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What is Theravada Buddhism?
by
John Bullitt
Copyright © 2005 John Bullitt
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Theravada (pronounced more or less
"terra-VAH-dah"), the "Doctrine of the Elders," is the
school of Buddhism
that draws its scriptural inspiration from the Tipitaka, or
Pali Canon, which scholars generally agree contains the
earliest surviving record of the Buddha's teachings.1
For many centuries, Theravada has been the predominant religion of
continental Southeast Asia (Thailand,
Myanmar/Burma, Cambodia,
and Laos) and Sri Lanka. Today Theravada
Buddhists number well over 100 million worldwide.2
In recent decades Theravada has begun to take root in the West.

Many Buddhisms, One Dhamma-vinaya
The Buddha the "Awakened One"
called the religion he founded Dhamma-vinaya "the doctrine and
discipline." To provide a social structure supportive of the practice of
Dhamma-vinaya (or Dhamma for short [Sanskrit:
Dharma ]),
and to preserve these teachings for posterity, the Buddha established the
order of bhikkhus (monks) and bhikkhunis (nuns)
the Sangha which continues to this day to pass his
teachings on to subsequent generations of laypeople and monastics, alike.
As the Dhamma (Dharma)
continued its spread across India after the Buddha's
passing, differing interpretations of the original teachings arose, which
led to schisms within the Sangha and the emergence of as many as eighteen
distinct sects of
Buddhism.3
One of these schools eventually gave rise to a reform movement that called
itself Mahayana
(the "Greater Vehicle")4 and that referred to
the other schools disparagingly as Hinayana (the
"Lesser Vehicle"). What we call Theravada today is the sole survivor of
those early non-Mahayana schools.5 To avoid
the pejorative tone implied by the terms Hinayana and Mahayana, it is common
today to use more neutral language to distinguish between these two main
branches of Buddhism. Because Theravada historically dominated
southern Asia, it is sometimes called "Southern" Buddhism, while
Mahayana, which migrated northwards from India into China,
Tibet, Japan, and Korea, is known as
"Northern" Buddhism.6

Pali: The Language of Theravada Buddhism
The language of the Theravada canonical
texts is Pali (lit., "text"), which is based on a dialect of Middle
Indo-Aryan that was probably spoken in central India during the Buddha's
time.7 Ven. Ananda, the Buddha's cousin and
close personal attendant, committed the Buddha's sermons (suttas) to
memory and thus became a living repository of these teachings.8
Shortly after the Buddha's death (ca. 480 BCE), five hundred of the
most senior monks including Ananda convened to recite and verify all the
sermons they had heard during the Buddha's forty-five year teaching career.9
Most of these sermons therefore begin with the disclaimer, "Evam me sutam"
"Thus have I heard."
After the Buddha's death the teachings
continued to be passed down orally within the monastic community, in keeping
with an Indian oral tradition that long predated the Buddha.10
By 250 BCE the Sangha had systematically arranged and compiled these
teachings into three divisions: the Vinaya Pitaka (the "basket of
discipline" the texts concerning the rules and customs of the Sangha), the
Sutta Pitaka (the "basket of discourses" the sermons and utterances by the
Buddha and his close disciples), and the Abhidhamma Pitaka (the "basket of
special/higher doctrine" a detailed psycho-philosophical analysis of the
Dhamma). Together these three are known as the Tipitaka,
the "three baskets." In the third century BCE Sri Lankan
monks began compiling a series of exhaustive commentaries to the Tipitaka;
these were subsequently collated and translated into Pali beginning in the
fifth century CE. The Tipitaka plus the post-canonical texts (commentaries,
chronicles, etc.) together constitute the complete body of classical
Theravada literature.
Pali was originally a spoken language with
no alphabet of its own. It wasn't until about 100 BCE that the Tipitaka was
first fixed in writing, by Sri Lankan scribe-monks who wrote the Pali
phonetically using their own Sinhala alphabet.11
Since then the Tipitaka has been transliterated into many different scripts
(Devanagari, Thai, Burmese, Roman, Cyrillic, to name a few). Although
English translations of the most popular Tipitaka texts abound, many
students of Theravada find that learning the Pali language even just a
little bit here and there greatly deepens their understanding and
appreciation of the Buddha's teachings.
