Unveiled Artist
Veteran Member
Question. I go to a Buddhist site. Very very nice. We are discussing the suttas and I asked how Brahma plays a role in offerings since we do offerings and oblation to deities and sangha (as so discussed). I didnt know this as I thought it was a Mahayana teaching. Therevada does it too.
Anyway, I asked about giving offerings to deities and one gentlemen said...rephrased. It's not a debate site so the info was given on good intentions.
Sorry. Format. On phone in the middle of something. Fix later
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My question
unveiledartist
I do have a question, though the convo is going over my head. This sutta mentions Ven. Brahnadeva’s mother offering oblation to Brahma. Im only familiar with Brahma being a Hindu deity/god. Do practitioners give oblations to Brahma as hindus do? I know at the Vietnamese Temple I went to we offered prayers , flowers, and foods to The Buddha and bodhisattvas (Mahayana) but Im not familiar with offerings and oblations as a whole. I assume The Buddha was Hindu; so, does the terminology between two faiths share the same definition and context or different?
unveiledartist:
I assume The Buddha was Hindu; so, does the terminology between two faiths share the same definition and context or different?
Answer Person Z
Does this makes sense:
I’m simplifying here but basically:
Anyway, I asked about giving offerings to deities and one gentlemen said...rephrased. It's not a debate site so the info was given on good intentions.
Sorry. Format. On phone in the middle of something. Fix later
-
My question
unveiledartist
I do have a question, though the convo is going over my head. This sutta mentions Ven. Brahnadeva’s mother offering oblation to Brahma. Im only familiar with Brahma being a Hindu deity/god. Do practitioners give oblations to Brahma as hindus do? I know at the Vietnamese Temple I went to we offered prayers , flowers, and foods to The Buddha and bodhisattvas (Mahayana) but Im not familiar with offerings and oblations as a whole. I assume The Buddha was Hindu; so, does the terminology between two faiths share the same definition and context or different?
unveiledartist:
I assume The Buddha was Hindu; so, does the terminology between two faiths share the same definition and context or different?
Answer Person Z
Does this makes sense:
I’m simplifying here but basically:
- 'Hinduism didn’t exist at that time
- Brahmanism (its historical predecessor) was at the time of the Buddha only getting established in that region
- Most people believed in the gods, but…
- Brahma ‘went out of fashion’, being replaced by cults around Siva and Krsna
- Strangely, Brahma continues to be worshiped in some forms in Buddhist countries, e.g. Thailand
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