To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Exploring Theravāda's connections to other paths - what can we learn from other traditions, religions and philosophies?

To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Yes.
18
86%
No.
2
10%
I don't know.
1
5%
 
Total votes: 21

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kc2dpt
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To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by kc2dpt »

Nibbana is the fourth noble truth, the goal of the path. Considering how often I see people demand proof of other teachings in Buddhism it is a wonder to me no one asks for proof for this, most fundamental aspect of Buddhism. And yet I wager more people in history have personally seen rebirth than have seen Nibbana.

So while we're discussing which parts of the teachings are necessary to call oneself a Buddhist, let's discuss this teaching: the complete ending of suffering, Nibbana.
- Peter

Be heedful and you will accomplish your goal.
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Ceisiwr
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by Ceisiwr »

Greetings Peter

First of all good idea for topic,


I voted yes, if one doesnt whats the point in even practicing (or practicing hard so just keeping basic morality etc)

The whole teaching is about dukkha and its final ending, if there were no ending it be a pointless teaching since it didnt lead anywhere, there would only be two truths and so no hope of a way out

So to in short yes, to be considered a fully devote, practicing follower of the Buddha IMO one has to accept that nibbana exsists and can be reached



Slightly off topic note, i think what we need is to bring all these kind of topics together under a serious discussion of right view, what is included and excluded and how it effects practice. Most of the controversial points i see being discussed are in relation to right view, never right effort, mindfulness, speech etc.


Metta
Last edited by Ceisiwr on Mon Mar 30, 2009 10:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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pink_trike
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by pink_trike »

Peter wrote:Nibbana is the fourth noble truth, the goal of the path. Considering how often I see people demand proof of other teachings in Buddhism it is a wonder to me no one asks for proof for this, most fundamental aspect of Buddhism. And yet I wager more people in history have personally seen rebirth than have seen Nibbana.

So while we're discussing which parts of the teachings are necessary to call oneself a Buddhist, let's discuss this teaching: the complete ending of suffering, Nibbana.
What's your precise definition of Nibbana? :popcorn:
Vision is Mind
Mind is Empty
Emptiness is Clear Light
Clear Light is Union
Union is Great Bliss

- Dawa Gyaltsen

---

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kc2dpt
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by kc2dpt »

To be clear, by "accept" I mean "accept as something one can attain" and not necessarily something you think you will attain in this life.
- Peter

Be heedful and you will accomplish your goal.
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Ngawang Drolma.
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by Ngawang Drolma. »

To be super simplistic here, you're a Buddhist if you've taken refuge in the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha. So yes, confidence in the 4NT (dhamma) seems necessary to be Buddhist.

:juggling:
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Lazy_eye
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by Lazy_eye »

Peter wrote:To be clear, by "accept" I mean "accept as something one can attain" and not necessarily something you think you will attain in this life.
Hi Peter,

From a Mahayana (especially Zen) perspective, Nibbana as "something one can attain" presents some issues. This is not to say that Nibbana is an expendable teaching; just that Mahayana might not define it the way that you have. I'm sure you're familiar with the Diamond Sutra, etc.

LE
Last edited by Lazy_eye on Tue Mar 31, 2009 10:10 am, edited 1 time in total.
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pink_trike
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by pink_trike »

For me, again, it is the idea that someone "_must_ accept" something to "be a Buddhist" that I find foreign...I wonder if this is an internet phenomenon. In 30 years of living a life that has been saturated with Buddhists, teachers, trainings, and retreats I have never heard this topic even come up for discussion, except now in internet forums. Perhaps this view represents a general lack of access to teachers? Cuz teachers generally slap questions like this down pretty fast and point us back to practice.

Anyways...

I'm cool with Nibbana, but let's not discuss it in too much detail...I'd probably start picking at "attain". :smile:
Vision is Mind
Mind is Empty
Emptiness is Clear Light
Clear Light is Union
Union is Great Bliss

- Dawa Gyaltsen

---

Disclaimer: I'm a non-religious practitioner of Theravada, Mahayana/Vajrayana, and Tibetan Bon Dzogchen mind-training.
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Dan74
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by Dan74 »

pink_trike wrote:For me, again, it is the idea that someone "_must_ accept" something to "be a Buddhist" that I find foreign...I wonder if this is an internet phenomenon. In 30 years of living a life that has been saturated with Buddhists, teachers, trainings, and retreats I have never heard this topic even come up for discussion, except now in internet forums. Perhaps this view represents a general lack of access to teachers? Cuz teachers generally slap questions like this down pretty fast and point us back to practice.

Anyways...

I'm cool with Nibbana, but let's not discuss it in too much detail...I'd probably start picking at "attain". :smile:
:goodpost:

And yet, some Zen teachers say that one has to believe two things: that the teachings work and that the enlightenment (true nature) is to be found nowhere else but right here.

_/|\_
_/|\_
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pink_trike
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by pink_trike »

Dan74 wrote:
pink_trike wrote:For me, again, it is the idea that someone "_must_ accept" something to "be a Buddhist" that I find foreign...I wonder if this is an internet phenomenon. In 30 years of living a life that has been saturated with Buddhists, teachers, trainings, and retreats I have never heard this topic even come up for discussion, except now in internet forums. Perhaps this view represents a general lack of access to teachers? Cuz teachers generally slap questions like this down pretty fast and point us back to practice.

Anyways...

I'm cool with Nibbana, but let's not discuss it in too much detail...I'd probably start picking at "attain". :smile:
:goodpost:

And yet, some Zen teachers say that one has to believe two things: that the teachings work and that the enlightenment (true nature) is to be found nowhere else but right here.

