Meaning in the Face of Transience: Reflections of Socially Engaged Buddhists in Japan
Finding solace in impermanence
Finding solace in impermanence
Buddhist compassion and social engagement
Digital mokugyo aids sutra recitation while drumming
Health and mindfulness in devotional dining
Using ki, water, and ink to express impermanence
Buddha’s perspective on suicide and Theravada…
The city of Kamakura in Japan’s Kanagawa Prefecture is home to one of the most poetic and paradoxical works of Buddhist sculpture. The statue is
Japan is the land of the rising sun and hopelessly polite people. On the surface, it appears to be a secular country, but if one
When one looks at the revival of Buddhism in India, it seems remarkable that of all the various Buddhist schools that sprouted up in Japan
A life combating philosophical errors and spreading the…
A recent report by the Washington, DC-based Pew Research Center projects that some of the world’s major religions are going to expand, with the notable
The Japanese Zen master Dōgen (1200–53) famously said, “To study the Buddha way is to study the self.”* A popular meditation manual known and used