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Difference between revisions of "Buddhist Association of Shinnyo-En"

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|founded=1936
 
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|email=shinnyoenaustralia@gmail.com
 
|email=shinnyoenaustralia@gmail.com
 
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== The [[Beliefs]] and Practices of [[Shinnyo Buddhism]] ==
+
== Welcome ==
 
+
[[File:GrayBuddha.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Buddha]]
[[Shinnyo-en]] is an international [[Buddhist community]] founded on the [[ancient]] [[wisdom]] and [[love]] [[embodied]] in the [[Buddha's teachings]]. Building on twenty-five centuries of [[tradition]], [[Shinnyo Buddhism]] teaches [[laypeople]] how to use each day as an opportunity to connect with others and seek [[enlightenment]].
+
[[Shinnyo-en]] [[Australia]] is a [[lay Buddhist]] {{Wiki|community}} serving the needs of [[Shinnyo-en]] members and their communities throughout [[Australia]] and [[New Zealand]]. [[Shinnyo-en]] is a worldwide {{Wiki|community}} that offers [[people]] a pathway to finding true [[joy]] in this [[life]] that is applicable to a {{Wiki|modern}} [[lifestyle]] yet with a strong foundation of [[traditional]] [[Buddha]].
 
 
The [[Buddhist]] term [[shinnyo]] denotes both [[buddhahood]] ([[spiritual awakening]]) and [[the nature of reality]]; en refers to a [[boundless]] [[garden]] or open [[space]]. [[Shinnyo-en]] is a place for [[people]] to discover and develop the [[buddha]], or [[awakened nature]], within themselves through {{Wiki|altruistic}} [[Buddhist practice]].
 
 
 
[[Shinnyo]] [[Buddhists]] promote the values of [[peaceful]] coexistence and cooperation through the works of {{Wiki|philanthropic}} foundations, and place great value on the contributions that each {{Wiki|individual}} can make toward [[life]] on our {{Wiki|planet}}. Everyone's [[spiritual]] journey is unique, and [[Shinnyo-en]] offers a diverse {{Wiki|environment}} where we can all grow and cultivate their [[aspiration for enlightenment]].
 
 
 
== [[Shinnyo-en]] History ==
 
 
 
=== c. 563 BCE ===
 
 
 
[[Siddhartha Gautama]], the man who is to become a [[buddha]] ([[awakened one]]), is born at [[Lumbini]] in present-day [[Nepal]].
 
At age 35 [[Siddhartha]] attains [[enlightenment]] (a [[state]] of [[spiritual awakening]] motivated by the [[desire]] to alleviate people's [[suffering]]) at [[Bodhgaya]] and becomes known as the [[Buddha Shakyamuni]].
 
Shortly after his [[enlightenment]], [[Shakyamuni]] delivers his first [[teaching]] at [[Sarnath]] and passes on his realizations to others.
 
 
 
=== c. 483 BCE ===
 
 
 
[[Shakyamuni Buddha]] passes away in [[Kushinagara]] at the age of 80 after [[teaching]] for 45 years.
 
For the next several centuries, [[Buddhism]] spreads and adapts to different [[beliefs]] and cultures. One such branch is [[Esoteric Buddhism]] (focusing on experiential [[spirituality]]), which was developed in [[India]] by [[masters]] such as [[Nagarjuna]] in the first centuries of the common {{Wiki|era}}.
 
 
 
=== 806 ===
 
[[File:Kukai.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Kukai]]
 
 
 
[[Kobo Daishi]] (also known as [[Kukai]]) returns to [[Japan]] from [[China]] as a [[master]] of [[Esoteric Buddhism]].
 
 
 
=== 874 ===
 
 
 
[[Master]] [[Shobo]] (a [[student]] of [[Kobo]] Daishi's [[Buddhism]]), founds [[Daigoji]] [[monastery]], where [[Shinjo Ito]] would study over a thousand years later.
 
