Showing posts with label Chaung Yen Monastery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chaung Yen Monastery. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Zoom: Meditation w/ Bhikkhu Bodhi (2/4)




TONIGHT: Wednesday, 7:00–8:00 pm (EDT) with Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi

Dharma Students, please join us Wednesday nights at 7:00 pm (Eastern) for a meditation session over Zoom by clicking HERE.

Wednesday evening meditation program continues as usual. If there were any need to cancel, Bhante Bodhi would announce it.

There will be meditation on [Chinese Lunar] New Year's Eve at the usual time: 7:00-8:00 pm (ET). Each Wednesday evening, from 7:00 to 8:00 pm, Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi leads a meditation session over Zoom.

The session consists of a 15-minute vandana (chanting verses of homage), followed by a 45-minute guided meditation. All are welcome to join.

The texts recited are available. See class page on website for text of chants.

With metta (loving-kindness),
Chuang Yen Monastery/BAUS
  • ZOOM Passcode: 368764
Note: This is a recurring meeting from 7:00 pm to 8:00 pm (Eastern Time) on Wednesdays.
ADDRESS:
  • BAUS (The Buddhist Association of the United States, 美國佛教會)
  • 2020 Route 301 Carmel, NY 10512
  • contact@baus.org
Receive class updates and reminders by email. Avoid it going to spam by adding contact@baus.org to email Contact List. To add, click on the sender "BAUS - Chuang Yen Monastery" and reply to "contact@baus.org" and click on "Add to Contact" on pop-up box.

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Meditate with Bhikkhu Bodhi: Zoom (6/4)



Dear Dharma Students,

Please join us tonight at 7:00 pm Wednesday (June 4th) for a meditation session over Zoom by clicking HERE. Each Wednesday evening, from 7:00 to 8:00 pm, Bhikkhu Bodhi leads a meditation session on Zoom.
The session consists of a 15-minute chanting verses of homage (vandana), followed by a 45-minute guided meditation (bhavana). All are welcome to join.

The texts for recitation are attached separately. Please see class page on web site for chanting text.

With metta,
  • Chuang Yen Monastery/BAUS
  • Buddhist Association of the United States
  • ZOOM Passcode: 368764
NOTE: This is a recurring meeting from 7:00 pm to 8:00 pm Wednesdays.
  • Join Zoom Meeting us02web.zoom.us/s/83540900862?pwd=V1VkL0NhVEVnbGU4RnByNVJGRUhNUT09#success
  • Meeting ID: 835 4090 0862
  • Passcode: 368764
  • One tap mobile +16468769923,,83540900862#,,,,*368764#
  • US (New York) +13017158592,,83540900862#,,,,*368764#
  • US (Washington DC) Dial by location +1 646 876 9923
  • US (New York) +1 301 715 8592
  • US (Washington DC) +1 312 626 6799
  • US (Chicago) +1 253 215 8782
  • US (Tacoma) +1 346 248 7799
  • US (Houston) +1 669 900 6833
  • US (San Jose) Meeting ID: 835 4090 0862
  • Passcode: 368764
  • Find local number: us02web.zoom.us/u/kcYniDdmfU
  • Donation: BAUS
  • Bhikkhu Bodhi (BAUS), June 4, 2025; Amber Larson, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Saturday, May 17, 2025

Abhidhamma w/ Bhikkhu Bodhi (video)

(Tergar) Back to the Roots: Mapping the Mind through Abhidharma with Bhikkhu Bodhi

Tibetan Yongey Rinpoche (Tergar)
Students of the Dharma, tomorrow (Saturday, May 17th, 2025) instead of Bhikkhu Bodhi's regular class on the AN, the venerable American Theravada Buddhist scholar-monk will be giving an online lecture on the Abhidhamma ("Higher Doctrine") through another Buddhist organization, Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche's Tergar:
Anthology (Bhikkhu Bodhi)
All regular students are welcome to join this program, which will run from 10:00 am to 11:30 am (ET). Find more details and a registration form here: Tergar Events

Note two options on the registration form: (A) If no translation from English to another language is needed, register to view the lecture through YouTube. (B) If translation into another language is needed, register to view the lecture through Zoom.

