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 Four Seals of the Dharma"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "thumb|250px| <poem> By Barbara O'Brien In the 26 centuries since the life of the Buddha, Buddhism has developed into diverse schools...")
 
 
(16 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[File:12 3STnL69.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:12 3STnL69.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
<poem>
 
By [[Barbara O'Brien]]
 
  
  
In the 26 centuries since the [[life]] of the [[Buddha]], [[Buddhism]] has developed into diverse schools and sects. As [[Buddhism]] reached into new regions of {{Wiki|Asia}} it often absorbed remnants of older regional [[religions]]. [[Many]] local "folk Buddhisms" sprang up that adopted the [[Buddha]] and the [[many]] iconic figures of [[Buddhist]] art and literature as [[gods]], without regard to their original meaning.
 
  
Sometimes new [[religions]] sprang up that were [[Buddhist]] in appearance but which retained little of the [[Buddha]]'s teachings. On the other hand, sometimes new schools of [[Buddhism]] arose that approached the teachings in fresh and robust new ways, to the disapproval of [[traditionalists]]. Questions arose -- what is it that distinguishes [[Buddhism]] as a distinctive [[religion]]? When is "[[Buddhism]]" actually [[Buddhism]]?
 
  
Those schools of [[Buddhism]] based on the [[Buddha]]'s teachings accept the [[Four Seals]] of [[Dharma]] as the distinction between true [[Buddhism]] and "sorta looks like [[Buddhism]]." Further, a teaching that contradicts any of the [[Four Seals]] is not a true [[Buddhist]] teaching.
 
  
The [[Four Seals]] are:
 
[[File:GuruRinpoche58.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
    All compounded things are [[impermanent]].
 
    All stained [[emotions]] are [[painful]].
 
    All [[phenomena]] are [[empty]].
 
    [[Nirvana]] is [[peace]].
 
  
Let's look at them one at a time.
 
1. All Compounded Things Are [[Impermanent]]
 
  
Anything that is assembled of other things will come apart -- a toaster, a building, a mountain, a [[person]]. The timetables may vary -- certainly a mountain may remain a mountain for 10,000 years. But even 10,000 years is not "always." The fact is that the [[world]] around us, which seems solid and fixed, is in a state of perpetual flux.
 
  
Well, of course, you may say. Why is this so important to [[Buddhism]]?
+
<poem>
 +
As described in [[The Dharma Jewel]], there are many different [[schools of Buddhism]], which provide different presentations of the [[Buddha's teaching]].  Different schools appeal to different personalities, and no one school claims to be 'right'.
  
[[Thich Nhat Hanh]] wrote that [[impermanence]] makes all things possible. Because everything changes, there are seeds and flowers, children and grandchildren. A static [[world]] would be a [[dead]] one.
+
So what is it that all [[forms]] of [[Buddhism]] have in common, and what differentiates [[Buddhism]] from other [[religions]] and [[philosophies]]?
[[File:22vnshou.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[Mindfulness]] of [[impermanence]] leads us to the teaching of [[dependent origination]]. All the compounded things are part of a limitless web of interconnection that is constantly changing. [[Phenomena]] become because of [[conditions]] created by other [[phenomena]]. [[Elements]] assemble and dissipate and re-assemble. [[Nothing]] is separate from everything else.
 
  
Finally, being [[mindful]] of the [[impermanence]] of all compounded things, including ourselves, helps us accept loss, [[old age]] and [[death]]. This may seem {{Wiki|pessimistic}}, but it is realistic. There will be loss, [[old age]] and [[death]] whether we accept them or not.
+
The defining features of [[Buddhism]] are [[THE FOUR SEALS OF THE DHARMA]] - four statements about the [[world]] which [[form]] the [[basis of all]] [[Buddhist teachings]].  The [[four seals]] aren't 'revealed [[truths]]' which we have to take on [[trust]] from some self-proclaimed 'prophet' who claims to have heard the {{Wiki|voice}} of [[God]], they are [[philosophical]] statements derived from [[logic]] and [[experience]].  
2. All Stained [[Emotions]] Are [[Painful]].
 
