RECOMMENDED 'At Home' Liturgy

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  • Jundo
    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
    • Apr 2006
    • 40479

    RECOMMENDED 'At Home' Liturgy

    Hi,

    'Liturgy' means the many acts and rituals by which we manifest (and are manifested by) the beliefs and teachings at the heart of Buddhist Practice. Some we practice as a group together, some at private times (not two, by the way). These various practices can bring the teachings more visibly to life, and our lives into the Teachings. Of course, in our way, Zazen is the centerpiece, and nothing else is really necessary. However, other practices can be truly powerful and resonate in the hearts of many people, bringing much Wisdom and Compassion into our lives.

    What are the some of the practices which we recommend or encourage at home and work ... our practice places in this Sangha in which all of life is the temple?

    ZAZEN

    Of course, seated Zazen is our one and only practice, for by the very nature of Shikantaza ... when sitting Zazen, there is nothing more to do, nothing more that need be done, no addition needed nor anything to take away. Zazen is complete and whole. No other place to be in all the world, no other place we must (or can) run to. Nothing lacks, all is sacred, and Zazen is the One Liturgy. It is vital to be sat by Zazen with such attitude. Thus, Zazen is sat each day as the One and Whole Practice.

    Yet, of course, we do eventually rise up from the Zafu and get on with "the rest of life". Then, ANYTHING and EVERYTHING can be encountered as Sacred, One, Whole ... as 'Zazen' ... from 'changing a baby's diaper' to 'stapling staples' at work to 'pulling weeds' in the garden ... all a SACRED RITUAL when approached as such.

    Thus, I wish to HIGHLY RECOMMEND one of the best little books on the subject of 'liturgy' in our so called 'ordinary' life at home and work ... please read it ...

    Bringing the Sacred to Life: The Daily Practice of Zen Ritual by John Daido Loori Roshi


    ... one of the best 'Zen Books' I have encountered in years, and very unique in its subject matter. Also, another book very very highly recommended for understanding the significance and origins of some of the traditional chants and practices one will encounter around Treeleaf and most other Soto Zen Sangha is Shohaku Okumura's "Living by Vow: A Practical Introduction to Eight Essential Zen Chants and Texts"

    Following Taigu's recent recommendation of Taigen Leighton's "Zen Questions" as "the most important book about Zen in the West" ... http://www.treeleaf.org/forums/showthread.php?9934-The-most-important-book-about-Zen-in-the-West I would like to introduce another book ... Shohaku Okumura's "Living by


    The sacredness can be brought into everything, even the most ordinary ... even the most ordinary manifests the sacred, is sacred and 'not just ordinary'.

    Here are some other rituals that we practice in this Sangha, and that you can adapt for home. REMEMBER: We encourage folks not to be bound by tradition, or overly caught in the 'right, wrong or traditional' way to do things. Instead, please bring traditions to life in ways which express your own heart. There is no need to follow every practice or any practice (besides Zazen, of course! 8) ), and please develop those which complement your life.

    On the other hand ... neither reject practices merely because, at first glance, they seem too exotic or hard or you do not understand. I ask everyone to look and listen to this 'sit-a-long' on '(UN)TURNING JAPANESE" ...

    So, must we bow, ring bells, chant (in Japanese, no less), wear traditional robes, have Buddha Statues, burn incense? ... All that stuff besides Zazen. Are they necessary to our Practice?

    No, not at all!

    On the other hand ...

    It is also vitally important that, in undertaking any practice or ritual, we "NON-DO" the practice ... meaning that we pursue it diligently and sincerely, yet with "nothing to obtain" ... much as washing the windows carefully to remove the grime, getting the job done, all while dropping all thought of "clean and dirty" and a job to achieve. That is another subject we talk about here often.

    So, what are some other daily rituals and practices which one can NON-DO?

