Pathless
Fiercely Interdependent
A question arises when I think of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. While reading another thread, I came across the following post:
My question is, which of the two figures, a Buddha or a Bodhisattva, do people admire more? Whom do you strive to be like? If you go in for hierarchy, which is the 'higher' being?
My answer is Bodhisattva. I would actually venture to say that there can be no true Buddha until all beings have been liberated; therefore, anyone who reaches any insight towards enlightenment must necessarily continue to work joyfullyas a Bodhisattva in Samsara until the far-off time that all beings have been liberated from the bonds of uncontrolled passions: fear, lust, jealousy, pain, anger, all of that good stuff.
Another saying comes to mind: There is no Nirvana without (or apart from) Samsara. Perhaps a Bodhisattva may walk in the heavy soup of Samsara, yet simultaneously inhabit the serene Elysian fields of Nirvana.
To me, a 'Buddha' who escapes worldliness for a paradise removed from suffering--as long as suffering, ignorance, and greed are arising somewhere--is simply deluding him or her -self.
Thoughts?
ATF said:Imagine one hundred people drowning at see, not a pleasant experience. A buddha is the one who learns to swim and reaches the shore where he is much, much happier. A boddhisattva is the one who has figured out how to swim but chooses not to swim to the shore until he has helped everyone else learn to swim too.
We are not drowning at sea, we are drowning in Samsara, the Buddhas have escaped samsara, which is the ultimate goal of all buddhists, but the boddhisattvas are still here with us, living life after life to help us all to escape.
My question is, which of the two figures, a Buddha or a Bodhisattva, do people admire more? Whom do you strive to be like? If you go in for hierarchy, which is the 'higher' being?
My answer is Bodhisattva. I would actually venture to say that there can be no true Buddha until all beings have been liberated; therefore, anyone who reaches any insight towards enlightenment must necessarily continue to work joyfullyas a Bodhisattva in Samsara until the far-off time that all beings have been liberated from the bonds of uncontrolled passions: fear, lust, jealousy, pain, anger, all of that good stuff.
To me, a 'Buddha' who escapes worldliness for a paradise removed from suffering--as long as suffering, ignorance, and greed are arising somewhere--is simply deluding him or her -self.
Thoughts?