No one can prove that the Tipitaka
contains any of the words actually uttered by the historical Buddha.
Practicing Buddhists have never found this problematic.
Unlike the scriptures of many of the world's great religions, the Tipitaka
is not regarded as gospel, as an unassailable statement of divine truth,
revealed by a prophet, to be accepted purely on faith. Instead, its
teachings are meant to be assessed firsthand, to be put into practice in
one's life so that one can find out for oneself if they do, in fact, yield
the promised results. It is the truth towards which the words in the
Tipitaka point that ultimately matters, not the words themselves. Although
scholars will continue to debate the authorship of passages from the
Tipitaka for years to come (and thus miss the point of these teachings
entirely), the Tipitaka will quietly continue to serve as it has for
centuries as an indispensable guide for millions of followers in their
quest for Awakening.

A Brief Summary of the Buddha's Teachings
The Four Noble Truths
Shortly after his Awakening, the Buddha
delivered his first sermon, in which he laid out the essential framework
upon which all his later teachings were based. This framework consists of
the Four Noble Truths, four fundamental principles of nature (Dhamma /
Dharma) that emerged from the Buddha's radically honest and penetrating
assessment of the human condition. He taught these truths not as
metaphysical theories or as articles of faith, but
as categories by which we should frame our direct experience in a way that
conduces to Awakening:
- Dukkha:suffering
,
unsatisfactoriness, discontent, stress;
The cause of dukkha: the cause
of this dissatisfaction is craving (tanha) for sensuality, for
states of becoming, and states of no becoming;
The cessation of dukkha: the
relinquishment of that craving;
The path of practice leading to the
cessation of dukkha: the Noble Eightfold Path of right view, right
resolve, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right
mindfulness, and right concentration.
Because of our ignorance (avijja) of these Noble
Truths, because of our inexperience in framing the world in their terms, we
remain bound to samsara, the wearisome cycle of birth, aging,
illness, death, and
rebirth .
Craving propels this process onward, from one moment to the next and over
the course of countless lifetimes, in accordance with kamma
(Skt. karma),
the universal law of cause and effect. According to this immutable law,
every action that one performs in the present moment whether by body,
speech, or mind itself eventually bears fruit according to its
skillfulness: act in unskillful and harmful ways and unhappiness is bound to
follow; act skillfully and happiness will ultimately ensue.12
As long as one remains ignorant of this principle, one is doomed to an
aimless existence: happy one moment, in despair the next; enjoying one
lifetime in heaven, the next in hell.
The Buddha discovered that gaining release
from samsara requires assigning to each of the Noble Truths
a specific task: the first Noble Truth is to be comprehended; the
second, abandoned; the third, realized; the fourth,
developed. The full realization of the third Noble Truth paves the way
for Awakening: the end of ignorance, craving, suffering,
and kamma / karma itself; the direct penetration to the transcendent freedom
and supreme happiness that stands as the final goal of all the Buddha's
teachings; the Unconditioned, the Deathless, Unbinding Nibbana (Skt.
Nirvana).
The Eightfold Path and the Practice of Dhamma
Because the roots of ignorance are so intimately entwined
with the fabric of the psyche, the unawakened mind is capable of deceiving
itself with breathtaking ingenuity. The solution therefore requires more
than simply being kind, loving, and mindful in the present moment. The
practitioner must equip him- or herself with the expertise to use a range of
tools to outwit, outlast, and eventually uproot the mind's unskillful
tendencies. For example, the practice of generosity (dana) erodes the
heart's habitual tendencies towards craving and teaches valuable lessons
about the motivations behind, and the results of, skillful action. The
practice of virtue (sila) guards one against straying wildly
off-course and into harm's way. The cultivation of goodwill (metta )
helps to undermine anger's seductive grasp. The ten recollections offer ways
to alleviate doubt, bear physical pain with composure, maintain a healthy
sense of self-respect, overcome laziness and complacency, and restrain
oneself from unbridled lust. And there are many more skills to learn.
The good qualities that emerge and mature
from these practices not only smooth the way for the journey to Nibbana /
Nirvana; over time they have the effect of transforming the practitioner
into a more generous, loving, compassionate, peaceful, and clear-headed
member of society. The individual's sincere pursuit of Awakening is thus a
priceless and timely gift to a world in desperate need of help.
