Wednesday, 24 July 2013

Buddhism: Karma Review

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Karma Review
Jul 24th 2013, 13:45

We've been talking about the Devadaha Sutta, in which the Buddha discusses karma. Karma is widely misunderstood even by people who say they believe in it, as well as by people who dismiss it as superstition without bothering to learn what it is. So it's a useful thing to review.

The word karma means "volitional action," and a doctrine of karma is a doctrine that explains the effects of volitional action. There are doctrines of karma found in many religions of Asia. However, they are not the same doctrines. What many people know about karma comes from one of the other religions, or from Asian folk belief, and is not what the Buddha taught.

The common understanding of karma is that past action has caused our present circumstances, and present action will cause our future circumstances. It's also often believed that the effects of our current actions will not be felt in this life but will take the form of reward or punishment in the next. But this is not what the Buddha taught.

The Buddha taught that our lives are conditioned both by what we've done in the past and what we are doing right now. This is an important distinction. For one thing, it means that the effects of past action can be changed by present action. Nothing is fated to happen to you because of past action; you always have a choice to change course.

Further, it means effects of volitional action begin immediately.  What you do right now conditions what you experience right now. Yes, what you do right now might also condition what you experience in the future, and the effects of what you do right now might continue on into lives beyond this one, although this is not set in stone.

But this also means that understanding and appreciating karma does not require belief in reincarnation. What you do in this life conditions this life. This is something that can be observed, if you pay attention to it.

In other words, karma is not just about behaving yourself so that your next life will be nice. Karma can be understood on many levels, some mystical and some not. You can think of it as a kind of physics of morality -- a cause will have an effect -- instead of some super-cosmic criminal justice system.

I know that in some schools of Buddhism the karma-rebirth connection is considered of utmost importance. But by applying the Buddha's own criteria -- see the previous post --  you don't have to accept this as true just because a teacher says it is true. Do keep an open mind, though.

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Buddhism: What's Hot Now: Buddhist Holidays 2013

Buddhism: What's Hot Now
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Buddhist Holidays 2013
Jul 24th 2013, 11:03, by buddhism.guide@about.com

Most Buddhist holidays are determined by moon phase rather than date, so the dates change every year. They also are determined by various Asian calendars that don't correspond to the Gregorian calendar. Further, the same holidays are observed at different times in different parts of Asia, resulting in, for example, numerous Buddha's Birthday dates.

This list of major Buddhist holidays for 2013 is ordered by date instead of by holiday, so that you can follow along through the year. And if you miss one Buddha's Birthday, just wait a few days and catch the next one.

February 10, 2013: Chinese New Year

Chinese New Year, BeijingGuang Niu/Getty Images

Chinese New Year is not, strictly speaking, a Buddhist holiday. However, Chinese Buddhists begin the New Year by going to a temple to offer incense and prayers.

I understand this date marks the beginning of a year of the snake.

February 11-13, 2013: Losar (Tibetan New Year)

Tibetan dancer dressed as dharmapalaChina Photos/Getty Images

In Tibetan monasteries, observance of Losar begins during the last days of the old year. Monks perform special rituals evoking protective deities and clean and decorate the monasteries. The first day of Losar is a day of elaborate ceremonies, including dances and recitations of Buddhist teachings. The remaining two days are for a more secular festival. On the third day, old prayer flags are replaced with new ones.

The Losar dancer in the photograph is dressed as a dharmapala.

In 2013, Losar and Chinese New Year begin in the same lunar month, but often Losar is a month later.

February 8 or 15, 2013: Parinirvana, or Nirvana Day (Mahayana)

On this day some schools of Mahayana Buddhism observe the death of the Buddha and his entrance into Nirvana. Nirvana Day is a time for contemplation of the Buddha’s teachings. Some monasteries and temples hold meditation retreats. Others open their doors to laypeople, who bring gifts of money and household goods to support monks and nuns.

In Buddhist art, a reclining Buddha usually represents Parinirvana. The reclining Buddha in the photograph is in Luang Prabang, Laos.

