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Der Hindu Buddha in der Theologie des bengalischen Vaishnava Acharya Bhaktivedanta Swami (The Hindu Buddha according to the Theology of the Bengali Vaishnava Acharya Bhaktivedanta Swami )

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Author(s)
Weber, Edmund
Keywords
Hindu Buddha,advaita religion,Holy
GE Subjects
Religious ethics
Comparative religious ethics
Spirituality and ethics
Comparative religion and interreligious dialogue
Christian-Hindu

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/192275
Abstract
Die Vaishnavas [1] zählen zu den indischen Dvaitas oder Theisten. Sie verehren Vishnu bzw. Krishna als einzigen, allumfassenden und personalen Gott. Dieser Gott kommt, wenn die Weltordnung, der Dharma, in Gefahr oder gestört ist, als heilbringender Avatar in die Welt. Und Buddha war ein solcher Avatar, d.h. eine helfende Inkarnation Vishnus. Ganz in dieser Tradition stehend hat der weltbekannte Gaudiya-Vaishnava Leh-rer und Gründer-Acharya der Iskcon, Swami Bhaktivedanta [1896-1977] [2] in seiner Theologie Buddha als Mensch gewordenen Gott, als Inkarnation Krish-nas, beschrieben. Zwar ist Buddha Krishna selbst, aber dieser erledigte [und er-ledigt bis heute?] in dieser Gestalt eine eng umgrenzte Aufgabe. Swami Bhakti-vedanta zitiert diesbezüglich ein Vaishnava Gedicht, in welchem diese Aufgabe sehr schön besungen wird: "O Lord Krishna, You have assumed the form of Lord Buddha, taking compassion on the poor animals."[3] Gott kam also als Buddha in diese Welt, um als Herr und Beschützer der Tiere Ahimsa, das Nicht-verletzen von lebenden Wesen zu predigen und zu verbreiten. (In the broad Indian religious culture we find two basic concepts of the inner structure of the Holy. The Advaita relig ion believes in the 'not-two' will say absolute 'oneness' of the ultimate reality. The Dvaita religion yet believes in 'two' will say the dual structure of the whole. Nevertheless, the latter one is no radical dualism because it recognises nothi ng to be outside the last reality. It is a kind of 'dualist monism' and insofar fundamentally different to West Asian and European moderate or radical dualism. )
Date
1998
Type
Article
Copyright/License
With permission of the license/copyright holder
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Globethics Library Submissions
Hindu Ethics

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