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________________ 134 LIFE OF BUDDHA. tion. and overcoming avarice, both food and drink-a gift heavenly, destructive of sorrow, productive of bliss—a heavenly life does she attain, entering upon the path that is free from corruption and impurity; aiming at good, happy does she become, and free from sickness, and long does she rejoice in a heavenly body." It is striking how little we hear of active opposition to Buddha in the Buddhist literature. This of course I may proceed from concealment; but seeing the Oppos Bado undoubted great prosperity of Buddhism, serious opponents would have been mentioned, if only to show how they had been overthrown. But Buddhism arose in the eastern land where Brahmanism had not taken such strong root as in the north-west. Numerous bodies of ascetics and religious freethinkers had arisen ; and we must bear in mind the predominant religiousness of the Hindus, which would lead them naturally to revere a seeker after religious truth, especially one who renounced worldly possessions, and who did not in any way disturb the general peace and order. In fact the asceticism sanctioned or encouraged by the Brahman literature and practice had numerous points of resemblance to that of Buddha. Yet it could only be in a country where high Brahman pretensions were already questioned, or denied, that Buddha could have so severely criticised their system. Sacrifices, Vedic teaching, caste, were to him as nothing. In a kind of Socratic method, when questioned by Brahmans as to the right path, Buddha makes them acknowledge that the paths announced in the Vedas have not enabled any of the Brahmans to see Brahma face to face, or to know him, or where and whence he is; and he declares that the boasted knowledge of the Brahmans is Brahmans foolishness : “As when a string of blind men confuted. are clinging one to the other, neither can the foremost see, nor can the middle one see, nor can the hindmost see.” This is followed by an elaborate series of images demonstrating the same thing. The Brahmans, he says, are hindered from knowing the truth by five obstacles,-lustful desire, malice, sloth and idleness, pride and self-righteousness, and doubt. All these things are
SR No.007305
Book TitleGreat Indian Religion
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorG T Bettany
PublisherWard Lock Bowden and Co
Publication Year1892
Total Pages312
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English
File Size42 MB
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