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    KINHIN

    This is walking Zazen ... step by step, no place to get to, constantly arriving. It can be practiced any time ... between or after seated Zazen or any place ... in the slow postal line or grocery line. Instructions are in our Guide to Basic Sitting (PDF):



    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    HOME ALTAR

    Although our Buddhist Practice is not limited to any place or time, and includes the noisy and busy places as well as the quiet ... it is good to set aside a small, still, special place where we can enter the mindset of practice. For some, it need not contain more than a Zafu or chair. Others may wish to make a small altar, featuring incense (if not allergic! ... the incense can be 'lit' invisibly, without a match too!), perhaps flowers ... and a statue of a Buddha or Bodhisattva. There is no required pattern in our Sangha.

    Here is a discussion and some simple instructions for making an altar at home.


    However, again, one need not be bound by rules. A simple framed picture, even a picture in your wallet which you pull out to look at, can be equal to the greatest Temple. If not a statue, a stone, a flower or simply empty space can suffice. What is more, my personal opinion is that a "Buddha Statue" is both seen and unseen ... and what is NOT a Buddha Statue?

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    ATTENDING OUR WEEKLY AND MONTHLY ZAZENKAI

    We have weekly and monthly Zazenkai netcasts, with lots of Zazen, Kinhin, Zazen, Chanting, Bowing, Zazen and ... Zazen ...



    Although we can all daily sit at home alone (yet still are 'all together') ... and although it may be strange to some to 'sit over the internet' ... I feel it is vitally important that we make the effort to sit together as a group. I wish that EVERYONE WOULD MAKE THE EFFORT TO JOIN IN OUR ZAZENKAI AS OFTEN AS POSSIBLE (it is available 'any place any time' ... so time and place are not an excuse!)

    We also have sitting with others at various times in our TreeleafNow Zazen groups. Check the calendar:


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    CHANTING

    At the Zazenkai, we always recite various traditional Chants ... and any of these can be undertaken at home. The Verse of Atonement and The Four Vows are especially encouraged to chant each day ... perhaps at the end of your day before bed ...

    The Heart Sutra can also be recited any time and place ... perhaps before the home altar or on the Zafu prior to Zazen.

    In reciting, we tend to just merge into the sound ... not giving it a thought. However, it is also good at other times to make study of what the chants MEAN (most of them are statements of Zen Buddhist teachings).

    Here is our Chant Book ...

    Chant Book PDF

    or

    Chant Book (SHORT VERSION HTML)

    If you would like to try chanting the Heart Sutra in Japanese, but don't speak Japanese, here is a slightly irreverent guide to pronouncing the Sutra in Japanese:

    Hi Guys, The following is my slightly irreverent Heart Sutra pronunciation guide. I have seen something like it available in Japan, but not in English. Here is how it works: I will take ordinary English words that sound as close as possible to stand for each of the following. For example: Shin = Shin (of the leg) Disregard


    Daido's book, above, suggests some other possible chantings too. There is also the traditional Evening Gatha ... time swiftly passes by ...

    Let me respectfully remind you,
    life and death are of supreme importance.
    Time swiftly passes by,
    and opportunity is lost.
    Let us awaken,
    awaken.
    Take heed,
    do not squander your life.


    Side Note: I love that Gatha ... so long as we each awaken to the fact that there is no "life and death" ... no me or you for the reminding ... even as time passes by, no time either ... and nothing about life that can be squandered, wasted or lost (SO DON'T KILL TIME, AND DON'T WASTE IT! )
    The Verse of the Kesa, of course, is a daily practice for those who have undertaken Jukai and received a Rakusu (Kesa). Do not place one on oneself without reciting! Here are some instructions on handling a Rakusu and chanting the Verse:



    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    SEWING A RAKUSU (or Full Kesa) as we do for our Jukai preparations as a group, is also a great Liturgy ...



    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    GATHA

    'Gatha' are short, meaningful little recitation which can be recited before (and/or after) many 'ordinary' daily activities to remind us how sacred they are, and how all support our life and practice ... from eating to work to going to the toilet to washing the face ... Here are some and a discussion ...

      Dear All, a re-MINDer that our ... Treeleaf Annual 'ALWAYS AT HOME' Two Day 'ALL ONLINE' ROHATSU (Buddha's Enlightenment Day) RETREAT ... is to be LIVE NETCAST on the weekend of Saturday & Sunday, December 9th and 10th, 2017. The retreat is designed to be sat in any time zone around the world through a


    Each can be recited out loud or silently within.

