Prince Siddhartha Gautama was educated
by great scholars. The Vedas and
Upanishads were taught to him. But he
was not satisfied with what he was taught.
He was not satisfied with the suffering being experienced by the people. And he decided to know the truth and find
ways to end suffering, for which he renounced his royal life, and became an
ascetic.
Seated under the Bodhi tree, Siddhartha, as he was
enlightened and became Lord Buddha, discovered three eminent universal truths
that every being possesses three characteristics: (1) Anicca or Annitya -the
impermanence, (2) Anatta -not-self, not having independently existing self
nature, and (3) Dukkha -the suffering arising from un-satisfactoriness on the
state of being. And Lord Buddha said:
“Sabbe Samkhara Anicca
Sabbe Samkhara Dukkha
Sabbe Dhamma Anatta.
All conditioned things are impermanent.
All conditioned things undergo suffering.
All phenomena are not self.”
These three truths are the primordial nature
of phenomenal existence and being part of the phenomenal existence we
inherently live with them.
The Buddha Dharma founded by Lord
Buddha, thought distinct and unique, has umbilical relation with Hindu Dharma
at philosophical level. There are
seamless connections between the philosophical thoughts of Vedas and Upanishads
and the rationales on which Buddha Dharma is grounded.
Lord Buddha built his own independent
ideals and principles for which he went to the depth of all the contemporary
philosophies, and indeed took Upanishads to their culmination state with his
sublime discoveries and teachings.
The teachings of Vedas and Upanishads,
Lord Buddha either rejected or did not take them any further, or modified. Some he accepted and expounded.
At the time when Lord Buddha began
teaching his Dharma, the following beliefs had firm grip on the people’s mind:
1...Vedas and
Upanishads are the divine scriptures,
2...Moktsa –the
liberation of Atma –self, is the ultimate goals of life.
3...Rites,
ceremonies and sacrifices, are the means of attaining Moktsa.
4...Chatur-Varna
–the caste system, was justified that for social existence.
5...God is the
Supreme Being endowed with unlimited opulence, who dwells beyond material world.
6...Atma is the
individual self, and Param Atma -the God, both dwells in the heart of every
being.
7...Brahmn is the
all pervading aspect of God. Its
effulgence spreads through, both material and spiritual worlds, in living
beings and non-living things.
8...Atma
transmigrates in Samsara through rebirth.
9...Karma is the
Natural Law of phenomenal existence. Our
action in past lives determines our status in this present life, and the cycle
continues.
The belief systems which Lord Buddha rejected
were:
1...God created all
that pervades, both living beings and non-living things,
2...God presides as
what should happened to men and the world,
3...Lord Buddha
either denied the existence of Atma –self, or ignored for any further
investigation, but succinctly said what Atma is not. Lord Buddha refrained from
identifying Atma –self, with the body, sensations, volition or consciousness.
4...The caste
system.
The two major antithesis of Lord Buddha are
that there is no God and there is no Atma –self.
With respect to God, Lord Buddha rejected
the idea of the personal aspect of God, and not the Param Atma aspect. Lord Buddha did not refute the idea of Param
Atma, the supreme consciousness that resides in the heart of every being.
Lord Buddha rejected the idea of Atma
-self, considering it as Ego, the personal aspect of being, which is
impermanent.
The belief systems which Lord Buddha modified
are:
1...Doctrine of
Moktsa -the liberation of Atma –self, was replaced by the doctrine of Nirvana
–liberation of mind or peace of mind.
2...Doctrine of Karma. Lord Buddha denied the fatalistic view of
Karma that action of distant past life has the potency to making present life
impotent. Instead Lord Buddha said noble
action of present life can annul bad Karma of past lives and shape present as
well as future.
The belief systems
which Lord Buddha accepted and expounded are:
1...Mind is the
centre of everything.
Mind
precedes things. If mind is comprehended
all things are comprehended.
Mind is the
leader and chief of all its faculties.
The very mind is made of those faculties.
We should
culture our mind and that is the first thing we should be doing.
2...Mind is the fount of all good and evil that arises within and befalls
us from without.
