clw_uk wrote:Greetings
There has been a lot of talk on this forum about "God". I was wondering, can one fully practice Dhamma (to nibbana as its end) and still believe in God or does this notion need to be done away with for nibbana to be reached?
Attachment to any view is incompatible with full enlightenment, but that's especially true in this case, because it's a wrong view.
I do think that provisionally, a belief in God can be helpful for some people, but if Buddhists adopted such a view it would be a corruption of Buddhism.
clw_uk wrote:I suppose what im asking is does nibbana require atheism?
That's not really a properly formed question, since you're treating Nibbana as a conditioned thing (ex: "Does X leads to Nibbana or not?" Nibbana is the unconditioned, so how could anything
lead there?). I would say Nibbana requires nothing, but that wouldn't be accurate either. More precisely, properties like "requiring" or "not requiring" do not apply to Nibbana.
Ben wrote:Hi Thomas
Its an interesting question, thanks for posting!
The way that I look at it is that right view is a requisite for liberation.
Belief in a supreme being, a creator-being, as others have said here, is a barrier for liberation, it is a 'wrong view'. I apologise as I cannot produce the relevant sutta citation to back this up. Perhaps someone else more knowledgeable can assist.
Within the Canon, you will find instances where non-human beings, such as Devas and Brahmas are present. Some of these beings, identify themselves as creator-beings but in fact, are considered by the Buddha as co-inhabitants of samsara, subject to birth, ageing, sickness and death. Have a look at MN 49 Brahmanimantanika Sutta
In the canon, there are instances where the Buddha directly, or indirectly through his chief disciples, teaches the Dhamma to these beings. My personal opinion, based on my reading of the suttas and later writers such as Ledi Sayadaw, Nyanpaponika Thera and Bhikkhu Bodhi, is that the devas and brahmas in the suttas were not mentioned to impart a teaching via metaphor.
Having said that, I have not had any experience (that I can recall) that verifies the existence of these beings (yet). And I can understand why some Buddhists interpret the devas and brahmas, and even concepts such as rebirth as metaphorical. That's fine. What I think is important is a recognition that with the development of sammaditthi (right view) comes an acknowledgement that our own 'views' may indeed be tainted by our own defiled mind. The real deal then is developing wisdom and the development of right view. MN 9 Sammaditthi Sutta.
All the best
Ben
Nice post!