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God in Buddhism - The God Idea in Early Buddhism |  | God in Buddhism - The God Idea in Early Buddhism: Encyclopedia II - God in Buddhism - The God Idea in Early Buddhism |  | The Buddha of the Pāli suttas (scriptures) dismisses as “foolish talk”, as “ridiculous, mere words, a vain and empty thing” (Digha-Nikaya No. 13, Tevijja Sutta) the notion that Brahmins (the priestly caste), who according to the Buddha have not in fact seen Brahman face to face, can teach others how to achieve union with what they themselves have never beheld. This is not a denial of the existence of Brahman, however, but merely intended (by the Buddha) to indicate the folly of those religious teachers who ...
See also:God in Buddhism, God in Buddhism - The God Idea in Early Buddhism, God in Buddhism - Mahayana and Tantric Mystical Doctrines, God in Buddhism - Literature |  | | God in Buddhism, God in Buddhism - Literature, God in Buddhism - Mahayana and Tantric Mystical Doctrines, God in Buddhism - The God Idea in Early Buddhism, Mahaparinirvana Sutra, Anunatva-Apurnatva-Nirdesa, Buddha-nature, Faith in Buddhism, God, Tathagatagarbha, trikaya |  | |
|  |  | God in Buddhism: Encyclopedia II - God in Buddhism - The God Idea in Early Buddhism
God in Buddhism - The God Idea in Early Buddhism
The Buddha of the Pāli suttas (scriptures) dismisses as “foolish talk”, as “ridiculous, mere words, a vain and empty thing” (Digha-Nikaya No. 13, Tevijja Sutta) the notion that Brahmins (the priestly caste), who according to the Buddha have not in fact seen Brahman face to face, can teach others how to achieve union with what they themselves have never beheld. This is not a denial of the existence of Brahman, however, but merely intended (by the Buddha) to indicate the folly of those religious teachers who would lead others to what they themselves do not personally know.
Yet Brahma himself, for example, while not denied by the Buddha, is in no way viewed by him as a sovereign, all-knowing, all-powerful Creator God. Brahma (like all other devas) is subject to change, final decline and death, just as are all other sentient beings in samsara (the reincarnational cycle). Instead of belief in such a would-be Creator God as Brahma (a benign heavenly being who is in reality not yet free from self-delusion and the processes of rebirth), the wise are encouraged to practise the Dharma (spiritual truth) of the Buddha, in which right vision, right thinking, right speaking, right acting, right living, right effort, right attentive awareness, and right meditative absorption are paramount and are said to bring spiritual Liberation. The “God idea” forms no part of the “Pāli” (or “agama”) Buddha’s doctrine of release from suffering - although some see in the “deathless realm of Nirvana” a hint of an impersonal, transcendental Absolute.
Other related archivesAnunatva-Apurnatva-Nirdesa, Brahman, Buddha-nature, Buddhism, Dharmakaya, Faith in Buddhism, God, Mahaparinirvana Sutra, Mahayana, Nirvana, Pāli Canon, Tantras, Tantric Buddhism, Tathagata, Tathagatagarbha, Vairocana, agamas, devas, omniscient, rebirth, trikaya
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "The God Idea in Early Buddhism", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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