    A very special 'Meal Gatha' might be recited by oneself or with one's family (much like 'Saying Grace') .. or during lunch breaks at work, etc (in voice or silently). Here is the one we recite during our annual 'Ango' period, but it is excellent as a daily practice and reminder ...

    (Hands in Gassho) This food comes from the efforts
    of all sentient beings past and present,
    and is medicine for nourishment of our Practice-Life.
    We offer this meal of many virtues and tastes
    to the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha,
    and to all life in every realm of existence.
    May all sentient beings in the universe
    be sufficiently nourished.


    Daido Roshi's lovely book suggested some other Meal Gatha.

    In fact ... one can make their own Gatha for ANYTHING ... which is exactly what Treeleafers have done for fun and personal inspiration ...

    I really like working with gathas. I wrote about them on my blog (http://dharmacore.wordpress.com/2008/08/16/zen-buddhist-gathas/), and I love the ones written by Thich Nhat Hanh (http://www.nuhong.org/bd_stepping_freedom.htm) and Robert Aitken (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0938077600/). I write a few of my own from time


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    AFFIRMATIONS

    Similar to "Gatha," one can recite some wise affirmations each day, as simple reminders of Wisdom and Compassion (Thank you to our Treeleaf member Stobird Tom for suggesting most of these), and you might make some of your own:

    May I deeply and honestly practice the four Bodhisattva Vows with magnanimity, love, and joy

    May I do my best to make the world a better, more beautiful place to live in for all

    May I be humble and kind today

    May I lend a hand to others today

    May I water the good seeds of mind today, letting the three poisons (of excess desire, anger and ignorance) dry up

    May I know deeply that Shikantaza is the best teacher

    May I know deeply that all of life, no matter how exciting or menial, is practice-enlightenment

    May I know deeply my own and others interrelated wholeness

    May I know deeply that there is nothing in me to run from and nothing in me to gain, I am responsible for myself, my acts, words and thoughts because I am whole

    May I know deeply that any act, word or thought can be a source of suffering or contentment, and what makes them a source of suffering or contentment is between my ears

    May I deeply know that the universe does not exist for the purpose of satisfying my puny selfish thoughts, feelings, and desires

    May I know deeply that I and others are trying their best

    May I listen more than I speak

    May I know deeply that my reality is born and then dies with me, therefore I am responsible for it

    May I know deeply that my actions are the universes’ actions, and no matter how small or insignificant, are sacred rituals

    May I be responsible enough to care for all objects and sentient beings with wise attention and compassion every minute of the day

    May I behave like an honest, upright, helpful being in all situations that call for it, behaving with equipoise and grace like a dancer that may sometimes made a mistake but continues to dance, rising up with self-respect when tripped or knocked down, forgiving over and over.

    May I avoid to be self pitying or overly-critical of others

    May I do the more difficult thing when the difficult thing is the right thing to do

    Although there will be ripples, and sometimes torrents in personal and professional life, may I do my best to flow harmoniously together with all people and circumstances day by day

    May I live with joy, loving-kindness, and gratitude for all, and respect for the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    THE TREELEAF APP

    Our Treeleaf "DAILY WISDOM/Dharma Leafs" phone app is available again, now ready for android! (For iPhone, there is a more limited way: https://www.treeleaf.org/forums/show...l=1#post304229!)

    The app is very simple: With a click, a few words of Zen wisdom pop up, to be repeated, followed by a certain number of breaths. It is good practice during one's busy day, especially at those moments when life gets a little trying.


    To access:

    Android, Google Play Store: Search for "Dharma Leafs". If searching, include the quotes when searching, this will make finding it much easier.



    Many of the sayings were suggested by Treeleaf members at the time of the app's original development.

    I would like to thank our Treeleaf member, Drew, for all his hard work these past many weeks to update the coding, and also get it ready and uploaded. I would also like to thank again Ongen, the original developer of the app.

    There is no charge for the app, of course, and it is meant to be both free and freeing. As far as I know, as a good Buddhist app, it is free of "malware" and the like too. Only "goodware."

