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Least Favorite Buddha Sayings and Sutras?
Comments
as for the claims that only a handful have made it that far, and that an arahant is a buddha, let me quote a well known theravada site...
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/bullitt/bfaq.html#maitreya
"According to Theravada tradition, many Buddhas have come and gone over countless eons"
"Some of a Buddha's followers may themselves become arahants, but they are not Buddhas, because they required a Buddha to show them the way to Awakening. (All Buddhas and paccekabuddhas are arahants, but not all arahants are Buddhas or paccekabuddhas)"
Now I see why people think Buddha is parallel to a God in Mahayana tradition. The Buddha and the Arahants are differed solely by method of attainment and ability to deliver the teachings. They are all liberated from Samsara, and thusly gone. The Buddha was human, endowed with the greatest psychic powers (like in the Kevatta Sutta). The body and mind (the five khandhas) of a Buddha are impermanent and changing, just like the body and mind of ordinary people. However, a Buddha recognizes the unchanging nature of the Dharma, which is an eternal principle and an unconditioned and timeless phenomenon.
This implies that Nirvana is impermanent or even suffering, it is not, Nirvana is peace.
Well that makes no sense, because it implies that Buddhahood itself is impermanent or suffering or ruled by desire or attachment to Samadhi. it is not.
I don't know about that, it implies Shakyamuni isn't thusly gone. I don't think that's true, but I would have to prove it, and I cannot.
So it claims that Shakyamuni is still afflicted?! It doesn't seem to make much sense with respect to the 3 marks of existence.
Right.... I'm confused about that. Is he the Buddha or is he not? Is he free from suffering or not?
I am curious now.
Because you love me so much?
True :thumbsup:
This only is in reference to the sasana(religion) being impermanent, but Nirvana is ultimately peace. Once you're gone, you're gone. You don't come back. Once you don't come back you don't come back. Samsara is defeated. Like I said before, the difference is how Nirvana is attained, and whether one can deliver the teachings before one is gone(parinirvana).
He's not saying they aren't Buddhas, just that they're not like Shakyamuni (Samyaksambuddha) because it mentions in the next sentence Sasana (the message) so as not to get people to think that just because the message is out doesn't mean that the message lasts forever. It will keep being delivered by Buddhas who attain realization after Shakyamuni Buddha's teachings are gone. They will then keep being delivered until all people are thusly gone.
When did I say that? I am quite aware I stand on the shoulders of giants, but I can say in some cases they might be mistaken. Like for the Dalai Lama in particular, since you mentioned him, I'm going to say the way he approached the Shugden situation could have been done differently, and he hurt the Karmapa school with his words and actions, and also the whole Tibetan Theocracy before (if he really believes he's the reincarnated versions of his predecessors) was cruel and had slavery. I will be a critic of any teachings I find unsound, and any teacher if I see fit.
That's not really necessary, and I don't want to. I will however disagree freely and point out what makes no sense.
This is how I understand it, but I'm no scholar so bear with me. Using the metaphor, one does not refuse any medicine. I believe it is a misunderstanding to say that one wants to become a Samyaksambuddha instead of an arahant because arahat attainment is simply one of the steps to becoming a Samyaksambuddha. One takes the medicine with the intent of becoming a doctor, that is not sick, for the purposes of giving the medicine to all others, curing all others. Being cured and not becoming a doctor is not an option. According to Mahayana, an arahat is one who gets the cure and leaves. In Mahayana one does not aspire to become an arahat because one never has any intention of leaving to begin with.
