RE: Hello from Japan!
May 17, 2010 at 8:01 am
(This post was last modified: May 17, 2010 at 8:02 am by Jun.)
Thanks for the welcomes.
Well, there are many variations and practices in all the different sects and schools of Buddhism. Here in Japan Buddhism is mixed with Shinto, Taoism and Confucianism (the last two from China). Although the Buddha was just a man who had a very practical method of overcoming our own self-imposed suffering, man has shown that he can't put simple ideas into practice and Buddhism has become a great big mess of supernatural mumbo-jumbo and an orthodox fixed dogma. The sects and schools fight among themselves as well as with each other over which is the "True" way to practice and what the Buddha truly taught. It is all nonsense.
Shingon was all about communicating with some ever-present super Buddha - Mahavairocana (which is actually borrowed from Mazda the Sun god). Zen, while it is pushed on Westerners as being practical and free of fixed doctrine and supernatural beliefs, still requires that one believe in specific things such as all the Bodhisattvas, reincarnation, and gathering metta ("merit" - a kind of unseen monetary system that can be passed on to others somehow and to the dead).
I never believed anything I was instructed to believe ("Do not believe in something simply because it is taught, or because it is written in scriptures, test it for yourself to see whether it is true" - the Buddha) But, to question the teachers ("Question EVERYTHING" - the Buddha) means to go against the orthodoxy that is Buddhism today and to bring ridicule. Clearly, while the Buddha said one thing, it is another that is practiced today as his supposed teachings.
I have always been an Atheist and never believed in "God" and all the various Bodhisattvas (borrowed from Hinduism anyway).
Jun
(May 16, 2010 at 10:41 pm)Watson Wrote: Lol Very, uh, passionate first post man. Welcome to AF, have some cherries and take a seat; you should fit right in here, trust me. Maybe you can enlighten some folks here as to some of the practices of Buddhism and what it was like to be a monk, too.
Well, there are many variations and practices in all the different sects and schools of Buddhism. Here in Japan Buddhism is mixed with Shinto, Taoism and Confucianism (the last two from China). Although the Buddha was just a man who had a very practical method of overcoming our own self-imposed suffering, man has shown that he can't put simple ideas into practice and Buddhism has become a great big mess of supernatural mumbo-jumbo and an orthodox fixed dogma. The sects and schools fight among themselves as well as with each other over which is the "True" way to practice and what the Buddha truly taught. It is all nonsense.
Shingon was all about communicating with some ever-present super Buddha - Mahavairocana (which is actually borrowed from Mazda the Sun god). Zen, while it is pushed on Westerners as being practical and free of fixed doctrine and supernatural beliefs, still requires that one believe in specific things such as all the Bodhisattvas, reincarnation, and gathering metta ("merit" - a kind of unseen monetary system that can be passed on to others somehow and to the dead).
I never believed anything I was instructed to believe ("Do not believe in something simply because it is taught, or because it is written in scriptures, test it for yourself to see whether it is true" - the Buddha) But, to question the teachers ("Question EVERYTHING" - the Buddha) means to go against the orthodoxy that is Buddhism today and to bring ridicule. Clearly, while the Buddha said one thing, it is another that is practiced today as his supposed teachings.
I have always been an Atheist and never believed in "God" and all the various Bodhisattvas (borrowed from Hinduism anyway).
Jun