Whatsoever
there is of evil, connected with evil, belonging to evil, all comes out from
the mind.
Whatsoever
there is of good, connected with good, belonging to good, all arise from mind.
If one
speaks or acts with an evil mind, affliction follows as the wheel of cart
following the bullocks that pulls the cart.
Purifying the
mind is the essence of life.
3...Avoiding all sinful acts.
4...Real religion is in the observance of tenets that are there in the
books of religion.
Of all the sages, Lord Buddha was
impressed with sage Kapila, and from his teachings Lord Buddha accepted the
following three truths:
1...Truth must
rest on proof and thinking must be based on rationales,
2...There is no
logical or factual basis for the presumption that God exists or that God
created the universe, and
3...There exists Dukkha
-the suffering, the un-satisfactoriness.
Lord Buddha founded his Dharma on human
anguish, which seeks nothing less than total human emancipation. It serves as total education of human mind
and heart. It unleashes the full human potential
for the universal well being of all, not through doing more of the same, the
same old habit that entrench us in more suffering, but by taking dip into the
deepest seat of our consciousness.
The Four Noble Truths discovered by
Lord Buddha unfolded the insight on suffering.
His doctrine of Middle Way ended all forms of extremism. And his
Eightfold Noble Path provided the way out of suffering.
The Eightfold Noble Truth provided the
basis for moral and ethical disciplines to reach the state of enlightenment
where a profound serenity and un-surpassing peace called Nirvana, is
attained.
Great scholars such as Nagarjuna in 3rd
century, Buddhaghosa in 5th century, and others including
Kamalashila, Shantideva, Atisha, Sakya Pandita, Asanga, Vasubandhu, Asvaghosha,
and several others have expounded the scope of the teachings of Lord Buddha.
A wide range of cosmological views have
been expressed in diverse Buddhist texts which are not always mutually
exclusive but all share the common ground that everyone phenomenal existence possesses
three universal characteristics of existence.
The Dharma founded by Lord Buddha is a
pragmatic and ethical way of living a harmonious life. It has no element of dogmatism. As a philosophy it has two dimensions: (i) metaphysical
and (ii) mystical dimensions.
On the metaphysical aspect, Lord Buddha
refuted the existence of God as an independent eternal primordial entity, sufficient
in itself, without any cause preceding it.
On the mystical dimension, Lord Buddha
advocates the existence of the continuum of consciousness associated with the cycle of birth and
death. It has no beginning and no
end. It is eternal. It can be understood only by contemplative
experience and not by analytical thought.
Buddha Dharma is a path; a way to salvation. It offers mankind a contemplative science
that deals with the basics of overcoming suffering. Based on metaphysics, Lord Buddha taught how to
discover ultimate wisdom within oneself.
And based on mysticism, Lord Buddha says that the goal of life is to be
free from the succession of birth in Samsara but without being dissolved into a
state of extinction.
In essence, Buddha Dharma is an endeavour
for happiness. The Dharma shows the way
to actualize a just society, based on spiritual values. It says the source of happiness is wisdom and
the principal cause of unhappiness is ignorance. Our own happiness is intimately linked to the
happiness of others.
Happiness depends on the degree of
altruism and it prevails when our relationship with others is harmonious. The right relationship of ours with others
provides right assumption and the basis for right human conduct.
The right relationship is possible with
right understanding and with it comes the respect for others. With respect there comes the responsibility
to ensure on others that they also have right understanding.
The right understanding provides self
confidence. And when there is right
relation with others with right understanding, there will be no feeling of oneness,
loving kindness and compassion. There
will be no feeling of deprivation leading to corruption.
By nature, we possess desire. We possess desire to own and accumulate, to
experience, to avoid and we also possess the desire to transcend all the
desires. Broadly we possess two kinds of
desires: material desire and spiritual desire.
It is with the spiritual desire we tend to have right understanding of
ourselves and others, and thereby seek mutual prosperity and happiness. With material desire there will be feeling to
deprivation and the tendency for corruption.
