Top Banner
Life of the Buddha: A spiritual Journey
27

Life of the buddha

Jan 09, 2017

Download

Education

mbpascua24
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Life of the buddha

Life of the Buddha: A spiritual Journey

Page 2: Life of the buddha

563BCConception

The Buddha’s mother was the wife of a leading figure in a small state known by its tribal name, Śākya.

It was a kind of oligarchic republic that was situated on the border of modern day India and Nepal. According to Buddhist tradition, she dreamt that an auspicious white elephant entered her womb

Page 3: Life of the buddha
Page 4: Life of the buddha

Buddha's words on loving kindness“Just as a mum cares for her only child all her life, radiate kindness through the world with boundless heart, unconfined, without anger or adversary.”

Page 5: Life of the buddha

563BCBirth: Lumbinī, Nepal

The Buddha emerged from his mother’s side, as she stood leaning against a tree, in a painless and pure birth.

He took seven steps and lotus flowers sprang up in his footsteps. A wise man predicted that this child would be either a great secular ruler or a great religious leader. He was named Siddhārtha (or Sarvārthasiddha), meaning ‘a man who achieves his goals’. His mother died shortly after his birth and he was brought up by his maternal aunt Mahāprajāpati.

Page 6: Life of the buddha
Page 7: Life of the buddha

548BCMarriage: Kapilavastu, Śākya

Siddhārtha was married at 15 – the normal age of consent – to a younger bride called Yaśodharā.

She conceived in due course and gave birth to a boy, who was called Rāhula. Siddhārtha is understood to have been a well educated young man, trained in martial arts and to have enjoyed his privileged life in ancient Kapilavastu, the capital city.

Page 8: Life of the buddha
Page 9: Life of the buddha

Prior to 534BCExistential crisis: Kapilavastu

Siddhartha’s father Śuddhodana wanted his son to become the political ruler predicted at his birth.

So he conspired to protect his son from any religious aspirations by giving him a life of pleasure and privilege, and by preventing him from seeing the harsher sides of reality. His plan eventually failed. Siddhartha managed to explore his society and was profoundly disturbed by finding out about old age, sickness and death. He was also fascinated by the sight of religious people seeking answers to life’s big questions.

Page 10: Life of the buddha
Page 11: Life of the buddha

534BCLeaving home: To RājagrihaEventually the tensions between cosy and familiar home

life and the challenge of suffering and death became too much.

Siddhartha left home on his own, as tradition has it slipping away in the dead of night, leaving his family in despair. In a dramatic moment, deep in the wilderness, he abandoned his horse and cropped his hair. He became a religious wanderer, and sought out the company of others doing the same. He travelled south into the neighbouring kingdom of Magadha (modern Bihar) where he was spotted by the young king Bimbisāra as he begged on the streets in the capital city Rājagriha.

Page 12: Life of the buddha

Indian depiction of the Buddha's great departure from Kapilavastu, on his horse Kanthaka, whose hooves are held off the ground by the gods.

Page 13: Life of the buddha

533BCMeditation: Magadha

Siddhārtha is first described as training with a succession of meditation teachers, including the masters Ālāra Kālāma and Uddaka Rāmaputta.

These people taught him meditation methods by which his mind could be calmed and enter more and more refined states of 'one-pointed' serenity, in which awareness of the outside world recedes. Although these experiences are powerful and satisfying in themselves, they do not last. Once his meditation was finished, he returned to being as before. Siddhārtha wanted a permanent solution and, despite being recognised as fully competent by his teachers, left them behind.

Page 14: Life of the buddha
Page 15: Life of the buddha

532–528BCAsceticism: Uruvelā

Siddhartha relocated to a spot near this pleasant village in the far west of Magadha, where he took up a completely different course of action.

Another approach adopted in his day was asceticism – the testing of one’s physical body by arduous tasks. These included: exposure to the heat of the sun without protection; avoiding a single physical posture, such as lying or sitting down; holding one’s breath; or fasting by reducing food intake progressively until surviving on tiny amounts of food. The idea was that one could wear down the physical influence of one’s being and release the soul, an insubstantial essence in each individual.

Page 16: Life of the buddha
Page 17: Life of the buddha

528BCCollapse: Varanasi

Siddhārtha took up this type of practice wholeheartedly and eventually settled with a group of five others near Varanasi.

He became highly proficient, but after some years of trying a variety of practices, Siddhārtha collapsed. He decided that all he was doing was risking death without any solution to the problems of suffering and death. He accepted a small meal of milk rice from a young woman called Sujātā, offered in thanks for having just given birth to a much desired son.

Page 18: Life of the buddha
Page 19: Life of the buddha

528BCAwakening: Bodh Gayā

Siddhārtha’s companions rejected him when he gave up asceticism. As he recovered strength, he moved near the river Nerañjarā and settled under a tree.

He sought a way to understand the human situation that would be liberating. He combined restraint with the withdrawal from the senses he had learnt in meditation. Remembering a moment of quiet illumination from his childhood, he entered a state of mind in which he could recall his past lives and understand what kept him and others tied to the cycle of rebirth. He attained ‘awakening’ or bodhi. This was the core experience by which he came to be called buddha, which means ‘awakened’.

Page 20: Life of the buddha

The Mahabodhi Temple at Bodh Gaya is said to mark the spot where the Buddha achieved

enlightenment. It is one of the most sacred sites of Buddhism.

Page 21: Life of the buddha

528BCTeaching: Sārnāth, Varanasi

The exact time varies according to source, but several weeks after his awakening, the Buddha decided to communicate his experience to other people.

He was not originally optimistic about this, but was persuaded that someone might understand. For want of anyone better to speak to, he walked to Sārnāth, not far from Varanasi, to find his former ascetic companions. He took some care to explain his insights to them. The teaching he gave is summarised in a text called the Dharma-cakra-pravartana Sutra – the discourse describing the first turning of the wheel of the teaching. The five ascetics became his first five disciples.

Page 22: Life of the buddha

The 5th Century Dhamekh Stupa at Sarnath which is said to mark

the spot in the deer park where the Buddha gave his first sermon.

Page 23: Life of the buddha

483BCDeath: Kuśinagara, Malla

he Buddha taught continuously in the remaining 45 years of his life. He travelled around north-east India, teaching in a variety of dialects.

In his 80th year his life ended near a small town called Kuśinagara, in Malla (Uttar Pradesh). Falling ill, possibly from food poisoning, he checked with his monastic followers whether they had any questions to ask before he died. They had none. He encouraged them with his final words: “Things that arise from causes will also decay. Press on with due care.” Amidst an unseasonal fall of forest flowers, he lay on his right side, entered a profound meditative state and passed away.

Page 24: Life of the buddha

Nepalese painting of the death of the Buddha

Page 25: Life of the buddha

483BCFuneral and Relics

The Buddha’s body was carried from its forest grove in through the north gate of Kuśinagara, and from there to a well known funerary monument.

The Buddha had left instructions for his disposal. His body was to be wrapped in linen and cotton, encased in an iron vessel and burnt on a pyre. The surviving pieces of burnt bone were divided between representatives from eight states. The bowl itself was given to Droṇa, who had divided the relics, and a group of latecomers were given the ashes from the pyre. Each group built a funerary monument over their relic, and these became the 10 places where the Buddha could be worshipped.

Page 26: Life of the buddha

Temple of tTooth in Kandy, Sri Lanka which is said toDetail from

the he house the tooth of the Buddha.

Page 27: Life of the buddha

Prepared by:Michelle Bayot Pascua