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Theravada
Buddhism
Theravada
(pronounced — more or less — "terra-VAH-dah"), the "Doctrine of
the Elders," is the school of Buddhism that draws its scriptural
inspiration from the Tipitaka, or Pali canon, which scholars
generally agree contains the earliest surviving record of the
Buddha's teachings. For many centuries, Theravada has been the
predominant religion of continental Southeast Asia (Thailand,
Myanmar/Burma, Cambodia, and Laos) and Sri Lanka. Today Theravada
Buddhists number well over 100 million worldwide. In recent
decades Theravada has begun to take root in the West.

Many Buddhisms, One Dhamma-vinaya
The Buddha — the "Awakened One" — called the religion he founded
Dhamma-vinaya — "the doctrine and discipline." To provide a
social structure supportive of the practice of Dhamma-vinaya (or
Dhamma for short [Sanskrit: Dharma]), and to preserve these
teachings for posterity, the Buddha established the order of
bhikkhus (monks) and bhikkhunis (nuns)— the Sangha — which
continues to this day to pass his teachings on to subsequent
generations of laypeople and monastics, alike.
As the Dhamma continued its spread across India after the
Buddha's passing, differing interpretations of the original
teachings arose, which led to schisms within the Sangha and the
emergence of as many as eighteen distinct sects of Buddhism.3 One
of these schools eventually gave rise to a reform movement that
called itself Mahayana (the "Greater Vehicle")4 and that referred
to the other schools disparagingly as Hinayana (the "Lesser
Vehicle"). What we call Theravada today is the sole survivor of
those early non-Mahayana schools.5 To avoid the pejorative tone
implied by the terms Hinayana and Mahayana, it is common today to
use more neutral language to distinguish between these two main
branches of Buddhism. Because Theravada historically dominated
southern Asia, it is sometimes called "Southern" Buddhism, while
Mahayana, which migrated northwards from India into China, Tibet,
Japan, and Korea, is known as "Northern" Buddhism.6
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Pali: The Language of Theravada Buddhism
The language of the Theravada canonical texts is Pali (lit.,
"text"), which is based on a dialect of Middle Indo-Aryan that
was probably spoken in central India during the Buddha's time.7
Ven. Ananda, the Buddha's cousin and close personal attendant,
committed the Buddha's sermons (suttas) to memory and thus became
a living repository of these teachings.8 Shortly after the
Buddha's death (ca. 480 BCE), five hundred of the most senior
monks — including Ananda — convened to recite and verify all the
sermons they had heard during the Buddha's forty-five year
teaching career.9 Most of these sermons therefore begin with the
disclaimer, "Evam me sutam" — "Thus have I heard."
After the Buddha's death the teachings continued to be passed
down orally within the monastic community, in keeping with an
Indian oral tradition that long predated the Buddha.10 By 250 BCE
the Sangha had systematically arranged and compiled these
teachings into three divisions: the Vinaya Pitaka (the "basket of
discipline" — the texts concerning the rules and customs of the
Sangha), the Sutta Pitaka (the "basket of discourses" — the
sermons and utterances by the Buddha and his close disciples),
and the Abhidhamma Pitaka (the "basket of special/higher
doctrine" — a detailed psycho-philosophical analysis of the
Dhamma). Together these three are known as the Tipitaka, the
"three baskets." In the third century BCE Sri Lankan monks began
compiling a series of exhaustive commentaries to the Tipitaka;
these were subsequently collated and translated into Pali
beginning in the fifth century CE. The Tipitaka plus the
post-canonical texts (commentaries, chronicles, etc.) together
constitute the complete body of classical Theravada literature.
Pali was originally a spoken language with no alphabet of its
own. It wasn't until about 100 BCE that the Tipitaka was first
fixed in writing, by Sri Lankan scribe-monks who wrote the Pali
phonetically using their own Sinhala alphabet.11 Since then the
Tipitaka has been transliterated into many different scripts (Devanagari,
Thai, Burmese, Roman, Cyrillic, to name a few). Although English
translations of the most popular Tipitaka texts abound, many
students of Theravada find that learning the Pali language — even
just a little bit here and there — greatly deepens their
understanding and appreciation of the Buddha's teachings.
No one can prove that the Tipitaka contains any of the words
actually uttered by the historical Buddha. Practicing Buddhists
have never found this problematic. Unlike the scriptures of many
of the world's great religions, the Tipitaka is not regarded as
gospel, as an unassailable statement of divine truth, revealed by
a prophet, to be accepted purely on faith. Instead, its teachings
are meant to be assessed firsthand, to be put into practice in
one's life so that one can find out for oneself if they do, in
fact, yield the promised results. It is the truth towards which
the words in the Tipitaka point that ultimately matters, not the
words themselves. Although scholars will continue to debate the
authorship of passages from the Tipitaka for years to come (and
thus miss the point of these teachings entirely), the Tipitaka
will quietly continue to serve — as it has for centuries — as an
indispensable guide for millions of followers in their quest for
Awakening.
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| We are formed and molded
by our thoughts. Those whose minds are shaped by selfless
thoughts give joy when they speak or act. Joy follows them
like a shadow that never leaves them.
-Buddha |

| You can search
throughout the entire universe for someone who is more
deserving of your love and affection than you are yourself,
and that person is not to be found anywhere. You yourself,
as much as anybody in the entire universe deserve your love
and affection. -Buddha |
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