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@Carlos-bz5oo23 күн бұрын
Excellent video educating as to why secular buddhism is colonialist drivel
@TheMrcassina23 күн бұрын
How do devas decide who's paying child support?
@smlanka4u22 күн бұрын
A galaxy has 3 to 1000 Sakwalas (world systems with layers). Texts mentioned 1000000000 Sakwalas in the universe.
@milascave222 күн бұрын
@@Carlos-bz5oo That's not at all what the video said.
@robothug668822 күн бұрын
They buy them work boots and say "get to work child" @@TheMrcassina
@seniraranasinghe64522 күн бұрын
As a life long Buddhist my understanding is >Buddhism enters a new country/society. >people “Cool,cool,cool…… Can we keep these gods around as well.” >”sure, ig” >People “Yay”
@swagmundfreud66622 күн бұрын
The number of 'Jesus was a Boddhisatva' discussions western Buddhists have proves this pretty handily.
@sunkintree22 күн бұрын
It's almost like any religion naturally shapes itself anew when it passes through new cultures, and that this is perfectly fine. Think about this when a hard-line Buddhist gets upset with you for choosing the secular Buddhist path. You can imagine they are a Catholic or a protestant upset that you didnt pick exactly everything they chose to believe in
@libertyprime791122 күн бұрын
Yay! Gods do exist!
@rishikeshkumar710322 күн бұрын
@@libertyprime7911 which one do
@seniraranasinghe64522 күн бұрын
@@rishikeshkumar7103 of course the god of your local beliefs. We all know rest are just made up.
@swagmundfreud66622 күн бұрын
I remember I had a discussion with a Buddhist monk in Japan, who happened to speak English, and I told him that one thing I liked about Buddhism was how the Buddha was just a man, and he looked at me and said very simply, with a bit of a laugh, 'The Buddha was NOT just a man'.
@turingmachine461722 күн бұрын
On the other hand I remember when a radio presenter (new age radio show) was interviewing my husband (Shin Buddhist) and two zen priests on the occasion of a big Buddhist gathering in Anchorage Alaska, asked “when you meditate do you connect with the Buddha?” There was a pause, then my husband answered, “the Buddha is dead”. More silence. The priests like the answer.
@shhs122720 күн бұрын
His point wasn't that buddha was not human it was that while still a man he was much much more than that.
@LinkEX20 күн бұрын
Giving the monk the benefit of the doubt, it might be the "just" that irked him. I.e. he didn't mean to imply "the Buddha was far more than a man", but "the Buddha was an extraordinary man". Similar to how sports fans would take it the wrong way of you call their favorite world class athlete "just" a man. Then again, you'd think he'd get your drift that your statement was meant as a compliment. I guess no matter how secular a religion claims to be, if you devote your life to it you're bound to elevate the important figures in it to a higher status. (Even if that figure emphasizes to not do that very thing.)
@swagmundfreud66620 күн бұрын
@@LinkEX He did take it complimentary, I think. He mostly thought it was a funny thing for me to say.
@JinSakai_Kuroudo16 күн бұрын
What a stupid thing to say to a monk
@midoriya-shonen23 күн бұрын
I remember being taught a lot of these misconceptions during high school, and it was a luxury that we even had a course to teach us about religions and traditions at all. Thank you for the lesson!
@SilverScarletSpider22 күн бұрын
Lol my American public school banned all teaching about other religions and only allowed learning christian stories and jewish horse/bullshiet
@MisterPeckingOrder22 күн бұрын
It’s stupid they don’t teach about these things anymore. It’s not like the world stopped having religious people just because we made the concept of teaching about it political. It’s only a problem when you only teach one religion and you teach it like it’s fact that supersedes everything else; But actually learning about different cultures, *especially* ones you don’t believe in, is extremely important. People fear and disrespect things they don’t understand and that creates problems throughout society.
@JoKaR80-d5r22 күн бұрын
I didnt learn these things until college at 31, lmbo😂
@dxtxzbunchanumbers22 күн бұрын
These are not "misconceptions", they are *different* conceptions. By the same token as some people wrongly assume a kind of universal rationalism Buddhism, others falsely assume Buddhism to have an "orthdoxy" -it simply doesn't have. There is no Buddhist Vatican with a worldwide authority. While there are strong feelings about upholding correct practice and belief in some quarters, there's yet to be a Buddhist Inquisition, or a Buddhist fatwa that means anything beyond a single country.
@namethis65821 күн бұрын
@@dxtxzbunchanumbersthis is the correct reply
@officialmycrazyamericanfat781123 күн бұрын
People always called me crazy for refusing to have premarital eye contact. Well who's crazy now?
@doomd181622 күн бұрын
I’m married and my wife and i avoid eye contact (Cause we do doggy)
@libertyprime791122 күн бұрын
You. (oh sorry did I say that out loud?)
@tashkashka22 күн бұрын
Bro thinks he's a deva
@melburnian22 күн бұрын
Neurotypicals!! snap
@libertyprime791122 күн бұрын
@@tashkashka I see what you did there.
@DaveLopez57523 күн бұрын
Today I am having Religion For Brunch.
@KHTimeProtecter23 күн бұрын
I’m having Religion For Lunch.
@Mondy66723 күн бұрын
I'm having Religion for Late Night Snacks
@goshdarnitman23 күн бұрын
I've always had the Eternal Dharma
@robertlibby971623 күн бұрын
A bunch of slackers that couldn't wake up on time!😂
@dradigogaming23 күн бұрын
Religion for Dinner
@maimee122 күн бұрын
As a Thai person who is raised in a country where Theravada Buddhism is the official religion, viewing anti-ritualism as purely a Western invention seems not entirely accurate. Over here, just within Theravada Buddhism, we make distinctions of two kinds of temples and two kinds of monks that practice in them: city and forest. The city temples focus more on rituals and things to do with the community of believers, while the forest temples focuses more on individual practice. Generally, forest temples and their monks are viewed with more respect and is seen as closer to true Buddhist practice. Some specific Nikaya in the city is actually viewed with derision. One of them allowing you to buy land in the heaven for your afterlife. Peak commercialization of Buddhism. And perhaps undeniably something untrue to any respectable Buddhist text. Maybe when the foreigners came, they get to see all the different Nikayas and so gets to choose what they think is best to follow. And what is best, if not to treat it as Philosophy and to reject all parts incompatible with science.
@user-jt3dw6vv4x21 күн бұрын
Agreed. There seems to be this idea that Buddhism as practiced in Asian countries is completely ritual-based and that anti-ritualism is Western which is very strange considering that Buddhism in all its forms was formed in Asia.
@malithaw7 күн бұрын
Same case in Sri Lanka. We perceive the organized sangha in Corlty as more materialistic than monks who reside in the wana aramayas or forest monastries.
@Luxcanum23 күн бұрын
Personally, for me, this is one of the most usefully educational channels on the net.
@mattamiller200223 күн бұрын
I mostly come to KZbin for educational content. And there's a lot of great stuff out there, we're kind of living through a golden age of this type of content. But this channel is still heads and shoulders above the rest. Just great, interesting, deeply informative content week after week after week. Love it.
@americanswan23 күн бұрын
Yes. Also, Ready to Harvest
@Stefan.Neuhauser22 күн бұрын
well theres even more information out there thats just outright doodoo. real pooopy. like reeeealy bad. i just think its important to consider and we shouldnt forget that.
@RO-oc4bk20 күн бұрын
As a Japanese (so I might be biased, mind you), I think the original Buddhism thought was similar to "I can neither prove nor disprove the gods' existence (or, their influence on our lives), so leave it for the time being. we have too many things to mind."
@_-KamiKaze-_20 күн бұрын
I think that's what is mentioned in one of the suttas in the Tripitaka
@anonymousperson992915 күн бұрын
Buddhism is just one of the many schools of philosophy that exists in India. You can belong to more than one at the same time. The modern distinction of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism is fake. These are the same Sanatan Dharma. Sanatan Dharma has many branches and it's very diverse. It is a way of life. Athiesm, Animism, Monoethism, Polyesthism all are accepted in Sanatan Dharma.
@RealAryanGupta15 күн бұрын
@@anonymousperson9929 more people need to see this
@whanua9814 күн бұрын
@@anonymousperson9929 so basically philosophy right?
