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GRECO-BUDDHISM
by Astalon “Walk,
monks, on tour for the blessings of the many folks, for the
happiness of the many folks, out of compassion for the world, for the
welfare,
blessings and happiness of gods and men. Teach the Dharma that is
lovely in its
beginning, lovely in its middle, and lovely in its
culmination.” Lord
Buddha Introduction:- Buddhism
as it spread through many cultures in the world have always
coexisted and adapted to the local religion and culture. Buddhism never
dominates over the indigenous cultures or religions. Buddhism true to
the core
aim of ending suffering and bringing benefit and happiness to all has
been
known to illuminate on local practices that are harmful but at the same
time
will emphasize and encourage local practices that brings goodness and
benefit
to all. In Japan Buddhism existed
and
works so well alongside Shintoism to the point the general practice of
Buddhism
in Japan is called Japanese Buddhism. In China Buddhism coexisted and
harmonized with the native Confucian, Taoist and ancestral worship
religion to
the point Buddhism in China is called Chinese Buddhism. In Thailand
Buddhism
embraced the native spirit worship to the point Buddhism in Thailand is
called
Thai Buddhism. In Sri Lanka Buddhism has adapted alongside the practice
and
culture of the Sinhalese and Tamils resulting in Ceylonese Buddhism. Yet
the central teaching and approach of all these forms of Buddhism
remains the same. This is because the human condition remains the same
exactly
the same wherever one goes, and thus the teachings of Buddhism remains
the
same. When
the Buddha first made known the Buddha Dharma to men he made it
known in the cultural context of Vedic and Brahmanic India. That was
because
his audiences were from Vedic and Brahmanic cultural backgrounds from
beside
the Ganges River. However the Buddha notably adapted his method of
teachings
and even devised different method of preaching to different people
depending
upon their level of understanding, their social needs, sensory
impairment,
their personality types etc.. The
Buddha once chided a monk who said that he has given up preaching to
one particular village because the people did not get his analogies.
The Buddha
then asked what was it the people understood. The monk said that the
people
understood simple and crude analogies. The Buddha said that then one
should use
simple and crude analogies to teach the people. The
Buddha also encouraged people to continue to practice their cultural
rites so long as it harmed no one and brought benefit to oneself and
others. The
classical case was with a
recent convert who every morning would observe a fire ritual with his
family.
He asked the Buddha if he could still practice this. The Buddha asked
him if
the rite harmed anyone or any being. The next question that also needed
to be
asked is does the rite brings benefit to anyone or any being. Given
that the
rite harmed no one and the rite united the family every morning the
Buddha gave
the man his blessings. The
Buddha sometimes even grafted on meaning to certain practices so
that people can contemplate on the sublime meanings when they perform
it next.
In the Sigalovada Sutta Sigala, the main character in this sutra
promised his
father on his deathbed that he would continue on a family custom daily.
The
custom involved throwing a pinch of rice in the six directions so that
that the
Gods will be delighted because he is paying respects to the Gods from
the Six
Directions. By delighting the Gods he will be free from all harms. The
Buddha did not oppose his practice to honor the Gods but told the
man that respecting the six directions actually meant the following. He said that
the east represents the parent, the south the teacher; the west the
spouse; the
north ones friends; above, religious teachers, and below, employees.
The six
directions represent the six types of human relationships, namely those
between
parent and child, teacher and pupil, husband and wife, friends,
religious
teacher and disciple, as well as employer and employee. Honouring the
six
directions meant fulfilling the reciprocal duties in all these
relationships.
By fulfilling these one is likely to be free from harm at least from
these
“directions”. Buddhism
spread across India due to the active missionary work of the monks.
Buddhism
came quite early to a group of people known as the Yonas in Buddhism.
They are
better known to modern readers as Greeks in India. Since their arrival
to India
under Alexander the Great in 326BCE they have established their
presence in the
urban areas around present day Punjab and the Hindu Kush. Alexander the
Great
himself established at least five known sizeable Greek settlements in
the
subcontinent. One is Alexander of the Caucasus which is actually built
on the
then town of Kapisa. The second town is Taxila when their king
surrender to
Alexander the Great. The third is Boukephala. The fourth is Nicaea and
the
fifth is Alexandria on the Indus. In India until the time of the
Indo-Greeks
most Greeks stayed in Alexandria in the Caucasus or Taxila. Buddhism
was received well and spread quite rapidly among the Greeks of
Alexandria of
the Caucasus and Taxila to the point that in Asoka’s time
these were main
Buddhist centres. In the Mahavamsa one of the high monks present in the
devotion of the high Thupa was a Yona ( Greek ) monk called
Dharmarikkita who
brought 30,000 Greek monks from Alexandria on the Caucasus to join him.
A monk
with the same name was sent North by Asoka to spread the Rock Edicts in
the
Greco-Bactrian lands. On an interesting note early Buddhist in Sri
Lanka base
upon the Mahavamsa went to Alexandria of the Caucasus to learn Buddhism. Yet
despite the rise and rise of Buddhism in these cities we also find that
in both
cities there was a strong following of the traditional Hellenic
religion. The
Indo-Greek period starting from 180BCE marked a period of the expansion
of the
Greeks in India but also the rapid spread of Buddhist philosophy and
belief
amongst the Greeks in Bactria and India. This is evident from the coin
markings
of the Greek Kings and the conversion of various Greek kings to
Buddhism. It is
also evident from the number of stupas that were built during this
period. The
rise of Greco-Buddhist art is another sign of the popularity of
Buddhism among
the Greeks, with the Buddha rupa, the Buddha represented in the human
form. It
was the Greeks who first depicted the Buddha as a human. Yet
at the same time as time the old Greek religion remained. As much as
people
took refuge in the Dharma they also continued to worship the Greek
Gods. In
fact with the rise of Greco-Buddhist arts we suddenly see
representation of the
Greek Gods either acting as guardian to the Buddha or are represented
as Devas
present during the great event in life of the Buddha’s, like
the Devas in
support of the Buddha during the Great Departure. The
religion that is practiced by the Indo-Greeks who followed Buddhist
philsophy
but who continued to adhere to the Greek nomos
arkhaios ( customs and cultures ) is known as Greco-Buddhism,
also known as
Hellenic Buddhism. What
is Greco-Buddhism/Hellenic Buddhism:- Greco-Buddhism
or Hellenic Buddhism can be seen in two ways. It can be seen as the
cultural
and religious syncretism between the Hellenic culture and Buddhism.
Alternatively it can be seen as the adoption of the Buddhist philosophy
by a
person with a Hellenic background in the same way as they would adopt
Stoicism
or Epicureanism for example. As
stated above Buddhism is an inclusive religion. That means it embraces
people
regardless of their race, culture, ethnicity, gender etc.. Buddhism is
also a
religion that seeks to co-exist with an existing culture. That is
because the
human condition is similar regardless of culture or race or religion. What
of the ancient Greek religion then? How does it view embracing a
secondary
religion or philosophy on top of it? Before we begin, we must remember
that the
ancient Greek religion was mostly an orthopraxic religion. Orthopraxic
means
adherence to a common practice. This practice covers both religious
rites and
also covers other aspects of nomos
arkhaios like morality, ethics, customs and conduct. This
differentiates
the Greek religion from modern religions of the world that emphasizes a
lot on
orthodoxy, that is adherence to a common faith, belief and thinking.
The Greek
religion had a slight orthodoxy with regards to theology due to the
level of
influence of the Iliad and the Odyssey and the work of Hesiod. However
theology
and cosmology is known to differ from one city to the next, one school
to the
next and was actually a subject of intense questioning by the
philosophers. The
ancient Greeks would therefore have no compulsion learning a new
philosophy or
worshiping a God unknown to the Greek pantheon if they were to go to a
different country. What they would be unwilling to do however would be
to break
nomos arkhaois or customs.
