For sure: "Upaya" (skillful means) was a very nice way for later Buddhists to say, "Well, we don't really agree with all the teachings of early Buddhism exactly as they are presented, and we can't say the Buddha (or whoever wrote down the South Asian version of the teachings) was 'wrong,' so we will just say that he "was making different versions of the teachings for different needs." It is a nice way of rectifying the differences.
And, in fact, different versions of the teachings ARE suited to different people, with some benefiting more from X presentation, and others from Y presentation, so it is true: Different medicines for different needs.
Choose the Buddha(s) you wish, who resonate with your needs, the medicine for you. Only a terrible physician would hand out the exact same prescription to every patient who came through the door, whether a cancer patient or someone with a broken foot.
Refrigerator is an idea, I cannot be sure if I am dreaming it; Buddhist Ice Hell (https://www.wisdomlib.org/buddhism/b...doc225388.html) is an idea, I cannot be totally sure if it exists or not. However, the former seems to keep my milk cold (also possibly imagined), while the latter seems to defy what I understand about the laws of physics and various other things, and though some vision of it might be had in meditation practice, I see little evidence for it, it seems as likely as not to be someone's fanciful imagining or meditative hallucination, so I am more skeptical about "ice hell" than refrigerators. The former does not keep my imaginary milk cold. Likewise, "Sunayata" seems to be something I can envision in a dream AND which seems actually to be born out with what physics, chemistry and modern brain science tells us about the inter-identity of phenomena, AND it actually seems to cure the heart of friction, conflict and suffering ... so I think it real. No, it does not keep my milk cold either, but it has other verifiable uses.
Someone else may find value in their belief in "ice hell" or flying Buddhas in the sky, and so I honor their right to find value there. Good for them if that is the "expedient" prescription that benefits them. Frankly, if you want examples of "holy lies" that are told to people in order to inspire, I say it is precisely such miracle stories ... whether of Jesus or Gautama. The wild stories of the Lotus Sutra themselves are such "holy lies," yet they have wonderful value as parables even if we don't take them literally.
(pardon more than 3 sentences)
Gassho, J
STLah
Buddhist Hell (I could not find a picture of a cold one, so we will make do with fire and brimstone):
And, in fact, different versions of the teachings ARE suited to different people, with some benefiting more from X presentation, and others from Y presentation, so it is true: Different medicines for different needs.
Part of this is also that I'm trying to pin down what sort of teacher Buddha is thought to have been, i.e. is he a spiritual philosopher propounding truths to be absolutely proven by the minds of the students or is he a pragmatist delivering remedies to treat one ailment or another depending on the audience or time?
If someone living had what they took to be some sort of vision of the bardo we wouldn't be able to deny their experience per se but could question how the experience is interpreted, therefore while I am inclined by my own experience and thought to believe there is something real to the sunyata idea I recognize that experience is one thing, whereas interpretation (including the interpretation that my insightful experience is objective reality) is another.
Someone else may find value in their belief in "ice hell" or flying Buddhas in the sky, and so I honor their right to find value there. Good for them if that is the "expedient" prescription that benefits them. Frankly, if you want examples of "holy lies" that are told to people in order to inspire, I say it is precisely such miracle stories ... whether of Jesus or Gautama. The wild stories of the Lotus Sutra themselves are such "holy lies," yet they have wonderful value as parables even if we don't take them literally.
(pardon more than 3 sentences)
Gassho, J
STLah
Buddhist Hell (I could not find a picture of a cold one, so we will make do with fire and brimstone):

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