Read More: The Death and Parinirvana of the Buddha

February 14-25, 2013: Monlam Chenmo (Great Prayer Festival; Gelugpa Tibetan)

Dalai LamaDaniel Berehulak/Getty Images

The several schools of Tibetan Buddhism hold prayer festivals (monlam) at different times throughout the year. The Gelugpa Monlam Chenmo, great prayer festival, was established in 1409 by Tsongkhapa, the founder of Gelugpa Tibetan Buddhism.

Duringthe Monlam Chenmo, monks and laypeople offer prayers for the long life of the lamas, in particular His Holiness the Dalai Lama; for the protection of Buddhism; and for the well-being of all sentient beings.

February 25, 2013: Magha Puja (Sangha Day; Theravada)

This is an alternate date (to March 30, 2013) for Magha Puja, or Sangha Day, also called "Fourfold Assembly" day. Buddhists attend services at temples and offer food and other gifts to monks. It is also common to walk around a shrine or Buddha image three times as a gesture of respect for the Three Jewels -- the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha.

February 25, 2013: Chunga Choepa (Butter Lamp Festival, Tibetan)

Tibetan butter sculptureChina Photos/Getty Images

The Butter Lamp Festival, Chunga Choepa in Tibetan, celebrates a demonstration of miracles attributed to the historical Buddha, also called Shakyamuni Buddha. Colorful butter sculptures are displayed, and singing and dancing go on into the night.

Sculpting yak butter is an ancient Tibetan Buddhist art. Monks bath and perform a special ritual before making the sculptures. So that the butter doesn't melt as they work with it, the monks keep their fingers cold by dipping their hands into cold water.

The photograph shows monks carrying a butter sculpture for display at the Ta'er Monastery in Huangzhong County of Qinghai Province, China.

March 30, 2013: Magha Puja (Sangha Day; Theravada)

For Theravada Buddhists, every new moon and full moon day is an Uposatha Observance Day. A few Uposatha Days are especially important, and one of these is Magha Puja.

Also called "Makha Bucha," Magha Puja commemorates a day when 1,250 monks, all from different places and on their on initiative, spontaneously came to pay homage to the historical Buddha. In particular, this is a day for laypeople to show special appreciation for the monastic sangha.

This is a major holiday in Thailand in particular. On this day, Buddhists in much of southeast Asia gather at sunset in their local temples to participate in candlelight processions.

April 8, 2013: Hanamatsuri (Buddha's Birthday, Japan)

In Japan, Buddha's birthday is observed every April 8 with Hanamatsuri, or “Flower Festival." On this day people bring fresh flowers to temples in remembrance of the Buddha's birth in a grove of blossoming trees.

A common ritual for Buddha's birthday is "washing" a figure of the baby Buddha with tea. The figure of baby Buddha is placed in a basin, and people fill ladles with tea and pour the tea over the figure. These and other traditions are explained in the story of the Buddha's birth.

April 13-16, 2013: Water Festivals (Bun Pi Mai, Sonkran; Southeast Asia)

Songkran, Water Festival in ThailandPaula Bronstein/Getty Images

This is a major festival in Burma, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand. Michael Aquino, the Guide to Southeast Asian Travel, writes that for Bun Pi Mai "Buddha images are washed, offerings made at the temples, and votive sand stupas are made in yards all over the country. Finally, Laotians spray water gleefully upon one another." As the photo suggests, elephants may be the ultimate water pistol.

May 17, 2013: Seokga Tansinil (Buddha's Birthday, South Korea)

Buddha's Birthday, KoreaChung Sung-Jun/Getty Images

Buddha's birthday in South Korea is celebrated with a week-long festival that usually ends on the same day as Vesak Puja in other parts of Asia. This is the biggest Buddhist holiday in Korea, observed with grand parades and parties as well as religious ceremonies.

The children in the photograph are attending a Buddha's birthday ceremony at the Chogye temple in Seoul, South Korea.

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Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Buddhism: The Limits of Reason

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The Limits of Reason
Jul 23rd 2013, 13:49

On to the Devadaha Sutta (Majjhima Nikaya 101), which was the subject of the talk given by Bhikkhu Bodhi, mentioned in the last post. The Devadaha Sutta is recorded in the Sutta-pitaka (basket of sutras), one of the three major sections of the Pali Tipitika or Pali Canon.