Therefore
even though in Classical Greece we had Epicureans openly believing that
the
Gods did not interfere with the world of men Epicureans still
participated in
the religious rites of their polis. Because nomos
arkhaois is so tied in with the concept of the Gods most
Greeks would
regard atheos which basically means
not honouring the Gods or severing ones relationship with the Gods with
trepidation. Greco-Buddhism
therefore is a form of Buddhism where the Buddhist religious and
philosophical
belief is practiced and integrated alongside Greek customs and
reverence to the
Greek Gods but also Greek philosophies. In fact as Buddhism became more
and
more integrated into the life of the Indo-Greeks some Greek Gods like
Herakles
and Tykhe became seen as guardians of the Buddha and thus Guardian Gods
of
Buddhism. Greco-Buddhism
left a long lasting legacy on Buddhism. It is because of the
Greco-Buddhist
that we have the Buddha-rupa or the human images of the Buddha. It is
because
of the Greco-Buddhist we have such beautiful anthromorphic imagery of
the
Buddha, Bodhissatvas and Gods. But
more importantly, it is likely because of the Greco-Buddhist and their
infusion
of Hellenic philosophies into Buddhist philosophies that opened one of
the many
doors that will lead to a new form of Buddhism. This Buddhism would
later
spread to China and Japan. It is called Mahayana Buddhism. Resolving
the Differences, Acknowledging the Similarities Even
though the ancient Greek religion was clearly practiced alongside and
even
integrated into Buddhism, both religions came from different cultural
backgrounds and have different emphasis. As a result there are bound to
be some
differences in both religions. However
despite this there are also many similarities between Hellenism and
Buddhism.
This article will also address the similarities. This
portion of the article will attempt to point out the differences and
resolve
those differences. It will also acknowledge the similarities that exist
between
Hellenism and Buddhism. Resolving the
Differences:- 1.
Gods? I thought Buddhism espoused atheism!! Both
Mahayana and Theravada Buddhism in general is a non-theistic religion
which
makes it very different from atheism or theistic religion. Non-theism
means
that the Gods or supernatural beings are not central to the religion or
a
requirement to the religion. That
means that in Buddhism one can certainly believe in a God and still be
a
Buddhist. It also means that in Buddhism one can be uncertain of the
existence
of the Gods and still be a Buddhist. It also means that one can totally
reject
the existence of anything remotely supernatural and be a hard core
atheist and
still be a Buddhist. In
Buddhism our belief does not centre on a God. It centres on the human
condition. It centres on reality. Whether one believes that a God exist
or not
is up to the individual. The
Buddhist doctrine notably does not deny the existence of deities
either. There
are numerous sutras with stories of Sakka appearing or Devas appearing.
How one
view it can be either literal or metaphorical, with many Buddhist
viewing it as
metaphorical. The argument commonly given is that the ancient Indians
had a
tendency to state the presence of the Gods for what is natural or
psychological
phenomenon. For example if a lightning followed by a thunder were to
occur when
a sermon is given the ancient would attribute it to Indra and describe
the
phenomenon as Indra appearing. However there are Buddhists who take
description
of the Gods literally pointing out that the ancients actually had words
for
lightning and thunder and would use it if they think it mundane. However
unlike other major religions in the world Buddhism believe that even if
the
deities exist they are at the crux of it unable to help us end our
personal Dukkha, our personal state
of
unsatisfactoriliness, our state of suffering. That is because our
personal Dukkha at the root of it
lies with our
craving, and our craving is ultimately born from our own ignorance or
self
delusion. Since
we are already in Reality, Enlightenment is present at any time. If we
can at
this very moment wake up to Reality, which is precisely what the Buddha
is, a
man who has woken up to the Truth, then we will cease to become
ignorant and
deluded. The moment this happens our craving end and so will our
suffering. Different
schools give different explanations as to why we have so much trouble
becoming
Enlightened. The traditional Theravadin explanation is that owing to a
lot of
negative causes one gain many negative and wrong views. By applying the
Eightfold path, starting off with improving ones wisdom, then improving
ones
morality then mental discipline ( Panna,
Sila, Samadhi ) you will be able to become Enlightened. If
one has a wrong
view owing to poor wisdom then there is no point even trying to perfect
ones
conduct because conduct is extremely tied in with ones perception of
the world. The
Dhammapadha from the Canto of the Pairs sums this nicely. Mind precedes all mental states, Mind is their chief, They are all mind-wrought, If with an impure mind a person acts or speaks, Suffering follows him like a wheel that follows
the foot of the
ox. Mind precedes all mental states, Mind is their chief, They are all mind-wrought, If with a pure mind a person acts or speaks, Happiness follows him like his never departing
shadow. The
Mahayana school in general agrees with the above view though it is
generally
believed that sila, panna and samadhi need to be applied together. It
is generally
agreed that if a being can perceive the Truth directly they would
become
Enlightened. There is technically in Mahayana nothing that is stopping
any
individual achieving Enlightenment even at this very moment except self
imposed
impediments owing to our own wrong views. As the Zen philosophy goes,
the wise
reject what they conceive for what they see and observe. The fool
rejects what
he sees and observes in favour of what he conceives. As
the famous Zen question goes:- Student:-
Master, teach me the way to liberation. Master:-
Who binds you? Student:-
No one master. Master:-
Then why seek liberation? Given
that what binds a person from being Enlightened is actually found
within the
individual themselves, self imposed upon themselves and not by any
other
individuals or forces, neither the Buddha nor the Gods can make an
individual
to become Enlightened if those causes continue to exist. The Buddha can
certainly help guide a person towards Enlightenment but cannot grant a
person
Enlightenment. Only the individual can do that himself. Therefore
to put ones full faith and full devotion into the Gods or to the Buddha
with
the aim that they will make you Enlightened is in most schools of
Buddhism unreasonable. Note
that even in the devotional schools of Buddhism like the Pure Land
schools
salvation is the Buddha getting the individual to the Pure Land. The
mental
cultivation and wisdom is still very much for the individual to develop
on
their own in the Pure Land. In
Theravada Buddhism the Gods are said to be unable to help a person
become
Enlightened for a second reason. The Gods themselves though far wiser
and more
ethical than men are not themselves Enlightened and are thus unable to
help an
individual towards Enlightenment. They can guide an individual towards
wisdom
and certainly can easily recognize an Enlightened individual but are
themselves
according to Theravada not Enlightened. In
Mahayana Buddhism however Gods who are Bodhissatvas are able to help
beings to
become Enlightened by virtue they are beings who are already
Enlightened. The
only reason they are not Buddhas is that they gave up their
Enlightenment so
that they may help all beings towards Enlightenment. Note that once
again the
Bodhissatvas are unable to make a person Enlightened but they can
certainly
guide an individual towards Enlightenment. In
Buddhism however just because the deities are unable to make us
Enlightened
should not preclude one from honouring deity if one actually believes
in a
deity or has an experience that suggest the existence of deities. As
a side note many monks who are openly atheist still encourage people to
pray
and offer to the Buddha and to the Gods. The reason for this is that
they
believe that this is a meditative process. The act of praying and
lighting a candle
or lighting incense is a form of meditation. It focuses the mind as one
pray
and performs a ritualized action at the same time. The sense of peace
and calm
that follows from this meditative process is beneficial to both oneself
and to
others regardless of whether there truly is a deity a not. In
Buddhism if the deities have any role it is as protector of the
Buddhist and
the Buddhist faith so that they may engage in the path towards
Enlightenment
unimpeded and unharmed. The Aradhana which is known as invitation to
the Gods
is traditionally recited during very public sermons in more traditional
temples.
In it the Gods are welcomed to the sermon and the people then ask the
Gods to
please look kindly upon the mortals. Then the Gods are asked to please
protect
the Buddhist in the room from illnesses, cruel and unjust authority,
thieves,
villains, fire, flood, drought, famine, other natural tragedies, bad
spirits, uncivilized
beings, tragedies caused by people, ferocious animals, accidents and
misfortune. Theistic
and agnostic Buddhist therefore pray to the Gods for our safety, our
protection, our well being and the physical portion of our health. We
honor
them because they continue to watch over us and keep us safe so that we
may
live our life in peace and continue on our Buddhist practice. We also
believe
that they can guide us towards wisdom and towards doing good. However,
we do
not believe that they can grant us Enlightenment or end our ignorance
and
suffering or make us good because of sheer devotion to them. The
Buddhist religion being one that emerged from a primarily Vedic culture
that
was deeply theistic ended up adopting a few Vedic Gods as the
protectors of
Buddhism. The primary two Gods are Indra and Brahma.