@garganotay197914 күн бұрын
@@anonymousperson9929it is not the same, buddhists reject the authority of the vedas
@manos_200122 күн бұрын
As someone raised in theravada i appreciate how the western secular interpretation of buddhism sort of bounced back into asian buddhist thought, cause at this point in life i consider myself an atheist and a buddhist. Not sure if you can do that with any other major religion.
@DemonIX514 күн бұрын
Same here
@SRJ779813 күн бұрын
Well, i consider myself am athiest too. But, i am from a hindu background. So, culturally a hindu, religiously an athiest.
@ZeroGravityFuneral11 күн бұрын
You can't actually do it with buddhism either but okay
@perseus60247 күн бұрын
You really can't do it with buddhism...you believe you can gain all knowledge by sitting under a tree? Very atheist of you.
@manos_20016 күн бұрын
@ZeroGravityFuneral Buddhism isn't just one homogeneous religion. There are a lot of sects, but they all agree on the 4 Nobel truths. You could definitely be a practitioner of modern secular Buddhism and be agnostic or atheist.
@RonJohn6323 күн бұрын
Western/Secular Buddhism sounds a lot like Unitarian Universalism, which strips away the superstitious/religious parts of Christianity.
@josemarroquin603022 күн бұрын
Thats a great comparison I think
@OptimusWombat22 күн бұрын
I was just thinking the same.
@tabryis22 күн бұрын
Which is laughable
@Tinil022 күн бұрын
@@tabryis Mostly in the sense that hypocritical athiests like Harris embrace secular Buddhism while dismissing the exact same concept applied to Christianity.
@swagmundfreud66622 күн бұрын
I've noticed that there is a kind of Neo-Gnostic Christianity that has been bubbling on the r/gnosticism subreddit which I can only describe as secular gnosticism.
@CaptPostmod20 күн бұрын
I went through a big Buddhist phase in my 20s (about 20 years ago). I remember being consistently baffled and flustered at all the secular, western, caucasian practitioners and groups who would insist that Buddhism was just a mental practice even while they were kneeling on zafutons in front of icons and effigies and chanting what one could describe as prayers.
@OzoTenzing15 күн бұрын
😂
@Sparhafoc10 күн бұрын
I constantly hear from Westerners that Buddhist is a philosophy not a religion, that it can't be a religion because x, that they don't believe in gods. I live in Thailand, so this is always amusing to me. Q: Which gods do you believe in? Thai Buddhist A: Yes
@OzoTenzing10 күн бұрын
@@Sparhafoc Secular Buddhism might be more palatable for many.
@Crymeareva10 күн бұрын
@@Sparhafoc buddhism is nothing but an exportable sect Hinduism had to offer. Hindu philosophy were plagiarised by buddha and made athiest
@jamesbond312510 күн бұрын
@@Sparhafocmahayana is kind of more like that tbh since bodhisattvas arent gods. mahayana buddhists usually only pray to their ancestors as well and only interact with bodhisattvas and deities for guidance and protection
@youremakingprogress14422 күн бұрын
My first real encounter with Buddhism was attending guided meditations led by a (white, USan) friend who said that Buddhism was more of a philosophy than a religion, and that it would be more accurate to say that one practices Buddhism, rather than saying that one is a Buddhist. I later watched a series of videos on Buddhism on the KZbin channel Linfamy (highly recommend, but this comment is not sponsored) that described all kinds of supernatural beliefs in Buddhism, and I was a bit confused. This breakdown here of the different ways Buddhism is practiced by different cultures and the different approaches to Buddhism made everything make more sense. Thank you!
@luisoncpp22 күн бұрын
This same channel already said something to keep in mind many videos ago: religion is always diverse. Pick any religion and you would find lots of congregations with different beliefs.
@yoeyyoey893722 күн бұрын
Yeah cause this guy actually studied and understands religion lol
@bonniemagpie996022 күн бұрын
Buddhism is all about mind control in every single aspect of that.
@j.obrien499022 күн бұрын
@@bonniemagpie9960 yeah but mind control in the good sense -- self control of ones own mind.. ;-).
@wilberwhateley756921 күн бұрын
I would say that he’s both correct and incorrect at the same time - because there never was a formal separation of philosophy from religion in the Eastern world (unlike the Enlightenment that transpired in the West), it’s often difficult to differentiate between philosophical and religious ideas in Eastern belief systems.
@davidcope573623 күн бұрын
Great video. I think if one is promoting a western influenced version of Buddhism that dispenses of supernatural elements, great. You are free to do so. But I think transparency is important, you should admit that your belief and practise is also the result of a specific historical process. You may argue for the value of your perspective, but asserting that it is somehow the immutable original feels very arrogant. It'd be like if you changed a friend's family recipe, started claiming that's how their grandma really cooked it, and then told them that their version tastes off.
@ekrueger2623 күн бұрын
Sects of Buddhism itself developed the same way. The Chan/Zen tradition centers around Huineng the sixth patriarch, his life story, and his teachings. However, it turns out that what is said about Huineng did not actually happen, and the Platform Sutra attributed to Huineng was likely written by his followers to assert Huineng's position as the sixth patriarch, while also asserting that the "sudden enlightenment" approach to awakening is not only correct, but also the correct way to interpret Buddha's teachings. Then, later Dogen asserted that the way to enlightenment is a gradual process that includes meditation which contradicts the teachings of Huineng. I think it is important not to discredit anyone's spiritual beliefs and people should practice what makes sense to them. The arrogance comes when people believe that their subjective truth is superior to others.
@ihatespam222 күн бұрын
All of religion is an interpretation based on each persons bias. Sometimes it’s an improvement.
@battlerushiromiya65121 күн бұрын
Yeah that is the most annoying thing of all, western scholars from christian europe who reduce buddhism to only meditation supposedly know more about buddhism than people who actually created it.
@stormshadow528321 күн бұрын
No... Western "Buddhism" is not Arya and in line with the practices followed by the Arya Sakyamuni. Mlecchafication is highly frowned upon.
@billyhill43420 күн бұрын
Yeah but that's kind of exactly what happens with all religion. My religion is the original, most connected to the "prophet", most accurate form of the religion, exists inside of Buddhism too. Sort of inevitable.
@sebastianwittenkamp273818 күн бұрын
Wonderful video, please keep up the lectures on Buddhism. You have a knack for taking a vast and complex subject and making it accessible. And I love how respectful your style of teaching is ❤
@Ropeorsnake3 күн бұрын
might be accessible but video starts off with a massive error in the names of deities and their respective functions
@S-K35123 күн бұрын
Thank you. I’m Buddhist and I enjoy your Buddhist videos a lot.
@davidhowe690523 күн бұрын
To me, the bodhisattvas in Mahayana Buddhism seem quite similar to the saints in Christianity.
@ดีดีมาก-ญ2ฅ23 күн бұрын
Bodhisattvas will become Buddha themselves but Saint can't become God in Christianity.
@sryoutube982123 күн бұрын
@@ดีดีมาก-ญ2ฅGood point!
@davidhowe690523 күн бұрын
@@ดีดีมาก-ญ2ฅ Wow, thanks for the quick reply! You are right, the similarity is not complete. What I was thinking was that, calling bodhisattvas 'gods' can be misleading, especially for people in monotheistic traditions, who think 'polytheism' is anathema (background: I was brought up Christian (in the UK), but now consider myself Buddhist, though I don't follow a particular tradition).
@ramintahouri27023 күн бұрын
@@ดีดีมาก-ญ2ฅnot exactly true. This is true for most heterodox Christianity, but in orthodox Christianity there is a theological concept called “theosis” which means deification of humanity. Since man is created in the image of god, human beings are therefore living icons of god. The saints in Christianity, although are not gods themselves, but are seen as a completed spiritual fathers and mothers in the process of transformation of deification. The outlook for orthodoxy is that human beings are not complete until they fulfil the image of god, whom Christ the living god, became an example for living a life of sinlessnes, even though we are still sinners. Theosis is described as God became man, so that man can become gods by grace(spiritual gifts).
@sryoutube982123 күн бұрын
Theosis is still different from becoming a Buddha, because one does not gain the same exalted attributes as the object of worship through theosis. But the Buddhist view is that once a bodhisattva becomes a Buddha, they are equally omniscient, equally endowed with every excellence, etc., as all previous and future Buddhas. A bodhisattva isn't just becoming "like" the most exalted possible kind of individual, but is in the process of actually becoming such, on the Buddhist view. So I think it is still different from theosis. @@ramintahouri270
@masael25523 күн бұрын
Wow, literally was just talking about this on cosmic skeptic's channel. Can't wait to watch this video!
