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How to gain Faith in Rebirth?
Comments
I will stalk the most beautiful woman i know.
after knowing her routines, i will rape her and kill her.
making sure i leave no evidence or witnesses.
then i will rob a rich man.
again killing him and leaving no trails for police to follow.
the, i will go to thailand or brazil and get plastic surgery
so nobody can recognise me and get a new identity.
in the event that the police catches up with me,
i will shoot myself before they can arrest me.
but i believe with proper planning and my creativity,
i will be able to get away with murder.
And you think you will be happy?
i make my choices based on my beliefs.
dont you?
I would hope that your reasoning doesn't accurately represent why you don't proceed with your hypothetical "perfect crime." It represents an awfully self-centered view-- by which I do not mean committing such a crime, but the "deterrent" for you committing it! Even if there existed no social or metaphysical consequences where I could "get away with it," such a thought would not even occur to me.
I see morality less of a matter of negative thou-shalt-NOTs than a matter of positively doing something for others. Compassion doesn't mean avoiding consequences that hurt me, but taking actions that acknowledge everyone's participation in life together. And I thought this way long before coming to Buddhism.
i am suggesting that if i dont believe in rebirth,
I will be a very sophisticated violent criminal.
I believe I will have to pay for breaking them.
Even if I die , i cant escape the bad karma.
otherwise, I would not bother keeping them.
I've heard the same from people that believe there is God who punishes. As if morality and ethics depends on a system of punishment and reward. Or as if Karma is some kind of vengeful deity.
This is wrong intention and wrong view.
Good luck on your fortunate rebirth... Just kidding, I think.
according to Buddha, it is the fool who does not
fear the fruit of bad karma and it is the fool
who thinks that his bad karma will not follow him
after death.
so, i am afraid you have the wrong view, ourself.
It might be helpful to explain just what you mean by "use", too.
So someone who can't accept rebirth should chose carefully the school of Buddhism they want to follow. Or simply do home-study and home-practice, which is what this forum is really good about; flexibility.
I suppose that the trouble you have with believing in rebirth is because you have no proof of it. But what I wonder then is whether you have any sort of belief about what happens after death and what the basis of your belief in that is.
Basically, if for example you believe that there is nothing after death, well isn't that also just a belief for which there is no proof of? Has anyone ever proved that there is nothing after death?
If one is not willing to go by faith in the Buddha's enlightenment, but require some sort of proof, well, since there is no proof available for what actually happens after death then perhaps the position which such a person should adopt is that, "I don't know what happens after death and no one else does either, so anything (including rebirth) is possible."
I think Alan Watts started off being skeptical about rebirth perhaps in a such fashion. However, he later explains that if consciousness sprang out of nothingness then it would be rational to believe in rebirth for the following reasons: He has also expressed the above as follows: Basically, I think what Alan Watts says can be seen as an extension of what Voltaire, the great French philosopher/writer, once said: Eleanor Roosevelt echoes the same sentiment when she said: Personally, I think it's not necessary that one believe in rebirth in order to practice Buddhism though one should at least be open minded about its possibility. And I want to end with the following point also. Firstly, most Thais are Buddhists and nearly all of them also believe in rebirth which gives us about 60 million Thai Buddhists who believe in rebirth. But guess what... I would say that at least tens of millions of these people have the wrong idea about rebirth! Just a few examples. A lot of people believe that to get a favourable rebirth all you need to do is make lots of dana (like giving food to monks, giving money for building temples, etc.) and it's not that important to keep the precepts. But in fact it's the other way around! A favourable rebirth is much more dependent on the precepts (sila/virtue) than generosity. Most also believe that nirvana is a goal only for the monks and laypeople are just suppose to collect merit in order to obtain a birth in the heavens and this also leads them to conclude that meditation is only for the monks and not for laypeople. Again, that's absolutely not in the spirit of what the Buddha actually taught. My point for mentioning this is that belief in rebirth won't automatically make you a "good" Buddhist. So if you are someone who doesn't believe in rebirth but you understand the importance of sila/virtue and your aim in life is not merely to accumulate merit for a good rebirth but you understand the importance of overcoming the three poisons (anger, greed and delusion), then I am very certain you will achieve much more than those tens of millions of "Buddhists" I mentioned who believe in rebirth.
I ask for an enumeration of traditions that don't and you off a tradition that, in your opinion, only, does.
Your response implies that seeing as only Theraveda "uses" the 8-fold path, the rest don't, which to say, of course, is ludicrous.
Also to say that "use"=use in a response to my request for your definition of the term as you use it, is like saying the sky is blue because it's blue.
Personally I'never encountered a tradition that doesn't include the N8FP as an important part of their core teachings, but haven't encountered them all.
My exposre includes:
Thervada
Kagu (and it's various lineages)
Nyingma
Geluk
Jodo Shinshu
Rinzai
Soto
Your mileage, of course, may differ, but I, for one, would really like to hear some specifics in support of your statement.
My tradition is within the Gelug and we do not use it.
