Gautama Buda
Gautama Buddha, the “Compassionate One,” holds the office of Lord of the World (referred to as “God of the Earth” in Revelation 11:4), hierarch of the etheric retreat at Shamballa (over the Gobi desert), where he sustains the threefold flame of life for the evolutions of Earth. Gautama (who was embodied as Siddhartha Gautama c. 563 B.C.), is the great teacher of enlightenment through the soul’s mastery of the Ten Perfections, the Four Noble Truths, and the Eightfold Path, and sponsor of Summit University and of the mission of the Mother of the Flame to carry the torch of illumination for the age.
Gautama came in an hour when Hinduism was at its worst state of decadence. The priesthood was involved in favoritism and guarding the great secrets, the real mysteries of God, from the people, thus keeping the masses in ignorance. The caste system had become a means of imprisonment of the soul instead of a means of liberation through dharma. Born as Prince Siddhartha, he left palace, power, wife and son to gain that enlightenment whereby he could give back to the people that which the interlopers had taken from them.
Early life
Gautama Buddha, was born Siddhartha Gautama in northern India. He was the son of King Suddhodana and Queen Mahamaya, rulers of the Sakya kingdom, and thus a member of the Kshatriya (warrior or ruling) caste.
Ancient Pali texts and Buddhist scriptures record that before his birth, his mother, Mahamaya, dreamt that a beautiful silver-white elephant entered her womb through her side. Brahmins, called to interpret the dream, foretold the birth of a son who would become either a universal monarch or a buddha.
During the last days of her pregnancy, the queen began a journey to Devadaha to visit her parents, as was the custom in India. On the way she stopped with her attendants at Lumbini Park and reached for a flowering branch of a sal tree. There, under the blossoming tree, the Buddha was born on the full-moon day of the month of May.
Atualmente Gautama Buda ocupa o cargo de Senhor do Mundo (que em Apocalipse 11:4 é chamado “Deus da Terra”). Em níveis internos ele sustenta a chama trina da vida – a centelha divina – para todos os filhos de Deus, na Terra.
Sete foram unânimes em afirmar que, se ele permanecesse no palácio, seria um rei universal que unificaria a Índia; mas, se fosse embora, transformar-se-ia em um Buda e removeria o véu de ignorância do mundo. Kondañña, o oitavo e mais novo do grupo, declarou que Gautama certamente seria um Buda e renunciaria ao mundo depois de defrontar quatro situações: um homem velho, um doente, um morto e um santo.
A criança recebeu o nome de Sidarta, que significa “Aquele que Cumpre o Seu Objetivo”. Sete dias após o seu nascimento, Mahamaya morreu. Sidarta foi criado pela irmã, Maraprajapati, que, mais tarde, seria uma de suas primeiras discípulas do sexo feminino.
Preocupado com a possibilidade de perder o herdeiro, o rei tomou várias providências para evitar que o filho entrasse em contato com a dor e o sofrimento, cercando-o de todo luxo disponível, inclusive três palácios e quarenta mil dançarinas.
In the Anguttara Nikāya (a canonical text), Gautama describes his upbringing in his own words:
I was tenderly cared for,... supremely so, infinitely so. At my father’s palace, lotus pools were built for me, in one place for blue lotus flowers, in one place for white lotus flowers, and in one place for red lotus flowers, blossoming for my sake.... Day and night a white umbrella was held over me, so that I might not be troubled by cold, heat, dust, chaff, or dew. I dwelt in three palaces,... in one, during the cold; in one, in the summer; and in one, during the rainy season. While in the palace of the rainy season, surrounded by musicians, singers, and female dancers, for four months I did not descend from the palace....[1]
Aos dezesseis anos, depois de provar a sua habilidade em uma competição militar, o príncipe Sidarta desposou a sua prima, a bela Yasodhara. Não demorou muito para Gautama se tornar melancólico e preocupado, mas o momento decisivo de sua vida só aconteceria quando ele estava com vinte e um anos de idade e empreendeu quatro excursões nas quais entrou em contato com as quatro situações.
Primeiro ele viu um homem velho, grisalho e decrépito, apoiado em um cajado. Depois, um ser miserável, atormentado pela doença, caído no caminho. Em seguida, viu um cadáver e, por último, um monge vestido com um manto amarelo, a cabeça raspada, que pedia esmolas. Sentindo enorme compaixão pelas três primeiras pessoas que encontrara, Gautama percebeu que a vida estava sujeita ao envelhecimento, à doença e à morte. Para ele, a quarta situação significou a possibilidade de superar essas condições e inspirou-o a abandonar o mundo que conhecia para buscar uma solução para o sofrimento.