In popular belief it is said that all deities
from the Trayastrimsa and Tusita heavens are protectors of Buddhism.
They are
however usually unnamed. As
Buddhism encountered more and more cultures across Asia its list of
guardian
deities increased. These deities tend to be culture specific or school
specific.
For example in Chinese Buddhism even though Sangharma ( Guan Gong ) is
considered a major guardian God of Buddhism, Tibetan Buddhism does not
even
realize that such a guardian god exist in Buddhism. On the other hand
Lopon
Rinpoche, a Tibetan Guru and Guardian Bodhissatva is totally unknown in
Chinese
Buddhism. Despite
this cross reverence is common. A Chinese Buddhist in a Tibetan
monastery will
still pay homage to Lopon Rinpoche as will a Tibetan monk in a Chinese
Buddhist
temple to Guan Gung. The
Greeks being a culture that adopted Buddhism also had Greek Gods that
were
associated as guardian Gods of Buddhism. This is perfectly acceptable
in
Buddhism. From a Hellenic viewpoint the Greek Gods can be guardian over
many
things, from guardian of cities to guardian of philosophies and for a
Greek God
to be a guardian of a philosophical and religious idea popular amongst
the
Greeks is not in contradiction to the general approach of the ancient
Greek
religion. 2.
Offerings? I thought Buddhist do not kill. I
presume that the above statement is due to the concept of animal
sacrifice
present in the ancient Greek religion. Let
us get one thing straight. Even though animal sacrifice exist in
ancient Greek
religion and certainly played a very important role in Greek polis
religion,
majority of offerings are what is known as bloodless offerings. They
consist of
libation, burning of incense, offering of grains or non meat based food
products. Animal
sacrifice is practiced less frequently in the overall ancient Greek
religion as
most people would popularly conceive. We think animal sacrifice as
common
because we focus on the public religion of large cities like Athens. We
forget
that for most part the Greek religion was actually based on home
practices or
in small villages and towns that also had their public cult. To perform
any
animal sacrifice is usually a large undertaking for the average Greek
families
or poorer and smaller villages. Most offerings in the ancient Greek
religion
would therefore have been bloodless. In
fact a lot of “animal sacrifices” in ancient Greek
family based religious
practices was in fact done at the same time when a family is going to
have a
feast or have a meal with meat. Ancient Greek diet for most of the
population
was fruit, grain, milk and vegetable based with meat only present once
in a
while. That is because to raise a cow or a few pigs required people to
sacrifice up either land in the case of a cow or food products in the
case of a
pig to raise them. As a result for most part having meat is not a daily
event.
As a result animal sacrifice is not a daily event either. When
something like a cow or a chicken is going to be slaughtered for meat
usually
the families will take the opportunity to then also devote the chicken
to a God
or a few Gods. However the actual amount of meat that goes to the God
is
minimal if at all. The ancient Greeks had a few beliefs about what the
Gods
partook in animal sacrifice. Some believed based upon the influence of
Hesiod’s
that they partook only in the bones and thus the bones are left out for
the
Gods, others believe that it is the smell of cooking meat that they
partook in
whilst others believe that the Gods would have a very small portion of
the
meat. Either way, animal sacrifice is usually a prelude to a feast,
with the
animal sacrificed being the feast itself. The
same goes for the major Greek polis sacrifices. After an animal is
sacrificed
they are usually cooked and then either the bones or a very tiny
portion of
meat ( one classical philosopher states that the actual amount of meat
Apollo
got offered from the sacrifice of a cow was a small, thin slice ) get
offered
to the God. The rest goes to the people participating in the ceremony
and a
feast ensues not long after. For many people probably the only time
they have
meat is during such festivities. So
looking at the issue from this viewpoint even though animal sacrifice
is part
of the ancient Greek religion, animal sacrifice for most part is
actually a
prelude to a feast in honour of the God. Animal sacrifice is not the
animal
sacrifice modern people think about. Animal sacrifice is no different
in many
respects to a modern BBQ party except it has a religious component at
the
start. In
fact by the Hellenistic era there are many notable philosophers, the
most
famous being Porphyrys who were against the concept of animal sacrifice
altogether and advocated for bloodless offerings only. One philosopher
during
the Hellenistic era sarcastically pointed out that the same God that is
pleased
by a hecatomb is also pleased by the burning of a single incense. Interestingly
enough the idea that it is the pious act offering that matters in
maintaining a
reciprocal relationship with the Gods and not the type or quality of
offering
already found root in the Classical era. The Oracle of Delphi when
famously
inquired which is the more pious, a very rich man who offered an ox for
the
festivity day or a poor farmer who everyday would offer a pinch of
barley, the
answer was the poor farmer who offered the barley. So
it seems that animal sacrifice is not a core part of the ancient
Hellenic
religion. What is a core part of the Hellenic religion is offering to
the Gods.
Performing bloodless offering exclusively does not make one break nomos arkhaios and the reciprocal
relationship with the Gods. What is important ultimately is that one
offers to
the God as part of the process of reciprocity which is the cornerstone
of
ancient Hellenic worship. Now
let us go to the Buddhist part of the equation. The Precepts ask that
all
Buddhists refrain from taking life unnecessarily and to treasure the
life of all
living things. This is because taking of life causes suffering to the
creature
that it is taken from. Though
majority of lay Buddhist are omnivores most do try their best to
increase their
vegetable, fruit and grain content and limit their meat consumption.
Meat
consumption is not per say forbidden to lay Buddhist and even to monks.
The
Buddha was aware that humans require the occasional small consumption
of meat or
animal based products like egg or milk in order to remain healthy. In a
more
scientific term, humans need B12 to survive. B12 can only be acquired
from
animal based products like meat, egg or milk, with the highest content
of B12
being meat. B12 can circulate within the human body for three months
before it
starts depleting itself out. For some reason the Buddha recognized this
phenomenon 2500 years back. Given
this he did not make it a rule as some Jain teachers of his days did
for his
followers to all be vegans. However he did advocate for the lay
Buddhists to
limit their intake of meat and to try to keep to a mostly vegetable,
grain,
fruit, and non meat based animal product diet like milk. This is both
for the
purpose of health and also for the purpose of sparing the life of
animals. For
the monks they are allowed to eat meat only if freely offered meat. In
fact the
Buddha’s last meal from Chunda is speculated to either be
some strange mushroom
or actually a style of cooking pork!! Now
offering to the living and breathing order of monks versus offerings to
the
Buddha, Bodhissatvas and the Guardian Gods are two entirely different
affairs.
Offerings to the monks are meant to fulfil the Buddhist reciprocal
obligation
to the Sangha. The Sangha provides guidance to the people and spiritual
solace
to the people. The people in turn provides food and sustenance for
members of
the Sangha. Both sides benefit from the offering. Offerings
to the Buddha, Bodhissatvas and Guardian Gods on the other hand is
different.
The Buddha, Bodhissatvas and Guardian Gods are considered an extension
of the
Sangha but they unlike the living Sangha do not need your food or
donations to
survive or run an organization. Offering done in this situation is
therefore
more as a mark of respect and a symbolic gesture of thanks and
gratefulness by
reciprocating a gift. However
the being who benefits from this symbolic gesture is not the Buddha,
Bodhissatva or Guardian Gods, it is the person who offers it that
benefits from
it. Even if none of the above beings exist the very act of offering is
in
itself a meditative process and can grant a person a sense of peace,
calm and
relief. This on its own has much psychological and physical benefit.
