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  2. According to Peter Harvey, Buddhism assumes that the universe has no ultimate beginning to it and thus sees no need for a creator god. In the early texts, the nearest term to this concept is "Great Brahma" (Maha Brahma), such as in Digha Nikaya 1.18. [6]

    • Is Buddhism Godless? As a religion, Buddhiusm doesn’t have a creator God. However, it does acknowledge the existence of devas (gods) and bodhisattvas.
    • Who Is the Buddhist God? Buddhism is a religion that does not attach importance to a divine creator, i.e. it isn’t theistic. Buddhists believe in karma which is a cycle of cause and effect.
    • What Is Buddhism God’s Name? When you enter a Buddhist monastery, you may see a lot of Buddhas and other religious figures. They look different and they may be painted in different colors.
    • How Many Buddhist Gods Are There? There are many god-like beings in Buddhism. Buddhism does not equate them to gods in the way that is commonly believed.
  3. Nov 23, 2009 · Buddhism has no creator god to explain the origin of the universe. Instead, it teaches that everything depends on everything else: present events are caused by past events and become the...

    • What Did Buddha Say?
    • The Poisoned Arrow Parable
    • Too Many Questions: The Parable of The Handful of Leaves
    • Bramajala Sutta, The Impermance of All, Including Gods
    • Buddha: Neither Accepted Nor Rejected God
    • Scientific Buddhists and Athiest Buddhists

    So, what did Buddha actually say about divine beings? Buddha lived in a time totally different from our own — a time in which belief in Gods and divine interventions was incredibly natural and universal. It is clear from many Buddhist suttas (sutras) — supported by the views of many scholars — that the Buddha did not deny the gods. When he did ment...

    The answer to this can be known by the famous parable of the poisoned arrow. Malunkyaputra, a very inquisitive follower of the Buddha’s, asked the Buddha deep metaphysical questions such as whether or not a person exists after death after having attained nirvana, whether the world is eternal or not and other metaphysical questions. The Buddha repli...

    Does this mean Buddha didn’t have the answer to these metaphysical questions? In the Samyutta Nikaya he explains he knows much more than he is revealing, through the parable of a handful of leaves: “…Then the Blessed One took up a few simsapa leaves in his hand and addressed the monks thus: “What do you think, Monks, which is more numerous: these f...

    The Buddha mentions Brahma explicitly in the ‘Brahmajala Sutta’ and assigns him many characteristics that people would normally ascribe to ‘God’ as believers know him today: “And then, monks, that being who first arose there thinks: “I am Brahma, the Great Brahma, the Conqueror, the Unconquered, the All-Seeing, the All-Powerful, the Lord, the Maker...

    Therefore, the Buddha’s view on the concept of God was neither to accept, nor reject the concept of a creator or creation. Even if he believed in these things himself, he viewed the answers to these questions as not necessary to achieving enlightenment. So, a Buddhist can believe in, and even worship a God, should they wish but enlightenment can on...

    There appears to be plenty of room for atheistic or scientifically-minded Buddhists within Buddhism as well as theists and anything else too. However, there is also a middle ground approach that has not been considered yet. In her book ‘A History of God,’ Karen Armstrong states the following and quotes Edward Conze and his book ‘Buddhism: its essen...

  4. Sep 19, 2023 · Central to many religious traditions is the belief in a creator God—a supreme being who fashioned the universe and oversees its workings. However, Buddhism takes a different path. It does not assert the existence of an omnipotent, omniscient creator.

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  5. Mar 6, 2017 · So while he did not specifically say there is no creator god, in Buddhism, there is nothing for a creator god to do. God has no function, no role to play, either as an original source or as an instigator of current events.

  6. Sep 25, 2020 · Buddhism is a non-theistic religion (no belief in a creator god), also considered a philosophy and a moral discipline, originating in the region of modern-day India in the 6th and 5th centuries BCE.

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