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Characteristics of a Buddha
Nine characteristics
Buddhists meditate on (or contemplate) the Buddha as having nine
characteristics:
"The Blessed One is:
A worthy one
Perfectly self-enlightened
Stays in perfect knowledge
Well gone
Unsurpassed knower of the world
Unsurpassed leader of persons to be tamed
Teacher of the gods and humans
The Enlightened One
The Blessed One or fortunate one.
These characteristics are frequently mentioned in the Pali Canon, and are
chanted daily in many Buddhist monasteries.
Spiritual realizations
All Buddhist traditions hold that a Buddha has completely purified his mind of
desire, aversion and ignorance, and that he is no longer bound by Samsara. A
Buddha is fully awakened and has realized the ultimate truth, the non-dualistic
nature of life, and thus ended (for himself) the suffering which unawakened
people experience in life.
The Nature of Buddha
Further information: Buddhology
The various Buddhist schools hold some varying interpretations on the nature of
Buddha (see below).
Pali Canon: Buddha was human
Main article: Buddha - God or Man
From the Pali Canon emerges the view that Buddha was human, endowed with the
greatest psychic powers (Kevatta Sutta). The body and mind (the five khandhas)
of a Buddha are impermanent and changing, just like the body and mind of
ordinary people. However, a Buddha recognizes the unchanging nature of the
Dharma, which is an eternal principle and an unconditioned and timeless
phenomenon. This view is common in the Theravada school, and the other early
Buddhist schools.
Eternal Buddha in Mahayana Buddhism
Main article: Eternal Buddha
Some schools of Mahayana Buddhism believe that the Buddha is no longer
essentially a human being but has become a being of a different order altogether
and that, in his ultimate transcendental "body/mind" mode as Dharmakaya, he has
eternal and infinite life and is possessed of great and immeasurable qualities.
In the Mahaparinirvana Sutra the Buddha declares: "Nirvana is stated to be
eternally abiding. The Tathagata [Buddha] is also thus, eternally abiding,
without change." This is a particularly important metaphysical and
soteriological doctrine in the Lotus Sutra and the Tathagatagarbha sutras.
According to the Tathagatagarbha sutras, failure to recognize the Buddha's
eternity and - even worse - outright denial of that eternity, is deemed a major
obstacle to the attainment of complete awakening (bodhi).
Buddha as compared to God
A common misconception among Westerners views Buddha as the Buddhist counterpart
to “God”; Buddhism, however, is non-theistic (i.e., in general it does not teach
the existence of a supreme creator god (see God in Buddhism) or depend on any
supreme being for enlightenment; Buddha is a guide and teacher who points the
way to nirvana). The commonly accepted definition of the term "God" describes a
being that not only rules but actually created the universe (see origin belief).
Such ideas and concepts are disputed by Buddha and Buddhists in many Buddhist
discourses. In Buddhism, the supreme origin and creator of the universe is not a
god, but Avidya (ignorance). Buddhists try to dispel this darkness through
constant practice, compassion and wisdom (known as prajna).
Hinduism and Buddhism
Similarities between Hinduism and
Buddhism
Buddhism and Eastern Teaching
God in
Buddhism
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