In celebrating the birth of a new board for general Buddhism, I thought I'd share some of the basic elements in Buddhism.
This is for those who are truly new to Buddhism and not just Dorje Shugden.
Although I have been studying Buddhism for the last 6 years or so, I still would not dare to say that I really do understand karma, samsara, etc.
Knowing and being able to recite words from the texts such as the Lamrim (which I have seen many forum members quote from) is one thing - but truly understanding the meanings and putting them into practice is quite another.
Personally, I am not impressed whether an individual can memorise all the texts and can quote from scriptures or churn our scholarly essays and theories on Buddhism.
I am more impressed when an individual has put in the time and effort to really put all those theories into practice and have incorporated these practices into their daily lives.
I am sure we all know - everything is a lot easier said than done.
If it were so easy - all of us would have achieved Enlightenment by now and be hanging out in some place called, Nirvana.
If it were so easy, then there should be more highly attained monks, lamas, tulkus and etc versus ordinary lay folks who like to pretend that they know more or much better than the rest.
Being well versed in the teachings and scriptures is just one aspect of Buddhism.
Translating all the essences of Buddha's teachings into daily practice is the key.
So, whether one is well acquainted with the meaning and terms of loving kindness is just a small part of it.
However, being really kind and loving towards all beings is really the heart of the Buddhism.
Therefore, to me - compassion is not a concept nor a theory.
It is a living practice. It has to be put into action, to be lived out and adapted to the various different individuals worldwide.
I guess, this is why there is that delicate balance between THE METHOD and THE WISDOM.
Thus Buddhism has the power to shape the way we live our lives and makes us better human beings.
Karma, Samsara, and NirvanaThree important concepts in understanding Buddhism are karma, Samsara, and Nirvana.
Karma refers to the law of cause and effect in a person's life, reaping what one has sown. Buddhists believe that every person must go through a process of birth and rebirth until he reaches the state of nirvana in which he breaks this cycle. According to the law of karma, "You are what you are and do what you do, as a result of what you were and did in a previous incarnation, which in turn was the inevitable outcome of what you were and did in still earlier incarnations."
For a Buddhist, what one will be in the next life depends on one's actions in this present life. Buddha believed, unlike Hinduism, that a person can break the rebirth cycle no matter what class he is born into.
The second key concept to understand is the law of Samsara or Transmigration. This is one of the most perplexing and difficult concepts in Buddhism to understand. The law of Samsara holds that everything is in a birth and rebirth cycle. Buddha taught that people do not have individual souls. The existence of an individual self or ego is an illusion. There is no eternal substance of a person which goes through the rebirth cycle. What is it then that goes through the cycle if not the individual soul? What goes through the rebirth cycle is only a set of feelings, impressions, present moments, and the karma that is passed on. "In other words, as one process leads to another, ... so one's human personality in one existence is the direct cause of the type of individuality which appears in the next."
The new individual in the next life will not be exactly the same person, but there will be several similarities. Just how close in identity they will be, Buddha did not define.
The third key concept is Nirvana. The term means "the blowing out" of existence. Nirvana is very different from the Christian concept of heaven. Nirvana is not a place like heaven but rather a state of being. What exactly it is, Buddha never really articulated.
Nirvana is an eternal state of being. It is the state in which the law of karma, and the rebirth cycle come to an end. It is the end of suffering, a state where there are no desires and the individual consciousness comes to an end. Although to our Western minds this may sound like annihilation, Buddhists would object to such a notion. Gautama never gave an exact description of Nirvana, but his closest reply was this. "There is disciples, a condition, where there is neither earth nor water, neither air nor light, neither limitless space, nor limitless time, neither any kind of being, neither ideation nor non-ideation, neither this world nor that world. There is neither arising nor passing-away, nor dying, neither cause nor effect, neither change nor standstill."
Although no Buddhist really understands the condition of Nirvana, it is their eternal hope.
Source:
http://wri.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/buddhism.html