Articles by alphabetic order
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 Ā Ī Ñ Ś Ū Ö Ō
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0


Difference between revisions of "The Use of Symbols and Rituals in Vajrayana / Mahayana Buddhism"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{DisplayImages|2961|680|1032|1746|2780|1919}}
 
{{DisplayImages|2961|680|1032|1746|2780|1919}}
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
 
<poem>
 
<poem>
  [[Acharya]] Mahayogi Sridhar Rana [[Rinpoche]]
+
  [[Acharya]] [[Mahayogi Sridhar Rana]] [[Rinpoche]]
  
 
In the [[Digghanikaya]] [[Udumbarika Sihanada Sutta]] of the [[Pali]] [[Tripitaka]], the [[Sasta]] ([[master]]) has told [[Nigrodha]] that it was not necessary to relinquish everything in his {{Wiki|culture}} to become a [[Buddhist]]. He could continue to follow those {{Wiki|cultural}} [[elements]] if they did not contradict the [[Samyag]] [[Drishti]] (correct [[view]]) [[view]]. For instance, it is not possible to continue [[animal sacrifice]] and still remain a [[Buddhist]]; however it is possible to perform the [[rites]] and [[rituals]] and [[symbols]] of the {{Wiki|culture}} one grows up in if they do not contradict the basics of [[Buddhism]].
 
In the [[Digghanikaya]] [[Udumbarika Sihanada Sutta]] of the [[Pali]] [[Tripitaka]], the [[Sasta]] ([[master]]) has told [[Nigrodha]] that it was not necessary to relinquish everything in his {{Wiki|culture}} to become a [[Buddhist]]. He could continue to follow those {{Wiki|cultural}} [[elements]] if they did not contradict the [[Samyag]] [[Drishti]] (correct [[view]]) [[view]]. For instance, it is not possible to continue [[animal sacrifice]] and still remain a [[Buddhist]]; however it is possible to perform the [[rites]] and [[rituals]] and [[symbols]] of the {{Wiki|culture}} one grows up in if they do not contradict the basics of [[Buddhism]].
  
Because through the centuries after the [[Buddha]], millions of {{Wiki|Indians}}, [[Bràhmins]] and otherwise became [[Buddhists]], it is natural that the [[rites]] and [[rituals]], the [[symbols]] and many such things were continued on as they did not contradict or distort the [[Samyag]] [[Drishti]] (correct [[view]]). These [[rites]] and [[symbols]] were taken from the general [[Indian]] socio-cultural {{Wiki|milieu}} that existed then – be they [[Sramanic]] or [[Brahmanic]] or from some other local {{Wiki|culture}}. As the [[Buddha]] himself has vouchsafed for such use of [[rituals]] and [[symbols]], to see [[Hindu]] influence in all such [[rites]], [[rituals]] and [[symbols]] is not only short sightedness, but specially if this [[criticism]] comes from another [[Buddhist]] denomination, it is a clear sign of [[idamsatyavinivesa]]. [[Idamsatyavinivesa]] is one of the [[Kayagrantha-s]] ([[bodily]] knots) that tie us to [[Samsara]] and it means holding on to a [[belief]] that “only the [[forms]] of [[symbols]], [[rites]] and [[rituals]], [[beliefs]], [[ideas]], that i believe, only my interpretations of the words of the [[Buddha]], only my [[Master]] etc. only the [[form]] of [[Buddhism]] I follow, only the [[form]] of [[Vipasyana]] my [[teacher]] or my sub-sect teaches are the [[truth]], all others are false.” In the [[Majjhima Nikaya]], Canki [[Sutta]], the Sasta has very clearly told Canki that to think –
+
Because through the centuries after the [[Buddha]], millions of {{Wiki|Indians}}, [[Bràhmins]] and otherwise became [[Buddhists]], it is natural that the [[rites]] and [[rituals]], the [[symbols]] and many such things were continued on as they did not contradict or distort the [[Samyag]] [[Drishti]] (correct [[view]]). These [[rites]] and [[symbols]] were taken from the general [[Indian]] socio-cultural {{Wiki|milieu}} that existed then – be they [[Sramanic]] or [[Brahmanic]] or from some other local {{Wiki|culture}}. As the [[Buddha]] himself has vouchsafed for such use of [[rituals]] and [[symbols]], to see [[Hindu]] influence in all such [[rites]], [[rituals]] and [[symbols]] is not only short sightedness, but specially if this [[criticism]] comes from another [[Buddhist]] denomination, it is a clear sign of [[idamsatyavinivesa]]. [[Idamsatyavinivesa]] is one of the [[Kayagrantha-s]] ([[bodily]] knots) that tie us to [[Samsara]] and it means holding on to a [[belief]] that “only the [[forms]] of [[symbols]], [[rites]] and [[rituals]], [[beliefs]], [[ideas]], that i believe, only my interpretations of the words of the [[Buddha]], only my [[Master]] etc. only the [[form]] of [[Buddhism]] I follow, only the [[form]] of [[Vipasyana]] my [[teacher]] or my sub-sect teaches are the [[truth]], all others are false.” In the [[Majjhima Nikaya]], [[Canki]] [[Sutta]], the [[Sasta]] has very clearly told [[Canki]] that to think –
  
