Namaste NAN,
thank you for the post.
NewAgeNerd said:
As to the point of 5000 years, this might be something specific to the Tibetan canon. The Japanese and Chinese Buddhist schools believed fervently that they were already in the age of the death of the dharma, this is why pure land buddhism arises.
there are only three Tipitakas, and the Japanese and Chinese share the same one... the other is the Tibetan and the Pali.
http://www.comparative-religion.com/buddhism/
regarding the time frame for the duration of the Dharma. when we find a teaching which does not seem to reflect on the reality of the situation, what does one do? in the Buddhist context, we are supposed to set that teaching aside.
a more thoughtful and informative treatment regarding women and their impact on Buddhism can be found here:
http://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/history/wbqcontents.htm
I have consulted my volume of buddhist scripture(an amalgmation of Mahayana and Therevada scriptures) and according to the translation Donald S Lopez, as a result of allowing women into the sangha the Buddha predicted the dharma would last for only 500 years, this is despite the stringent rules the Buddha added for nuns.
who is Donald Lopez? in any event, there are three phases that the Dharma is said to undergo, the True Dharma, the Sembelance Dharma and the Final Dharma. depending on ones tradition we are either about to end the period of True Dharma or the Sembelance Dharma. i can understand the appeal of the Tariki Pure Land schools during this time, however.
As to reclassification, I forgot that this site is first and formost a religious forum. I enjoy studying Buddhism, but am not anymore a practitioner. As a result for the aid of me and people like me, I was wondering if we should seperate all the various Buddhisms for greater accessibility, much like what is done with the Abrahamic faiths.
ah.. i see what you are saying. to be frank with you... we didn't have a Sanatana Dharma section until we had several Hindu members... so... if we get more Buddhists and they'd like to section this bit out, i'm sure Brain would be happy to accomodate them.
The bottom line is, there are things the Buddha actually said and actually taught, and then there are things attributed to him.
however, since none of the teachings were written down when they were delivered.. it is mainly an oral tradition, even to this day... there is no real method to discern this other than textual critiques, which have their own issues.
the Buddha explained how one could determine if a teaching was an authentic Buddhist teaching or not and this is really the method that one should employ to determine these things, in my view.
The Mahayana claims to be a revelation of the Buddha and perhaps this is the case, who am I to say.
i'm not sure that i would use the term "revelation" which has a specific connotation in English. perhaps... revelaed or... expounded, would be a better choice?
Nevertheless, there is a fundamental difference between what the Buddha actually said and taught(the short, middle, and long discourses) and the later sutras which are attributed to him(for example, the lotus sutra).
ok, like what? the Short/Middle/Long discourses are all part of the SutaPitaka section of the Tipitaka, which also includes the Vinya and Abidharma, also taught by the Buddha.
you'll note, doubtlessly, that all of the Suttas/Sutras begin with the phrase "thus i have heard...."
Before I had extensively studied Buddhism, the Nichren school that I studied with told me that the Lotus sutra was spoken by the Buddha.
fair enough...
This lead to my mistaken belief that all of the Buddhist world should embrace such a refined teaching. You can imagine how this is problematic.
indeed, i can. it would be rather strange, don't you think, for the entire Buddhist Sangha to embrace one particular teaching? especially since we know that beings are of differing capacities and practice the Dharma according to these capacities.
I suppose to most Buddhist it does not matter how other people view Buddhism, and this is probably why the mass classification of all of the various reilgions influenced by the Buddha into one branch has been allowed to continue.
i would have to say that you are correct... most Buddhists don't really care all that much on how non-Buddhists view the tradition. some sure do, though, so this is more of a general statement than anything else.