In this sutta, the Buddha is speaking to a group of Jains about their understanding of karma. Their teacher, Mahavira, taught a doctrine of karma that was quite different from what the Buddha taught, and I'll explain that in another post. For now, I want to point to a passage in which the Buddha discussed why we believe what we believe, or the basis for accepting a teaching as true.

In this sutta, the Buddha said there are five means for deciding what is true that are not to be relied upon.  These are:

  1. conviction / faith
  2. liking
  3. tradition / hearsay
  4. careful thinking / reasoning by analogy
  5. pondering views / reflective acceptance

(I'm taking the list from two different translations, which accounts for the two versions of some of these.)

In each of these five cases, the Buddha said, the outcome can go one of two ways, depending on what kind of conviction, what kind of liking, what kind of reasoning, etc. In other words, the basis of your trust might be sound, or it might be unsound.

You might remember a similar list in the Kalama Sutta, where the Buddha said,

"So in this case, Kalamas, don't go by reports, by legends, by traditions, by scripture, by logical deduction, by inference, by analogies, by agreement through pondering views, by probability, or by the thought, 'This contemplative is our teacher.'"

People often cite the Kalama Sutta's teaching on not blindly accepting the words of legends, scriptures, traditions, or teachers. But sometimes these same people overlook the rest of the warning and cling to ideas about Buddhism developed through reasoning by analogy and pondering views. Thanissaro Bhikkhu, Theravada monk and scholar, wrote of this,

"When the Buddha says that you can't go by logical deduction, inference, or analogies, he's saying that you can't always trust your sense of reason. When he says that you can't go by agreement through pondering views (i.e., what seems to fit in with what you already believe) or by probability, he's saying that you can't always trust your common sense. And of course, you can't always trust teachers, scriptures, or traditions."

Of course, whenever we are learning something new, we nearly always try to fit the new thing into what we already know. Put another way, we try to file it in the intellectual filing system that has accumulated in our brains since we were children. The human brain seems to be wired to do this.

The problem is that if the new thing really doesn't fit, rather than opening a new filing cabinet we are likely to modify the new thing so that it fits into one of the old ones. And then, most of the time, the wisdom the new thing might have given us is lost.

So, it's entirely normal to judge Buddhist teachings by their agreement (or not) with the views we already hold. But the Buddha specifically warned us to not do that. How, then, do we know whether to accept or reject a teaching? And the short answer is, by means of direct insight gained through practice.

If you wade through the Sutta-pitaka, you might notice that nearly all of the Buddha's talks were, in one way or another, about how to realize direct insight through practice. He spent about 40 years teaching how to realize direct insight through practice. This is what Buddhism is; realizing direct insight through practice. It's not at all about concocting Grand Theories of Dharma through intellectual speculation and pondering views. For some reason, that's a difficult point to get across.

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Buddhism: What's Hot Now: Big Buddhas: A Photo Gallery

Buddhism: What's Hot Now
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Big Buddhas: A Photo Gallery
Jul 23rd 2013, 11:02, by buddhism.guide@about.com

The image of the Buddha is one of the world's most familiar icons, representing wisdom and compassion. From time to time, people have been moved to erect really big buddhas. Some of these are among the largest statues in the world.

Which of the giant buddhas of Asia is the biggest? Some say it's the Leshan Buddha of Sichuan Province, China, a seated stone giant 233 feet (71 meters) tall. But what about the Monywa Buddha of Burma, a reclining image stretching 294 feet (90 meters)? Or the bronze Ushiku Buddha of Japan, which stands 394 feet (120 meters)?

A 502-foot (153 meters) standing buddha is being erected in Lushan, Henan, China. In Guifeng, China, stonemasons are working on a reclining buddha statue that will be 1,365 feet (416 meters) long. There are plans to build a 500-foot (152 meters) bronze seated Maitreya Buddha at Kushinagar, Uttar Pradesh in northern India. At the moment, the Ushiku Buddha may still be the world's biggest buddha. Or maybe not.