 
Idameva saccam moghannam
 
Idameva saccam moghannam
Line 13: Line 21:
 
So the teachings given by the [[Sasta]] to [[Canki]] and [[Nigrodha]] themselves sanction very clear use of any {{Wiki|cultural}} [[elements]] like [[symbols]] and [[rites]] and [[rituals]] of any place and [[time]] as part of [[Buddhism]] if they do not contradict the [[Samyag Drishti]] (correct [[view]]).
 
So the teachings given by the [[Sasta]] to [[Canki]] and [[Nigrodha]] themselves sanction very clear use of any {{Wiki|cultural}} [[elements]] like [[symbols]] and [[rites]] and [[rituals]] of any place and [[time]] as part of [[Buddhism]] if they do not contradict the [[Samyag Drishti]] (correct [[view]]).
  
A close study of such [[symbols]] and [[rites]] and [[rituals]] within [[Vajrayana]] / [[Mahayana]] shows that not only have such [[symbols]] and [[rites]] and [[rituals]] been taken from the background cultures be it [[Indian]], [[Tibetan]] or {{Wiki|Chinese}} etc., the use of such [[symbols]] etc. in [[Vajrayana]] / [[Mahayana]] is quite different from the use of these same or similar [[symbols]] and [[rites]] and [[rituals]] in other non-Buddhist systems. So not only were those [[symbols]] innocuous as far as [[Samyag]] [[Drishti]] ([[correct view]]) was concerned but also [[Vajrayana]] / [[Mahayana]] have remolded their meaning to make them closer to the [[Buddhist]] weltanschauung, to the [[Buddhist]] [[Samyag]] [[Drishti]] ([[correct view]]). This is a sign of healthy creativity rather than a sign of {{Wiki|degeneration}} or muddling up or even influence of non-Buddhist systems.
+
A close study of such [[symbols]] and [[rites]] and [[rituals]] within [[Vajrayana]] / [[Mahayana]] shows that not only have such [[symbols]] and [[rites]] and [[rituals]] been taken from the background cultures be it [[Indian]], [[Tibetan]] or {{Wiki|Chinese}} etc., the use of such [[symbols]] etc. in [[Vajrayana]] / [[Mahayana]] is quite different from the use of these same or similar [[symbols]] and [[rites]] and [[rituals]] in other [[non-Buddhist]] systems. So not only were those [[symbols]] innocuous as far as [[Samyag]] [[Drishti]] ([[correct view]]) was concerned but also [[Vajrayana]] / [[Mahayana]] have remolded their meaning to make them closer to the [[Buddhist]] weltanschauung, to the [[Buddhist]] [[Samyag]] [[Drishti]] ([[correct view]]). This is a sign of healthy {{Wiki|creativity}} rather than a sign of {{Wiki|degeneration}} or muddling up or even influence of [[non-Buddhist]] systems.
  