For example the Lamrim includes Hinayana Instructions so this is mainly where we get our instructions on Renunciation and so forth from rather then lineage jumping to Theravada.
Just sayin...with metta
Victor
Second, try examining what nano second is not the rebirth of the next one.
A meditative practise will show each one is both inherently connected to and yet different from the last.
That understanding should be enough to carry your practice unless what you are really doing is thinking that someone is asking you to believe that it's your ego that will be reborn.
Sure, maybe 2000 years ago it was used as a insult, but I don't recall EVER hearing the term used in adeliberately insulting manner. No, I think Hinayana is fine.
In the part of the country I'm from, the term "square" was used as a pejorative in reference to Scandinavians. This was a century ago. I'm of Norwegian and Swedish decent. Should I take your example whenever someone uses the word "square"?
Personally, I use the term seldom, but not because some others may find the term offensive. I refrain from using it in mixed company because I prefer not to deal with irrational objections to a word that, in actual usage, in no way refers to them. In short, I find such protestations to be offensive. So, to satisfy my sense of moral outrage, would you mind just getting over it?
"Significant numbers" is not the immediate issue. Rather, it's the absurd notion that there's no such thing as a particular word (whatever that means) and that the word appears to have something inherently offensive about it regardless of the intent in it's usage.
Caz meant absolutely zero insult, that much is obvious, yet he's being called out for just that.
That is unjust as well as irrational.
Does the Buddha's teaching support that?
And I'm not calling Caz out...didn't even mention Caz. So I'm not going to answer for that.
But over the years of reading about Buddhism, I've become very aware that there are many Buddhists who view the term Hinayana as insulting. To me it makes no difference, but apparently to quite a few people it does.
I don't use the "N word" because many people find it offensive.
Or the "B word" or the "C word", or any number of other offensive words.
I've gotten chewed out on this forum for using the term "American Indian", rather than "Native American", even though American Indians I have known have preferred the former, and even though in several polls of American Indians, it was the preferred term.
People have sensitivities about words that are used about labels. And, when possible, I prefer to use words that don't ruffle someone else's sensibilities.
If you want to be offensive to other people, that's your decision. But I would suggest that the concept of right speech would suggest we should err on the side of caution when using labels that people object to. It's just a matter of courtesy (translated in this instance into compassion).
Just go ahead and use whatever word you like. But using the word Hinayana is and will always be a reminder of a dispute within Buddhism that allegedly made the whole Mahayana tradition stoop to petty namecalling (i.e. Hinayana). And you still want to keep doing it disregarding what anybody else thinks? Maybe you need to polish up your metta practise?
Be it 2000 years ago or yesterday, using the word still looks bad, feels bad and smells bad out of consideration for the Mahayana tradition. But I do realize my comment is not relevant to this thread so feel free to disregard it.
/Victor
I was the student of first one, and then another, of the most well known of Karma Kagyu teachers of the last century, for a total of 30 years, and I never, ever, heard either of them refer to the 8FP.
They weren't against it I'm sure.
I suspect that if they had been asked they would have described it in detail.
But their jumping off point was located elsewhere.
In the Maha-ati teachings to be precise.
Maha-Ati and Dzogchen assume no necessity for Hinayana/Theravada teachings at all.
But I suspect I am wasting my time..
Were there more students of those traditions on this forum I suspect that we would see a number of replies affirming that.
The reality of New Buddhist Forum is that for whatever reason there are few Maha-Ati or Dzogchen students among the membership, so dissenting against the view that ALL Vajrayana groups start with the Hinayana view looks like eccentricity or an individual with an axe to grind..
Go to vajrayana.com ( the specialist Vajrayana forum ) and put that question there and you will get a very different response.
NB Referring to ' Tibetan Buddhist ' or ' T.B.' is misleading..The Vajrayana is not confined to Tibet, nor to Tibetans.
But I have just checked with my wife who is the student of a Sakya teacher and she says that it does not feature in his teachings or in his teacher's teachings at all.
Again as with my Kagyu teachers there is no suggestion of antipathy..it just does not feature.
Neither do the 4NT for that matter.
I think part of the problem is a reluctance to see that there is no standard model of Buddha-Dharma, and this includes aspects that some would consider to be of the essence.
Once one lets go of the need to see specific commonalities we are more free to see what IS being said.
Until then one is forced to read stuff into things that is not there.
Or to say that certain schools can't really be Buddhist.
Or that the 8FP/4NT MUST be there really but that we have carelessly mislaid them...
I thought that the position for all Mahayana is to become Bodhisattvas and then Sammasambuddhas themselves?
A Buddha being a selfawakened Being I guess it would be contradictory to follow another Buddhas teaching to enlightenment (in which case you are a sravaka buddha and not a sammasam buddha).
Just wondering...?
/Victor
Some Mahayanists at least , see the whole ' Bodhisattva and aspiring to be one' model as a skillful means rather than a statement of literal fact.
To quote Ajahn Chah, ' Dont be an Arahant, dont be a Bodhisattva, be nothing '.
'Dont be anything' ..but a Lao speaker told me that this is a softening of what Ajahn Chah actually said...