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    RYAKU FUSATSU

    In many Buddhist traditions there is a monthly practice of Uposatha on days of the full moon to recite and renew the Precepts. In Japanese Zen this tradition takes form as Ryaku Fusatsu. It is a lovely chance to wipe the slate clean, atone and make amends, vow to begin again. We have a group that gathers with the full moon (in various time zones) for this renewal. Details here:



    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    BOWING

    Bowing can be a wonderful daily practice of humility and gratitude ... not to a statue or necessarily anyone in particular, but to ALL OF REALITY AND EVERYONE, all supporting our life and practice.

      Dear All, a re-MINDer that our ... Treeleaf Annual 'ALWAYS AT HOME' Two Day 'ALL ONLINE' ROHATSU (Buddha's Enlightenment Day) RETREAT ... is to be LIVE NETCAST on the weekend of Saturday & Sunday, December 9th and 10th, 2017. The retreat is designed to be sat in any time zone around the world through a


    Some Korean Zen (Son) groups engage in the practice of 108 Full Prostrations Daily (also ... good for those Bodhisattva 6-pack Abs 8) )

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    ORYOKI

    A lovely tradition of formal meal ritual ... We also hold an online class and practice group on that from time to time (PM Shugen for details).



    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    METTA RECITAL

    A daily practice we strongly encourage in this Sangha is the recital of "Metta" ... Loving Kindness expressed to all living beings ... not leaving out even the one we find hard to love ...



    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    TONGLEN

    Another lovely practice, originally from the Tibetans, of symbolically taking in the suffering of others, and returning peace, soothing our own heart along the way ...


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    DANA

    Making all our work (in the factory, office, garden, kitchen and nursery) into a daily sacred act ...



    ... as well as work and giving to help others in need ...

    A forum for the creative development of charitable and socially engaged projects and practices seeking to aid and assist our fellow sentient beings in this world. Please join in and do your part.


    ...is a vital practice in this Sangha, not to be neglected.

    Our requested daily "Lend A Hand" practice is one facet of this too:

    Dear All, As you know, we've asked folks to write “SAT TODAY” next to their signature before posting in this Forum. "SAT TODAY" means that someone has sat Zazen sometime during the past day, and that they will have “sat before chatting” in the Forum. Signing "SatToday" - Please


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    SAMU

    Of course, all our great and little tasks at home or work can be felt as a "sacred ritual" and practice ... from changing a baby diaper to washing dishes to stapling paper to meetings ...

      Dear All, a re-MINDer that our ... Treeleaf Annual 'ALWAYS AT HOME' Two Day 'ALL ONLINE' ROHATSU (Buddha's Enlightenment Day) RETREAT ... is to be LIVE NETCAST on the weekend of Saturday & Sunday, December 9th and 10th, 2017. The retreat is designed to be sat in any time zone around the world through a


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    SHAKYO SUTRA TRACING

    The practice of Shakyo (写経, which literally means "Copying Sutras") is a simple yet focused, relaxing yet powerful meditative practice that anyone can do, offered at many temples in Japan. Millions of people in Japan have practiced Shakyo, either just occasionally when visiting a famous temple as a tourist, or regularly and more seriously as part of a particular temple's Shakyo club. And we have a group here at Treeleaf too, first timers welcome any time!

    A group to practice Shakyo Sutra tracing and calligraphy, guided by Geika. We also have some folks interested in study of the Japanese language.


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    A TIME FOR TEXT STUDY

    Our way is said to be 'Beyond Words and Letters" ... but that does not mean that we should not also have time to crack the books!

    The first branch of the ‘”Eightfold Path is Right View (sometimes called Right Perspective or Right Understanding)… . That is: to study and to come to understand the world through fundamental Buddhist perspectives and philosophies, and to make those ways of seeing a natural part of one’s life. The Four


    __________________________________________________ ____________________

    __________________________________________________ ____________________

    SO, AM I LEAVING ANYTHING OUT?

    Probably, but that should keep any Bodhisattva busy for awhile!

    Anyway, WHAT IS -NOT- A SACRED LITURGY!?!