  
His Holiness the [[Dalai Lama]] translated this seal "all contaminated [[phenomena]] are of the nature of [[suffering]]." The word "stained" or "contaminated" refers to [[actions]], [[emotions]] and [[thoughts]] conditioned by [[selfish]] [[attachment]], or by [[hate]], [[greed]] and [[ignorance]].
+
They are:
  
[[Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche]], a {{Wiki|Bhutanese}} [[lama]] and filmmaker, said,
 
[[File:201 6544.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
"All [[emotions]] are [[pain]]. All of them! Why? Because they involve [[dualism]]. This is a big [[subject]] now. This we have to discuss for a while¦ From the [[Buddhist]] point of [[view]], as long as there is a [[subject]] and [[object]], as long as there is a separation between [[subject]] and [[object]], as long as you divorce them so to speak, as long as you think they are independent and then function as [[subject]] and [[object]], that is an [[emotion]], which includes everything, almost every [[thought]] that we have."
 
  
It is because we see ourselves as separate from other things that we [[desire]] them, or are repulsed by them. This is the teaching of the [[Second Noble Truth]], which teaches that the [[cause of suffering]] is [[craving]] or [[thirst]] ([[tanha]]). Because we divide the [[world]] into [[subject]] and [[object]], me and everything else, we continually [[grasp]] for things we think are separate from ourselves to make us [[happy]]. But [[nothing]] ever satisfies us for long.
+
(1) [[Impermanence]].  
3. All [[Phenomena]] Are [[Empty]].
 
  
Another way to say this is that [[nothing]] has intrinsic or inherent [[existence]], including ourselves. This relates to the teaching of [[anatman]], also called [[anatta]].
+
All [[phenomena]] are [[subject]] to change, growth, [[dissolution]] and [[decay]]. Even the {{Wiki|sun}}, {{Wiki|planets}} and {{Wiki|galaxies}} are changing and will one day cease to [[exist]].
  
[[Theravada]] and [[Mahayana]] [[Buddhists]] understand [[anatman]] somewhat differently. [[Theravada]] [[scholar]] [[Walpola Rahula]] explained,
+
(2)  All [[phenomena]] are unfindable upon analysis.  
  
"According to the [[Buddha]]'s teaching, it is as wrong to hold the opinion 'I have no [[self]]' (which is the {{Wiki|annihilationist}} theory) as to hold the opinion 'I have a [[self]]' (the eternalist theory), because both are [[fetters]], both arising out of the false idea 'I AM'. The correct position with regard to the question of [[Anatta]] is not to take hold of any opinion or [[views]], but to try to see things objectively as they are without [[mental]] projections, to see that what we call 'I', or 'being', is only a combination of [[physical]] and [[mental]] [[aggregates]], which are working together interdependently in a flux of momentary [[change]] within the [[law of cause and effect]], and that there is [[nothing]] permanent, everlasting, unchanging and [[eternal]] in the whole of [[existence]]." ([[Walpola Rahula]], What the [[Buddha]] Taught, 2nd ed., 1974, p. 66)
+
If you search for the [[ultimate nature]] of your car, you won't find it. All you'll find is parts, the [[causes]] of those parts coming together, and [[mental]] projection or '[[imputation]]' of something that performs the [[function]] of a car.  Similarly with the [[ego]] - the [[self]].  The [[essential]] [[nature]] of the [[self]] is as unfindable as the [[essential]] [[nature]] of a car or [[Milinda's]] [[chariot]].  'We are such stuff as [[dreams]] are made on'.
  
[[Mahayana Buddhism]] teaches the [[doctrine]] of [[shunyata]], or "[[emptiness]]." [[Phenomena]] have [[no existence]] of their own and are [[empty]] of a permanent [[self]]. In [[shunyata]], there is neither [[reality]] not not-[[reality]]; only relativity. However, [[shunyata]] also is an [[absolute reality]] that is all things and beings, [[unmanifested]].
+
(3)  {{Wiki|Materialistic}} [[existence]] is ultimately unsatisfactory.  
4. [[Nirvana]] Is [[Peace]].
 