Here, it is important to distinguish a very important point. Those who have tried to make [[Buddhism]] [[concord]] with {{Wiki|Modernism}} have constantly harped on the point that the [[Buddha]] revolted against all [[rites]] and [[rituals]]. There are two things wrong with this [[view]]. Firstly, this is an attempt to fit the [[Buddha]] in a ‘modernist weltanschauung’ as if the [[Buddha’s]] [[view]] of the [[world]] was exactly like what came into [[existence]] in the cultures of the {{Wiki|Western}} [[world]] after the 17th century due to [[scientific]] developments and the Industrial {{Wiki|Revolution}}. Till about 1950, the whole of the {{Wiki|Western culture}} was under the sway of {{Wiki|Modernism}}. {{Wiki|Modernism}} believed that only what was [[scientific]] or looked [[scientific]] was true, real, fact, un-superstitious; anything else that didn’t look [[scientific]] or similar to [[Physics]] and {{Wiki|Chemistry}} was false, untrue, and superstitious. Needless to say, many [[Buddhist]] [[scholars]] and educated [[Buddhists]] of that [[time]] (especially those [[Buddhist monk]] [[scholars]] of the {{Wiki|British}} colonial [[Ceylon]]) fell for this consensual hypnotic [[illusion]] and subscribed rather vociferously to this [[view]]. So anything within [[Buddhism]] that didn’t look [[scientific]], was not analytically linear, didn’t fit the {{Wiki|Cartesian}} Reductionist linear {{Wiki|paradigm}} was thrown out the window and declared that the [[Buddha]] did not actually teach such a thing but rather was brought into [[Buddhism]] by latter-day {{Wiki|decadent}} [[Buddhists]].
+
Here, it is important to distinguish a very important point. Those who have tried to make [[Buddhism]] [[concord]] with {{Wiki|Modernism}} have constantly harped on the point that the [[Buddha]] revolted against all [[rites]] and [[rituals]]. There are two things wrong with this [[view]]. Firstly, this is an attempt to fit the [[Buddha]] in a ‘modernist weltanschauung’ as if the [[Buddha’s]] [[view]] of the [[world]] was exactly like what came into [[existence]] in the cultures of the {{Wiki|Western}} [[world]] after the 17th century due to [[scientific]] developments and the Industrial {{Wiki|Revolution}}. Till about 1950, the whole of the {{Wiki|Western culture}} was under the sway of {{Wiki|Modernism}}. {{Wiki|Modernism}} believed that only what was [[scientific]] or looked [[scientific]] was true, real, fact, un-superstitious; anything else that didn’t look [[scientific]] or similar to [[Physics]] and {{Wiki|Chemistry}} was false, untrue, and {{Wiki|superstitious}}. Needless to say, many [[Buddhist]] [[scholars]] and educated [[Buddhists]] of that [[time]] (especially those [[Buddhist monk]] [[scholars]] of the {{Wiki|British}} colonial [[Ceylon]]) fell for this consensual hypnotic [[illusion]] and subscribed rather vociferously to this [[view]]. So anything within [[Buddhism]] that didn’t look [[scientific]], was not analytically linear, didn’t fit the {{Wiki|Cartesian}} Reductionist linear {{Wiki|paradigm}} was thrown out the window and declared that the [[Buddha]] did not actually teach such a thing but rather was brought into [[Buddhism]] by latter-day {{Wiki|decadent}} [[Buddhists]].
  
[[Symbols]] and [[rites]] and [[rituals]] were among those most valuable {{Wiki|psychotherapeutic}} [[elements]] which didn’t fit the Modernist {{Wiki|paradigm}}. So they were declared as wholesale non-Buddhist; and they were actually things the [[Buddha]] himself actually taught against. However, after the [[Cognitive]] {{Wiki|Revolution}} in the [[West]] in the 1950’s, {{Wiki|Modernism}} has lost its stranglehold on {{Wiki|Western}} {{Wiki|cultural}} weltanschauung and is no longer considered as the whole and sole criteria to decide what is true and what is not. After the 1950’s, Post-Modernism began to fan out across the {{Wiki|Western}} {{Wiki|cultural}} horizon and {{Wiki|Modernism}} gradually [[died]] out. Post-Modernism upholds the fact that the [[scientific]] [[view]] of [[life]] is only one mode of gauging [[reality]] and is by no means the whole and sole determinant of what is true or false; and there are alternate modes to [[experience]] / evaluate and interpret the [[world]] / [[reality]] etc. which are equally valid. Now, if we subscribe to these quaint [[ideas]] that the [[Buddha]] had the same [[view]] as the Modernists whose [[ideas]] began only after the 17th century and that too in the [[West]]; today we automatically make the [[Buddha]] outdated in this Post-Modernist [[world]]. It is also absurd to believe that the [[Buddha]] in the 6th century BC taught what the Modernists believed in the 17th century and refuted whatever these Modernists refuted or saw as false.
+
[[Symbols]] and [[rites]] and [[rituals]] were among those most valuable {{Wiki|psychotherapeutic}} [[elements]] which didn’t fit the Modernist {{Wiki|paradigm}}. So they were declared as wholesale [[non-Buddhist]]; and they were actually things the [[Buddha]] himself actually [[taught]] against. However, after the [[Cognitive]] {{Wiki|Revolution}} in the [[West]] in the 1950’s, {{Wiki|Modernism}} has lost its stranglehold on {{Wiki|Western}} {{Wiki|cultural}} weltanschauung and is no longer considered as the whole and sole criteria to decide what is true and what is not. After the 1950’s, Post-Modernism began to fan out across the {{Wiki|Western}} {{Wiki|cultural}} horizon and {{Wiki|Modernism}} gradually [[died]] out. Post-Modernism upholds the fact that the [[scientific]] [[view]] of [[life]] is only one mode of gauging [[reality]] and is by no means the whole and sole determinant of what is true or false; and there are alternate modes to [[experience]] / evaluate and interpret the [[world]] / [[reality]] etc. which are equally valid. Now, if we subscribe to these quaint [[ideas]] that the [[Buddha]] had the same [[view]] as the Modernists whose [[ideas]] began only after the 17th century and that too in the [[West]]; today we automatically make the [[Buddha]] outdated in this Post-Modernist [[world]]. It is also absurd to believe that the [[Buddha]] in the 6th century BC [[taught]] what the Modernists believed in the 17th century and refuted whatever these Modernists refuted or saw as false.
  
