E N D
1. 1 WEEK 5: INTRODUCTION TO BUDDHISM
DR. DORIS R. JAKOBSH
2. 2 IS BUDDHISM A RELIGION?
NO ‘GOD-NOTION’
NO CREATOR
NO ULTIMATE REALITY TO WORSHIP
3. 3 BUT:
ALLOWING FOR A DIFFERENT VOCABULARY
NON-THEISTIC
THEN BUDDHISM IS A RELIGION
4. 4 ESSENCE:
Buddhism is a way of life
Ethical
Psychological
Philosophy of BECOMING/AWAKENING
5. 5 BUDDHIST ALTARS Do not focus on an archetypal hero
Mother, father image
Rather, a psychological state
Profound meditation
Warm compassion
Fury against illusion
6. Buddha
under
Bodhi
Tree,
Sri
Lanka
7. 7
8. 8
9. 9
10. THAI WALKING BUDDHA10
11. 11
12. 12 1993 CHICAGO PARLIAMENT OF THE WORLD RELIGIONS “The Buddha, the founder of Buddhism, was not God or a god. He was a human being who attained full enlightenment through meditation and showed us the path of spiritual awakening and freedom. Therefore, Buddhism is not a religion of God. Buddhism is a religion of wisdom, enlightenment and compassion. Like the worshippers of God who believe that salvation is available to all through confession of sin and a life a prayer, we Buddhists believe that salvation and enlightenment are available to all through the removal of delusion and a life of meditation/ However, unlike those who believe in God who is separate from us, Buddhists believe that Buddha, which means ‘one who is awake and enlightened’ is inherent in us all as Buddhanature or Buddhamind.”
13. 13 BUDDHA AND ‘ULTIMATE QUESTIONS’
Nature of the soul
Life after death
Origin of the universe
NOT ADDRESSED
14. 14 “BEING RELIGIOUS AND FOLLOWING DHARMA HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH DOGMA THAT THE WORLD IS ETERNAL. FOR WHETHER THE WORLD IS ETERNAL OR OTHERWISE, BIRHT, OLD AGE, DEATH, SORROW, PAIN, MISERY, GRIEF AND DESPAIR EXIST. I AM CONCERNED WITH THE EXTINCTION OF THESE.”
15. ANALOGY:
BUDDHA TEACHINGS = RAFT
SHORE = NIRVANA
BUT: THE SHORE IS NOT DESCRIBED
MAKE-UP OF RAFT IS THE BUDDHA’S TEACHINGS
16. DEER PARK SERMON Four
Noble
Truths
‘Middle
Way’
17. “THERE ARE 2 EXTREMES, MONKS, WHICH ARE TO BE AVOIDED. WHAT ARE THESE 2 EXTREMES? A LIFE GIVEN TO PLEASURES, DEDICATED TO PLEASURES AND LUSTS – THIS IS DEGRADING, SENSUAL, VULGAR, UNWORTHY AND USELESS. AND A LIFE GIVEN TO SELF-TORTURE – THIS IS PAINFUL, UNWORTHY, AND USELESS.BY AVOIDING THESE 2 EXTREMES, MONKS, I HAVE GAINED THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE MIDDLE PATH, WHICH LEADS TO INSIGHT, WHICH LEADS TO WISDOM, WHICH PRODUCES CALM, KNOWLEDGE, ENLIGHTENMENT AND NIRVANA.”
