* At Jikoji & on zoom *
Jukai Ceremony & Sesshin
SOLD OUT!
Thursday, January 4th - Sunday, January 7th
Led by Ōshin Jennings and Nenzen Brown, this special sesshin will culminate in a Jukai Ceremony
Jikoji Zen Center is pleased to announce that Zen practitioners from Jikoji Zen Center, No Barriers Zen, and Santa Barbara Zen Center, will receive lay ordination at a Jukai Ceremony January 7th, 2024 at Jikoji. Sensei Ōshin Jennings and Sensei Nenzen Brown will serve as Preceptors.
Jukai is the formal Zen Buddhist ceremony of lay ordination, in which Zen practitioners commit to the Buddhist path. The term Jukai is made up of the Japanese characters 受 “ju”, which means “receiving/granting,” and 戒 “kai”, which means “the precepts.” In the Jukai ceremony, practitioners openly receive the Sixteen Bodhisattva Precepts as an ongoing path in their lives.
Taking the precepts at the Jukai ceremony formally commences a commitment to a lifelong practice of mindful inquiry into the motivations and consequences of one’s own actions.
To prepare for this ancient ceremony, each student has intensively studied the precepts with their teacher, as well as other central teachings of the Buddha. Each ordainee has also hand-sewn a rakusu, a miniature Buddhist robe. On the back of each rakusu, the preceptor will write the ordainee’s Dharma name, which will be presented to them during the ceremony. This new name serves both as a recognition of the qualities they are already deeply exploring, as well as being a commitment to a life-long practice of embodiment of those qualities.
Each participant will also receive their Oryoki bowls as well as their kechimyaku, or blood lineage chart, which begins with Shakyamuni Buddha’s name and continues through the lineage ancestors down to the present day preceptors and their students.
This ceremony has been coordinated and prepared with the support of each of the three sanghas. The ceremony will be followed by a luncheon in celebration. Please join us for this happy day and in support of our sangha!
SOLD OUT!
Pamela Chobun Nenzen Brown was introduced to sitting meditation practice in 1976. Forty years later, as her father was declining with a neurodegenerative disease, she decided to stay seated. Pamela was ordained in Kobun Chino Otogawa Roshi's lineage by Shoho Michael Newhall in 2020 and received dharma transmission from Jakko Eso Vanja Palmers at Felsentor, Switzerland in 2022. Nenzen serves and teaches at Santa Barbara Zen Center and its affiliate temple in Los Olivos.
Ōshin Jennings is the founder of No Barriers Zen, a Zen Buddhist community in Washington, DC and online. Ōshin is the first known Deaf Buddhist priest and received Dharma transmission from Shoho Michael Newhall in 2022. He has made it his mission to use his experiences as a Deaf and disabled practitioner to help make meditation practices and the Dharma more accessible. Ōshin is also a psychotherapist and artist, and he is working on translating the sutras into ASL with his community.
Oryoki meals will be provided.
Cost:
For those joining the sesshin on site, the cost is $100/per overnight, $60/per overnight camping, and $40/per day for daytime visits.
Questions?
Please feel free to call Jikoji 408-741-9562 or email us at info@jikoji.org.