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Qualifications for being Buddhist
Comments
Now for my opinion too man!!!
Basically I think of course! Of course you can! It's an open invitation and everyone is more than welcome to join that party. So go for it, and as @Lionduck says above, who cares, things evolve anyway.
But also I think it's important not to limit yourself at any point either i.e. don't be marred by your own experiences EVEN AS Buddhism is a purely experiential learning experience i.e. someone who has travelled the desert and not yet reached the oasis may not believe the oasis, but it doesn't mean it's not there. I don't mean this in any hubbabubba mystical sense, I just mean, don't close yourself off to the great potentialities of the Buddha Dhamma -- if you choose to practice.
WW,
Abu
And in the end "Buddhist" is a label. Since there is not really anything to label (no-self), the label "Buddhist" is also very empty of a meaning.
If you're meaning a ceremony, no it's not required.
But as a concept -- that you go to Buddha when you are in need. That you go to the Sangha when you are in need. That you go to the Dhamma when you are in need.
That said, Buddhism is a tool. The ideas and practices taught by the Buddha were taught for the purpose of ending suffering, not simply to be believed (MN 22); and the challenge the Buddha gives us is to put some these things into practice and see what results we get. And when we know for ourselves that, "These qualities are skillful; these qualities are blameless; these qualities are praised by the wise; these qualities, when adopted & carried out, lead to welfare & to happiness," then these are the things we can know for sure are worth holding onto for the moment (AN 3.65). That's all we really need to worry about, not what labels we choose to place upon ourselves, or are placed upon us my others.
Leigh Brasington brought up a good point on his website:
Is it all really the words of the Buddha and his close disciples? Well, unless you are willing to believe, for example as found in MN 123, that the newly born baby Buddha-to-be took seven steps to the north and exclaimed in a loud voice "I'm the chief in this world, the most accepted and the most senior. This is my last birth, I will not be born again”, you are going to have to let go of literalism. You will need to use your critical thinking ability to decide what is authentic, what is mythology, and even what was a later creation to serve some sectarian purpose.
The development of the early Buddhist community is not as black and white as most of us would like to believe. For example, there were people at Nalanda who paid homage only to the three previous Buddhas, where they didn't include Gautama Buddha, yet they managed to survive side by side with those who did pay homage to Gautama.
Who or what were they taking refuge in?
Some scholars are of the opinion that they were the remnants of Devadatta's so called "schism" because Faxian also saw a community of disciples near Savathī who were paying homage to the three previous Buddhas, also observing the restrictions on diet --- so much for a short term schism of little consequence.
But, though I have authentication concerns as well, I have sort of gotten past all that by just asking myself when I read something supposedly said by Buddha -- it isn't quite as important if something was actually said by Buddha, as it is whether or not there is wisdom there.
But just accepting "everything" is going down the same path which many people on this site condemn or criticize about Christianity.
And, again, it also depends a lot on whether you see Buddhism as a religion or philosophy. The former would lend itself more to the "you must believe in all of it or you're not a Buddhist", while the latter does not.
Did every disciple during the Buddha life time hear every word he spoke? Possibly Ananda, but doubtful anyone else. Also, as a rule of thumb, it's an accepted notion that the Buddha only taught what needed to be heard at that time.
With that said, the proof is in the pudding --- I don't see many arahants roaming around, even with those various collections avaialable to them
Of course, this doesn't mean that such collections aren't a good place to start.
PS: The reason I included "or her" is probably obvious --- it just shows how much bias can creep into an institutioinalized religion, even Buddhism.
I always remember what was said to me once by a monk in Thailand, and what was essentially the same as what I read in the very first Thai book I ever picked up about Buddhism (unfortunately, I no longer have the book or can cite it...it was over 25 years ago)...but it went something like this:
As you read this book, accept what you can and set the other portions apart. Later, as you learn more you may be able to come back to what you set aside and take a new look and find you can now accept it.
Course my wife just says its another Buddhist covering for a poor memory.
Personally I find it helpful to keep an open mind when reading the suttas and don't see the need to reject the bits I'm currently uncomfortable with.
- medative super powers
- non-human radio active contemination..
:P
why this question?
( I ask cuz every time I see it, my brain keeps pointing to John Donne's "No man is an island...")
To do something by ourselves, without copying others, is to become an example to the world and the merit of doing such a thing becomes the source of all wisdom.
Ironically this was within a large monastery where all the monks appeared to be cloned from one teacher. I think anyone following this blessing had already left.
Have virtues, or practice the first five precepts.
Practice meditation, or purify the mind of greed, hatred and delusions.
Discern, or believe in what you experience for yourself as opposed to believing what is said or written.