With metta, BAUS via Wisdom Quarterly

"Many, fearful of annihilation [extinction] at death, construct belief systems that ascribe to their individual selves, their souls, the prospect of eternal life. A few yearn for a path to liberation but do not know where to find one. It was precisely to offer such a path that the Buddha has appeared in our midst."
- Bhikkhu Bodhi

Details
Ven. Buddhaghosa, the great Buddhist scholar-monk, compiling Theravada Abhidhamma texts
.
Manual of Abhidhamma (Bodhi)
Seeking a deeper understanding of your own mind — a map to greater well-being? Join us for a special online webinar with Venerable Bhikkhu Bodhi, a renowned Buddhist scholar and teacher of Buddhist philosophy, as he unravels the profound wisdom of the Abhidharma.

Often referred to as “Buddhist psychology,” the Abhidhamma [the “Dhamma in Ultimate Terms" or “Higher Doctrine”] offers a detailed map of consciousness, illuminating the intricate workings of our thoughts, emotions, and perceptions.

In this event, Bhikkhu Bodhi will guide us through the “topography” of consciousness and core principles of the Abhidharma, exploring how this ancient system of analysis can provide valuable insights into the causes of suffering and the path to innate well-being.

By systematically exploring the inner landscape of mind, we can clarify which mental states lead to suffering, which cultivate happiness and well-being at present and in the future, and which ultimately lead to full inner freedom (enlightenment, awakening, bodhi).

This is a unique opportunity to learn from a renowned master teacher and deepen your understanding of these essential teachings.

Why attend?
Wow, so my emotions actually make sense.
Venerable Bhikkhu Bodhi is a respected Buddhist monk, scholar, and translator renowned for his clear and insightful teachings on Abhidharma, the system of Buddhist psychology. Bhikkhu Bodhi's teachings emphasize the importance of understanding the mind by systematically guiding us to recognize confusion and discover the reality that leads to profound self-understanding and lasting well-being.

What will we learn?
But consciousness is too big to understand! - Successful meditators understand it.
.
In this program, participants will get an overview of the Abhidharma's teachings and learn the classifications of consciousness how to cultivate beneficial mental states

What is included in this program?
Included in this LIVE teaching by Venerable Bhikkhu Bodhi is a presentation followed by a Q&A session, during which participants may ask what pertinent questions they like.

Cost?
This webinar is free of charge, so no payment is required.
Bhikkhu Bodhi
American Bhikkhu Bodhi
Bhikkhu Bodhi is an American-born Buddhist monk from New York City. After completing his PhD in philosophy at Claremont in Los Angeles. He then traveled to Theravada Buddhist Sri Lanka, where he received full ordination in 1973, under the leading Sri Lankan scholar-monk Ven. Balangoda Ananda Maitreya Mahanayaka Thera. From 1984 to 2002, he served as editor for the Buddhist Publication Society in Kandy, where he lived for ten years with the senior German Buddhist monk Ven. Nyanaponika Mahathera at the Forest Hermitage. He currently lives and teaches at Chuang Yen Monastery (BAUS.org) in Carmel, New York. More

Tuesday, March 4, 2025

Meditate w/ Bhikkhu Bodhi Zoom (Weds)



Virtual meditation over Zoom (BAUS)
Dharma Students, join us tonight at 4:00 pm (LA time, 7:00 pm NY time) for a guided meditation session over Zoom with the great Bhikkhu Bodhi.

Recorded instructions by Bhante (Venerable) each Wednesday evening as Bhikkhu Bodhi leads a meditation session on Zoom.

American scholar-monk Bhikkhu Bodhi
The session consists of a 15-minute vandana (chanting verses of homage), followed by a 45-minute guided meditation. All are welcome to join. For the texts recited, see class page on web: chanting text.
With metta
美國佛教會
BAUS (Buddhist Association of the United States)

NOTE: This is a recurring meeting: from 7:00pm to 8:00pm Wednesdays

Saturday, February 1, 2025

Best Buddhist life for laypeople

The Buddha has good news for everyone pursuing a home-life or a left-home life (Ven. Bodhi).


