The
Triple Gem
1. The Buddha The self awakened one. The original nature
of the Heart;
2. The Dhamma The Teaching. The nature of reality;
3. The Sangha a. The Awakened Community. b. Any harmonious
assembly. c. All Beings.
The
Four Noble Truths
1. The Noble Truth of Dukkha - stress, unsatisfactoriness, suffering;
2. The
Noble Truth of the causal arising of Dukkha, which is grasping,
clinging and wanting;
3. The
Noble Truth of Nirvana, The ending of Dukkha. Awakening, Enlightenment.
"Mind like fire unbound";
4. The
Noble Truth of the Path leading to Nirvana or Awakening.
All Buddhist
teachings flow from the Four Noble Truths. Particularly emphasised
in the Theravada.
The
Four Bodhisattva Vows
1. I vow to
rescue the boundless living beings from suffering; (Link to 1st
Truth)
2. I vow to put an end to the infinite afflictions of living beings;
(Link to 2nd Truth)
3. I vow to learn the measureless Dharma-doors; (Link to 4th Truth)
4. I vow to realise the unsurpassed path of the Buddha. (Link
to 3th Truth)
Foundation
of the Mahayana Path, these vows say. 'Whatever the highest perfection
of the human heart-mind may I realise it for the benefit of all
that lives!'
The
Eight Fold-Path
Right,
Integral, Complete, Perfected.
1. Right View,
Understanding;
2. Right Attitude, Thought or Emotion;
3. Right Speech;
4. Right Action;
5. Right
livelihood;
6. Right
Effort, Energy, and Vitality;
7. Right
Mindfulness or Awareness;
8. Right
Samadhi "concentration", one-pointedness. Integration
of, or establishment in, various levels of consciousness.
Alternate
meanings are given as the original Pali has shades of meaning
not available in one English word.
The
Five Precepts
I undertake
to:
1. Abstain
from killing living beings;
2. Abstain from taking that which not given;
3. Abstain from sexual misconduct;
4. Abstain from false speech;
5. Abstain from distilled substances that confuse the mind. (Alcohol
and Drugs)
The underlying
principle is non-exploitation of yourself or others. The precepts
are the foundation of all Buddhist training. With a developed
ethical base, much of the emotional conflict and stress that we
experience is resolved, allowing commitment and more conscious
choice. Free choice and intention is important. It is "I
undertake" not 'Thou Shalt". Choice, not command.
The
Five Precepts in positive terms
I undertake
the training precept to:
1. Act with
Loving-kindness;
2. Be open hearted and generous;
3. Practice stillness, simplicity and contentment;
4. Speak with truth, clarity and peace;
5. Live with mindfulness.
The
Ten Paramita
Paramita
means gone to the other shore, it is the highest development of
each of these qualities.
1. Giving
or Generosity; *
2. Virtue, Ethics, Morality; *
3. Renunciation, letting go, not grasping;
4. Panna or Prajna "Wisdom" insight into
the nature of reality; *
5. Energy, vigour, vitality, diligence; *
6. Patience or forbearance; *
7. Truthfulness;
8. Resolution, determination, intention;
9. Kindness, love, friendliness;
10. Equanimity.
* In Mahayana
Buddhism, 6 are emphasised, they are, numbers l., 2., 4., 5.,
6., Samadhi (see Path) & 4.
The
Four Sublime or Uplifted States
1. Metta
Friendliness, Loving-kindness;
2. Karuna Compassion;
3. Mudita Joy, Gladness. Appreciation of good qualities
in people;
4. Upekkha Equanimity, the peaceful unshaken mind.
Full development
of these four states develops all of the Ten Paramita.
The
Five Powers or Spiritual Faculties
1.Faith, Confidence;
2. Energy, Effort;
3. Mindfulness;
4. Samadhi;
5. Wisdom.
The
Five Hindrances
1. Sense craving;
2. Ill-will;
3. Sloth and Torpor;
4, Restlessness and Worry;
5. Toxic doubt and the ruthless inner critic.
The
Four bases or Frames of Reference of Mindfulness
1. Mindfulness
of the Body breath, postures, parts;
2. Mindfulness of Feelings, Sensations pleasant, unpleasant
and neutral;
3. Mindfulness of States of Consciousness;
4. Mindfulness of all Phenomena or Objects of Consciousness.
The
Three Signs of Existence or Universal Properties
1. Anicca
Impermanent;
2. Dukkha Unsatisfactory, stress inducing;
3. Anatta Insubstantial or Not-self.
All compounded
and conditioned things, all phenomena are impermanent. Because
of this they give rise to Stress and Affliction and because of
this they are Not-self What we call "self " is a process
not a 'thing".
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