TO BE OR NOT TO BE, THAT IS THE BUDDHIST QUESTION
(To mark the eight-year anniversary of this blog I am reprising selected previous postings, beginning with the very first one.)
Whether or not to be engaged in the world is the perennial
question for Buddhists.
The approach in Hinayana Buddhism is to not be
engaged, to be the lone rhino on the plain, so-called, to be a pratyeka-buddha, one who is in it for
himself alone. Seek out your own salvation with diligence, was the
Buddha's message. Hinayana, called the
Lesser Way, the Lesser Vehicle, or the Little Raft, claims to be the only form
that follows the original teachings of the Buddha.
Since Hinayana is oriented solely toward the individual, it is viewed negatively by Buddhists of other schools, such as Mahayana Buddhism. Hinayana these days is termed Theravada Buddhism, meaning the Teaching of the Elders, or the Old School of Wisdom.
Since Hinayana is oriented solely toward the individual, it is viewed negatively by Buddhists of other schools, such as Mahayana Buddhism. Hinayana these days is termed Theravada Buddhism, meaning the Teaching of the Elders, or the Old School of Wisdom.
Called the Greater Vehicle, Mahayana Buddhism is other-oriented.
Their ideal is the Bodhisattva, the buddha who refuses final nirvana in order to
return to the world to teach others how to become enlightened themselves. Mahayana Buddhists offer the world salvation through
knowledge, and through example.
One's temperament has something to do with which
approach he or she takes, but not everything to do with it. Some of us are solitary types by nature and
have followed the original teachings of the Buddha for years. Seeking out our own salvation with diligence
was, and is, what resonates most for us.
Something, however, has changed for me at least. That I am an old man now, or am becoming one
rapidly, has something to do with it. I
feel that I have lived my life, have had my shot at it, and therefore have a
feeling for other people that I did not have in the past. In Mahayana Buddhism this is called compassion.
My increasing age, however, is not the complete explanation for this. Buddhism grew out of Hinduism and so there are aspects of the latter that still work for the former. One of these is the idea of a shared consciousness. It has been called cosmic consciousness, the idea that life exists as an interconnected network of consciousness, with each conscious being linked to every other conscious being. In Buddhism this is referred to as Indra's net, or the Net of Jewels. Another analogy is a spider's web, where every dew drop on it reflects every other dew drop on it.
My increasing age, however, is not the complete explanation for this. Buddhism grew out of Hinduism and so there are aspects of the latter that still work for the former. One of these is the idea of a shared consciousness. It has been called cosmic consciousness, the idea that life exists as an interconnected network of consciousness, with each conscious being linked to every other conscious being. In Buddhism this is referred to as Indra's net, or the Net of Jewels. Another analogy is a spider's web, where every dew drop on it reflects every other dew drop on it.
Cosmic consciousness is all the more reason to be
engaged in the world. Cosmic
consciousness says I am already.
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