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The Twelve
Principles of Buddhism
Drafted by
Christmas Humphreys,
The Buddhist
Society, London, in 1945
1. Self-salvation is for any man the
immediate task. If a man lay wounded by a poisoned arrow he
would not delay extraction by demanding details of the man
who shot it, or the length and make of the arrow. There will be
time for ever-increasing understanding of the Teaching during
the treading of the Way. Meanwhile, begin now by facing life as
it is, learning always by direct and personal experience.
2. The first fact of existence is the law of change or
impermanence. All that exists, from a mole to a mountain, from a
thought to an empire, passes through the same cycle of existence
- i.e., birth, growth, decay and death. Life alone is continous,
ever seeking self-expression in new forms. 'Life is a bridge;
therefore build no house on it.' Life is a process of flow, and
he who clings to any form, however splendid, will suffer by
resisting the flow.
3. The law of change applies equally to the 'soul'. There is no
principle in an individual which is immortal and unchanging.
Only the 'Namelessness', the ultimate Reality, is beyond change,
and all forms of life, including man, are manifestations of this
Reality. No one owns the life which flows in him any more than
the electric light bulb owns the current which gives it light.
4. The universe is the expression of law. All effects have
causes, and man's soul or character is the sum total of his
previous thoughts and acts. Karma, meaning action-reaction,
governs all reaction to them, his future condition, and his
final destiny. By right thought and action he can gradually
purify his inner nature, and so by self-realisation attain in
time liberation from rebirth. The process covers great periods
of time, involving life after
life on earth, but ultimately every form of life will reach
Enlightenment.
5. Life is one and indivisble, though its everchaning forms are
innumerable and perishable. There is, in truth, no death, though
every form must die. From an understanding of life's unity
arises compassion, a sense of identity with the life in other
forms. Compassion is described as 'the Law of laws - eternal
harmony', and he who breaks this harmony of life will suffer
accordingly and delay his own Enlightenment.
6. Life being One, the interests of the part should be those of
the whole. In his ignorance man thinks he can successfully
strive for his own interests, and this wrongly directed energy
of selfishness produces suffering. He learns from his suffering
to reduce and finally eliminate its cause. The Buddha taught
Four Noble Truths:
(a) The omnipresence of suffering;
(b) its cause, wrongly directed desire;
(c) its cure, the removal of the cause; and
(d) Noble Eightfold Path of self-development which leads to the
end of suffering.
7. The Eightfold Path consists in Right (or perfect) Views or
preliminary understanding, Right Aims or Motive, Right Speech,
Right Acts, Right Livelihood, Right Effort, Right Concentration
or mind development, and finally, Right Samadhi, leading to Full
Enligtenment. As Buddhism is a way of living, not merely a
theory of life, the treading of this Path is essential to
self-deliverance. 'Cease to do evil, learn to do good, cleanse
your own heart: this is the Teaching of the Buddhas.'
8. Reality is indescribable, and a God with attributs is not the
final Reality. But the Buddha, a human being, became the
All-Enlightened One, and the purpose of life is the attainment
of Enlightenment. This state of Consciousness, Nirvana, the
extinction of the limitations of self-hood, is attainable on
earth. All men and all other forms of life contain the
potentiality of Enlightenment, and the process therefore
consists in becoming what you are. 'Look withtin: thou art
Buddha.'
9. From potential to actual Enligtenment there lies the Middle
Way, the Eightfold Way 'from desire to peace', a process
of self-development between the 'opposites', avoiding all
extremes. The Buddha trod this Way to the end, and the only
faith required in Buddhism is the reasonable belief that where a
Guide has trodden it is worth our while to tread. The Way must
be trodden by the whole man, not merely the best of him, and
heart and mind must be developed equally. The Buddha was the
All-Compassionate as well as the All-Enlightened One.
10. Buddhism lays great stress on the need of inward
concentration and meditation, which leads in time to the
development of the inner spiritual faculties. The subjective
life is as important as the daily round, and periods of quietude
for inner activity are essential for a balanced life. The
Buddhist should at all times be 'mindful and self-possessed',
refraining from mental and emotional attachment to 'the passing
show'. This increasingly watchful attitude to circumstances,
which he knows to be his own creation, helps him to keep his
reaction to it always under control.
11. The Buddha said: 'Work out your own salvation with
diligence.' Buddhism knows no authority for truth save the
intuition of the individual, and that is authority for himself
alone. Each man suffers the consequences of his own acts, and
learns thereby, while helping his fellow men to the same
deliverance; nor will prayer to the Buddha or to any God prevent
an effect from following its cause. Buddhist monks are teachers
and exemplars, and in no sense intermediates between Reality and
the individual. The utmost tolerance is practised towards all
other religions and philosophies, for no man has the right to
interfere in his neighbour's journey to the Goal.
12. Buddhism is neither pessimistic nor 'escapist', nor does it
deny the existence of God or soul, though it places its own
meaning on these terms. It is, on the contrary, a system of
thought, a religion, a spiritual science and a way of life,
which is reasonable, practical, and all-embracing. For over two
thousand years it has satisfied the spiritual needs of nearly
one-third of mankind. It appeals to the West because it has no
dogmas, satisfies the reason and the heart alike, insists on
self-reliance coupled with tolerance for other points of view,
embraces science, religion, philosophy, psychology, ethics and
art, and points to man alone, as the creator of his present life
and sole designer of his destiny.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Itha.../teachings.htm
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