 
 
=== 1936 ===
 
 
 
[[Shinjo]] begins his {{Wiki|training}} at [[Daigoji]] and starts a fellowship of [[Buddhist]] practitioners that grew to become [[Shinnyo-en]].
 
 
 
=== 1938 ===
 
  
[[File:Consecration.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Consecration]]
+
== What is [[Shinnyo-en]]? ==
 +
[[File:Buddhism For Our Times.jpg|thumb|250px|left|]]
 +
[[Shinnyo-en]] is a [[Buddhist community]] that is based on the "last teachings" of [[Gautama Buddha]], the [[founder of Buddhism]].  Its aim is to make the [[enlightenment]] of the [[Buddha]] available to as many [[people]] as possible through the [[vehicle]] of self-reflection and [[altruism]].  Through the centuries, [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|training}} leading to [[enlightenment]] has been available to all, but it has been mostly those who renounced the [[worldly life]] to become [[monks]] or [[nuns]] who have taken advantage of it.
  
[[Shinnyo-en]] celebrates the [[consecration]] of its first [[temple]], Shinchoji.
+
[[Shinnyo-en]] provides an alternative framework for guidance and practice so that [[ordinary people]] can make [[society]] their primary {{Wiki|training}} ground.  Its [[doctrine]] is firmly grounded in [[traditional]] [[Buddhism]], and lay practitioners can train to achieve a [[state of mind]] on par with [[Wikipedia:Convention (norm)|conventional]] {{Wiki|clergy}}.  In short, it is a diverse [[spiritual community]] ([[sangha]]) that tries to support each and every one of its members to walk the [[path]] toward [[wisdom]] and [[enlightenment]].
  
=== 1943 ===
+
== History ==
 +
[[File:Shinjo.jpg|thumb|250px|left|The Master]]
 +
[[Shinnyo-en]] was founded in 1936 by [[Master]] [[Shinjo Ito]] and his wife [[Tomoji]].  [[Shinjo]] trained at [[Daigoji]], the head [[temple]] of the [[Daigo School]] of [[Shingon esoteric Buddhism]].  There, he mastered all the trainings and gained the title of [[Great Acharya]] ("[[Great Master]]").  He became a successor of the "[[dharma]] {{Wiki|stream}}," the [[traditional]] flow of [[Buddhist wisdom]] handed down in an unbroken line since the time of the [[Buddha]] over two thousand five hundred years ago.  This also qualified him to start his [[own]] [[lineage]], or denomination.  However, because [[Shingon Buddhism]] is an [[esoteric]] [[tradition]], it forbids revealing its teachings to the non-initiated.
  
[[File:Shinjo.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Shinjo]]
+
[[Esoteric]] refers to an [[understanding]] that cannot be described or [[taught]] through [[human]] [[language]], as doing so would prevent [[full understanding]].  [[Esoteric Buddhism]] (or [[Vajrayana]]) developed relatively late in [[Buddhist]] history, and so it includes all the teachings that came before it. Emphasizing direct [[experience]] of practice rather than [[religious]] [[discipline]], study of texts, or other external methods, it also requires that teachings and [[rites]] be passed on only by a senior in [[faith]] who is sure that the trainee is indeed ready to receive them.
  
[[Shinjo]] completes [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|training}} and is [[recognized]] as an [[acharya]], which authorizes him to take on students and establish his [[own]] [[dharma lineage]].
+
Searching for a way to share the [[enlightenment]] he had [[realized]] through [[Shingon]], [[Shinjo]] further studied the [[Buddhist teachings]] and came across a set of [[scriptures]] known as the [[Nirvana]] or [[Mahaparinirvana]] ("[[Great Passing into Nirvana]]") [[Sutra]], the "last teachings" of the [[Buddha]]. Reading this [[sutra]], [[Shinjo]] [[realized]] that its all-embracing [[Wikipedia:concept|concepts]] were the [[doctrinal]] support he needed to make effective [[spiritual practice]] accessible to everyone.
  