Secondly, in all the Sastra-s (even the [[Theravada]] [[Sutta-s]]) we don’t find the [[Buddha]] revolting against any [[rites]] and [[rituals]] or {{Wiki|cultural}} [[elements]] – be they even {{Wiki|Vedic}}. He only decried those parts of those [[rituals]] which were either meaningless or against the [[Samyag Drishti]] ([[correct view]]). He often re-interpreted those [[rituals]] giving them a new meaning or [[transformed]] those [[rituals]] to make them more meaningful, but he did not revolt against [[rites]] and [[rituals]] and [[symbols]] per se. In fact, in the [[Sutta Nipata]], Magandiy [[Sutta]], the Sasta says, “I do not say one attains [[purification]] by [[view]], [[tradition]], [[knowledge]], [[virtue]] or [[ritual]], nor is it attained without [[view]], [[tradition]], [[knowledge]], [[virtue]] or [[ritual]]. It is by only taking these factors as a means and not [[grasping]] onto them as ends in themselves that one so attains and consequently does not [[crave]] for re-becoming” In this [[Sutta]], the Sasta has clearly shown that he does not revolt against all [[rituals]] per se as useless mumbo jumbo but rather says very clearly that [[rituals]] can and should be used properly to attain [[purification]] etc. This certainly does not fit the [[ideas]] of those Modernist [[Buddhist]] [[scholars]] mentioned above. So it is clear that the [[Buddha]] has not taught against [[rites]], [[rituals]] and [[symbols]]. In fact, he does even say very clearly, “I do not say one attains purification…without [[rituals]] etc…It is by only taking those factors ([[rituals]] etc.) as means….that one attains….” This [[Magandiya Sutta]] is certainly not very Modernist is it?
+
Secondly, in all the Sastra-s (even the [[Theravada]] [[Sutta-s]]) we don’t find the [[Buddha]] revolting against any [[rites]] and [[rituals]] or {{Wiki|cultural}} [[elements]] – be they even {{Wiki|Vedic}}. He only decried those parts of those [[rituals]] which were either meaningless or against the [[Samyag Drishti]] ([[correct view]]). He often re-interpreted those [[rituals]] giving them a new meaning or [[transformed]] those [[rituals]] to make them more meaningful, but he did not revolt against [[rites]] and [[rituals]] and [[symbols]] [[per se]]. In fact, in the [[Sutta Nipata]], Magandiy [[Sutta]], the [[Sasta]] says, “I do not say one attains [[purification]] by [[view]], [[tradition]], [[knowledge]], [[virtue]] or [[ritual]], nor is it [[attained]] without [[view]], [[tradition]], [[knowledge]], [[virtue]] or [[ritual]]. It is by only taking these factors as a means and not [[grasping]] onto them as ends in themselves that one so attains and consequently does not [[crave]] for re-becoming” In this [[Sutta]], the [[Sasta]] has clearly shown that he does not revolt against all [[rituals]] [[per se]] as useless mumbo jumbo but rather says very clearly that [[rituals]] can and should be used properly to attain [[purification]] etc. This certainly does not fit the [[ideas]] of those Modernist [[Buddhist]] [[scholars]] mentioned above. So it is clear that the [[Buddha]] has not [[taught]] against [[rites]], [[rituals]] and [[symbols]]. In fact, he does even say very clearly, “I do not say one attains purification…without [[rituals]] etc…It is by only taking those factors ([[rituals]] etc.) as means….that one attains….” This [[Magandiya Sutta]] is certainly not very Modernist is it?
  