_/|\_
Agreed. Confidence is important. Some will have confidence as a foundation to build a practice on, and some will build a foundation of practice, of working with circumstances, out of which confidence will arise. c'est la vie
Vision is Mind
Mind is Empty
Emptiness is Clear Light
Clear Light is Union
Union is Great Bliss

- Dawa Gyaltsen

---

Disclaimer: I'm a non-religious practitioner of Theravada, Mahayana/Vajrayana, and Tibetan Bon Dzogchen mind-training.
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by Cittasanto »

their is no must accept anything within Buddhism so no! see the truth for yourself and accept what is true, not accept this and that to be a Buddhist, see and know for yourself
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He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that. His reasons may be good, and no one may have been able to refute them.
But if he is equally unable to refute the reasons on the opposite side, if he does not so much as know what they are, he has no ground for preferring either opinion …
...
He must be able to hear them from persons who actually believe them … he must know them in their most plausible and persuasive form.
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Ben
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by Ben »

Hi Peter

If we take 'buddhist' to mean someone who has taken refuge in triple gem, then i'm not sure whether that means the same as accepting nibbana as achievable. I think for many of us we are initially attacted to the Dhamma because of our own experience of the intractible nature of samsara where everything is dukkha. The Dhamma offers us something that we desire, which is a promise of an end of dukkha. But at that point we may not know, directly know that Nibbana is achievable. So I think that to know, to truely know that Nibbana is achievable, one would need to have tasted Nibbana and be a sotapanna.
Until then, our acceptance of Nibbana is an acceptance based on logical inference or in some small part, faith.
Metta

Ben
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kc2dpt
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by kc2dpt »

pink_trike wrote:For me, again, it is the idea that someone "_must_ accept" something to "be a Buddhist" that I find foreign.
Again, this gets it backwards. It's not like there's a club that you're not allowed in until you accept a set of beliefs. Rather it's that a word needs a definition in order to be meaningful. A Buddhist is defined most sensibly as one who strives to implement the Buddha's teachings. A person who strives to implement some teachings and refuses to implement others, who doubts the Buddha or the Dhamma or the Sangha, who would rather make baseless accusations of mass corruption against sincere practitioners, who rejects thousands of years of tradition for no reason... such a person is not sensibly called a Buddhist. Perhaps someone influenced by Buddhism, perhaps someone on the way to becoming a Buddhist. And there's nothing wrong with being that sort of person. We are who we are. We are at where we are at on the path. There's no point trying to force yourself to be something you are not. Likewise, there is no point cheapening or lessening the path simply to fit where you are at.
Perhaps this view represents a general lack of access to teachers?
I think a teacher can help keep us focused where we need to be focused, can help us from going on irrelevant tangents, and can also help keep us from nurturing wrong views, obstructive views. I think without a teacher it is very easy to form wrong views regarding the teachings. So one with a teacher might say "I don't worry about rebirth in my practice. When I ask questions about rebirth my teacher tells me to not worry about it and get back to my practice." And that might be right for that person. But when one goes further to say "Rebirth is not a part of the path at all. Belief in rebirth is in fact an obstacle to the path" then one goes too far and teaches wrong view. Those without teachers who hear this wrong view are set on a wrong path and they have no one to help straighten them out.
I wonder if this is an internet phenomenon.... teachers generally slap questions like this down pretty fast and point us back to practice.
I think that response works well between a student and a teacher, where there is trust and respect. But if a person is seeking information and gets slapped down they will likely leave unsatisfied. Furthermore, this is a discussion forum, not a practice forum. All we can do here is discuss. If we say "don't discuss, get back to practice" then there is no discussion forum. So yes, I think these sorts of conversations are due to the medium.
- Peter

Be heedful and you will accomplish your goal.
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kc2dpt
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by kc2dpt »

Manapa wrote:see and know for yourself
See and know what?
- Peter

Be heedful and you will accomplish your goal.
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Ngawang Drolma.
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by Ngawang Drolma. »

Regarding having confidence in the Buddha's teachings on rebirth, nibanna, and all the central aspects of Buddhism, I think of it like this:

If I want proof before believing these things for myself, it is good enough for me if someone has died, taken rebirth, achieved liberation, and told us, "I've see this, I don't want it for you, and here's how you can stop it." If I wait to experience it for myself, I'll either be dead and taking another rebirth out of ignorance, or I'll be doubting nibanna for the next umpteen lives. So it is proof positive for me that somebody only a couple of thousand years ago experienced it and told us about it. Unless you think the Buddha was incoherent or kooky, he's etched out a fine path that we can follow.

My two cents :namaste:

Edited to add: I know that many people don't like ritual and fancy Buddhist-stuffs. But I'll you that from my pov, people who struggle with parts of the Buddha's dhamma might find spending time daily really focusing on venerating the Buddha might be useful. I know I might make people mad by saying that, but it's just my opinion
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Re: To be a Buddhist you must accept Nibbana?

Post by Cittasanto »

Peter wrote:
Manapa wrote:see and know for yourself
See and know what?
If the teaching has validity.
Blog, Suttas, Aj Chah, Facebook.

He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that. His reasons may be good, and no one may have been able to refute them.
But if he is equally unable to refute the reasons on the opposite side, if he does not so much as know what they are, he has no ground for preferring either opinion …
...
He must be able to hear them from persons who actually believe them … he must know them in their most plausible and persuasive form.
John Stuart Mill
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