The problem with us is in seeking
happiness through our material desire which only create a feeling of
deprivation and insecurity. We feel
deprived when we do not have right understanding on our material needs. We feel deprived and start exploitation. To free us from the feeling of deprivation
and insecurity Lord Buddha gave his vast teaching on Karma.
In Samsara we wander endlessly, propelled
by our actions, called Karma, the natural law of phenomenal existence to which
we are subjected. It is an active
principle that what we beget is the result of our Karma.
Nothing forces us to born in Samsara,
the world of suffering, except the accumulated merits of our Karma. In Samsara, our existence is sustained by our
ignorance –the mistaken perception, seeking happiness where it is not there,
and permanence in impermanence.
In Samsara the suffering is caused by
being subservience to negative states of mind with wrong motivation. With right motivation the ignorance of
searching happiness where it is not there is overcome.
The Samsara in itself is not bad but
the way we perceive Samsara is wrong. We
should strive for Nirvana -not to be born in Samsara, but not to get out of
Samsara. We should not strive for
disappearing from Samsara, for one cannot disappear from Samsara. But we should no longer be enslaved to Samsara.
Lord Buddha says;
“We are what we think.
All that we are arises with our thoughts.
With our thoughts we make the world.
Speak or act with impure mind,
And trouble will follow you.
Speak or act with pure mind,
And happiness will follow you.
It is man’s own
mind,
not his enemy or foe
that lures him to evil
ways.”
True happiness is experienced with harmonious
relation within and among families, societies and nature. Happiness is in being in a state of harmony
realizing mutual happiness and prosperity. But we continue to seek happiness with
physical facilities and wealth accumulation.
This is ignorance.
For happiness we should have faith in ourselves,
create positive thoughts and visualize success.
The intention and expectation of our action must be firm and clear
before we begin our journey of happiness.
The ultimate human aspiration is to
feel happy. To attain this supreme goal,
we should engage our mind, which precedes everything, and creates our goal and
the way for it.
Buddha Dharma is a profound science of
mind that explains the nature of mind, and provides a solution to cease human
sufferings. In the first two verses of Dhamma-pada,
Lord Buddha declares; “Mind is the forerunner of all states both wholesome and
unwholesome. Mind is the chief, and all
our experiences are mind made.”
In ordinary life, our mind is dictated
by Ego, which forever swings from pleasure to pain and back again. For this reason we remain in Samsara. So long our mind dictated by Ego is our master
and we are ruled by our thoughts emanating from our Ego ridden mind, we
continue to remain in Samsara.
The eternal journey of ours therefore
begins with purifying our mind by getting rid of Ego and making progress in
having our mind just aware and mindful but not touched by pleasure or
pain.
Lord Buddha’s teaching on Buddha Nature
makes us aware of the existence of enlightened potential within us. It provides a platform for creative
visualization and affirmation of the way to success.
The existence of Buddha Nature in us is
an attribute of our mind. We should
visualise our goal so intensely that our subconscious mind believes it is
possible. Affirmation at that state of
mind gives emotional strength. This law
of attraction has infinite potential.
To realize Buddha Nature we need Bodhi
Citta –the emotional feeling of goodwill for others, the positive attitude and behavior that shun
negative thoughts that harm self and other beings alike. We should detach our mind from sense objects with
spiritual practice and reach out to our goal with our mind.
Buddha Dharma is a method to work with mind
and spirit for not to dissolve into some state of extinction, but to discover ultimate
wisdom within oneself for living a noble life.
Positive thought creates positive
attitude. The negative thought creates
the world of conflict, disharmony and suffering. Those who have conquered their mind; mind is
their best friend and teacher. But those
who have failed to do so continue to suffer in Samsara.
Buddha Dharma is a way of living a
righteous way of life with right thought and doing noble deed. It is a path and the ultimate goal of that path
is to alleviate suffering of all beings equally.
Lord Buddha gave his sublime teaching
wishing us to be in right path living a moral and ethical life sharing human
values with all alike.
The problem with us is that we believe
in every small and big thought that comes out, hopping, wishing, worrying,
arguing, justifying, imploring, and celebrating. Life passes on and we are not making real progress
in our life.
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