Ascetismo
No caminho de volta ao palácio, Sidarta recebeu a notícia do nascimento do seu filho, a quem deu o nome de Rahula, ou “obstáculo.” Na mesma noite, ordenou que selassem o seu cavalo favorito, Kanthaka. Antes de sair da cidade, ele foi ao quarto para um ultimo olhar para a esposa e filho. Ele cavalgou até ao amanhecer, quando, ao trocar de roupa com o cocheiro, assumiu a aparência de um asceta. O cocheiro foi enviado de volta ao palácio.
Thus, Gautama began the life of a wandering monk. Immediately he went in search of the most learned teachers of the day to instruct him in truth, quickly mastering all they taught. Unsatisfied and restless, he determined to find a permanent truth, impervious to the illusions of the world.
Traveling through the Magadha country, he was noticed for his handsome countenance and noble stature. He arrived at a village called Senanigama, near Uruvela, where he was joined by a group of five ascetics, among whom was Kondañña, the Brahmin who had foretold his Buddhahood.
Here, for almost six years, Gautama practiced severe austerities, which are recorded in his own words in the Majjhima Nikāya:
Because of so little nourishment, all my limbs became like some withered creepers with knotted joints;... the pupils of my eyes appeared sunk deep in their sockets as water appears shining at the bottom of a deep well;... the skin of my belly came to be cleaving to my back-bone....[2]
As a consequence of these severe bodily mortifications, Gautama became so weak that he once fainted and was believed to be dead. Some accounts describe how he was found collapsed by a shepherd boy who restored him with drops of warm milk. Others say it was the devas, or gods, who revived him. Realizing the futility of asceticism, Gautama abandoned his austerities to seek his own path of enlightenment—whereupon his five companions rejected and deserted him.
The Bo tree
One day Sujata, a villager’s daughter, fed him a rich rice milk—a “meal so wondrous ... that our Lord felt strength and life return as though the nights of watching and the days of fast had passed in dream.”[3] And then he set out alone for the Bo tree (abbreviation for bodhi, or enlightenment) at a place now called Buddh Gaya, or Bodh Gaya, where he vowed to remain until fully illumined. Hence, it has become known as the Immovable Spot.
At that point, Mara, the Evil One, attempted to prevent his enlightenment and confronted him with temptations much in the same manner that Satan tested Jesus during his fasting in the wilderness.
The Dhammapada records the words of Mara, as she assailed Gautama: “Lean, suffering, ill-favored man, Live! Death is your neighbor. Death has a thousand hands, you have only two. Live! Live and do good, live holy, and taste reward. Why do you struggle? Hard is struggle, hard to struggle all the time.”
Unmoved, he sat under the Bo tree while Mara continued her attack—first in the form of desire, parading voluptuous goddesses and dancing girls before him, then in the guise of death, assailing him with hurricanes, torrential rains, flaming rocks, boiling mud, fierce soldiers and beasts—and finally darkness. Yet still, Gautama remained unmoved.
As a last resort, the temptress challenged his right to be doing what he was doing. Siddhartha then tapped the earth,[4] and the earth thundered her answer: “I bear you witness!” All the hosts of the Lord and the elemental beings responded and acclaimed his right to pursue the enlightenment of the Buddha—whereupon Mara fled.
Having defeated Mara, Gautama spent the rest of the night in deep meditation under the tree, recalling his former embodiments, attaining the “superhuman divine eye” (the ability to see the passing away and rebirth of beings), and realizing the Four Noble Truths. In his own recorded words: “Ignorance was dispelled, knowledge arose. Darkness was dispelled, light arose.”[5]
Thus, he attained Enlightenment, or the Awakening, during the night of the full-moon day of the month of May, about the year 528 B.C. His being was transformed, and he became the Buddha.
The event was of cosmic import. All created things filled the morning air with their rejoicings and the earth quaked six ways with wonder. Ten thousand galaxies shuddered in awe as lotuses bloomed on every tree, turning the entire universe into “a bouquet of flowers sent whirling through the air.”[6]
For a total of forty-nine days he was deep in rapture, after which he again turned his attention to the world. He found Mara waiting for him with one last temptation: “How can your experience be translated into words? Return to Nirvana. Do not try to deliver your message to the world, for no one will comprehend it. Remain in bliss!” But Buddha replied: “There will be some who will understand,” and Mara vanished from his life forever.