Discernment (paρρa)
The Eightfold Path is
best understood as a collection of personal qualities to be developed,
rather than as a sequence of steps along a linear path. The development of
right view and right resolve (the factors classically identified with wisdom
and discernment) facilitates the development of right speech, action, and
livelihood (the factors identified with virtue). As virtue develops so do
the factors identified with concentration (right effort, mindfulness, and
concentration). Likewise, as concentration matures, discernment evolves to a
still deeper level. And so the process unfolds: development of one factor
fosters development of the next, lifting the practitioner in an upward
spiral of spiritual maturity that eventually culminates in
Awakening.
The long journey to Awakening begins in
earnest with the first tentative stirrings of right view the discernment
by which one recognizes the validity of the four Noble Truths and the
principle of kamma / karma. One begins to see that one's future well-being
is neither predestined by fate, nor left to the whims of a divine being or
random chance. The responsibility for one's happiness rests squarely on
one's own shoulders. Seeing this, one's spiritual aims become suddenly
clear: to relinquish the habitual unskillful tendencies of the mind in favor
of skillful ones. As this right resolve grows stronger, so does the
heartfelt desire to live a morally upright life, to choose one's actions
with care.
At this point many followers make the
inward commitment to take the Buddha's teachings to heart, to become
"Buddhist" through the act of taking refuge in the Triple Gem: the Buddha
(both the historical Buddha and one's own innate potential for Awakening),
the Dhamma / Dharma (both the Buddha's teachings and the ultimate Truth
towards which they point), and the Sangha (both the unbroken monastic
lineage that has preserved the teachings since the Buddha's day, and all
those who have achieved at least some degree of Awakening). With one's feet
thus planted on solid ground, and with the help of an admirable friend or
teacher (kalyanamitta) to guide the way, one is now well-equipped to
proceed down the Path, following in the footsteps left by the Buddha
himself.
Virtue (sila)
Right view and right resolve continue to
mature through the development of the path factors associated with sila,
or virtue namely, right speech, right action, and right livelihood. These
are condensed into a very practical form in the five precepts, the basic
code of ethical conduct to which every practicing Buddhist subscribes:
refraining from killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, lying, and using
intoxicants. Even the monks' complex code of 227 rules and the nuns' 311
ultimately have these five basic precepts at their core.
Concentration (samadhi)
Having gained a foothold in the purification of one's
outward behavior through the practice of sila, the essential
groundwork has been laid for delving into the most subtle and transformative
aspect of the path:
meditation
and the development of samadhi, or concentration. This is spelled out
in detail in the final three path factors: right effort, by which one learns
how to favor skillful qualities of mind over unskillful ones; right
mindfulness, by which one learns to keep one's attention continually
grounded in the present moment of experience; and right concentration, by
which one learns to immerse the mind so thoroughly and unwaveringly in its
meditation object that it enters jhana, a series of progressively
deeper states of mental and physical tranquillity.
Right mindfulness and right concentration
are developed in tandem through satipatthana ("frames of reference"
or "foundations of mindfulness"), a systematic approach to meditation
practice that embraces a wide range of skills and techniques. Of these
practices, mindfulness of the body (especially mindfulness of breathing) is
particularly effective at bringing into balance the twin qualities of
tranquillity (samatha) and insight (vipassana), or
clear-seeing. Through persistent practice, the meditator becomes more adept
at bringing the combined powers of samatha-vipassana to bear in an
exploration of the fundamental nature of mind and body.13
As the meditator masters the ability to frame his immediate experience in
terms of anicca (inconstancy), dukkha, and anatta
(not-self), even the subtlest manifestations of these three characteristics
of experience are brought into exquisitely sharp focus. At the same time,
the root cause of dukkha craving is relentlessly exposed to the
light of awareness. Eventually craving is left with no place to hide, the
entire karmic process that fabricates dukkha unravels, the eightfold
path reaches its noble climax, and the meditator gains, at
long last, his or her first unmistakable glimpse of the Unconditioned
Nibbana / Nirvana.
