Buddhism: Beliefs and Teachings (AQA)
Across
- 3. Suffering. Belief that all life includes suffering and unsatisfactoriness; one of the Three Marks of Existence.
- 4. An important part of the Buddha’s teachings found in the Pali Canon, explaining the truth about existence. These include: suffering, the cause of suffering, the end of suffering, the path to the end of suffering.
- 6. Reaching enlightenment
- 7. The teachings of the Buddha; these are the ultimate truth. Can also refer to following the Buddhist path (following the dharma).
- 9. Literally ‘blowing’ out. The belief that individuals can achieve a state of perfect peace where they experience liberation from the cycle of birth, death and rebirth.
- 12. The fourth Noble Truth. Known as ‘The Middle Way,’ it includes the way to wisdom; mental training and the way of morality. Eight stages to be practised simultaneously.
- 13. The school of Buddhism mainly found in Sri Lanka and Thailand; it is an older tradition than Mahayana.
- 15. Literally “Greater Vehicle”; this school of Buddhism focuses on achieving enlightenment for the sake of all beings (Bodhisattva). It is the main school of Buddhism in China, Tibet and Japan.
- 17. The belief that all life involves/is marked by these three features; sometimes known as the Three Universal Truths. The three are: dukkha, anicca, anatta.
- 19. A life free from worldly pleasures, and involves giving up of material possessions. An ascetic life often has the aim of pursuing religious and spiritual goals.
Down
- 1. This is the dominant form of Buddhism in Japan and focuses on chanting the name of Amitabha Buddha.
- 2. The belief that everything exists because other things do; everything is interconnected and everyone affects everyone else
- 5. craving
- 6. An awakened or enlightened person
- 8. Belief that there is no fixed self/no soul; one of the Three Marks of Existence
- 10. In Mahayana Buddhism this refers to the fundamental nature of all beings, which means that all beings can become enlightened/reach Buddhahood
- 11. A state of wisdom that enables total clarity and understanding of the truths of existence; achieving Enlightenment (Buddhahood) allows a being to be freed from the cycle of rebirth.
- 14. One of the Three Poisons; the attachment to material things, and the ongoing selfish desire for more.
- 16. Impermanence. Belief that nothing is permanent; one of the Three Marks of Existence.
- 17. Causes of dukkha that affect all beings: ignorance, greed and hate.
- 18. Teaching from the Jataka Tales about Siddhartha Gautama’s experience of illness, old age, death and a holy man. These sights led him to give up his life of luxury, to follow an ascetic lifestyle, in search of the truth about suffering.