Theravada Buddhism Enlightenment

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Over 100 million people seek enlightenment by taking on a spiritual journey called Theravada Buddhism, originating in ancient India during 100 BCE. By taking on this religious path people begin to learn traits such as wisdom and acceptance through meditation. I can inform readers about Gautama Buddha’s ancient religion by revealing Theravada’s peaceful teachings and spiritual beliefs. And along this religious journey followers of Theravada become wiser and kinder, they learn to accept things for what they truly are, and this new mindset eventually results in Nirvana, or Enlightenment, the ultimate goal in which every Theravada follower dreams of. This peaceful religion, Theravada, means “school of the elder monks” in Pali, Theravada’s original language in which their sacred doctrines (the Pali Canon and the Pali Tipitaka) are …show more content…

The goal in Pali, Theravada’s original religious language, meaning “worthy one” in which an individual has achieved nirvana. Meditation is the primary way to reach enlightenment, and this is through something they call Vipassana (a form of meditation to purify the mind of factors that cause pain). Along with Vipassana meditation one must follow the Pali Canon. Theravada’s basic teachings begin with the four noble truths and its doctrines are from the Pali Canon, a collection of the earliest Buddhist scripture. The Pali Canon, once written upon palm leaves by Monks in the first century BCE was “one of the early achievements of Theravada was the preservation of the Tripitaka -- a large collection of texts that includes the sermons of the Buddha -- into writing.” ("Origins of Theravada, Possibly the the Oldest School of Buddhism."About.com Religion & Spirituality. N.p., n.d. Web. 31 May 2016.) Which is now called the Pali Canon, a sacred

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