tuesday 9/3/13 rap do you think early civilizations needed religion or some sort of belief? explain....

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Tuesday 9/3/13 RAP Do you think early civilizations needed religion or some sort of belief? Explain. Today: Turn in map of Asia and M.E Hinduism Buddhism Objective: Understand and describe the Hindu belief through reading and assessing information. UNDERSTAND AND LEARN HISTORICAL INFORMATION ABOUT FIVE KEY EVENTS IN THE LIFE OF THE BUDDHA

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Tuesday 9/3/13

RAPDo you think early civilizations needed religion or some sort

of belief? Explain.

Today:• Turn in map of Asia and M.E• Hinduism• Buddhism

– Objective: Understand and describe the Hindu belief through reading and assessing information.

– UNDERSTAND AND LEARN HISTORICAL INFORMATION ABOUT FIVE KEY EVENTS IN THE LIFE OF THE BUDDHA

Hinduism• Hinduism is an ancient religion whose origins

predate recorded history.• It has no single human founder.• It has developed over thousands of years.• One eternal spirit, Brahman Nerguna.• Its most sacred scriptures are the Vedas

– Vedas means “knowledge” in Sanskrit, the ritual language of Hinduism.

– Vedas began as an oral tradition– Modern scholars speculate that they date back as far

as 6500 BCE.– Historians believe that the Vedas were written down

around 1000 BCE or earlier.

• Sacred symbols and the worship of certain Gods can also be traced back to the seventh century BCE

• The word HINDU was first used by the ancient Persians to describe the practices and beliefs of people who lived east of the Indus River.

• Hindus call their religion “Santana Dharma” (the eternal religion) or “Vedic Dharma” (the religion of knowledge.)

• Over the millennia Hinduism has continued to evolve, and in modern times it incorporates a wide variety of religious beliefs and practices.

• Belief in reincarnation, or rebirth of the soul. • Belief in karma, how a person lives one life determines

what form the person will take in the next life.• Hinduism has historically been tolerant of other

religions, believing that all religions can be legitimate paths to God.

• As of 1997, there were nearly one billion Hindus in the world, more than 900 million of them living in India.

Wednesday 9/4/13

• NO RAP

• Do you think Hinduism was the answer for many people at this time? Why or why not?

WORLD RELIGIONS UNITBUDDHISM

UNDERSTAND AND LEARN HISTORICAL INFORMATION ABOUT FIVE KEY EVENTS IN THE LIFE OF

THE BUDDHA

Buddhism

• Open your textbook to page 48.

• SWBAT describe the origins of Buddhism

BUDDHISM

• The religion called Buddhism is based on the teachings of the Buddha, a man who lived in India in the fifth century BCE.

• Originally named Siddhartha Gautama, he became known as the Buddha, or “the Awakened One,” after an enlightenment experience at the age of 35.

• Siddhartha married Yasodhara and they had one son Rahula.

• From the age of 29 Siddhartha spent six years seeking the answer to the problem of human suffering.

Buddhism

• Siddhartha then became awakened, or enlightened, as to the nature of reality and achieved the spiritual goal of nirvana, or liberation from suffering.

• For the remaining 45 years of his life, he was known as the Buddha and taught others the path to Awakening (Buddhahood).

• While the Buddha is a historical figure, his life story is traditionally told in the form of a legend in which he is depicted as the ideal human.

Buddhism

• The Buddha’s teachings applied to all living creatures, and he rejected the priestly rituals and class – or caste- discrimination that was a part of Hinduism, the other central religion at that time.

• Today Buddhism is practiced by more than one-fourth of the world’s population and has become increasingly popular in the West.

Now you get to listen to a story on Siddartha Guatama.

Siddhartha’s

Birth

Siddhartha’s Princely Life in the Palace

Siddhartha Discovers Aging, Sickness, and Death

Siddhartha Leaves His Family to

Become an Ascetic

Siddhartha Achieves

Enlightenment and Becomes the Buddha

Buddha’s Basic Teachings• After Siddhartha became the Buddha, or the Awakened

One, he was concerned that no one else would understand the great truths he had realized under the Bodhi tree.

• One of the many Gods begged him to teach his Dharma—or the way to right living –to all beings, Gods and humans alike.

• So the Buddha left the site of his Awakening and sought the five ascetics with whom he had practiced self –deprivation.

• When they saw him approaching, they decided to ignore him as a failure, but as he began to speak they were impressed in spite of themselves. They quickly recognized the great transformation he had experienced. The Buddha began to teach them what he had learned, and within a short time they too were enlightened.

Buddha’s Basic teachings

• They became the Buddha’s followers and soon hundreds of others joined them.

• Individually or in groups, the Buddha’s followers wandered from town to town, “turning the wheel of the Buddha Dharma” to make his teachings available to everyone.

• The principle teachings of the Buddha Dharma, or “Way of the Buddha,” can be summarized in the Four Noble Truths.

The Four Noble Truths• The first is the Noble Truth of suffering, which says that

suffering includes birth, death, aging, sickness, grief, pain, not being with loved ones, being with loved ones, and not getting what one wants.

• The second Noble Truth says that when people crave things, such as sensual pleasures (like food, which can be enjoyed with al five senses), suffering comes.

• The third Noble Truth states that a person’s suffering ends only when that person gives up such cravings.

• The fourth Noble Truth details eight steps, called the Eightfold Path, that a person can follow to stop suffering: right opinion, right purpose, right speech, right action, right way to earn a living, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration.

• These Four Noble Truths were spread by the Buddha’s followers and continue to be the foundation of Buddhism today.

Biographical Poem about the Buddha

Follow this format:First and last name

Four adjectives describing the BuddhaRelative (son, husband, father) of…Resident of (city and /or country)…

Who lived from (year to year)…Who searched for…

Who taught…Who is remembered for…

Final name meaning…

Thursday 9/5/13

RAP

What do you think…

• Explain how Buddhism might have had an impact on the people of this region during this time. Good and / or bad.

Venn diagram • In a Venn diagram please compare and

contrast Hinduism and Buddhism.