站内搜索: 设为首页 | 加入收藏  [繁体版]
文库首页智慧悦读基础读物汉传佛教藏传佛教南传佛教古 印 度白话经典英文佛典随机阅读佛学问答佛化家庭手 机 站
佛教故事禅话故事佛教书屋戒律学习法师弘法居士佛教净业修福净宗在线阿含专题天台在线禅宗在线唯识法相人物访谈
分类标签素食生活佛化家庭感应事迹在线抄经在线念佛佛教文化大 正 藏 藏经阅读藏经检索佛教辞典网络电视电 子 书
Two Faces of the Dhamma
 
[Bodhi Bhikkhu] [点击:1593]   [手机版]
背景色

Two Faces of the Dhamma
by
Bhikkhu Bodhi
© 1998

On first encounter Buddhism confronts us as a paradox. Intellectually, it appears a freethinker's delight: sober, realistic, undogmatic, almost scientific in its outlook and method. But if we come into contact with the living Dhamma from within, we soon discover that it has another side which seems the antithesis of all our rationalistic presuppositions. We still don't meet rigid creeds or random speculation, but we do come upon religious ideals of renunciation, contemplation and devotion; a body of doctrines dealing with matters transcending sense perception and thought; and — perhaps most disconcerting — a program of training in which faith figures as a cardinal virtue, doubt as a hindrance, barrier and fetter.

When we try to determine our own relationship with the Dhamma, eventually we find ourselves challenged to make sense out of its two seemingly irreconcilable faces: the empiricist face turned to the world, telling us to investigate and verify things for ourselves, and the religious face turned to the Beyond, advising us to dispel our doubts and place trust in the Teacher and his Teaching.

One way we can resolve this dilemma is by accepting only one face of the Dhamma as authentic and rejecting the other as spurious or superfluous. Thus, with traditional Buddhist pietism, we can embrace the religious side of faith and devotion, but shy off from the hard-headed world-view and the task of critical inquiry; or, with modern Buddhist apologetics, we can extol the Dhamma's empiricism and resemblance to science, but stumble embarrassingly over the religious side. Yet reflection on what a genuine Buddhist spirituality truly requires, makes it clear that both faces of the Dhamma are equally authentic and that both must be taken into account. If we fail to do so, not only do we risk adopting a lopsided view of the teaching, but our own involvement with the Dhamma is likely to be hampered by partiality and conflicting attitudes.

The problem remains, however, of bringing together the two faces of the Dhamma without sidling into self-contradiction. The key, we suggest, to achieving this reconciliation, and thus to securing the internal consistency of our own perspective and practice, lies in considering two fundamental points: first, the guiding purpose of the Dhamma; and second, the strategy it employs to achieve that purpose. The purpose is the attainment of deliverance from suffering. The Dhamma does not aim at providing us with factual information about the world, and thus, despite a compatibility with science, its goals and concerns are necessarily different from those of the latter. Primarily and essentially, the Dhamma is a path to spiritual emancipation, to liberation from the round of repeated birth, death and suffering. Offered to us as the irreplaceable means of deliverance, the Dhamma does not seek mere intellectual assent, but commands a response that is bound to be fully religious. It addresses us at the bedrock of our being, and there it awakens the faith, devotion and commitment appropriate when the final goal of our existence is at stake.

But for Buddhism faith and devotion are only spurs which impel us to enter and persevere along the path; by themselves they cannot ensure deliverance. The primary cause of bondage and suffering, the Buddha teaches, is ignorance regarding the true nature of existence; hence in the Buddhist strategy of liberation the primary instrument must be wisdom, the knowledge and vision of things as they really are. Investigation and critical inquiry, cool and uncommitted, constitute the first step toward wisdom, enabling us to resolve our doubts and gain a conceptual grasp of the truths upon which our deliverance depends. But doubt and questioning cannot continue indefinitely. Once we have decided that the Dhamma is to be our vehicle to spiritual freedom, we have to step on board: we must leave our hesitancy behind and enter the course of training which will lead us from faith to liberating vision.

For those who approach the Dhamma in quest of intellectual or emotional gratification, inevitably it will show two faces, and one will always remain a puzzle. But if we are prepared to approach the Dhamma on its own terms, as the way to release from suffering, there will not be two faces at all. Instead we will see what was there from the start: the single face of Dhamma which, like any other face, presents two complementary sides.


分享到: 更多



上一篇:Vision and Routine
下一篇:A New Undertaking


 07.兼祧娉二室 Betrothals to two girls a.. 165.救溺女度二姓 Saving a drowning girl ..
 The Two Faces of Reality

△TOP
佛海影音法师视频 音乐视频 视频推荐 视频分类佛教电视 · 佛教电影 · 佛教连续剧 · 佛教卡通 · 佛教人物 · 名山名寺 · 舍利专题 · 慧思文库
无量香光 | 佛教音乐 | 佛海影音 | 佛教日历 | 天眼佛教网址 | 般若文海 | 心灵佛教桌面 | 万世佛香·佛骨舍利 | 金刚萨埵如意宝珠 | 佛教音乐试听 | 佛教网络电视
友情链接
金刚经 新浪佛学 佛教辞典 听佛 大藏经 在线抄经 佛都信息港 白塔寺
心灵桌面 显密文库 无量香光 天眼网址 般若文海 菩提之夏 生死书 文殊增慧
网上礼佛 佛眼导航 佛教音乐 佛教图书 佛教辞典

客服QQ:1280183689

[显密文库·佛教文集] 白玛若拙佛教文化传播工作室制作 [无量香光·佛教世界] 教育性、非赢利性、公益性的佛教文化传播
[京ICP备16063509号-26 ] goodweb.net.cn Copyrights Reserved
如无意中侵犯您的权益或含有非法内容,请与我们联系。站长信箱:alanruochu_99@126.com
敬请诸位善心佛友在论坛、博客、facebook或其他地方转贴或相告本站网址或文章链接,功德无量。
愿以此功德,消除宿现业,增长诸福慧,圆成胜善根,所有刀兵劫,及与饥馑等,悉皆尽消除,人各习礼让,一切出资者,
辗转流通者,现眷咸安宁,先亡获超升,风雨常调顺,人民悉康宁,法界诸含识,同证无上道。
 


Nonprofit Website For Educational - Spread The Wisdom Of the Buddha & Buddhist Culture