=== 1950 ===
+
Today, the [[Shinnyo-en]] [[path]] to [[spiritual]] [[liberation]] is [[recognized]] in official and [[Buddhist]] circles as an {{Wiki|independent}} branch of [[esoteric Buddhism]] (Jpn. [[Mikkyo]]).  Since the passing in 1989 of [[Shinjo Ito]], the order has been led by his successor, Her Holiness Shinso Ito.
  
[[Tomoji Ito]] completes her [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|training}}.
+
== Basic [[Doctrine]] ==
 +
[[File:Basic Doctrine.png|thumb|250px|left|]]
 +
The Founder's {{Wiki|training}} in [[esoteric Buddhism]] emphasized becoming {{Wiki|aware}} of the ever-present [[lovingkindness]], [[compassion]], and [[wisdom]] that fill the [[universe]] and inspire [[people]] at the deepest level.  In [[Buddhism]], one way of referring to such [[consciousness]] is "[[buddha nature]]" (the potential for [[buddhahood]]), but [[traditionally]], most who focused on [[cultivating]] this part of themselves became [[monks and nuns]].  The [[Nirvana Sutra]] encourages all people–monastic and lay [[practitioner]] alike–to help themselves by helping others, as everyone has a [[buddha nature]] at their core, whether they are {{Wiki|aware}} of it or not.
  
=== 1966 ===
+
In summary, the [[Sutra's]] four major {{Wiki|principles}} are:
  
[[Shinjo]] and his wife [[Tomoji]] attend a [[world]] conference of [[Buddhists]] in [[Thailand]]. During this trip they go on to visit [[India]], the birthplace of [[Buddhism]].
+
# Everyone has a [[buddha nature]], without exception.
 +
# "[[Buddha]]" is always {{Wiki|present}} and {{Wiki|transcends}} the historical figure ([[Gautama]]).
 +
# Even the worst wrongdoer (defined as someone who willfully tries to destroy people's [[faith]]) can eventually [[attain buddhahood]].
 +
# [[Nirvana]] is [[state of mind]] we cultivate in the here and now. It is always available, [[joyful]], a [[revelation]] of the [[true self]], and [[pure]].
  
=== 1967 ===
+
In [[essence]], the [[Nirvana Sutra]] contains a [[hopeful]] message: that all [[people]], by acting altruistically and reaching into themselves through {{Wiki|reflection}} and [[meditation]], can bring forth the great [[joy]], [[lovingkindness]], and [[compassion]] of [[buddhas]].  The Founder sculpted a statue of the [[Buddha]] giving his last teachings (a [[Parinirvana]] [[Buddha]]) as a [[symbol]] of the [[inherent]] [[buddha nature]] in all [[beings]] and the [[self-realization]] [[preached]] in the [[Nirvana Sutra]].
  
[[Shinjo]] and [[Tomoji]] visit {{Wiki|Europe}} and the {{Wiki|Middle East}} as representatives of [[Japanese Buddhism]] for a [[religious]] and {{Wiki|cultural}} exchange of [[goodwill]].
 
Shortly after their return, [[Tomoji Ito]] passes away.
 
  
=== 1970 ===
+
== [[Lineage]] System ==
 +
[[File:Lineage System.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Lineage System]]
 +
Everyone at [[Shinnyo-en]] becomes a member through a {{Wiki|mentor}} called "guiding parent." This is the [[person]] who introduces a new follower to the {{Wiki|community}} and helps that [[person]] to practice.
  
[[Shinjo]] and his daughter and {{Wiki|future}} successor, Shinso, embark on their first trip to the [[Wikipedia:United States of America (USA)|United States]] to cultivate [[Shinnyo-en's]] budding overseas presence.
+
When the {{Wiki|community}} was small, [[Shinjo]] and [[Tomoji Ito]] guided followers directly, making them [[feel]] like part of a [[family]].  However, with increasing numbers of followers, such direct guidance became impossible, and so guiding [[parents]] are now responsible for conveying their same [[loving kindness]] and [[compassion]].  This [[dharma]] ([[teaching]]) relationship helps both the "guiding parent" and the "guiding child" to exchange [[experiences]], gain greater [[insight]], and practice in a way that nurtures each other's [[Buddha nature]].
  
