[Ten Great Religions by James Freeman Clarke]@TWC D-Link bookTen Great Religions CHAPTER IV 33/78
Its power lay in the strength of conviction which inspired its teachers; and that, again, must have come from the sight of truth, not the belief in error. Sec.4.Leading Doctrines of Buddhism. What, then, are the doctrines of Buddhism? What are the essential teachings of the Buddha and his disciples? Is it a system, as we are so often told, which denies God and immortality? Has _atheism_ such a power over human hearts in the East? Is the Asiatic mind thus in love with eternal death? Let us try to discover. The hermit of Sakya, as we have seen, took his departure from two profound convictions,--the evil of perpetual change, and the possibility of something permanent.
He might have used the language of the Book of Ecclesiastes, and cried, "Vanity of vanities! all is vanity!" The profound gloom of that wonderful book is based on the same course of thought as that of the Buddha, namely, that everything goes round and round in a circle; that nothing moves forward; that there is no new thing under the sun; that the sun rises and sets, and rises again; that the wind blows north and south, and east and west, and then returns according to its circuits.
Where can rest be found? where peace? where any certainty? Siddartha was young; but he saw age approaching.
He was in health; but he knew that sickness and death were lying in wait for him.
He could not escape from the sight of this perpetual round of growth and decay, life and death, joy and woe.
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