Gautama The Buddha, The Enlightened One: 1. 2. Family Name of Prophet: 3. Holy Name: 4. Name For God

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Gautama The Buddha, The Enlightened One


1. Buddhism.
Date: Around 570 BC.

2. Family name of Prophet:


Siddartha Gautama.

3. Holy Name:
The Buddha, The Enlightened One.

4. Name For God:


The Promised One: Maitreya Buddha, Amitabha
“Source of Wisdom, Unbounded Light.

While not much is known about the earliest forms of Buddhism, it seems the earliest followers
believed that there was only the one Buddha and that no more would follow. Soon, however, a
doctrine of the Maitreya , or "Future Buddha," began to assert itself. In this, Buddhists believed
that a second Buddha would come and purify the world; they also believed that the first Buddha
prophesied this future Buddha.

5. Birth Legends and Life:


He was the chief's son of a tribal group, the Shakyas, so he was born a Kshatriya. At the age of
twenty-nine, he left his family in order to lead an ascetic life. A few years later he reappears with a
number of followers; he and his followers devote their lives to "The Middle Way," a lifestyle that
is midway between a completely ascetic lifestyle and one that is world-devoted. At some point he
gained "enlightenment" and began to preach this new philosophy in the region of Bihar and Uttar
Kadesh.

His teaching lasted for several decades and he perished at a very old age, somewhere in his
eighties

6. Manner of Revelation:
Unknown: But (see above) Gautama leaves his home, recieves “enlightenment” and reappares
with discuples.
This same outline (from the perspective of the homeland) can be seen in the stories of Abraham,
Zoroaster, Moses, Jesus, Mohammed etc.
7. Revealed Book:
Tripitaka “Three Baskets”.
While Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, spent several decades teaching, none of his teachings
were written down until several hundred years later. In the third century, Asoka, the great Mauryan
emperor, converted to Buddhism and began to sponsor several monasteries throughout the country.
He even sent missionaries out to various countries both east and west. During his reign, the
teachings of Buddha spread all across India and Sri Lanka.

Disturbed by the prolific growth of Buddhist heresies, a council of Buddhist monks was convened
at the Mauryan capital of Patna during the third century BC to purify the doctrine. What arose
from that council, more or less, were the definitive teachings of Theravada Buddhism.

When the teachings of Buddha were finally written into a canon,


This canon is called the Tripitaka, or "Three Baskets," for it is divided into three parts, the Vinaya
, or "Conduct," the Sutta , or "Discourses," and the Abhidhamma , or "Supplementary Doctrines."

The second part, the "Discourses," are the most important in Buddhism. These are discourses by
the Buddha and contain the whole of Buddhist philosophy and morality. . Therevada Buddhism
holds that Buddha was a historical person who, on his death, ceased to exist. There were, however,
strong tendencies for Buddhists to worship Buddha as a god of some sort; these tendencies
probably began as early as Buddha's lifetime.

The Mahayanists developed a theology of Buddha called the doctrine of "The Three Bodies," or
Trikaya. The Buddha was not a human being, as he was in Theravada Buddhism, but the
manifestation of a universal, spiritual Being. This Being had three bodies. When it occupied the
earth in the form of Siddhartha Gautama, it took on the Body of Magical Transformation
(nirmanakaya ). This Body of Magical Transformation was an emanation of the Body of Bliss
(sambhogakaya ), which occupies the heavens in the form of a ruling and governing God of the
universe.

There are many forms of the Body of Bliss, but the one that rules over our world is Amithaba who
lives in a paradise in the western heavens called Sukhavati, or "Land of Pure Bliss." Finally, the
Body of Bliss is an emanation of the Body of Essence (dharmakaya ), which is the principle
underlying the whole of the universe. This Body of Essence, the principle and rule of the universe,
became synonymous with Nirvana . It was a kind of universal soul, and Nirvana became the
transcendent joining with this universal soul.

(Note: the resemblence of Asoka to Constantine in Christian history.)


6. Basic Teachings:
The Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path.
.
The Basics of Buddhist Wisdom
Dr. C. George Boeree
Shippensburg University

The Four Noble Truths

1. Life is suffering;

2. Suffering is due to attachment;

3. Attachment can be overcome;

4. There is a path for accomplishing this.

1. Suffering is perhaps the most common translation for the Sanskrit


word duhkha, which can also be translated as imperfect, stressful, or
filled with anguish.

Contributing to the anguish is anitya -- the fact that all things are
impermanent, including living things like ourselves.

Furthermore, there is the concept of anatman -- literally, "no soul".


Anatman means that all things are interconnected and interdependent, so
that no thing -- including ourselves -- has a separate existence.

2. Attachment is a common translation for the word trishna, which literally means thirst and is
also translated as desire, clinging, greed, craving, or lust. Because we and the world are imperfect,
impermanent, and not separate, we are forever "clinging" to things, each other, and ourselves, in a
mistaken effort at permanence.

Besides trishna, there is dvesha, which means avoidance or hatred. Hatred is its own kind of
clinging.

The Eightfold Path

1. Right view is the true understanding of the four noble truths.

2. Right aspiration is the true desire to free oneself from attachment, ignorance, and hatefulness.

These two are referred to as prajña, or wisdom.