Four-day hybrid retreat with Ven. American Bhikkhu Bodhi
During the Buddha’s time, thousands of people left the household life to take up the lifestyle of monastics (monks and nuns), but the Buddha also had hundreds of thousands of ordinary householder disciples who continued to live and practice at home.

To guide these lay disciples, the Buddha offered a rich body of teachings that would enable them to live the best life — a truly noble life — while fulfilling their household duties.


Over four days, Bhante (Bhikkhu Bodhi) lead a retreat focused on the Buddha’s teachings for laypeople. The retreat was based primarily on the Maha Mangala Sutta, the "Great Blessings Discourse," but Bhante gathered a vast number of discourses (suttas) and other texts that show how a lay disciple can walk the path to liberation while dwelling amid “the dust of the world.”

What about fans of Guanyin? Welcome to BAUS
The retreat included Dhamma talks, discussion periods, and five sessions of meditation each day. It also provided the opportunity for those who haven’t yet “gone for guidance” (sarana) to go for guidance (aka refuge) to the Three Jewels, the first decisive step to formally becoming a practitioner of the Buddha-dharma (the Buddha's Teachings).
The retreat was in hybrid mode, onsite and online. The teachings were given in English only. Those who wished to join in person could visit Chuang Yen Monastery (BAUS or the Buddhist Association of the United States) and attend the retreat live. Those unable to attend in person practiced at home, participating online over Zoom or YouTube.

The monastery was able to accept only 50 onsite practitioners. If applying after the 50 spaces have been filled, there was a waiting list and accepted if prior applicants drop out. If not joining in person, attend from home via Zoom or YouTube. Register to participate onsite only if a firm commitment to stay for the duration of the retreat can be made. If participating only part time, please join through the online channels. There is no charge for the course. Donations for the monastery are always welcome.

Monday, September 2, 2024

The Diamond Sutra, BAUS class (10/6)


CLASS: The Various Aspects of Meditation Theory in the Diamond Sutra
Not Czech monk Ven. Dhammadipa (Xing Kong)
Ven. Dr. Dhammadipa Sak, Ph.D. (aka Fa Yao) is the abbot of the US Zen Institute in Germantown, Maryland, and the Amata Meditation Center in Boyds, Maryland.

He previously served as the abbot of Chuan Yen Monastery (BAUS' CYM) and the Temple of Enlightenment. He is currently a vice president of the Buddhist Association of the United States (BAUS).

The Diamond Sutra 
Wiki edit by Wisdom Quarterly

This Sanskrit discourse is a Mahāyāna Buddhist sutra (a kind of apocryphal sacred text) from the genre of "Perfection of Wisdom" (Prajñāpāramitā) literature.

Translated into a variety of languages over a broad geographic range, the Diamond Sūtra is one of the most influential Mahayana sutras in East Asia, particularly prominent within the Chan (or Zen) tradition [1] alongside the Heart Sutra.

A copy of the Chinese Tang Dynasty version of the Diamond Sūtra was found among the Dunhuang manuscripts in 1900 by Taoist monk Wang Yuanlu and sold to Aurel Stein in 1907 [2]. They are dated back to May 11, 868 [3]. It is, in the words of the British Library, "the earliest dated printed book" [4].

It is also the first known creative work with an explicit public domain dedication, as its colophon at the end states that it was created "for universal free distribution" [5], a tradition carried on today by many Mahayana publishers given that the Buddha's Dharma is priceless.

Title
I did it, Batman! - There's no I. Keep meditating!
The Sanskrit title for this work is the Vajracchedikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra, which may be translated roughly as the "Vajra Cutter Perfection of Wisdom Discourse" or "The Perfection of Wisdom Text that Cuts Like a Thunderbolt" [1].

