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The Three Refuges in Buddhism: The Inspiration, Truth, and Support for Spiritual Growth, Lecture notes of Religious Studies

The three refuges in buddhism, also known as the three jewels, are the buddha, the dharma, and the sangha. They offer inspiration, truth, and support to buddhists on their spiritual path. The buddha represents the perfected teacher, the dharma is the truth and teachings, and the sangha is the community of practitioners. The significance of the three refuges in buddhism, their meanings in different traditions, and the importance of repeating the refuge ritual.

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2021/2022

Uploaded on 09/12/2022

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Download The Three Refuges in Buddhism: The Inspiration, Truth, and Support for Spiritual Growth and more Lecture notes Religious Studies in PDF only on Docsity! The three refuges: background information Buddhism - AO1 1 The three refuges in Buddhism are not hiding places, and people who ritually ‘go for refuge’ are not seeking to escape from anything. Rather they are seeking support and guidance whilst they follow a challenging spiritual path. The three refuges are also known in Buddhism as the three jewels, (in Sanskrit; triratna), which means they are treasures of inestimable worth. The three jewels offer Buddhists the inspiration of the Buddha, the truth of the Dharma and the support of the Sangha. Inspiration, truth and support are highly valuable commodities in an uncertain world, but they are often unstable and impermanent. Many people put their trust in the secular values of modern society, such as the freedom to pursue wealth and happiness. Some people rely on other, inevitably flawed, human beings to be their support and inspiration. People are not perfect, and even good ones are liable to let us down. Some people derive their values from particular religious beliefs or political opinions. Buddhists might say that whilst these are not necessarily negative, they are unlikely to sustain a person on the difficult path to overcoming self and attaining enlightenment, and more solid anchors are needed which the three jewels provide. Several different Buddhist traditions use the practice of going for refuge, but they attribute slightly different meanings to each one. In the Theravada tradition, the Buddha is usually thought to be Gotama, the historical Buddha, known as the Blessed One, the arahant or arhat (noble one), who is perfectly Awakened. However, Mahayana Buddhism has a much more complex understanding of the nature of ‘Buddha’. Going for refuge in the Buddha might include thinking about Gotama, but also other Buddhas, including those that exist in other realms, such as Amitabha, and including the Dharmakaya, the ultimate, beyond all understanding. Going for refuge in the Buddha might include the awareness of the inherent Buddha-nature in all existence. It might also include going for refuge in bodhisattvas (one whose essence is truth/enlightenment), or particular lamas or teachers, especially in Tibetan traditions. In some traditions, the sangha recites a list of patriarchs, who have passed the teachings down through the generations. Going for refuge in the Dharma, or the truth/teachings, is sometimes described in the Theravada tradition as going for refuge in the Noble Eightfold Path and the Middle Way. These offer a structure for living which brings about peace and calmness, and lack of enmity. As well as providing a refuge, the Dharma is meant to challenge and to invite the wise person to explore (ehipassiko) and experience it, and to allow it to bring about a transformation. In Mahayana traditions the Dharma will be understood in countless other ways, such as the teaching of skilful means (apaya kausalya) and the bodhisattva path in the Lotus Sutra, or the teaching of Buddha-nature in the Tathagatagarbha Sutra, or the teaching of emptiness (sunyata) in the Mulamadhyamakakarika. In all cases it is about the striving for wisdom, compassion and enlightenment. Similarly the Sangha could have a narrow interpretation, for example the fourfold Sangha of monks, nuns, lay-men and lay-women, or a wider meaning of all Buddhists within a particular tradition, or all Buddhists worldwide. Typically Buddhists going for refuge in the Sangha think about all the sentient beings who have practised before them, those who have taught the dharma and those who live the religious life. They also think about those who practise with them, and support them in their spiritual lives.
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