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LECTURE IV - THE SAṄGHA OR BUDDHIST ORDER OF MONKS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

Monier Monier-Williams
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

Perhaps the first point made clear by the study of the Buddhist Scriptures is, that the Buddha never seriously thought of founding a new system in direct opposition to Brāhmanism and caste. Even his Order or fraternity of Monks, which attained a world-wide celebrity and spread through a great part of Asia, was a mere imitation of an institution already established in India. He himself was a Hindū of the Hindūs, and he remained a Hindū to the end. His very name, Gautama, connected him with one of the most celebrated Hindū sages, and was significant of his original connexion with orthodox Brāhmanism. It is true he was a determined opponent of all Brāhmanical sacerdotalism and ceremonialism, and of all theories about the supernatural character of the Vedas (see p. 53); but, being himself a Hindū, he never required his adherents to make any formal renunciation of Hindūism, as if they had been converted to an entirely new faith; just as, if I may say so with all reverence, the Founder of the Christian Church, being Himself a Jew, never required His followers to give up every Jewish usage.

Nor had the Buddha any idea of courting popularity as a champion of social equality and denouncer of all distinctions of rank and ancient traditions— a kind of Tribune of the people, whose mission was to protect them from the tyranny of the upper classes.

Type
Chapter
Information
Buddhism
In its Connexion with Brahmanism and Hinduism and in its Contrast with Christianity
, pp. 71 - 92
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1889

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