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Running head: THERAVADA BUDDHISM SCHOOL Theravada Buddhism School Ashleigh Sizemore REL/133 Mr. Calvin Habig May 4, 2015 Theravada Buddhism School Buddhism has over hundreds of million followers. The word Budi comes from when Buddha was awakened over 2,000 years ago. This is when Prince Siddhartha also went off to seek the world at 35 years old. Prince Siddhartha was a very sheltered prince who had no idea about the dangers of this world all he knew was bliss. He witnesses a series of events that open his eyes and made him leave his safety net even though is father wanted to keep him deep in pleasure his was the king of the entire world and try everything not to lose his son. Buddhism recognises no creeds whose uncritical acceptance is expected of its followers. Instead the Buddha enunciated certain basic laws and truths whose veracity he invited his followers to test for themselves (Gunasekara, V). One of the traditional epithets of the Dhamma is"ehipassiko"(meaning literally"come and see") which is an appeal to the empirical verification of the Dhamma (Gunasekara,V). The basic teachings of Buddhism are the Four Noble Truths which are: There is Suffering, Suffering is common to all. 2. Cause of Suffering We are the cause of our suffering 3. End of Suffering Stop doing what causes suffering 4. Path to end Suffering Everyone can be enlightened The Buddhadid not deny that there is happiness in life, but he pointed out it does not last forever. Eventually everyone meets with some kind of suffering. He said:"There is happiness in life, happiness in friendship, happiness of a family, happiness in a healthy body and mind ...but when one loses them, there is suffering ."...Dhammapada (http://online.sfsu.edu/rone/Buddhism/footsteps.htm). Also, The Noble Eight Fold Path which teaches The path is a process to help you remove or move beyond the conditioned responses that obscure your true nature. In this sense the Path is ultimately about unlearning rather than learning - another paradox. We learn so we can unlearn and uncover. The Buddha called his teaching a Raft. To cross a turbulent river we may need to build a raft(http://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/8foldpath.htm).When built, we single-mindedly and with great energy make our way across. Once across we don't need to cart the raft around with us. In other words don't cling to anything including the teachings. However, make sure you use them before you let them go. It's no use knowing everything about the raft and not getting on. The teachings are tools not dogma. The teachings are Upaya, which means skillful means or expedient method. It is fingers pointing at the moon - don't confuse the finger for the moon(http://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/8foldpath.htm). Last The Three Fundamental Laws or Triple Jewels Buddha knew it would be difficult for people to follow his teachings on their own, so he established the Three Refuges for them to rely on. If a person wants to become Buddhists take refuge in and rely on the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha. These are known as the Triple Jewel. The Sangha are the monks and nuns. They live in monasteries and carry on the Buddha's teaching. The word Sangha means 'harmonious community'. The Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha together possess qualities that are precious like jewels and can lead one to enlightenment A refuge is a place to go for safety and protection, like a shelter in a storm. Taking refuge does not mean running away from life. It means living life in a fuller, truer way. Taking refuge is also like a man traveling for the first time to a distant city. He will need a guide to show him which path to follow and some traveling companions to help him along the way. The school I select was Theravada, The Theravada School of Buddhism, literally"the School of the Elders,"is the oldest continual lineage of Buddhism and faithfully preserves the original teachings of the Master. The teachings are preserved both in the Pali Canon, the voluminous record of the Buddha's words over forty-five years of teaching, and in the living transmission of teacher to student, represented by the Order of Bhikkhus (one of the oldest institutions on this planet.) These three; Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha are the Three Jewels. Their worth is literally beyond price. I feel like since this is the oldest school that all the other school were built of the foundation of this school and since it was a school for only elders a lot of wisdom came from the elders and went to the younger followers of Buddhism. Which I find unique because there is nothing like the real thing the originality of anything that is valuable you can duplicate many things but it is nothing like the real deal. References: http://www.arrowriver.ca/theravad.html (n.d.) Theravada Buddhism. Retrieved from http://www.arrowriver.ca/theravad.html http://www.buddhanet.net (n.d.) The Eight-Fold Path. Retrieved fromhttp://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/8foldpath.htm http://www.accesstoinsight.org (2005) What is Theravada Buddhism. Retrieved from http://www.accesstoinsight.org/theravada.html Gunasekara,V. (n.d.) A Modern Introduction to Buddha’s Teachings. Retrieved from http://www.buddhismtoday.com/english/buddha/Teachings/basicteaching3.htm http://online.sfsu.edu (n.d.) Following the Buddha’s Footstep. Retrieved from http://online.sfsu.edu/rone/Buddhism/footsteps.htm 1 THERAVADA BUDDHISM SCHOOL 2 THERAVADA BUDDHISM SCHOOL 3 THERAVADA BUDDHISM SCHOOL 4 THERAVADA BUDDHISM SCHOOL 5

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