    I would like to close with some very wise words from an old member:

    There may be a saying and I don't know who said this but the candle that burns brightest has the shortest life. What I mean is that how I practice now is to make it part of my daily life... nothing special. If I make it special it's separate from me, and I don't think that's what this is. If I stay consistent and don't overdo it, then I'll maintain my practice. If I push too hard, I'll burn out and this will just be another phase of my life; something I tried.

    But that is not the Way at least from what I've learned. We share in a practice that's come down from generations, and so to honor it I stay consistent.
    Gassho Jundo

    SatTodayLAH
    Last edited by Kotei; 03-16-2024, 07:25 AM. Reason: updated chant book link
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE
  • Risho
    Member
    • May 2010
    • 3179

    #2
    Re: RECOMMENDED 'AT HOME' LITURGY

    This is awesome! Thank you

    Gassho,

    Cyril
    Email: risho.treeleaf@gmail.com

    Comment

    • Shokai
      Dharma Transmitted Priest
      • Mar 2009
      • 6394

      #3
      Re: RECOMMENDED 'AT HOME' LITURGY

      Thank you Jundo for this 'zen Life in a nutshell'. It's good to be reminded of how we can all enhance our practice.

      gassho,
      合掌,生開
      gassho, Shokai

      仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai

      "Open to life in a benevolent way"

      https://sarushinzendo.wordpress.com/

      Comment

      • Engyo
        Member
        • Aug 2010
        • 356

        #4
        Re: RECOMMENDED 'AT HOME' LITURGY

        In addition to all the foregoing good words and expressions, any chants or devotions which appear in Sutrayana are fair practice for one who wishes to make visible or audible that which we express in shikantaza invisibly and inaudibly; particularly in cultivating the Bodhisattva Way.
        Chanting hopes of loving-kindness for all or wishes that all sentient beings receive healing blessings to be free from suffering, illness, pain, debillitating disease or disability is all to this same purpose.
        In addition to the chants we practice in Zazenkai, I practice Medicine Buddha Mantra with many others in the World Wide Healing Circle. I'm even thinking about booking a time slot to do it in Zen Hall. While I couldn't swear that this practice makes a difference to anyone but me, I will continue to sit with confidence (faith) that it does. Much like with my vow to save all sentient beings, I will even send prayers into the unconditioned that it does. I call it "right intention".
        Gassho,
        Engyo

        Comment

        • Jinyo
          Member
          • Jan 2012
          • 1957

          #5
          Re: RECOMMENDED 'AT HOME' LITURGY

          Lou - thank you for sharing your thoughts on the Loori book. I have just read it through for the second time.

          I feel the most important statement Loori makes in his introduction is that our participation
          in Zen liturgy begins as an act of faith. If we train or 'school' ourselves it is only in order to realise
          that which is already there - the buddha within us.

          I can understand that there is the potential for 'imitation' in liturgy practice- as in artists emulating Picasso - but Loori
          underlines that 'great faith, great doubt and great determination' nurtures our practice.

          I'm not sure that we set out to 'master' Zen in the way we might set out to master a skill - in order to then 'unlearn' and leap into the void. My (limited) understanding is that we are born into the void ( nonduality and interconnectedness) - and so there is nothing to master - only a re-cognition of what is already there. Our letting go is really a return to the sacred within ourselves and the whole of life.

          I found one of the most helpful thoughts, in the book, is the idea that form (in this case rituals) is really a state of consciousness. This has become a touch stone for gauging within myself whether I'm practicing by rote - or genuinely engaging with a focused mind.

          But no doubt I often fool myself ops:

          Gassho

          Willow

          Comment

          • Amelia
            Member
            • Jan 2010
            • 4985

            #6
            For wearing the rakusu, do we place it on our heads (hands in gassho), say the verse of the kesa, then unfold it, place it to our lips, then wear it?
            求道芸化 Kyūdō Geika
            I am just a priest-in-training, please do not take anything I say as a teaching.

            Comment

            • Ishin
              Member
              • Jul 2013
              • 1359

              #7
              Thank you Jundo

              This post was very informative and helped answer many questions I have about Zen Practice

              Gassho,

              C
              Grateful for your practice

              Comment

              • Byokan
                Treeleaf Priest
                • Apr 2014
                • 4289

                #8
                Ah! Very nice to have these recommendations all in one place, thank you Jundo.

