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Venerable
Ajahn Viradhammo -
Going Forth
Ajahn
Viradhammo shared these thoughts on last years 'Going Forth' Ceremony
held at the monastery
The robe of a monk is a sign, not just for the person who's going forth,
but a strong sign for society as well. It is a sign that there is
spiritual aspiration and that there are beings who are very serious
about this; there is truth and people are seeking the truth. This is a
very healthy thing for society to see: a robe. Sometimes we mix up other
religious perceptions with what Buddhism is. A monk isn't a priest. It's
not like a monk is some kind of intermediary with truth. Each one of us
has to discover truth for ourselves. So a monk or a nun practices in
this particular way with the intention to realise truth. In the same
way, lay people are practising in their environments with their
conditions. A monk doesn't ordain to become a teacher or a counsellor or
a lecturer. The primary intention is the realisation of nibbana. From
that, teaching or counselling in a community can take place but that's
secondary. If there isn't that primary intention of realising nibbana
then it becomes corrupted and the monk is just speaking from books
rather than from wisdom and insight. The realisation of nibbana isn't
selfish. It's kind of like the selfishness that puts an end to
selfishness. Then from that you get monastic beings trying to share
their insights with the lay community.
Not everyone has the vocation of being a monk or a nun but everyone has
a bit of the monk or nun in them. So we can look at the monk or the nun
as a kind of archetype, an image of someone who is seeking truth. Each
one of us has different ways of trying to realise truth. A society which
supports a situation where men and women who really want to do that are
given the opportunity is enriched. And a society which does not have
that and where those energies are not allowed to flower or are thwarted
suffers a great loss. Just like a society which allows great artists to
flower or good plumbers or good ecologists or whatever it might be.
These are all important parts of a healthy society.
Sometimes people ask, 'what if everyone wanted to become a monk or a
nun?' And my joke is, 'what if everyone wanted to become a hairdresser?'
I don't think it's ever going to be a problem. What we're trying to do
here is to develop a community where the community includes the
monastics and the lay people. Where spiritual aspiration, the love of
truth and goodness is encouraged, honoured and brought strongly into
consciousness. This is that kind of sanctuary and the kind of ceremony
which reminds us of that possibility.
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