Sermon Tone Analysis

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I want to tell you a story, a story from long long ago.
A story that speaks not from the viewpoint of rags to riches, but from riches to rags.
Come along with me as we travel back in time to meet a man named Siddhartha:
Read page 229 from “The Story of the World”
Buddhism
Myths:
All Buddhists are vegetarians.
Some Buddhists are, and that thought derives from one of the teachings of Buddhism that they shouldn’t kill another creature.
The only thing Buddhists do is mediate
Meditation is very important, but there is much more to the religion
All Buddhists wear robes
Monks, yes.
Regular Buddhists, not so much.
In fact, they dress a lot like us.
Origin
Remember Sunday night we talked about the Vedas, those sacred writings of Hinduism?
Well right about the time they were completed is when Siddhartha showed up on the scene, the son of a high-ranking Hindu, he himself being a Hindu prince.
Tradition has it, in addition to the story we read, that when Siddhartha was born, a “seer” (fortune teller) predicted that if Siddhartha ever saw four things
— sickness, old age, death, and a monk who renounce the world
then Siddhartha would give up his earthly rule and discover a way of salvation for mankind.
Which is why his father did everything he could to keep him from those things.
— then Siddhartha would give up his earthly rule and discover a way of salvation for mankind.
Which is why his father did everything he could to keep him from those things.
You know what happened, he saw those things, and at age 29, left his wife, son, and all he had and knew in pursuit of truth.
Left in search of two things:
The cause of suffering
The cure for suffering
He obviously started with Hinduism, seeing if it had the truth.
He read the Vedas, but found no fulfillment
So then he moved onto self-denial, called asceticism, which also didn’t provide what he was looking for.
So he continued on and on and on for the next six years, looking for enlightenment.
The Bodhi Tree
Finally, one day, while sitting and pondering life underneath a Bodhi tree, he found it.
He found enlightenment, or Nirvana.
What did he discover?
Well, we’ll get there in a minute
But, what do you think his name became.....Buddha, thus Buddhism was born.
Two Types of Buddhism
Theravada Buddhism
Makes up around 38% of Buddhists
Practiced mainly in southern Asia
View Buddha as an earthly sage or wise teacher
But, enlightenment is only available to a select few, mainly monks, after many many reincarnations.
So, basically, you have to become a monk and practice more and more meditation and study the Buddhist teachings to ultimately achieve Nirvana.
Mahayan Buddhism
Just under 60%, 56% to be exact, of Buddhist believe in Mahayan Buddhism
Practiced mainly in Eastern Asia — China, Japan, Korea
View Buddha not as an earthly teacher, but an eternal savior
As they follow Buddha, he leads them to enlightenment, or nirvana
So, enlightenment is available to many, not a select few....
Which makes sense why more Buddhist’s follow this school of thought.
There are other very small types of Buddhism.....Tibetan, Zen and New Age
Writings
Pali Canon - one of the earliest writings on Buddhism.
50 volumes, ten times the size of the Bible
Sutras
Buddha’s life and story
Tantras
Practices based on the Sutras
What Do They Actually Believe?
There are two main things the Buddhist believes in, the Four Noble Truths & the Eightfold Path
Four Noble Truths - These are the essential elements of Buddhist belief
Dukkha - All of life is suffering
Samudaya - Cause of suffering is selfish desire
We suffer because we desire health, wealth, status and comfort
Much like Hinduism, they believe in reincarnation, but differently.
Here, reincarnations are part of an endless cycle of continual suffering due to selfish desire
Nirodha - The cure for suffering
The cure is obviously, overcoming this selfish desire.
By overcoming selfish desire, you end the cycle of reincarnation, and achieve ultimate enlightenment
But, how do you overcome it?
The Eightfold Path - you follow it, that’s noble truth number four
The Eightfold Path
Right views
Truly understand what reality is, basically, a right view of the world, suffering, and how to solve it
Right Intent
Focus on pursuing liberation from this endless cycle of suffering
Not content, ever.
Always pursuing enlightenment
Right Speech
Honest and helpful.
Speak truth.
Speak encouragement.
Don’t use hurtful words.
Don’t exaggerate (tell little white lies)
Right Conduct
Wholesome actions that avoid harm to others.
Here’s a helpful way to think about it.
We have the ten commandments right?
The first four commandments deal with what?
Our relationship with God
The last 6 deal more with what, ethical commands.
Think about these ones in light of right conduct of buddhism.
There are five Buddhist precepts under Right Conduct to adhere to:
Abstain from harming living beings (hence vegetarianism)
Abstain from stealing
Abstain from false speech
Abstain from sexual misconduct
Buddhist monks are celibate
Abstain from intoxicating drinks and drugs
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