Special Events


Friday, October 14th – 7:00 PM

Special Guest Ben Connelly Talks on NEW Book release . . .

Imagination, Interdependence, and Liberation: Practicing Yogacara Buddhism with Vasubandhu’s Three Natures


Saturday, October 15th – 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM

Zazenkai led by Ben Connelly


Ben Connelly

Imagination, Interdependence, and Liberation.

Practicing Yogacara Buddhism with Vasubandhu’s Three Natures

Dive into this empowering approach to freedom from suffering and from harmful personal and social patterns—and find peace and joyfulness in the present.

In his new book, Vasubandhu’s “Three Natures,” a plain-English commentary, Ben Connelly shows the power of integrating early Buddhist psychology with the Mahāyāna emphasis on collective liberation. You’ll discover how wisdom from fourth-century India can be harnessed to heal and transform systems of harm within ourselves and our communities.

You can find the book here, publication date is Oct. 4th:

https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Vasubandhus-Three-Natures/Ben-Connelly/9781614297536

Bio

Ben Connelly is a Soto Zen teacher and Dharma heir in the Katagiri lineage. He also teaches mindfulness in a wide variety of secular contexts including police training and addiction recovery groups. He works with multifaith groups focused on intersectional liberation, racial justice, and climate justice. Ben is based at Minnesota Zen Meditation Center, travels to teach across the United States, has written for Tricycle and Lion’s Roar magazines, and is author of Inside the Grass Hut, Inside Vasubandhu’s Yogacara, Vasubandhu’s “Three Natures”, and Mindfulness and Intimacy.

Endorsements:

“A remarkable book . . . powerful and lucid.”

-Roshi Joan Halifax,  founding abbot, Upaya Zen Center

“Inspiring…opens many doors to personal and social transformation, sorely needed.”

-Dr. Larry Ward, author of America’s Racial Karma

“Connelly’s insightful and often moving commentary displays the profound relevance of Vasubandhu’s Yogācāra philosophy both to personal practice and to the wider social world.”

-Jonathan Gold, Professor of Religion, Princeton University

“…shows us how to understand and embody the mystery of Vasubandhu’s teachings without getting lost in esoterica and spiritual bypassing.” 

-Pamela Ayo Yetunde, Th.D. Co-editor, Black and Buddhist

“Beautifully written, it fuses lucid explanations of often difficult Yogacara ideas with attention to everyday concerns in a way that can help all of us apply Buddhist wisdom to the lives we live in the twenty-first century. ”

Roger R. Jackson, author of Mind Seeing Mind and Rebirth

“…a rare and welcome combination of scholarship and insight born of deep study and practice. The goal of human flourishing and freedom from suffering is at the center of his exposition of every verse.”  -Anantanand Rambachan Author of A Hindu Theology of Liberation

Ben Connelly

Minnesota Zen Meditation Center

pronouns: he or they

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To study the Buddha Way is to study the self.
To study the self is to forget the self.
To forget the self is to be actualized by all things.

~ Eihei Dogen Zenji

Buddha

Zen practice is to get to our True Mind, the mind not accessible to thinking. This mind cannot be consciously known by ordinary efforts. An unusual effort is necessary. This effort is zazen.

~ Shunryu Suzuki Roshi