What is Buddhism?

Buddhism has a history of more than 2,500 years, which was founded by Gautama Siddharta, the prince of Piloff Kingdom in ancient India. There is the word "Buddha" in China ancient books, but in ancient books, Buddha refers to the teachings of the Buddha, especially the teachings of the Buddha recorded in Buddhist scriptures.

Buddhism is the enlightenment and teaching of Buddhism, which can be understood from three aspects:

First, teaching words refer to Buddhist classics.

Second, enlightenment, the Buddha enlightened nine sentient beings.

Third, the doctrine, the Buddha used the wisdom of Buddhism to educate all beings in the nine realms.

This also reflects from the side that family members have the responsibility to spread Buddhism and benefit students. At home, they need the wisdom of Buddha to improve their moral quality and life value, and they also have the responsibility to inherit the teachings of Buddha. Buddha said that all beings are equal and have Buddha nature, and there is no difference between heart and Buddha, which means there is no difference between truth.

The difference between Buddhism and other religions

Most other religions worship faith and emphasize absolute belief in God, while Buddhism, on the contrary, is very opposed to believing in God. Buddhism does not deny the existence of God. It thinks that God is just a sentient being with higher wisdom than human beings, which deserves respect and not necessarily worth believing in. It should believe in a kind of wisdom that truly understands the life in the universe.

Therefore, Buddhist faith is a kind of wisdom letter. Many religious beliefs are based on a person's emotional religious beliefs and put their ideal followers on God. This god, to a large extent, is shaped by people according to their own beliefs. Buddhism is really different from other religions in this respect.