Wikipedia has a good description the Mahayana view:
Mahāyāna Buddhists see the Buddha himself as the ideal towards which one should aim in one's spiritual aspirations. In Mahāyāna Buddhism, a hierarchy of general attainments is envisioned, with the attainments of arhats and pratyekabuddha being clearly separate, and below that of fully-enlightened buddhas (Skt. samyaksaṃbuddha), or tathāgatas, such as Gautama Buddha.<sup id="cite_ref-Williams.2C_Paul_2004._p._119_12-0" class="reference">[13]</sup>
In contrast to the goal of becoming a fully-enlightened buddha, the path of a śrāvaka in being motivated by seeking personal liberation from saṃsāra, is often portrayed as selfish and undesirable.<sup id="cite_ref-13" class="reference">[14]</sup> There are even some Mahāyāna texts that regard the aspiration to arhatship and personal liberation as an outside path.<sup id="cite_ref-14" class="reference">[15]</sup> Instead of aspiring for arhatship, Mahāyāna Buddhists are urged to instead take up the path of a bodhisattva, and to not fall back to the level of arhats and śrāvakas.<sup id="cite_ref-Williams.2C_Paul_2004._p._119_12-1" class="reference">[13]</sup> Therefore, it is taught that an arhat must go on to become a bodhisattva eventually. If they fail to do so in the lifetime in which they reach the attainment, they will fall into a deep samādhi of emptiness, thence to be roused and taught the bodhisattva path, presumably when ready. According to the Lotus Sūtra (Skt. Saddharmapuṇḍarīka Sūtra), any true arhat will eventually accept the Mahāyāna path.<sup id="cite_ref-15" class="reference">[16]
</sup>The Mahāyāna teachings often consider the śrāvaka path to be motivated by fear of saṃsāra, which renders them incapable of aspiring to buddhahood, and that they therefore lack the courage and wisdom of a bodhisattva.<sup id="cite_ref-Williams.2C_Paul_2004._p._120_16-0" class="reference">[17]</sup> Novice bodhisattvas are compared to śrāvakas and arhats at times. In the Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra, there is an account of 60 novice bodhisattvas who attain arhatship despite themselves and their efforts at the bodhisattva path, because they lacked ability in prajñā-pāramitā and skillful means to progress as bodhisattvas toward complete enlightenment (Skt. Anuttarā Samyaksaṃbodhi). This is because they are still viewed as having innate attachment and fear of saṃsāra. The Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra compares these people to a giant bird without wings that cannot help but plummet to the earth from the top of Mount Sumeru.<sup id="cite_ref-Williams.2C_Paul_2004._p._120_16-1" class="reference">[17]</sup>
I don't think that is the case. There is still work to do because other beings have yet to attain nirvana, not because peace has not been found for oneself.
I kind of understand what you're getting at but once a person becomes a Buddha they do not come back to Samsara, nor do they need to, because until the time of Maitreya there will be no need for another Buddha until the next decline of the Dharma etc. ad infinitum.
Of course if your goal is that you want to be born in Tushita heavens so you can try and be reborn as a human to become a Samyaksambuddha in a human birth so that you can guide people in the same path as you, my main problem with that idea is it implies that you think that others haven't attained Buddhahood yet which may be a mistaken view due to fear of abandonment.
And if you want to help people attain Nirvana, you can do that in this life by teaching and disseminating the Dharma. To become a Samyaksambuddha is just unnecessary right now because the Dharma is still being disseminated, and not forgotten. You are helping people attain Nirvana by becoming an Arahant, and to become attached to Samsara is counterproductive to the goal. :rolleyes:
Once you receive the cure, you cannot go back. That's what makes enlightenment, enlightenment. You don't go back to Samsara, ever, because you've no fetters left to bind you there.
That's wonderful, but you're also aware of how many Kalpas one has to live through to see the Dharma decline? Especially when the Sangha actually keep teaching it? to try and become a Samyaksambuddha and delay nirvana might be completely unnecessary. Everyone might already be free already, but we're stuck here in a deluded state of mind with the idea that others haven't. And I mean this doesn't even include the fact that all things in Tushita Heavens decline, die, get sick etc. The shifting of the aggregates are not friendly to a person in Samsara, and Karma, not Boddhisattvahood ties a person to samsara, even in the Tushita Heavens.