Awakening
This first enlightenment experience, known
as stream-entry (sotapatti), is the first of four progressive stages
of Awakening, each of which entails the irreversible shedding or weakening
of several fetters (samyojana), the manifestations of ignorance that
bind a person to the cycle of birth and death. Stream-entry marks an
unprecedented and radical turning point both in the practitioner's current
life and in the entirety of his or her long journey in samsara. For it is at
this point that any lingering doubts about the truth of the Buddha's
teachings disappear; it is at this point that any belief in the purifying
efficacy of rites and rituals evaporates; and it is at this point that the
long-cherished notion of an abiding personal "self" falls away. The
stream-enterer is said to be assured of no more than seven future rebirths
(all of them favorable) before eventually attaining full Awakening.
But full Awakening is still a long way
off. As the practitioner presses on with renewed diligence, he or she passes
through two more significant landmarks: once-returning (sakadagati),
which is accompanied by the weakening of the fetters of sensual desire and
ill-will, and nonreturning (agati), in which these two fetters are
uprooted altogether. The final stage of Awakening arahatta occurs
when even the most refined and subtle levels of craving and conceit are
irrevocably extinguished. At this point the practitioner now an arahant,
or "worthy one" arrives at the end-point of the Buddha's teaching. With
ignorance, suffering, stress, and rebirth having all come to their end, the
arahant at last can utter the victory cry first proclaimed by the Buddha
upon his Awakening:
"Birth is ended, the holy life
fulfilled, the task done! There is nothing further for the sake of
this world."
[MN
36]
The arahant lives out the remainder of his
or her life inwardly enjoying the bliss of Nibbana, secure at last from the
possibility of any future rebirth. When the arahant's aeons-long trail of
past kamma eventually unwinds to its end, the arahant dies and he or she
enters into parinibbana total Unbinding. Although language utterly
fails at describing this extraordinary event, the Buddha likened it to what
happens when a fire finally burns up all its fuel.

"The serious pursuit of happiness"
Buddhism is sometimes naοvely criticized
as a "negative" or "pessimistic" religion and philosophy. Surely life is not
all misery and disappointment: it offers many kinds of happiness and sublime
joy. Why then this dreary Buddhist obsession with unsatisfactoriness and
suffering?
The Buddha based his teachings on a frank
assessment of our plight as humans: there is unsatisfactoriness and
suffering in the world. No one can argue this fact. Dukkha lurks behind even
the highest forms of worldly pleasure and joy, for, sooner or later, as
surely as night follows day, that happiness must come to an end. Were the
Buddha's teachings to stop there, we might indeed regard them as pessimistic
and life as utterly hopeless. But, like a doctor who prescribes a remedy for
an illness, the Buddha offers both a hope (the third Noble Truth) and a cure
(the fourth). The Buddha's teachings thus give cause for unparalleled
optimism and joy. The teachings offer as their reward the noblest, truest
kind of happiness, and give profound value and meaning to an otherwise grim
existence. One modern teacher summed it up well: "Buddhism is the serious
pursuit of happiness."

Theravada Comes West
Until the late 19th century, the teachings
of Theravada were little known outside of southern Asia, where they had
flourished for some two and one-half millennia. In the past century,
however, the West has begun to take notice of Theravada's unique spiritual
legacy in its teachings of Awakening. In recent decades this interest has
swelled, with the monastic Sangha from various schools within Theravada
establishing dozens of monasteries across Europe and North America.
Increasing numbers of lay meditation centers, founded and operated
independently of the monastic Sangha, strain to meet the demands of lay men
and women Buddhist and otherwise seeking to learn selected aspects of
the Buddha's teachings.
The turn of the 21st century
presents both opportunities and dangers for Theravada in the West: Will the
Buddha's teachings be patiently studied and put into practice, and allowed
to establish deep roots in Western soil, for the benefit of many generations
to come? Will the current popular Western climate of "openness" and
cross-fertilization between spiritual traditions lead to the emergence of a
strong new form of Buddhist practice unique to the modern era, or will it
simply lead to confusion and the dilution of these priceless teachings?
These are open questions; only time will tell.
Spiritual teachings of every description
inundate the media and the marketplace today. Many of today's popular
spiritual teachings borrow liberally from the Buddha, though only rarely do
they place the Buddha's words in their true context. Earnest seekers of
truth are therefore often faced with the unsavory task of wading through
fragmentary teachings of dubious accuracy. How are we to make sense of it
all?
