What is Buddhism?
What is Buddhism?
Content
What is Buddhism?
Is Buddhism just a philosophy?
Who was the Buddha?
The Buddha is dead so how can he help us?
Was the Buddha a god?
If the Buddha is not a god, then why do people worship him?
But I have heard people say that Buddhists worship idols.
Why do people burn paper money and do all kinds of strange things in Buddhist temples?
If Buddhism is so good, why are some Buddhist countries poor?
Why is it that you don't often hear of charitable work being done by Buddhists?
Why are there so many different types of Buddhism?
You certainly think highly of Buddhism. I suppose you think your religion is right and all the others are wrong.
Is Buddhism Scientific?
Q: What is Buddhism?
A: The name Buddhism comes from the word "budhi" which means 'to wake up' and thus Buddhism is the philosophy of awakening. This philosophy has its origin in the experience of the man
Siddhata Gotama, known as the Buddha, who was himself awakened at the age of 36.
Buddhism is now more than 2500 years old and has about 300 million followers world-wide.
Until a hundred years ago, Buddhism was mainly an Asian philosophy but increasingly
gaining its adherent in Europe and America.
Q: So Buddhism is just a philosophy?
A: The word philosophy comes from two words 'philo' which means 'love' and 'sophia'
which means 'wisdom'. So philosophy is the love of wisdom or love and wisdom, both
meanings describe Buddhism perfectly. Buddhism teaches that we should try to develop our
intellectual capacity to the fullest so that we can understand clearly. It also teaches
us to develop love and kindness so that we can be like a true friend to all beings. So
Buddhism is a philosophy but not just a philosophy. It is the supreme philosophy.
Q: Who was the Buddha?
A: In the year 563 BC, a baby was born into a royal family in northern India. He grew
up in wealth and luxury but eventually found that worldly comfort and security do not
guarantee happiness. He was deeply moved by the suffering he saw all around and resolved
to find the key to human happiness. When he was 29, he left his wife and child and set
off to learn from the great religious teachers during his time. They taught him much but
none really knew the cause of human suffering and how it could be overcome. Eventually,
after six years of study and meditation, he had an experience in which all ignorance
fell away and he suddenly understood. From that day onwards, he was called the Buddha,
the Awakened One. He lived for another 45 years in which time
he travelled all over northern India teaching others what he had discovered. His
compassion and patience were legendary and he made thousands of followers. In his
eightieth year, old and sick, but still happy and at peace, he finally passed away.
Q: Wasn't it irresponsible for the Buddha to walk out on his wife and
child?
A: It couldn't have been an easy thing for the Buddha to leave his family. He must
have worried and hesitated for a long time before he finally left. But he had a choice,
dedicating himself to his family or dedicating himself to the world. In the end, his
great compassion made him give himself to the whole world. And the whole world still
benefits from his sacrifice. This was not irresponsible. It was perhaps the most
significant sacrifice ever made.
Q: The Buddha is dead so how can he help us?
A: Faraday, who discovered electricity, is dead, but what he discovered still help us
. Louis Pasteur who discovered the cures for many diseases is dead, but his medical
discoveries still save lives. Leonardo da Vinci who created masterpieces of art is dead,
but what he created can still uplift and give joy. Noble men and heroes may have been
dead for centuries but when we read of their deeds and achievements, we can still be
aspired to act as they did. Yes, the Buddha is dead but more than 2500 years later, his
teachings still help people, his example still inspires people, his words still change
lives.
Q: Was the Buddha a god?
A: No, he was not. He did not claim that he was a god, the child of a god or even
the messanger from a god. He was a man who perfected himself and taught that if we
followed his example, we could perfect ourselves too.
Q: If the Buddha is not a god, then why do people worship
him?
A: There are different types of worship. When someone worships a God, they praise and
honour Him or Her, make offerings and ask for favours, believing that the God will hear
their praise, receive their offerings and answer their prayers. This is not the kind of
worship that Buddhists are practicing. The other kind of worship is when we show respect
to someone or something we admire. When a teacher walks into the room, we stand up. When
we meet a dignitary, we shake hands. When the national anthem is played, we salute. These
are all gestures of respect and worship and indicate our admiration for persons or things
. This is the type of worship that Buddhists practice. A statue of the Buddha with its
hands rested gently in its lap and its compassionate smile reminds us to strive to
develop peace and love within ourselves. The perfume of incense reminds us of the
pervading influence of virtue, the lamp reminds us of the light of knowledge and the
flowers which soon fade and decay, remind us of impermanence. When we bow, we express our
gratitude to the Buddha for what his teachings have given us. This is the nature of
Buddhists worship.