@tc5993223 күн бұрын
Which video?
@masael25523 күн бұрын
@tc59932 This short. I was in the comments talking about it and there were some good discussions there! kzbin.infof2gK9uRIPQc?si=UaIhCaquzeuLmC4Y
@jacksonelmore622722 күн бұрын
My fellow enjoyer of skepticism 😎
@masael25522 күн бұрын
@@jacksonelmore6227 A thousand skeptics!
@ChaoMung-t9u22 күн бұрын
Someone should send this video to Alex!
@nikosuokko837022 күн бұрын
I have always wished to have a video like this to share with others I have studied all of this, but my spiritual beliefs have been hard to share to others, most won't have the time and interest to sit down with me for 3 hours as I explain all of this This was amazingly done. On point, pure information, and not 3 hours long From the bottom of my Buddhist heart, I thank you!
@AdwinLauYuTan23 күн бұрын
The concept of upaya is essential to how the various devas, bodhisattvas, and Buddhas are reinterpreted to be metaphors for various aspects of the mind. Thank you for bringing this concept up. For example, the upaya doctrine espoused in the Lotus Sutra allows for the later Universal Gate chapter within the Lotus Sutra to be reinterpreted from being a long sermon on how Avalokiteshvara can save us to being an extended metaphor for the workings of compassion. Upaya serves as a very useful tool to the Buddhist Modernist, as you say, to reinterpret the Buddhadharma. Buddhism is really all four parts of the tetralemma, atheistic, theistic, both atheistic and theistic, and neither atheistic nor theistic.
@andrewyam793822 күн бұрын
It is actually none of the four as well 😉
@AdwinLauYuTan22 күн бұрын
@andrewyam7938 We're out here reinventing the pentalemma.
@kushjindal293920 күн бұрын
@@AdwinLauYuTan dude in hindi / sanskrit upaya literally means solution so it is interesting
@abhishekdarjee706912 күн бұрын
Sounds like Hinduism .. ngl
@visionary478723 күн бұрын
The complexity of Buddhist cosmology, with realms and layered heavens, serves as a powerful metaphor as much as a literal belief system. For some, these devas are guiding symbols for psychological states, while for others, they are very real presences in their spiritual lives. And the beauty of Buddhism is that it doesn’t force a one-size-fits-all approach. Whether devas are seen as external or internal, Buddhism ultimately centers on self-awareness and insight over external worship.
@عباسالجوراني-س6ج23 күн бұрын
So essentially believe whatever make you happy
@kaiklose617223 күн бұрын
The middle way is key; they are both internal and external. They are real and not, the same way we are real and yet not. However, the degree to which one wants to interact with the Devas, Nagas, Nyen ect. Is up to ones self. Focus on the inner, outer, both or neither. Though, I'll quote my Friends teacher, Gelug Lama "we make a vow to all sentient beings, including Debas, Nagas and so forth. To ignore them is to forsake our Bodhisattva vows which extend to all sentient beings which are our responsibility."
@midnightwanderer173423 күн бұрын
@@kaiklose6172Like how many more intelligent life forms are there besides humans because I feel like there’s too many to track… I also feel like we’re just infants compared to the others 😑
@niket52723 күн бұрын
That's a very western point of view. They were and are considered real even to this day in actual Buddhist countries.
@eduardon929923 күн бұрын
The thing is: Buddhism says that there is no difference beetween the physical and the psychological. In Buddhist metaphysics, it is said that each plane of existence or realm is created by the karma (the intentions, thoughts and actions) of the beings living on it, including our own human realm. When Buddhism says that "heaven and hell are mind states" it is not meant to be interpreted as "Buddhist cosmology is just metaphors". It is meant to be interpreted as the fact that each kind of existence (humans, animals, heaven, hells, ghosts...) is manifested by the mind states of sentient beings. Each mind reflects reality according to its own point of view. Some Tibetan schools even hold the belief that dreams are a manifestation of this luminous, creative aspect of the mind. You are creating your own "personal, minor realms" when you are sleeping, not different from how your mind is manifesting this human existence right now.
@FakePale23 күн бұрын
I am Catholic, but I have a lot of respect for Buddhism. I think it's a fascinating tradition to learn about
@EvilXtianity23 күн бұрын
_"I am Catholic..."_ Why did you decide to worship a father who used one of his sons as a human sacrifice to himself _and_ cannibalism?
@bitofwizdomb726623 күн бұрын
I actually think that if some Christians read and understood Buddhas teachings , they become better, wiser, more mindful Christians. They would learn to be awake and conscious each moment and understand the intricate interplay of cause and effect . They’d be more present each moment with the thoughts they think , the words they speak and the actions they engage in. They’d understand that they are 100% responsible and accountable for their choices words and actions . They’d understand that they shape their very next moment with their choices, thoughts, words and actions . They’d realize they create each moment their own heaven or hell. It’s all cause and effect
@shenanigans371022 күн бұрын
Most of the Renaissance scholars of Buddhism were Catholic monks, especially Jesuits.
@luisoncpp22 күн бұрын
yep, me too
@maverick729122 күн бұрын
@@bitofwizdomb7266yes some of the philosophies of Buddhism would act as a useful tool in how to behave towards things. But that's where it would end as the teachings of Jesus Christ come first and primary as it is a discipline of faith. But I wouldn't be opposed to gutting out the Buddhist teachings so as to get the mindfulness practices for Christians to improve their social behaviour.
@GaryNac22 күн бұрын
You can say that many Buddhists believed in gods and it didn't necessarily entirely reject the supernatural or anything like that however those things were not the things which were meant to be focused on.I think this is a fairly simple way to sum it all up.
@user-jt3dw6vv4x22 күн бұрын
Buddhism, Hinduism and other Eastern religions are deeply intertwined. The prevalence of Hindu-derived deity worship in various parts of Buddhist Asia is because of the Hindu influence. Phra Phrom (Thai depiction of Brahma) as featured in the video at 10:52 cannot be tied to Buddhism but more broadly to the general Dharmic/Indic culture that exists in Thailand. Thai people also popularly worship Ganesha, a deity that does not exist in Buddhist cosmology and Thai people also visit Hindu temples in Thailand. Some of the largest Ganesha statues outside of India are located in Thailand. Phra Phrom in Thai-style is also worshipped by ethnic Chinese across Southeast Asia and southern China. In Hong Kong, there is a famous Phra Phrom statue that is frequented by Chinese people. In Japan, there are Japanese versions of Ganesha, Shiva and Skanda and in Sri Lanka, you will find Buddhist people worshipping local folk gods as well as Hindu gods inside some Buddhist temples like Seema Malaka. The same thing applies to other Buddhist groups in Asia. So correlating it to Buddhism is incorrect because some of these devas don't even exist in Buddhism. The reason people worship them in Asia is because of the pre-existing Hindu influence and the general overlap that Eastern religions share with one another. Thailand was previously a Hindu nation, these Hindu practices were simply carried over after Theravada Buddhism was brought to the country from Sri Lanka. There is no restriction to how people must practice Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism, Shintoism etc. so people mix them together.
@privilegedindiansrworsthum840818 күн бұрын
Bs
@user-jt3dw6vv4x17 күн бұрын
@@privilegedindiansrworsthum8408 What part of my comment is "BS"? Be specific.
@aditshukla15 күн бұрын
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x The modern socio-political element within him made say so, which cant digest the fact that Hinduism and Buddhism have existed together for centuries.
@DB0358414 күн бұрын
Hinduism is a scam and vinayak is worshipped in vajrayan Buddhism and in old hindi script they said those who worship Ganesha or vinayak don't invite them for yagya (fire sacrifice) later hindu appropriated Ganesh during bak Gangadhar Tilak time when he started Ganesh visharjan in last less than 200 years
@aditshukla14 күн бұрын
@@DB03584 There are Hindu temples dedicated to Ganesha dating long, long before Tilak's time. You have been successfully scammed by your bahujan political masters.😅😅 Now you will spend your entire life trying to make everything about Sanatan Dharm into blue-tinted Buddhism. Sad.
@Budjarn23 күн бұрын
This was really interesting, I learned a lot of new things about Buddhism. Thank you :)
@BlackReaper023 күн бұрын
The part of buddhist modernism was very interesting.