I don't know about that vision of hierarchy, or how it helps attainment for others, but all people who exit Samsara don't come back because they have achieved Buddhahood (albeit in different ways) they still don't have any of the mental impurities or fetters that tie a person to samsara. The only way to stay stuck to samsara is to willfully choose to ignore a fetter holding you back.
You do know tathāgata is a title for an Arahant right?
As I said before, a person who refuses the medicine, that the doctor gave them and demands to be sick until everyone becomes a doctor isn't considering the possibility that they might be the only one refusing the medicine.
But it is the only path the Buddha taught. The only way to be unaffected by it is to not hear it or to ignore it.
This implies there is a fall when it might not be there.
They cannot, because there's no way back to samsara. It's like choosing to go back to sleep when you're already awakened.
Okay, I don't think so, because it doesn't seem to add up.
I don't think so. There's no reason to fear Samasara. There is no courage or wisdom lacking because to become a śrāvaka you release fear and anxiety for equanimity. There's nothing to hold them back.
Okay, again I contest the idea that there's a hierarchy of awakening. There's being awake, and not being awake.
I think that's unfounded because there's no attachment an Arahant has left. There's nothing left to fear. Not even Samsara.
I agree with that, and as I said, there's no attachment left in an Arahant, also no samsara to fear. Samsara is a fragile bubble created by one's own clouds of ignorance. It clouds a person's eyes so they can't see what is in front of them. Dependent origination shows that once that cessation is completed the ignorance abates.
The only difference is how a person attained their enlightenment and ability to teach before being thusly gone. While the Samyaksambuddha is certainly an aspiration one might crave, it is a craving better abandoned, so one doesn't crave for immaterial existence. See craving to be better than a Śrāvakabuddha when you live in the time of the dissemination of the Dharma is craving for immaterial existence. You will get your wish, but it's unnecessary. Imagine for a moment if all sentient beings are Śrāvakabuddha for a moment. What would be the purpose then of becoming a Samyaksambuddha other than craving for immaterial attainments?
What you need to understand is that Mahayana has a different conception of buddhahood and what a Buddha is capable of doing; and, to steal a phrase from tiltbillings, "The Mahayana does not get to define the Theravada for Theravadins any more than the Theravada gets to define the Mahayana for Mahayanists."
In Mahayana, there's nothing stopping a Buddha from 'popping back' into samsara, especially considering that, for them, the distinction between samsara and nirvana is little more than an illusion when viewed from the ultimate standpoint of the Dharmakaya. Moreover, their conception of causality allows for the continuation of the mindstream after the breakup of the body. As Namdrol from E-Sangha once explained it to me:
In other words, not only does bodhicitta act as a cause to help keep a bodhisattva on the path to buddhahood throughout their innumerable lives, it acts as a positive, non-afflictive cause for the continuation of the enlightened being/mindstream as well. And this is perfectly logical and consistent within Mahayana's own understanding of itself, which includes certain terms that Theravada understands differently.
For example, the Theravada standpoint is that the cause of said mindstream (as well as the body) is kamma, both skillful and unskillful, although I'm not entirely sure if this corresponds to afflictive and non-afflictive in Mahayana. Nevertheless, in the Pali Canon, the noble eightfold path is said to be the kamma that leads to the ending of kamma (AN 4.235).
When it comes to the standard explanation of why the mind and body don't [always] cease with that attainment of nirvana, it's said that as long as the lifespan of the aggregates isn't completely exhausted — which itself depends upon the amount of input remaining from past kamma — the mind and body of an arahant will continue. When this input from past kamma is exhausted, there's said to be complete cessation of both mind and body.
A Mahayanaist would probably disagree with this in an ultimate sense, saying that this is only how it appears from the point of view of samsara (think relativity here), but not from the point of view of high-level Bodhisattvas and fully enlightened Buddhas. Whether or not we agree with this is irrelevant, however, since neither tradition is the arbiter of all things Buddhist. The best we can do is agree to disagree.
