Namaste all,
good discussion thus far.
several questions have been raised and though i think that they have been answered sufficiently, i would like to offer my own, as well.
1. Is Buddha Shakyamuni the first Buddha?
unequivocally no. the Suttas relate a teaching given by the Buddha to the Sangha wherein he relates that he was, in a previous arising, waiting to meet the Buddha Dipankara and, at this meeting, Buddha Dipankara propheised that the mendicant Sumeda would arise as the Buddha Shakyamuni. The Suttas relate that there have been countless previous Buddhas which have arisen in this world system and there will be countless more.
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/dn/dn.32.0.piya.html
2. proclaiming of the Dhamma/Dharma as the "correct path".
Yes, without question Buddha Shakyamuni extolled the path of Doctrine and Discipline as the only path capable of complete and total liberation. there are several terms which are used to describe beings in various stages of the path, the Sanskrit term for complete and total unbinding is Annutara Samyak Sambodhi and it is this state which is the aim of Buddhas teachings.
a famous passage of the Dhammapada states:
They go to many a refuge, to mountains, forests, parks, trees, and shrines
eople threatened with danger.That's not the secure refuge,that's not the highest refuge,that's not the refuge,having gone to which, you gain release from all suffering and stress.But when, having gone for refugeto the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha,you see with right discernmentthe four Noble Truths — stress, the cause of stress, the transcending of stress, and the Noble Eightfold Path, the way to the stilling of stress:That's the secure refuge,that, the highest refuge,that is the refuge,having gone to which, you gain release from all suffering and stress.— Dhammapada, 188-192
3. If there are other deities, why no Creator deity?
This is a very good question. Many modern commentators think that the reason the Buddha taught as he did was due to a lack of understanding of monotheism. they often have the, incorrect view, that the Sanatana Dharma is a polytheistic tradition when in actuality it is not. it is, in fact, monotheistic with a very interesting permutation. Muller has termed this "Henotheism" which means, essentially, that there is one God but that aspects of this being are manifest and given their own due, like Mercy, and Compassion et al.
the term "creator god" is rendered as
issara-nimmana-vada Pali and it is this which we are discussing. a belief in a Creator deity is classified as a "wong view" of a morally destructive kind since they deny the consequences of karma and presume certain other wrong views, such as the existence of Atman and so forth.
the Buddha Shakyamuni explained the lack of a Creator Deity in many ways..along with the idea that Nibbana/Nirvana is not permenent either. these are both examples of "clinging to views" which directly impedes ones progress along the path.
here is a Sutta where the Buddha repudiates the prevailing Samhkya philosophical tradition of the time..
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.001.than.html
in the Digha Nikaya (the Long Discourses) 24 it is said like this:
"There are some ascetics and brahmins who declare as their doctrine
that all things began with the creation by a god, or Brahma."
And this god is characterized so:
"That Worshipful Brahma, the Great God, the Omnipotent, the
Omniscient, the Organizer, the Protection, the Creator, the Most
Perfect Ruler, the Designer and Orderer, the Father of All That Have Been and Shall Be, He by Whom we were created, He is permanent, Constant,
Eternal, Unchanging, and He will remain so for ever and ever."
"There is none other God but Thee, the Almighty, the Most Exalted,
the All-Powerful, the All-Wise".
*The notion of creator is rejected in terms of the Buddha in satirically retelling the creation story of the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad. This not "a discreet silence about the First Cause," it is not indifference. Though the Buddha's particular rejection is not a philosophical argument against a creator god, per se, it is rather a religious statement that is consistent with the underlying ontology of becoming that characterizes what the Buddha taught. What is clear, in the broader context, is that this rejection is not tied to a particular god-notion, but addresses the notion of a "single supernatural Being" from which "all things began," given that such a notion is invariably grounded in a radically different ontological basis than what the Buddha presents.
(*indebted to Bruce Burrill)
metta,
~v