@vonPeterhof23 күн бұрын
An interesting chapter in the history of the reception of Buddhism as an "atheistic religion" is at least a subset of the Buddhist clergy of the Mongolic peoples of the former Russian Empire embracing the Bolshevik Revolution and trying to sell the idea that their core teachings were perfectly compatible with communism and scientific rationalism. For some time the Bolsheviks reciprocated, but ultimately extended their anti-religious campaigns to the Buddhists as well.
@shenanigans371022 күн бұрын
Oh wow. That is interesting!
@gagank47819 күн бұрын
Great work again! Love the Buddhism videos, especially!!!
@perorenchino203623 күн бұрын
A small correction, here at the begining the two priests were talking about the attributeless bramhan not the four headed god bramha. Those two things are different.
@AdvaiticOneness123 күн бұрын
Exactly. Brahman and Brahma are different. Brahman is a metaphysical concept related to consciousness and is considered as the ultimate reality in Hinduism.
@perorenchino203623 күн бұрын
@@AdvaiticOneness1 Yes
@oscaraltman812223 күн бұрын
I feel like this is actually a pretty big mistake in this video, thanks for bringing attention to this!
@perorenchino203623 күн бұрын
@@oscaraltman8122 Yep that mistakes makes hinduism nearly identical to other indo-europeann religions.
@yagomizuma227523 күн бұрын
Brah
@maxjohn601219 күн бұрын
Your videos are endlessly fascinating! Thank you for all your work.
@kevinforbesofficial23 күн бұрын
Minor correction/nitpick: Avalokiteshvara is not exclusively Male. Depending on the region they are depicted as Male or Female (for instance in China she is Guanyin and often female, while in Tibet he is Chenrezig and usually male.)
@marchwhitlock645523 күн бұрын
That doesn’t make referring to him as ‘he’ incorrect, though.
@utenatenjou213922 күн бұрын
Noted: this is a joke btw: try stay away with pronouns, Buddhism is about awakening, not wokism.
@user-jt3dw6vv4x22 күн бұрын
@@utenatenjou2139 What???? They have a point. Avalokiteshvara is depicted as either male or female and you can find the male and female versions in the same temple in some Asian countries like Gangaramaya temple in Sri Lanka. What do you mean "wokism"? Huh??
@utenatenjou213922 күн бұрын
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x I do aware of male/female view of Avalokiteshvara . He/she pronoun doesn't need to be bound to he or she only. I hope this clear you of "what????". Do you get that marking he/she as correct/incorrect is a mood point; hence, demand correctness/incorrectness is slippery slope for wokism.
@emperorsodiumlatvia16 күн бұрын
Yeah He can be male / Female But i believe avalokitesvahara as a Male.
@tongbai20623 күн бұрын
In Thailandd we think of deva as more of an angle than a god, but some Buddhists do worship Hindu Gods
@user-jt3dw6vv4x22 күн бұрын
Yeah the Hindu worship is because of the Hindu influence across Buddhist Asia. I think people don't realise that in Buddhist Asian cultures, people mix Buddhism with other similar religions like Hinduism, Taoism, Shintoism and folk religions.
@saugamathazine195922 күн бұрын
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x hindu is a brahminism and bileve in caste system. There is nothing hindu or hinduism is a made concept. Brahminism is actually pratuce in shadow of Hinduism. Stop accociate buddism to hindusim.
@GoodNewsEveryone299921 күн бұрын
@@user-jt3dw6vv4x In all cultures really, I'm of the Plum Village tradition and Jesus comes up and we've been encouraged to read and take to heart teachings from other traditions that support right thinking and right understanding.
@wilberwhateley756921 күн бұрын
I know that in the 1600s the Vedic faiths began to acknowledge the Buddha as an incarnation of Vishnu - this led to the decline of Buddhism as an independent religion in the Indian subcontinent, but allowed many followers of Buddhist teachings to return to their Hindu families without compromising their values as they no longer had to choose between the two religions.
@sagarpatel304320 күн бұрын
God is western concept...there is nothing called Hindu god, Hindu itself is name of river. Dev means the one who shines and the one who protect. Gautam budh is just another guru like thousands of them in India. It has turned into religion pr0paganda.
@Dhyey49422 күн бұрын
good video yet again, I would only add for people to read 'Magnetic Aura' from Talesio helped me a tonnn
@terrlaw32820 күн бұрын
Ton
@kunzangdordze973023 күн бұрын
Bodhisattvas also exist in Pali canon, and Theravada also includes a procedure for lay practitioners to enter a path of bodhisattva with aim of eventually becoming buddha. Pure buddha fields (also called pure lands) are not celestial realms per say, they are more like a state of mind, although they are sometimes associated with certain direction such as west for Sukhavati or east for Abhirati, they do not reside in any physical place. Great bodhisattvas themselves have their own pure fields - Avalokiteshvara resides in Potala, Manjushri in Vimala and Vajrapani in Alakavati, but again these are not physical places as such. Unlike devas, these bodhisattvas are free from samsara and are a source of Buddhist refuge (as a jewel of sangha) along with buddhas and their teaching.
@marchwhitlock645523 күн бұрын
I thought the term ‘bodhisattva’ simply referred to one who is not yet enlightened in the Pali canon-distinct from its later meanings. Beyond that, I also thought part of the bodhisattva path involved choosing to remain in samsara in order to help all others; how then can these great bodhisattvas be said to be free from samsara?
@sryoutube982123 күн бұрын
@@marchwhitlock6455a bodhisattva both in non-Mahāyāna and Mahāyāna contexts refers to someone who, for the sake of others, aims at becoming a samyaksaṃbuddha (sammāsaṃbuddha in Pāḷi) rather than another kind of awakened person. The reason why this requires "staying in saṃsāra" is because the path to becoming a samyaksaṃbuddha is the longest path to awakening and the most arduous - traditionally, it is narratively recounted in the Jātaka stories, wherein the bodhisattva who became the Samyaksaṃbuddha Śākyamuni has to do various difficult things and go through arduous births. But eventually, once one becomes a samyaksaṃbuddha, one is free from saṃsāra. And further, one is uniquely able to help other beings. Or so the Buddhist view goes. Mahāyāna and Theravāda disagree in some ways on the nature of a samyaksaṃbuddha and on what is cultivated during the path towards it, but otherwise these terms are basically held in common across all Buddhism.
@fronteredar735522 күн бұрын
Bodhisattva is just Buddha before becoming enlightenment as Buddha, as least thats what the meaning is in the Pali Canon
@user-jt3dw6vv4x22 күн бұрын
Sect differences don't mean much in Buddhism. Bodhisattvas are also widely revered in Theravada Buddhist cultures due to the Mahayana influence.
@andrewyam793822 күн бұрын
@@user-jt3dw6vv4xdepends on which Theravada tradition. The Thai forest tradition and its various Western offshoots strictly follows the pali canon and has no reverence whatsoever for Bodhisattvas, even going so far as to consider the concept misguided. One cannot postpone enlightenment. It happens naturally when one's mind is ready.
@RedpandaJourney14 күн бұрын
You should also do some research on the Six Dharshanas of Hinduism. Especially Nyayasutra would be very interesting.
@blanchjoe148122 күн бұрын
Dear RFB, Thank you for another well researched and developed piece. Like all things Buddhist, the question of whether Buddhism is Atheistic, or not, is completely dependent upon how one defines the belief, or concept of "God". If one is able to assume a definition for what God "Is" then it is possible to answer the question of what relationship Buddhism has to The Divine principle.
@brenorocha668722 күн бұрын
This whole confusion stems from the way Europe name things. Religion, gods, atheism, those are all European words to describe European belief systems that don't necessarily apply elsewhere.
@malithaw7 күн бұрын
This. Always makes me chuckle when when westerns try to see everything that is non western only thro8gh their own lens.
@truongcahanh89156 күн бұрын
By this line of reasoning, I as a non-European person would never be able to describe my Buddhist culture, or for that matter my innermost thoughts which are highly rooted in my cultural upbringing, to others while speaking in European language. Inversely I would also be incapable of fully understanding Western concepts which have been translated into my native Asian tongue, and am obliged to master Greek in order to read Plato, or German to read Nietzche, or French to read Foucault
@brenorocha66876 күн бұрын
@truongcahanh8915 Only if you deal in absolutes. Which is what people do when they pose the question "Are Buddhists atheists?" and expect a 'yes or no' answer. We can use borrowed words to talk to people from other cultural backgrounds, but a lot is lost in the translation. "Gods" is a good enough translation for Devas, but without further explanation Europeans will probably think of the Greek pantheon. They will never guess that a human could be reborn as a "god", or the other way around. If I try to explain to you about the African Orixas cultuated here in Brazil I can use words like 'gods' or 'saints' or ' ancestors', but none of these words will carry a precise idea. Because they are borrowed from a different culture. The Europeans had to import Karma into their vocabulary, because they didn't have any word that could translate the concept.
