Theravāda vs. Mahāyāna vs. Vajrayāna

Theravāda vs. Mahāyāna vs. Vajrayāna — LaoDharma.org
2.6  ·  Comparison  ·  8 min read

Theravāda vs.
Mahāyāna vs. Vajrayāna

ເຖຣະວາດ — ມະຫາຍານ — ວັຊຣະຍານ

Buddhism is not one monolithic religion but a family of traditions. The three great vehicles — Theravāda, Mahāyāna, and Vajrayāna — share the same roots but developed distinctly different philosophies, practices, and aesthetics. Here is how they compare.

8 min read
Comparative
Bilingual

Three great vehicles —
one source

ສາມຍານໃຫຍ່ — ຕົ້ນທາງດຽວກັນ

All Buddhist traditions trace their origin to the historical Siddhartha Gautama and his teaching. But in the centuries after the Buddha’s death, different schools developed different interpretations of his words, different canons, different spiritual ideals, and different practices. By the 1st century CE three major streams had emerged that define Buddhism to this day: Theravāda, Mahāyāna, and eventually Vajrayāna.

These are not competing religions. They are different expressions of the same fundamental insight — that suffering can end — taking different forms adapted to different cultures, temperaments, and historical circumstances. Many Buddhist scholars and practitioners hold deep respect across traditions.

The three traditions at a glance

ສາມປະເພນີ ໃນສັງເຂບ
FeatureTheravāda ☸Mahāyāna 🪷Vajrayāna ⚡
Meaning of nameTeaching of the EldersGreat VehicleDiamond/Thunderbolt Vehicle
Language of canonPāliSanskrit & ChineseSanskrit & Tibetan
Highest idealArahant (personal liberation)Bodhisattva (liberation of all)Immediate Buddhahood this life
Primary meditationVipassanā & SamathaŚūnyatā, Zen, Pure LandTantric visualization, mantra
Key scripturePāli Canon (Tipiṭaka)Prajñāpāramitā, Lotus SūtraTantras, Tibetan Book of Dead
Geographic homeLaos, Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Sri LankaChina, Japan, Korea, VietnamTibet, Bhutan, Mongolia, Nepal
View of the BuddhaHistorical teacher, supreme guideCosmic being, many BuddhasPrimordial Buddha, guru as Buddha
Role of monasticsCentral — Vinaya strictly observedVaries widely; lay practice emphasized in ZenLama (tantric master) is central

What they share

ສິ່ງທີ່ພວກເຂົາ ມີຮ່ວມກັນ
SharedThe Four Noble Truthsອາລິຍະສັດສີ່All Buddhist traditions accept the Four Noble Truths as the foundational diagnosis of the human condition and the basic structure of the path.
SharedThe Three JewelsໄຕລະດັດTaking refuge in the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha is the universal mark of being Buddhist, across every tradition without exception.
SharedNon-harming and compassionອຫິງສາ ແລະ ກະລຸນາAll traditions share a fundamental commitment to non-harm (ahiṃsā) and the cultivation of compassion (karuṇā) toward all beings.
SharedThe goal of liberationຈຸດໝາຍຂອງການຫຼຸດພົ້ນAll traditions are oriented toward liberation from suffering and the cycle of rebirth, however they conceive of it and whatever path they follow.

Where Lao Buddhism stands

ສາສະໜາພຸດລາວ ຢູ່ໃສ

Lao Buddhism is unambiguously Theravāda. The Pāli Canon is authoritative. The Pātimokkha is observed. The Arahant is the highest spiritual ideal. Vipassanā and Samatha meditation are practiced. And the Sangha — robed monks walking the streets of Vientiane and Virginia alike — is the living heart of the tradition.

What makes Lao Buddhism distinctive within Theravāda is its deep integration with pre-Buddhist Lao animist traditions — the veneration of spirits (Phi), the Baci ceremony, the use of sacred strings (sai sin) — which give Lao Buddhism its unique cultural character. This is not a dilution of Theravāda but an authentic localization: the same truth, expressed in the language of Lao civilization.

📖 Complete your Section 2 journey

You have completed Section 2 — Theravāda Buddhism. Continue to Section 3 — Lao Buddhism, the heart of this site, where these teachings come alive in Lao culture, history, and practice — from the Lane Xang Kingdom to Lao temples in America today.