Moral and Spiritual Development
Without a spiritual background man has no moral
responsibility: man without moral responsibility poses a danger to society.
Buddhism has been an admirable
lighthouse for guiding many a devotee to the salvation of eternal bliss. Buddhism is
especially needed in the world today which is riddled with racial, economic and
ideological misunderstandings. These misunderstandings can never be effectively cleared
until the spirit of benevolent tolerance is extended towards others. This spirit can be
best cultivated under the guidance of Buddhism which inculcates an ethical moral
co-operation for universal good.
We know that it is easy to learn vice without a master,
whereas virtue requires a tutor. There is a very great need for the teaching of virtue by
precepts and examples.
Without a spiritual background, man has no moral
responsibility; man without moral responsibility poses danger to society.
In the Buddha's Teaching, it is said that the spiritual
development of man is more important than the development of material welfare. History has
taught us that we cannot expect to gain both worldly happiness and everlasting Happiness
at the same time.
The lives of most people are generally regulated by
spiritual values and moral principles which only religion can effectively provide. The
governmental interference in the lives of people is made comparatively unnecessary if men
and women can be made to realize the value of devotion and can practise the ideals of
truth, justice and service.
Virtue is necessary to attain salvation, but virtue alone
is not enough. Virtue must be combined with wisdom. Virtue and wisdom are like the pair of
wings of a bird. Wisdom can also be compared to the eyes of a man; virtue, to his feet.
Virtue can be likened to a vehicle that brings man up to the gate of salvation. But wisdom
is the actually key that opens the gate. Virtue is a part of the technique of skillful and
noble living. Without any ethical discipline, there cannot be a purification of the
defilements of sentient existence.
Buddhism is not mere mumbo-jumbo, a myth told to entertain
the human mind or to satisfy the human emotion, but a liberal and noble method for those
who sincerely want to understand and experience the reality of life.
-ooOoo-
Previous Page Contents
Next
Page |