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Would a Buddha ever lie ...
Would a Buddha ever lie with all the good intentions in the world?
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He would answer skilfully, or remain silent. But he would never deliberately lie.
His speech would be Right, and really, how the person would take it, would be their problem.
but there wouldn't be anything wrong with the Buddha's input or engagement in the matter.
Besides - why would he violate his own precept?
my opinion.
I agree
I don't know, but I think it's interesting that throughout the 550 birth stories contained in the Jakata, the precept against lying is the only precept the Buddha doesn't break.
Harming.
Stealing.
Sexual Misconduct
Harmful substances...
Interesting.
Now, see...
had I been the Buddha, I would have said:
"Hunter, yes, I saw the rabbit. it was running, and it hid. Obviously it hid out of fear. But don't ask me where it went, because I can't see it now"
All of which is true, and not a lie.
It prevents the rabbit from coming to harm.
it prevents the hunter from taking a life.
See....? Stories can always be improved upon.....
I think that adhisila; the 'higher' Ethic might sometimes call for telling a fib. The purpose of vinaya is to create merit; to do wholesome karma. The Buddha said that karma is cetana; a word that implies both intention or motive and volition. The wholesomeness of a thought. word, or deed is determined by the underlying cetana.
This is not to say that so called good intentions always create merit. Intention is not a fully adequate translation of cetana. For example, karma motivated by confusion {moha} or ignorance {ajnana} is unwholesome; even though we generally do not intend to be confused or ignorant.
Also, in general, most of us would agree that a charitable deed {dana} is wholesome karma. However, this is only true if the deed is motivated by wholesome cetanas such as generosity or compassion. If the motive is pride, a desire to be viewed favorably by others; or avarice, the desire to get a tax deduction; then it is not really wholesome karma.
In the story of the rabbit, the Buddha's intention was to protect the rabbit. Let's suppose the Buddha's motive had been to keep the rabbit for his own dinner? Then, I think, the lie would have been unwholesome karma.
Also, consider the hunter's deed, shooting the rabbit. His intention was probably not to harm the rabbit; he was acquiring a meal. At worst, I think a devoted vegitarian could claim the hunter was acting out ignorance, or perhaps a greedy appetite.
I am not letting the Buddha {in this story} completely off the hook either. His action possibly deprived the hunter of a meal. Offering the hunter his arm as as meal was not really a solution. I thought that part of the story was weak. Chances are, the hunter would decline, and find another rabbit to shoot, or perhaps, go hungry.
Another issue: was the hunter poaching, or was he acting on a legal right? If the former, maybe the Buddha should have reported the poacher to the authorities? If the latter, the Buddha violated the vinaya by committing theft.
Life frequently presents us with moral & ethical dilemmas; even tri-lemmas or worse. I think the best we can do is try to cultivate and maintain wholesome cetanas; while restraining and letting go of unwholesome cetanas. Some are obvious. Greed, hatred, pride, and envy are unwholesome cetanas. Kindness, compassion, generosity, and patience are wholesome. Of course, restraining the unwholesome and developing the wholesome is easier said than done. Even harder is cultivating the discerning wisdom to choose between unacceptable alternatives.
Ok, Federica- go!
Now the question: has the man told a falsehood? Certainly in the conventional manner of speaking it is, but in the ultimate manner it is not:
Yes. Its also called the Prajnaparamita Diamond Sutra and additionally The Diamond That Cuts Through Illusion
.
Yes... I too have heard this "story" before but I don't know for sure where it comes from. You will observe that the Diamond Sutra is mentioned in the quote itself. But I was cautious of the validity of the source (I haven't read the Diamond Sutra) and hence stated thus "This is said to be in the Diamond Sutra."
Thanks for pointing out this "misquote"... but that still leaves us wondering where it comes from? And, someone is going to use this "story" again...
SS Officer : "Are there Jews hiding in this village?"
Buddha: "NO"
No...your fat makes you look fat.
The dress is incidental.....
But it would make a cute car-cover....
More doughnuts, dearie....?
:rolleyes:
I knew it.
Godwin's Law strikes again......
The Buddha: "Stop blaming the dress, dear. See reality as it is!"
Reductio ad Hitlerum :vimp:
Hey I come by this honestly , being somewhat jewy
Ok How bout this.....
Fanatical Israeli settler with bulldozer : "Is that a palestinian olive grove?"
Buddha "NO"
SS Officer : "Are there Jews hiding in this village?"
Buddha: What you seek is hidden within you.
Something like that. I am thinking of his conversation with Angulimala.
Yeah I can just see that one..... " Herr Stangl, das Juden is within you".
Truth is, Godwin's law aside, such situations commonly arose...
To remain silent is tantamount to saying yes, but to say something hilariously Buddhist in that context might make the SS think he's off his rocker, so it just might work.
The woman search lead her to enlighten to the impermance of things
Morality is adaptive and situational, not a fixed form. If you want to quote me a Sutra that says under absolutely no circumstances lie? Go ahead. I like the sound of Sutras.
There is only skillfulness in the approach that the Buddha employed , and skilfullness is one of the paramis of the 6 or 10 paramitas that any Bodhisattva required to perfect
Would he ever dip the onion ring in ranch dressing take a bite and then DOUBLE DIP into the ranch dressing again? Or would he simply spoon some onto his bitten onion ring? I think we need this question addressed.
ha ha ha
I'm sorry but this is simply shocking. A Buddha would NEVER double dip. Never EVER double dip. ...this too heavy. I'm gettin outta the kitchen.
But seriously, All truth in one action. This is what I have been taught, this is the practice. The Vajrayana approach to this matter may be very different and I respect that.
.... mu?
So when we read the buddha teaching, we should always remember the condition of why he preached that particular way/level , who is seeking the questions , what backgound of training the person have already received etc
then we can fully understand the content of the teaching , that what the ancient Buddhist masters did when they read the canon
without doing all this study , we might not know what we are talking about
Sorry, Fede, I don't have any at the moment. I'll try to find some when I have the time, but I'll probably forget.
in this tradition, if you do not trust your teacher , well it is relatively hard to invent your own wheel .. but do you do doctrinal debate with your teachers ?
So to have the wisdom to skillfully apply the correct teaching is very important
Your point is? I don't see the Buddha lied here. Instead of telling the women that it is futile to ask the Buddha to give her lost child's life back, he used a skillful means to make the woman understand that there is no household in the entire city where no one has ever died. By the time the woman returned to the Buddha she had understood that reality and was in a position mentally to sit down and listen to his Dhamma.
Your husband died while undergoing an operation from an illness long ago. One day you had to go to the hospital for an operation and the woman in the bed next to you is having the same sickness your husband had and she was supposed to undergo the same operation. In your stupidity you went on about the sickness and the treatment your husband had for the sickness and all that while talking with the woman and suddenly the woman asks "Did your husband recover the operation". In her compassion for the other being, not wanting to make her feel worse than she already is the woman lied saying "no". I think it’s better to say no out of compassion rather than saying yes to save your discipline in this particular case.
:):)
The Buddha's golden words are always truthful and no false, it is always the unpure minds of the listener to miss the point on his teaching : )
Hence, from the Mahayana stand point, all words in the Mahayana canon are the golden words of the Buddha , his teaching is appropiate to the capacity level and karmic condition of the listeners at that time.
And how to apply & relate on the buddha teaching to our modern age is base on the wisdom and capacity of the modern Buddhist teachers
:D
What jinzang said, but also on the other hand, we may still thank him. _/\_