When people come across a debate about: "is Dorje Shugden a worldly spirit or is He a Buddha?", even though they know little or nothing about the Dharma, they actually engage in a thinking process like this:
- There are spirits, thus there is a spirit realm, thus there is such a thing as realms, thus there is such a thing as rebirth, thus there is karma, thus there is suffering, thus there are causes for suffering... What? When? How?
- There are Buddhas, what qualifies a Buddha? Who are they? What do they do? So there is a possibility for someone to become a Buddha or a spirit... how then? Thus there must be causes for becoming a spirit, and there must be causes and a method to attain buddhahood too. What? When? How? Who?
Have you ever thought about this?
The ban is preparing many people's mind to receive teachings on the first, second, third and fourth Noble Truths... It creates a terrain to receive teachings with a mind that is more open because it has formulated questions in search of answers!
This is especially valid for the cultures of this world that did not have karma and rebirth clearly established or for those who had lost them. They are thrown a juicy ban and let to think for themselves for a bit, and then when they come across a Lamrim teaching, they start "figuring things out".
Things we find through a controversy and through personal research and debate come to our minds deeper and stay.
What an interesting and skillful way to bring people into spirituality and make them develop more and more deep-seated knowkedge....