Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts

Sunday 31 March 2019

Becoming a Buddhist - Lotus Pond Temple, Lantau Is. Hong Kong 30th March, 2019

After a few false starts I finally took the plunge and officially became a lay Buddhist this weekend. I flew to Hong Kong on Friday afternoon, stayed overnight at the Lotus Pond temple on Lantau Island, and at 5:00 a.m. Saturday morning the community of monks and nuns took me through a ceremony to become part of the Plum Village Buddhist family. It practises in the Zen tradition of the Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh. I had been fiddling at the edges for years, looked at different traditions, went on a pilgrimage to northern India, and done some study, reading and meditation, so I thought it was about time to take this step and be part of something positive. It will also give me support as I continue in the practice. I will need it!

Every religion has a ceremony of some sort. The usual thing here is to Take Refuge in the Three Jewels (the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha) and to undertake one's best to recite and live according to the Five Mindfulness Trainings (generally known as the Five Precepts).

It was terrific. The brothers and sisters were lovely to me. We enjoyed eating meditation, sitting meditation, singing, and walking meditation together. The ceremony, in which they were all present, went for almost an hour, and at several points I had to "touch the Earth" which means literally touching my forehead to the ground. Later I received a certificate setting out the details of the event and the lineage of my teacher. The Dharma name given to me is "Radiant Sincerity of the Heart".

There were one or two minor challenges in getting there. The plane from Taiwan arrived an hour late and the taxi driver couldn't exactly find the temple, so it took a quick phone call to figure it out. 

Another pleasant surprise was that the Lotus Pond Temple is just a short walk away from the  huge world famous Buddha statue (Tian Tan) on Lantau Island. So walking around the hills and seeing that area was a definite bonus. Although I was unable to take any photos during the ceremony (since nobody was available to do that), I did get some afterwards which I hope you will enjoy. It was an amazing experience!

Monday 17 August 2015

Buddhism in Myanmar - A Personal Perspective

Let me preface this by saying that I only spent five months in the country, working as a trainer with the British Council. So my observations are necessarily limited by that amount of time.
Nevertheless, I got the distinct impression that Buddhism is taken very seriously there.
What in particular do I mean?
- young boys and girls spend time in robes as part of their upbringing
- monks provide general education to those less fortunate
- bhikkhus and bhikkhunis, including young ones, walk the streets on alms processions
- people give generously from what little they have to the monks
- prayers are sent out over loudspeakers from certain temples at different times of the day
- major festivals are celebrated with great energy by the whole community
- people generally act modestly in public
- monks are invited to attend important social events and are treated respectfully at them
- there are always new young men and women wishing to take vows
- houses have shrines with Buddhist images, candles, incense, flowers, etc.
- monks are consulted, probably revered, for certain decisions

Of course, there are some unique elements within Burmese Buddhism, such as the worship of nats, which are unique and, to outsiders, strange, but they are fortunate to have both male and female monks, and a long history of worship extending back thousands of years. Most recently there have been some monks becoming more vocal in everyday affairs, perhaps even political ones. Given the military's iron grip on power and their extensive lack of concern for the less fortunate, this is humanly understandable. Myanmar has far to go to resemble a country Westerners would relate to, and the November elections may not change that situation in the short term.

As a fellow seeker of the Path, I certainly felt comfortable with that part of society. Please see my photo page for many images taken during my time there.

Monday 10 October 2011

Handbook for Mankind - Tweeted Version

Tweets from “Handbook for Mankind” originally written by Ajahn Buddhadāsa Bhikkhu, the famous Thai Buddhist monk who belonged to the forest tradition and founded Suan Mokkh, an international meditation retreat centre. (Thai: พุทธทาสภิกขุ, May 27, 1906 - May 25, 1993)

Between September and December 2010 I sent just over 70 tweets summarising the main points from the book. I was both an experiment in reducing a text to bite-size pieces and a way of gaining a deeper understanding of this important document. Though I didn't tweet the whole book, I hope what I did send gave my readers some of the essence of its message.

