Dharma talk for March 25, 2018 by Dojin Sarah Emerson: The Noble Truth of Suffering
All posts by stonecreek
Ango Talk 5: Seasoned in Suffering
Dharma talk for March 25, 2018 by Dojin Sarah Emerson: Seasoned in Suffering
Ango Talk 4: The Good News of Suffering
Dharma talk for March 18, 2018 by Myozen Barton Stone: The Good News of Suffering
Ango Talk 3: Giving and Receiving
Dharma talk for March 11, 2018 by Edmee Danan: Giving and Receiving
PRECEPTS RENEWAL CEREMONY – WEDNESDAY JUNE 17
Wednesday, June 17 6:30 pm
Everyone is invited to participate in this ritual of affirming our practice of the bodhisattva precepts. The ceremony is as appropriate for those of you who have not received the precepts, as it is deeply relevant for those renewing their commitment. The ceremony will follow the form of the Full Moon Ceremony including some melodic chanting.
JIZO CEREMONY – SATURDAY JUNE 27
Please bring a small amount of red cloth, other materials will be provided.
By donation (suggested donation $30, no one turned away for lack of funds)
Led by Dojin Sarah Emerson and Hoka Chris Fortin
To register please call or email: stonecreek@sonic.net, 707-829-1129
FINDING BALANCE
Dharma talk for May 17, 2015 by Dojin Sarah Emerson: Finding Balance
DHARMA TALK BY DAVID BRAZIER – SUNDAY MAY 31
ALL ONE DHARMA
Buddhism comes in many shapes and sizes. There are different traditions and lineages and each teacher has their own way of doing it. The Tibetans sometimes jokingly say that there are as many Dharmas as lamas. This diversity is one of the great richnesses of Buddhism. Shakyamuni Buddha had a genius for teaching in a manner suited to the person before him. His disciples were diverse, each offering something unique, yet all engaged in the transcendence of self, the practice of compassion, the wisdom of emptiness, the practice of pure heartedness. Not just Shakyamuni: there have been innumerable great sages through the aeons of time who have taught love, compassion, joy and peace. They keep pointing out these simple principles and we complicate and divide them. Buddha did not teach a single method or protocol as exclusive. When he met people in need he responded from his great store of compassion. Each time was unique. He gave memorable teachings not so that each could defend the bit of the Dharma that each had memorized, but in the hope that these seeds would grow and burst our separate bubbles, liberating us into the open sky of his great Dharma vision. It is important to create Sanghas to transmit the Dharma, and Sanghas need their distinctive practices, but these should not become a barrier to understanding the fundamental unity of what is all one Dharma, all from one great heart.
David Brazier, (Dharma name: Dharmavidya), English, Buddhist master, Head of the Order of Amida Buddha (international, based in UK), President of the International Zen Therapy institute, patron of the Tathagata Trust in Assam, advisor to the Korean Buddhist Counselling association, teaches regularly at APAEL, the existential psychotherapy institute in Lima, Peru, examines doctoral students in London, UK, and regularly lectures in a dozen countries in the Americas, Europe and Asia. He is a doctor of philosophy and an authority on Buddhist psychology. He has published ten books, including Zen Therapy, The Feeling Buddha, Not Everything is Impermanent, and, most recently, Buddhism is a Religion: You Can Believe it. He is a published poet, a psychotherapist, and the inventor of pandramatics, a form of improvisational theatre. In the past he has founded and worked in a number of socially and culturally engaged projects around the world helping refugees, the mentally ill and victims of war, and resisting the arms trade. He and his disciples have founded sanghas and Buddhist training communities in various parts of Europe, also Hawaii, Israel and India. He has studied with leading Buddhist teachers in a number of traditions, Soto Zen, Shin, Jodo, Kargyu, and Theravada. His spiritual experiences go back to childhood and he has a lifelong interest in the unity of spiritual revelation across traditions and its personal and social implications. When not travelling he lives alone in a hermitage in a rural part of France. He enjoys photography, gardening, walking, and reading. He has three children and five grandchildren.
THE SELF: LIVING AT THE CROSSROADS
Dharma talk for May 10, 2015 by Jisho Warner: The Self: Living at the Crossroads
PRACTICE HALF-DAY – THURSDAY JULY 16
A morning of Zen practice in silence. Settle into the rhythm of sitting and walking, with a tea break. Led by Jisho and Korin. Fee $15 members/$25 non-members. Pre-registration is helpful.
8 am – noon