Astus wrote:A student of Buddhism asked, “Which do you think is the best path: that of the arahant or that of the bodhisattva?”
“That kind of question is asked by people who understand absolutely nothing about Buddhism!”
Ajahn Sumedho
Astus wrote:The article "View from the Center" starts with these two quotes:
"Don't be an arahant, don't be a bodhisattva, don't be anything at all – if you are anything at all you will suffer"
Ajahn Chah

Tilopa wrote:So there's no path that leads to Nirvana and no path that leads to Enlightenment?
Astus wrote:Tilopa wrote:So there's no path that leads to Nirvana and no path that leads to Enlightenment?
Another way to say the same thing:
"Followers of the Way, make no mistake! All the dharmas of this world and of the worlds beyond are without self-nature. Also, they are without produced nature. They are just empty names, and these names are also empty.
All you are doing is taking these worthless names to be real. That's all wrong! Even if they do exist, they are nothing but states of dependent transformation, such as the dependent transformations of bodhi, nirvana, emancipation, the threefold body, the [objective] surroundings and the [subjective] mind, bodhisattvahood and buddhahood. What are you looking for in these lands of dependent transformations! All of these, up to and including the Three Vehicles' twelve divisions of teachings, are just so much waste paper to wipe off privy filth. The buddha is just a phantom body, the patriarchs just old monks."
(Record of Linji, 2.18, tr. by RF Sasaki, p. 221-222)
Astus wrote:Tilopa wrote:So there's no path that leads to Nirvana and no path that leads to Enlightenment?
Another way to say the same thing:
"Followers of the Way, make no mistake! All the dharmas of this world and of the worlds beyond are without self-nature. Also, they are without produced nature. They are just empty names, and these names are also empty.
All you are doing is taking these worthless names to be real. That's all wrong! Even if they do exist, they are nothing but states of dependent transformation, such as the dependent transformations of bodhi, nirvana, emancipation, the threefold body, the [objective] surroundings and the [subjective] mind, bodhisattvahood and buddhahood. What are you looking for in these lands of dependent transformations! All of these, up to and including the Three Vehicles' twelve divisions of teachings, are just so much waste paper to wipe off privy filth. The buddha is just a phantom body, the patriarchs just old monks."
(Record of Linji, 2.18, tr. by RF Sasaki, p. 221-222)
kirtu wrote:Huseng wrote:There is the irreconcilable difference between Arhatship and Bodhisattvahood.
Unless those Bhikku accept the latter as legit and possible, it will always be a thorny issue between the two major divisions of Buddhism.
Bodhisattvahood is also included in the Southern School but Arhantship is emphasized. Their view seems to be that Bodhisattvahood cannot be accomplished for ordinary beings and it will take 3 eons (which is correct) and that Arhantship could be accomplished in seven lifetimes in the best cases.
So from their POV it's a practical matter of efficiency it would seem.
Kirt
Astus wrote:OK, here's another one, perhaps this will be clearer:
but it is all in order to bring your thoughts to a halt so that you do not produce a single thought."
(Buddhism in the Space Age by Hsuan Hua)
Nangwa wrote:A vacuous state of mind is not Buddhahood.
Astus wrote:Nangwa wrote:A vacuous state of mind is not Buddhahood.
Huineng emphatically pointed out that suppressing all thoughts and refraining from thinking of anything is a misunderstanding of the dharma, and indeed one who did that was being tied up by the dharma, instead of being liberated by it."
Does No-Thought Mean No Thought?
retrofuturist wrote:Greetings TMingyur,TMingyur wrote:Also: practicing for the benefit of self and others is the Theravada ideal laid down in suttas.
Yes, but the emphasis on "others" in the Theravada sense is not such that the other attains nirvana as a direct or indirect consequence of your actions... but rather that through one's own morality (sila), harmlessness, compassion and kindness, the shravaka bring happiness and joy to those they encounter simply by following the Noble Eightfold Path.
Metta,
Retro.
Users browsing this forum: Seishin and 15 guests