In the [[Anguttara Nikaya]], the Sasta has mentioned in two different places (the 4th and the 5th [[Nipata]]) that [[offerings]] should be [[offered]] to those [[deities]] requiring [[offerings]] (Skt. [[bali]] [[grahaka]] [[devata]]). Now, this again is certainly a [[rite]] and [[ritual]] that the Sasta himself sanctioned. If this [[ritual]] was not so important, why would he say it at two different places or why would it be repeated at two different places in the same [[Nikaya]]? The [[Vajrayana]] / [[Mahayana]] still maintain this [[ritual]] to date. In the [[Majjhima Nikaya]] [[Saleyyaka Sutta]], the Sasta says that it is [[Mithya Drishti]] (incorrect [[view]]) to believe that there are no [[Dana]], [[Yajña]] and Havana. All three are [[rituals]]. The Sasta himself prescribed the {{Wiki|worship}} of the [[Cetiya]]. In the [[Parinibbana Sutta]], [[Diggha Nikaya]], the Sasta himself has {{Wiki|preached}} that the remains of the [[body]] of a [[Tathagata]] should be encased in a [[Caitya]] / [[Stupa]] and those who {{Wiki|worship}} such Stupa-s with wreathes, [[perfumes]], colors ([[sindura]], [[avira]] etc.) with devout hearts will reap benefits and [[happiness]] for a long [[time]]. This is certainly very [[ritualistic]] and such types of [[offerings]] were [[offered]] in [[temples]] in [[India]] long [[time]] before the [[Buddha]] and they still continue even among non-Buddhists. In the same [[Parinibbana Sutta]], the [[Buddha]] commands that his [[body]] be [[Wikipedia:cremation|cremated]] like the [[body]] of a [[Cakravarti]] [[Emperor]]. He certainly did not say, “Do not perform any [[rituals]] at all because that is not a [[Buddhist]] thing to do” We find the [[Buddha]] himself sanctioning the {{Wiki|worship}} of a [[tree]] (a transplantation from the [[Bodhi Tree]] in [[Bodhgaya]]) as a [[symbolic]] [[representation]] of the [[Tathagata]]. The [[Tathagata]] himself helped make the [[Stupa]] / [[Caitya]] / [[Cetiya]] for [[Sariputra’s]] remains saying such Stupa-s of arya-s should be worshipped. Any kind of {{Wiki|worship}} is a [[ritual]], and when [[rituals]] are accepted, [[symbols]] are accepted too.
+
In the [[Anguttara Nikaya]], the [[Sasta]] has mentioned in two different places (the 4th and the 5th [[Nipata]]) that [[offerings]] should be [[offered]] to those [[deities]] requiring [[offerings]] (Skt. [[bali]] [[grahaka]] [[devata]]). Now, this again is certainly a [[rite]] and [[ritual]] that the [[Sasta]] himself sanctioned. If this [[ritual]] was not so important, why would he say it at two different places or why would it be repeated at two different places in the same [[Nikaya]]? The [[Vajrayana]] / [[Mahayana]] still maintain this [[ritual]] to date. In the [[Majjhima Nikaya]] [[Saleyyaka Sutta]], the [[Sasta]] says that it is [[Mithya Drishti]] (incorrect [[view]]) to believe that there are no [[Dana]], [[Yajña]] and Havana. All three are [[rituals]]. The [[Sasta]] himself prescribed the {{Wiki|worship}} of the [[Cetiya]]. In the [[Parinibbana Sutta]], [[Diggha Nikaya]], the [[Sasta]] himself has {{Wiki|preached}} that the remains of the [[body]] of a [[Tathagata]] should be encased in a [[Caitya]] / [[Stupa]] and those who {{Wiki|worship}} such Stupa-s with wreathes, [[perfumes]], colors ([[sindura]], [[avira]] etc.) with devout hearts will reap benefits and [[happiness]] for a long [[time]]. This is certainly very [[ritualistic]] and such types of [[offerings]] were [[offered]] in [[temples]] in [[India]] long [[time]] before the [[Buddha]] and they still continue even among non-Buddhists. In the same [[Parinibbana Sutta]], the [[Buddha]] commands that his [[body]] be [[Wikipedia:cremation|cremated]] like the [[body]] of a [[Cakravarti]] [[Emperor]]. He certainly did not say, “Do not perform any [[rituals]] at all because that is not a [[Buddhist]] thing to do” We find the [[Buddha]] himself sanctioning the {{Wiki|worship}} of a [[tree]] (a transplantation from the [[Bodhi Tree]] in [[Bodhgaya]]) as a [[symbolic]] [[representation]] of the [[Tathagata]]. The [[Tathagata]] himself helped make the [[Stupa]] / [[Caitya]] / [[Cetiya]] for [[Sariputra’s]] remains saying such Stupa-s of arya-s should be worshipped. Any kind of {{Wiki|worship}} is a [[ritual]], and when [[rituals]] are accepted, [[symbols]] are accepted too.
  
