There is no point in suffering by itself. Suffering is like the "idiot light" on your dashboard that tells you that your car has engine problems. It points to the fact that something is wrong, but you have to act on this information to make it useful - by itself the light does nothing. If you are suffering, find the cause and rectify it. Not doing this is like looking at the light on your car's instrument panel and thinking how bad it might be getting but never going to a garage.
The question is not relevant to ending suffering so the Buddha made a point of not offering an answer to this question.
The alternative is to suffer. Do you want to suffer? There is no point to suffering. You can only justify because of the condition of this world but it does not need to be so. We must and we are as human beings in war with suffering otherwise we would be hurting each other. This is the best of humanity when we come together to overcome suffering.
To impose the minority's point of view on the majority To provide an outlet for sadists perverted love of causing suffering in others.
Buddhism teaches that everyone experiences suffering and misery caused by a desire for money and happiness.
Mainly, Suffering The way suffering begins End suffering The way to end suffering
It is a messiah that is suffering
Suffering
Suffering from, but I dont know the case. Make a sentence.
After his experiences as a prince and as a wandering monk, the Buddha had learned that all people have one thing in common: if they think about their own life, or look at the world around them, they will see that life is full of suffering."This is the noble truth of suffering: birth is suffering, aging is suffering, illness is suffering, death is suffering; sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief and despair are suffering; union with what is displeasing is suffering; separation from what is pleasing is suffering; not to get what one wants is suffering; in brief, the five aggregates subject to clinging are suffering."
In essence the four noble truths express the nature of all composite phenomena and explain the path to liberation from the cycle of suffering.
Creative suffering
In Catholicism, there are three main types of suffering: physical suffering, emotional suffering, and spiritual suffering. Physical suffering refers to pain and illness, emotional suffering involves feelings of sadness, grief, or loneliness, and spiritual suffering relates to feelings of separation from God or a lack of faith. These types of suffering are seen as opportunities for growth, redemption, and drawing closer to God through prayer and perseverance.