@Zantetsukens14 күн бұрын
This is a great summary and showcase of the eternal debate and comparison between Theravada vs Mahayana vs Western "Secular" Buddhism
@newpilgrim23 күн бұрын
Profoundly helpful, many thanks!🙏
@pH-LIVE20 күн бұрын
I LOVE your channel. You're a regular inspiration for me, and The Neighbourhood... podcast... on Spotify. I'm proud of you for the accomplishment of this library of knowledge and wisdom. It's a commendable achievement. Obviously, I Love you and your audience. -SPHC 🧙🏻♂✨🧘🏽
@jaybird690523 күн бұрын
your eyebrow work has become sublime, my friend
@tenzinchoedon820721 күн бұрын
😂
@bahadursunny167423 күн бұрын
I don't know why the west thinks Buddhism is atheistic..... We always worshipped gods..... But the Buddha is the supreme teacher of gods and humans. Btw... Another amazing video ❤❤❤🙏
@thomaslai138123 күн бұрын
The cultural West has always been weird regarding the question of divinities. Until well into the 20th century (and to a degree still today), monotheism was regarded as the most “rational” belief system, which was of course mere Eurocentrism reflecting a preference for the White European way of doing things, one of these being Christian belief in one supreme God. Then in fits and starts throughout the 20th century, European intellectuals who questioned the rationality of belief in divinities embraced Buddhism for its apparent disinclination towards gods, championing it on this basis as a rational, empirical, even “scientific” philosophy. Extolling Buddhism’s “rational empiricism” naturally meant downplaying the presence of gods and rituals in Buddhist praxis; these were “mere superstitious contamination” of an otherwise sensible tradition relying on empirically observable data about reality.
@TingTong256822 күн бұрын
There are many Buddhist from the east claiming Buddhism is Atheistic too and it really sounds phony. A Sri Lankan guy going around saying his religion is Atheistic got checked by me and he got so triggered till he dosen't want to speak to me anymore plus he also blocked me in all platforms.
@utenatenjou213922 күн бұрын
Atheistic/Theistic: 1) Lack believe that God(s) exists -> Do not believe in any God(s) via existence of is not warrant enough to further believe in them 2) Believe that God(s) DO NOT exists -> not believe in any God(s) via no such thing to believe 3) Believe that God(s) exists -> not believe in any God(s) 4) Believe that God(s) exists -> believe in any God(s) 5) Believe that God(s) exists -> believe in only one God 6) Lack believe that God(s) exists -> believe in God(s) --> IHMO, I think human can do this even it is illogical 7) Ignorance (I think this is a variance of 1) existence/non-existence of God(s) has no concern to them; hence, believing has no concern ) I think some Buddhists may fall into one or more of above (there can be others criteria possible). I think some Buddhists view God(s) as tools (phony, pascal wager type, half-heart if you may called), whether God(s) existence is irrelevant when asking for helps. a.k.a. anyone please help, logical not applied in the process. @TingTong2568 You can ask and compare definitions then the "check" on concept of "Without God(s)" can be understood on both side.
@user-jt3dw6vv4x22 күн бұрын
@@TingTong2568 Someone doesn't just block someone for such a petty reason. There is clearly more to this story and you both were not friends either. The term "atheistic" is incorrect and I think people are simply conflating the fact that Buddhists don't worship deities to gain things with the idea of atheism, that includes people with Asian origins who don't know enough about Buddhism. The Buddha said that worshipping gods will not help achieve liberation and is only a symptom of dukka (suffering). Gods are not a central idea to basic Buddhism. I think this is what confuses people to conflate this with atheism.
@TingTong256822 күн бұрын
@user-jt3dw6vv4x he was never my friend but we know each other since we used work at the same place. He got triggered when i checked him about his claims that Buddhism is an atheistic movement.
Old Japanese texts about Christians would talk about Jesus/the Father as their ‘Buddha’.
@HeRa06Ram20 күн бұрын
It was mostly because they called every foreign religion that they didn't understood as "Buddhism" that's why they initially knew Christianity as "The European's Buddhism"
@Randomaccount947015 күн бұрын
True it was an interchangeable word from religion at the time @@HeRa06Ram
@Simon.the.Likeable22 күн бұрын
I really like going to Theravada Buddhist temples and listening to the chanting of the monks. I went to a Pure Land ceremony once and could not make it through to the end. For me, it is very much "horses for courses," like the difference between Baptist and Orthodox Christian services, I suppose.
@Dan_The_Man0-022 күн бұрын
Even as a Buddhist i didn’t know some of this 😅
@jakekuo756222 күн бұрын
Same
@mikehart561923 күн бұрын
The Buddhist concepts are very similar to the neo-Pagan ones. The Buddhist cosmology is far more complex and systematized but some Pagans view the gods as actual independent spiritual beings while others view them as symbols, archetypes, and aspects of nature and human life, while others see the gods as a blend of actual and symbolic. Some see the gods as separate beings while others as aspects or ways of experiencing an undivided Divine/Spiritual. Some Pagans are atheistic in that they don't work with the gods at all but directly with nature. Outside monotheism, religions are often not simple binaries of theist or atheist. They can be mixes or gradations of or even neither. But that makes life more interesting.
@amitarmori27292 күн бұрын
Yes also it amalgamate with local culture and there religions and modify itself according to people
@HouseofSinope23 күн бұрын
Had to click on the notif.
@davidchess198522 күн бұрын
A good survey. I notice you didn't mention Zen much, if at all; my impression is that Westerners tended (for whatever reason) to encounter Zen-related forms of Buddhism, which put less emphasis on anything supernatural. That may also have contributed to the "Buddhism is atheist" impression in the West?
@tonioene226220 күн бұрын
I suspect the same. 👍
@sacrface42019 күн бұрын
No
@davidchess198518 күн бұрын
@@sacrface420 mu?
@hijiri_byakuren22 күн бұрын
23:37 "others have questioned if we can even call it buddhism after discarding so many elements of buddhism classically defined" the skandhas of buddhism itself XD Very good video! It's great seeing how essays about how buddhism is perceived in the west vs what it classically/historically has been are getting spread, and i specially like this one!
@liangflrs0223 күн бұрын
As a practicing and convert to Vajrayana Buddhism (albeit not always strictly the best) - there are many gods in the pantheon. It was an easy conversion from Catholicism into Buddhism because some of the concepts & history of religion in Mexico, from when the Spaniards brought Christianity and mixed with our Indigenous customs share parallels (Saints are parallels to Bodhittsavas as an example La Virgen Maria and Avalokitsvara in the form of Chenrizeg/Guanyin or Tara, celebrations of the ancestors/the dead, the afterlife, what happens when we die, spirits). Through conversations with my Tibetan neighbors we discovered that we related on various concepts, histories, and shared similar ideas/traditions that were adopted by the dominant religion as well as the violent clashes that empire and religion often bring (Buddhism in Tibet and Catholicism in Mexico). Sidenote, I'm from the north, with Yaqui ancestry, we also share similar views about the spirit world and the significance of the deer 🦌. I also saw many of the same parallels when I traveled to Oaxaca as an example the belief of snakes and what they represent was very similar to Nagas. But this was my own experience can't make assumption all Northern Mexicans view it this way. To give a crude yet simple example of all this in Mexico we have burritos (which predate colonization), in the Middle East they are called Shawirma, in other Western countries they call them wraps. It's essentially a carbohydrate that you add proteins, vegetables, sauce etc. that is food on the go, it's virtually eaten in the same way in all places except with a regional variation and flavor but works the exact same way. This is how I was able to understand the concepts of both religions separated by time and space. I guess that's as simple as I can put it.
