Read An Illustrated Outline of Buddhism: The Essentials of Buddhist Spirituality Online
Authors: William Stoddart,Joseph A. Fitzgerald
Tags: #Philosophy
trinsic. Frithjof Schuon has given a metaphysical exposition of the
relationship of the Buddha and the Bodhisattva as follows: The three
fundamental attributes of the Divine Nature—the three fundamental
hypostases of Unity—are Absoluity, Infinity, and Perfection. These
may be symbolized geometrical y as Center, Radii, and Circumference.
In Christian terms, the Father is the Absolute (the Center), the Holy
Spirit is the Infinite (the Radii), and the Son is the Perfect (the Cir-
cumference—the Incarnation of God in the world). In Buddhist terms,
Nirvāna
is
the Absolute (the Center), the Bodhisattva is the Infinite
(the Radii), and the Buddha is the Perfect (the Circumference—in this
case, the presence of
Nirvāna
in
samsāra
).
In both cases, the Infinite is the Radii emerging from the Center and returning to it. This symbolical way of looking at things enables us to see, firstly, the respective
functions of the Buddha and the Bodhisattva, and also the analogy
between the functions of the Holy Spirit and the Bodhisattva.1
1 See Frithjof Schuon, “Hypostatic Dimensions of Unity”, in
Sufism: Veil and Quintes-
sence
(Bloomington, IN: World Wisdom, 2006), and “The Mystery of the Bodhisattva”,
in
Treasures of Buddhism
; Titus Burckhardt, “The Image of the Buddha”, in
Sacred Art
in East and West
; Peter Masefield,
Divine Revelation in Pali Buddhism
; and Marco Pallis, “Is There Room for Grace in Buddhism?”, in
A Buddhist Spectrum
(Bloomington,
IN: World Wisdom, 2003).
Buddhas and Bodhisattvas
69
Bodhisattva Kshitigarbha, Kamakura period, Japan
70
An Illustrated Outline of Buddhism
The Bodhisattva’s Undertaking
I take upon myself . . . the deeds of all beings, even those in the
hel s, in the other worlds, and in the realms of punishment. . . . I
take their suffering upon me, . . . I bear it, I do not draw back from
it, I do not tremble at it, I have no fear of it, . . . I do not lose heart.
. . . I must bear the burden of all beings, for I have vowed to save
all things living, to bring them safe through the forest of birth, age,
disease, birth, and re-birth. I think not of my own salvation, but
strive to bestow on all beings the royalty of supreme wisdom. So
I take upon myself all the sorrows of all beings. I resolve to bear
every torment in every purgatory of the universe. For it is better
that I alone should suffer than that the multitude of living beings
should suffer. I give myself in exchange. I redeem the universe from
the forest of purgatory, from the womb of flesh, from the realm of
death. I agree to suffer as a ransom for all beings, and for the sake
of all beings. Truly I will not abandon them. For I have resolved to
gain supreme wisdom for the sake of all.
Vajradhvaja
Sūtra
Above
:
Sanjūsangendō Temple, Kyoto, Japan, 1226.
The hall contains 1,000 different images of the Bodhisattva Kwannon;
Right
: The central statue of Bodhisattva Kwannon, Sanjūsangendō Temple, Kyoto;
Following pages
: White Tārā (
left
) and Mahāvairochana (
right
), the Supreme Feminine and Masculine Principles, Mongolia, 17th century
72
An Illustrated Outline of Buddhism
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