Happy Lunar New Year 2019

29/01/201909:40(Xem: 17289)
Happy Lunar New Year 2019
The year of pig 2019

Chuong trinh Xuan_2019
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14/05/2015(Xem: 29781)
Amitabha Buddha’s name chanting is an easy method of cultivation in which beliefs are difficult to have, especially in this age of information technology when people care more about material comfort than the spiritual life. However, as in the Buddha’s teachings: Buddhahood is a nature of mind and it’s the mind that possesses the Buddhahood, ringing about enlightenment. Therefore, as Buddhists, we have to believe in Buddha’s teachings. The Flower Adornment Sutra stated: “Beliefs are the mother of all the good merits.”. No other merits are greater than making a vow to be reborn in the Pure Land and to become a Buddha. On the occasion of this year’s retreat, we would like to briefly tell you about an old lady having a belief in Amitabha Buddha’s name chanting
21/11/2014(Xem: 27573)
As a Vietnamese Buddhist monk serving as a Buddhist chaplain in several hospitals across Melbourne, as well as at the Melbourne Assessment Prison, I have witnessed numerous personal tragedies experienced by the living, along with the profound realities of dying and death. Many individuals, especially those approaching the end of life, often face their final moments with fear, suffering, and deep emotional pain. Bearing these experiences in mind, I would like to share some reflections from a Buddhist perspective. It is my sincere hope that such understanding may help ease the fear surrounding death and allow individuals to approach this inevitable transition with greater calmness and acceptance. For, according to the Buddhist view, death is not the end of life, but rather a continuation within the cycle of existence.
08/10/2014(Xem: 21765)
Dan Stevenson is neither a Buddhist nor a follower of any organized religion. The 11th Avenue resident in Oakland's Eastlake neighborhood was simply feeling hopeful in 2009 when he went to an Ace hardware store, purchased a 2-foot-high stone Buddha and installed it on a median strip in a residential area at 11th Avenue and 19th Street. He hoped that just maybe his small gesture would bring tranquillity to a neighborhood marred by crime: dumping, graffiti, drug dealing, prostitution, robberies, aggravated assault and burglaries.
11/03/2014(Xem: 6127)
I want to begin to write this essay with mentioning Prof. Seonglae Park, who is the famous scholar in the history of science. Prof. Park carefully explained in his heading remarks of the quarterly journal, ¡°Gwahak Sasang¡±(The Thought of Science) how the West occupied the East, and how the moral civilization of the East ...
11/03/2014(Xem: 5776)
Buddhism, that oldest world religion, is generally misconceived to be a blind faith. As seen from its outward appearance, really it is painted with a strong religious color. To a non-Buddhist, who sees the golden image of Buddha, and hears the chanting of Sanscrit Sutras and the clinking of the bell, Buddhism is nothing but idolatry...
11/03/2014(Xem: 5519)
The eminent scientist, Bertrand Russell, has summed up the position of present-day philosophical thought follows: '' Assuming physics to he broadly speaking true, can we know it to be true, and if the answer is to be in the affirmative, does this involve knowledge of other truths besides those of physics?
31/07/2013(Xem: 7910)
There is an ongoing mistake that people seem to make that spirituality is a religion. But, spirituality is not about faith (or spirits, or ghosts or anything paranormal). Those interested in spirituality might also be interested in other things “out of the ordinary,” too, but spirituality is science—with the very important added value of real human experience. I recently watched the documentary “The Story of Everything” in which famous physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking explains the amazing creation of everything.
13/04/2013(Xem: 5113)
The Dalai Lama, the exiled leader of Tibet who is revered as a spiritual teacher, is at the center of a scientific controversy.
10/04/2013(Xem: 5963)
The two lectures which are here reprinted were delivered by the Hon’ble Justice U Chan Htoon when he was invited to represent Buddhism at two religious Conferences in the United States: The Sixteenth Congress of the International Association for Religious Freedom, held at Chicago, and the Conference on Religion in the Age of Science, held at Star Island, New Hampshire, U.S.A., in August 1958.