 
As far as [[symbols]] go, there are no fixed meanings [[attached]] to any [[symbol]] according to the [[world]] famous {{Wiki|psychologist}} C.J. {{Wiki|Jung}}. That means, the same [[symbols]] can be given different meanings by [[Hindus]], [[Buddhists]], {{Wiki|Jainas}} or [[Christians]]. Whether any [[symbol]] like ‘om’ etc. is [[Buddhist]] or [[Hindu]] or [[Jaina]] depends on what meaning you give to it, as they do not have any fixed meaning according to the [[world]] famous [[religious]] historian {{Wiki|Mircea Eliade}}. So it is spurious to call [[Vajrayana]] / [[Mahayana]] influenced by [[Hinduism]] simply because there are some outward similarities in some [[symbols]] or [[rituals]] etc.
 
As far as [[symbols]] go, there are no fixed meanings [[attached]] to any [[symbol]] according to the [[world]] famous {{Wiki|psychologist}} C.J. {{Wiki|Jung}}. That means, the same [[symbols]] can be given different meanings by [[Hindus]], [[Buddhists]], {{Wiki|Jainas}} or [[Christians]]. Whether any [[symbol]] like ‘om’ etc. is [[Buddhist]] or [[Hindu]] or [[Jaina]] depends on what meaning you give to it, as they do not have any fixed meaning according to the [[world]] famous [[religious]] historian {{Wiki|Mircea Eliade}}. So it is spurious to call [[Vajrayana]] / [[Mahayana]] influenced by [[Hinduism]] simply because there are some outward similarities in some [[symbols]] or [[rituals]] etc.
  
I would like to end this article with a quote by David Brazier, a psychotherapist and a [[Zen]] [[Buddhist]] from his [[book]], ‘The [[Feeling]] [[Buddha]]’ – “When skillfully used, [[ritual]] is moving and transformative, reaffirming the connection between the particular {{Wiki|individual}} [[experience]] and the larger {{Wiki|drama}} in whole we all share. [[Ritual]], properly employed is a therapeutic re-affirmation of the meaning and {{Wiki|mystery}} of [[life]].”
+
I would like to end this article with a quote by [[David Brazier]], a psychotherapist and a [[Zen]] [[Buddhist]] from his [[book]], ‘The [[Feeling]] [[Buddha]]’ – “When skillfully used, [[ritual]] is moving and transformative, reaffirming the [[connection]] between the particular {{Wiki|individual}} [[experience]] and the larger {{Wiki|drama}} in whole we all share. [[Ritual]], properly employed is a {{Wiki|therapeutic}} re-affirmation of the meaning and {{Wiki|mystery}} of [[life]].”
 