18. 18 FIRST NOBLE TRUTH: LIFE INEVITABLY INVOLVES SUFFERING:
Imperfect
Illness
Hateful
Separation
19. 19 SECOND NOBLE TRUTH: THE ORIGIN OF SUFFERING IS OUR DESIRES:
Grasping for pleasure
Grasping for becoming
Grasping for sensual delight
Grasping for what we don’t have
20. 20 THIRD NOBLE TRUTH: SUFFERING WILL STOP WHEN DESIRES ARE STOPPED:
When the ‘grasping’ stops
Elimination of passions
21. 21 FOURTH NOBLE TRUTH:
THERE IS A WAY TO GET TO THIS POINT: THE EIGHTFOLD PATH
22. 22 1) RIGHT UNDERSTANDING
Understanding reality through the Four Noble Truths
Seeing through illusions
23. 23 2) RIGHT THOUGHT/MOTIVES
Uncover ‘unwholesome’ emotional roots that guide our thinking
Discover and weed out
Only then do we become free from self-centredness
24. 24 3) RIGHT SPEECH
VS. - Vain talk, gossip, harsh words, lying
Communication must further truth and harmony
Including ‘self-talk’: “May you be well and happy today…”
25. 4) RIGHT ACTION FIVE RULES OF MORAL CONDUCT:
DO NOT DESTROY LIFE
DO NOT STEAL
AVOID SEXUAL MISCONDUCT
DO NOT LIE
DO NOT USE INTOXICANTS
ABOVE ALL: ALL ACTIONS SHOULD BE BASED ON CLEAR UNDERSTANDING
26. MONKEYS TAKE CARE OF THE TREES, STORY
27. 27 5) RIGHT LIVELIHOOD
How one makes their living
One’s work should not harm others
28. 28 6) RIGHT EFFORT
Refers to the constant effort that must be put into achieving these goals
IT TAKES EFFORT!
29. 7) RIGHT MINDFULNESS The way to liberation is through the mind
“CHECK YOUR MIND
BE ON GUARD
PULL YOURSELF OUT
LIKE AN ELEPHANT FROM THE MUD.”
30. 8) RIGHT MEDITATION Applying mental discipline to quiet the mind
THE MIND IS SUBTLE, INVISIBLE, AND TREACHEROUS
USE SKILFUL MEANS TO SEE AND UNDERSTAND ITS NATURE
31. 31 KARMA: CAUSE OF NEXT LIFE = KARMA
32. 32 ANATMAN, SKANDHAS
ANATMAN - No soul to be reborn; no permanent reality
SKANDHAS – aggregates
33. 33 KARMA: ANALOGY Candle analogy
Domino analogy
34. 34 SAMSARA
Worldly phenomena
Life, suffering, decay, death, painful rebirth
35. 35 NIRVANA “No suffering for him
Who is free from sorrow
Free from the fetters of life
Free in everything he does
He has reached the end of his road…
Like a bird invisibly flying in the sky
He lives without possessions
Knowledge his food, freedom his world
While others wonder…
He has found freedom –
Peaceful his thinking, peaceful his speech
Peaceful his deed, tranquil his mind.”
36. 36 Anuradhapura, Sri Lankan Stupa
37. 37 TIBETAN CHORTEN/STUPA
38. 38 MAITREYA BUDDHA/FUTURE, UNIVERSAL BUDDHA
39. 39 SAMGHA: ORIGINS
(samgha = community/followers)
Initially samgha = 5 ascetics
Set in motion the ‘wheel of dharma/dhamma’
ANYONE could be part of the Buddha’s group
40. 10 PRECEPTS Refrain from taking life (ahimsa)
Do not take what is not given
Chastity
Do not lie or deceive
Do not take intoxicants
Consume food in moderation; never after noon
Do not partake in public spectacles (dancing, singing)
Do not ornament your body
Do not recline on wide or high beds
Do not accept gold or silver
41. 41 MONASTICS VS LAY PEOPLE
ONLY FIRST FIVE PRECEPTS FOR LAY FOLLOWERS
ALL TEN FOR MONKS AND NUNS
42. 42 THE ‘ORDER’ AND WOMEN
Women included since time of Buddha
YET, some hesitation
Lesser order
Different, subordinate rules guiding them
43. 43 THREE JEWELS/THREE REFUGES
I TAKE REFUGE IN THE BUDDHA
I TAKE REFUGE IN THE DHARMA
I TAKE REFUGE IN THE SAMGHA
44. 44
“Come, bhiksu/bhikhuni (monk, nun)”
45. 45 WHAT CONSTITUTES THE SAMGHA? WHO IS ‘WORTHY’?
Order of monks and nuns came to be viewed as ‘ideal’
Laypeople came to be viewed as the inferior way
LED TO MAHAYANA AND THERAVADA DIVISION