Quantum redactiones paginae "Theravada" differant

Content deleted Content added
Jondel (disputatio | conlationes)
No edit summary
mNo edit summary
Linea 3:
[[File:Buddhist sects.png|thumb|Charta ostendit tres divisiones momentium Map showing the three major Buddhist divisions.]]
Thai monks blessing the [[Bhumibol Adulyadej|King of Thailand]] in Wat Nong Wong, [[Sawankhalok District|Amphoe Sawankhalok]], [[Sukhothai Province|Sukhothai]], Thailand.]]
 
[[File:Buddhist sects.png|thumb|Map showing the three major Buddhist divisions.]]
'''Theravāda'''([[Palice]] "[[schola]] senatorium monacorum") est haeresis [[Buddhismus|buddhismi]] quae adhibet praecepta [[Buddha]]e conservati in Canone Pali ut doctrina cardinis sua. Canon Pali est solum integrum buddhismum canon reliquens in [[Linguae Indicae|lingua classica indica]], Pali, quae ut [[lingua sacra]] et [[lingua franca]] servit Theravadae.<ref>Crosby, Kate; Theravada Buddhism: Continuity, Diversity, and Identity, 2013, page 2.</ref> Proprietate alia, Theravada solet conservativam esse re doctrina et disciplina monastica.
Surrexit
Another feature of Theravada is that it tends to be very conservative about matters of doctrine and monastic discipline.<ref>Gombrich, Theravada Buddhism, a social history from Ancient Benares to Modern Colombo, Routledge; 2 edition (July 26, 2006), page 37</ref> [[Haeresis|Haerese]] distincta, Theravada surrexit in [[Ceylon]] [[Taprobane]] dispersaque in reliqua meridii orientalis [[asia]]e est.
 
As a distinct sect, Theravada Buddhism developed in [[Sri Lanka]] and spread to the rest of Southeast Asia.
 
Theravāda (Pali, literally "school of the elder monks") is a branch of Buddhism that uses the Buddha's teaching preserved in the Pāli Canon as its doctrinal core. The Pali canon is the only complete Buddhist canon which survives in a classical Indic Language, Pali, which serves as the sacred language and lingua franca of Theravada Buddhism.[1] Another feature of Theravada is that it tends to be very conservative about matters of doctrine and monastic discipline.[2] As a distinct sect, Theravada Buddhism developed in Sri Lanka and spread to the rest of Southeast Asia.
== Bibliographia ==
*[https://www.britannica.com/topic/Theravada Commentarius de Theravada ex Encyclopaedia Brittanica]