THERAVADA BUDDHISM
The term "Theravada" means "Teaching of
the Elders." Theravada Buddhism is found in Sri Lanka,
Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Thailand.
Theravadins maintain that they alone possess the
true doctrines and disciplines of Buddhism, while others sects are either too
rigid or too lax in their interpretation.
Theravada, originally
called Hinayana, has kept the Buddhist scriptures in
Pali rather than Sanskrit which is employed, along with other
languages, in the Mahayana schools. The Pali dialect is
used because Sanskrit is the language of Brahmanism which
Theravadins reject.
Theravadin beliefs include that the Buddha
was a man like any other, the difference being his high state of
understanding and intuition into life as it truly is.
Theravadins further believe that Buddhism has
nothing to do with religious mysticism or with dreams and ecstasies, visions
and trances, which other religions, including various forms of
the Mahayana, regard as leading to supernatural powers.
They also hold that belief in a permanent self or
soul is a pernicious error, the result of longing for a life without
death, certain to produce attachment to life.
The central institution of Theravada
Buddhism is the Sangha, the celibate Brotherhood of bhikkus (monks) who
wander about singly or in small groups begging for a livelihood and existing in
utmost simplicity. Some women may also belong to such groups.
Theravada stresses the Three Refuges, namely the
Buddha, the Dharma (teachings), and again the Sangha.
Theravada is dismissed by Mahayanists, by the
Chinese for example, who say that Theravada is merely a preparation for
more complex methods. They say, too, that it is preached to
disciples of “limited receptiveness.”
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