Monks in the West II Authentic Practices of Celibacy and Intimacy in Monastic Communities of Men

Similar documents
Interviews with Participants of Nuns in the West I Courtney Bender, Wendy Cadge

Concluding Remarks Stephanie Kaza, Fr. Paschal Phillips, OCSO, Fr. William Skudlarek, OSB, Rev. Heng Sure, Ph.D., Abbot Damien Thompson, OCSO

Zenkei Blanche Hartman: Discussion Suffering Caused by a Sense of Unworthiness and Alienation

Ajahn Sundara: Discussion Suffering Caused by Sickness and Aging

Introduction: Thomas Keating Fr. Thomas Keating, OCSO, Fr. William Skudlarek, OSB

1 of 10 6/11/2015 8:51 AM

1 of 10 6/11/2015 8:50 AM

Introduction: Brother David Steindl-Rast Patrick Henry, Ph.D., Br. David Steindl-Rast, OSB

Introduction: Father Patrick Barry Fr. Patrick Barry, OSB, Patrick Henry, Ph.D.

Ajahn Sundara's Presentation Suffering Caused by Sickness and Aging

Fr. Leo LeFebure's Reflection Fr. Leo Lefebure, Fr. William Skudlarek, OSB

1 of 7 6/11/2015 9:07 AM

Ajahn Sundara: Discussion Suffering Caused by Sickness and Aging

Sr. Mary Margaret Funk: Discussion Suffering Caused by a Sense of Unworthiness and Alienation

Sr. Margaret Michaud's Presentation Suffering Caused by Sickness and Aging

Fr. James Wiseman's Presentation Suffering Caused by Greed and Consumerism

Interviews with Participants of Nuns in the West I Courtney Bender, Wendy Cadge

Sr. Margaret Michaud: Discussion Suffering Caused by Sickness and Aging

Parabola in the Classroom

When a Buddhist Teacher Crosses the Line

ddha Despite the ravages of 70 years of Communism, Buddhism is making a comeback in this ancient land of scholarship and faith

Sangha as Heroes. Wendy Ridley

Buddhism Notes. History

IMI ORDINATION GUIDELINES FOR FPMT STUDENTS

2825 Ridgegate Row / La Jolla, California 92037

Welcome to Saint John s Abbey Volunteer Program.

BUDDHISM Jews Metropolitan Tel Aviv, with 2.5 million Jews, is the world's largest Jewish city. It is followed by New York, with 1.

INTRODUCTION EXPECTATIONS. ISSUES FOR FOURTH THEOLOGY updated 16 July Human Formation

Buddhism in Burma (Myanmar)

Bodhi Path and Lama Ole Nydahl. by Shamar Rinpoche. An Answer to Questions Raised about Bodhi Path and Lama Ole Nydahl

INTRODUCTION TO BUDDHISM

Religions of South Asia

Between Han and Tang: The emergence of Chinese Buddhism and Religious Daoism. October 1, 2013

Buddhism. World Religions 101: Understanding Theirs So You Can Share Yours by Jenny Hale

Habit of the Heart: Doors to Forgiveness 12 October 2014 Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Reston, VA Rev. Dr.

HR-XXXX: Introduction to Buddhism and Buddhist Studies Mondays 2:10 5:00 p.m. Fall 2018, 9/09 12/10/2018

To the US Bishops: A (Friendly) Call to Repentance and Reform. Prof Janet E. Smith November 11, 2011 on

FPMT Basic Program Feb Dec Student Application

EL41 Mindfulness Meditation. What did the Buddha teach?

Right Action, Right Living, (and Right Consumption): Morality, Sex, and Drugs in Buddhism

Berkeley Buddhist Priory Newsletter May June 2002

Evangelism: Defending the Faith

BUDDHISM. All know the Way, but few actually walk it. Don t believe anything because a teacher said it, you must experience it.

Sr. Mary Margaret Funk: Discussion Suffering Caused by a Sense of Unworthiness and Alienation

Life in the Monestary/Convent This lesson is historical in nature and therefore the only Bible reference used is the memory verse itself.

