Hi Sangha-friends!
From time to time I frequent the various web incarnations of the danish Buddhist communities just to see what they're up to this present moment.
It occurred to me that almost all of them (all the major ones regardless of lineage) very openly and therefore presumably without any shame charge money up-front for their Teachings. This got me thinking. We live in a time now where the traditional monasteries no longer hold the status they once did as centers of Dharma-education. Smaller local and non-residential centers are slowly taking up that function. People can now make a living as Dharma-teachers by selling books and doing lecture-tours/retreats.
It this okay I ask? To charge money for the Teachings on the whole and as a consequence perhaps make a living propounding them?
Is it the pinnacle of Right Livelihood? Or is it in fact cheating by selling knowledge that's not yours to sell? Aren't you charging money for people's own nature?
My own view:
I tend towards the view (as you might have guessed) that you shouldn't charge anything. I think it's unethical. At least as far the knowledge itself is concerned. On the point of the teaching enterprise it's not that one should not travel around teaching. By all means! But they should not expect to be paid for it in order to make a living. If anything having chosen the part of the Teacher one might have to pay up a little even. The way I see it is that you do it because you think it's important and right. Like volunteer work or having a child.
On the point of the non-charging Sangha; I realize people need a roof over their heads and zafus to sit on when they're not like Treeleaf. My thoughts on that are that you might set up an appropriate membership fee. People who pay that help to keep the center running and in return may get symbolic privileges that do not as such interfere with the availability of the Teachings themselves to the public. Examples could be: priority on a already overbooked sesshin, a vote on how to spend surplus money or which teacher to invite over from abroad. A vote on the Sangha organization bylaws etc.
If there are not enough contributing members then the Sangha is clearly not mature enough yet to have a center of it's own.
These are just some thoughts.
I would like your points of view. I think it's a necessary to discuss the relationship between Dharma and funds now that a new type of urban (+ western) lay-Buddhism is slowly emerging.
NB. This does not have anything to do (I think) with the concept of donations (something extra given out of kindness) or the ongoing thread about Treeleaf-donations. I'm cool with that. It has to do with the practical financial structure of personal and Sangha economy of the day-to-day kind. Luckily it's not so important for us at Treeleaf Sangha.
Thank you for your time.
Gassho
Aske
From time to time I frequent the various web incarnations of the danish Buddhist communities just to see what they're up to this present moment.
It occurred to me that almost all of them (all the major ones regardless of lineage) very openly and therefore presumably without any shame charge money up-front for their Teachings. This got me thinking. We live in a time now where the traditional monasteries no longer hold the status they once did as centers of Dharma-education. Smaller local and non-residential centers are slowly taking up that function. People can now make a living as Dharma-teachers by selling books and doing lecture-tours/retreats.
It this okay I ask? To charge money for the Teachings on the whole and as a consequence perhaps make a living propounding them?
Is it the pinnacle of Right Livelihood? Or is it in fact cheating by selling knowledge that's not yours to sell? Aren't you charging money for people's own nature?
My own view:
I tend towards the view (as you might have guessed) that you shouldn't charge anything. I think it's unethical. At least as far the knowledge itself is concerned. On the point of the teaching enterprise it's not that one should not travel around teaching. By all means! But they should not expect to be paid for it in order to make a living. If anything having chosen the part of the Teacher one might have to pay up a little even. The way I see it is that you do it because you think it's important and right. Like volunteer work or having a child.
On the point of the non-charging Sangha; I realize people need a roof over their heads and zafus to sit on when they're not like Treeleaf. My thoughts on that are that you might set up an appropriate membership fee. People who pay that help to keep the center running and in return may get symbolic privileges that do not as such interfere with the availability of the Teachings themselves to the public. Examples could be: priority on a already overbooked sesshin, a vote on how to spend surplus money or which teacher to invite over from abroad. A vote on the Sangha organization bylaws etc.
If there are not enough contributing members then the Sangha is clearly not mature enough yet to have a center of it's own.
These are just some thoughts.
I would like your points of view. I think it's a necessary to discuss the relationship between Dharma and funds now that a new type of urban (+ western) lay-Buddhism is slowly emerging.
NB. This does not have anything to do (I think) with the concept of donations (something extra given out of kindness) or the ongoing thread about Treeleaf-donations. I'm cool with that. It has to do with the practical financial structure of personal and Sangha economy of the day-to-day kind. Luckily it's not so important for us at Treeleaf Sangha.
Thank you for your time.
Gassho
Aske
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