Net Deals Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Anantarika-karma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anantarika-karma

    Anantarika-karma. Ānantarya karma ( Sanskrit) or Ānantarika kamma ( Pāli) [ 1] are the most serious offences in Buddhism that, at death, through the overwhelming karmic strength of any single one of them, bring immediate disaster. [ 2][ 3] Both Buddhists and non-Buddhists must avoid them at all costs. Such offenses prevent perpetrators from ...

  3. Buddhist funeral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_funeral

    Buddhism. Among Buddhists, death is regarded as one of the occasions of major religious significance, both for the deceased and for the survivors. For the deceased, it marks the moment when the transition begins to a new mode of existence within the round of rebirths (see Bhavacakra ). When death occurs, all the karmic forces that the dead ...

  4. Zen for Daily Living: Transforming death and grief - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/zen-daily-living-transforming...

    Few things cause as much suffering and confusion as when people are at the end of their life. Loved ones are often forced to make some of the most complicated and far-reaching decisions of their ...

  5. Kisa Gotami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kisa_Gotami

    Kisa Gotami was the wife of a wealthy man of Savatthi. Her story is one of the most famous ones in Buddhism. After losing her only child, Kisa Gotami became desperate and asked if anyone could help her. Her sorrow was so great that many thought she had lost her mind. An old man told her to see the Buddha.

  6. Ikkyū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ikkyū

    Buddhist verse by Ikkyū. Ikkyū (一休宗純, Ikkyū Sōjun, February 1, 1394 - December 12, 1481) was an eccentric, iconoclastic Japanese Zen Buddhist monk and poet.He had a great impact on the infusion of Japanese art and literature with Zen attitudes and ideals, [1] as well as on Zen itself, including breaking Buddhist monastic teachings with his stance against celibacy.

  7. Filial piety in Buddhism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filial_piety_in_Buddhism

    This is the Buddhist way to benefit one's parents and all living beings. [113] The Zen master Qisong (1007 – 1072) criticized Han Yu's writings for not conforming to Confucian doctrine. [114] Also, during this time some Buddhist writers started to argue that the five moral precepts in Buddhism were an expression of filial piety. [115]

  8. Zen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zen

    A History. Part One: India and China: "Zen (Chin. Ch'an, an abbreviation of ch'an-na, which transliterates the Sanskrit Dhyāna (Devanagari: ध्यान) or its Pali cognate Jhāna (Sanskrit; Pāli झान), terms meaning "meditation") is the name of a Mahāyāna Buddhist school of meditation originating in China.

  9. Maraṇasati - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maraṇasati

    Maraṇasati (mindfulness of death, death awareness) is a Buddhist meditation practice of remembering (frequently keeping in mind) that death can strike at any time ( AN 6.20), and that we should practice assiduously ( appamada) and with urgency in every moment, even in the time it takes to draw one breath.