@lola-922022 күн бұрын
Very interesting, what led you to become Buddhist initially? Like, what sparked your interest and convinced you it was the right path for yourself? (I was raised Protestant but eventually changed to a different faith too, and I like hearing others' conversion stories)
@tsurugi520 күн бұрын
I haven’t seen that many Mexican converts to Buddhism wow
@natreiyn020518 күн бұрын
None of the bodhisattvas, wrathful or peaceful, are individual entities. They are all emanations of bodhicitta, which is within yourself.
@user-gr7jo9qb3l17 күн бұрын
Pls find a real teacher. Buddhism is non-theist and has never worshipped external gods. You need to receive teachings on karma, defects of samsara, precious human birth, and liberation. We have never worshiped gods or saints
@pasinduasha9 күн бұрын
Thank you, as a person with a Traditional Buddhist background, your presentation is very valuable and gained vital knowledge from this. 🙏🙏🙏
@AdvaiticOneness123 күн бұрын
The Brahman described by Hindus is essentially "Consciousness" (Chitta) or "Fullness" (Poornam). Yogic meditations and the teachings of the Upanishads serve as guides toward enlightenment. While Buddha referred to the ultimate reality as "Shunyam" (Emptiness), Hindus recognized it as "Poornam" (Fullness) or Brahman. This is why idealists and scientists are more interested in hindu philosophy especially Advaita vedanta.
@marchwhitlock645523 күн бұрын
I thought it was Nāgārjuna, and not the Buddha, who first referred to ultimate reality as emptiness.
@thomaslai138123 күн бұрын
@@marchwhitlock6455 the concept of Emptiness, Śunyata, arose around the 1-2 centuries AD with the rise of Mahayana thought around this time in Northern India. Fundamentally, Śunyata describes what Orthodox Buddhist schools designate “Conditioned Origination”: that all phenomena, not being static and unchanging, lack any essence fundamental to their existence that would impart permanence (in humans this would be our Soul, our notion of Ego even as we undergo fundamental changes as we grow and develop). For Mahayana Buddhists, the absence of such a “permanent” essence in anything makes everything “empty”. For their part, the Orthodox Buddhist schools understood Śunyata as Annihilationism, namely that what comes into existence passes away and ceases absolutely, (in Conditioned Origination, things serve as the basis for the origination of more things before passing, in this way continuing to “exist” through the ripple effect of further things spawned). Nagarjuna attempted through his writings to show that Mahayanist thought, and especially Śunyata, was still in line with Orthodox Buddhist thought, but his efforts were unsuccessful and was ultimately embraced by Mahayanists only.
@thomaslai138123 күн бұрын
@@marchwhitlock6455 Nagarjuna attempted to demonstrate through his writings that the Mahayana concept of Emptiness was compatible with, and indeed a continuation of, the Orthodox Buddhist concept of Conditioned Origination when Mahayana Buddhism began to emerge in northern India during the 1-2 centuries AD. Ultimately he was unsuccessful in reconciling these two traditions of Buddhist thought, and was embraced only by Mahayana Buddhism.
@RDesai_indiancapitalist22 күн бұрын
ॐ पूर्णमदः पूर्णमिदं पूर्णात् पूर्णमुदच्यते and पूर्णस्य पूर्णमादाय पूर्णमेवावशिष्यते.
@robothug668822 күн бұрын
And the buddah was a upanishad
@sjappiyah4071Күн бұрын
Excellent breakdown, this has been a prevailing narrative in the western discussion with Bhuddism , thank you for providing the other side
@micahdunwoody655522 күн бұрын
I wish more people knew about the cosmology of Buddhism. It is so cool!
@VARMOT12313 күн бұрын
And all indian religions because they are deeply interconnected
@wonderness26498 күн бұрын
@@VARMOT123no thanks!
@itsoblivion81242 күн бұрын
Cosmology is same in all indian religions.
@micahdunwoody65552 күн бұрын
@@itsoblivion8124 which makes it all the more interesting, because there are different interpretations and images of figures. e.g. the difference between Hindu Yama and Buddhist Yama.
@itsoblivion81242 күн бұрын
@@micahdunwoody6555 there's also indra net which contains myriads of universes.
@stupidw33b5223 күн бұрын
yesss I've been waiting for this video
@ARIXANDRE23 күн бұрын
I'm a new subscriber and this channel has been a blessing. Thank you for your knowledge and delivery, Dr.
@KarlBunker22 күн бұрын
"Hungry Ghosts" -- Great name for a band.
@DyarContreras22 күн бұрын
The jazz fusion musicians Melhdau and Guilliana already named one of their songs, “Hungry Ghost.” Look it up….GREAT drum and keyboard duet.
@ihatespam222 күн бұрын
Almost anything you can think of, has already been a band name, it’s crazy.
@mexicanstatue17223 күн бұрын
great video! as always :D
@brenorocha668722 күн бұрын
I wonder what Secular Buddhists have to say about the Buddha's teachings regarding ethics and morality. The Western view of Buddhism is heavily focused in meditation and mindfulness, but according to the Buddha's teachings a virtuous behavior is just as important, if not more. One can become very proeficient in meditation and mindful cultivation, but that alone won't lead anyone to liberation. It's even possible to a person very accomplished in meditation to have selfish and unwholesome behavior. The Buddha's cousin Devadatta is the prime example of this in the Pali Cannon (spoiler alert: he ends up in Hell).
@eseetoh21 күн бұрын
Tks for a great accurate explanation n breakdown for how the Buddha(s) explain the existence of supernatural beings; both gods (devas), ghosts, demons, etc. But in Buddhism we do not rely on / worship them for help but instead practice the Teachings ourselves for self-salvation. But here in Singapore some ppl use the term to describe Buddhism as a 'non-theist' religion, which I think fits Buddhism perfectly. With Metta To All!!!
@slickandslaycious657922 күн бұрын
Thanks! This was very informative. It also showed how european atheism was influenced by buddhism and vice versa
@Cheat-n2y23 күн бұрын
In Bangladesh We practice Theravada, and we also consider the existence of Gods(not the creator one), but don't worship any (except few people worship Hindu Gods, but they only do that because they want solution for temporary problems). But people not study Buddhism that much, rather they do things like other religions somewhat do
@gerededasein118220 күн бұрын
Nicely done, and an interesting treatment. Might have been cool to also discuss Navayana Buddhism, but I can see that it might not fit the theme. If you already have a video discussing Navayana, please link it in a reply.
@ThainaYu22 күн бұрын
I am Thai while also have Chinese linage. So I know plenty aspect of Theravada and Mahayana. Now I am closest to agnostic modernized Buddhism I could say that Theravada side also nontheistic by tradition too (even before 19th century). Buddhism in southeast Asia coexist alongside Hinduism and native Paganism and never reject each other. And it was freedom to be Buddhist while also worship any god or deva they wanted to. It also freedom to worship none at all The ultimate greatness of Buddha is, he specified that all supernatural being, no matter it exist or not, was just another being in Buddhist cosmology. But he is just a mundane human achieving enlightenment. So any and every kind of folk tradition just another part of his cosmology Buddha just tell us that it really nonsense to rely on any gods or devas. But he did not prohibit anyone to worship anything beside him, he don't even demand worshipping him in the first place. He just tell the way and what he think we should know. That was a relationship between teacher and pupil many Theravada are keep in mind about Buddha while being Buddhist. Thinking about Buddha as god or just human teacher is not really important. And so any god or devas or any supernatural tradition was still being worship by Buddhist people if they wanted to. If they worship god then Buddha just become the greatest teacher of all those god while Buddhism itself still being atheistic practice Mahayana is completely another story and I think your explanation was plenty accurate for Mahayana culture. But there was reformist Mahayana like Zen that was sometimes atheist too
@Jamil_Ahmed21 күн бұрын
Dude, changing title and thumbnail like crazy.Props for great video
@lpslucasps22 күн бұрын
5:40 Tbf, nothing's lewdest than holding hands.
@syd.a.m20 күн бұрын
Such cultured devas.
@fariesz67869 күн бұрын
are the Q devas?
@smallman978722 күн бұрын
I remember learning about buddhism in social studies classes. My teachers always emphasized that it was more of a philosophy than a religion. I thought a lot about the little I learned about it and came to the conclusion that it was correct about the origins of suffering and how to eliminate them. I didn't pick up any buddhist practices but just always had the notion of buddhism as an inherently factual philosophy in the back of my mind. Thank you for showing me where that all came from RFB!
