kingdom.
They all became the members of the Sangha, the Buddhist Order, the
followers of the Buddha Dharma. The
Sangha that began with five ascetics eventually grew into thousands. With the central theme of seeing the universe “as it is,”
the Buddha encouraged his disciples to spread the Buddha Dharma in the
spirit of universal love and compassion.
Today, about one-fifth of the world’s population, more than a
billion people, follow the teachings of the Buddha. He
was 80 years of age when he passed into Parinirvana.
Surrounded by his beloved disciples and friends, he laid himself at
the sal grove of Malla at Kusinagara and the Buddha gave his final
instruction:
My disciples, my last moment has come, but do not forget that
death is only the end of the physical body.
The body was born from parents and was nourished by food; just as
inevitable are sickness and death. But
the true Buddha is not a human body, it is Enlightenment.
A human body must die, but the wisdom of Enlightenment will exist
forever in the truth of the Dharma, and in the practice of the Dharma.
He who sees merely my body does not truly see me.
Only he who accepts my teaching truly sees me.
After my death, the Dharma shall be your teacher.
Follow the Dharma and you will be true to me. My dear disciples, this is the end. In a moment I shall be passing into Nirvana; make my
teachings your light. Work
out your salvation with diligence. This
is my instruction. Thus
after 45 years of enlightened life, the Perfectly Awakened One, the Sage
of Sakya Kingdom, peacefully entered into the realm beyond our
understanding, the realm of Dharmakaya.
Soon after the Buddha’s four councils were held to preserve the
teachings of the Buddha in purest form.
Recorded in Pali and Sanskrit languages, the teachings were
preserved in voluminous compilation of writings called Tripitaka [The
Three Baskets], which consisted of 100 volumes of 1000 pages each.
The completion of these texts were undertaken at the Third Council
which were sponsored by the great Buddhist King Asoka.
Under the leadership of Thera Tissa with 1000 Bhiksu, this task was
done. As
the term Tripitaka suggest, it consisted of three component parts called
Sutra Pitaka, Vinaya Pitaka and the Abhidharma Pitaka. The
Sutra Pitaka contains the actual words of the Buddha instructing ways and
means for his disciplines to attain Buddhahood.
The Vinaya Pitaka contains rules and regulations for monks and
nuns, as well as lay members of Sangha [Buddhist Order].
The Abhidharma Pitaka contains commentaries and metaphysical
explanations in detail of what the Buddha’s teachings meant. From
the original writing, the Tripitaka has been translated many times into
the languages of Asia, but the most complete set of Tripitaka in existence
today is called Taisho Daizo Kyo, which was compiled by a group of
scholars headed by Dr. J. Takakusu. With
the teachings of the Buddha rapidly expanding into western countries,
Buddhist scholars are making great efforts to translate the teachings into
English as well as into other European languages.
The Teachings Based
on the spiritual experiences of Siddhartha Gautama, the Perfectly
Enlightened One, the teachings of Buddha-Dharma was founded.
At Baranasi, the Buddha deliver his famous first discourse to five
ascetics revealing the Fourfold Noble Truths and the Eightfold Noble
Paths. The
Four Noble Truths state: 1.
Duhkha: suffering – illness, pain, anguish, dissatisfaction, conflict,
friction and other forms of disharmony – is everywhere.
2. Samudaya: the cause of suffering is attributable to craving or
“thirst” and illusions created by self-centeredness.
3. Nirodha: the cessation of suffering occurs when the causes and
conditions of suffering are removed.
This state is called Nirvana, the state of True Reality.
4. Marga: the path the leads to the cessation of suffering.
This path is popularly called the Eightfold Noble Path which
consists of eight steps: Right
Views, Right Livelihood, Right Thought, Right Effort, Right Speech, Right
Mindfulness, Right Conduct, Right Meditation
Guided by the Spirit of Compassion, the Buddha delivered many
discourses during his 45 years of enlightened life.
He instructed many ways to attain Buddhahood to thousands of his
followers. Fulfilling the
spiritual needs of the people, the Buddha always reminded them that his
instructions were like fingers pointing to the moon.