Focusing
on the symbolic meaning behind an act of offering can also provide a
sense of
peace, hope and relief. Lighting
of a
flame on a candle and watching the flame dance to life could represent
ignorance and darkness being dispelled by the light. Offering of flower
and
incense represents transiency of things beautiful and pleasant. A fruit
symbolizes the cycle of cause and effect. In
Buddhism however offering of meat or meat based product in rites to
either the
Buddha, Bodhisattvas or to the Guardian Gods is either strongly
discouraged to
being outrightly banned in many temples. The symbolism behind it is
negative,
the taking of life. The greater symbolism behind it is even more
negative,
perpetuation of suffering. Offering
of meat or meat based product is not a sign of gratefulness or thanks
because as
any Buddhist would realize the Buddha, Bodhisattvas and the Guardian
Gods abhor
the taking of life, to which the meat or meat product symbolizes. Needless
to say any form of animal sacrifice is totally out of the question and
utterly
unBuddhistic. However
as stated above in Hellenismos, bloodless offerings are a perfectly
acceptable
form of offering to the Gods and there is nothing wrong from a Hellenic
point
of view to do bloodless offerings exclusively. Offering to maintain the
reciprocal bond between mortal and Gods is what matters. Likewise from
a
Buddhist point of view the act of praying and offering is considered
psychologically beneficial regardless of whether one believe that the
deities
exist or not. So long as the offering is bloodless from a Buddhist
viewpoint the
offering is fine. From a Hellenic viewpoint the act of offering in
itself is
pious. Therefore
from a Greco-Buddhist standpoint bloodless offerings are not only
pious, it is
acceptable from both the Greek nomos
arkhaois viewpoint and the Buddhist viewpoint. In
fact if we move one step further, in Buddhism we believe that seeding a
good
cause will result in a good outcome as part of the process of cause and
effect.
From a Greco-Buddhist viewpoint therefore offering to the Theois is in
effect
sowing another line of good cause as one maintains a good reciprocal
relationship with the Gods. Therefore from a Greco-Buddhist practice
viewpoint
continuous offering and worship to the Theois is yet another method of
seeding
good cause which will eventually lay the foundations for good results. 3.
Can we still drink wine? One
of the biggest misunderstanding both within Buddhism and outside
Buddhism is
with regards to wine and alcohol. The Buddhist precept of
“Refrain from
intoxication” is often thought to be equated to “Do
not drink alcohol.” Yet
Buddhist get shocked when they see that in the Buddha Carita the Buddha
shared
a sip of wine with someone who offered him a small portion of wine. Refrain
from intoxication does not equal to not drinking alcohol entirely.
Refrain from
intoxication means if you’re to drink alcohol you should do
so with no
intention of getting intoxicated nor should you get intoxicated from
it. If you
like the taste of wine, to drink a tiny amount and not get drunk or
mind altered
from it is permissible in the Buddhist faith. The
injunction remember is against intoxication, not against alcohol. Interestingly
enough the ancient Greeks themselves even though they were tolerant
towards the
festival associated with drunken revelry like during the Dionysia
clearly does
not see getting intoxicated on a frequent basis as acceptable. The
popular
concept that the Greeks tolerated or even celebrated frequent and
recurrent
drunkardness is clearly untrue. The ancient Greeks in general had a far
higher
tolerance for drunkardness than the Buddhist but it does not mean that
the
ancient Greeks condoned recurrent drunkardness. Dionysius,
the God of Wine already clearly stated that only the first three
glasses of
alcohol goes to him, the subsequent glasses starts going to various
kakosdaemons like quarrel. So
Greco-Buddhist by all means can still drink wine. They just should
control
their intake, to savour the wonderful taste of the wine as opposed to
getting
hungover the next morning from the wine. 4.
I thought that Buddhism espoused monasticism
which is not really tolerated in the ancient Greek culture? How do we
reconcile
that? The
ancient Greek religion is clearly a religion of the community and thus
any
attempt to splinter the community apart or draw a subset of people from
the
community in the case of the Pythagorean monasticism and live in
communes
outside the flow of normal society is not well tolerated. Buddhist
monasticism and Pythagorean monasticism are two totally separate
entities. The
Buddhist monks clearly when they withdrew from the world stayed in the
monastery to meditate and to contemplate. Monks are however not
withdrawn from
society, they have to continuously engage with society and contribute
to
society. Herein
lies the difference between the Pythagorean monastics who ends up
creating
their own splinter community versus the Buddhist monks are very much
part of
the society they stay in and live in. The Buddhist monastery is
actually seen
as an extension of society and in fact the way the monasteries are run
is so
that they are an integral and reachable part of the local community.
Most
monasteries have purpose built buildings to be made into orphanages or
the
shelter for the homeless or those in need in society. The Buddhist
monasteries also
provided services directly to society that would otherwise be
unavailable in
their absence. Since
monks were trained to read and write and mostly had access to
literatures and
medical training the monasteries acted as the local school for the
community,
local library and also the local clinics. Monks
also provide the psychological support for the people. A monk cannot
spend all
day meditating by Vinaya ruling. He must spend some of his day doing
something
either for the monastery or for the society he lives in. Often this is
when the
monk listen to the problems of the people and try to find a solution.
At other
times if there are no problems to be found that can include sweeping
the
streets of the city to keep it clean!! So
in this sense the Buddhist religion is truly a religion of the
community and is
not in contradiction to the Hellenic view on society. Acknowledging the
Similarities:- 1.
Morality and Goodness is inherent in Man The ancient Greeks like the Buddhist believed
that morality and virtue is something that is inherent to humans.
Morality and
virtue is part of the individual’s personal development and
reflects very much
on one’s upbringing, education and personal fibre. Goodness
is also believed to
be something that is inherent in an individual. All beings by their
very
tendency have the potential to do Good, and in fact part of the
development of
the individual will be to nurture a person’s virtue and
morality which is a
reflection of this Good. 2.
Badness, Wickedness, Lack of Virtue but Not Sin The ancient Greeks like the Buddhist believe
that when a person commit something bad or something wicked it is
considered to
be due to a lack of virtue, wickedness or badness. It is however not
related
remotely to the Christian concept of sin. Such a concept is absent in both Buddhism and
ancient Greek thinking. We must first note what a Christian definition
of sin is. Sin is usually taken to mean doing something that is against
the
Good. This is the way the word sin was used in by the Neoplatonics and
was
clearly used again and again in Sallustius on the Gods and the World. Sin has a completely different connotation when
it comes to the Christians. Christians though they believe like the
Neoplatonics that sin is when one does something against the Good, sin
to them
is more going against God. Christians generally assume that the Christian
God being a Good God is the source for all Good. Therefore to go
against the
order of the God of the Christian would be synonymous to going against
the
Good. However here is where the problem starts. The
Christian God has track record for actions that would not usually be
considered
either virtuous or good. For example the same Christian God that is the
yardstick for all things good according to book of 2 Chronicles of the
Bible
helped Abijah slain 500,000 Israelites. It is therefore his will and
his desire
to kill 500,000 Israelite. Now suppose some mighty individual came forth
to
halt this slaughter, this person would technically be sinning from a
Christian
viewpoint as he went against God. Worse this person is technically
against the
Good because he went against the Christian God. Never mind that half a
million
people is dying, going against the Christian God is synonymous with
going
against the Good. Whereas from a Hellenic and Buddhist viewpoint
that individual would be the most virtuous man indeed.
This leads us to another similarity, a fixed
concept of Good, not an arbitrary concept of Good. 3.
Fixed Concept of Good, not Arbitary Good The Hellenic and Buddhist believed in a fixed
Good, even though what that Good maybe is interpreted differently from
philosopher to philosopher. However this Good is believed to manifest
itself in
the form of virtues, morality, ethics etc.. Hellenic philosophies that espouses that the
Gods are Good like the Neoplatonic belief had to reject the literal
interpretation of the myths popular among the uneducated because if the
Gods
are Good they therefore cannot do what the popular myths scandalously
say that
they do. Good is believed to manifest itself in the forms of various
virtues
and also an inability to manifest the disvirtues. If the myths are
taken
literally many Gods will have trouble being seen as Good. Other
philosophers
had a second solution to this problem by saying that the Gods love the
Good
which is why the virtuous and good individuals get blessed. The Gods
themselves
are not the Good but the Gods love the Good and praise the Good and
uphold
individuals who are virtuous. This is different from the Christians who
believe that God is Good regardless of what He may do. God can order
the death
of 500,000 individuals and even participate in it. If anyone tries to
stop God
woe be to the wicked, sinful man who tries to prevent the carnage and
massacre
for he is against God and thus against the Good. God can cause people
to lie
and to twist their tongues and still be good. God can cause brothers to
go
against brothers and still be Good. God can order his angels to slay
the
newborn and still be Good. In fact God promises that at the end of days
he will
unleash more horrors, and woe to the peaceful, kind individual who
happens to
be around at the time. If that person tries to lessen the horrors
unleashed by
God that individual will be sinful for he or she is going against God
thus
against the Good This is the difference between the fixed Good
versus and the arbitrary Good. Our concept of Good does not change
based upon
the whim of a divinity. 4.