@pathumwijayasooriya430213 күн бұрын
I'm from Sri Lanka and according to the teachings taught here, Bodhisattvas are not beings that deliberately postpone their enlightenment to help others! They are on a path from one rebirth to the next in order for them to finally reach enlightenment. They may help people along the way in these rebirths and since they are beings of compassion and kindness they do so without hesitation. Theravada buddhists generally do not worship any sort of bodhisattva's. The general notion we have about the devas is that the idea of Devas were introduced in order for the teachings of the Buddha to be better understood by the people who lived during that time who were brought up in a Jina or Hindu religious background. Buddhist traditions are common in Sri Lanka, ranging from watering trees, to building statues etc. However, more or less people here are aware that the core of Buddhism does not involve all the traditions. Traditions were introduced as means of longevity of the religion, political manipulation and blind faith. Buddhism in its true form is quite simple yet profound. What we learn here in Sri Lanka is that your whole life revolves around your mind which is quite untethered in most people. In order to tether it to yourself or ground it of sorts, we practice meditation to try and calm the mind. Our pursuit of enlightenment does not involve and Devas or supernatural beings.
@OnyxIdol22 күн бұрын
I really appreciate your calm, research based explanations of these topics
@thomaslai138123 күн бұрын
Gods, namely devāh, are beings that enjoy higher states of existence due to a store of past good karma, but at the end of the day they, like all other non-awakened beings (humans, animals, demons, etc.) are subject to cyclical rebirth, and so will be eventually pass away and be reborn into another state (a lower one if they have exhausted their good karma and not cultivated more to keep them in the rarified heavenly realms). So yes, gods exist in Buddhist cosmologies, and depending on the tradition may or may not be objects worthy of veneration, but they are differentiated from Buddhas (and Bodhisattvas, depending on how one interprets these) by being subject to cyclical rebirth.
@Purwapada22 күн бұрын
candrakirti said those who attain good karma and ascend the the deva realm are idiots, just as much as those who do bad deeds and go to avici According to dzogsar khyentse rinpoche
@CG0V22 күн бұрын
Your videos are such a gift! Excellent analysis!
@yanluoanthony686822 күн бұрын
I notice that went u started to talk about secular Buddhism and modernism Buddhism, they sound like someone who is vaguely learning zen but grew up in a fundamentalist Protestant background. I have also noticed that those professors and authors are not Asian and sound very American,and what they espouse sounds very orientalist and cherry picking of what they like and dislike about Buddhism.
@ROM04713 күн бұрын
Wish I’d seen this early enough to attend Who are the Hungry Ghosts! Is the recording available? Love your content
@Lalita_Luna23 күн бұрын
Definite theism: 1. Specifically the Abrahamic idea of God? Then: obviously NO. 2. The wider understanding of deities? Then: obviously YES.
@black-cross22 күн бұрын
Has any religion ever presented the correct view of God, or do you prefer the ones that allow you to speculate and make Him in your desired image?
@fronteredar735522 күн бұрын
@@black-crossWhat's the correct view of God?
@black-cross22 күн бұрын
@@fronteredar7355 the only One who claims to have created the universe and humbled Himself becoming man and dying for our sins.
@fronteredar735522 күн бұрын
@@black-cross Was that Hinduism?
@TheForeignersNetwork22 күн бұрын
That's not correct though. Other religions see their deities as progenitors of creation too... Buddhism is unique in that the mind is considered to be the primal force of all material phenomena, and its essence is emptiness. In this way, everyone that is not a Buddha is trapped in their own mental constructions and previous actions, including every deity that isn't a Buddha
@jarosawwieczorek83520 күн бұрын
great channel, I immediately subscribed after watching "Where is the grave of Jesus". Is there a chance that you would make a film about the Shroud of Turin itself and the Eucharistic Miracles?
@debarghyachattopadhyay261420 күн бұрын
That's where most amateurs fall face down, in abarahamic religion questioning the God is sin , where in Hinduism or Buddhism it is a whole set of philosophy to debate the existence of all powerful being, its not frowned upon, rather encouraged to find your place and understanding
@marcelo90z5 күн бұрын
Abrahamic religions have an "orthodox" approach, meaning that there is only one correct truth/way of life that God intended/revealed, and there is effort to teach scripture and customs to match this understanding, even if people disagree what is the correct way. Dharmic religions and eastern philosophies, at least what I know of, are more on the "orthopraxis" side, as in there is more emphasis in correct moral practices rather than believing something is factual. Buddhism, for example, rarely cares if you believe it is correct or not, what matters is that, in the tradition, the only way to be enlightened is acting well. While in Christianity/Islam, part of the faith is to wholeheartedly embrace the teachings as revelations from God. In the grand scheme of things, neither orthodoxy nor orthopraxy is "better" than one another. We need some degree of orthodoxy, as in to know and believe concretely in the right and fair, while in orthopraxy we find the best way to interact with the world and ourselves. Having knowledge but bad actions is egoistical (and dangerous, in the wrong hands), and action without good knowledge can be misguided or is limited.
@skootzkadoodles9 күн бұрын
I lived in Japan for 3 months and could not figure out Buddihsm at all because my framing is based off Abrahamic references, this cleared up all my questions, thank you!!!
@oltedders23 күн бұрын
The Buddhist gods are there to protect us. Their powers are activated by our Buddhist practice. They don't need to be identified or assume any kind of form other than the manifestation of protection or to quickly resolve a dilemma.
@roxyamused22 күн бұрын
I've heard them called dharma protectors or dharmapalas which are considered tamed devas. Not all devas have our best interests at heart.
@miahconnell2322 күн бұрын
Mostly, generally, I don’t focus on metaphysical or supernatural stuff: but I’ve had a number of instances wherein likelihood and heretofore known things about regular existence say I shouldn’t have survived, and yet here I am typing. Perhaps I was protected by help, things, beings, or something unseen by normal mortal eyes in this realm. I’m not even sure how I feel about existence.
@T-h-a-t_G-u-y22 күн бұрын
Love the Buddhist videos
@TheBitterSarcasmOfMs.Anthropy19 күн бұрын
That time lapse footage around 1:16 was absolutely beautiful
@hiroshima1922 күн бұрын
that first image is a Hungry Ghost, the inspiration for the Bloodlickers in Bloodborne
@douglashtang20 күн бұрын
Finally we have an English video that dives into this. As a Vietnamese, I grew up being taught and learning about all of this so these are very familiar to me.
@Mrballerize23 күн бұрын
I think the reason a lot of people think of Buddhism as Athiestic is because in the West, a lot of people practice Secular/Athiest Buddhism. That being said, just like all religions, it encompasses a variety of thoughts and perspectives. Some Buddhist are theist, and others are not.
@niket52723 күн бұрын
Yeah and it's annoying that the western secular buddhists almost insist that theirs is the correct one
@s.d.m.g36123 күн бұрын
@@niket527 it's the west so there's nothing else to expect.
@niket52723 күн бұрын
@@s.d.m.g361 yeah and they tend to ignore the community and ethical aspect as well. Basically mindfulness in pursuit of individual material happiness, regardless of the effect your actions have on others, the environment, society. Eg soldiers using mindfulness
@Carlos-bz5oo23 күн бұрын
@@s.d.m.g361 Gotta make Buddhism sensible to capitalist droggery
@roxyamused22 күн бұрын
@@niket527 , this is my biggest critique of western/medicalized mindfulness. It's really not that mindful at all if the ethics of it are stripped away. Individualism is also antithetical mindfulness and buddhism itself, since interconnectedness makes individualism moot.
@BaiLong4518 күн бұрын
Thanks for this video. As someone who has always paid homage and worshipped the Buddhas and bodhisattvas at the various temples throughout the Chinese diaspora, I was confused and somewhat miffed reading and hearing others, monks included, say that Buddhism is atheistic. The true, as is shown in this video, is more complex than the atheist/theistic binary.
@User-vbhhnvgjmtКүн бұрын
Actually there is God in Buddhism called Brahma Sahampati. The difference with another religion (Theistic) is the role. While God in other religions is the creator, determiner and judge of everything, whereas in Buddhism the universe was created naturally, and Brahma Sahampati is a Supreme God who knows everything and has supernatural power and is able to mobilize His inffluence as far as 1000 solar systems. In Buddhism, individuals are responsible for their own Karma, rely on their own Karma and Wisdom as protectors. Achieving spiritual liberation depends on one's own efforts, but of course the role of the environment is also very influential, because the environment can also influence a person. Because humans in general have hearts and actions that are far from good and pure, they are far from Brahma, most often connected with Earth Gods who live in cities and villages or Human Guardian Gods or certain Gods whose past lives have had kinship relations (after death humans are mostly born in the ghost and lower worlds, only a few are born into the happy world, because most people's minds are dirty and not well trained). In Buddhism, the God King Sakka is described as a Worldly God, namely a God who gives worldly blessings, especially individuals who are considered very good, who have the right to receive blessings from him. If in other religions (theistic) the highest divine concept is union with God in heaven, then in Buddhism the highest is Nibana.
