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Archive for The Concept

Song – Only Remembered

Bill Staines, Looking for the WindI’ve heard this sung by several people. My favorite version is by Bill Staines, on his “Looking for the Wind” album. You can download the song for $.99 at Amazon’s MP3 download site.

Up and away like the dew in the morning,
Soaring from earth to its home in the sun,
Thus we will pass from the earth and its toiling,
Only remembered for what we have done.
Only the truth that in life we have spoken.
Only the seed we have sown,
These shall pass onward when we are forgotten,
Fruits of the harvest and what we have done.

Only remembered, Only remembered,
Only remembered for what we have done,
Only remembered, Only remembered,
Only remembered for what we have done.

Shall we be missed when the others succeed us,
Keeping the fields that in springtime we’ve sown?
No, for the sowers shall pass from their labors,
Only remembered for what they have done.

Only remembered, Only remembered,
Only remembered for what they have done,
Only remembered, Only remembered,
Only remembered for what they have done.

Up and away like the dew in the morning,
Soaring from earth to its home in the sun,
Thus we will pass from the earth and its toiling,
Only remembered for what we have done.

Words and music by John R. Sweeney and William J. Kirkpatrick, from “On Joyful Wing, A Book of Praise and Song” published by John J. Hood in 1886. (I’ve emended the words slightly to modernize the syntax – RB)

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Protestant Buddhism – David’s Concern

I had lunch yesterday with David and Elizabeth, and we were talking about (what else) the New Dharma Center. David is uncertain about the notion; specifically, he is concerned that we will fall into the trap that caught Buddhists in Sri Lanka who tried to borrow methods and practices from the Protestant missionaries who were making heavy inroads on the island, successfully proselytizing the native Buddhist population. The result was what the authors Richard Gombrich and Gananath Obeyesekere call “Protestant Buddhism“. For those of us attracted to the rationality and clarity of the Buddha’s teachings, the absence of dogmatic doctrine, and the strong focus on ethical action, Protestant Buddhism is not a welcome prospect; essentially, the native Buddhists, in an attempt to stave off the Christian Protestant missionaries, made their temples over in the form of Christian churches; there was a tendency to deify the Buddha, a borrowing of additional gods and goddesses from the Tamil Hindu traditions and the incorporation of Hindu puja ceremony into Buddhist practice; a shift in emphasis away from ethical practice and toward belief in the Buddha as a source of temporal success, and a new emphasis on intercessory prayer.

Another possibly cautionary example is The Buddhist Churches of America, a U.S. branch of the Japanese Jodo Shinshu variant of Pure Land Buddhism; in addition to their use of the word “church” to define their gathering places, the BCA uses the terms “Reverend”, “Minister” and “Bishop” to refer to members of the Church hierarchy. While meditation is not typically part of their practice, and while they do have a relatively straightforward focus on the Buddhadharma, they are very much targeted to Japanese-Americans; there’s a lot of chanting, and that is almost entirely in Japanese. And there is, for me, an uncomfortable mysticism about the basic Pure Land doctrine, that chanting the name of Amitabha Buddha over and over will guarantee rebirth in the “Pure Land”, in which one is promised virtually certain Enlightenment. For those looking for salvation through ritual, faith, and supplicatory prayer, but who no longer identify themselves as Christians or Jews, the BCA may offer an alternative. But that is not, I believe, what we are about.

I think that it’s very important, early on, to articulate a set of guiding principles that will fix the grounding of our Center and of the Dharma that we practice in the Buddha’s teachings. We are not trying to assimilate into a foreign culture, as were the Japanese immigrants who founded BCA in 1944. And we are not trying to resist proselytizing Christians, as were the “Protestant Buddhists” in Sri Lanka. Rather, we are trying to arrange a setting for the Dharma that will make it most easily accessible to those who are ready for it and who need it most.

In many of the suttas, in the formula statement which describes the Buddha’s reputation, one of the items is that he is “the only one able to tame those ready to be tamed.” I believe that many Americans today are ready to be tamed, and that they need to be tamed, not by Buddhism, of one lineage or another, but by the Buddha, through the words he left with us.