Personal development and excellence as virtues Hellenism and Buddhism both share the common
belief
that personal development and excellence in what one does in life as
virtues.
For a person to develop critical thinking, rational thought, logics,
internalized morality and virtue, a strong personal fortitude,
leadership
skills, debating skills, organizational skills, personal awareness and
spiritual understanding which makes a person a better individual is
considered
very important in both Hellenism and Buddhism. Both pour in a great
deal of
effort in developing these virtues in the individual which is believed
to be a
product of education and upbringing. These are not traits considered virtues in many
cultures and traits like critical thinking and debating skills were
probably
not traits treasured during Middle Age Europe for example. In many
countries up
till today having too strong a personal fortitude is considered a
disvirtue. In
many very religious countries having too much personal awareness and
far too
strong a personal spiritual fortitude is still considered a disvirtue. Excellence is also considered to be a virtue in
Hellenism and Buddhism. Excellence in ones job, excellence in ones
skills,
excellence in ones life, excellence is praise and is seen as a virtue. Whilst many other cultures delights in the
excellence of individuals very few go out to classify it as a virtue
like the
Buddhist and Hellenist did. 5.
Individual and Society as Coexistant and
Reciprocal Hellenism and Buddhism are unique in that both
that place equal emphasis on both the individual and on society.
Hellenism
emphasizes a lot on an individual’s personal development but
also on the
individual’s duty to society and also the society’s
duty back to the
individual. Hellenism and Buddhism place a lot of onus on
parents, teachers, elders, and society in general to develop an
individual. At the same time both view that every
individual
needs to contribute back and be a functional member of the society they
belong
to. Individuals at the very least are supposed to participate in the
local
economy and local civic duties whenever possible and to be good
citizens or
good community members. They are supposed to ensure local security by
first
making sure that they do not do things that might harm local security.
There is
also a hope that the individual will ultimately do something that will
better
their society they are in. In Buddhism interestingly enough a monk is
considered an ultimate expression of contribution back to the society
as a monk
takes on the duty to solve the most difficult problem society has,
emotions and
personal issues!!! These are for the monks to resolve. Finally, both Hellenism and Buddhism believe
that society has a duty towards the individual. The duty can come in
the form
of justice. The duty can come in the form of security. The duty can
come in the
form of education. It may surprise many people but most cultures
only emphasizes the duty of an individual to society, but not the other
way
round. 6.
Nothing to Excess, The Middle Way An interesting aspect of Hellenism and Buddhism
is their emphasis on nothing to excess or the Buddhist Middle Way.
Nothing to
excess is one of the most important Maxim to Hellenism as is the Middle
Way to
Buddhism. All the Delphic Maxims are to be interpreted in the light of
Nothing
to Excess. All Buddhist precepts and practices are to be interpreted
also in
light of the Middle Way. For example Help Your Friends, one of the
maxims
even though is good if done to excess can destroy an individual to the
point
the person who is trying to help is friends would soon require
financial or
psychological help himself. The Middle Way likewise tells individuals to be
neither too slack or too stringent on their practices. The Middle Way
especially applies to some aspect of Buddhist virtues like,
“Be sparing in your
use of resources”. If someone applied this to the extreme
they would become a
miser which is harmful to all. Only by applying the Middle Way does a
person
becomes a person who saves but still spends appropriately. Note the concept of nothing to excess is once
again not present in every culture or religion. Some cultures for
example
encourage deep religious fervor. What
was the Belief and Practices of the Ancient Greco-Buddhist? With
exception to the Milinda Panha which was probably composed during the
end of
the Indo-Greek period there is no literary guide to help us discern
exactly
what the Greco-Buddhist believed. However
based upon the nuministic evidence from coins and sculptures of the era
and
from the writings of the Milinda Panha we can say safely that they like
all
Buddhist in the world they adhered to the core tenets of the Buddhist
faith
that unites both Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism. They
therefore likely accepted the general idea of the Four Noble Truths,
the Eight
Fold Path, the Three States of Existence, the philosophy of dependent
origination, cause and effect, and the Middle Way ( these are the
oldest and
core Buddhist concepts that were present even during the 2nd
Buddhist Council). They
likely adhered in so far as they are able to the Five Precepts, namely
to
refrain from taking life, to refrain from stealing, to refrain from
improper
sexual behaviour, to refrain from deceiving, and to refrain from a
state of
intoxication. They also like took refuge in the Triple Gem, namely the
Buddha,
the Dharma and the Sangha. The
Greco-Buddhist very much like modern Theravadin and all pre-Mahayana
Buddhist
believe that the Buddha though a great philosopher, found the way to
end dukkha and was free from
passion he was
still only a man. When he reached Mahaparanirvana
the Buddha expired from the world and what we
have left to guide us is the Darma. However
there is evidence that they likely went one step further. They probably
also saw
the Buddha as a Hero, a concept unknown to Vedic Indians but present
among the
Greeks. The evidence that they saw the Buddha as more than just a mere
mortal
but as something quasi divine comes from the dedication of Meridarch
Theodorus
which calls the Buddha “Bhagavat”, meaning Lord but
also implying a certain
degree of divinity. This is in fact the first known use of the word
Bhagavat
with the Buddha. In standard Buddhist literature both Theravadin and
Mahayana
it will take another century or two before it emerges. It
is in fact more likely that the Indo-Greeks elevated the status of the
Buddha
to a Hero than any other cultural subgroups who were Buddhist at the
time. The
Greeks of the Hellenic era were generous in dispensing the status of
Hero, most
notably to their kings posthumously but also to various classical
philosophers like
Socrates and even to Homer. When a person gets given a Hero status they
are
usually given their due in terms of worship. The
elevation of the status of the Buddha from man to a Hero or
quasi-divinity
likely had a hand in the emergence of concepts like Celestials Buddha
and
Dhyani Buddhas present in Mahayana but not in Theravada. We
also know that the Greco-Buddhist still honoured the Greek Gods.
However they
were likely to have modified their rituals to suit the Buddhist faith.
Offering
which is a central part of worship of the ancient Hellenics continued
but this
was most likely bloodless. Whilst
there is no direct evidence that all Greco-Buddhist offerings went
bloodless we
know that this is the usual trend in all other countries Buddhism
enters. In
Vedic India cities where Buddhist were the majority only performed
bloodless
offerings to the Gods, a total detraction from the Vedic tradition of
the
day. In China the
Buddhist population
continued to honour the Chinese Gods but performed exclusively
bloodless
offerings to the Chinese Gods associated with Buddhism.
In Thailand we know that the spirit worship
went from one where animal sacrifice was practiced to one where only
rice,
flower and grains were given. There is no reason to believe that the
Greeks who
were Buddhist would have buckled the trend. The
ancient Greeks also had a tendency to syncretise a local deity with
their Greek
deity wherever they went. This is based upon the belief that the Greek
Gods are
known the world over except under a different guise, name and cult in
different
places to different cultures. When a local deity has been associated
with a
Greek deity a cult that celebrates the local guise of the Greek deity
would
then be established. In Babylon for example a cult for Aphrodite Ishtar
was
established ( though the Greeks had long held the belief that Ishtar
and
Aphrodite were one and the same down from the time of Herodotus ) while
in Ai
Khanoum we know that the worship of Artemis Anahita, Anahita being the
local
Goddess of the waterway was established. The
Greco-Buddhist applied the same principal to the Buddhist deities. We
know that
they syncretised two Vedic Buddhist deities, namely Vajrapani and
Hariti with
two Greek deities that were popular in the Indo-Greek period, namely
Herakles
and Tykhe. This resulted in the syncretic deity Herakles Vajrapani and
Tykhe
Hariti. Other
deities were also likely associated with Buddhism. We know that Zeus
was
depicted with a Buddhist gesture on the coins of many Indo-Greek kings.