Thomas Merton s Encounter with Buddhism and Beyond: His Intermonastic Exchanges, Interreligious Dialogue, and Their Legacy By Jaechan Anselmo Park

Buddhism in Tibet PART 2. p Buddhist Art

River Dhamma. Table of Contents President s Address... 1 Arrow River Notice... 2 Comings and Goings... 3 Library Project...4, 5 ARFH Canoe Trip...

How To Be A Monastic And Not Leave Your Day Job: A Guide For Benedictine Oblates And Other Christians Who Follow The Monastic Way (Voices From The

Interview with a Ruesi

The Monastic Formators Program: an introduction for a workshop at the Abbots Congress September 2016

Flourishing Culture Podcast Series Leading From an Abundant Spiritual Life February 8, Al Lopus & Ruth Haley Barton

From the World Wisdom online library: A WISH FOR HARMONY* His Holiness the Dalai Lama

A Portrait of Ani J. aka Tsunma Jamyang Donma, Yulokod Studios

The Universal Monk: The Way of the New Monastics

The Reasons for Developing Virtuous Personalities

Employment Application: Full Time Senior Pastor Position

Buddhism. Webster s New Collegiate Dictionary defines religion as the service and adoration of God or a god expressed in forms of worship.

Avoid all evil, Embrace all goodness, Purify one's mind. ~ Heart of a Buddha

Name per date. Warm Up: What is reality, what is the problem with discussing reality?

Happenings By: Right Rev. Barb Martzall

Compassion Fatigue. -A A Buddhist Perspective. Kim M. Kinsley D.O. Hospice & Palliative CareCenter

November 9, The Most Reverend James Powers Bishop of the Diocese of Superior 1201 Hughitt Ave PO Box 969 Superior, WI Dear Bishop Powers:

Knowledge of: The cultural, social, and ethical realities in which the churches live and respond both globally and locally.

The Contemplative Dimension of the New Evangelisation: Christian Meditation in the Church in a Secular World

Dalai Lama (Tibet - contemporary)

RS (Philosophy and Applied Ethics) Year 11 Revision Guide

Buddhist Healthcare Principles for Spiritual Carers

Welcome back Pre-AP! Monday, Sept. 12, 2016

Homily for the 31 st Sunday of Ordinary Time Year A Proclaimed at HFCC Page 1

IN THE BENEDICTINE MONASTIC TRADITION

You may have found yourself wanting something, daydreaming of a buying something new, a meal, what you were going to do when you finished.

How does Buddhism differ from Hinduism?

Name: First Middle Last. Other names used (alias, maiden, nickname): Current Address: Street/P.O. Box City State Zip Code

DOWNLOAD OR READ : THE MONKS AND MONASTERIES OF CONSTANTINOPLE CA PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

TEACHINGS OF THE BUDDHA JACK KORNFIELD PDF

RELIGIOUS STUDIES. Buddhism Beliefs and teachings and Practices. GCSE (9 1) Candidate Style Answers.

Compassion Meets Emptiness Three days of teachings on Chenrezig and Mahamudra With Karma Kagyu lineage holder Shamar Rinpoche

The Berkeley Buddhist Priory Newsletter March-April, Learning to Listen by Rev. Jisho Perry

Triratna Dharma Training Course for Mitras. Year One The Distinctive Emphases of Triratna

Mark Scheme (Results) Summer GCSE Religious Studies (5RS15) Buddhism

If you are looking for a book Handbook for the Practice of Dhamma: Being the Method of Recollection at the Time of Death and for Those Who Are

Prayer And Community: The Benedictine Tradition (Traditions Of Christian Spirituality) By Columba Stewart READ ONLINE

Buddhist Pilgrimage Tour

ACCEPTING THE EMBRACE of GOD: THE ANCIENT ART of LECTIO DIVINA

Mahayana Buddhism and Unitarianism

ACCEPTING THE EMBRACE of GOD THE ANCIENT ART of LECTIO DIVINA

Chapter Two Chatral Rinpoche s Steadfast Commitment to Ethics

The Berkeley Buddhist Priory Newsletter October - December 2007

Guidelines for Catechesis of High School Youth Grades 9-12

Hinduism. Hinduism is a religion as well as a social system (the caste system).

