Read more.I don’t believe in Reincarnation. Am I still a Buddhist?
by Waylon Lewis, elephantjournal.com on Jun 16, 2009
I grew up in a Buddhist family. As the Dalai Lama says of Buddhism,
Anything that contradicts experience and logic should be abandoned. - His Holiness the Dalai Lama
Shinshu Roberts was looking at Suzuki Roshi transcripts and ran across this....In fact, the Buddha himself said something along the lines of “Buddhism is what can be experienced, not what I say it is.” And so I’ve never believed in reincarnation—I’ve never experienced it, it strikes me as superstition, as a spiritual hangover from Buddhism’s origins with Hinduism (I also don’t particularly believe in eight-armed green deities).
Still, from a strict Buddhist p.o.v., reincarnation is part of our dogma. Wait, I thought we didn’t have dogma, we only “believed” what we could experience? Well, there’s the rub. If you ask my teacher, Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche, the fact that I don’t believe in reincarnation means I’m not, strictly speaking, a proper Buddhist. I say, show me the evidence of it, and why it matters to my Bodhisattva Vow: to be of benefit.
Because that, after all, is the whole point of all this Buddhist stuff (at least as I was brought up to understand it in Chogyam Trungpa’s sangha community): to become sane (Hinayana), work for the benefit of others (Mahayana) and fully involve onself in this short, precious human existence (Vajrayana). And Trungpa Rinpoche himself never emphasized reincarnation, or the six realms (except as psychological analogies).
So call me a dis-believer. But given that Buddhism is a non-theistic tradition, I think that just makes me a…Buddhist. ~ elephant journal editor-in-chief, Waylon Lewis.
Via one of my favorite Buddhist e-newsletters, Upaya, which also has an elegant site that’s chock-ful of events and Dharma:
For me, as a Buddhist, my practice and beliefs center on the Bodhisattva Vows I have taken and following the Noble Eightfold Path - and that does not require a belief in reincarnation, only a devotion to helping others to the best of my ability.
The science of reincarnation, such as it is, does not convince me, simple as that.
Reincarnation is a unique teaching in the Tibetan schools of Buddhism. Theravada (for sure) and Mahayana (possibly) believe in rebirth but not reincarnation, a very important distinction.
ReplyDeleteI don't know if it's important to believe in rebirth or not - but it's important to understand it, I think - to place the Buddha's teaching in context.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ashin - I wasn't aware of that - I have done almost ALL of my reading in the Tibetan and Mahayana traditions.
ReplyDeleteKaspalita - I think I understand it, but if I do, what I understand simply does not make sense to me within the universe as my admittedly little mind understands it.
Thanks to both of you for sharing your thoughts.
Peace,
Bill