This article was received by us via email recently. It is slightly dated , but we thought it might be useful for us to publicise this email as it contains many points which are useful for practising Buddhist, young or old. Please try to share this with your Dharma friends. Thank you.
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Posted on 12. Feb, 2010 by Christopher Ong in News
Campus  – The National University of Singapore Buddhist Society, or NUSBS, has  offered to correct the misconceptions of Buddhism held by Pastor Rony in  his recent video interviews.
The group holds several regular weekly meetings. Among those of  interesting note are the classes on Buddhist psychology helmed by  Brother Piya every Thursday tailored for the beginners in Buddhism, and a  Dharma circle every Friday evening where members enjoy fellowship and  discuss on issues concerning Buddhism.
Coincidentally, this week is also Buddhism Awareness Week in the  National University of Singapore and if you haven’t already noticed the  society’s colorful booth right outside the Central Library (fill up a  simple quiz and win a prize!), find out more about them through their  website.
Two very popular camps are conducted by the society every year.
The  first is known as the Camp Ehi Passiko – a Pali phrase which means ‘Come  and See’ – that allows participant not only to understand Buddhism  better, but also to take a peek into what NUSBS is all about. This camp  is packed with fun outdoor activities and is held at the East Coast Park  over a period of 2 days from 1-2 August. The second camp centers its  theme on ‘Happiness’, which is conducted in December over a period of a  five-day-four- night stay. There are panel discussions on happiness and a  debate on euthanasia.
Following the series of video interviews, NUSBS has identified the following common misconceptions about Buddhism.
Misconception  1: Pastor Rony commented about Buddhist chanting: “One could chant  ee-ee-oo-ah- ah, ting-tang-wala- wala-bing- bang, it doesn’t mean  anything.”
Answer: Buddhist chanting is not meaningless babble. In Buddhism,  chants have definite meanings, contrary to what Pastor Rony’s  interviewee claimed. For instance, the chants may refer to the  practitioner’s wish to radiate loving-kindness to other beings. Chanting  is also an aid to meditation. By focusing on the act of recitation,  chanting helps to stop the mind from wandering and instead cultivate  inner happiness.
 Misconception 2: Pastor Rony said, “The teaching is this, everybody  is potentially a god … and you can be above God and be even more  powerful than God.”
Answer: Buddhism does not subscribe to the  theistic concept of God that is common to the Abrahamic faiths. We  believe that everyone has the potential to develop into a Buddha – a  perfected being free from hatred, anger, and ignorance.
 Misconception 3: Pastor Rony’s interviewee (a former monk) didn’t  know what Nirvana was, and said that his fellow monks didn’t know  either, implying that Buddhists don’t know what they’re talking about  when they refer to Nirvana.
 Answer: Nirvana is not a meaningless entity. In conventional  language, the best approximate we can say is this: Nirvana is the  freedom from the underlying cause of all suffering – the illusion of  being a separate self. The word ‘Nirvana’ literally means ‘blowing out’,  like the extinguishing of a flame. It’s the extinguishing of all  delusions, leading to extraordinary clarity and peace. It is a state  that defies conventional language, and belongs to the realm of spiritual  attainment, not logical understanding. So we may know what Nirvana is  logically, but not know what it is on the experiential level. It is like  knowing the possibility of zero-gravity but without the actual  experience of weightlessness in space.
 Misconception 4: Pastor Rony said, “If something bad [happens], they  say it’s because of your karma … If somebody falls sick, oh it’s  because of your karma. It’s so easy to explain… It seems that you cannot  do anything about the bad things that are happening.”
 Answer: The doctrine of karma does not entail fatalism. The word  ‘karma’ literally means ‘action’, and refers to our intentional mental  actions. What we are now is determined by our thoughts and actions in  the past, and similarly, what we will experience in the future is  influenced by our thoughts and actions in the present. Karma doesn’t  mean that we’re dealt a fixed destiny that we have to passively accept.  Our karma continuously changes depending on how we think and act now. By  changing our thoughts and behaviour, we can definitely transform the  quality of our lives for the better.
 Misconception 5: Pastor Rony claimed that Buddhism had simply ‘repackaged’ the doctrine of reincarnation as ‘rebirth’.
Answer:  Reincarnation and rebirth are philosophically distinct concepts.  Reincarnation is the belief, common to Hinduism and Jainism, that each  individual has a soul, and that this soul will travel to another body  after death. Rebirth, however, is the theory that there is no such thing  as a soul (because each individual is a flowing, continuous process)  and it is the mind which establishes itself as a personality, much like  how a flame is passed from one candle to another.
 Misconception 6: Pastor Rony said, “How could you ever learn from  your past life when you do not know what you were or who you were;  whether you were a prince or a cockroach, you also don’t know… Surely  there isn’t any past life because when you were born as a baby, you  started with a new slate with no recollection whatsoever… There is no  such thing as a previous life, or to be reborn into the next life.”
 Answer: This understanding of the mind stems from John Locke’s  epistemological theory of ‘tabula rasa’, which claims that individuals  are born as a blank slate, and all their knowledge comes from experience  and perception. This theory is still subject to ongoing philosophical  debate. In any case, according to the doctrine of rebirth, our thoughts  and actions leave imprints on our consciousness which we may not be  fully aware of. These imprints result in consequences which come to  fruition when causes and conditions allow them to.
 Misconception 7: Pastor Rony said, “Ladies should be very offended  [by the doctrine of rebirth]… One of the Buddhist persons who argued  with me many years ago, he said, ‘…You are such an unbeliever, he said,  next life ah, … you’ll be born as a woman!’ So you ladies, don’t believe  in reincarnation.”
 Answer: Buddhism does not regard women as inferior to men. In fact,  the Buddha himself was explicit about treating men and women equally; he  initiated women into the Sangha (the Buddhist monastic order) despite  fierce controversy. Any sexist sentiments of individuals derive from the  attitudes of their cultures, not from Buddhism.
The Kent Ridge Common sincerely thanks the NUSBS for helping to  clear the misconceptions of Buddhism shown in Pastor Rony’s video  interviews. Visit the NUSBS website today — and maybe you could join in  their activities, soon!

 
 
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