Dzogchen: Heart Essence Of The Great Perfection PDF

LAY DISCIPLESHIP CONTRADICTION TERMS?

Alongside various other course offerings, the Religious Studies Program has three fields of concentration:

LEADERS WITH HUMANITY. A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR THE WELL BEING OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND ENVIRONMENTAL ADVOCATES By ADO in collaboration with Daniel King

Association KARUNA Center Transpersonal Project - Realization. Palyul Tradition. of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism

Wisdom Energy: Basic Buddhist Teachings By Lama Yeshe, Lama Zopa Rinpoche

In the Heart of the Desert:

bridges contemplative living with thomas merton Leader s Guide jonathan montaldo & robert g. toth edited by

Helping people and communities discover the intentional spiritual life.

Transcription:

1 of 5 6/13/2015 9:23 PM Home About MID Bulletins News Events Glossary Links Contact Us Support MID Benedict's Dharma Gethsemani I Gethsemani II Gethsemani III Abhishiktananda Society Bulletins Help Monks in the West II Authentic Practices of Celibacy and Intimacy in Monastic Communities of Men Fr. Thomas Ryan, CSP from Bulletin 77, July 2006 [Click here for a printer-friendly version of this article] Father Thomas Ryan, in his capacity as advisor to Monastic Interreligious Dialogue, was a participant in Monks in the West II. Jotipalo Bhikkhu of Abhayagiri Monastery in California and Brother Gregory Perron of Saint Procopius abbey in Illinois converse after one of the sessions of Monks in the West II. Click on the picture to enlarge it. The electronic sign at the Minneapolis-St Paul airport was flashing Orange Alert as a dozen Buddhist monks arrived in their burnt orange robes from around the country. They were on their way to Saint John s Abbey in Collegeville Minnesota for three days of dialogue on celibacy with a similar number of Catholic monks. As he opened the October 26-29 meeting, Fr. William Skudlarek OSB executive director of Monastic Interreligious Dialogue (MID), said You (Buddhists) have been at this for some five-to-seven hundred years Fr. Thomas Ryan, CSP, Fr. Thomas Ryan resides at the North American Paulist Center in Washington DC, and works for Christian unity and interfaith relations through a variety of formats: interreligious dialogue, retreats, on-line courses, graduate instruction, workshops, etc. He has served on MID s Board of Advisors. All articles by or about Fr. Thomas Ryan, CSP Browse the Archive By Category By Author By Article Title By Bulletin

2 of 5 6/13/2015 9:23 PM longer than we have. We have something to learn. This was the second Monks in the West interreligious dialogue; the first took place in 2004 at the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas in northern California and brought together seven Buddhist and seven Catholic monks. Twenty-two monks participated in the meeting in Collegeville. The Catholic participants came from Saint John s Abbey, five other Benedictine monasteries and two Cistercian monasteries. The Buddhists represented the Theravada, Mahayana, and Tibetan traditions. The first session dealt with Theory, the why of celibacy. Buddhist participants explained that their teachings focus on seeing how suffering is created and cured. Attachments give rise to suffering, so advancement in the spiritual life requires letting go of one s attachments. Attachment to desires, among which are sexual desires, is a hindrance to spiritual progress. Raging desire takes away choice, freedom, said Rev. Kusala Bhikshu, a Buddhist chaplain at UCLA in his opening presentation. The senses must be controlled in order to be free. Brother Gregory Perron OSB from St. Procopius monastery in Illinois spoke of how monastic life demands a profound understanding and acceptance of solitude. Celibacy is a tool, offered Perron, a skillful means like intentional simplicity of life, by which our heart is burrowed out and the core of our being laid bare. By embracing it, the monk accepts the aloneness that characterizes every human being. In response to Buddhist reflections on the illusory nature of the body, Catholic participants pointed out Christianity s remarkably positive evaluation of the body in the doctrines of the Incarnation, bodily Resurrection and Ascension of Jesus, and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. Both sides acknowledged balancing points of reference as well, such as, in Christianity, Paul s Who will deliver me from this body of death? (Romans 7:24); and, in Buddhism, the teaching that humankind, while

