Buddhist Defense on
the Hope of Change
The best promise or prophecy made by Gautama is
the fact that the Universe is constantly changing. However, peoples often lose
hope in change and transformation of the world assuming a metaphysical faith or
a materialistic reason that do not know spiritual values. Thus, hope is part of
the field of Spirituality, because the promise of a better world is the main
feature of the great spiritual masters who have ethically led humanity by
driving it to the Pure Earth or the Kingdom of Righteousness. In spirituality,
this hope is embodied in two perfect metaphors for contemporary society:
Awakening (Bodhi) or Resurrection. These hopes are nothing less than the
Evolution and Salvation of the world, both internal and external, which has
been marked by suffering for thousands of years. Although this original Desire is difficult to satisfy,
certainly the hope to achieve Cure (Nirvana) is a consolation and a passion, by
being a perception of the future of humanity that encourages the individual to
self-realize the Purpose (Dharma) of his True Self. However, hope must always
go hand in hand with the perception of reality as unsatisfactory, impermanent
and insubstantial, since otherwise hope would be a delusional thinking or
unfounded delusion in which those who are ignorant of this often fall. Hope for
change in the world is therefore a challenge of the utopian reason, because
without hope there is no Sense of history. The Free and Enlightened Being
(Arhat-Bodhisattva) works continuously to develop the spiritual capabilities of
the peoples, teaching that if humanity is united is unstoppable. But this hope is not part of a false optimism but of a
perception of the basic potentialities of human being, that are Liberty,
Equality and Fraternity against Oppression, Poverty and Conflict. For Buddhist
Spirituality, hope for change in the world is an ethical imperative of the
political, economic, cultural and environmental development, because it is the autopoiesis of the expected world.
Thus, the only belief of the spiritual master is that it is possiblea better
world, as long as society risks its comfort to meet the challenge of the Path
to Pure Earth or Kingdom of Righteousness. Although hope of change shares with
resentment the fact of feeling dissatisfaction (dukkha) facing the present
society, certainly resentment acts destructively, while hope acts
constructively. While resentment is attachment to the past, instead, hope is
Openness (Sunyata) to the future. Although fear is the fundamental instrument
of traditional politics to get obedience and appeasement, the Buddhist
Spirituality teaches hope in a better world as the way to get consensus and
Liberation. The materialistic civilization uses fear as Power of Coercion, but
the Free and Enlightened Being (Arhat-Bodhisattva) uses the compassionate
wisdom (prajna-karuna) as a Counterpower that creates a direct pathway to meet
the postmodern hope in a better world.
The kind of change of which the spiritual
master talks has a significance of transformation and revolution, so it is opposed
to the vision of status quo, being rather the spiritual conversion of the
peoples so that they can actively adapt to an appropriate lifestyle. This is
the proposal for change which the
Analytical-Existential-Libertarian Discourse (Buddha-Dharma-Sangha) and its
direct democratic vision embody to solve the world problems. The Maitriyana
denounces that traditional politics of all countries and epochs is essentially
a breach of the hope for change residing within humanity, which deeply desires
that the various peoples converge on global policies where pacifism, social
justice, education and ecology are knotted. From this perspective, the hope for
change is inherent in human life and its upward progress of survival and
spiritual evolution, while attachment and what is static are synonymous with
illusion and self-destruction. This vision of true development is the
fundamental inspiration of the Free and Enlightened Being (Arhat-Bodhisattva)
who is an individual with essentially reformist and revolutionary premises, by
using the nature of change in pursuit of Good. In metapolitics of Buddhist
Spirituality, the real change in the world is the one that radically transforms
the structures of power, establishing a virtuous system of direct democracy
that liberates the peoples from dictatorships
of authoritarian and populist governments. This means that the hope for change
that is encouraged by the spiritual master has a historical sense, because when
banishing the custom of social submission it is produced a rupture of epoch
which favors the indispensable Cure (Nirvana) of the world's problems. Indeed,
the ethics of the Middle Way is the great jewel of humanity because it is an
adequate means to carry out the goals that the great movements for social
change have sought. If social movements of the past had used appropriate means,
then all the major problems of the contemporary world would be already solved.
Although conflicts are renewed with the pass of epochs, the higher and
amplified state of consciousness (H-ASC) to which a Free and Enlightened Being
(Arhat-Bodhisattva) has reached constitutes the most perfect resource of the
Universe in order to solve the challenges that life has every day. The
Maitriyana's advantage is that it forms spiritual masters specially prepared to
righteously solve problems threatening the Earth (Gaia), by developing the
hidden potentialities of the peoples. This spiritual potentiality is the Desire
and the hope for change that involves realistic optimism which emerges from the
experience of the Real as unsatisfactory, impermanent and insubstantial. The
Buddhist Spirituality defines the human being as a being that is able to make
his spiritual existence indefinitely grows through the contemplative work, so
that the hope of change requires entering an adventure of ongoing growth and
overcoming. Given that the appropriate means are spiritual by definition, those
peoples that are warlike, unjust, ignorant and polluting will never be able to
build a better world precisely because they lack adequate means to go to the
future. This turns the social progress into a work that no one can consummate
through technology, it is instead required the mutual support, empathy and
solidarity of others. Therefore, the hope for change requires a passion for the
pursuit of happiness and general welfare, aspiring to a Pure Earth or Kingdom of
Righteousness which grows up until reaching the confines of the Cosmos. The
hope of change and the Maitriyana always go on the same path, by introducing
spiritual values in society so that there is true progress.
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