1
Birth of Gautama Buddha
Answers
Answer:
The historical version of Gautama Buddha’s birth may be familiar even to those with no more than a nodding acquaintance with the faith he founded. In the Buddhist tradition, however, Gautama’s birth was no accident of fate. Rather, there is a backstory preceding his arrival on earth. Non-believers would see this as myth; to the faithful, it is a spiritual truth, a different kind of reality in keeping with the essence of Buddhism. In this version, the Buddha’s birth was not so much the beginning of a tradition as the spectacular culmination of a series of events. Sumedha was an ascetic who once met an enlightened man, a Buddha named Dipamkara. The encounter had a profound effect upon Sumedha. He too wished to become a Buddha; to this end, he set out to cultivate the “Ten Perfections” – Charity, Forbearance, Morality, Effort, Discernment, Meditation, Expediency (the skill needed to teach sentient beings about the way of Buddhism), Vow (to achieve enlightenment), Spiritual/Occult Powers and Omniscience. As a bodhisattva, Sumedha spent several lifetimes tirelessly cultivating these qualities. His birth as Sakyamuni or Gautama Buddha, in the 5th century BCE, was the culmination of this aspiration.
Explanation:
please mark this answer as a brainliest please.
The Gautama Buddha then traveled to the deer park near Benares, India, where he gave his first sermon and outlined the basic doctrines of Buddhism. According to Buddhism, there are “four noble truths”: (1) existence is suffering; (2) this suffering is caused by human craving; (3) there is a cessation of the suffering, which is nirvana; and (4) nirvana can be achieved, in this or future lives, though the “eightfold path” of right views, right resolve, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration.
For the rest of his life, the Buddha taught and gathered disciples to his sangha, or community of monks. He died at age 80, telling his monks to continue working for their spiritual liberation by following his teachings. Buddhism eventually spread from India to Central and Southeast Asia, China, Korea, Japan, and, in the 20th century, to the West.