Short Biography of Lord Gautama Buddha
Sri Ramakrishna
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Swami Vivekananda on Lord Buddha..
Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda Vol. 8:
Buddha’s message to the world
The life of Buddha has an especial appeal. All my life I have been very fond of Buddha… I have more veneration for that character than for any other — that boldness, that fearlessness, and that tremendous love!He was born for the good of men. Others may seek God, others may seek truth for themselves; he did not even care to know truth for himself. He sought truth because people were in misery. How to help them, that was his only concern. Throughout his life he never had a thought for himself. How can we ignorant, selfish, narrow-minded human beings ever understand the greatness of this man?
I am the servant of the servants of the servants of Buddha.
Who was there ever like him? — the Lord — who never performed one action for
himself — with a heart that embraced the whole world! So full of pity that he —
prince and monk — would give his life to save a little goat! So loving that he
sacrificed himself to the hunger of a tigress! — to the hospitality of a pariah
and blessed him!
On Buddha and Shankara
In Buddha we had the great, universal heart and infinite patience, making religion practical and bringing it to everyone’s door. In Shankaracharya we saw tremendous intellectual power, throwing the scorching light of reason upon everything. We want today that bright sun of intellectuality joined with the heart of Buddha, the wonderful infinite heart of love and mercy. This union will give us the highest philosophy. Science and religion will meet and shake hands. Poetry and philosophy will become friends.I would like to see moral men like Gautama Buddha, who did not believe in a Personal God or a personal soul, never asked about them, but was a perfect agnostic, and yet was ready to lay down his life for anyone, and worked all his life for the good of all, and thought only for the good of all. Well has it been said by his biographer, in describing his birth, that he was born for the good of many, as a blessing to the many. He did not go to the forest to meditate for his own salvation; he felt that the world was burning, and that he must find a way out. “Why is there so much misery in the world?” —was the one question that dominated his whole life.