1.About founder of Buddhism. 2.Buddiyskoe teaching and its sources. 3.Rasprostranenie Buddhism....

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1.About founder of Buddhism.

2.Buddiyskoe teaching and its sources.

3.Rasprostranenie Buddhism.

Theme number 11. World religions. Buddhism.

Buddhism (Sanskrit बु�द्ध धर्म�, buddha dharma; Pali - buddha dhamma, «Science and Spirituality") - the religious and philosophical teachings (dharma) of a spiritual awakening (bodhi). Sami its acolytes called it "Dharma" (Law, teaching) or "Buddhadharmoy" (Teachings of the Buddha). The term "Buddhism" was founded by Europeans in the XIX century

Buddhism

One of the three world religions.

Was born in India in the middle of I thousand years BC The opposition Brahmanism, which contained a caste system

Having survived the flourishing there, entrenched in the minds and practices of the peoples of other regions: South, Southeast and Central Asia, the Far East. Now the followers of Buddhism in the world there are more than 800 million people.

The founder of Siddharth Gautama (563-483 BC) - son of King Sakya (Sakya). About the Buddha there is a whole legend

in her most importantFour Great Summit - poverty,

disease,  old age and death.

Statue of Siddhartha Gautama in Bodh Gaya, India. Bodh Gaya has traditionally been the place of his enlightenment

After leaving the palace and became an ascetic, after 7 years, 35 years of age reached a bodhi (enlightenment) and he opened four noble truths. Arriving at Sarnath near Benares, he gathered around him the five ascetics who were his students, and he read them his first sermon. This Benares sermon of the Buddha were summarized his teaching framework

"Four Noble Truths studies" which showed the way to salvation

1. Life is suffering. The birth and aging, sickness and death, separation from loved ones, and an alliance with the unloved, unreached goal and an

unsatisfied desire - all this suffering.

.

2. Suffering comes from the thirst of life, pleasure, creativity, power, eternal life, etc.

3. Destroy this insatiable thirst, desire to give up, renounce earthly vanity - that's the way to the destruction of suffering.

4. It was at the end of this path is the complete liberation, nirvana.

Developing their teaching, the Buddha developed a detailed so-called eight (octal) way, method of comprehending the truth and closer to nirvana.

Eightfold path to

salvation:

righteous speech

righteous determination

righteous deeds

righteous faith

just life

righteous thoughts

The righteous thoughts

righteous contemplation

Buddha felt that he should tell people about it and show them the way to salvation, resist the temptation to sink into a state of nirvana. His teaching was called Dharma. His disciples came, and he founded a community. Next, all over India began to emerge of the community. Entered there shaved head, wore yellow robes, were vegetarians and were carrying the most necessary - mug to collect alms and water, a razor, a staff.

Scientists Buddhist monks recorded ancient sacred texts, studied and commented on them. So there was a Scripture Buddhist Tripitaka (translated from Pali - triple basket. Buddhist canon was first written on palm branches, which took three baskets). It is composed of students of the Buddha and written in 80 BC. e. in Ceylon.

The main source is considered, the Triptaka (threefold basket)

1.Vinayapitaka ("Basket of disciplines"). It sets out the ethics of Buddhism.

2.Suttapitaka ("Basket of texts") - dogma of Buddhism

3.Abhidhama-Pitaka("Basket of explanations of the law") - the

philosophy of Buddhism

The most effective factor in saving another person's life in Buddhism considered going beyond the real society, ie join the sangha - the monastic order. This meant loyalty to the Buddha, his teachings, the community, the rejection of caste, family, introduction to the world of strict rules and regulations, five of which are required for the laity and ten - for the clergy and ascetics (code "Panca Sila")

Pincher Shila (Five precepts) for the laity

1. Do not kill any living creature;

2. Do not speak untruth;;3. Do not take itself does not

belong to

4. Do not commit adultery;

5. Do not use stimulants;

The Code Punch-Sheila - For the clergy and ascetics

is not after the full moon; not to participate in the amusements

do not sleep in a broad, high, soft bed

not use ointments, perfumes, do not wear

jewelry

does not have a gold, silver, jewelry

Buddhism originally interprets karma. Responsibility for their actions is the man himself, and changed his karma one, not even God, can not. In this sense, a new existence, rebirth - the result of actions (karma), recorded in the past.

The supreme goal of Buddhism - Nirvana ("calm", "extinction"). Nirvana - not death (Buddhism denies the eternal death). It is regarded as a special condition, which can not be described in the images of the exact definition of the canonical texts do not. It is sometimes said that it was "bliss", "higher purpose" (in the sense of the cessation of suffering and the completion of the "path").

In Buddhism, there are two ways

Mahayana (Great Vehicle), a wide path of

salvation for all

Hinayana (a small chariot), the narrow way of salvation

for some people

In the Hinayana path to

salvation lay

correspondingly increased role in the improvement of teaching, the

collective knowledge

through the monastic state of

was relatively simple ritual, less important and complex

pantheon;

through membership in the sang

ideal of the righteous is an Arhat, ie people who achieved liberation from

all worldly

In Mahayana, allowing the possibility of salvation lay, especially under the guidance of a compassionate bodhisattva. In Mahayana Buddhism, the purpose can be achieved more easily, rather, more simply. Therefore, in modern Mahayana Buddhism is more popular than the Hinayana. About 2 \ 3 of all Buddhists - the followers of the Mahayana.

In the II century penetrated into China (Chan - Buddhism)

In III - Century BCIndian Emperor Ashok

  transformed  Buddhism in the state ideology

In the VI - VII centuries penetrated into Japan  (Zen Buddhism)

In VI-th century came to the country of Tibet (Lamaism)

Among the many sectarian tendencies of Buddhism is the most notable of Zen Buddhism - a specific modification of the Far Eastern Mahayana. "Zen" - means the silent contemplation, contemplation, inner concentration on the basis of the doctrine of the ability to achieve the unexpected enlightenment (satori), lies in the sudden discovery of the wisdom of the Buddha in the individual consciousness of man.

There are "Zen“

Chinese (Chan)Japanese

Monastic Worldly

Two Tibetan Buddhist monks in traditional clothing

This is a rough timeline of the development of the different schools/traditions:

Timeline: Development and propagation of Buddhist traditions (ca. 450 BCE – ca. 1300 CE)

450 BCE[202] 250 BCE 100 CE 500 CE700 CE

800 CE1200 CE[203]

IndiaEarly

SanghaEarly Buddhist schools

Mahayana Vajrayana

Sri Lanka &Southeast Asia

Theravada Buddhism

Central Asia

Greco-BuddhismTibetan Buddhism

Silk Road Buddhism

East Asia Chán, Tendai, Pure Land, Zen, NichirenShingon

450 BCE 250 BCE 100 CE 500 CE700 CE

800 CE 1200 CE

Legend:= Theravada tradition

= Mahayana traditions

= Vajrayana traditions

The World Fellowship of

Buddhists (VBB)

Asian Buddhist Conference for Peace (ABKM)

Regional organizations in

different countries

In the past decade, for Buddhism is

characterized by the trend towards

centralization, which manifested itself in the minds of international

coordination organizations

Rites of Buddhism believers committed simple

Repentance for the animals (dzul-Hur)

The ceremony dedicated to the hermits, raised to the rank of a deity (naydani Hural)

The ritual worship of the owners of the area (about)

The ceremony dedicated to the master water (usu tyayalgi)

funeral rites