![]() College Of Zen Buddhist Studies
The Third Quarter for the College of Zen Buddhist Studies begins on July 2, 2012. We are currently accepting applications for new students here. Returning students can sign up for their new classes now.
Find a distance community that bridges the boundries of location and distance.
Students who enroll in the College of Zen Buddhist Studies are eligible to take five precepts once they enroll. Once a student has finished their first nine classes they are eligible to take ten precepts and become a Novice Priest in the Five Mountain Zen Order. Another benefit that students in the program can take advantage of is to be authorized to enter into kōan study with a qualified Zen Teacher. These interviews are offered over video conference, usually Skype.
Under the direction of the Five Mountain Order (founded in 2008 as the Monastery Without Walls), the College of Zen Buddhist Studies is one of the few Buddhist institutions in the world to make full use of online distance-education opportunities, providing our students with a convenient, affordable, and unique Zen training experience. The next quarter begins at the College of Zen Buddhist Studies on April 9, 2012 and will be offering a variety of courses on line. Our application fee is $25 and each course is offered for the nominal fee of $50 tuition/class. These classes are multimedia, and feature interaction with the instructors online, as well as private counseling and or course meeting using on line video technology. Once you have submitted your application you will be given a signon so that you can sign up for the classes of your choice.
Frequently Asked Questions.
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Saturday, June 23, 2012
College of Zen Buddhist Studies
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Symphony of Science - 'We Are All Connected'
Tonight Rev. Doshim
Halaw shared this video with me and as I have followed all of these scientists
it occurred to me that what they were all saying was that there is an interdependence
of all nature in the cosmos. The Huáyán Sect of Buddhism has followed this for
more than one thousand years. I hope you enjoy.
"We Are All
Connected" was made from sampling Carl Sagan's Cosmos, The History
Channel's Universe series, Richard Feynman's 1983 interviews, Neil deGrasse
Tyson's cosmic sermon, and Bill Nye's Eyes of Nye Series, plus added visuals
from The Elegant Universe (NOVA), Stephen Hawking's Universe, Cosmos, the
Powers of 10, and more. It is a tribute to great minds of science, intended to
spread scientific knowledge and philosophy through the medium of music.
The Avataṃsaka Sutra is
a compilation of sutras of various length. The earliest of these texts, the
Daśabhūmika Sūtra, maybe dates from the first century CE. The Daśabhūmika Sūtra
describes the ten stages on the Bodhisattva-path. The various sutras were
probably joined together shortly before its translation into Chinese, at the
beginning of the 5th century CE.
The Avataṃsaka
("garland", string of flowers) sutra integrates the teachings on Śūnyatā
and vijnaptimatra (mind-only).
The basic idea of the Avataṃsaka
Sutra is the unity of the absolute and the relative:
All in One, One in All.
The All melts into a single whole. There are no divisions in the totality of
reality [...] [I]t views the cosmos as holy, as "one bright pearl,"
the universal reality of the Buddha. The universal Buddhahood of all reality is
the religious message of the Avataṃsaka-sutra.
Each part of the world
reflects the totality of the cosmos:
In each dust-mote of
these worlds
Are countless worlds and
Buddhas...
From the tip of each
hair of Buddha's body
Are revealed the
indescribable Pure Lands...
The indescribable
infinite Lands
All ensemble in a hair's
tip [of Buddha].
All levels of reality
are related and interpenetrated. This is depicted in the image of Indra's net.
This "unity in totality allows every individual entity of the phenomenal
world its uniqueness without attributing an inherent nature to anything".
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