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Monastic Training
For a talk about monastic training by Ajahn Munindo
please click
here.
If you are interested in becoming a monk then Aruna Ratanagiri is a
place to check out first as a guest. In fact it’s good to come a few times, and
extend your stay for weeks at a time both to get a feel for the rhythms and
changes of the monastic life, and also to acknowledge how the lifestyle affects
you. Obviously, perhaps, it’s not all easy. Certainly things, or the absence of
things, will be irritating at times. You need to know in yourself how you can
handle the ups and downs of inspiration and negativity – this is the work of
strengthening and purifying the mind.
The following are a few main areas which you will need to consider over a period
of time:
How do the training precepts, the sense restraint and attention to details of
behaviour affect me?
Do I enjoy solitude and community? Where are the difficulties? Do I value
spiritual friendship?
How do I feel about others supervising my training?
How am I with being part of a tradition and following its customs?
Do I appreciate and benefit from the teachings that are given in this place? Or
would another monastery be more suitable?
These are not questions that have immediate answers (in fact, beware of any
'immediate answers'...); but staying for periods of time at Aruna Ratanagiri may
help you to see what they are pointing at. Then most likely it’s a matter of
taking one step at a time while being aware of how the affects and responses
change within you.
After some time as a guest (it’s also recommended to visit other monasteries)
you may decide that you’d like to make a year’s commitment to training in the
community as an anagarika – literally ‘a homeless one.’ This involves
shaving one's head, training within the Eight Precepts, wearing white and
putting aside concerns outside the monastery for a year. You can communicate
your interest in making this commitment to the Guest Monk, and the Sangha can
consider your request.
If the community does consider that, at this time, training in this monastery is
something that they can help you with, (depending on where you come from) you
will have some time to finish off, or shelve, any domestic business and in due
course take anagarika precepts with a teacher.
After a year or so, you may feel that you’d like to continue the training and
request ‘ordination’ as a monk (bhikkhu). Again this is something that
the Sangha, and specifically a teacher, has to feel is suitable, as they have to
take on the responsibility of guiding you through potentially rocky patches as
well as laying down a course of practice. In this tradition, there is no ‘Going
Forth’ as a monk without a teacher, so it is important that you feel you
have access to someone you can trust, respect and confide in.
Ordination as a monk is in two stages: ‘Going Forth’ (pabbajja) as a
novice (samanera) – whereupon you relinquish money and wear monk’s robes
– and ‘Acceptance’ (upasampada) as a bhikkhu. Acceptance is a
stage that you may enter or not, depending on your capacity and interest. You
have to train for at least a year as a samanera first; and even then it
is up to the Sangha of bhikkhus to decide whether you are ready for
Acceptance. This is because bhikkhu life entails a very full training in
precepts and observances and also carries a responsibility to the lineage, to
the Sangha as a whole, and to the lay community.
Bhikkhu ordinations require an initial commitment of five years of
training under a teacher in the monasteries of this lineage. These are serious
commitments as each monk is receiving offerings from faithful lay people whose
trust deserves the greatest respect. Also, in this lineage each monk is
benefiting from a succession of masters who have given their lives to
discovering truth and sharing it with others. To be an heir to such treasures is
a privilege that should not be taken lightly….But to live that privilege
joyfully, and without pretence…that’s what takes the time and deepening!
If you are interested in what is outlined here, you may come and stay for a
while, and talk things over with a senior monk. |