Wednesday, November 30, 2005

What Buddhists do at ChristmasTime

Buddha’s Enlightenment Day
By Barbara G. Taylor

What do Buddhists do when their neighbors are opening Christmas, Chanukah and Kwanzaa presents? When they are celebrating Diwali, observing the fast of Ramadan, or lighting the Yuletide fires? Like adherents of most of the world’s other spiritual traditions, Buddhists, too, celebrate a major holiday near the time of the winter solstice. And their holiday even includes a star shining in the East.

Buddha’s Enlightenment Day commemorates the result of Shakyamuni Buddha’s search to understand himself, and is considered the most important day of the Buddhist year. During the week preceding the celebration, which is observed on or around December 8th, Zen Buddhist monasteries throughout the world hold their most intense retreats, with some practitioners abstaining from sleep for the entire seven days. But even such strenuous practice is a really just a shadow, a small reminder, of what the Buddha experienced.

Shakyamani Buddha is the historical Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama, who lived in the 6th century BCE. Born to an extraordinarily wealthy and privileged family, actually raised to be a king, he spent his childhood, youth, and young adulthood surrounded with beautiful objects, sweet smells, lovely sounds and luscious tastes, dressed in the finest garments, waited upon by servants, protected from harm and sheltered from anything that was difficult, ugly or unpleasant. His life was an enviable one; he lacked nothing, wanted nothing that youth and wealth could supply, including a lovely wife and delightful children. But despite all these pleasures and privileges, he longed to see the world outside his palace walls, the world from which his family, with all its good intentions, had tried so hard to protect him.

Siddhartha Gautama left the palace, and immediately encountered three things that he had never seen before. He saw an old woman, wrinkled and frail, with trembling hands and legs that would barely support her, with cataracts in her eyes. Next, he saw sick people, suffering from painful, incurable illnesses, covered with sores and vomit, and others with injured bodies, infected wounds and broken bones. And, finally, he saw people carrying a corpse, their beloved husband, friend and father, taking him away to burn on a funeral pyre. Suddenly, Siddhartha Gautama realized that all life is suffering. And he could not understand why.

Bewildered, he removed his silken clothes, abandoned his rich possessions, his family and all that he had known, and went out into the new and unfamiliar world that he had just discovered, seeking to learn what it means to be human. He wandered as far as his feet would carry him, wondering “What is human life?” and “Why do humans suffer so?” Eventually his question grew so large and overwhelming that he could focus on it alone. He spent six years sitting under the Bodhi tree, never sleeping, barely eating, only asking, “What am I?”

And then, one day, after he had sat for all those years in meditation, suddenly he saw the morning star, shining in the Eastern sky. And he attained enlightenment.

At that moment, Siddhartha Gautama became the Buddha. The word “Buddha” in Sanskrit means simply an awakened one. How did he do it? How did he attain enlightenment? He only saw the morning star.

You, too, can wake up.

To study the way of the Buddha is to study oneself.

To study oneself is to forget oneself.

To forget oneself is to be enlightened by everything.

Barbara Taylor and her lovely husband, Jim Jackson, tend The Morning Star Zen Center in Fayetteville Arkansas.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Remember that the others are just “spiritual traditions” and not God’s truth. I knew most of them had co-opted our Lord’s birthday to try to make it their own, but I didn’t know that the Buddhists had gone so far as claiming star of Bethlehem. We all are obviously searching for the same thing and we need to unite. Christ was here before all the others. Why not stick with the real thing and then you wouldn’t have to make up new names and miss the true spirit?

Yours in Christ,
W

Anonymous said...

George, you ignorant slut. Buddhism predates Christianity by more than five hundred years.
I agree that we should come together, but if “stick with the real thing” in your terms, we should probably be worshiping the Egyptian god Osiris. At least 6,000 years ago, some 2000 years or so before even Judaism existed, Osiris died and rose on the third day. His followers used a cross as his emblem

Other familiar beliefs which predate Christianity include:

In Persia and Rome the god Mithra died, was buried in a rock tomb, and resurrected. Mithra’s day was the first day of the week, called Sun-day. Mithraists used the sign of the cross made on the forehead and had a communion ritual similar to the Christian one.

In Syria Adonis, died and rose again on the third day. Women mourned his death and found him risen on the third day.

In Greece Dionysius was born of a virgin and died a sacrificial death which was commemorated by eating bread and wine to represent his body and blood.

Anonymous said...

Watwood:
If all that's true, why isn't it in the Bible?
Orve:
A myth is a traditional story concerning the early history of a people or explaining a natural or social phenomenon. It is not necessarily false. The early people may have had some intuition about God's plan and were talking about Jesus without knowing it. If you want to base everything on science, prove Jesus isn't our savior. Otherwise have faith and accept him.