S
sonicdrifter
Guest
Of course Buddhism doesn't automatically bring joy or enlightenment; only God can do that. Buddhism is correct according to its own purview, but if we broaden the scope we see that these truths are but a part of a much more comprehensive whole.
One good way to see this is to see that Buddhism focuses on rules. It makes rules the supreme thing and says if you follow those rules or recommendations then you will achieve happiness. But when we think about it, the idea that a static, impersonal, unsupported, ungiven (no lawgiver) rule resides as the key to life makes no sense. A rule does not exist on its own. And how silly it is to say that a rule rises above true being, true life, and true Love. No, the minimization of suffering and the attainment of an ecstatic state is not what life is about; it is about something far greater.
:e4e:
Buddhism does have rules, or rather precepts, that are meant to be followed, and a measure of inner peace and freedom from karma comes from following those rules. But this is not the heart of the process, it is commitment to the process of meditation, wherein the three poisons of the mind come to an end, with the illusion of an isolated separate self penetrated and dissolved, so that a deeper self, in unity with the living compassion, intelligence, and creative energy of life is discovered, the unborn, the unchanging, and the undying.
I do not think you can get that following rules is the supreme thing in Buddhism from studying Buddhism or learning about it. If you study some of the discourses, Buddha spends only a small time on following rules, and expects this to be established fairly quickly in the lives of students, and then gives much longer discourses on the practice of meditation and what can be realized through meditation. It is not merely an ecstatic state, it is not like taking drugs and getting high, or getting fired up by a sermon. Those are transitory states that come and go. The unborn, unchanging, and undying is always there, is eternal, and therefore when one joins with it, then it endures and gives lasting peace. It also allows a person to live a life of compassion towards all sentient beings, including animals, and including homosexuals, who it seems are the focus of some undeserved prejudiced wrath by at least a number of Christian factions.