=== 1971 ===
+
Through this system of guiding [[parents]] and guiding children, members are organized into groups called "[[lineages]]" that cater to people's {{Wiki|individual}} needs and for maintaining the warm [[feeling]] of fellowship that has existed since [[Shinnyo-en's]] [[birth]].
 
 
The first [[sanctuary]] outside [[Japan]] is dedicated in Hawaii.
 
 
 
=== 1982 ===
 
 
 
[[File:Shinso Ito.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Shinso Ito]]
 
Shinso Ito completes her [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|training}} and becomes a successor in the [[Shinnyo]] [[lineage]].
 
The first [[sanctuary]] in the continental [[U.S.]] is dedicated in {{Wiki|San Francisco}}.
 
 
 
=== 1985 ===
 
 
 
The first {{Wiki|Asian}} [[sanctuary]] outside [[Japan]] is dedicated in {{Wiki|Taipei}}, [[Taiwan]], and the first [[sanctuary]] in {{Wiki|Europe}} is dedicated in {{Wiki|Paris}}.
 
 
 
=== 1989 ===
 
 
 
Shinso becomes the head of [[Shinnyo-en]] after Shinjo's passing.
 
 
 
=== 1997 ===
 
 
 
[[File:Daigoji.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Daigoji]]
 
The [[Shinnyo]] [[Samaya]] Hall is dedicated at [[Daigoji]] in {{Wiki|recognition}} of Shinjo's founding of a new school of [[Buddhism]]. Shinso becomes the first woman to officiate at a service in the 1,100-year history of [[Daigoji]].
 
 
 
=== 2006 ===
 
 
 
Commemorating the centennial of Shinjo's [[birth]], the new {{Wiki|training}} center of Ogen'in opens to facilitate greater access to [[Shinnyo Buddhism]].
 
 
 
=== 2011 ===
 
 
 
After several years of renovations of the [[temple]] complex, the Maraparinirvana [[Buddha]] statue, sculpted by the [[Shinnyo-en]] Founder, [[Shinjo Ito]], was re-inspirited at the Oyasono headquarters [[temple]] in [[Tachikawa]], [[Japan]].
 
 
 
=== Today ===
 
 
 
[[Shinnyo Buddhism]] continues to spread as new [[temples]] are opened and the teachings reach the hearts of many around the [[world]]. Currently, Oyasono, the head [[temple]] of [[Shinnyo Buddhism]], is undergoing restoration and renovation for the sake of {{Wiki|future}} [[Shinnyo]] [[Buddhists]].
 
 
 
== [[Master]] [[Shinjo Ito]] ==
 
[[File:Young master.jpg|thumb|250px|left|The Young Master]]
 
 
 
[[Shinnyo-en's]] story began in 1936. [[Shinjo Ito]] was enjoying a comfortable career as an aircraft engineer, but felt a strong [[desire]] to pursue [[Buddhism]] and guide [[people]] to [[happiness]].
 
With the support of his wife [[Tomoji]], [[Shinjo]] began {{Wiki|training}} in [[Shingon]], a major school of [[Japanese Buddhism]] founded in the 9th century CE, at the [[Daigoji temple]] complex in {{Wiki|Kyoto}}. According to the [[mystical]] teachings of [[Shingon]], [[enlightenment]] is not a distant [[reality]] that can take countless lifetimes to attain. Rather, it is a part of the [[reality]] we live in. With the guidance of a genuine [[teacher]], [[enlightenment]] can be [[realized]] through practice for the [[benefit]] of oneself and others.
 