That doesn't mean we can't be critical of certain ideas or have inter-tradition debates, but it does mean that nobody can really 'win' such debates as each side is logically consistent within itself, and it all depends on what you take as the basis for your views. It's entirely possible that a person who accepts the commentarial literature in Theravada as authoritative can have serious disagreements with someone who only accepts the Suttas, so just imagine the amount of disagreement possible with someone who also accepts an additional collection of teachings that lies outside of Theravada altogether.
That's why I tend to look beyond these debates and focus instead on other criteria for choosing what to accept as the basis for my views, things such as archeology, scholarly opinion, textual analysis, etc. I'm just as liable to reject the majority of the Theravadin commentarial literature as I am the majority of Sanskrit sutras.
That doesn't mean, however, that I don't find things in each I like, admire or even adopt when I think they're beneficial; and it certainly doesn't stop me from trying to understand where other traditions are coming from in order to see past our differences.
Just look at all the good Jesus did, all the compassion he taught. Karma is shared, passed on, belonging to all (and to none). Any single bit of self, of separate identity, confounds true understanding of the Dharma, and distorts it. We are the ones that are burying the Buddha's teachings. There is common ground and truth in all of the Buddhist schools, but we're clinging in the worst way.
With that, I'm out.
Theravada vs Mahayana debate = not buddhism.
I forgot to mention that apparently the mere remembrance of dharma in bardo causes instant enlightenment, allegedly.
Ch'an_noob,
"A pious man is one who would be an atheist if the king were." - Jean de la Bruyere
"He that has satisfied his thirst turns his back on the well." - Baltasar Gracian
"Growth demands a temporary surrender of security." - Gail Sheehy
IT'S NOT THE SAME AS TO SAY YOU CAN SLANDER BUDDHA'S TEACHINGS.
This is the reason why Buddha considered entering Nirvana after his enlightenment because he is worry people will mis-interpret or mis-understand his teachings and cause themselves and other people great karmic harm with slandering.
Now with all the information all over the internet where people can access everything without a teacher guiding you this danger is even greater.
By saying things like you dislike certain sutras means your contemplating the Buddha might be/is wrong. That is very foolishly harming yourself. For Buddha is not wrong with anything he taught, it's different people's capacity to understand the teachings thats the problem.
Valois
Your attitude is all too common even historically when the "Sudden enlightening" school is flourishing in China. Again, people who "suddenly" awaken is not because they have heard something "powerful" it's more because they are deeply rooted in the dharma from cultivation for a long time. Thus chan masters knows when to give their mind the extra push to understand. Such as reading the diamond sutra etc.
Infact, alot of teachers who stop student from reading any sutras etc for a long time because excessive knowledge is useless knowledge that will just increase one's ego and views, thus making the mind more stubborn and less likely to get enlightened.
If everyone read historical Chan stories carefully. Most accomplished Chan masters were very well disciplined for a long time before allowed to learn any buddhist theories.
Anyway, this is warning is said for the good of every new and keen practitioner on here!
DO NOT SLANDER BUDDHIST SUTRAS OR THEORIES PRESENTED BY THE BUDDHA! If you believe in karma it's wise to heed this!
All the teachings were recordings of the words of Buddha, hence any suggestions they were "wrong" or "inferior" is a slander.
This is just something my teacher have emphosised and it has been written on sutras many times. I can't say nothing when practitioners insist on treading dangerous path.
Buddha said no word ever; to say otherwise is to slander him. See, Surangama.
I feel that this discussion is not conducive to generating loving-kindness and will only lead to confusion, suffering, and discontent. I love you Ch'an, and I hope that none of my statements have offended your beliefs.
To conclude I also live right near the bible belt and have learned to be weary of blind faith. If I be engulfed in Avici like Devadatta then so be it, I have no regrets. @Talisman, you're right and I personally apologize, I'm a weaker man than you!