Q: But I have heard people say that Buddhists worship
idols.
A: Such statements only reflect the misunderstanding of the persons who make them.
The dictionary defines an idol as "an image or statue worshipped as a god". As we have
seen, Buddhists do not believe that the Buddha was a god, so how could they possibly
believe that a piece of wood or metal is a god? All religions use symbols to express
various concepts. In Taoism, the ying-yang is used to symbolise the harmony between
opposites. In Sikhism, the sword is used to symbolise spiritual struggle. In Christianity
, the cross is used to symbolise Jesus's sacrifice. And in Buddhism, the statue of the
Buddha is used to symbolise human perfection. The statue of the Buddha also reminds us
of the human dimension in the Buddha's teachings, the fact that Buddhism is man-centred,
not god-centred that we must look within not without to find perfection and
understanding. So to say that Buddhists worship idols is not correct.
Q: Why do people burn paper money and do all kinds of strange things in Buddhist
temples?
A: Many things seem strange to us when we don't understand them. Rather than dismiss
such things as strange, we should strive to find out their meaning. However, it is true
that Buddhist practice sometimes has its origin in popular superstition and
misunderstanding rather than the teachings of the Buddha. The Buddha taught with clarity
and in detail and if some fail to understand fully, the Buddha cannot be blamed. There is
a saying:
If a man suffering from a disease does not seek
treatment even when there is a physician at
hand,it is not the fault of that physician.
In the same way, if a man is oppressed and
tormented by the disease of the defilements but
does not seek the help of the Buddha,
that is not the Buddha's fault.
JN 28-9
Nor should Buddhism or any religion be judged by those who don't practise it properly
. If you wish to know the true teachings of Buddhism, read the Buddha's words or speak to
those who understand them properly.
Q: If Buddhism is so good, why are some Buddhist countries
poor?
A: If by poor you mean economically poor, then it is true that some Buddhist
countries are poor. But if by poor you mean a poor quality of life, then perhaps
some Buddhist countries are quite rich. America, for example, is an economically rich and
powerful country but the crime rate is one of the highest in the world, millions of old
people are neglected by their children and die of loneliness in old people's homes,
domestic violence and child abuse are major problems. One in three marriages end in
divorce, pornography is easily available. Rich in terms of money but perhaps poor in
terms of the quality of life. Now, take Burma, a country that is economically backward.
Parents are honoured and respected by their childern, the crime rate is relatively low,
divorce and suicide are almost unheard of, as are domestic violence and child abuse,
pornography and sexual licence are non-existent. Economically backward, but perhaps a
higher quality of life than in a country like America. But even if we judge Buddhist
countries in terms of economics alone, one of the wealthiest and most economically
dynamic countries in the world today is Japan where 93 percent of the population call
themselves Buddhists.
Q: Why is it that you don't often hear of charitable work being done by
Buddhists?
A: Perhaps it is because Buddhists don't feel the need to boast about the good they
do. Several years ago the Japanese Buddhist leader Nikkho Nirwano received the Templeton
Prize for his work in promoting inter-religious harmony. Likewise a Thai Buddhist monk
was recently awarded the prestigious Magsaysay Prize for his excellent work among drug
addicts. In 1987 another Thai monk, Venerable Kantayapiwat was awarded the Norwegian
Children's Peace Prize for his many years of work helping homeless children in rural
areas. and what about the large scale social work being done among the poor in India by
the Western Buddhist Order? They have built schools, child minding-centres, dispensaries
and small scale industries for self-sufficiency. Buddhists see help given to others as a
n expression of their religious practice just as other religions do but they believe that
it should be done quietly and without self-promotion. Thus you don't hear so much about
their charitable work.
Q: Why are there so many different types of Buddhism?
A: There are many different types of sugar: brown sugar, white sugar, granulated
sugar, rock sugar, syrup and icing sugar but it is all sugar and it all tastes sweet.