Teaching
Contemplating whom he should first teach, he decided to return to the five ascetics who had left him. He began a journey of over one hundred miles to Benares and delivered to his old companions his first sermon, known as the Dhammacakkappavattana-sutta, or “Setting in Motion the Wheel of Truth.”
At the end of the sermon, in which he revealed the key discovery of his quest—the Four Noble Truths, the Eightfold Path, and the Middle Way—he accepted the five monks as the first members of his order. Kondañña was the first to grasp the teaching.
For forty-five years, Gautama walked the dusty roads of India, preaching the Dhamma (universal Doctrine), which led to the founding of Buddhism. He established the sangha (community) that soon numbered over twelve hundred devotees, eventually including his entire family—his father, aunt, wife, and son. When the people questioned him as to his identity, he answered, “I am awake”—hence, the Buddha, meaning “Enlightened One” or “Awakened One.”
Passing
At the age of eighty, Gautama became seriously ill and almost died, but revived himself, thinking it was not right to die without preparing his disciples. By sheer determination, he recovered and instructed Ananda, his cousin and close disciple, that the order should live by making themselves an island—by becoming their own refuge and making the Dhamma their island, their refuge forever.
After announcing that he would die in three months, he traveled through several villages and then stayed with Cunda, the goldsmith, one of his devoted followers. According to generally accepted tradition, Cunda invited Gautama to partake of sukara-maddava—a dish he had prepared unknowingly with poisoned mushrooms. After the meal, Gautama became violently ill, but bore his pain without complaint.
His only concern was to console Cunda, who might feel responsible for his death. And thus, he compassionately asked Ananda to tell Cunda that of all the meals he had eaten, only two stood out as special blessings—one was the meal served by Sujata before his enlightenment, and the other was the food from Cunda which opened the gates to his transition.
He passed during the full-moon of May, c. 483 B.C., after again advising Ananda that the Dhamma—the Truth—must be his master and reminding the monks of the transiency of all conditioned things.
Legacy
Following the passing of Gautama, Buddhism began to develop in two major directions, leading to the establishment of the Hinayana (“little vehicle”) and the Mahayana (“great vehicle”) schools of Buddhism, from which many further subgroups evolved.
Adherents of the Hinayana school believe their teachings represent the original Buddhist doctrine taught by Gautama, and therefore refer to their path as the Theravada, or “Way of the Elders.”
The traditional Theravadin outlook centers around the monastic way of life and emphasizes the necessity for self-sacrifice and individual enlightenment in order to help others. Their goal is to become an arhat—perfected disciple—and enter Nirvana.
The Mahayanists, who believe that the Theravadins’ strict observance of precepts departs from the true spirit of the Buddha, concentrate more on emulating the Buddha’s life, stressing good works and compassion toward others in the process of gaining enlightenment. The Theravadins, however, claim that the Mahayanists have polluted the pure stream of Gautama’s teaching by incorporating more liberal doctrines and interpretations.
The Mahayanists consider their school to be the “greater vehicle,” as it provides more for the layman. Their ideal is to become a bodhisattva—one who attains Nirvana but voluntarily returns to the world to assist others in obtaining the same goal.
Gautama’s work today
Gautama Buddha was the first initiate to serve under Sanat Kumara, hence the one chosen to succeed him in the office of Lord of the World. On January 1, 1956, Sanat Kumara placed his mantle on Lord Gautama, whereupon the Chela par excellence of the Great Guru also became the hierarch of Shamballa.
Atualmente Gautama Buda ocupa o cargo de Senhor do Mundo (que em Apocalipse 11:4 é chamado “Deus da Terra”). Em níveis internos ele sustenta a chama trina da vida – a centelha divina – para todos os filhos de Deus, na Terra.
Referindo-se ao grandioso serviço que o Senhor Gautama presta à vida, no cargo que ocupa como Senhor do Mundo, em 1º de janeiro de 1986, Maitreya disse:
O Senhor do Mundo sustenta verdadeiramente a chama trina para as evoluções da Terra por meio de uma filigrana de luz que sai do seu coração. Este é um atalho criado devido ao carma das pessoas, pois existem tantas trevas ao redor do seu coração, que as artérias espirituais, ou cordão de cristal, foram cortadas.