Leshan BuddhaBig Buddhas: The Leshan Buddha Ushiku Amida BuddhaBig Buddhas: The Ushiku Amida Buddha Burma Reclining BuddhaBig Buddhas: The Monywa Buddha Tian Tan BuddhaBig Buddhas: The Tian Tan Buddha
Great Buddha at LingshanBig Buddhas: The Great Buddha at Lingshan Nihonji DaibutsuBig Buddhas: The Nihonji Daibutsu

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Buddhism: What's Hot Now: Eight Dharmapalas

Buddhism: What's Hot Now
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Eight Dharmapalas
Jul 23rd 2013, 11:02, by buddhism.guide@about.com

Dharmapalas grimace from Vajrayana Buddhist art, and their sculpted, threatening forms surround many Buddhist temples. From their looks you might think they are evil. But dharmapalas are wrathful bodhisattvas who protect Buddhists and the Dharma. Their terrifying appearance is meant to frighten forces of evil. The eight dharmapalas listed blow are considered the "principal" dharmapalas, sometimes called “Eight Terrible Ones." Most were adapted from Hindu art and literature. Some also originated in Bon, the indigenous pre-Buddhist religion of Tibet, and also from folk tales.

Mahakala

Mahakala is the wrathful form of the gentle and compassionate Avalokiteshvara Bodhisattva. In Tibetan iconography he is usually black, although he appears in other colors as well. He has two to six arms, three bulging eyes with flames for eyebrows, and a beard of hooks. He wears a crown of six skulls.

Mahakala is the protector of the tents of nomadic Tibetans, and of monasteries, and of all Tibetan Buddhism. He is charged with the tasks of pacifying hindrances; enriching life, virtue and wisdom; attracting people to Buddhism; and destroying confusion and ignorance.

Yama

MarenYumi/Flickr Creative Commons License

Yama is lord of the Hell Realm. He represents death.

In legend, he was a holy man meditating in a cave when robbers entered the cave with a stolen bull and cut off the bull's head. When they realized the holy man had seen them, the robbers cut off his head also. The holy man put on the bull's head and assumed the terrible form of Yama. He killed the robbers, drank their blood, and threatened all of Tibet. Then Manjushri, Bodhisattva of Wisdom, manifested as Yamantaka and defeated Yama. Yama became a protector of Buddhism.

In art, Yama is most familiar as the being holding the Bhava Chakra in his claws.

Yamantaka

Yamantaka is the wrathful form of Manjushri, Bodhisattva of Wisdom. It was as Yamantaka that Manjushri conquered the rampaging Yama and made him a protector of the Dharma.

In some versions of the legend, when Manhushri became Yamantaka he mirrored Yama's appearance but with multiple heads, legs and arms. When Yama looked at Yamantaka he saw himself multiplied to infinity. Since Yama repesents death, Yamantaka represents that which is stronger than death.

In art, Yamantaka usually is shown standing or riding a bull that is trampling Yama.

Hayagriva

Hayagriva is another wrathful form of Avalokiteshvara (as is Mahakala, above). He has the power to cure diseases (skin diseases in particular), and is a protector of horses. He wears a horse's head in his headdress and frightens demons by neighing like a horse.

Vaisravana

Vaisravana is an adaptation of Kubera, the Hindu God of Wealth. In Vajrayana Buddhism, Vaisravana is thought to bestow prosperity, which gives people freedom to pursue spiritual goals. In art, he is usually corpulent and covered in jewels. His symbols are a lemon and a mongoose, and he also is a guardian of the north.

Palden Lhamo

Palden Lhamo, the only female dharmapala, is the protector of Buddhist governments, including the Tibetan government in exile in Lhasa, India. She is also a consort of Mahakala. Her Sanskrit name is Shri Devi.

Palden Lhamo was married to an evil king of Lanka. She tried to reform her husband, but failed. Further, their son was being raised to be the destroyer of Buddhism. One day while the king was away, she killed her son, drank his blood and ate his flesh. She rode away on a horse saddled with her son's flayed skin.

The king shot a poisoned arrow after Palden Lhamo. The arrow struck her horse. Palden Lhamo healed the horse, and the wound became an eye.

Tshangspa Dkarpo

Tshangspa is the Tibetan name for the Hindu creator god Brahma. The Tibetan Tshangspa is not a creator god, however, but more of a warrior god. He usually is pictured mounted on a white horse and waving a sword.

In one version of his legend, Tshangspa traveled the earth on a murderous rampage. One day he attempted to assault a sleeping goddess, who awoke and struck him in the thigh, crippling him. The goddess's blow transformed him into a protector of the dharma.

