Religion Posts
Archives
@religionblogger
religionblogger

  • My new Twitter handle is now live - check me out at @jackiewgibson!

  • CNN has posted a history of bias against Sikhs - more reason for people to learn about religions before they attack anyone:...

  • Sikh temple shooting unfolding, learn about Sikhism here: http://t.co/A0ltLLIm

  • Sikh temple shooting unfolding, learn about Sikhism here: http://t.co/l3KrAJZf

  • Hackers group Anonymous takes down Vatican website: http://t.co/B6lbGAVp

  • WGN-TV calls doomsday prophecies "an illusion": http://t.co/mv8Gzyw7

  • RT @graceishuman: Really,? Asking people JUST LEAVING the service how they felt about it? Tacky, tacky, inappropriate

  • Whitney Houston's funeral service really took the world to church. Love Pastor Winans' honesty, very moving.

  • #teacher ? Here are appropriate responses to situations with your Jehovah's Witness student: http://t.co/A6UfqcgH

  • #Teachers: Want to know why your Jehovah's Witness student won't say the pledge and how to respond? http://t.co/EIdlgDwW

Translator
English flagItalian flagKorean flagChinese (Simplified) flagPortuguese flagGerman flagFrench flagSpanish flagJapanese flagArabic flag
Russian flagGreek flagDutch flagBulgarian flagCzech flagCroatian flagDanish flagFinnish flagHindi flagPolish flag
Romanian flagSwedish flagNorwegian flagCatalan flagFilipino flagHebrew flagIndonesian flagLatvian flagLithuanian flagSerbian flag
Slovak flagSlovenian flagUkrainian flagVietnamese flag      

The following overview of Buddhism was written by Religion Transcends writer Jackie Walker for the Summer 2008 issue of Relate magazine. Relate’s mission is to inspire teen girls to pursue their dreams with confidence and to teach them to be an example for others in their speech, life, love, faith and purity. Religion overviews may have Christian overtones to make the content relatable for the Christian teen audience.

 

He was a round, bald man, swathed in a delicate robe and usually depicted laughing and holding food or possessions. But the Buddha wasn’t always so rotund. Though portions of his life were filled with comforts, other times found him leading the life of an ascetic, one who denies himself material possessions. Eventually, that simple existence led him to discover a way out of the cycle of suffering and death – and to start a worldwide religion. So who was this man who sparked a following? And what do his followers believe?

 

The life of Buddha

In 563 B.C. in northern India, a royal couple gave birth to a son they named Siddartha Guatama. He lived a life of luxury, enjoying three palaces, a wife, and a son. According to legend, after seeing four people alongside a road, ill or dead, he began to ponder suffering. Kissing his family goodbye, he set out to find a way to eliminate suffering. After studying Hinduism, he began to live the life of an ascetic. At one point, he was eating only one grain of rice a day. Skinny and weak, he realized extreme asceticism would not relieve his suffering either.

 

One day he began meditating under a tree in Bodh Gaya, India. There he achieved a “Great Awakening,” where it is said the earth shook and he was moved into a state of bliss, suddenly understanding the universe and its cycle of suffering. Once able to eliminate what led to his suffering, he became “enlightened” or freed from the cycle of death. In that state, he took the name of “Buddha” (“enlightened one”) and began a ministry that lasted 45 years until his death at the age of 80.

 

A religion is born

Buddha gained a following soon after his enlightenment. Today, that following has grown to 365 million people, making Buddhism the fourth largest religion in the world (after Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism). Most Buddhist beliefs can be found in the Tripitaka, three sacred texts that together are 11 times the size of the Bible.

 

Many Buddhist beliefs stem from four ideas Buddha obtained during his own path to enlightenment; these are called the Four Noble Truths:

  1. Life is suffering.
  2. Suffering is caused by attachment or desire for something.
  3. One can end suffering by overcoming craving, thus reaching nirvana.
  4.  One must follow an eight-fold path in order to achieve nirvana or enlightenment.

 The Eight-Fold Path is a treatment path that requires discipline:

  1. Right belief
  2. Right intention
  3. Right speech
  4. Right behavior
  5. Right occupation (choosing a livelihood that allows you to seek enlightenment)
  6. Right effort
  7. Right mindfulness (being aware of what you want to achieve)
  8. Right concentration

 Other beliefs include the following:

  • Rebirth: Your “self” is reborn, or reincarnated, into a new person after your death.
  • God: There is no higher power. Each person must find relief from suffering on her own.
  • Karma: Good actions create good consequences, and bad actions cause negative consequences.

Divisions and developments

These basic beliefs may differ by group or place. Just as there are denominations in Christianity, there are also several divisions in Buddhism.

 

Theravada Buddhism is mostly found in Southeast Asia. It is mainly restricted to monks who wear robes and shave their heads. Some consider it to be more conservative, focusing on discipline, strict rules, and asceticism (denying themselves life’s pleasures, just as Guatama Buddha did). Mahayana Buddhism is found mostly in Northern Asia and is open to all people. Its followers believe in compassion and devotion to the Buddha. Here, Guatama Buddha is seen as more divine and may be worshipped in some way. In Vajrayana Buddhism, chanting and rituals seem to be the most important practices, and some Vajrayana Buddhists believe in a spirit world.

 

As Buddhism spread through different parts of Asia, it took on some of the cultural practices of those countries, creating further divisions. Zen Buddhism traces its roots to China and Japan; it focuses on discipline and meditation and suggests that anyone could obtain enlightenment suddenly, out of nowhere. Tibetan Buddhism developed in India and Tibet. Its leader is called the Dalai Lama (“wisdom teacher”) and serves as both Tibet’s head of state and as its spiritual leader. However, it is important to note that Tibet is under Chinese rule and that, after attempting to overthrow the Chinese government in 1959, the Dalai Lama was exiled to Dharamsala, India, where he still lives today.

 

To learn more about the Dalai Lama, visit www.dalailama.com. To learn about some of the differences between Christianity and Buddhism, check out The Lotus and the Cross by Ravi K. Zacharias. Find news and holiday information related to Buddhism on ReligionTranscends.com.

 

Copyright 2009, Religion Transcends.

Be Sociable, Share!

Leave a Reply