Usually
when a deity is depicted with this gesture he is usually a Buddhist
guardian
deity. Given that Zeus and Indra has been equated early on in the
history of
the Greeks in India and given that Indra was seen as a Buddhist
Guardian God it
is very likely that a syncretic Zeus-Indra was seen as a Buddhist
Guardian God
by the Greeks. Our support for this come from our only known depiction
of Zeus
in Greco-Buddhist art outside the coins. This shows a Zeus with the
headgear of
Indra watching the Buddha. Boreas
is another God that frequently appeared in Greco-Buddhist murals and is
also
one of the few Gods whose shawl iconography persist in all other later
depiction of Buddhist wind Gods. Boreas is frequently depicted in
Greco-Buddhist art as watching over the Buddha. Athena surprisingly is
another
Goddess that frequently appears within a Buddhist context, mostly in
the
coinage of Kings. In the coins of Menander II and in some coins of
Menander I
she is depicted performing the Buddhist mudra which indicates that she
is once
again seen as a Buddhist Guardian deity. The
Greco-Buddhist being Greeks were also likely to be students of the
various
Hellenic philosophies like Epicureanism, Stoicism, Scepticism etc..
There is a
possibility that they integrated these philosophies into their Buddhist
belief.
In fact modern day historians suggest there is a good chance that it is
this
integration of various Greek philosophies into Buddhism was another
contributing factor to the rise of Mahayana Buddhism, though this is
another issue
entirely with some historians favouring this while others rejecting
this. The
Very Rough Guide to Reconstructing Hellenic Buddhism Foreword:- This
is a general guide only and by no means should ever regarded as
authoritative.
This is a guide only. It is written only from the perspective of the
author and
the understanding of the author on the Greco-Buddhist practice. This
guide is
meant to help in practice but is only a guide. Please
also keep in mind that Reconstructionism is not a re-enactment. It is
about
adapting the wisdom, philosophy and spirituality of the past into
modern
lifestyle. Reconstructionism is not about reading 100 books or finding
a
particular day to re-enact. Greco-Buddhism is a form of Hellenism which
adapts
Buddhism into itself, or a form of Buddhism that embraces the Hellenic
culture. Remember
the words of the Buddha which goes:- “He
who reads the sutra much but does not practice teachings therein is
like a
cowherd who only counts the cows of others. He does not partake in the
Holy
Life.” Dhammapadha. First
and foremost I assume that you are already a practicing Buddhist and
you regard
adhering to the Precepts, Taking Refuge in the Buddha, Dharma and
Sangha (
Sangha here meaning you will support the various Sangha be they
Theravadin,
Mahayana and Vajrayana ) and
understanding and applying the Four Noble Truths, the Eight Fold Path,
the
Three Marks of Existance, Dependent Origination, Karma ( Cause and
Effect ) and
the Middle Way as what is necessary to becoming a Buddhist. You like
all
Buddhists seek to end ignorance because you know through ignorance
craving is
born and through craving dukkha, roughly translated as suffering. You
like all Buddhist realize that Enlightenment can be now as
Enlightenment is the
ability to see and realize Truth and Reality, which is all around us
and within
us. What holds us back is the human condition. As
a side note, regardless if you are a Mahayana, Theravadin or Vajrayana
Buddhist
or adhere to the various Abhidhamma philosophies this guide can still
be used.
I write this guide in a non sectarian way and keep things to the core
principles that all Buddhist agrees. This is mean to keep the guide
universal
to all Buddhists. You may modify some ideas here based upon your
specific view
of the Buddha and the teachings of the Buddha. For example if you
believe in
the Dhyani Buddhas and the Celestial Bodhissatvas and Buddhas in
keeping with
the philosophy of nirvana with remainder then it is likely you will not
see the
Buddha as a mere Hero but as something greater than a Theoi. Buddhism
in terms of philosophy and form has expanded since 100BCE and all
modern
Buddhist and that includes anyone who practices Greco-Buddhism should
learn of
those. Reconstructionism is not about living in the past.
Reconstructionism is
adapting the wisdom and culture of the past to modernity. (As
a disclaimer, my Buddhist tradition is that of Mahayana, with my
teachings
coming from the Tiendai school and the Ch’an school. My
inherent belief on top
of the core Buddhist teachings is that the Buddha Nature is inherent in
all
beings, ( Compassion and Love ) is essential towards Bodhicitta and in
the
concept of Sunyata. From a Hellenic viewpoint I am a Neoplatonic
Hellenic with
a Stoicist leaning. ) This
guide also assumes that you are either a follower of Hellenismos or are
interested in the Hellenic religion and culture and wants to honor the
Theoi.
However you want to keep it consistent with the Buddhist context and
want to
make sure that you only honour Hellenic deities known to be Guardians
of
Buddhism and not some deity that is utterly averse to Buddhism. Reconstructing Greco-Buddhism/Hellenic
Buddhism:- The Human Condition that pervades humans
in 2008AD is exactly the same Human Conditions that afflicts humans in
150BCE.
Even though our physical problems have changed, the cause that give
rise to so
many things that causes Dukkha in
humans remain the same. Dukkha is often translated
to the word suffering yet this meaning is not exactly what the Buddha
had in
mind. Dukkha in fact translates to
unsatisfactorily state of affairs. It is not necessarily suffering, it
is not
necessarily happiness. It is akin to a wheel that is out of kilter.
Instead of
spinning smoothly it is spinning with a wobble. That is in fact the
meaning of Dukkha. Dukkha is the end result of
two other causes. Dukkha is born
from
craving. Craving to be near or having more of something one desire.
Craving to
be away or have none of what one does not desire. Craving for
existence.
Craving for non existence. If one does not get or has not fulfilled
what one craves for then personal suffering follows. Suffering can also
be
inflicted upon others as one strikes out to reach for what one craves
for. Most
human actions, including psychotic actions are all done because an
individual
is reacting to some form of craving, however transient it may be. Now what is the cause for craving?
Craving is born from ignorance of reality, ignorance of the situation,
ignorance of cause and effect, ignorance of dependent origination, and
deluding
oneself about reality. Now if this sounds preposterous think on
this. Most of us in our childhood really love sweets. Our parents in
fact
learnt that to control our behaviour they can use sweets both as
punishment and
rewards. At the first sight of sweets you can have children practically
eating
a tenth of their body mass in terms of sweets over an hour. Yet as adults we no longer behave as
such. Most sane adults do not guzzle down one kilogram of sweets in one
standing nor can we be so easily tempted by sweets. If there is a
packet of
sweets in our cabinet we do not look upon at every few minutes with the
aim of
having one. Why? Is it because sweet now taste bitter to
us? I think not. Most of us still find sweet tasty and delicious. Is it
because
we dislike sweets? I think we will be hard pressed to find a person who
genuinely disliked sweets. The reason we no longer crave sweets in
the same way as a child is because of our deeper understanding of
reality. We
know that when we take sweets as regularly as a child would ideally
want to we
fill up our body with a lot of unnecessary sugar. We subject our teeth
to
decay. We make ourselves more prone to diabetes. We make ourselves more
prone
to obesity. Unlike children as well we know of
“dependent origination”. Children inherently
believe that they can “get away”
from rotten tooth from eating sweets. As adults we know that if we eat
a packet
of sweets daily we cannot ultimately get away from the ultimate
consequence of
obesity and diabetes. If a cause has been sown a consequence must arise. This is why we no longer crave. We no
longer crave not because the sweet is any less tasty. We no longer
crave
because we have a deeper understanding of reality and we also know
cause and
consequence. And thus because of this we do not
suffer dukkha originating from
sweets. You can take away the two sweets from my table at work or put
two
sweets on my table. It neither overjoys me to see to sweets on my
table, nor
does not make me sad to see no sweets on the table. Dukkha
has been extinguished in this respect. This shows that Dukkha
can indeed be extinguished. Dukkha
finds its root in craving and craving finds its origination in
ignorance and
delusion of reality Buddhist therefore seek to end ignorance by seeking
to wake
up to Reality. By perceiving things as they really are, and not as we
conceive
of them we become Enlightened and thus ending Dukkha. Buddhist
thus strive to follow the Eightfold
path, by cultivating panna ( Wisdom ) which encompasses right view and
right
intention, by cultivating sila ( Morality ) which encompasses right
speech,
right action and right livelihood and by cultivating Samadhi ( Mental
Discipline ) right effort, right mindfulness and right concentration. We also seek to ensure that we in our
life do not seed more cause for Dukkha
both for ourselves and for others. Therefore we practice the precepts
in our
daily life. The precepts are not a series of “Do
nots”. Rather they are a guide
to tell us what we should in general not do. The Precepts are not hard and fast rules
however. The precept that tells us to refrain from taking life should
not stop
a Buddhist shooting a tiger that is going on a rampage in a village and
eating
up people. Letting a tiger eat up people and causing rampage unhindered
is a
cause for more suffering. To take down the tiger in the event that
restraining,
sedating or chasing away the tiger is impossible is the only right
action to
prevent more suffering and harm to other people. Likewise the precept of not taking what
is not given does not mean that during a major disaster where all food,
power
and water supply are cut off for days you hold the high horse and make
yourself
and your family starve just because you refuse to take fruits from the
apple
tree in the park, saying that it is council apple. The precepts have to
be
taken in context. Thus the Precepts are as follow:- 1.