3 of 5 6/13/2015 9:23 PM fifth from the bottom in the 31 realms of its cosmology, is the only one in which spiritual growth can happen. Thus human form is in the end praised by the Buddha. In the second session the participants moved from Theory to Practice. Rev. Jisho Perry from the Shasta Buddhist Abbey in California said that the whole thrust of training is not to give in to desire that arises. He described the Buddhist method of accepting sexual feelings without either acting on them or repressing them, but just letting them pass through. The right use of will is willingness, not will power the willingness to sit there and let that feeling pass through, he said. Fr. Skudlarek expressed appreciation for the Buddhist approach to transforming the sexual energy. Our training did not teach us to accept sexual feelings with awareness and then let them pass without acting on them. You had to fight them! And the more you resisted, the stronger they got! Rev. Heng Sure who teaches at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, presented celibacy as the first step in a three step process that goes from celibacy to stillness to insight. It should not be seen just as a difficult adjunct to the spiritual path, but as essential to it, he said. The practice of meditation calls for daily periods when the senses are stilled and not allowed to pursue sense objects. Something happens to the energy in the stillness, said Heng Sure; the pressure goes away. In married life, he explained, spiritual practice is partial and piecemeal, making celibacy a more effective means to move toward insight, and the peace and happiness that flow from it. In the discussion, Fr. Mark Serna OSB, president of MID, pointed out that in Christianity married people can be holy, too; one doesn t have to be celibate to go to heaven. Catholic monastics emphasized how, in Christian faith, motivation for celibacy is strongly relational. For me, said Fr. Terrance Kardong of Assumption Abbey in North Dakota, it s the deep personal relationship

4 of 5 6/13/2015 9:23 PM with Jesus that enables me to do something this hard. Fr. Michael Peterson OSB from Blue Cloud Abbey in South Dakota drew a laugh when he shared, When some college kids asked me: How can you live without sex? an answer came that wasn t even planning on: God s a better kisser. In celibacy I transfer my desire for fulfillment to God. Heng Sure said that the idea of embracing celibacy because it leads to love is not a Buddhist approach. A Buddhist would say It leads to liberation from further suffering both personal and, in the Bodhisattva path, for everyone. Lama Norbu added that the relational dimension, while not highlighted in the Buddhist practice of celibacy, is not absent either. Monks choose to live in community, he said. And the core of their spirituality is compassion for others. The third session focused on how the two traditions handle transgressions and failure. Ajahn Punnadhammo from Ontario delineated the Four Defeats in Buddhist monasticism sexual intercourse, stealing above a trivial amount, killing a human being and falsely claiming superior spiritual achievements and explained how, if a monk should do any of these four actions, he is no longer a monk and is not allowed to be readmitted into the community. Responses to lesser sexual infractions are spelled out in detail in the monastic code. Buddhists listened with keen interest to Abbot John Klassen OSB of Saint John s Abbey as he related how, in response to the exposure of sexual misconduct by Catholic clergy and religious, the bishops ruled that transgressions against minors would result in expulsion from the priesthood. But, said Klassen, leaders of religious communities took a fundamentally different stance. They had to agree to remove any offender from ministry, but they were not willing to throw them out of the community. They agreed to do risk assessment and develop supervision for offenders. Offenders have understood that because of recidivism and lack of public trust, supervision plans are necessary.

5 of 5 6/13/2015 9:23 PM Klassen described how, in the 1970s, our awareness of failures moved from the moral arena to the psychological arena, and now to the awareness that the sexual abuse of minors is a crime. New guidelines provide a level of behavioral specificity that we ve never seen before. In the closing session, the monks discussed both what contributes and detracts from the development of friendship and healthy intimacy in celibate communities. Through the event, participants began the day with an hour of quiet sitting in meditation, and joined the monastic community at Saint John s for their rhythm of daily prayer. At the end, Lama Norbu passed around Buddhist prayer flags for all the participants to sign. I will return to Tibet next summer, he said, and erect these flags on the highest mountain in the world where the dedicated energies of those here and all the communities they represent will fly up to heaven. Website by Booklight, Inc. Copyright 2010, Monastic Dialogue