It is produced in different forms so that it can be used in different ways. Buddhism
is the same. There are Theravada Buddhism, Zen Buddhism, Pure Land
Buddhism, Yogacara Buddhism, and Vajrayana Buddhism, but they are all
Buddhism and it all has the same taste - The state of freedom. Buddhism has evolved into
different forms so that it can be relevant to the different cultures in which it exists.
It has been reinterpreted over the centuries so that it can remain relevant to each new
generation. Outwardly, the types of Buddhism may seem very different but at the centre of
all of them is the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path.
Different sects of Buddhism have never gone to war with each other, they have never
expressed hostility towards each other and to this day, they go to each other's temples
and worship together.
Q: You certainly think highly of Buddhism. I suppose you think your religion is right
and all the others are wrong.
A: No Buddhist who understands the Buddha's teaching thinks that other religions are
wrong. No one who has made a genuine effort to examine other religions with an open mind
could think like that either.The first thing you notice when you study the different
religions is just how much they have in common. All religions acknowledge that
man's present state is unsatisfactory. All believe that a change of attitude and
behaviour is needed if man's situation is to improve. All teach an ethics that includes
love, kindness, patience, generosity and social responsibility. They
use different languages, different names and different symbols to
describe and explain things.
Imagine an Englishman, a Frenchman, a Chinese and an Indonesian all looking at a
cup. The Englishman says,"that's a cup." The Frenchman answers,"No it's not. It's a tasse
." The Chinese comments,"You're both wrong. It's a pei." And the Indonesian says,"No,
it's a cawan." The Englishman gets a dictionary and shows it to the others saying,"I can
prove that it is a cup. My dictionary says so." "Then your dictionary is wrong," says the
Frenchman "because my dictionary clearly says it is a tasse." The Chinese says," My
dictionary is thousand of years older than yours, so my dictionary must be right." While
they are arguing with each other, a Buddhist comes up and drinks from the cup. After he
has drunk, he says to the others, "Whether you call it a cup, a tasse, a pei or a cawan,
the purpose of the cup is to be used. Stop arguing and drink, refresh your thirst." This
is the Buddhist attitude to other religions.
Q: Is Buddhism scientific?
A: Before we answer that question it would be best to define the word 'science'.
Science, according to the dictionary is "knowledge which can be made into a system, which
depends upon seeing and testing facts and stating general natural laws, a branch of such
knowledge, anything that can be studied exactly."
There are aspects of Buddhim that would not fit into this definition but the
central teachings of Buddhism, the Four Noble Truths, most
certainly would. Suffering, the First Noble Truth is an
experience that can be defined, experienced and measured. The
Second Noble Truth states that suffering has a natural cause, craving, which likewise
can be defined, experienced and measured. No attempt is made to explain suffering in
terms of a metaphysical concept or myths. Suffering is ended, according to
the Third Noble Truth, not by relying upon a supreme being,
by faith or by prayers but simply by removing its cause. This is axiomatic.
The Fourth Noble Truth, the way to end suffering, once again,
has nothing to do with metaphysics but depends on behaving in specific ways. And once
again behaviour is open to testing. Buddhism does not have the concept of a supreme being
, as does science, and explains the origins and workings of the universe in terms of
natural laws. All of this certainly exhibits a scientific spirit. Once again, the
Buddha's constant advice that we should not blindly believe but rather question, examine,
inquire and rely on our own experience, has a definite scientific ring to it. He says:
"Do not go by revelation or tradition,
do not go by rumour, or the sacred scriptures,
do not go by hearsay or mere logic,
do not go by bias towards a notion or by another person's seeming ability and
do not go by the idea 'He is our teacher'
but when you yourself know that a thing is good,
that it is not blamable,
that it is praised by the wise and
when practised and observed that it leads to happiness,
Then follow that thing.
AI 188
So we could say although Buddhism is not entirely scientific, it
certainly has a strong scientific overtone and is certainly more scientific
than any other religion. It is significant that Albert Einstein, the
greatest scientist of the twentieth century said of Buddhism:
"The religion of the future will be a cosmic religion. it should
transcend a personal god and avoid dogmas and theology. Covering both the
natural and the spiritual, it should be based on a religious sense arising
from the experience of all things, natuaral and spiritual and a meaningful
unity. Buddhism answers this description. If there is any religion that
would cope with modern scientific needs, it would be Buddhism."