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Please subscribe to the mail list

I’ve also set up a mail list for the New Dharma Center, one that lets you subscribe and unsubscribe online, and also browse the message archives. That shouldn’t be a time-consuming process, since list traffic should be light. I envision using the list mainly to announce meetings, especially as a core group forms and we begin dealing with the substantial issues of starting a new meeting. Since it’s a nuisance to pay regular visits to the website, I’d also expect the list to be used to announce the publication of important documents on the site. All in all, I’d expect the traffic to be no more than a couple of messages per week.

To subscribe to the list, go to the list information page and sign yourself up. It’s easy, and there’s no downside.

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This site

I’ve set the site up as weblog, and configured the weblog so that anyone who registers can not only comment on the articles I add but also add his or her own articles, as consideration of the idea of a New Dharma Center stimulates creative thinking. So, if you are interested, register now and begin contributing. Note that your first comment or article might not show up on the site immediately. I’ve set it up so that the first contribution of a new registrant requires moderation; once that first post is approved, however, there should be no further delays.

The software (Wordpress, for those who are interested) is really pretty intuitive and easy to use. At some point, I’ll post a page of detailed instruction about how to comment and create posts, but that is relatively low on the priority list. Until I do that, there are some very good tutorials online, including this article from the Wordpress Codex, and a number of video tutorials on YouTube.

So please login or register and contribute your ideas to what could be a very exciting and rewarding project. And if you have specific questions, please send them to me in an email.

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How this began

I taught a class last quarter at UC’s Osher Livelong Learning Institute in “The Teachings of the Buddha”. The class attracted more than 30 students, which is quite large by OLLI standards; it’s clear that there’s a lot of interest in Buddhism. The students were sharp, attentive, and involved with the teachings that we covered. They found the Buddha’s Dharma comprehensible, for the most part, and, again for the most part, they recognized the relevance of the teachings to the conditions of their lives and of our culture. Many of them, it was clear, were attracted to the Dharma and were looking for ways to integrate it into their lives.

The sticking point for many of them, it turned out, was not what I expected it to be. They were cool with the non-theistic nature of the discourses, and they understood that the Buddha’s demand that we confront the harsh reality of our circumstances did not, therefore, mean that Buddhism was somehow gloomy or “pessimistic”; they understood how accepting responsibility for the consequences of our actions could provide a foundation for morality and could bring meaning to our lives. Even kamma and rebirth didn’t dim their enthusiasm (although that might have had something to do with the relatively naturalistic slant I gave to our discussion of those doctrines). What disturbed them about Buddhism, and what, for almost all of them, was a deal-breaker for their acceptance of the Dharma as their personal path, was the failure of contemporary Buddhism to provide the kind of communal experience, the sense of fellowship, that they received from their participation in church or temple services.

“Do Buddhists have a church?” “Do they have regular meetings?” “What do they do when they get together?” Those were the questions I got, and the answers I was able to give were clearly not answers that satisfied whatever felt need it was that had stimulated the questions.

Now I’m quite ready to believe that my own growing dissatisfaction with the modes of practice that dominate Buddhism meetings and the dominance of communal meditation in those practices probably affected the answers I gave. Someone who was more enthusiastic about communal meditation than I am might have responded to those questions with an explanation and a defense of meditative practice that might have given the students the assurance they were looking for and given them also more encouragement than I gave them to attend meditative sessions and take up the practice. But I understood their questions to be revealing of a need that, again as I understand it, contemporary Buddhist practice is not fulfilling.

It was that experience with my OLLI class that stimulated me to begin thinking more deeply about an idea that I’d been noodling for several years – the idea of a Dharma Center that would focus more on exploring the teachings and less on the practice of group meditation. As I talked to various people about that, the idea began to assume a more distinct outline. That outline is what I’ve written as The Concept, and I’ve set this site up to explore that concept in more detail and, if there proves to be enough interest, to begin working on the very difficult task of bringing real shape to the outline, to actually start a New Dharma Center.

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