A situação é comparável ao entupimento das artérias do corpo físico que diminui de tal maneira o fluxo de sangue que acaba criando uma insuficiência e o coração não consegue mais sustentar a vida. Isto é comparável ao que acontece no plano astral.
Então Sanat Kumara veio para a Terra para manter a chama da vida. Em Shamballa, Gautama Buda faz o mesmo, sustentando a chama trina e tornando-se uma parte de todo coração vivente. Quando o discípulo se aproxima da Senda, compreende que a sua meta é expandir a sua chama aqui embaixo e no seu coração, para que, com ou sem o fio de filigrana do coração de Gautama, ele possa sustentar a vida, a alma, a consciência e a senda iniciática.
Amados, tal passo é, por si só, uma realização que poucos alcançaram neste planeta. Não tendes ideia de como vos sentiríeis, seríeis ou vos comportaríeis se Gautama Buda retirasse o fio de filigrana e o momentum das batidas do seu coração e da sua chama trina, que são o vosso apoio. A maioria das pessoas, especialmente os jovens, não leva em consideração qual é a fonte da vida que experimentam com exuberância e alegria
.
Em 31 de dezembro de 1983, Gautama deu a seguinte explicação sobre a dádiva que concedeu:
Sou muito observador. E vos observo, graças ao contato da minha chama, por meio do fio de contato que mantenho com a chama trina do vosso coração, sustentando-a, como faço, até que passeis do chakra da alma para o mais fundo do coração – a câmara secreta do coração – e sejais capazes, por vós mesmos, de sustentar a chama que arde nesta oitava.
Alguém aqui se recorda de ter acendido a sua chama trina, ao nascer? Alguma vez vos lembrastes de tê-la avivado ou mantido acesa? Amados corações, reconhecei que atos de amor, valor, honra e altruísmo certamente contribuem para essa chama, mas um poder maior e uma Origem superior mantê-la-ão, até que sejais um só com esse poder superior: o vosso Santo Cristo Pessoal.
Todos recebem o incentivo e o impulso da chama do meu coração. À medida que a luz que vem da Divindade passa por mim, percebo muitas coisas vossas e da vossa vida cotidiana que julgais estarem além do registro e da percepção de um Senhor do Mundo, que deve estar mesmo muito ocupado.
E estou mesmo! Mas nunca tão ocupado que não perceba os elementos da Senda apresentados, em toda a parte, pelos pais, nas famílias, nas comunidades e nas salas de aula da vida. Pois considero ser do meu interesse assegurar que algum elemento da senda da iniciação, movendo-se em direção ao coração de Jesus e de Maitreya, faça parte da vida de toda criança em desenvolvimento.
Retiros
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► Artígo principal: [[Special:MyLanguage/Shamballa Ocidental|{{{2}}}]]
Gautama Buda é o patrocinador da Summit University e hierarca de Shamballa, o retiro etérico do Senhor do Mundo, que fica sobre o deserto de Gobi.
Em 1981, Gautama estabeleceu uma extensão do seu retiro na oitava etérica, que recebeu o nome de Shamballa Ocidental e está localizado sobre o Coração do Retiro Interno, no Rancho do Royal Teton, nos Estados Unidos.
A nota-chave de Gautama Buda é a canção “Moonlight and Roses”. A “Ode à Alegria”, da nona sinfonia de Beethoven, também nos sintoniza diretamente com o Senhor do Mundo.
Ver também
Fontes
Template:Pérolas de Sabedoria, vol. 26, n° 4, 23 de janeiro de 1983.
Template:Pérolas de Sabedoria, vol. 32, n° 30, 23 de julho de 1989.
Mark L. Prophet e Elizabeth Clare Prophet, Os Mestres e os seus retiros, s.v. “Gautama Buda.”
- ↑ Helena Roerich, Foundations of Buddhism (New York: Agni Yoga Society, 1971), p. 7.
- ↑ Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th ed., s.v. “Buddha.”
- ↑ Edwin Arnold, The Light of Asia (London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., 1930), p. 96.
- ↑ with the “earth-touching mudra”—left hand upturned in lap, right hand pointed downward, touching earth.
- ↑ Edward J. Thomas, The Life of Buddha as Legend and History (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1927), pp. 66-68, quoted in Clarence H. Hamilton, ed., Buddhism: A Religion of Infinite Compassion (New York: The Liberal Arts Press, 1952), pp. 22–23.
- ↑ Huston Smith, The Religions of Man (New York: Harper & Row, Harper Colophon Books, 1958), p. 84.