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#1 |
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I have the book 'Mindfulness Bliss and Beyond " by Ajahn Brahm and haven't had time to get further than the first chapter yet.
However I saw this comment in the book in a section on how to tell if someone is enlightened. "So if you see someone who has many possessions, is proud, or fears death, then you know that person is not fully enlightened. " How does this fit in with wealth and possessions owned by monasteries and temples in the form of many valuable statues, artifacts and so on ? |
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#2 |
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How does this fit in with wealth and possessions owned by monasteries and temples in the form of many valuable statues, artifacts and so on This relationship has the downside of limiting the way a monastery may develop. For example if the laity are not responsive to Dhamma talks on the Jhannas then support may diminish. This reaction is of course both good and bad. Of course the real 'bad guy' in this respect is the Catholic church. |
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#3 |
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#4 |
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#5 |
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"So if you see someone who has many possessions, is proud, or fears death, then you know that person is not fully enlightened. " The stream enterer is not fully enlightened. How does this fit in with wealth and possessions owned by monasteries and temples in the form of many valuable statues, artifacts and so on ? - Ajahn Maha Bua's temple, don't have electricity to monk's dwell. He donate many thing to public. - Ajahn Promote's temple, have less than 10 monk's dwell. He pass a lot of donate things to poor temples. ![]() |
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#6 |
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How does this fit in with wealth and possessions owned by monasteries and temples in the form of many valuable statues, artifacts and so on? |
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#7 |
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How does this fit in with wealth and possessions owned by monasteries and temples in the form of many valuable statues, artifacts and so on ? In the dojo where I practice zazen we only have a statue of the budhha, nothing more than that. And I realy enjoy that kind of austerity. ![]() |
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#8 |
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#13 |
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#14 |
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"So if you see someone who has many possessions, is proud, or fears death, then you know that person is not fully enlightened. " - He a monk, not manage that temple. If manage, he is not Arahunt. - The temples are public. Not his own. - It like a tradition that the temple in Thailand should be like this. . . . ![]() |
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#15 |
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Aloka-D #10: |
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#16 |
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frank #8: I have to wonder at Brahm's use of the term "Enlightened" or "fully enlightened". The Buddha did not teach "Enlightenment". |
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#18 |
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I thought that you couldn't really say if a person was enlightened or not. There isn't an aura around them that lets us know.
I think AB is trying to give big clues as to how someone who is not enlightened might be identified and the converse doesn't necessarily imply enlightenment. If it was true, from the example given, all beggars on the streets are then enlightened. |
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#19 |
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