 
 
[[Shinjo]] studied [[sacred]] [[Buddhist texts]] (known as [[sutras]]), searching for one that would capture [[Shingon's]] [[mystical]] [[truths]] yet also make [[Shingon Buddhism]] accessible to [[laypeople]]. [[Shinjo]] concluded that the [[Nirvana]] Sutra—which focuses on the [[teachings of the Buddha]] in the final moments of his life—was the {{Wiki|perfect}} text to help [[people]] understand the [[Buddha's teachings]]. The [[Nirvana Sutra]] brings together the teachings bequeathed by the [[Buddha]] on his final day; it is the [[Buddha's]] legacy and the culmination of forty-five years of [[teaching]]. The [[Buddha]] emphasizes in his final [[discourse]] that everyone can [[attain enlightenment]], and welcomes all to the [[path]] of [[cultivating]] the [[four virtues]] of [[lovingkindness]], [[compassion]], [[joy]], and [[equanimity]].
 
 
 
[[File:Mster Shinjo Ito.jpg|thumb|right|Master Shinjo Ito]]
 
 
 
[[Shinjo]] often repeated the saying: "One person's [[awakening]] will [[enlighten]] countless others." This articulates the [[Buddhist]] [[principle]] of [[interdependence]] and the underlying {{Wiki|altruistic}} [[philosophy]], central to [[Shinnyo Buddhism]], that true [[spiritual practice]] brings [[joy]] to oneself and others. [[Shinjo]] believed that each of us possesses the potential for [[spiritual awakening]], and directed his [[energy]] to helping [[people]] cultivate that potential.
 
 
 
== [[Shinnyo-en]] in [[Australia]] ==
 
 
 
[[Shinnyo-en]] [[Australia]] is a [[lay Buddhist]] {{Wiki|community}} serving the needs of [[Shinnyo-en]] members and their communities throughout [[Australia]] and [[New Zealand]].  [[Shinnyo-en]] is a worldwide {{Wiki|community}} that offers [[people]] a pathway to finding true [[joy]] in this [[life]] that is applicable to a {{Wiki|modern}} [[lifestyle]] yet with a strong foundation of [[traditional]] [[Buddha]].
 
  
 
{{R}}
 
{{R}}
: http://www.shinnyoen.org/
+
https://www.shinnyo.org.au/
: https://www.shinnyo.org.au/
 

Latest revision as of 04:14, 8 November 2015

Buddhist Association of Shinnyo-En
Shinnyo en.jpg

Shinnyo-en Logo

Information
Tradition/Linage Japanese Esoteric Buddhism
Main School Mahayana
Sub School Japanese
Founded Founded(when)::1936
People
Founder(s) BUORG-Names::Names::Master Shinjo Ito
Contact Infotmation
Address 231 Longueville Road
Lane Cove
New South Wales 2066
Australia
Country Australia
Coordinates service=google }}
{{#geocode:231Longueville RoadLane CoveNew South WalesAustralia|format=float|service=google}} service=google }}The "_geo" type of this property is invalid
Map {{#display_map:{{#geocode:231Longueville RoadLane CoveNew South WalesAustralia}}|height=250px|width=250px|zoom=18}}
Phone Phone::(02) 9418 6688
Website Website::https://www.shinnyo.org.au/ "Website" has not been listed as valid URI scheme.
Email Email::shinnyoenaustralia@gmail.comURIs of the form "Email::shinnyoenaustralia@gmail.com" are not allowed.

Welcome

Buddha

Shinnyo-en Australia is a lay Buddhist community serving the needs of Shinnyo-en members and their communities throughout Australia and New Zealand. Shinnyo-en is a worldwide community that offers people a pathway to finding true joy in this life that is applicable to a modern lifestyle yet with a strong foundation of traditional Buddha.

What is Shinnyo-en?

Buddhism For Our Times.jpg

Shinnyo-en is a Buddhist community that is based on the "last teachings" of Gautama Buddha, the founder of Buddhism. Its aim is to make the enlightenment of the Buddha available to as many people as possible through the vehicle of self-reflection and altruism. Through the centuries, Buddhist training leading to enlightenment has been available to all, but it has been mostly those who renounced the worldly life to become monks or nuns who have taken advantage of it.

