MAHAYANA BUDDHISM
According to tradition
three Buddhist Councils were held to resolve the doctrinal differences among
Buddhist leaders. Only regarding the fourth that was held in Kashmir there is
historical evidence. From then nowadays Buddhism came to be divided into the
Mahayana and Hinayana schools. The brahmins and their lay supporters had by now
largely turned away from the older gods. In north-western India the rule of
Greeks. Sakas and Kushans in turn threw open the gates to the west. It was
these new elements that sought a new outlook in Buddhism. Thus the claim arose
that a new Great Vehicles (Mahayana) was found would carry many souls to
salvation.
Mahayana soon became
popular in many parts of India as it fitted with the mood of the times and the needs
of many simple people better than did the lesser Vehicle (Hinayana). The lesser
Vehicle remained intact in ceyton and soon in Thailand and other parts of
South-East Asia it became the national religion. Mahayana on the other hand it
self (soon divided by various schisms) was carried by succession of Indian
monks to China and thence to Japan.
Regarding Mahayana's
chronological authenticity it is generally held that it originated around the
first century B.C. in Andhra. Soon it was expounded by a group of Buddhist
philosophers. The outstanding among them was nagarjuna. It was he who conceived
the doctrine of the void (Shunyata) meaning that every thing which is around us
is emptiness and whatever we perceive is mere illusion. This void is in fact
the nirvana or end to the cycle of birth and rebirth which every Buddhist
secks.
A new feature of the
Manayana Buddhism is the concept of the future Buddha. The Buddha himself
probably taught that he was the last of the long succession of earlier Buddhas.
The carvings on the stupas of Barhut and Sanchi depict crowds of worshippers
before the symbols of the Buddha. A little later sculptors began to carve
images of the Buddha. A little later sculptors began to carve images of the
Buddha himself. Soon the Buddhist sects took to worshipping images. Under the
new (foreign) rulers of north-western India. Zoroastrianism and Buddhism came
in contact and probably through this the idea of future Buddha became part of
the orthodox Buddhists. Thus the cult of Maitreya or the future Buddha was
widespread among al Buddhist sects by the time Menander came to Patliputra.
Romila Thapar holds
the view that this aspect of Maitreya Buddha had its origin out side India. The
Maitreya Buddha saves the world. This idea is further linked to the concept of
the suffering saviour of the Bodhisattva who redeems humanity through his own
suffering. In these twin concepts we clearly see the beliefs that were current
in Palestine of the day. These belief reappear in later day Christianity as
Jesus Christ the son of God, who was born to redeem the suffering of man and
the future promise of second coming.
The concept of the
Maitreya Buddha came to be linked with the older conception of Buddhism, the
previous incarnations of Buddha known as Bodhisattavas. The Bodhisattava
concept reached its consummation with the final birth of Gautama in the Sakyas.
However as Maitreya and other unnamed Buddhas after him are yet to come there
must be Bodhisattavas existing in the universe. These Bodhisattavas might be adored
and prayed with out any misgiving. Thus the Bodhisattava doctrine believed in
theheavens filled with mighty forces of goodness and presented Buddhism with a
new my theology. It was this development that constituted the hall mark of
Mahayana the Great vehicle.
The universe of the
Great vehicle contains numerous Bodhisattava. The chief of them from the
earthly point of view is avalokitesvara padmapani. His special attribute is
compassion. Vajrapani a sterner Bodhisattava is the for of sin and evil. The great
Maitreya the future Buddha is worshipped as Bodhisattava. Every thing from the
humblest worm onwards is in a sense a Bodhisattava since all beings will attain
nirvana and become the Buddha.
The great Vehicle was
not content with creating this pantheon of noble and beneficent Bodhisattavas.
It was claimed that Gautam Buddha was not a mere man but the earthly expression
of a mighty spiritual being. The Buddha's Body of bliss is the presiding deity
on the most important Mahayana heaven Sukhavati where the are reborn in the
buds of lotuses which rise from a lively lake before the Buddha's throne. This
divine Buddha is usually called Amitabha or Amitayus. He too shares the
compassion of the Bodhisattava.
The Mahayana sect
produced soon new versions of the Pitakas of scriptural texts of Buddhism they
are all writings in Samskrit which became the official language of Mahayana.
Many of these texts are ostensibly sermons of the Buddha.
The new Buddhist
philosophical school of Mahayana came into existence during the 200 B.C. 300
A.D. period. Asvaghosha's name is associated with the school. Some of his
famous works contain the philosophy of Mahayana. The book called
Sraddhotpada-Sastra is attributed to him.
Mahayana doctrine has
two philosophical schools Madhamika and Yogachara. For quite some time Buddhism
began to slowly develop into a theistic religion with the Buddha as the object
of the cult. Exponents of the Madhyamika were Nagarjuna and his disciple
Aryadeva. It was with Nagarjuna that Mahayana developed its own system of
philosophy. Later aryadeva write a commentary on the work. It appears from
evidence that the Satavahanas were great patrons of Buddhism.
The philosophy of
Madhyamika is commonly characterized as Sunyavada-the philosophy of relativism.
According to this the phenomenal world is a mere illusion from the view-point
of ultimate truth.
The second school
called Yogachara is of later origin two brothers Asanga and Vasubandhu are
generally believed to have been the first exponents of this system. This school
also formulates two kinds of Truths-the Ultimate and the Relative and looks
upon phenomenal world as an illustion. It asserts however that this illusion is
mental illusion and therefore considers consciousness as real.
There is nothing
strange about the emergence of Mahayana. The earlier form of Buddhism was
rather arid unlike the Mahayana. The Mahayana requires us to take part in the
world and evolve new social and religious ideals. The Mahayana happens to be
more emotional and filling than Hinayana which reduces Nirvana and ethical life
to great aridity.
The Mahayana Buddhism
is theistic similar to the theistic beliefs of Shaivism and Vaishnavism
preaching loving devotion to personal God whom the devotee loves with all his
heart and easy spontaneous grace. On the metaphysical side it led to a school
of thought similar to the conception of an absolute with regard to which all
determination would prove to be negation. Reason and language only applied to
finite and nothing can be said of the infinite.
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