Morning Practice for March 28, 2025 6:30am Eastern

Use this link to join. If asked for a password use 463913


Photograph by Zen’etsu

Please put your zoom in gallery mode, and keep your video link on while muting your mic until the end of the service – Feel welcome to face away from your device camera while keeping your presence visible in the frame for others in attendance to see and know you are there. Please refrain from moving your device around while others are sitting zazen with you.

Order of Morning Practice

Robe Chant

40 minute period of Zazen

Four Great Vows

Morning Service

Morning Greetings

Evening Practice for March 27, 2025 7pm Eastern

Here is the Zoom link to join in the cloud zendo, password if needed: 522050

Tonight we will have a short service followed by two periods of Zazen with an interval of Kinhin (5 minutes of slow walking in between). We will have our monthly pass the feather sharing and conclude by chanting the refuges in Pali. Please feel welcome to stay on zoom if you are able to share greetings with the sangha.

Please put your zoom in gallery mode, and keep your video link on while muting your mic until the end of the service – Feel welcome to face away from your device camera while keeping your presence visible in the frame for others in attendance to see and know you are there. Please refrain from moving your device around while others are sitting zazen with you.

Order of Service (text available at highlighted links)

Greeting by the Kokyo

Enmei Jukko Kannon Gyo

Heart Sutra in Chinese

25 Minute Zazen Period

5 minutes of Kinhin (slow walking)

25 Minute Zazen Period

Four Great Vows

Introductions and announcements

Refuges in Pali

Evening Practice for March 20, 2025 7 pm Eastern

Here is the Zoom link to join in the cloud zendo, password if needed: 522050

Tonight we will have a short service followed by one period of Zazen with an interval of Kinhin (5 minutes of slow walking in between) and then our monthly Wellbeing Ceremony. We will conclude by chanting the refuges in Pali.

Please feel welcome to stay on zoom if you are able to share greetings with the sangha.

Please put your zoom in gallery mode, and keep your video link on while muting your mic until the end of the service – Feel welcome to face away from your device camera while keeping your presence visible in the frame for others in attendance to see and know you are there. Please refrain from moving your device around while others are sitting zazen with you.

Order of Service

Greeting by the Kokyo

Evening Bell Chant

Harmony of Difference and Equality

25 Minute Zazen Period

5 minutes of Kinhin (slow walking)

Our monthly Wellbeing Ceremony

Enmei Jukko Kannon Gyo

Loving Kindness Meditation (call and response)

Refuges in Pali

Seiryū Paula Represents ABZS at the Feb 18th, 2025 Ireicho National Tour Event in Washington D.C.

Seiryū says “The Ireicho event was well attended, with many persons of Japanese descent and their extended families.  100 year old Masaharu Ishii stamped his sister’s name in the Ireicho to officially kick off the national tour before I arrived.  After stamping the Ireicho, a journalist, Daisuke Nakai, from the major Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun asked if he could speak with me.  “Why I was present, do I have Japanese heritage & what is the meaning for me.  I replied that I was stamping the names of Rev Jiko Nakade’s grandfather & 2 Daifukuji priests from Kealakekua, HI who were rounded up, taken to Sand Island off of Oahu then shipped by boat to the mainland detention camps.  There were no Buddhists in robes or rakusus in the audience.  Publically Rev Duncan Williams is very approachable and humble.  After the event he greeted me warmly saying, “I look forward to being involved with All Beings Zen Sangha again.””

The 1942 Executive Order 9066 authorized the US military to remove people deemed a threat to national security leading to the incarceration of Japanese Americans in violation of their civil liberties. To acknowledge and remember them, the Ireicho, a book of the names of over 125,000 incarcerated persons is touring 12 of the continental internment camp sites.  Ireichomeans” book consoling spirits.”

February Zazenkai Recap

Sangha group pictures from our February Zazenkai — where for our afternoon tea discussion we read a passage from Ross Gay’s book ‘Inciting Joy’ … 

In one section we read, 
“What if joy is not only entangled with pain, or suffering, or sorrow, but is also what emerges from how we care for each other through those things? What if joy, instead of refuge or relief from heartbreak, is what effloresces from us as we help each other carry our heartbreaks?”

A very nourishing day of Zen practice..

Also, please admire the beautiful flower arrangement that one of the attendees created during Samu (Work Practice).

Zazenkai for February 23, 2025 10-4 Eastern

All Beings Zen Sangha Zen Meditation Retreat Schedule    10am-4pm. In person and online. To join via zoom use this link. If asked for a password use 338529

10:00 Welcome and explanation of the Jundo and then people will begin the first period of Zazen

10:10am Robe Chant (lead by Kokyo) 40 minute peirod of Zazen

10:50am End of Zazen – beginning of Work Practice

Work Practice leader will assign tasks

12:00pm End of Work Practice/return to Zendo for Lunch

12:15am Oryoki instruction

12:30pm Lunch –Formal Oryoki

1:30pm Lunch clean up/break

1:40pm Outdoor walk (weather permiting) or Dharma study

2:15 Tea and Cookies/Dharma Discussion

3:10pm Kinhin (slow walking meditation)

3:20pm 30 minute period of Zazen

3:50pm Closing Chant 

4:00 End of Zazenkai

Statement in Support of Compassion by Soto Zen Buddhist Association – February 2025

Inryū Sensei our All Beings Zen Sangha Guiding Teacher and Resident Priest is a signatory on this document as well as our Associate Priest Seido David Sarpal

Here is the Statement

SZBA Statement in Support of Compassion
Zen holds as a foundational truth that all beings are Buddha Nature; that we are interdependent and the suffering of one is suffering that affects us all. Viewing the world as a boundless and all-encompassing circle of connection, we realize that no one can be left out or left behind.

We, the members of the Soto Zen Buddhist Association, reject any attempt to oppress marginalized groups and treat them as outsiders who do not deserve the same rights, opportunities and respect as those in power.

We are diverse in many ways–sex, gender expression, race, ability, religion–and this is our greatest strength, a strength that should be celebrated. Marginalization, oppression, and rejection are the antithesis of Zen practice, and we oppose any attempts to make such behaviors law or national policy. We oppose the creation of a culture that deliberately normalizes marginalization, isolation or oppression of any group. We call for compassionate treatment of those who are marginalized and living in fear.

We must have compassion for all, and we must remember that compassion is wisdom in action, and compassion must never lead to apathy or passive acceptance. Therefore, we encourage opposition, not based in anger or fear or hatred but arising from our bodhisattva vows. We encourage everyone to bear witness to the cries of the world. We encourage people to march, write letters, and support organizations working to protect suffering beings. We support those who are in danger by building safe spaces or insisting that public institutions create those spaces and we encourage others to do the same. We offer emotional support and a calming presence to those who are in despair. And we offer the practice of Zen to all people as a way to cope with the world as it is.