According to Vetter, the Buddha ...sought "the deathless" ( amṛta).... According to Edward Conze, death was an error which could be overcome by those who entered the "doors to the Deathless", "the gates of the Undying." ...the Buddha saw death as a sign that "something has gone wrong." The Buddha saw death as brought on by an evil force, Mára, "the Killer," "who tempts us away from our true immortal selves and diverts us from the path which could lead us back to freedom." Our cravings keep us tied to Mára’s realm. By releasing our attachments we move beyond his realm, and gain freedom from samsara, the beginningless movement of death and rebirth.
What your sources seem to suggest is that the Buddha, rather than being a historical figure later mythologized in Mahayana, might have originally been a mythological figure later historicized in Theravada. — Thorongil
It has never been fully realised what a radical revolution had transformed Buddhism when the new spirit….fully emerged in the first century CE. When we see an atheistic, soul-denying philosophic teaching of a path to personal Final Deliverance consisting of the absolute end of life, and a simple worship of the memory of its human founder superseded by a magnificent High Church with a Supreme God, sorrounded by a numerous pantheon, an a host of Saints, a religion highly devotional, highly ceremonial and clerical, with an ideal of Universal Salvation of all living creatures, Salvation not in annihilation, but in eternal life, we are fully justified in maintaining that the history of religions has scarcely witnessed such a break between new and old within the pale of what nevertheless continued to claim common descent from the same religious founder.
Buddhism is whatever Buddhists say it is... — Wuliheron
Not so. I think even the most skeptical readings of Buddhism reveal a common, identifiable and unique set of ideas, principle of which is 'dependent origination'. There is a definite 'sasana' (dispensation). — Wayfarer
but then was wiped out by the Mughal invaders — Wayfarer
Vajrayana is not actually the 'third turning'. — Wayfarer
I've never joined a particular school or teacher although I feel a stronger affinity with Chinese Buddhism — Wayfarer
Perhaps you should do some reading. — Wayfarer
In the precanonical tradition, there is a threefold division of reality:
The rupadhatu, the samsaric sphere of name and form (namarupa), in which ordinary beings live, die, and are reborn.
The arupadhatu, the sphere of "sheer nama," accessed by samadhi, an ethereal realm frequented by yogins who are not completely liberated;
"Above" or "outside" these two realms is the realm of nirvana, the "amrta (immortal) domain," characterized by Prajñā (wisdom). This nirvana is an "abode" or "place" which is gained by the enlightened. — Wayfarer
When Jesus says "No one comes to the Father except through me" he could be referring, as the perfect embodiment of the Christ, to the enabling activity of the Christ in others and not specifically to any held belief in Jesus Christ the man as savior. — John
An advanced pupil of yoga or Vedanta will for ever have dry eyes, whilst the masters of the Cabbala, according to the Zobar, cry much and often. Christian mysticism speaks also of the "gift of tears"— as a precious gift of divine grace.
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