Namaste jiii,
thank you for the post.
jiii said:
Well, okay...what I was trying to put forth was mostly that, although the Buddha didn't go out of his way to avoid speaking about gods, such things were not a dogmatic belief...and as such, not 'final', really.
you are correct, he didn't avoid the subject of deities at all. they are frequently mentioned in the suttas and have, in some cases, been directly responsible for some humans Awakening.
you are also correct that it was not a dogmatic belief, it was more of a statement of fact. the Suttas relate several instances where the deities and devas made themselves manifest and visible to earth beings, especially during some of the specific instances which we refer to as the First, Second and Third Turning of the Wheel of Dharma.
One Buddhist might be very familiar with a large system of deities, but the next Buddhist might rarely mention them, even know little of them...both could, hypothetically speaking, attain Nirvana no different from the other.
that is correct. ones views regarding deities is inconsequential with regards to the attainment of Nibbana/Nirvana or of Annuttara Samyak Sambodhi.
Vadradhara, correct me if I'm wrong here. Take the "Pure Land Sect"...although Amitaba is decidedly the most notable character of this type of Buddhism, followers still aren't really expected to 'believe' that Amitaba is actually a non-incarnate Buddha...that is, that he actually exists (or does not exist, or arises, or does not arise, or that he is future, past, or present...and on and on). They can, and it's all good, but they don't really have to, at all, to follow the "Pure Land" way.
i am not a Pure Land adherent though Takiri is, i believe.
in any event.. the question, itself, is the real problem since it is presuming the existence of some sort of "i" or "being" which could be identified as Amitahba. the Buddha Shakyamuni answered this question with the famous simile of the fire that has gone out.
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.072.than.html
I've found that in Buddhism, from text to text, it seems that many different beliefs are accepted or rejected. But I cannot find many instances when these particular beliefs are strictly upheld as being so.
the monastic orders, of all Three Vehicles have a set of texts which establish the correct discipline for the monks and nuns. these doctrines do not have anything to do with deities with the exception of certain Vajrayana texts but this more in the context of Tantra.
Despite the thousands of 'beliefs' that Buddha speaks of throughout the texts of various sects and eras of Buddhism, I have still found that Watts was correct when he said that," Ultimately, ideas are quite incidental to Buddhism." Though, I realize that this tricky to explain in juxtaposition to the deity-filled texts of Buddhism.
the ideas are, however, how things are communicated to other human beings. without which there would be no Liberation possible. the pitfall, as it is mentioned in the Suttas, is to become trapped by the Buddhist ideas in the same way that one was trapped in the non-Buddhist ideas, you've just changed one set for the other.
nevertheless, one can still enter the Stream and attain the fruit of a Foe Destroyer whilst being trapped in the Buddhist ideas, to attain Liberation requires putting down even these ideas.
I also think that it is this underpinning of pointing at something beyond ideas that universally links so many varied Buddhist schools of thought or practice. I simply think that if someone were to come to the Buddha particularly hung up on Brahman for one reason or another, it wouldn't at all be unlikely that the Buddha might tell that person, in so many words, that the issue is moot so far as attaining Nirvana.
indeed, Upaya is the term. the Buddha would see through the Dharma Eye and know precisely what was needed to be said to the individual to cause them to seek the religious life.
I am certainly aware of Buddhism's "Wheel of Becoming", for instance, which involves both gods (devas), demons (asuras), and ghosts (pretas). I assume that most that practice Buddhism are familiar with this...however, I hardly think that a formal acceptance or denial of these entities was in any way core to Buddhist practice.
many Suttas make it quite clear that the Buddha Shakyamuni was talking about a literal rebirth in to these various states of woe, as they are called. the belief in a literal rebirth is, however, one of the teachings that one cannot verify until a certain level of spiritual development has been attained. according to the Suttas, when a being can attain the 1st Jhanna they can recall all the previous arisings in detail and depth and they will see the clear working of karma over the vast time scales involved.
as regards practice, it really depends on the school and the Vehicle that you are practicing as they each have a style which is suited for those sorts of beings. there is a wide array and diversity in the Buddhist practice lineages as there should be, in my view.
Perhaps it was part of Buddhist belief, but Buddhist belief has always been known to be something that, at best, points at the "truth"...and, because of this, there is nothing really final about it in the same sense that, say, it is a pretty fundamental and necessary belief and 'final' belief of Christianity that Jesus was the Son of God. Again, correct me if I am wrong here, Vad.
i would have to say that this summation is incorrect. there are, indeed, "core values" if you will, that one must accept to be able to practice the Dharma in any meaningful sense. these doctrines are called the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path and we can get into these in more detail if you'd like. with regards to the laiety, there are 5 Precepts which must be upheld whereas the monastics have anywhere from 220-250, depending on Vehicle and school and so forth.
the 5 Precepts are sort of like the Jewish and Christian traditions 10 Commandments in that they are pithy guides for ethical and moral conduct.
Indeed. I would furthermore posit that, by and large, one's day to day practice is that which is emphasized to the utmost over almost everything else, and certainly before any formal 'acceptance', or otherwise, of the many deities that Buddhism describes or seems to deny.
ones day to day practice may involve these very deities
the many practice lineages of Buddha Dharma have many different ways of working with beings and, especially in the Tantric schools, the use of deity practice is quite prevelant.
the Zen and Ch'an schools of practice, by contrast, focus much of their attention on the practice of, as their name says, "ch'an" or "zen". this is a form of breathing meditation which Buddha Shakyamuni extolled as the "one practice which completes all 18."
in the end, it is a matter of personal aptitude and the typical measures needed to ensure a dedicated practice of the methods for Liberation. as the Suttas relate "the Ocean is of one taste."
metta,
~v