Shinnyo-en provides an alternative framework for guidance and practice so that ordinary people can make society their primary training ground. Its doctrine is firmly grounded in traditional Buddhism, and lay practitioners can train to achieve a state of mind on par with conventional clergy. In short, it is a diverse spiritual community (sangha) that tries to support each and every one of its members to walk the path toward wisdom and enlightenment.

History

The Master

Shinnyo-en was founded in 1936 by Master Shinjo Ito and his wife Tomoji. Shinjo trained at Daigoji, the head temple of the Daigo School of Shingon esoteric Buddhism. There, he mastered all the trainings and gained the title of Great Acharya ("Great Master"). He became a successor of the "dharma stream," the traditional flow of Buddhist wisdom handed down in an unbroken line since the time of the Buddha over two thousand five hundred years ago. This also qualified him to start his own lineage, or denomination. However, because Shingon Buddhism is an esoteric tradition, it forbids revealing its teachings to the non-initiated.

Esoteric refers to an understanding that cannot be described or taught through human language, as doing so would prevent full understanding. Esoteric Buddhism (or Vajrayana) developed relatively late in Buddhist history, and so it includes all the teachings that came before it. Emphasizing direct experience of practice rather than religious discipline, study of texts, or other external methods, it also requires that teachings and rites be passed on only by a senior in faith who is sure that the trainee is indeed ready to receive them.

Searching for a way to share the enlightenment he had realized through Shingon, Shinjo further studied the Buddhist teachings and came across a set of scriptures known as the Nirvana or Mahaparinirvana ("Great Passing into Nirvana") Sutra, the "last teachings" of the Buddha. Reading this sutra, Shinjo realized that its all-embracing concepts were the doctrinal support he needed to make effective spiritual practice accessible to everyone.

Today, the Shinnyo-en path to spiritual liberation is recognized in official and Buddhist circles as an independent branch of esoteric Buddhism (Jpn. Mikkyo). Since the passing in 1989 of Shinjo Ito, the order has been led by his successor, Her Holiness Shinso Ito.

Basic Doctrine

Basic Doctrine.png

The Founder's training in esoteric Buddhism emphasized becoming aware of the ever-present lovingkindness, compassion, and wisdom that fill the universe and inspire people at the deepest level. In Buddhism, one way of referring to such consciousness is "buddha nature" (the potential for buddhahood), but traditionally, most who focused on cultivating this part of themselves became monks and nuns. The Nirvana Sutra encourages all people–monastic and lay practitioner alike–to help themselves by helping others, as everyone has a buddha nature at their core, whether they are aware of it or not.

In summary, the Sutra's four major principles are:

  1. Everyone has a buddha nature, without exception.
  2. "Buddha" is always present and transcends the historical figure (Gautama).
  3. Even the worst wrongdoer (defined as someone who willfully tries to destroy people's faith) can eventually attain buddhahood.
  4. Nirvana is state of mind we cultivate in the here and now. It is always available, joyful, a revelation of the true self, and pure.

In essence, the Nirvana Sutra contains a hopeful message: that all people, by acting altruistically and reaching into themselves through reflection and meditation, can bring forth the great joy, lovingkindness, and compassion of buddhas. The Founder sculpted a statue of the Buddha giving his last teachings (a Parinirvana Buddha) as a symbol of the inherent buddha nature in all beings and the self-realization preached in the Nirvana Sutra.


Lineage System

Lineage System

Everyone at Shinnyo-en becomes a member through a mentor called "guiding parent." This is the person who introduces a new follower to the community and helps that person to practice.

When the community was small, Shinjo and Tomoji Ito guided followers directly, making them feel like part of a family. However, with increasing numbers of followers, such direct guidance became impossible, and so guiding parents are now responsible for conveying their same loving kindness and compassion. This dharma (teaching) relationship helps both the "guiding parent" and the "guiding child" to exchange experiences, gain greater insight, and practice in a way that nurtures each other's Buddha nature.

Through this system of guiding parents and guiding children, members are organized into groups called "lineages" that cater to people's individual needs and for maintaining the warm feeling of fellowship that has existed since Shinnyo-en's birth.

Source

https://www.shinnyo.org.au/