In English, shortened forms such as Diamond Sūtra and Vajra Sūtra are common. The title relies on the power of the vajra (diamond or thunderbolt and also an abstract term for a powerful adamantine weapon) to cut things as a metaphor for the type of wisdom that cuts through illusions to get at ultimate reality [1], which is what the Abhidhamma literature of the Pali canon aims to do.

This sutra is also called Triśatikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra ("300 lines on the Perfection of Wisdom Sutra").

The Diamond Sūtra is highly regarded in East Asian countries with historical traditions of Mahayana Buddhism [1]. [It is not considered an actual "sutra," a discourse by the Buddha or his immediate disciples, in the Theravada tradition of South and Southeast Asia.]

Translations of this title into the languages of some of these countries include... More

ABOUT THE TEACHER: Born in Taiwan and raised in Malaysia, Ven. Dhammadipa received his ordination in Sri Lanka in 1987. He earned a Ph.D. in theology and religious studies from the University of Bristol, UK, in 2005.

Ven. Dhammadipa has also been a visiting lecturer at the University of Chicago School of Divinity. His primary interests include Abhidhamma and meditation practices, and he frequently emphasizes the importance of meditation in society.

He is fluent in Chinese, Cantonese, Hakka, and English and is literate in several other languages including Pali, Sanskrit, Japanese, French, and German for his academic pursuits.
PROGRAM SCHEDULE
  • 9:00 am – Check-in
  • 9:30 am – Meditation unguided
  • 9:40 am – Greet teacher/bow to the Buddha
  • 9:45 am – Introduction to the day’s master and class
  • 9:50 am – Morning Class 1
  • 10:35 am – Tea break and cookies
  • 10:45 am – Morning Class 2
  • 11:30 am – Lunch and break
  • 12:50 pm – Meditation
  • 1:00 pm – Afternoon Class 1
  • 1:45 pm – Tea break and cookies
  • 2:00 pm – Afternoon Class 2
  • 2:45 pm – Share the merits, bow to the Buddha and teacher, and group photo
  • 3:00 pm – Clean up
Celebrating BAUS’s 60th anniversary and the new Dr. C.T. Shen & Mrs. Woo Ju Shen Memorial Hall

Thursday, August 3, 2023

Buddhist Summer School w/ Bhikkhu Bodhi (2)



This is Part 2 of our Buddhist Summer School with American scholar monk Bhikkhu Bodhi, from his recorded series As It Is. See Part 1. The topic today is the outline or summary of the Teaching (Dharma) famously known as the Four Noble Truths (Four Ennobling Truths).
The (united) Buddhist flag
What is the Dhamma (the Buddha's Dharma or "Doctrine")? It is the Teaching of the Buddha relating to liberation (moksha), freedom from suffering (dukkha), awakening from illusion (maya), and enlightenment in a benighted universe of ignorance. There are stages to this awakening. And there are many related teachings concerning enlightenment/awakening (bodhi).

The whole of the Buddha-Dharma may be summarized in four densely packed statements called the Four Noble Truths. Noble means "enlightened," so it is more useful to call them the Four Ennobling Truths, as direct realization of them leads to awakening.
  1. There is disappointment.
    American Bhikkhu Bodhi
  2. There is a cause of this.
  3. There is an end to this.
  4. There is a path leading to the end of disappointment.
When one awakens from ignorance, what one knows for certain is the deep meaning of these four statements. The first is very troubling to us as "ordinary, uninstructed worldlings." Who can say that all things are ultimately disappointing, unfulfilling, or "suffering"? What does this mean? What about pleasure, of which there are many kinds?

There is suffering, okay. That makes sense. We can feel that even in our own comfortable lives. We have no idea how far it goes, so it's nice to know that there's a reason or cause of all this disappointment or dukkha.

Hooray, there's an end to it at some point. When we know the cause, we can stem it and arrive at the cessation of ALL suffering. How?

There is a path leading to the cessation of all suffering, and it is called the Ennobling (Noble) Eightfold Path. Each of its factors are explained with the Four Ennobling Truths. (Enlightenment is said to depend on the cultivation of the 37 Requisites of Enlightenment or bodhi-pakkhiyā-dhammā). There is much to unpack. And Bhikkhu Bodhi lays out the basics.