I agree with my teacher's methods, hence restrict myself access to the information available on the internet. I also do not seek other philosphical views outside of what I am studying right now. I will indeed read much more widely in the future, but not until my mind is more stable so as not to cause unneccsary confusion to my practice.
There is only ONE Sammasambuddha in our world system, namely, Siddharta Gotama.
A Sammasambuddha is the human being that attains full enlightenment via their own efforts, without a teacher, when there is no supramundane Dhamma is the world and then starts the Buddhist religion.
The Buddha said here the founder of Buddhism cannot be a woman, that is all.
Kind regards
The life force of a human body can be ended via a knife, gun, poison, suffocation, disease or old age. These are physical causes rather than karmic.
The Theravada suttas do not say there is a mindstream let alone the cause of a mindstream.
The Pali suttas certainly advise the noble eightfold path is the kamma that leads to the ending of kamma but kamma here merely is reaping a result of kamma that results in suffering. The kamma that leads to the ending of kamma means the 'doer' ends; 'self-identity' ends, so there is no 'doer' or 'reaper' of kamma. The kamma that ends kamma has nothing to do with ending a mindstream.
It is wise to distinguish between worldly Buddhist religions (such as Mahavihara populist Buddhism) & Buddha vacca (sayings) from the suttas.
This can be compared to popular teachings of Christianity when compared to the actual sayings of Jesus.
In this regard, Buddhism is not different from Christianity.
There are the sayings in the scriptures of Buddha & Christ and then there is what common people & priests believe.
Best wishes
For those uninstructed on the reality of mind, the Buddha provided the following discourse aptly named: Assutava Sutta: Uninstructed
The "being" referred to is a mental concept of identification. It is not a psycho-physical organism.
As for vinnanasota, in the sense you, Tiltbilling, Namdrol, Bodhi & Buddhaghosa are implying, it is alien to the suttas.
Countless suttas state consciousness is impermanent & the arising and passing of consciousness has been discerned.
The suttas state all conditioned things are impermanent and every form of consciousness is an impermanent conditioned thing.
Further, there are six classes of consciousness and no such thing as simple single consciousness.
Also, the suttas have standards and if a term is found in one sutta but contradictory to the many others suttas, it is not Buddhavaca.
I can only suggest you learn about more about the history of the DN.
There are aspects of the DN which are in complete contradiction to the rest of the suttas.
As for your words "I don't think it's a stretch to say that kamma is at least one of the causes or nutriments for the stream of consciousness", these make no sense at all.
Consciousness is sense awareness that functions with the sense organs. That the mind is conscious of a form via the eye, sound via the ear, etc, is unrelated to kamma.
It follows it is untenable to suggest kamma is at least one of the causes or nutriments for consciousness.
Kamma can influence the generation (growth) of consciousness and where conscioiusness becomes stationed or absorbed [like consciousness generating and absorbed in a TV program) but kamma is completely unrelated to the faculty or aggregate of consciousness.
It is wise to not dismiss scores of unconvoluted suttas for one dodgily translated DN sutta, where the term viññāṇasotaṃ is found only twice & remains undefined.
Please bear in mind the Buddha defined important terms such as vinnana in the suttas (such as in SN 12.2 and SN 22.79).
As viññāṇasotaṃ remains undefined, viññāṇa must take the ordinary meaning rather than taking on a new meaning Bodhi, Tiltbillings, Namdrol and your good self crave (tanha) to create.
But thanks for pointing out DN 28.
Also, the translation above is a contradiction.
How can an arahant have an "unbroken stream of consciousness", as translated by Bodhi, that conforms with the views of Tiltbillings & Namdrol, given an arahant is not subject to the "rebirth" you were implying? To imply an arahant's consciousness is "unbroken" supports the view of the eternalism of an arahant.
Further, "paraloke" means "other world" and not "next world". Even Bodhi translates "other world" in most of his works.
