The document defines key Buddhist terms and concepts, including:
- Buddha, Dhamma, Sangha, the Four Noble Truths, the Eightfold Path, the three marks of existence (dukkha, anicca, anatta), the five precepts, Theravada Buddhism, Mahayana Buddhism, Bodhisattvas, Sunyata, Buddha-nature, Pure Land Buddhism, and Amitabha.
The document defines key Buddhist terms and concepts, including:
- Buddha, Dhamma, Sangha, the Four Noble Truths, the Eightfold Path, the three marks of existence (dukkha, anicca, anatta), the five precepts, Theravada Buddhism, Mahayana Buddhism, Bodhisattvas, Sunyata, Buddha-nature, Pure Land Buddhism, and Amitabha.
The document defines key Buddhist terms and concepts, including:
- Buddha, Dhamma, Sangha, the Four Noble Truths, the Eightfold Path, the three marks of existence (dukkha, anicca, anatta), the five precepts, Theravada Buddhism, Mahayana Buddhism, Bodhisattvas, Sunyata, Buddha-nature, Pure Land Buddhism, and Amitabha.
The document defines key Buddhist terms and concepts, including:
- Buddha, Dhamma, Sangha, the Four Noble Truths, the Eightfold Path, the three marks of existence (dukkha, anicca, anatta), the five precepts, Theravada Buddhism, Mahayana Buddhism, Bodhisattvas, Sunyata, Buddha-nature, Pure Land Buddhism, and Amitabha.
- `Buddha` means `an enlightened person` Buddha - `Buddha` also refers to the man who started the religion of Buddhism - The truth about what life is really life Dhamma - The teachings of the Buddha (such as the Four Noble Truths) - The community of Buddhists Sangha - The people who follow the Buddha`s teachings When the Prince left the palace and saw: 4 Sights - An old man - A sick man - A dead man - A holy man - When you punish your body to try and achieve some spiritual goal Ascetic lifestyle - The Buddha tried living an ascetic lifestyle but gave it up to meditate instead - The word for `suffering` - The idea that life is unsatisfactory Dukkha - Physical, emotional or mental suffering - `Thirst` or `craving` - `Wanting` things or wanting things to be different Tanha - Buddhists think craving is the main cause of suffering - The wisdom that overcomes ignorance - Seeing life the way it really is Nibbana - Enlightenment - Getting out of the cycle of life and death Three things that cause suffering in the world and keep people in the cycle of life and death: Three Poisons 1. Greed – craving and selfishness 2. Hatred – feelings of wanting to reject or hurt other things 3. Ignorance – not knowing how things really are The first and main teaching of the Buddha: Four Noble Truths 1. There is suffering. 2. Suffering is caused mainly by craving. 3. Suffering comes to an end when you overcome craving and achieve Nibbana 4. The Eightfold Path is the path to Nibbana - The path Buddhists follow to achieve Nibbana or Enlightenment. Eightfold Path Steps 1 and 2 are about Wisdom: how you see the world Steps 3, 4 and 5 are about Morality: how you treat others Steps 6, 7 and 8 are about Meditation: how you train your mind to be calm and see the world accurately Right Speech, - Steps 3, 4 and 5 of the Eightfold Path which are all about morality (how you treat others) Right Action, Right - Speaking and acting truthfully, compassionately and without causing any harm to others Livelihood - Earning your money in a way that is truthful, compassionate and does not cause harm - 5 basic guidelines that Buddhists follow to guide their actions and behaviour 5 Precepts - The First Precept says that Buddhists will not cause harm to any living thing - The other Precepts are not lying; not stealing; not harming sexually; not taking intoxicating substances. - Three things that are true about life: 3 Marks of 1. dukkha – life involves suffering 2. anicca – things are always changing Existence 3. anatta – there is no fixed self or soul - The idea that life is impermanent Anicca - Things are always changing, nothing stays the same - The idea that there is no fixed self or soul Anatta - The idea that a person is always changing - The oldest tradition in Buddhism - The `school of the elders` Theravada - The tradition of Buddhism you find in countries like Sri Lanka and Thailand - A person who has followed the Eightfold Path, achieved Enlightenment and will not be reborn. Arhat - The goal of Theravada Buddhism. - A tradition of Buddhism that calls itself the `great vehicle` because it aims to get all people enlightened Mahayana - The tradition of Buddhism you find in countries like Japan and Tibet - A person who out of compassion has promised not to get enlightened until all other people are enlightened Bodhisattva - The goal of Mahayana Buddhism - Emptiness Sunyata - The idea that nothing has any real permanent existence Buddha- - The belief that inside everyone and everything there is something pure and real nature - A popular idea in Mahayana Buddhism Pure Land - A tradition of Buddhism in Japan and China that involves praying to a Buddha called Amitabha Buddhism - The Pure Land is a heavenly place that Amitabha will take you when you die if you have faith - A Buddha that is worshipped in Pure Land Buddhism Amitabha - He created a `Pure Land` where people with faith in him can go when they die