Jukai Ceremony formaly becoming buddhist.
The ceremony of Jukai in the sangha. It is the primary
initiation ceremony of zen. Its when your formally take up
the way of Zen.
The True inner initiation of zen is enlightenment, but
meanwhile we do outer initiation ceremonies like Jukai,
which have a deep meaning.
The terms vary based on buddist group, so these terms are
various terms that might be used in zen or other buddhist
associations. - so try not to worry to much about them.
For those who don't know, jukai is the traditional Buddhist
ceremony of receiving the precepts.
There are three formal levels of participation in Zen.
From the top down, they are:
1.Zen Master Dai-oshō (大和尚)
After having become oshō one may become a dai-oshō,
resident priest in a Zen-temple
2.Zen Priest
3. A member of a Zen community who has received "lay
ordination". "Lay ordination" is approximately the equivalent
of confirmation in a Christian community.
"The precepts are not rules. They are the commonway of
life for Buddhists." Furthermore, the Buddhist precepts
apply only to yourself. They are never, ever, ever to be used
as a means of judging other people's behavior.
Laity
The term ‘laity’ refers to lay or non-ordained Buddhist
practitioners who are not part of the monastic order. In the
Buddhist tradition, the laity are sometimes referred to as
upāsaka (for men) and upāsika (for women).
This refers to people who are not monks, nuns or novice
monastics, yet undertake certain vows (usually in the form
of taking refuge in the Triple Gem and attempting to live
according to particular moral precepts and the Eightfold
Path).
A person publicly vows to honor the Three Devotions, and
uphold the Three Universal Precepts and the Ten
Fundamental Precepts. The Three Devotions are to Buddha,
Dharma (Buddhist teachings) and Sangha (Buddhist
community). The Three Universal Precepts are 1) to observe
social rules, 2) observe the universal rules of morality and
3) work for the salvation of all beings.
The Ten Fundamental Precepts are 1 not to destroy lie 2
not to steal 3. not to have excessive desires 4. not to lie
5. not to live by selling harmful things
6. not to discuss the failures of Buddhist priests and
laypeople 7. not to praise oneself or berate others 8. not to
begrudge the sharing of Buddhist teachings or other things
but give them freely 9 not to become angry and 10 not to
abuse the three treasures; Buddha, Dharma and Sangha.
In Jukai you receive the rakasu, which represents the robe
of the Buddha, and your connection to all the ancient
lineage of people who have walked the Way and suffered for
wisdom and also gained wisdom.
You share in their light and their effort. You take on a
Buddhist name, identifying yourself in the tradition in that
way.
You engage with the precepts of the Bodhisattva. There are
sixteen of them. Pretty much they are common sense
undertakings.
"I take up the way of not killing," "not stealing," "not lying,"
"not undertaking sexual misconduct," "not misusing drugs."
Things like that, simple things. "Not indulging in anger,"
"not
praising myself while abusing others." And as well as that
there is taking refuge as part of the precepts. "I take
refuge in the Buddha." "I take refuge in the dharma." "I
take refuge in the sangha." Which is the primary act, I
suppose, really. To say that I trust that there is a Way and I