1 Buddhism is a means of conquering birth, aging, pain and death, and destroying mental defilements.
2 The Buddha discovered how to conquer human fears, a practical method for eliminating suffering.
3 "Buddhism" means "the Teaching of the Enlightened One."
4 A Buddha is an enlightened individual who knows the truth about all things.
5 A Buddha knows "what is what" and behaves appropriately regarding all things.
6 Buddhism is based on intelligence, science & knowledge to destroy suffering & its source. A
7 Paying homage to sacred objects via rites & rituals, making offerings, praying is not Buddhism.
8 To attain liberation we first examine things closely to come to know & understand their true nature.
9 Buddhism sets no store by making libations of holy water, or any externals, spirits or celestial beings.
10 Rather, Buddhism depends on reason & insight; it doesn't demand conjecture or supposition.
11 Buddhism demands we act in line with our own insight, not take any other's word for anything.
12 Religion is a many-sided thing. Many look at it from the wrong angle, & Buddhism is no exception.
13 Buddhism: a practical method of liberating self from suffering by realising true nature of things.
14 Ceremonies like setting up trays of food as offerings don't fit with Buddhist principles.
15 The Dharma, now so overlaid by ceremony, has been obscured, falsified & changed.
16 Some are attracted to Buddhism for its moral teaching: harmony, honesty, gratitude, good, merit.
17 Some see Buddhism as truth: knowing emptiness, transience, non-self, dukkha, way to end of suffering.
18 Some see Buddhism as religion: practice morality, concentration, insight, release from suffering.
19 Some see Buddhism as psychology: describing the nature of the mind in remarkable detail.
20 Some see Buddhism as scientific: that is verifiable by clear experimental proof using introspection.
21 Some see Buddhism as culture, some aspects held in common, others better & higher than other cultures
22 Of these, the one a real Buddhist should take most interest in is Buddhism as religion.
23 Look at Buddhism as direct practical method to gain knowledge of true nature of things.
25 At very least see Buddhism as art of living – being a skilful and competent human being living well.
26 We need to develop “Three Lustres” - moral purity, tranquil & steady mind, wisdom & clear insight.
27 As our guide to living, Buddhism brings spiritual cheer & joy, disperses depression & disillusionment.
28 One who organises life in accordance with Buddhist Art of Living is victor over all things about them.
29 Victory over animals, people, possessions is genuine bliss.
30 Buddha Dhamma will enrapture & nourish a mind that has developed a taste for it.
31 Real Buddhism is not books, manuals, repetition of formulas, rites or rituals.
32 Real Buddhism is practice via body, speech & mind that destroys the defilements.
33 Morality stops short of eliminating craving, aversion & delusion, so can't do away with suffering.
34 Buddhism aims at eliminating various kinds of suffering attendant on birth, aging, pain & death.
35 Buddhism is system leading to organised practical understanding of true nature of things - “what is what”.
36 To know how things really are in all clarity is to attain the “Fruit of the Path”.
37 Knowing “what is what” means disenchantment with things takes the place of fascination.
38 When we know “what is what” deliverance from suffering comes about automatically.
39 Seeing all things as impermanent, unsatisfactory & not selves, there's nothing worth attaching ourselves to.
40 Realising nothing's worth attaching selves to, there's a slipping free from their controlling power.
41 Essentially the Buddha's teaching is nothing but knowledge of “what is what” i.e. true nature of things.
42 First Noble Truth which points out all things are suffering tells us precisely what things are like.
43 But we fail to realise all things are a source of suffering & so we desire them.
44 If we knew all as source of suffering, not worth desiring/grasping at, we'd be sure not to desire them.
45 Second Noble Truth points out that desire is the cause of suffering.
46 People desire this, that & the other simply because they don't understand nature of desire.
47 3rd Noble Truth points out freedom from suffering, Nirvana consists in complete extinguishing of desire.
48 People don't realise Nirvana can be attained at any time/place, soon as desire's completely extinguished.
49 Not knowing facts of life, people not interested in extinguishing desire, nor Nirvana.
50 4th Noble Truth is Path i.e. the method for extinguishing desire.
51 People don't recognise it as very point of support, their foothold to be reinforced.
52 People not interested in Noble Path which is a most horrifying piece of ignorance.
53 We can see 4 Noble Truths tell us clearly just “what is what” & Noble Path is the most precious thing.
54 All phenomena arise as result of causes; by eliminating causes, all phenomena may be brought to end.
55 Nil's permanent, just effects arising from causes, developing through them & ceasing with their cessation.
56 All phenomena are merely products of causes.
57 World's just perpetual flux of natural forces incessantly interacting & changing.
58 Buddhism points out all things are devoid of any self entity.
59 All just perpetual flux of change so inherently unsatisfactory as lacking freedom & subject to causality.
60 Unsatisfactoriness ends when process stops; this happens when the causes are eliminated.
61 Thus all things just appearances, so shouldn't be fooled into liking/disliking them.
62 Rendering mind truly free involves escaping completely from causal chain by eliminating causes.
63 Buddha became monk to answer what is suffering, its cause & what is freedom from it.
64 To attain perfect & right knowledge of “what is what” is ultimate in skill – and aim of Buddhism.
65 Another important teaching is 3 characteristics – impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, non-selfhood.
66 Saying all things r impermanent = all things change perpetually, nothing is unchanged even for an instant.
67 Saying all things r unsatisfactory = all inherently have property of conducing 2 suffering & torment.
68 That all r not selves = in nothing at all is an entity we might regard as its “self” or call “its own”.
69 If we grasp or cling to things the result is bound to be suffering.
70 Things r more dangerous than fire, since we can see fire & keep away, while things are fire we can't see.
71 Thus we go about voluntarily picking up handfuls of fire, which is inevitably painful.