                Gassho,
                Lisa
                展道 渺寛 Tendō Byōkan
                Please take my words with a big grain of salt. I know nothing. Wisdom is only found in our whole-hearted practice together.

                Comment

                • Kyosei
                  Member
                  • Feb 2012
                  • 356

                  #9
                  How should us offer incense ritualistically? is there a proper manner?

                  Why do we dedicate merits?

                  Thanks friends,
                  _/|\_

                  Kyōsei

                  強 Kyō
                  声 Sei

                  Namu kie Butsu, Namu kie Ho, Namu kie So.

                  Comment

                  • Jundo
                    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                    • Apr 2006
                    • 40479

                    #10
                    Originally posted by mpdalles
                    How should us offer incense ritualistically? is there a proper manner?

                    Why do we dedicate merits?

                    Thanks friends,
                    Hello Marcos,

                    Incense is a way found in many religions to bring the olfactory senses into a sacred mood of heart. Perhaps the smoke rising also reminds us of impermanence, as the flame burns and the whisps rejoin the air.

                    If you wish to light incense, I would choose a scent subtle and not too stimulating (a light sandlewood, for example, not many of the rich and flowery scents that one can find these days). Light a candle, Gassho, respectfully and with clear heart (this is vital) lift the incense stick with one hand while holding Gassho with the other, light it in the flame, gently flick to extinguish if needing to extinguish the flame at the tip (or tamp quickly with the thumb and index finger of the other hand ... do not blow like a birthday candle), place upright in the incense bowl filled with sand, Gassho again with both hands.

                    Something like below is a lovely incense holder (just make sure it is stable, and the cat will not knock it over, because ... )

                    That's all.

                    Gassho, J

                    SatToday

                    Last edited by Jundo; 04-22-2015, 08:01 AM.
                    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                    Comment

                    • Jundo
                      Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                      • Apr 2006
                      • 40479

                      #11
                      Oh, and your other question ...

                      Why do we dedicate merits?
                      Traditionally, in Buddhism, it was felt that "merit" arose from good acts (such as making a donation to a Buddhist temple, translating subtitles on a Buddhist talk ) and built up in a great, cosmic "bank account" to make good Karmic effects and help cancel out bad Karma. It is an aspect of Mahayana Buddhism, and some Theravadan traditions, that developed very early (and which some other Buddhist sometimes find hard to grasp). Here is a simple and clear explanation from the Tricycle blog ...

                      what you are referring to here is called ‘merit transfer’. The idea is that through your skilful conduct you build up a stock of merit - a kind of spiritual capital that is earning interest in your karmic bank account. According to many Buddhist traditions, this merit may be transferred to others, especially the dead, sick, or spiritually destitute.

                      There are specific ceremonies and rituals by means of which merit is transferred. For instance, in Theravada Buddhism, a donor may give food or clothing to the monastic community and then ‘donate’ the merit gained to a departed relative (to help them in the ‘after-life’). As far as I know, there is no need for the other person to agree to receive merit.

                      Some Mahayana traditions emphasise merit transfer as a means of overcoming spiritual acquisitiveness and expressing compassionate concern for others. The Bodhisattva, or ideal Buddhist, gives all his or her merit away because they want as many beings as possible to benefit from their spiritual virtue. A form of words that one might use to dedicate merit in this way is: ‘May the merit gained in my acting thus, go to the alleviation of the suffering of all beings.’
                      A more scholarly treatment of the subject is here (in Theravada Buddhism):



                      Personally, I do not have much opinion on the cosmic and Karmic effects of transferring merit, except that I do believe it is fully in keeping with the Bodhisattva vows, and a wonderful attitude, to work for the benefit of others. Generally, I have avoided straight "dedication of merit" language in the "Eko" after our chants ... preferring wording such as "we dedicate or sincere efforts to" or "we dedicate our hopes and aspirations" or "our thoughts and caring". I simply am not much one for the belief that we are setting up a bank account of merit that we can transfer to others to help them in various ways, including a better rebirth.

                      Of course, doing something for the benefit of others is a "cosmic effect", even if most ordinary. It is very much in the way I described the far reaching effects of "Metta" (Loving Kindness) on another thread ...