Thursday, May 25, 2023

Bhikkhu Bodhi: Paths to Liberation (6/24)

Bhikkhu Bodhi, Chaung Yen Monastery (BAUS.org); Dhr. Seven (ed.), Wisdom Quarterly

American scholar-monk Bhikkhu Bodhi
This year (2023) American scholar-monk Bhikkhu Bodhi resumes his monthly Dharma talks for speakers of Russian.

The new series [presented in English with Russian translation] is on the theme of “Models of the Path to Liberation in Early Buddhism.”

In the sutras we see that the Buddha presented the Dharma (Teachings) on the Path to Enlightenment in a variety of ways designed to meet the needs of his audience.

What did the historical Buddha teach?
Some models are more comprehensive and general, others narrower, intended for particular individuals.

In this series, Ven. Bodhi explores four comprehensive models of the path:
  1. the Noble Eightfold Path
  2. the sequential training of the monastic
  3. the Seven Factors of Enlightenment
  4. the Seven Stages of Purification.
Schedule
  • May 20: The Noble Eightfold Path (SN 45:8)
  • June 24: The Sequential Training–1 (MN 27)
  • July 22: The Sequential Training–2 (MN 27)
  • August 26: The Sequential Training–3 (MN 27)
  • September 23: The Seven Factors of Enlightenment (selections from SN Chapter 46)
  • October 21: The Seven Factors of Enlightenment (selections from SN Chapter 46)
  • November 18: The Seven Stages of Purification (MN 24)
  • December 30: The Seven Stages of Purification (MN 24)
The talks will be based on the discourses (sutras) of the Buddha. A file with the text material can be found HERE.

Bhante will present the talks in English, with alternating translation into Russian. Those who do not speak Russian are welcome to join.

There are Buddhists in Russia?
The talks are given online at 9:30 am ET (4:30 pm–6:20 pm Moscow time).

Those in other time zones who want to join should check for the corresponding time in their own zone at this site. To join the program and obtain the Zoom link, register here.
Those already registered for Bhante’s regular Saturday classes need not register again.

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

As It Is: Karma and Rebirth (Bhikkhu Bodhi)

Bhikkhu Bodhi (baus.org); Dhr. Seven and Ashley Wells (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly


The Buddha’s Teaching: As It Is
When Bhikkhu Bodhi was a young monk, he lived in Washington D.C. in the Washington Buddhist Vihara, a Sri Lankan Theravada Buddhist monastery. It was 1979 when he recorded a series of ten lectures, a profound Basic Buddhist Teachings released in 1981 about everything from the Buddha to Nirvana for home study.

Wisdom Quarterly went to see him when he was living in the Forest Hermitage in Kandy, Sri Lanka, as editor in chief of the Buddhist Publication Society to ask if we could promote and distribute it. BAUS converted those cassette tape talks into a CD series in March of 2008, but the internet has made it even easier to spread the wisdom of the Buddha.

Introduction to CD: Bhikkhu Bodhi gave a series of lectures on the fundamental teachings of early Buddhism. Bhante G (Ven. Gunaratana), at the time the president of the Buddhist Vihara Society, suggested Ven. Bodhi record the lectures so that the vihara could distribute them as a set of cassette tapes. In the summer of 1981, Ven. Bodhi recorded them in the Washington D.C. monastery basement using an ordinary, nonprofessional tape recorder.

An enthusiastic lay supporter had the master copies reproduced in large quantities for distribution. They have continued to be distributed on tape and as CDs for over 25 years. They are now considered “public domain” for anyone to copy and distribute freely, the one condition being that they not be sold or made a commodity. They are best understood in order and can be heard in their proper sequence on the BAUS CD.

Bhikkhu Bodhi (born Jeffrey Block in 1944) is an American Theravada Buddhist monk, ordained in Sri Lanka and currently teaching in New York at Chaung Yen Monastery and New Jersey at Bodhi Monastery. He was appointed the second president of the Buddhist Publication Society and has edited and authored many publications grounded in the Theravada Buddhist tradition. He is founder of Buddhist Global Relief, an organization that funds projects that cure hunger and empower females across the world.

Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Bhikkhu Bodhi in Los Angeles (Jan. 7-12)

Lankarama (dhammausa.org); Ananda (Dharma Meditation), Dhr. Seven, Wisdom Quarterly
dhammausa.org
dhammausa.org
Bhikkhu Bodhi is the most famous American Buddhist monk in the world. He is the preeminent English translator of the original Buddhist texts. This is a six-day, non-residential retreat. It runs for six days, and retreatants return home for rest each night. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to meet and learn from Bhikkhu Bodhi, who traveled to Asia for decades and now lives on the East Coast (Chaung Yen Monastery, Upstate NY, BAUS.org) and Bodhi Monastery in NJ. APPLY for this retreat through our the Lankarama Buddhist Institute and RSVP at Dharma Buddhist Meditation. FREE/by donation:

Monday, September 2, 2019

Bhikkhu Bodhi: Session 12 (video)

Bhikkhu Bodhi, CYM, Carmel, NY (BAUS.org); Dhr. Seven, Sayalay Aloka, Wisdom Quarterly

American Theravada Buddhist scholar-monk Bhikkhu Bodhi teaches at the Buddhist Association of the United States (BAUS), Chuang Yen Monastery, in Carmel, Upstate New York: This retreat is being streamed live (and stored). This is Session 12: "Exploring Dependent Origination," Abhidharma Study and Meditation Retreat, Monday, Sept. 2, 2019, 2:10 PM.

Bhikkhu Bodhi: Session 11 (video)

Bhikkhu Bodhi, CYM, Carmel, NY (BAUS.org); Dhr. Seven, Sayalay Aloka, Wisdom Quarterly


American Theravada Buddhist scholar-monk Bhikkhu Bodhi teaches at the Buddhist Association of the United States (BAUS), Chuang Yen Monastery, in Carmel, Upstate New York: This retreat is being streamed live (and stored). This is Session 10: "Exploring Dependent Origination," Abhidharma Study and Meditation Retreat, Monday, Sept. 2, 2019, 10:20 AM.

Bhikkhu Bodhi: Session 10 (video)

Bhikkhu Bodhi, CYM, Carmel, NY (BAUS.org); Dhr. Seven, Sayalay Aloka, Wisdom Quarterly


American Theravada Buddhist scholar-monk Bhikkhu Bodhi teaches at the Buddhist Association of the United States (BAUS), Chuang Yen Monastery, in Carmel, Upstate New York: This retreat is being streamed live (and stored). This is Session 10: "Exploring Dependent Origination," Abhidharma Study and Meditation Retreat, Monday, Sept. 2, 2019, 9:00 AM.

Sunday, September 1, 2019

Bhikkhu Bodhi: Session 9 (video)

Bhikkhu Bodhi, CYM, Carmel, NY (BAUS.org); Dhr. Seven, Sayalay Aloka, Wisdom Quarterly


American Theravada Buddhist scholar-monk Bhikkhu Bodhi teaches at the Buddhist Association of the United States (BAUS), Chuang Yen Monastery, in Carmel, Upstate New York: This retreat is being streamed live (and stored). This is Session 9: "Exploring Dependent Origination," Abhidharma Study and Meditation Retreat, Sunday, Sept. 1, 2019, 3:35 PM.

Bhikkhu Bodhi: Session 8 (video)

Bhikkhu Bodhi, CYM, Carmel, NY (BAUS.org); Dhr. Seven, Sayalay Aloka, Wisdom Quarterly


American Theravada Buddhist scholar-monk Bhikkhu Bodhi teaches at the Buddhist Association of the United States (BAUS), Chuang Yen Monastery, in Carmel, Upstate New York: This retreat is being streamed live (and stored). This is Session 8: "Exploring Dependent Origination," Abhidharma Study and Meditation Retreat, Sunday, Sept. 1, 2019, 2:10 PM.