I refrain
from taking life 2.
I refrain
from taking what is not given 3.
I refrain
from sexual misconduct 4.
I refrain
from deceiving/false speech 5.
I refrain
from being intoxicated Every Buddhist should also take refuge
in the Triple Gem. The Triple Gem is the Buddha, the teachings of
Buddha known
as the Dharma and the Sangha, the order of monks. Every Buddhist accept
that
the Buddha is our primary teacher and his teaching which guides us is
found
with the Dharma. The Sangha are the extension of the brotherhood and
sisterhood
first established by the Buddha two and a half millenias ago to help
support
fellow Buddhist in need. Now for a Greco-Buddhist the issue is
how to view the Buddha? Different schools of Buddhism have diverse
views on how to perceive the Buddha. It is universally agreed that the
Buddha
is Enlightened and that he was free from Dukkha and that he taught us
the way
to end Dukkha. It is also agreed that while he was walking and was
alive as
Siddhartha Gautama he was a man who is awake to Reality. It is what happened to him after his
Mahaparanirvana that is the cause of the differing views between the
schools.
Whether the Buddha is still active in the world, whether there is a
whole
cohort of Celestial Buddhas out there or whether the Buddha is now the
Buddha
force etc.. differs from school to school. I will however discuss how
the
ancient Greeks in India likely saw the Buddha. Like all early Buddhist they likely saw
the Buddha as a very wise philosopher and person who is free from dukkha. The initial Greeks who became
Buddhist very much like their Indian counterpart probably saw the
Buddha upon
his Mahaparanirvana has no longer any influence on this world barring
through
the Buddha Dharma. This
is known as
Nirvana without remainder. Upon Nirvana the Buddha is no more. This is
by the
way is still the official view of Theravada. This view changed sometime during the rule
of the Indo-Greek kingdoms that by the early first century BCE the
Buddha is
described as someone who is divine and has some influence on the world.
This is
based upon the relic vase of Meridarch Theodosus. The relic vase
constituted an
offering and the verse was written in a prayer format. This means that
on top
of the Buddha being divine he is now worshiped as well. This is a clear
departure from the previous trends. We
know this belief and view later gained
ground in the Buddhist world as in Mahayana Buddhism, barring
Ch’an, the Buddha
is seen as remaining active in this world and has become a Celestial
Buddha.
The Buddha in some schools of Mahayana Buddhism is effectively
worshiped the in
same way one would worship a deity and in some schools have effectively
become
deities. This is known as Nirvana with Remainder. We also know that among lay Theravadins
Buddha worship is very popular and indeed once again is viewed as
something
like a God among the lay Theravadin. This view is not shared by the
monks, not
officially anyway. In Theravada the Buddha had Nirvana with Remainder
whilst he
was alive but upon Mahaparanirvana entered Nirvana without Remainder, a
permanent and final state of affair. The only explanation for this change
from human to divinity assuming that this change did not happen in
India before
this ( of which we have no evidence, our earliest evidence of bhakti of
the
Buddha in India is over a century after Meridarch Theodorus vase ) is
that the
Greeks in India saw the Buddha as a Hero. This probably explains why so many
relics of the Buddha got enshrined and why the Buddhist scrolls say a
lot of
Buddhist relics under the Sunga got transferred to Ghandarha and
Western Punjab
which is the seat of the Indo-Greek rule. Heroes to the ancient Greeks are
individuals who has done something amazing in life or has lived an
overall
outstanding life or has made a significant contribution to society or
died in
an amazing way that when they die they became divine. These outstanding
individuals received public worship usually around areas that are
believed to
house their body or relics associated with them. They are believed to
be able
to influence and protect their worshipers. Even though they were
generally
believed to only be able to influence a limited area some forms of Hero
worship
like that of Alexander the Great and Achilles indicates that the rule
was
neither hard nor fast. In Classical Era for example Socrates
was clearly revered as a Hero as was individuals such as Pindar. The
Buddha it
seemed received the same honours and was worshiped as a Hero. This
could
explain why so much effort was made to recover the relics of the
Buddha. The
Indo-Greek stupas served not only as a traditional Buddhist shrine, it
also
served as a heroon or the sanctuary
to a Hero, the Hero being the Buddha. For a modern day Greco-Buddhist
reconstructionist to see the Buddha as a Hero is in fact a perfectly
legitimate
view. It is consistent with the core Buddhist belief that the Buddha
was only a
man and it is consistent with the Hellenic belief that great people
upon death
can become Divine. This in fact is consistent as well with the Mahayana
teaching of Nirvana with Remainder. Thus to look upon the Buddha as a hero
and to honour him as such from a Greco-Buddhist point of view is
legitimate. This now leads us to the Hellenic part
of the Greco-Buddhist religion. The Buddhist Greeks would have no
problem
integrating their native ethical system and virtue systems into
Buddhism. The Buddhist Greeks were however still
Greeks and definitely wanted to honour and venerate the Gods of Greece.
The
Greeks likely saw from a Buddhist/Greek context that honouring the Gods
is a
form of sowing good cause as offering to the Gods secured a reciprocal
relationship with the Gods. Interestingly enough the same view is taken
by
modern day theistic Japanese Buddhist and Chinese Buddhist who honours
the
Gods. Now whether the Greco-Buddhist continued
to honour all the Greek Gods no one knows. Among theistic Chinese and
Japanese
Buddhist there are individuals who honour exclusively the Chinese
Buddhist
deities or Japanese Buddhist deities. There are also many others still
who
honours their indigenous deities regardless of whether they are
associated with
Buddhism or not. The commonest reason given by theistic
Buddhist who does not honour non-Buddhist Gods is, who knows if those
Gods are
hostile to Buddhism. Given the high prevalence of this concern amongst
a large
portion of modern theistic Buddhist one can safely presume this concern
must be
systemic throughout the ages. Part of the reason some local deities get
associated as Buddhist Guardian deities relatively quickly wherever
Buddhism
spread in Asia may be due to this concern. Now here is my advice. For those who are
now are now practicing Hellenismos I would strongly recommend that you
continue
to venerate of the entire pantheon. There is no evidence to suggest
that the
Greco-Buddhist only venerated the Greek Gods associated with Buddhism.
Nor are
there any injunctions within the Buddhist religion to not venerate
deity. If we
take the general assumption of the Buddhist doctrine all Gods are
pro-Buddhism.
