

The goal of the Path is stillness.
Peter wrote:Theravada - The Buddha taught the way for an individual to attain perfect peace. He created the monastic order as a] an ideal environment to perfect this path to peace and b] as a way to preserve the teachings for future generations.
Mahayana - Also, new ideas and practices were introduced (bodhisattvas helping people is one such idea) with the aim of making it easier for the lay people to participate. Some new scriptures were authored to support these new practices and aims.
Peter wrote:For this reason, I never recommend a person try to do a doctrinal comparison but rather experience the traditions for themselves. Likely one tradition, or maybe even one teacher, will resonate with you or make sense to you or inspire you to practice. That's what's important: being inspired to practice. Then as you develop and learn and explore maybe you'll find new teachers that inspire you or new temples. And that's fine. Eventually you'll want to commit yourself to deep study and practice in one tradition so as to get the maximum benefit out of it. Looking around in the beginning is fine and good. Hoping around from one thing to the next and never settling down is just more of the very same behavior that keeps us suffering. It is the nature of the unenlightened mind to want to keep hopping.The goal of the Path is stillness.
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Jechbi wrote:related thread
TheDhamma wrote:I was referring to Theravada and Mahayana as doctrines, not so much the way they are practiced.
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