HEY YOU DISGUSTING PIECE OF *(&^*^&%&!!!!$#$#!! I CAN'T BELIEVE YOU WOULD HOLD THAT KIND OF RIDICULOUSLY IGNORANT AND BIASED OPINION IN THE FACE OF MY OWN MORAL RECTITUDE AND OBVIOUS SUPERIOR KNOWLEDGE. YOU SHOULD BOW DOWN BEFORE ME THAT I AM DEIGNING TO RESPOND TO YOUR POST!!!!
Happy now? ;-D;-D;-D;-D;-D;-D;-D;-D;-D;-D;-D;-D;-D;-D
--Paul
random text to get by the lameness filter.
9. Religious conditions were similar in Java but politically there was
this difference, that there was no one continuous and paramount kingdom.
A considerable number of Hindus must have settled in the island to
produce such an effect on its language and architecture but the rulers
of the states known to us were hinduized Javanese rather than true
Hindus and the language of literature and of most inscriptions was Old
Javanese, not Sanskrit, though most of the works written in it were
translations or adaptations of Sanskrit originals. As in Camboja,
ivaism and Buddhism both flourished without mutual hostility and there
was less difference in the status of the two creeds.
In all these countries religion seems to have been connected with
politics more closely than in India. The chief shrine was a national
cathedral, the living king was semi-divine and dead kings were
represented by statues bearing the attributes of their favourite gods.
6. _New Forms of Buddhism_
In the three or four centuries following Asoka a surprising change came
over Indian Buddhism, but though the facts are clear it is hard to
connect them with dates and persons. But the change was clearly
posterior to Asoka for though his edicts show a spirit of wide charity
it is not crystallized in the form of certain doctrines which
subsequently became prominent.
The first of these holds up as the moral ideal not personal perfection
or individual salvation but the happiness of all living creatures. The
good man who strives for this should boldly aspire to become a Buddha in
some future birth and such aspirants are called Bodhisattvas. Secondly
Buddhas and some Bodhisattvas come to be considered as supernatural
beings and practically deities. The human life of Gotama, though not
denied, is regarded as the manifestation of a cosmic force which also
reveals itself in countless other Buddhas who are not merely his
predecessors or destined successors but the rulers of paradises in other
worlds. Faith in a Buddha, especially in Amitâbha, can secure rebirth in
his paradise. The great Bodhisattvas, such as Avalokita and Mañjurî,
are splendid angels of mercy and knowledge who are theoretically
distinguished from Buddhas because they have indefinitely postponed
their entry into nirvana in order to alleviate the sufferings of the
world. These new tenets are accompanied by a remarkable development of
art and of idealist metaphysics.