@jatc11yey20 күн бұрын
Covers a wide range of scholarship, as always 👏👏👏
@GigaDanMan22 күн бұрын
9:25 having to go through multiple layers of a hierarchy of those who don’t have answers only for the top person to dodge the question… *Is this an allegory for calling customer service?!*
@ramonarobot20 күн бұрын
Kafkaesque 😆
@itsROMPERS...21 күн бұрын
My developed take on the Buddha is that he urged us to simply open our eyes and really see everything for exactly what it is, no more, no less. The problem of life is that we overlook things and don't really understand what things are in themselves, because we don't bother to let them be what they are, and we project our own expectations on them. Nothing else is necessary. The end of your journey is where you are standing. You are a Buddha already, you just have to realize it.
@slayparader19 күн бұрын
Hi @ReligionForBreakfast . I would like to know your opinion on Tipitaka/Tripitaka, the Buddhist Canon.
@Jakob.Hamburg22 күн бұрын
Great episode, because I love the topic Budhism and its lore and I find you did a great job in analyzing, telling and presenting again. : ) Happy Halloween @ everyone. 🎃🕯✨
@GregTom222 күн бұрын
I don't get this protestant Buddhism thing. What's the point of Buddhism if you do not believe in reincarnation and in the cycle of samsahra? That's completely missing the main concern of the teachings. All meditation is "empty ritual" if there is nothing to enlighten out of. If any religion works without belief in the supernatural, I feel like it should be hinduism, where enlightenment is not the rejection of an illusion of self, but rather the embrace of the notion that your atman is shared with all other beings in the universe, re-envisioning Brahma not as a god, but as consciousness itself.
@battlerushiromiya65121 күн бұрын
Even Hinduism needs the supernatural as the Brahma or consciousness is something that exists outside natural laws, plus this ignores that many Hindus are strongly theistic and the only example of atheists we find are from criticism of them written by other theists. Plus many schools of thought in Hinduism require you to discard your sense of self to obtain communion with the Brahman. Overall, witrhout spiritual or supernatural beleifs most of the religions reduce to actions that have no purpose, without notion of karma there is no enlightenment, and as you said all your meditation is just a waste of time.
@AmunRa120 күн бұрын
A secular Buddhist won't necessarily discount the idea of rebirth/reincarnation. The idea that when you die, you are born again is not as radical as the idea of heavenly beings who you can appease and win favors from. That said, for many Buddhists, even non-secular ones, enlightenment is not necessarily the immediate goal. Some simply want to be the "best versions of themselves" in the immediate future, and find the dharma the best way to do it.
@battlerushiromiya65120 күн бұрын
@@AmunRa1 You don't need Buddhism to do that. Being a better version of yourselves I mean. Secondly do secular Buddhism accept the idea of karma without karma believing in reincarnation or rebirth is useless as you will never be able to escape the cycle of death and reincarnation Overall this trend of secular Buddhism will most likely go the same way christian deism and unitarian universalism has gone where stripping all the supernatural aspects leads to a destruction of the connection with practises secular Buddhists use and Buddhism itself
@tsurugi520 күн бұрын
exactly secular Buddhism is a joke because at that point a bullet to the head is pretty much equal to nirvana
@connorclarke17088 күн бұрын
I think karma can also be pretty easily interpreted in a social, psychological sense. If all you give out is negativity and hatred than that's all you're likely to receive in turn. @@battlerushiromiya651
@_98s22 күн бұрын
I always look forward to ur Buddhism videos
@Alec.4023 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing
@ligiasommers18 күн бұрын
Excellent and enlightening, thank you 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻🙏🏻🪷🙏🏻
@YakubTheFather23 күн бұрын
Question (around 16:00 made me think of it) what do you consider the biggest challenge regarding early scholars and understanding other cultures religion? The limited texts they got, the strict cultural lenses they saw it though or the language barrier being higher for lay people as opposed to the learned and making interactions less fruitful?
@mitslev404323 күн бұрын
I think it a bit of everything. But I would say it is conceptual. Some cultures are so alien that it's hard to find a point of reference. And often they try to liken it to something from their own culture or religion when they really don't match up. So for example I often have atheist ask me why I believe in the Christian God and not other gods like Zeus. To which I reply that are nothing alike. Put a god from every religion right next to eachother and you will find that the only thing they have in common is that they are worshiped. Even in one religion like with the Greeks beings like the primordials titans and Olympians are all gods yet can be different kinds of creatures. Also the limited time. It can take years and years for someone to understand their own religion let alone a foreign one in a limited amount of time.
@sanku199921 күн бұрын
Cultural differences and overall evolution of the said society 100%. For example, Buddhism and Hinduism don't fit the western definition of religion as it is a way of living. Lots of stories are metaphors for life but if taken literally, they become 'mythical'.
@fariesz67869 күн бұрын
i would add another dimension even: a _counter-cultural_ lense if you will, something about how they try to distance themselves from _some_ aspects of their respective current culture (also influenced by personal beliefs, hopes, etc.) the ideas of Huxley and Davies seemed a lot like they were essentially _looking_ (or maybe longing) for some more rational alternative to the religious frameworks they knew from home (which were also getting more radicalised in the 19th century). you might also call this dimension "projection"
@fariesz67869 күн бұрын
@@sanku1999i reckon that statement, while i get what you're trying to say and somewhat agree with it, is selling it in a way that overshoots the target almost equally far in the other direction. the thing is that especially evangelical Christians love to emphasize faith and (alleged) individuality, but there is a bunch of codified performative behaviour going on (that they aren't even aware of, depending on the person). so you could classify Christianity just as much as a "way of life" and a quite different one depending on the individual confession or even local group.
@dominamortis111122 күн бұрын
You are remarkably fascinating. 🧡
@sryoutube982123 күн бұрын
Buddhist philosophical history has plenty of investigation of many classical "divine attributes," but as they concern Buddhas: omniscience, omnipresence, impassibility, omnibenevolence, etc. The only classical divine attribute routinely denied of the Buddhas is being the efficient or formal cause of the world. One sees this tendency throughout historical Buddhist literature in India for example. So here's a question: is the most important attribute for making something a God the creator-attribute? Because if not, then maybe the Buddhas - the omniscient (sarvajña) saviors (tāyin) through teaching - are Buddhism's gods. And the devas are more like...jinn or something.
@billbowser1322 күн бұрын
From what I understand, as a buddhist living in a predominantly muslim environment, jinns are used more likely to refer to all supernatural beings (brahmas, devas, petas, and even demons). This is just anecdotal tho
@TheForeignersNetwork22 күн бұрын
I mean maybe? What you're suggesting would require an objective metric for what constitutes a "god" outside of the Buddhist framework. So like, you can have that opinion, but you're never going to get an empiric answer
@wavesnwind22 күн бұрын
In this sense, the Tathagatagarbha is not at all dissimilar from the "One" of Neoplatonism.
@swagmundfreud66622 күн бұрын
Funny thing is, my westernized perspective on Buddhism has always viewed Buddha as just the guy who got enlightenment before everyone else did, thus he was not omnipotent and not omnipresent and not impassible and not omnibenevolent (ok maybe the last, but he wasn't ALWAYS omnibenevolent). I've noticed myself, I often choose to just call the Buddha Siddhartha, because calling him his given name gives a sense of him just being a man. Which most Buddhists in Asia don't seem to believe.
@sryoutube982122 күн бұрын
@@swagmundfreud666 yeah, the reason why Buddhists in Asia don't take him to be a human is because the tradition never really did. As far back as is observable in the textual and archeological record, a Tathāgata is regarded in Buddhism as exceeding all other categories in excellence. But the image of the human Buddha gained popularity with Buddhist modernism.
@nilupulimedagama38392 күн бұрын
As a buddhist i have rarely seen buddhism interpreted so accurately by someone thats not born to its culture. W video