Begtse

Begtse is a war god who emerged in the 16th century, making him the most recent dharmapala. His legend is woven together with Tibetan history:

Sonam Gyatso, the Third Dalai Lama, was called from Tibet to Mongolia to convert the warlord Altan Khan to Buddhism. Begtse confronted the Dalai Lama to stop him. But the Dalai Lama transformed himself into the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara. Witnessing this miracle, Begtse became a Buddhist and a protector of the Dharma.

In Tibetan art, Begtse wears armor and Mongolian boots. Often he has a sword in one hand and an enemy's heart in the other.

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Buddhism: What's Hot Now: When Is Buddha's Birthday?

Buddhism: What's Hot Now
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When Is Buddha's Birthday?
Jul 23rd 2013, 11:02, by buddhism.guide@about.com

On what day is Buddha's Birthday? That's simple. Just calculate the first full moon day of the sixth month of the Buddhist lunar calendar, which would be the fourth month of the Chinese calendar, except in years in which there's an extra full moon, and then Buddha's birthday falls in the seventh month. Well, except where it starts a week earlier. And in Tibet it's usually a month later. Oh, and in Japan, Buddha's Birthday always is April 8.

Or, you could follow the guide below. For more about how Buddha's birthday is celebrated, see ."

Buddha's Birthday in Japan

In Japan, Buddha's birthday is called Hanamatsuri, or “Flower Festival." On this day people bring fresh flowers to temples in remembrance of the Buddha's birth in a grove of blossoming trees.

In Japan, Buddha's birthday is observed every year on April 8.

For more about Buddhism in Japan, see "Buddhism in Japan: A Brief History."

Buddha's Birthday in Korea

Buddha's Birthday South KoreaChung Sung-Jun/Getty Images

In South Korea, Buddha's birthday is a gala week-long celebration that ends on the first full moon day of the lunar month Vesakha, which usually falls in May. This full moon day is the most commonly observed date for Buddha's birthday. Here are upcoming dates for the celebration in South Korea:

2009: May 2-May 8
2010: May 15-May 21
2011: May 4-May 10

Throughout Korea, city streets and temples are decorated with lanterns. At Jogyesa Temple in Seoul, the first day begins with religious ceremonies, followed by a street fair near the temple. In the evening a gala lantern parade stretches for miles through the heart of Seoul.

Buddha's Birthday in Southeast Asia

Visakha Puja, ThailandPaula Bronstein/Getty Images

Theravada is the dominant form of Buddhism in Sri Lanka, Thailand, Cambodia, Burma (Myanmar) and Laos. Theravadins combine observance of Buddha's birth, enlightenment and death into one holiday, called Vesak, Visakha, or Wesak, and sometimes Buddha Day.

Vesak Puja is the most holy day of the year for Theravada Buddhists, marked by visits to temples, candlelight processions and observance of Uposatha Precepts.

2009: May 8
2010: May 21
2011: May 10

For more about this holiday see "Vesak Puja."

Buddha's Birthday in Tibet

Saka Dawa pilgrims, LhasaChina Photos/Getty Images

Saga Dawa is the entire fourth month of the Tibetan calendar, which usually begins in May and ends in June. The seventh day of Saga Dawa is the date of the historical Buddha's birth for Tibetans. However, the Buddha's birth, enlightenment and entry into Nirvana at his death are observed together on the 15th day of Saga Dawa, called Saga Dawa Duchen. This is the single most important holiday for Tibetan Buddhism, usually observed with pilgrimages and other visits to temples and shrines.

In 2009, Saga Dawa Duchen falls on June 7.
In 2010, Saga Dawa Duchen falls on May 27.

See also "Tibetan Buddhism: An Introduction."

Buddha's Birthday in China and Elsewhere

In most of China and most other parts of Asia, Buddha's Birthday coincides with the dates for Vesak Puja, in Southeast Asia (see above). However, most Mahayana Buddhists celebrate the day as Buddha's birthday alone, and observe the Buddha enlightenment and parinirvana on other days.