He stressed that his followers look beyond his instructions to
attain the True Reality, the reality which he realized and which he wanted
all to experience.
Out of these teachings left behind by the Buddha, many unique
characteristics of Buddhism arose. One
of them is the principle of causal origination (Pratitya-Samutpada).
This principle expresses that nothing can exist by itself. Every existence is the accumulation of numerous causes and
conditions. It teaches that
thse causes and conditions are temporary and in constant change.
Such being the case, when one of these causes or conditions
changes, the existence itself will change affecting the entire universe
however minute the effect may be. Since
Mahayana Buddhism regards these causes and conditions as one aspect of
eternal life force in motion, the principle further accepts these causes
and conditions to be mutually permeating.
With this principle of causal origination as the background of his
teachings, the Buddha proclaimed his famous statement of impermanence of
all existing things.
Deriving from the above principle of causality, another unique
characteristic of Buddha’s teachings arose.
It is the denial of a permanent individual soul.
Although Buddhism acknowledges the existence of temporary self, it
flatly denies the existence of a permanent soul in a person.
It points out that human beings, like other existing things, are
also the accumulation of series of causes and conditions.
The teaching does not make any exception to the principle of causal
origination.
In place of recognizing the existence of a permanent individual
soul, Buddhism explains the continuity of human life by the teaching of
karma. This teaching
basically explains that all acts of an individual, whether they are
revealed or not, remain in the person as accumulated latent energy.
When the person dies, it is this total latent energy that
formulates another life.
Another important characteristic of Buddhism is the affirmation of
the state beyond the relative impermanent world of causality.
This state is called Nirvana, Dharmakaya, Pure Land, Thusness,
Suchness, “As Isness,” etc. Whatever
expression this state is called, the state of True Reality goes beyond our
relative understanding and imagination.
It is the state, which transcends the understanding of the ordinary
world of duality, the world of subject-object split.
And yet, this True Reality is also recognized as an all-inclusive
state identifying itself with all existence.
This leaves no room for it to be considered as a separate reality.
Such being the nature of the True Reality it then becomes possible
for a person to merge with the Ultimate by transcending the world of
subject-object split by negating the position of self-centeredness.
During the 45 years of his enlightened life, the Buddha devoted his
entire teachings toward instructing his disciples to become aware of the
impermanence of the mundane world and directing them in ways to merge and
be united with the True Reality, the realm where relative terms and
thinking no longer apply.
Although the teachings of the Buddha are all intertwined, they can
be categorized superficially into four ways.
First is the way of practice where seekers try to eliminate
self-centeredness through a series of actual physical and spiritual
activities, such as walking and chanting practices and fasting, etc.
This way is represented by such sects as Tendai, Kegon and Jitsu.
Second is the way to achieve the state of selflessness through a
series of meditations in order to attain True Reality.
Even though the majority of Buddhist sects practice meditation, in
the West it is most commonly represented by the sects of Zen Buddhism.
Third is the way of mysticism.
By the prescribed mystical rituals of body (mudra), speech (dharani)
and thought (yoga), seekers try to realize unification with True Reality.
This method is represented by esoteric Buddhism in the West.
Fourth is the way of the Other Power.
By recognizing the nature of the True Reality to be infinite
compassion and wisdom, this path find release from bondage of
self-centeredness by complete surrendering of self to the True Reality,
which is identified as Amida Buddha.
The path, furthermore, considers the entire process of surrendering
as well as unification to Amida Buddha as the absolute working of the
Buddha. Hence, the term Other
Power is used. This path is
very popular among the lay people of Asian countries, particularly in
China and Japan. In North
America this path is represented by the True Pure Land sects.
Teachings of the Buddha which began 2500 years ago with five
mendicants at Baranasi eventually became the foundation for established
orders called The Buddhist Sangha which attracted thousands of people.
As Buddhism flourished eastward with the spirit of universal love
and compassion, it brought peace and comfort to the people of many
countries. Without coercion
or force of arms, the gentle teachings of the Buddha expanded into many
countries, until today the estimated members of the Sangha number well
over one-fifth of the world’s population. I go the Buddha for guidance
I go
the Dharma for guidance I go to the Sangha for guidance |
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