Like any historical figure, the Buddha’s life as become a combination of fact and legend. But more importantly, his enlightenment and teachings are just as relevant today as they were when he first discovering them 2500 years ago.
These teachings are summarized in the Four Noble Truths:
- Life means suffering.
- The origin of suffering is attachment.
- The cessation of suffering is attainable.
- There is a path to end suffering.
Near the end of the film, one of the speakers reveals what I found a most intriguing comment: “It is a great irony that the person who shunned all forms of ritual and personality worship, has became the ultimate figure of personality worship.”
What do you think the Buddha would say to those who treat him as a God?
(Feature image: h.koppdelaney Hattip video: Spiritual Mind)
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9 Comments... join the discussion!
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We’re all sons and daughters of God. It doesn’t make any of us crazy to say so.
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Personally, I think the attachment to the rituals of modern Buddhism rather defeats the point of the tradition of scarcity and lack of attachment. But that may be just me.
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Wow, I’ve never heard that C.S. Lewis quote. Thanks for sharing.
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I have no idea what The Buddha would say to those who believe him a God. I could try to imagine but how do you put yourself into the mind of a completly enlightened being? He would have probably been able to say just what that person needed to hear to properly understand, there again maybe not.
The Dalai Lama once told a story of a fellow buddhist monk who after many years of daily practice was suprised to discover that their is no God in Buddhism. A BUDDHIST MONK!
A sister of the Brahma Kumaris (a profoundly good person) Once told me that she had been a Buddhist but changed to devote herself to Raja Yoga and the Brahma Kumaris because she needed a religeon that included God. At the end of the day that’s how it seems to work. We take the best and leave the rest according to our own genetic pre-disposition and emotional needs.
Finally,I am not sure that Jesus ever claimed divinity over and above that which is in us all. It is a shame that no contemporaneous accounts of Jesus’ life exist. What we have is blind faith based on a mixture of hearsay and manipulation by interested parties to meet political ambitions. Commenting of such a documents seems to me to be an utterly pointless exercise.
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Good film, thanks for sharing.
Don’t know what the Buddha would say. Probably to find yourself and look for enlightenment…
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No holiness. Vastness.
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