ANNOUNCEMENT: Our 2026 TREELEAF Home-Leaving ORDINATION of Seikan and Dogaku

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  • Jundo
    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
    • Apr 2006
    • 44308

    ANNOUNCEMENT: Our 2026 TREELEAF Home-Leaving ORDINATION of Seikan and Dogaku

    Dear All,

    I am very content to make this announcement, and ask everyone sitting with our Sangha to join in its celebration. Our sangha will welcome through 'Home Leaving' Ordination, two new novice-priest trainees, familiar and friendly faces around here ...
    .
    DOGAKU JUSTIN ARNDT image.png



    and
    SEIKAN ROBERT DEPAOLO
    image.png



    They will join our present Novice-Priest Trainees, Washin, Shinshi, Byokan, Koushi, Ankai, Shujin, Seiko, Bion, Onki, Shinkon and Kouriki(and Emi Jido), and our Transmitted Priests, Shokai, Kyonin, Kokuu, Sekishi, Kotei and Onkai. Seikan and Dogaku become part of our next class in Treeleaf's Monastery of Open Doors:
    .
    The Monastery of Open Doors
    A non-residential path to Soto Zen ordination, the priesthood, and a role of service to others
    for dedicated, long-time Zen practitioners who live with challenges of health, disability,
    childcare and family responsibilities, economic hardship
    or equivalent life obstacles.
    (LINK)

    They will be Ordained by me (Jundo) as Novice Priest-Trainees at a Shukke Tokudo "home-leaving" Ordination Ceremony to be held on Sunday May 3rd at 11:00AM New York, 8:00AM California (4:00PM London, 5:00PM Paris) as our community gathers together from Japan, Indonesia and elsewhere in Asia, North and South America, the UK and Europe, New Zealand, Australia and more.

    From time to time, after undertaking Zen practice for many years, a person may feel in their heart a certain calling. They may wish to train in our traditions and embody our practices in order to keep this way alive into the next generation as clergy. They may feel a calling within themselves to live as a servant and minister to the community, to the Sangha and to all sentient beings.

    Traditionally, in India, China, Japan and the other Buddhist countries of Asia, one was expected to leave one’s home and family behind in order to begin the necessary training and practice of an “apprentice”. Thus, the ancient ceremony of ordination in Buddhism became known as Shukke Tokudo, “Leaving Home to Take the Way”. Now, in modern Japan and in the West, one great change in the nature of Buddhist clergy has been that many of us function more as “ministers” than “monks,,” with family and children, often with outside jobs as “Right Livelihood” supporting us, while ministering to a community of parishioners. This, in keeping with changes in cultures and society, has done much to bring Buddhism out from behind monastery walls. While now we may be living in a monastic setting for periods of weeks or months (and thus can be called “monks” during such times), we then return to the world beyond monastery walls, where these teachings have such relevance for helping people in this ordinary life. We are not bound by monastery walls, dropping all barriers separating "inside" from "out". Thus, the term “leaving home” has come to have a wider meaning, of “leaving behind” greed, anger, ignorance, the harmful emotions and attachments that fuel so much of this world, in order to find the “True Home” we all share. In such way, we find that Home that can never be left, take to the Way that cannot be taken.

    Someone’s undertaking “Shukke Tokudo” is not a “raising up” of their position in the Sangha, it is not an honor or “promotion” into some exalted status, not by any meaning. Far from it, it is a lowering of oneself in offering to the community, much as all of us sometimes deeply bow upon the ground in humility, raising up others and the whole world above our humbled heads.
    .
    It is to volunteer and offer oneself as the lowest ‘sailor on the ship’ at the beck and call of the passengers' well-being and needs, a nurse to the suffering, a brother or sister supporting a family, a friend offering to help carry a burden. One must be committed sincerely to serve and benefit others, and one must not undertake such road for one’s own benefit, praise or reward.

    What is more, the undertaking of “Shukke Tokudo” is not the end of the road of training, not by any meaning. Far from it, it is but the first baby steps. Perhaps, years down the road, the person will find that that they maintain the inner calling to continue this path … and, perhaps, years down the road, they shall have embodied this Tradition sufficiently to continue it and be certified as a fully Dharma Transmitted “priest” and a teacher … but there is no guaranty of any of that. Some will withdraw by their change in feelings, some will be asked to withdraw. For this reason, one undertaking “Home Leaving” is not yet recognized in the Zen world as truly a fully ordained “priest” for many years, and is called an “Unsui”, meaning “clouds and water,” representing the resolution yet malleability that is required in training. The best translation in English is “apprentice priest” or "novice priest" or “priest trainee”. Perhaps, years down the road, some trainees will be felt to have embodied these traditions sufficiently in order to function independently as priests and to receive Dharma Transmission … but not necessarily. For now, they are expected to learn … with the future not assured, and no promises about the future. (Of course, we are all beginners, all students … all learning from each other … teachers learning from students too).
    .