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Monday, 22 July 2013

Buddhism: What's Hot Now: The First Buddhist Monks

Buddhism: What's Hot Now
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The First Buddhist Monks
Jul 22nd 2013, 11:03, by buddhism.guide@about.com

In the beginning there were no monasteries, just a wandering teacher and his tag-along disciples. In India and Nepal 25 centuries ago there were many wandering teachers and disciples. It had long been common for men seeking spiritual teaching to attach themselves to a guru, and these gurus usually lived either in simple forest hermitages or, even more simply, under the shelter of trees.

The historical Buddha began his spiritual quest by seeking highly regarded gurus of his day. Then he realized enlightenment, and disciples began to follow him.

Leaving Home

The Buddha and his first disciples had no fixed place to call home. They slept under trees and begged for all of their food. Their only clothes were robes they patched together from cloth taken from rubbish heaps. The cloth usually was dyed with spices such as turmeric or saffron, which gave it a yellow-orange color. Buddhist monks' robes to this day often are called "saffron robes."

At first, people who wished to become disciples simply approached the Buddha and asked to be ordained, and the Buddha would grant ordination. As the sangha grew, the Buddha established a rule that ordinations could take place in the presence of ten ordained monks without his having to be there.

In time there came to be two steps to ordination. The first step was home-leaving. Candidates recited the Ti Samana Gamana (Pali), "taking the three refuges" in the Buddha, the dharma, and the sangha. Then the novices shaved their heads and put on their patched, yellow-orange robes.

The Ten Cardinal Precepts

Novices also agreed to follow the Ten Cardinal Precepts, which are:

  1. No killing
  2. No stealing
  3. No sexual intercourse
  4. No lying
  5. No taking of intoxicants
  6. No eating at the wrong time (after the midday meal)
  7. No dancing or music
  8. No wearing of jewelry or cosmetics
  9. No sleeping on raised beds
  10. No acceptance of money

These ten rules eventually were expanded to 227 rules, recorded in the Vinaya-pitaka of the Pali Canon.

Full Ordination

In time a novice could apply for full ordination as a monk. To qualify he had to meet certain standards of health and character. Then a senior monk presented the candidate to the assembly of monks and asked three times if anyone objected to his ordination. If there were no objections, he would then be ordained.

The only possessions monks were allowed to keep were three robes, one alms bowl, one razor, one needle, one girdle, and one water strainer. Most of the time they slept under trees. They begged for their food in the morning and ate one meal a day, at noon. Monks were to gratefully receive and eat whatever they were given, with a few exceptions. They could not store food or save anything to eat later. For more on the food rules for monks, see "Buddhism and Vegetarianism."

The Buddha also ordained women as nuns. For the story of the first Buddhist nuns and the rules they followed, please see "The First Buddhist Women."

Discipline

As explained earlier, monks endeavored to live by the Ten Cardinal Precepts and the other rules of the Vinaya-pitaka. The Vinaya also prescribes penalties, ranging from simple confession to permanent explusion from the order. On days of a new and full moon, monks gathered in an assembly to recite the canon of rules. After each rule was recited, the monks paused to allow for confessions of breaking the rule.

Rains Retreats

The first Buddhist monks sought shelter during the rainy season, which lasted most of the summer. It came to be the practice that groups of monks would stay somewhere together, forming a temporary community. Wealthy laypeople sometimes invited groups of monks to be housed on their estates during the rainy seasons. Eventually a few of these patrons built permanent houses for monks, which amounted to an early form of monastery.

In much of southeast Asia today, Theravada monks observe Vassa, a three-month "rains retreat." During Vassa, monks remain in their monasteries and intensify their meditation practice. Laypeople participate by bringing them food and other supplies. Elsewhere in Asia, many Mahayana sects also observe some form of three-month intensive practice period to respect the rains retreat tradition of the first monks.

Growth of the Sangha

The historical Buddha is said to have delivered his first sermon to only five men. By the end of his life, the early texts describe thousands of followers. Assuming these accounts are accurate, how did the Buddha's teachings spread?

The historical Buddha traveled and taught, through cities and villages, during the last 40 or so years of his life. Small groups of monks also traveled on their own to teach the dharma. They would enter a village to beg for alms, going from house to house. People impressed by their peaceful, respectful nature often would follow them and ask questions.

When the Buddha died, his disciples carefully preserved and memorized his sermons and sayings and passed them on to new generations. Through the dedication of the first Buddhist monks, the dharma is alive for us today.

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