New York Programs Fall 2016
Sundays with Gelek Rimpoche
JOIN US FOR
SUNDAY TEACHINGS WITH
KYABJE GELEK RIMPOCHE
WEEKLY at 11am
OPEN TO ALL – FREE OF CHARGE
We look forward to seeing you onsite at Jewel Heart in Ann Arbor and online via Go To Webinar.
To join via webinar use the link or visit GoToWebinar with ID below:
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/5231911003373495810
Please log in early and set up before Rimpoche begins. This link and ID is valid for this new series of Rimpoche’s Sunday teachings regardless of attending one or all. Please send your questions, comments and feedback to:[email protected] or contact: 734 489 4919.
Stay tuned to Rimpoche’s calendar and the broadcast calendar for the ongoing schedule. To become a Jewel Heart webcast subscriber and access the vast archive of teachings by Kyabje Gelek Rimpoche, visit http://www.jewelheart.org/webcast-subscription/
2016-17 Tsoh Dates
Please follow this link for a complete calendar of Fire Monkey Year Tsoh dates. Tsoh dates at Jewel Heart New York are adjusted to fall on Sundays, unless otherwise noted in the calendar. Tsoh times are noon, unless otherwise noted in the calendar. Tsohs to celebrate special occasions, such as Kyabje Gelek Rimpoche’s birthday, will be shared in the newsletter well in advance. PLEASE NOTE:Waning Moon Day practices are restricted to those with Highest Yoga Tantra, Mother Tantra initiation unless otherwise noted.
New York Special Events Winter 2016
Indo-Tibetan Buddhist Ethics
with Dr. Tom Yarnall
Buddhist “higher education” (adhiśikṣā) traditionally is divided into the interconnected disciplines of ethics (śīla), wisdom/philosophy (prajñā), and meditation or experiential cultivation (samādhi / bhāvanā). In this introductory series Dr. Tom Yarnall will focus on the theory and practice of ethics (with reference to the other inextricably interrelated higher educations) within the Indian and Tibetan Buddhist traditions. Topics will include the ethical practices and commitments progressively developed within each of the three Buddhist Vehicles (the Individual, Universal, and Tantric Vehicles).
While these sessions will be grounded in scholarly and historical material, Tom’s presentations also will explore how on a personal level interested or committed spiritual practitioners can deeply understand, connect with, and organically incorporate these Buddhist perspectives and practices into their own lives, moment by moment, day by day, for an entire lifetime (and beyond!). The two-hour format will allow ample time and opportunity in each session for questions and discussion, encouraging full, detailed, personal engagement with the topics covered.
PLEASE NOTE – The 4 sessions are offered at two different venues:
Tuesdays, April 5 and 12, 7pm at Tibet House US
22 West 15th Street, NYC, NY 10011
Thursdays, April 7 and 14, 7pm at Jewel Heart NY
260 West Broadway, NYC, NY 10013
Click here for registration. Pre-registration is required.
There will not be a webcast. This is a live event only.
SESSION ITINERARY
Session 1 • Introduction and Overview
Tuesday, April 5 • 7–9pm • Tibet House US
An introduction to and overview of the ethics of each of the three Vehicles. In addition to covering key specifics of each, we will explore how the Vehicles form a coherent, systematic progression, enabling practitioners to build on and expand their ethical understandings and commitments as they mature through the Vehicles.
Session 2 • Individual Vehicle Ethics
Thursday, April 7 • 7–9pm • Jewel Heart NY
This session will focus on developing deeper, more nuanced and practical understandings of the foundational exoteric attitudes and practices of “renunciation,” taking refuge, and love and compassion, as well as the goal of attaining individual liberation (from addiction and suffering), which form the basis of all Buddhist ethics and practice.
Session 3 • Universal Vehicle Ethics
Tuesday, April 12 • 7–9pm • Tibet House US
This session will focus on the mature exoteric Universal attitudes, practices, and perspectives of great compassion, altruistic mind training (lo jong), the spirit of awakening (bodhicitta), and the six perfections (pāramitā) of generosity, ethics, tolerance, vigilance, meditation, and wisdom.
Session 4 • Tantric Vehicle Ethics
Thursday, April 14 • 7–9pm • Jewel Heart NY
This session will focus on the advanced esoteric Universal perspectives and practices of cultivating the buddha-identity and pure perception that support and constitute Tantric ethics and accelerated techniques for achieving buddhahood.
Dr. Tom Yarnall is an Associate Research Scholar and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Religion at Columbia University in New York. As a teacher he specializes in Indo-Tibetan Buddhist Studies, teaching courses in Buddhist history, philosophy, ethics, and contemplative sciences, and in Tibetan and Sanskrit languages. As a researcher he works with the Columbia Center for Buddhist Studies (CCBS) and the Columbia-affiliated American Institute of Buddhist Studies (AIBS), serving as the Executive Editor for the “Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences” series of translations of works from the Tibetan Tengyur (and associated literature), being co-published by AIBS, CCBS, and Tibet House US, and being distributed by Columbia University Press.
Dr. Yarnall began his engagement with Buddhism almost 40 years ago (in the late 70s), studying intensively with Tibetan Lamas from all four orders (including H.H. the Dalai Lama, H.H. Sakya Dagchen Rinpoche, Ven. Dezhung Rinpoche, and many others), while earning a B.A. in Religion (Buddhist Studies) at Amherst College in 1983. He later enrolled in the graduate program in Religion (Buddhist Studies) at Columbia University, earning an M.A., an M.Phil., and Ph.D. (with honors) in 2003. Dr. Yarnall’s own scholarly work has focused on Mādhyamika philosophy, Buddhist ethics, and especially on Indian and Tibetan Tantric materials of the Unexcelled Yoga class. His study and translation of the creation stage chapters of Tsong Khapa’s Great Treatise on the Stages of Mantra (sngags rim chen mo) was published in the “Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences” series in 2013. His forthcoming book, entitled The Emptiness that is Form: The Nonconceptual Embodiment of Buddhahood, contains a detailed analysis and study of the relationship between the view of emptiness and practice of deity yoga in Indo-Tibetan Buddhist Tantra.