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Is *your* Buddhism a religion?
It seems that there are many perspectives on whether or not Buddhism is properly classified as a religion or not. The answer, of course, depends on how one defines what a religion is.
I am not asking whether *you* believe "Buddhism" is a religion or not, rather I am asking whether your beliefs and practices are something *you* regard as being religious or not.
The question assumes that you do self identify as Buddhist. Extra brownie points if you provide some explanation of why you do or do not regard your beliefs and practices as religious in nature.
I am not going to answer my own question as I don't wish to set any tone (I may answer my own question later after others have had a chance to respond (assuming anyone does respond
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I have done Nichiren practice alone; but it is better in community with others.
I consider my practise of Buddhism to be religious as there is ritual and practise I adhere to.
Sadly, I cannot eloquently justify WHY I feel it to be a religious practise, other than to say that's what it feels like, so I miss out on the brownie point
In metta.
Raven
So to me any Buddhist who accepts the ideas like suchness, Buddha nature, or Nirvana is practicing a religion, regardless of how structured or unstructured it is.
My Buddhism is definitely a Religion.
So I guess my answer to your question is more gray than black or white.
Thanks for reading my first post.
As do I.....
I have confirmed confidence in the teachings of the historical Buddha because they are verifiable through practice and direct experience and understanding.
Added cultural superstitions and rituals have no place in my life.
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I suspect few....maybe none of us have experienced nirvana, but we have faith that it is real. We might see some supporting evidence, but ultimately until we experience it, we are practicing a sort of blind....or at least vision impaired faith
Also ritual and superstition are very different. The latter has little value to me, but the former has great value in creating mindfulness.
All that bowing, lighting incense, wearing a kesa, using a nenju, chanting even if you don't speak that language, and/or have chanted the same thing thousands of times....all of it creates a spiritual, mindful state of respect, honour, gratitude and focus....very conducive to practice and very valuable IMHO.:cool:
This implies not only that we know exactly what the "historical" Buddha taught but also that you have some kind of direct insight into their verifiable nature.
What is nirvana like Dazzle?
What makes any system of thought more than a philosophy are it's practical aspects and the changes those practices bring about in the practitioner.
Different strokes for different folks though...
Dare I say, that sounds like a very Buddhist attitude to me.
the difficulty is with the parameters for the anything ... finding a tradition and if you are fortunate a live teacher to guide you is beneficial, from my experience.
I have confirmed confidence in the teachings of the historical Buddha because they are verifiable through practice and direct experience and understanding.
I can pretty much go along with this. This is just my experience, but I find it pretty amazing that a bunch of people could have gone out to Amdo in Tibet in 1938 to find a two-year-old, and lo, these many years later, we see who/what that boy has become. That happened in my lifetime, and the occurrence of that is something visible and demonstrable. I think it's pretty amazing.
The movie Kundun is pretty good, although of course it's a movie. I think it's pretty close to historically correct, as far as I know. (Of course I don't condone downloading pirated movies with BitTorrent because it would be stealing from the producers, but the movie is generally available.) So I can go along with Dazzle on this one. I don't think he's overstating his experience.
One might say as an ironic joke that Buddhism is not a religion- it's the truth.
Given that, HHDL has said that if science specifically refutes anything in Buddhism, he can't be a Buddhist any more. (I would guess he could still make a good living as a motivational speaker or a consultant )
Finally, I just have to say that using *asterisks instead of quotation marks* just drives me totally nuts. We have people that are in the process of learning English as a second language reading and posting on this board and although some issues with grammar are acceptable, that's just going too far.
That sounds great, but is it permanent?
Haha. Of course not But that is also satisfying. I think my original post was written a little wrong. I possibly exaggerated things accidentally . I am on a journey like many with many twists and turns.
Cool, good luck on your journey. I hope that the Sukha (happiness) that you are experiencing now lasts a long time.
No, I do regard my practice as a religious one.
Buddha taught that no one can "save" us but ourselves. And I believe that. So even though my practice may look like a religion to others, in actuality it is not. I see the various rituals and pujas as being very much a cognitive-behavioral retraining of the mind, not as an act of faith or an act of supplication. I do revere all those who have attained Buddhahood, but this is not the same thing as worship.
Really shenpen nagwa, does it give you pleasure making such sarcastic remarks to me?
Where's all that special bodhisattvic loving kindness and compassion for all sentient beings you're supposed to be developing ?
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This is a link (notice how I labelled the link as a link, cool huh?)
Not really.
You're the one making bold and definitive statements. I just responded to them.
My sarcasm has a point, that point is not necessarily to offend you but to highlight the problems with posts that make strong singular claims about what we do and do not know about the "historical" Buddha and his teachings.
Technically we don't know anything at all about the 'historical Buddha'. There are writings and stories and we know that the community of Buddhists accepts them as authoritative (with some exceptions), but that's all we have to go on.
When I read words about what the historical Buddha taught I just assume one is referring to the basic and fundamental teachings on suffering and the path that leads to liberation. These truths are verifiable through reason and direct experience, aren't they?
I guess I don't see any statements that are 'bold' being made.
I think I need to flag my own post as :ot: Perhaps I get special allowances since I am the OP, but perhaps not
You're both excused from this discussion. I've removed some of the quoted posts and several following. I suggest taking a break from engaging each other.
fair enough.
But of course, that would depend on what religion means.
Yes but you could also have attachments to buddhism as a non-religion. And you could be free from attachments as a religion or as a non-religion. It really depends what you mean by religion.
imminently verifiable
http://newbuddhist.com/forum/showpost.php?p=119005&postcount=1
Good question. Have you heard of the "Simile of the Raft"?
"Alagaddupama Sutta: The Water-Snake Simile" (MN 22), translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu. Access to Insight, July 16, 2010, http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.022.than.html.
Not necessarily, it depends on the individual.
It does depend on what religion means which is why I left it undefined in my OP. I wanted others to think for themselves what religion is to them and whether they regard their own practice as religion or religious.
I can very quickly provide one definition of religion and then prove it's impossible not to form attachments, but that would be putting the cart before the horse.
Anything more convincing you would like to share? An actual source of some kind?
The content of the post speaks for what you believe. Nothing more.
Okie dokie.
Practicing buddhism as a religion sounds like it's the next step, one that I'm not ready for yet.
It wonderful when people practise Dharma it makes for happy's !
My brain is just not wired that way, maybe for now, maybe for this life.
Too many questions. Though I don't think that's a bad thing. 80% the reason I get up in the morning is simply out of curiousity
I am as much of a painter, a driver, and a worker as I am a Buddhist. I practice all of these things, and many more things. I am a dishwasher, a boyfriend, and a hiker.
What I "believe" does not make who I am. Perhaps beliefs are rather useless, and intentions are where we actually use our mind to take action, or non-action.