    We hope that, in the coming years, other people will feel this same calling. It must be by mutual decision. It is not something that should be rushed into, nor rushed through. Although people are all different, maybe a good time to first consider such a thing would be only after practicing for 5 years or longer, and then it should be deeply thought about (and silently sat with) for longer still before first taking on the responsibilities of being an apprentice student-priest.

    For now, I am pleased to announce that Dogaku and Seikan will be our next Novice Priest-Trainees.

    We hope that you will join us in wishing them well in their start on this long undertaking. The ceremony will occur much as our prior Ordination Ceremonies, with all of our Sangha brought together across oceans using all means of modern media, dropping all thought of place and time.

    As in all we undertake in our Sangha, the ceremony will not be limited to a specific location, much as our annual Jukai here at Treeleaf … and we hope that you will all join us for the ceremonies when the day comes.

    Gassho, Jundo

    SatTodayLAH


    TO WATCH THE CEREMONY

    The ceremony can be attended either via Zoom, joining the usual SSR room here: JOIN ROOM >>
    Or, you can watch it via YouTube here:

    SCREEN
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE
  • Dogaku
    Member
    • May 2025
    • 138

    #2
    Thank you Jundo and the Treeleaf community for this opportunity to further dedicate myself to the Way.

    Gassho,
    Dogaku
    Sat/Lah

    Comment

    • Seikan
      Member
      • Apr 2020
      • 1093

      #3
      Thank you Jundo and everyone for your support and encouragement as I've prepared for this unique and important opportunity. I only hope that I can, in turn, be of equal or greater service to the Treeleaf community and all beings everywhere.

      Dogaku, I'm very happy and honored to take this next step alongside you my friend.

      Gassho,
      Seikan
      stlah
      聖簡 Seikan (Sacred Simplicity)

      "See and realize / that this world / is not permanent. / Neither late nor early flowers / will remain."
      —Ryokan

      Comment

      • Tairin
        Member
        • Feb 2016
        • 3287

        #4
        Wonderful news!!


        Tairin
        sat today and lah
        泰林 - Tai Rin - Peaceful Woods

        Comment

        • Shinshi
          Senior Priest-in-Training
          • Jul 2010
          • 4263

          #5
          Wonderful additions to the Treeleaf family. I am very excited for the ceremony.

          Gassho, Shinshi
          Sat-Lah
          空道 心志 Kudo Shinshi

          For Zen students a weed is a treasure. With this attitude, whatever you do, life becomes an art.
          ​— Shunryu Suzuki

          E84I - JAJ

          Comment

          • Junsho
            Member
            • Mar 2024
            • 415

            #6
            Amazing news! Congratulations Dogaku and Seikan for your dedication to help all sentient beings.

            Gassho and deep bows
            SatLah
            Junshō 純聲 - Pure Voice, Genuine Speech

            Standing in protest against wars around the world. We must put an end to this insanity!

            “Since, in any case, it’s just ordinary people who wage war on each other, everybody is wrong, friend as much as foe. The winner and the loser are in any case just ordinary people.
            It’s so sad to watch the world’s conflicts. There’s such a lack of common sense.​“ - Kodo Sawaki Roshi - To You (Page 66)

            Comment

            • Bion
              Senior Priest-in-Training
              • Aug 2020
              • 6968

              #7
              What a joyous moment! Congratulations to both of you, my friends! Seikan Dogaku

              gassho
              sat lah
              "One uninvolved has nothing embraced or rejected, has sloughed off every view right here - every one."

              Comment

              • Taiji
                Member
                • Jun 2025
                • 127

                #8
                Congratulations to you both! Thank you for your devotion to the community and to all beings.

                Gassho,
                Taiji
                Sat/LAH Today
                Taiji / 泰侍
                "Peaceful Samurai"

                Comment

                • Hoshuku
                  Member
                  • May 2017
                  • 338

                  #9
                  Every blessing on you both.

                  Bows
                  Hoshuku

                  Comment

                  • Shui_Di
                    Member
                    • Apr 2008
                    • 391

                    #10
                    Congratulations for Seikan and Dogaku.

                    May the Three Jewels always be with you.

                    Deep Gassho, Mujo
                    Stlah
                    Practicing the Way means letting all things be what they are in their Self-nature. - Master Dogen.

                    Comment

                    • Choujou
                      Member
                      • Apr 2024
                      • 591

                      #11
                      Congratulations to you both! Absolutely wonderful news! Thank you both for your dedication and service to all sentient beings

                      Gassho to you both with deep bows,
                      Choujou

                      sat/lah today

                      Comment

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