</poem>
 
</poem>
 
{{R}}
 
{{R}}
 
[http://www.byomakusuma.org/Teachings/TheUseOfSymbolsAndRitualsInVajrayanaMahayanaBuddhism.aspx www.byomakusuma.org]
 
[http://www.byomakusuma.org/Teachings/TheUseOfSymbolsAndRitualsInVajrayanaMahayanaBuddhism.aspx www.byomakusuma.org]
 
[[Category:Ritual Instruments]]
 
[[Category:Ritual Instruments]]

Latest revision as of 16:08, 28 March 2024

93 45jg02 n.jpg
Guru-Draakonid.jpg
00-4.jpg
Mahakala1.jpg
Image002.JPG
Medi234.jpg





 Acharya Mahayogi Sridhar Rana Rinpoche

In the Digghanikaya Udumbarika Sihanada Sutta of the Pali Tripitaka, the Sasta (master) has told Nigrodha that it was not necessary to relinquish everything in his culture to become a Buddhist. He could continue to follow those cultural elements if they did not contradict the Samyag Drishti (correct view) view. For instance, it is not possible to continue animal sacrifice and still remain a Buddhist; however it is possible to perform the rites and rituals and symbols of the culture one grows up in if they do not contradict the basics of Buddhism.

Because through the centuries after the Buddha, millions of Indians, Bràhmins and otherwise became Buddhists, it is natural that the rites and rituals, the symbols and many such things were continued on as they did not contradict or distort the Samyag Drishti (correct view). These rites and symbols were taken from the general Indian socio-cultural milieu that existed then – be they Sramanic or Brahmanic or from some other local culture. As the Buddha himself has vouchsafed for such use of rituals and symbols, to see Hindu influence in all such rites, rituals and symbols is not only short sightedness, but specially if this criticism comes from another Buddhist denomination, it is a clear sign of idamsatyavinivesa. Idamsatyavinivesa is one of the Kayagrantha-s (bodily knots) that tie us to Samsara and it means holding on to a belief that “only the forms of symbols, rites and rituals, beliefs, ideas, that i believe, only my interpretations of the words of the Buddha, only my Master etc. only the form of Buddhism I follow, only the form of Vipasyana my teacher or my sub-sect teaches are the truth, all others are false.” In the Majjhima Nikaya, Canki Sutta, the Sasta has very clearly told Canki that to think –

Idameva saccam moghannam

i.e. “only this is the truth, all else is false” is not a thing that a learned wise man does.

So the teachings given by the Sasta to Canki and Nigrodha themselves sanction very clear use of any cultural elements like symbols and rites and rituals of any place and time as part of Buddhism if they do not contradict the Samyag Drishti (correct view).

A close study of such symbols and rites and rituals within Vajrayana / Mahayana shows that not only have such symbols and rites and rituals been taken from the background cultures be it Indian, Tibetan or Chinese etc., the use of such symbols etc. in Vajrayana / Mahayana is quite different from the use of these same or similar symbols and rites and rituals in other non-Buddhist systems. So not only were those symbols innocuous as far as Samyag Drishti (correct view) was concerned but also Vajrayana / Mahayana have remolded their meaning to make them closer to the Buddhist weltanschauung, to the Buddhist Samyag Drishti (correct view). This is a sign of healthy creativity rather than a sign of degeneration or muddling up or even influence of non-Buddhist systems.

Here, it is important to distinguish a very important point. Those who have tried to make Buddhism concord with Modernism have constantly harped on the point that the Buddha revolted against all rites and rituals. There are two things wrong with this view. Firstly, this is an attempt to fit the Buddha in a ‘modernist weltanschauung’ as if the Buddha’s view of the world was exactly like what came into existence in the cultures of the Western world after the 17th century due to scientific developments and the Industrial Revolution. Till about 1950, the whole of the Western culture was under the sway of Modernism. Modernism believed that only what was scientific or looked scientific was true, real, fact, un-superstitious; anything else that didn’t look scientific or similar to Physics and Chemistry was false, untrue, and superstitious. Needless to say, many Buddhist scholars and educated Buddhists of that time (especially those Buddhist monk scholars of the British colonial Ceylon) fell for this consensual hypnotic illusion and subscribed rather vociferously to this view. So anything within Buddhism that didn’t look scientific, was not analytically linear, didn’t fit the Cartesian Reductionist linear paradigm was thrown out the window and declared that the Buddha did not actually teach such a thing but rather was brought into Buddhism by latter-day decadent Buddhists.