When the Indo-Greeks went to war with the Sacea or against Eucratides
it is
very likely that they would still pray and honour Ares, a very
non-Buddhist God
but very Hellenic God For parallel assessment of practices many
modern Buddhist from China and Japan still honour their entire cultural
pantheon with little regards as to whether they are Buddhist Gods or
non-Buddhist Gods. A lot of theistic Chinese Buddhist would often tell
you that
just because a God has not yet been associated is more a reflection of
human
ineptitude than the God not being a guardian of Buddhism. I will now focus on Greek deities that
we know are strongly associated with Buddhism and were likely seen as
guardian
deities of Buddhism. The first deity I will speak of is
Herakles. Herakles was strongly syncretized with Vajrapani to the point
Vajrapani was depicted exclusively as Herakles by the Greco-Buddhist
and this
tradition continued late into the Kushan period. His association with
Vajrapani
was at the time Vajrapani was still seen by most Buddhist as a Yaksha
or a Deva
and a protector of the Buddha. He was not yet seen as the Bodhissatva
who
manifested the full power and strengths of the Buddhas. However his
fusion with
Herakles likely spurred his change from a powerful Yaksha to the
Bodhissatva
that manifested the full strength of the Buddhas. Vajrapani as Herakles is alluded to in the
Samyaktuvastu, first composed in the 2nd century
CE. In the
Samyaktuvastu the demoness Hariti went to the palace of Indra on Mount
Meru but
got pushed back by the very mighty god who guarded the gate to the
palace of
the God Indra. This god is described as mighty enough to push back all
of
Hariti’s five hundred children. This God is Vajrapani. Now this is an interesting piece as
Vajrapani was never associated in Buddhism to be guarding the gates of
Indra’s
palace. In fact until he became a Bodhissatva he was never associated
with
Heaven. The Samyaktuvastu is talking about Vajrapani the Yaksha in the
Heavens. To make things more peculiar many
earlier Indian Buddhists actually thought Vajrapani to be the same as
Indra.
Buddhist Indian iconography barely differentiates the two. Yet the
composer of
the Samyaktuvastu obviously thought that Indra and Vajrapani were two
separate
deities. This peculiarity can only be resolved if
we acknowledge that Herakles, whose image is used to depict Vajrapani
by the
Indo-Greeks actually guarded the gate to Olympus in popular Greek
belief, which
is the home to Zeus. The author of the Mahayana sutra the Samyaktuvastu
is over
two centuries removed from the Indo-Greeks yet retains memories of the
syncretic deity Herakles Vajrapani. The second deity I will speak of is Tykhe
who was strongly syncretized with Hariti. All the Tykhes with a
cornupcia in
Greco-Buddhist art is meant to represent Hariti. Tykhe Hariti is
frequently
associated with the Buddha as his guardian but also representing the
transformation of wickedness to compassion and good. In the Indo-Greek context on the coins
of various Kings we have depictions of Tykhe with a Buddhist mudra.
Here we
have a clear association of Tykhe with Buddhism but not as Hariti. This
further
seals Tykhe’s role as guardian of Buddhism to the Indo-Greeks. Hariti in the Buddhist sutras is usually
associated with protection of children specifically small children.
This remains
true wherever her modern religion remains practiced. Her modern
religion still
focuses a lot on the welfare and protection of small children. However oddly enough in actual religious
practice like in Nepal where she is still worshiped as Hariti or in
Japan where
she is worshiped as Kishimongen she is also popularly seen and
worshiped as
well as protector of the town and also as a bringer of good fortune (
in Nepal
she is also believed to heal smallpox ). Haritis role as protector of towns and
cities were likely present in her pre-Buddhist form as a mother
Goddess.
Interestingly enough this is theorized to be reason why she was
syncretized
with Tykhe in the first place. Tykhe is the Goddess who is supposed to
guide
the fate of town and cities and during the Hellenistic era Tykhe was
often
worshiped as the protector of cities and towns. Given the two very
similar role
of these Goddesses Tykhe-Hariti got syncretised. Which likely explain why Hariti is
popularly worshiped as a bringer of good fortune till today, not in
terms of
money but in terms of luck. The people still remember a time when she
was Tykhe-Hariti
and clearly the iconography indicates that the Greco-Buddhist
associated her
strongly with Tykhe. Hariti through her association with Tykhe also
became the
luck bringer and lady of fortunes. The third deity I will discuss is Zeus
Indra. Zeus-Indra should not be a surprising syncretism. Zeus has long
been
associated with Indra even during Alexander’s invasion of
India. Indra is one
of the earliest Guardian God of Buddhism and practically every culture
that
adopts Buddhism syncretises one of their local deity with the Buddhist
Indra.
The coins of the Greco-Buddhist king clearly shows Zeus performing a
Buddhist
mudra of blessing indicating that he is considered a Guardian God of
the
Buddhist faith. In the Hellenized mural of the Great Departure a Zeus
with
Indra’s hairdress is found, further indicating that the two
deities were
syncretised. The wind God Boreas was definitely
associated with Buddhism and is likely a guardian deity of Buddhism. He
appears
on many Greco-Buddhist art often in context with the Buddha. There is
no
scriptural evidence or later sutra that attempts to explain why Boreas
is so
closely associated with Buddhism. Interestingly enough the various wind
Gods
associated strongly with Buddhism in Asia all maintains the shawl of
Boreas.
Boreas in classical Greek art was frequently depicted either with a
pair of
wings or a shawl. In India Boreas was most frequently depicted with a
shawl.
This shawl later became the iconography for every Buddhist wind God
down to
Fujin in Japan who though an old Shinto deity was associated strongly
with
Buddhism. The most unexpected deity to be
associated with Buddhism is Athena. She was clearly the deity favoured
by the
very Buddhist Menander II and also Menander I who was the convert to
Buddhism
and is depicted on the coins as making a Buddhist mudra gesture. Though
no
actual religious iconography of her survive the various coins from
various
kings depicting her in mudra indicates that she was associated with
Buddhism. This is
interesting as Athena
is the only Greek deity to have never been syncretised with any Indian
or
Bactrian deity but oddly enough to be associated as a guardian of the
Buddhist
teachings. A Goddess depicted in the form of Athena was later worshiped
by the
Kushans as a deity associated with Buddhism as well. This was after
they
conquered the Indo-Greeks. I will not mention other deities here as
I have little numistic or literary evidence of their association as
guardian
Gods of Buddhism. Now if you are a Buddhist interested in
Hellenism but are fearful that you may be worshiping Gods who are not
Buddhist
the above five Gods were definitely regarded by the Greeks as Guardian
Gods of
Buddhism. Now from a Hellenistic viewpoint I would
recommend that you start off any offering ritual to the Guardian Gods
of
Buddhism with a candle or a flame to Hestia. In fact the central flame
to which
all other flames are lit and all incense are burnt which forms the
start and
end of most Mahayana devotional ritual should be the flame that is
devoted to Hestia.
Though there is no nuministic evidence that Hestia was popularly
worshiped by
the Indo-Greeks there is also little nuministic evidence that Hestia
had
popular worship either in Greece. Yet Hestia as we know from historical
and literary sources of the time was in fact one of the most popularly
worshiped Goddesses. She was rarely depicted, barely had any myths
associated
with her yet she is in public rites and in family practice the Goddess
to
receive the first of offerings in any religious rites. Now if you fear that Hestia may not be a
Buddhist Goddess let me tell you there is probably no Greek Goddess
more
Buddhist than Hestia. Hestia is considered by the Greeks to be
a merciful and kind Goddess who watches over the home, family and city.
Hestia
is the selfless Goddess in Greek myth who stepped down from her
position as an
Olympian so that she can be close to men in their home. She is the
protector of
the supplicants and the weak and no one is allowed to hurt people on
either the
public or private hearth. Hestia is also a chaste Goddess and is
unaffected by
lust or passion. She despises conflict and stays far from it. Now with regards to offering most
Buddhist knows that the usual offering given to both the Buddha and the
Buddhist guardian gods tends to be either 1.
a burning candle, representing both the dispelling
of ignorance by the
light of wisdom but also self sacrifice of the individual to light the
way 2.
Flower to represent the transiency of beauty 3. Incense to represent
the
transiency of fragrance 4. Fruit, to represent cause and effect 5.
Water to
represent purity. Though other offerings can be given, the
offering has to be bloodless. Offering should not contain meat or any
meat
product or result in the killing of any living creature. This is to respect the sanctity of life.
Hellenics who wants to embrace Buddhism should know precious all life
is seen
in Buddhism. Many devout theistic Chinese Buddhist who worships many
non-Buddhist Chinese Gods would not offer any meat to the Gods and
would not
participate in any public rites that involves killing of a creature or
meat
offering. I hope this essay proves itself helpful
for anyone who is interested in practicing Greco-Buddhism. May all be well and happy. May be
blessing of the Theois be upon all. . |