I’m having a group chanting of the Great Compassionate Mantra 大悲咒@7pm Buddhist Library tonight.
All are welcome. It is an informal group chanting and practice session, so it is suitable even for new comers.
See you all!
Bite-sized Dharma on the go!
I’m having a group chanting of the Great Compassionate Mantra 大悲咒@7pm Buddhist Library tonight.
All are welcome. It is an informal group chanting and practice session, so it is suitable even for new comers.
See you all!
Give and take, give and take. We hear this often and as Buddhists, we learn much about the practice of Giving. While we give open-handedly, we should perhaps also learn to Take Graciously.
If you refuse to ask for or to receive help, how are others supposed to give help?
I am here at The Buddhist Library.
So I am using wordbooker to sync the blog posts and comments with facebook.
The latest version of wordbooker seem to sync the comments, including spam, onto facebook.
Thanks to Stephen, after some back and forth on their support forum over the Chinese New Year, we’ve got a patch below which may end up in the wordbooker’s next update or release.
Get it here wordbooker.php.tar
As always, backup your wordbooker.php file. Untar it. Test it with spams and normal comments. Let me know how it works.
Continue reading if you
want to know why the spam was synced to facebook and what this patch does.
You can also read the original forum thread over here
Happy Chinese New Year to all!
Here’s some programmes coming up at the Buddhist Library for this Chinese New Year:
Wednesday 2 Feb Chinese New Year’s Eve 年除夕
8:30pm ~ 9:30pm
Special Chinese New Year Puja & Chanting led by Ven. B. Dhammaratana
Thursday 3 Feb (1st Day of Chinese New Year 年初一)
8:30am ~ 9:00am
Blessings by Ven. B. Dhammaratana
11am ~ 11:30am
Puja in Pali & English
11:30am ~ 11:45am
Dhamma talk by Ven. Chuan Guan
11:45am
Dana for monks
6:30pm
Evening Puja in Pali & English by Ven. B. Dhammaratana
8:00pm
Chanting in Chinese by Ven. Yuan Qing
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Friday 4 Feb (2nd Day of Chinese New Year 年初二)
6:30am ~ 8:30am
Library opens for blessings
Saturday 12 Feb (10th Day of Chinese New Year 年初十)
1:30pm
Visit to Taipei Old Folks’ Home
Sunday 13 Feb (11th Day of Chinese New Year 年十一)
11:30am
Chinese New Year Gathering
New Year House Blessing Service by Bhante B. Dhammaratana will commence from Friday 4 Feb (2nd Day of Chinese New Year 年初二).
Please contact counter staff for an appointment.
Suki hontu! ^_^
I like science, esp physics, partly because it can be proven and partly because it is this understanding that allowed many modern inventions. I also like physics because it meant that when I studied kinematics (way back in secondary school and JC), I only had to study once and can apply the same stuffs in three different exams!
The one thing I love was the mathematical proving1 in JC. Not that I was particularly good at it, ‘cos I frequently prove that 0 = 0 or 1 = 1 and not prove or disprove the intended question!
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While I have this passion for maths, physics and science, I also wonder how many of us take it as fact or truth as long as scientists say so. How many of us have proven all the mathematical, physical and chemical laws, and how many of us assume it should be right?
Granted, I have confidence in those in labcoats, and I do not propose that we learn years of aerospace engineering before taking a plane or civil & structural engineering to stay in a highrise without becoming paranoid.
Physicists are using Large Hadron Collider (LHC) as the instrument to find or verify the presence Higgs boson (particles). Their experiments would be mostly unintelligible to most of human kind. Their findings will only be verified and proven by their fellows in the field, and not even by scientists in other fields. Should we doubt their findings?
In Buddhist teachings, the mind is our instrument, but we need to train it so that we can use it to see the true nature of all phenomena. The Buddha saw how it was and was consequently released from craving and attachment, leading to an ending of suffering.
Others who have repeated this procedure realised the same truth and was likewise liberated. They are then declared as Arahants, the Noble Ones, by virtue of their purity and freedom from craving, attachment and defilements.
Their accounts were recorded and later verified by others. Some even came from other schools to challenge the Buddha and his teachings, but through their own verification, ‘converted’ to the Buddhist teachings.
The invitation to Buddhists and non Buddhists alike has always been this: Ehi passiko. Come and see.
Suki hontu! ^_^
Footnote 1: The mathematics in university was so crazy, they had crazier names! These include things like binomial series, bernoulli, la place, fourier transform (no, not transformer transform!), root locus, among others … … come to think about it, I have this pet project to go figure most of them out completely, just so I don’t waste this life time of study in university! … but that is another blog post … ^_~
EDIT:
Meanwhile, for those who like studies and clinical tests by the scientists, there are numerous articles citing changes in the grey matter linked to meditation.
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/01/28/how-meditation-may-change-the-brain/?src=me&ref=general