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Mahayana Buddhism

Mahayana Buddhism is strongest in Tibet, China, Taiwan, Japan, Korea, and Mongolia.

Mahayana Buddhism is not a single group but a collection of Buddhist traditions: Zen Buddhism, Pure Land Buddhism, and Tibetan Buddhism are all forms of Mahayana Buddhism.

Theravada and Mahayana are both rooted in the basic teachings of the historical Buddha, and both emphasise the individual search for liberation from the cycle of samsara (birth, death, rebirth...). The methods or practices for doing that, however, can be very different.

* The Bodhisattva

Mahayana talks a great deal about the bodhisattva (the 'enlightenment being') as being the ideal way for a Buddhist to live.

Anyone can embark on the bodhisattva path. This is a way of life, a way of selflessness; it is a deep wish for all beings, no matter who they are, to be liberated from suffering.

* The Boddhisattva Vow

However innumerable sentient beings are, I vow to save them.

However inexhaustible the defilements are, I vow to extinguish them.

However immeasurable the dharmas are, I vow to master them.

However incomparable enlightenment is, I vow to attain it.

* The Trikaya - the three bodies of Buddha

Mahayana Buddhism says that there are three aspects of Buddhahood, which it describes by regarding Buddha as having three bodies (trikaya):

  • Dharmakaya: Buddha is transcendent - he is the same thing as the ultimate truth.

  • Sambhogakaya: Buddha's body of bliss, or enjoyment body.

  • Nirmanakaya: Buddha's earthly body - just like any other human being's body.

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An outline history

Mahayana began to more formally emerge in distinction to Theravada after a Third Council held at Patna circa 250 B.C.E. under the authority of the notable King Asoka.


Read about Theravada
Theravada Buddhism was the earliest form of Buddhism to emerge and literally translated means Old (Thera) Way (vada).