Fortunately the Buddha left us with some
simple guidelines to help us navigate through this bewildering flood.
Whenever you find yourself questioning the authenticity of a particular
teaching, heed well the Buddha's advice to his stepmother:
[The teachings that promote] the
qualities of which you may know, 'These qualities lead to passion, not
to dispassion; to being fettered, not to being unfettered; to
accumulating, not to shedding; to self-aggrandizement, not to modesty;
to discontent, not to contentment; to entanglement, not to seclusion;
to laziness, not to aroused persistence; to being burdensome, not to
being unburdensome': You may definitely hold, 'This is not the Dhamma
/ Dharma, this is not the Vinaya, this is not the Teacher's
instruction.'
[As for the teachings that promote]
the qualities of which you may know, 'These qualities lead to
dispassion, not to passion; to being unfettered, not to being
fettered; to shedding, not to accumulating; to modesty, not to
self-aggrandizement; to contentment, not to discontent; to seclusion,
not to entanglement; to aroused persistence, not to laziness; to being
unburdensome, not to being burdensome': You may definitely hold, 'This
is the Dhamma, this is the Vinaya, this is the Teacher's instruction.'
[AN VIII.53]
The truest test of these teachings, of
course, is whether they yield the promised results in the crucible of your
own heart. The Buddha presents the challenge; the rest is up to you.

Notes
1. Buddhist Religions: A
Historical Introduction (fifth edition) by R.H. Robinson, W.L.
Johnson, and Thanissaro Bhikkhu (Belmont, California: Wadsworth, 2005),
p. 46.
2. This estimate is based on data
appearing in » CIA World Factbook 2004. South Asia's largest
Theravada Buddhist populations are found in Thailand (61 million
Theravadans), Myanmar (38 million), Sri Lanka (13 million), and Cambodia
(12 million).
3. Buddhist Religions, p.
46.
5. Guide Through The Abhidhamma
Pitaka by Nyanatiloka Mahathera (Kandy: Buddhist Publication
Society, 1971), pp. 60ff.
6. A third major branch of Buddhism emerged much
later (ca. 8th century CE) in India:
Vajrayana,
the "Diamond Vehicle." Vajrayana's elaborate system of
esoteric initiations,
tantric
rituals, and
mantra
recitations eventually spread north into central and east Asia, leaving
a particularly strong imprint on
Tibetan Buddhism.
See Buddhist Religions, pp. 124ff. and chapter 11.
7. Modern scholarship suggests
that Pali was probably never spoken by the Buddha himself. In the
centuries after the Buddha's death, as Buddhism spread across India into
regions of different dialects, Buddhist monks increasingly depended on a
common tongue for their Dhamma / Dharma discussions and recitations of
memorized texts. It was out of this necessity that the language we now
know as Pali emerged. See Bhikkhu Bodhi's Introduction in Numerical
Discourses of the Buddha (Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira Press, 1999),
pp. 1ff, and n. 1 (p. 275) and "The Pali Language and Literature" by the
Pali Text Society (» http://www.palitext.com/subpages/lan_lite.htm; 15
April 2002).
8. Great Disciples of the
Buddha by Nyanaponika Thera and Hellmuth Hecker (Somerville: Wisdom
Publications, 1997), pp. 140, 150.
9. Buddhist Religions, p.
48.
10. The
Hindu Vedas, for example, predate the Buddha by at
least a millennium (Buddhist Religions, p. 2).
11. Buddhist Religions, p.
77.
12. See Dhp 1-2.
13. This description of the
unified role of samatha and vipassana is based upon the Buddha's
meditation teachings as presented in the suttas (see "One Tool Among
Many" by Thanissaro Bhikkhu). The Abhidhamma and the Commentaries, by
contrast, state that samatha and vipassana are two distinct meditation
paths (see, for example, The Jhanas in Theravada Buddhist Meditation
by H. Gunaratana, ch. 5).
It is difficult to reconcile these two views just from studying the
texts; any remaining doubts and concerns about the roles of samatha and
vipassana are best resolved through the actual practice of meditation.
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