Faith in Buddhism

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 17

  • @grndpahawk5990
    @grndpahawk5990 Před 11 měsíci

    Canki Sutta. Majjhima Nikaya 95, Buddha talks about the preservation of truth through Faith and the discovery of truth through Faith. ☸️🙏 Namo Buddhaya

  • @janeg7057
    @janeg7057 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for this. Excellent timing. My daughter and I are viewing our local temple this Saturday in the Bay Area. I’d love to stop by the temple your go to when we take a trip down south in April! It’s hard when you have no community. We have been studying for years but feel we need a community to move us forward!

    • @AlanPeto
      @AlanPeto  Před rokem +1

      That’s great! Yes, it’s helpful even if you can’t go all the time. And depending on temple, they may be “online” in different ways to bridge the gap in between. Hope you enjoy Hsi Lai when you eventually visit! (Be sure to go to their website first because right now you have to do a free reservation time due to the pandemic but it’s easy to do)

  • @xoAmelia7
    @xoAmelia7 Před 2 měsíci

    Hey Alan, I'm new to Buddhism, and while I have no difficulty believing in the Four Noble Truths, samsara, rebirth, no supreme God, karma, no self, I have difficulty in believing in certain supernatural gains of serious meditation (walking through walls, telepathy, etc).
    I do believe the Buddha taught many things that were ahead of his time and that science has confirmed (matter cannot be created or destroyed, cause and effect, nature of impermanence) but I'm having a hard time believing in the miracles\supernatural aspects I mentioned above since we cannot prove them.
    I would appreciate your advice and your take. Thank you.

    • @AlanPeto
      @AlanPeto  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Great question. It's why we have faith in the Buddha, as our teacher. There are things we can't prove, per se, but take it on his word. Why? He's a Buddha and has a proven teaching(s) that lead to liberation. Depending on our level, we can understand perhaps just a little bit of it, but that allows us even more faith since we were able to understand some initial small concepts. Much like if you were in elementary school, and your teacher was saying there is such things as physics which are beyond our comprehension at that age. Our teacher has proven smaller initial concepts with us that leads to credibility. Another way to look at it is, the Buddha actually said the supranormal/supernatural abilities he, and his enlightened followers, obtained from advanced meditative concentration (and the fact he was a Buddha) allows them to reveal/obtain these abilities. To us, these appear supranormal/supernatural, but that doesn't mean they are not 'natural' anyways. Just beyond our level of understanding/comprehension. What gives power to this in Buddhism, is that the Buddha said that one should not practice Buddhism to obtain these 'powers', as the true power is from his teachings (Dharma). The supranormal/supernatural powers are basically byproducts or obtainments from such advanced levels. He did use it to help others understand Buddhism, etc., but these were limited circumstances and he often did it with the point of helping others understand the Dharma. That would be in sharp contrast, for example, if say another religion stated the founder of their religion had supernormal/supernatural powers as a proven fact to their supreme status in that religion (and was a constant focus). That doesn't exist in Buddhism. alanpeto.com/buddhism/buddhist-superstition/

    • @xoAmelia7
      @xoAmelia7 Před 2 měsíci

      @@AlanPeto Hey Alan, thank you so much for answering my question.
      I am very much a skeptic at heart and have a very critical eye for things that have to be taken 'on faith alone,' like various Abrahamic faiths.
      It's taken me a while to realize that Buddhism is not 'faith' based in the Abrahamic, unquestionable sense, but 'faith' in the trust sense.

  • @MrX-bb5ny
    @MrX-bb5ny Před rokem +1

    🙏💙love from India🇮🇳

  • @mimi1238912
    @mimi1238912 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for these videos, new to learning about Buddhism and these videos really help understanding. It seemed really difficult at 1st to learn and it was a bit intimidating

    • @AlanPeto
      @AlanPeto  Před rokem

      Great to hear! Let me know if any questions.

  • @buutich1
    @buutich1 Před rokem +1

    Maintaining "don't know mind."

  • @priyadarshanachandrasena2062

    🙏🙏🙏

  • @victoriapoirier8010
    @victoriapoirier8010 Před rokem

    Can you do chants in English. And I also Do Buddhist prayers

    • @AlanPeto
      @AlanPeto  Před rokem

      Hi, Victoria! Yes, you can do chanting in English, but it's perhaps the least popular way. The reason is that it can be a bit challenging to find a harmonic tone (although that can absolutely be done), and it takes longer! When chanting in sanskrit, pali, or native tongues like chinese, japanese, etc., it just flows easier and faster. If you'd like an example, you can see my chanting of the Heart Sutra here: czcams.com/video/U34u44S9dKw/video.html

  • @Shizzie-5k
    @Shizzie-5k Před rokem

    What do you think of kampada tradition

    • @AlanPeto
      @AlanPeto  Před 11 měsíci +1

      I don't have any personal experience, but from what I understand it's a Tibetan tradition. However, I've read online that there is a "new" version of that some have concerns about. You may want to do more research on this and ask questions. Again, it's a tradition I don't have any experience with.

  • @redswordsman8822
    @redswordsman8822 Před rokem

    Hi where can I buy one from a real website??

    • @AlanPeto
      @AlanPeto  Před rokem

      Can you explain what you want to buy?