                      People often ask me if I believe Metta really works and is helpful, even across great distances. Well, I say this ...

                      If one is filled with anger, hate and ill will, it is easy to see how that infects the space, situations and people immediately around us who must deal with us. It can even damage folks and infect relationships with family and friends at great distances, even if we only communicate sometimes. But further, it brings a bit more ugliness and separation into this world in general, and our doing so adds just a touch more bitterness to the society we all share as residents of the world near and far. These days, a fellow who does a violent act or speaks a hurtful word in one city far away can cause ripples of violence and hurt far across the world ... just open the newspaper or internet and you will see countless examples of this spread of the effects of greed, anger and ignorance like great waves circling the world.

                      So, just the same when we bring a touch of loving kindness, sympathy, well wishes, peace, charity and the like into this life.

                      http://www.treeleaf.org/forums/showt...l=1#post152923
                      One of the little aspects about practice around Treeleaf.

                      Gassho, J
                      Last edited by Jundo; 04-22-2015, 08:05 AM.
                      ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                      Comment

                      • Kyosei
                        Member
                        • Feb 2012
                        • 356

                        #12
                        Thank you, Jundo.

                        _/\_
                        _/|\_

                        Kyōsei

                        強 Kyō
                        声 Sei

                        Namu kie Butsu, Namu kie Ho, Namu kie So.

                        Comment

                        • Kyosei
                          Member
                          • Feb 2012
                          • 356

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Jundo
                          Light a candle, Gassho, respectfully and with clear heart (this is vital)
                          Jundo,

                          Sorry I forgot to ask it yesterday.

                          Why did you say that it is vital to be with a clear heart when we're going to light a candle?

                          Sometimes our hearts are not so "clear" (maybe sorrowful, or resentful), in that case should we wait a little before light the candle?

                          How is that attitude of "clear heart"?

                          Somehow I'm linking this to my Zazen practice, as I have an altar here at home, and everyday I'm gonna sit, I light a candle on the altar, light an incense, recite the "Three Refuges" in Pali, then I sit Zazen. That is to say, I do Zazen illuminating the room only with it's candle's light.
                          _/|\_

                          Kyōsei

                          強 Kyō
                          声 Sei

                          Namu kie Butsu, Namu kie Ho, Namu kie So.

                          Comment

                          • Jundo
                            Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                            • Apr 2006
                            • 40479

                            #14
                            Originally posted by mpdalles
                            Jundo,

                            Sorry I forgot to ask it yesterday.

                            Why did you say that it is vital to be with a clear heart when we're going to light a candle?

                            Sometimes our hearts are not so "clear" (maybe sorrowful, or resentful), in that case should we wait a little before light the candle?

                            How is that attitude of "clear heart"?

                            Somehow I'm linking this to my Zazen practice, as I have an altar here at home, and everyday I'm gonna sit, I light a candle on the altar, light an incense, recite the "Three Refuges" in Pali, then I sit Zazen. That is to say, I do Zazen illuminating the room only with it's candle's light.
                            Well, just as with Zazen, one sits as one is. If upset, let the upset be ... if sad, let the sadness be ... if feeling off balance, let the off balance be.

                            However, the point of all Practice is to realize the clarity and balance that shines forth when the mind becomes still. Silent Illumination. By all the "letting be", one allows such wild thoughts and emotions to settle down and drift away. One reaches a centered stillness.

                            Thus, when lighting incense, sitting Zazen or in any aspect of Zen Practice, one can undertake each with clarity of heart.

                            The point of allowing the "sorrowful, resentful" to be (and be let go) is not to keep on with the sorrow and resentment, but to attain the balanced clarity of silent illumination that shines through and clears away the sorrow, resentment etc.

                            So, when lighting incense and all the rest, it is best to do so with a clear, balanced, unbound, shining heart.

                            Do I explain in a clear way?

                            Gassho, J

                            SatToday
                            ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

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                            • Theophan
                              Member
                              • Nov 2014
                              • 146

                              #15
                              Thank You Jundo for the teaching and guidance on the Liturgy.
                              I will order the book "Living by vow"

                              Gassho
                              Theophan
                              Sat Today

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