Therefore, the translation of "abbocchinnaṃ" as "unbroken" appears dubious.
And to translate "sota" as stream, as though it is a permanent stream, is also dubious.
Abbocchinnaṃ probably means "uninterrupted" or "always" (in a conventional sense).
Also, Bodhi appears to omit pajānāti, which = to know, find out, come to know, understand, distinguish.
In other words, the passage probably states something like: To end, the meaning you are giving to the term viññāṇasotaṃ appears dubious.
The meaning appears to be the flow of conscious experience rather than a permanent unbroken phenonema of consciousness.
The sutta appears to discuss human experience whereas Bodhi is inferring meta-physics.
best wishes
DD
Abbokiṇṇa [= abbhokiṇṇa, abhi + ava + kiṇṇa, cp. abhikiṇṇa] 1.filled M i.387 (paripuṇṇa +); DhA iv.182 (pañca jātisatāni a.). -- 2. [seems to be misunderstood for abbocchinna, a + vi + ava + chinna] uninterrupted, constant, as ˚ŋ adv. in combn. with satataŋ samitaŋ A iv.13 = 145; Kvu 401 (v. l. abbhokiṇṇa), cp. also Kvu trsl. 231 n. 1 (abbokiṇṇa undiluted?); Vbh 320. -- 3. doubtful spelling at Vin iii.271 (Bdhgh on Pārāj. iii.1, 3).
http://dsal.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/philologic/contextualize.pl?p.0.pali.702010
Pajānāti [pa+jānāti] to know, find out, come to know, understand, distinguish D i.45 (yathābhūtaŋ really, truly), 79 (ceto paricca), 162, 249; Sn 626, 726 sq., 987; It 12 (ceto paricca); Dh 402; Pv i.1112 (=jānāti PvA 60); J v.445; Pug 64. -- ppr. pajānaŋ Sn 884, 1050, 1104 (see expln at Nd1 292=Nd2 378); It 98; Pv iv.164; and pajānanto Sn 1051. -- ger. paññāya (q. v.) -- Caus. paññāpeti; pp. paññatta; Pass. paññāyati & pp. paññāta (q. v.). Cp. sampajāna.
http://dsal.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/philologic/contextualize.pl?p.2.pali.407188
Back to the thread topic.
The least favorite Buddha sayings and sutras for some are those that distinguish between beings. Many Buddhists crave to believe Buddhism is one happy family, with all in agreement, but the Buddha actually pointed out the distinctions between beings & those who regard themselves as his followers.
I am certainly not wrong.
I will adhere to core dhammas thank you, such as the three characteristics.
And you can adhere to dhammas of becoming; not connected with dispassion; born of convoluting & mistranslating the Pali, under the power of craving.
All the best Jason.
DD
traditional buddhism is your truth. But you are by no means experiencing nirvana, the ultimate. That's ok, you will experience it when you're ready. I can only assume you will somehow get angry with what I said. It's all too predictable
Your posts have been refuted. They are not about the ultimate.
Non-conceptuality is a conditioned state because it involves a choice or volition
The ultimate truth does not involve choice. It is the UNIVERSAL nature of phenomena & reality.
Your posts are void of the language of the ultimate, such as dispassion, the destruction of craving, impermanence, unsatisfactoriness & not-self.
Your posts are about "people" and "me, me, me", full of infatuation.
As least you have done well to place them on the beginner's forum.
There, you can receive advice about your mind's guru becomings.
All the best
DD
Traditional Buddhism is the ultimate truth; the universal truth of nature.
Your truth is your truth.
Traditional Buddhism states all conditioned things bear the characteristics of impermanence, unsatisfactoriness & not-self (emptiness).
Traditional Buddhism states suffering occurs due to ignorance, craving & attachment.
These are natural truths rather than personal truths.
As for your insistance "non-conceptuality" is the ultimate truth, that is your personal truth.
It is not Nirvana and not related to natural truth.
All the best