  
The fourth seal sometimes is worded "[[Nirvana]] is beyond [[extremes]]." [[Walpola Rahula]] said "[[Nirvana]] is beyond all terms of [[duality]] and relativity. It is therefore beyond our conceptions of good and [[evil]], right and wrong, [[existence]] and [[non-existence]]." (What the [[Buddha]] Taught, p. 43)
+
All [[emotions]] based on the three [[mental]] [[poisons]] of [[attachment]], [[aversion]] and [[ignorance]] are ultimately [[painful]]. You can never have enough [[worldly]] {{Wiki|possessions}}, and even if you did you'd {{Wiki|worry}} about losing them since they are all [[impermanent]].  And you've got to lose the lot eventually when you shuffle off your coil. All {{Wiki|materialistic}} [[cravings]] eventually lead to dissappointment and worse. This is known as [[dukkha]].
  
[[Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche]] said, "In [[many]] [[philosophies]] or [[religions]], the final goal is something that you can hold on to and keep. The final goal is the only thing that truly [[exists]]. But [[nirvana]] is not [[fabricated]], so it is not something to be held on to. It is referred to as 'beyond [[extremes]].'"
+
(4)  The [[true nature]] of [[mind]] is clarity and [[peace]], 'but whilst this muddy vesture of [[decay]] doth grossly close it in' we cannot [[experience]] it. The sky-like clarity of the [[mind]] is obscured by the {{Wiki|thunder}} clouds of [[anger]], [[attachment]] and [[ignorance]]. The {{Wiki|real}} [[nature]] of the [[mind]] is [[Nirvana]] - which is NOT [[nothingness]], but the [[non-conceptual]] [[peace]] 'which passeth all [[understanding]]'.
 +
</poem>
  
[[Nirvana]] is defined in diverse ways by the various schools of [[Buddhism]]. But the [[Buddha]] taught that [[Nirvana]] was beyond [[human]] [[conceptualization]] or [[imagination]], and discouraged his students from wasting time in speculations about [[Nirvana]].
+
{{R}}
This Is [[Buddhism]]
+
[http://kwelos.tripod.com/fourseals.htm kwelos.tripod.com]
  
The [[Four Seals]] reveal what is unique about [[Buddhism]] among all the [[world]]'s [[religions]]. [[Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche]] said, "Whoever holds these four [seals], in their [[heart]], or in their head, and [[contemplates]] them, is a [[Buddhist]]."
+
[[Category:Buddha Seal's]]
</poem>
 
{{R}}
 
[http://buddhism.about.com/od/basicbuddhistteachings/a/fourseals.htm buddhism.about.com]
 
[[Category:Buddhas]]
 
[[Category:Barbara O'Brien]]
 

Latest revision as of 18:21, 17 April 2024

12 3STnL69.jpg





As described in The Dharma Jewel, there are many different schools of Buddhism, which provide different presentations of the Buddha's teaching. Different schools appeal to different personalities, and no one school claims to be 'right'.

So what is it that all forms of Buddhism have in common, and what differentiates Buddhism from other religions and philosophies?

The defining features of Buddhism are THE FOUR SEALS OF THE DHARMA - four statements about the world which form the basis of all Buddhist teachings. The four seals aren't 'revealed truths' which we have to take on trust from some self-proclaimed 'prophet' who claims to have heard the voice of God, they are philosophical statements derived from logic and experience.

They are:


(1) Impermanence.

All phenomena are subject to change, growth, dissolution and decay. Even the sun, planets and galaxies are changing and will one day cease to exist.

(2) All phenomena are unfindable upon analysis.

If you search for the ultimate nature of your car, you won't find it. All you'll find is parts, the causes of those parts coming together, and mental projection or 'imputation' of something that performs the function of a car. Similarly with the ego - the self. The essential nature of the self is as unfindable as the essential nature of a car or Milinda's chariot. 'We are such stuff as dreams are made on'.

(3) Materialistic existence is ultimately unsatisfactory.

All emotions based on the three mental poisons of attachment, aversion and ignorance are ultimately painful. You can never have enough worldly possessions, and even if you did you'd worry about losing them since they are all impermanent. And you've got to lose the lot eventually when you shuffle off your coil. All materialistic cravings eventually lead to dissappointment and worse. This is known as dukkha.

(4) The true nature of mind is clarity and peace, 'but whilst this muddy vesture of decay doth grossly close it in' we cannot experience it. The sky-like clarity of the mind is obscured by the thunder clouds of anger, attachment and ignorance. The real nature of the mind is Nirvana - which is NOT nothingness, but the non-conceptual peace 'which passeth all understanding'.

Source

kwelos.tripod.com