
Originally Posted by
NikolaiI
I meant it to be one to open up discussion, rather than argument.
To both you and Tyler; you may be right. I am going to drop it for now, maybe come back to it later. Thank you for posting.
I honestly wasn't trying to make the Bible suit me. It was my own understanding of that verse, whether it is right or wrong, and I do admit it could be wrong.
Anyway you are correct that Buddhists consider the mind to be the sixth sense. But there is more to Buddhism than it appears you know about. Not all Buddhists are the same (shouldn't this go without saying?). For instance in Pure Land Buddhism the central figure is Amitabha, Buddha of Infinite Light.
Speaking of reading into scripture what you wish to be, I would be wary of that myself if I were you. For instance you may have some idea that Buddhists don't believe in God, and this may be true for as many Buddhists as you will ever meet in your life, but they might be making the same error in propogating something which isn't entirely true. Not about God; but simply about saying "Buddhism is like this," the reasoning for which is "as far as I have understood Buddhism, everyone always discounts accounts of supernatural happenings." Even though the stories of people who attain Buddhahood or almost attain it - for example, one person met Buddha Vajrayogini, female Buddha of Wisdom, 3 times in disguise, but each time turned down her offer to meditate with him, and so she said he would not achieve supreme enlightenment in that life. He did not, but he became very advanced, and when he spoke, flowers came down from the sky. Also in Hua Yen Buddhism, or... mythology, it is understood that Amida Buddha comes down personally and escorts those who attain Buddhahood back to heaven. Now most may not believe it, but some do; and who are you to say they are wrong and should be corrected?
Now that last example, that will seem completely absurd, one of those mythology things which you would never in a hundred years even consider, and let me say I get that. But from my readings of Buddhist Scripture, Buddha is not someone or something which doesn't exist anymore, but Buddha is in a way eternal, for instance Manjushri is not dead or something, but exists, and you or I may have taken an instruction from him in a past life. I don't see how Manjushri's teachings would be false or impossible to attain; actually part of Buddhism is that Buddha-nature is attainable. It is esoteric and sacred, but if we discuss Buddhism it is necessary to go to these things because they deal with reality - what is reality as in "what is the source of reality?" etc. I know it's not regular to discuss esoteric and sacred things of different religions; but if you keep it a secret, what is the use of that either?