Symbols and rites and rituals were among those most valuable psychotherapeutic elements which didn’t fit the Modernist paradigm. So they were declared as wholesale non-Buddhist; and they were actually things the Buddha himself actually taught against. However, after the Cognitive Revolution in the West in the 1950’s, Modernism has lost its stranglehold on Western cultural weltanschauung and is no longer considered as the whole and sole criteria to decide what is true and what is not. After the 1950’s, Post-Modernism began to fan out across the Western cultural horizon and Modernism gradually died out. Post-Modernism upholds the fact that the scientific view of life is only one mode of gauging reality and is by no means the whole and sole determinant of what is true or false; and there are alternate modes to experience / evaluate and interpret the world / reality etc. which are equally valid. Now, if we subscribe to these quaint ideas that the Buddha had the same view as the Modernists whose ideas began only after the 17th century and that too in the West; today we automatically make the Buddha outdated in this Post-Modernist world. It is also absurd to believe that the Buddha in the 6th century BC taught what the Modernists believed in the 17th century and refuted whatever these Modernists refuted or saw as false.

Secondly, in all the Sastra-s (even the Theravada Sutta-s) we don’t find the Buddha revolting against any rites and rituals or cultural elements – be they even Vedic. He only decried those parts of those rituals which were either meaningless or against the Samyag Drishti (correct view). He often re-interpreted those rituals giving them a new meaning or transformed those rituals to make them more meaningful, but he did not revolt against rites and rituals and symbols per se. In fact, in the Sutta Nipata, Magandiy Sutta, the Sasta says, “I do not say one attains purification by view, tradition, knowledge, virtue or ritual, nor is it attained without view, tradition, knowledge, virtue or ritual. It is by only taking these factors as a means and not grasping onto them as ends in themselves that one so attains and consequently does not crave for re-becoming” In this Sutta, the Sasta has clearly shown that he does not revolt against all rituals per se as useless mumbo jumbo but rather says very clearly that rituals can and should be used properly to attain purification etc. This certainly does not fit the ideas of those Modernist Buddhist scholars mentioned above. So it is clear that the Buddha has not taught against rites, rituals and symbols. In fact, he does even say very clearly, “I do not say one attains purification…without rituals etc…It is by only taking those factors (rituals etc.) as means….that one attains….” This Magandiya Sutta is certainly not very Modernist is it?

In the Anguttara Nikaya, the Sasta has mentioned in two different places (the 4th and the 5th Nipata) that offerings should be offered to those deities requiring offerings (Skt. bali grahaka devata). Now, this again is certainly a rite and ritual that the Sasta himself sanctioned. If this ritual was not so important, why would he say it at two different places or why would it be repeated at two different places in the same Nikaya? The Vajrayana / Mahayana still maintain this ritual to date. In the Majjhima Nikaya Saleyyaka Sutta, the Sasta says that it is Mithya Drishti (incorrect view) to believe that there are no Dana, Yajña and Havana. All three are rituals. The Sasta himself prescribed the worship of the Cetiya. In the Parinibbana Sutta, Diggha Nikaya, the Sasta himself has preached that the remains of the body of a Tathagata should be encased in a Caitya / Stupa and those who worship such Stupa-s with wreathes, perfumes, colors (sindura, avira etc.) with devout hearts will reap benefits and happiness for a long time. This is certainly very ritualistic and such types of offerings were offered in temples in India long time before the Buddha and they still continue even among non-Buddhists. In the same Parinibbana Sutta, the Buddha commands that his body be cremated like the body of a Cakravarti Emperor. He certainly did not say, “Do not perform any rituals at all because that is not a Buddhist thing to do” We find the Buddha himself sanctioning the worship of a tree (a transplantation from the Bodhi Tree in Bodhgaya) as a symbolic representation of the Tathagata. The Tathagata himself helped make the Stupa / Caitya / Cetiya for Sariputra’s remains saying such Stupa-s of arya-s should be worshipped. Any kind of worship is a ritual, and when rituals are accepted, symbols are accepted too.

As far as symbols go, there are no fixed meanings attached to any symbol according to the world famous psychologist C.J. Jung. That means, the same symbols can be given different meanings by Hindus, Buddhists, Jainas or Christians. Whether any symbol like ‘om’ etc. is Buddhist or Hindu or Jaina depends on what meaning you give to it, as they do not have any fixed meaning according to the world famous religious historian Mircea Eliade. So it is spurious to call Vajrayana / Mahayana influenced by Hinduism simply because there are some outward similarities in some symbols or rituals etc.

I would like to end this article with a quote by David Brazier, a psychotherapist and a Zen Buddhist from his book, ‘The Feeling Buddha’ – “When skillfully used, ritual is moving and transformative, reaffirming the connection between the particular individual experience and the larger drama in whole we all share. Ritual, properly employed is a therapeutic re-affirmation of the meaning and mystery of life.”

Source

www.byomakusuma.org