3. Right speech involves abstaining from lying, gossiping, or hurtful talk.

4. Right action involves abstaining from hurtful behaviors, such as killing, stealing, and careless
sex.

5. Right livelihood means making your living in such a way as to avoid dishonesty and hurting
others, including animals.

These three are refered to as shila, or morality.

6. Right effort is a matter of exerting oneself in regards to the content of one's mind: Bad qualities
should be abandoned and prevented from arising again; Good qualities should be enacted and
nurtured.

7. Right mindfulness is the focusing of one's attention on one's body, feelings, thoughts, and
consciousness in such a way as to overcome craving, hatred, and ignorance.

8. Right concentration is meditating in such a way as to progressively realize a true


understanding of imperfection, impermanence, and non-separateness.

The last three are known as samadhi, or meditation.

The Kalama Sutta

In the Kalama Sutta, we find the Kalamas, a people of apparently skeptical natures, asking Buddha
for guidance in distinguishing good teachers from bad ones, and proper teachings from evil ones.
The Buddha answers in three parts, which are treasures of wisdom. First, he outlines the criteria
we should use to distinguish good from bad teachers and teachings:

"It is proper for you, Kalamas, to doubt, to be uncertain.... Do not go upon what has been acquired
by repeated hearing; nor upon tradition; nor upon rumor; nor upon what is in a scripture; nor
upon surmise; nor upon an axiom; nor upon specious reasoning; nor upon a bias towards a notion
that has been pondered over; nor upon another's seeming ability; nor upon the consideration, 'The
monk is our teacher....'

"What do you think, Kalamas? Does greed appear in a man for his benefit or harm? Does hate
appear in a man for his benefit or harm? Does delusion appear in a man for his benefit or harm?"
-- "For his harm, venerable sir." -- "Kalamas, being given to greed, hate, and delusion, and being
overwhelmed and vanquished mentally by greed, hate, and delusion, this man takes life, steals,
commits adultery, and tells lies; he prompts another too, to do likewise. Will that be long for his
harm and ill?" -- "Yes, venerable sir...."
"Kalamas, when you yourselves know: 'These things are bad; these things are blamable; these
things are censured by the wise; undertaken and observed, these things lead to harm and ill,'
abandon them. "

Next, Buddha presents The Four Exalted Dwellings or Brahma Vihara:

"The disciple of the Noble Ones, Kalamas, who in this way is devoid of coveting, devoid of ill will,
undeluded, clearly comprehending and mindful, dwells, having pervaded, with the thought of
amity, all corners of the universe; he dwells, having pervaded because of the existence in it of all
living beings, everywhere, the entire world, with the great, exalted, boundless thought of amity that
is free of hate or malice.

"He lives, having pervaded, with the thought of compassion, all corners of the universe; he dwells,
having pervaded because of the existence in it of all living beings, everywhere, the entire world,
with the great, exalted, boundless thought of compassion that is free of hate or malice.

"He lives, having pervaded, with the thought of gladness, all corners of the universe; he dwells,
having pervaded because of the existence in it of all living beings, everywhere, the entire world,
with the great, exalted, boundless thought of gladness that is free of hate or malice.

"He lives, having pervaded, with the thought of equanimity, all corners of the universe; he dwells,
having pervaded because of the existence in it of all living beings, everywhere, the entire world,
with the great, exalted, boundless thought of equanimity that is free of hate or malice.

And finally, Buddha reveals how, no matter what our philosophical orientation, following this path
will lead to happiness, The Four Solaces:

"The disciple of the Noble Ones, Kalamas, who has such a hate-free mind, such a malice-free
mind, such an undefiled mind, and such a purified mind, is one by whom four solaces are found
here and now.

"'Suppose there is a hereafter and there is a fruit, result, of deeds done well or ill. Then it is
possible that at the dissolution of the body after death, I shall arise in the heavenly world, which is
possessed of the state of bliss.' This is the first solace found by him.

"'Suppose there is no hereafter and there is no fruit, no result, of deeds done well or ill. Yet in this
world, here and now, free from hatred, free from malice, safe and sound, and happy, I keep
myself.' This is the second solace found by him.

"'Suppose evil (results) befall an evil-doer. I, however, think of doing evil to no one. Then, how can
ill (results) affect me who do no evil deed?' This is the third solace found by him.

"'Suppose evil (results) do not befall an evil-doer. Then I see myself purified in any case.' This is
the fourth solace found by him.
"The disciple of the Noble Ones, Kalamas, who has such a hate-free mind, such a malice-free
mind, such an undefiled mind, and such a purified mind, is one by whom, here and now, these four
solaces are found."

(quotations adapted from The Anguttara Nikaya 3.65, Soma Thera Trans., emphases added.)

Once again. There is little in Buddhism that one can argue with. Certainly the “Four Noble Truths
and thew “Eightfold Path” agree in essence with teachings of the other Faiths covered in this
website.

The parallel histories of


1. the Emperor Asoka of Mauryan convening a council of Buddhist monks to purify the doctrine
with the resulting canonization of the Tripitaka; and
2. The Emperor Constantine convening a group of bishops to purify Christian doctrine and the
resulting canonization of the Bible, is unmistakable.

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