Theravada Buddhism focused primarily on meditation and
concentration, the eighth of the Eightfold Noble Path; as a result, it centered
on a monastic life and an extreme expenditure of time in meditating. This left
little room for the bulk of humanity to join in, so a new schism erupted within
the ranks of Buddhism in the first century AD, one that would attempt to
reformulate the teachings of Buddha to accomodate a greater number of people.
They called their new Buddhism, the "Greater Vehicle" (literally, "The Greater
Ox-Cart") or Mahayana, since it could accomodate more people and more
believers from all walks of life. They distinguished themselves from mainstream
Theravada Buddhism by contemptuously referring to Theravada as Hinayana,
or "The Lesser Vehicle."
The Mahayanists, however, did
not see themselves as creating a new start for Buddhism, rather they claimed to
be recovering the original teachings of Buddha, in much the same way that the
Protestant reformers of sixteenth century Europe claimed that they were not
creating a new Christianity but recovering the original form. The Mahayanists
claimed that their canon of scriptures represented the final teachings of
Buddha; they accounted for the non-presence of these teachings in over five
hundred years by claiming that these were secret teachings entrusted only to the
most faithful followers.
Whatever the origins of
Mahayan doctrines, they represent a significant departure in the philosophy.
Like the Protestant Reformation, the overall goal of Mahayana was to extend
religious authority to a greater number of people rather than concentrating it
in the hands of a few. The Mahayanists managed to turn Buddhism into a more
esoteric religion by developing a theory of gradations of Buddhahood. At the top
was Buddhahood itself which was preceded by a series of lives, the
bodhisattvas.
This idea of the bodhisattva
was one of the most important innovations of Mahayana Buddhism. The
boddhisattva , or "being of wisdom," was originally invented to explain
the nature of Buddha's earlier lives. Before Buddha entered his final life as
Siddhartha Gautama, he had spent many lives working towards Buddhahood. In these
previous lives he was a bodhisattva , a kind of "Buddha-in-waiting," that
performed acts of incredible generosity, joy, and compassion towards his fellow
human beings. An entire group of literature grew up around these previous lives
of Buddha, called the Jataka or "Birth Stories."
While we do not know much about the earliest forms of
Buddhism, there is some evidence that the earliest followers believed that there
was only the one Buddha and that no more would follow. Soon, however, a doctrine
of the Maitreya , or "Future Buddha," began to assert itself. In this,
Buddhists believed that a second Buddha would come and purify the world; they
also believed that the first Buddha prophesied this future Buddha. If a future
Buddha was coming, that meant that the second Buddha is already on earth passing
through life after life. So someone on earth was the Maitreya . It could
be the person serving you food. It could be a child playing in the street. It
could be you. What if there was more than one Maitreya? Five? Ten? A billion?
That certainly raises the odds that you or someone you know is a future Buddha.
The goal of Theravada Buddhism is practically
unattainable. In order to make Buddhism a more esoteric religion, the
Mahayanists invented two grades of Buddhist attainment below becoming a Buddha.
While the Buddha was the highest goal, one could become a pratyeka-buddha
, that is, one who has awakened to the truth but keeps it secret. Below the
pratyeka-buddha is the arhant , or "worthy," who has learned the
truth from others and has realized it as truth. Mahayana Buddhism establishes
the arhant as the goal for all believers. The believer hears the truth,
comes to realize it as truth, and then passes into Nirvana . This
doctrine of arhanthood is the basis for calling Mahayan the "Greater Vehicle,"
for it is meant to include everyone.
Finally, the
Mahayanists completed the conversion of Buddhism from a philosophy to religion.
Therevada Buddhism holds that Buddha was a historical person who, on his death,
ceased to exist. There were, however, strong tendencies for Buddhists to worship
Buddha as a god of some sort; these tendencies probably began as early as
Buddha's lifetime. The Mahayanists developed a theology of Buddha called the
doctrine of "The Three Bodies," or Trikaya. The Buddha was not a human
being, as he was in Theravada Buddhism, but the manifestation of a universal,
spiritual being. This being had three bodies. When it occupied the earth in the
form of Siddhartha Gautama, it took on the Body of Magical Transformation
(nirmanakaya ). This Body of Magical Transformation was an emanation of
the Body of Bliss (sambhogakaya ), which occupies the heavens in the form
of a ruling and governing god of the universe. There are many forms of the Body
of Bliss, but the one that rules over our world is Amithaba who lives in a
paradise in the western heavens called Sukhavati, or "Land of Pure
Bliss." Finally, the Body of Bliss is an emanation of the Body of Essence
(dharmakaya ), which is the principle underlying the whole of the
universe. This Body of Essence, the principle and rule of the universe, became
synonymous with Nirvana . It was a kind of universal soul, and Nirvana
became the transcendent joining with this universal soul.

©1996, Richard
Hooker
For information contact: Richard Hines
Updated 6-6-1999