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Via The Tricycle Community \\ From the Academy: Ritual

 


APRIL 2025

From the Academy
Welcome to From the Academy, a monthly newsletter for Premium subscribers offering a scholarly take on topics in Buddhist thought and practice. Each issue highlights a key theme and points to further reading for exploration. This month, we look at how ritual transmits Buddhist tradition—and how it continues to evolve.

Ritual
What Makes a Ritual

Why do we bow, chant, or light incense, even when we’re not always sure what it means? Ritual marks something as meaningful or sacred—an object, a place, or a moment in time. Through symbolic gestures, it sets these things apart from daily life and brings people together in a shared purpose. 

Rituals usually follow a script—with a beginning, middle, and end—so that they can be passed down over time and performed in the same way again and again. In this way, rituals deepen a sense of connection to a tradition and to others following in that tradition.


Ritual in Buddhist Practice

In Buddhist traditions, ritual comes in many forms, from simple acts like bowing or offering food to elaborate initiations. These practices often reflect a person’s role within a community or tradition, and are frequently done to reaffirm a vow, honor a teacher, venerate an ancestor, or feed a hungry ghost.  

Rituals vary widely across Buddhist cultures, each having its own style and emphasis. Local ritual customs help shape a community’s identity and instill a sense of belonging. Even brief gestures—like placing the hands together in a sign of respect (Skt.: anjalimudra), chanting, or reciting an aspiration—can reorient the practitioner to the sacred and help settle the body and mind. These ritualized actions have long helped to frame and support practice in many Buddhist traditions.
A practitioner with a mala and hand mudra in prayer, image courtesy of BJ Graf of RetreaTours
Preserving and Adapting

Ritual has always been a crucial way of passing down Buddhist traditions, but its forms are never fixed. Over time and across cultures, they shift—usually slowly, but sometimes dramatically. These changes allow ritual to stay connected to the past while serving new needs in the present. 

Thai monks, for example, have used the traditional ordination ceremony to bless and ordain trees, highlighting the need to protect the environment. This blending of old and new is not without controversy. As with many ritual adaptations, the meanings attributed to the act can diverge, and debates over its appropriateness offer a window into the evolving life of Buddhist communities.


Modern Tensions

Today, adaptation also plays out in the tensions between traditional rituals and modern norms. For practitioners in contemporary cultures with egalitarian values, rituals can seem out of step, too hierarchical, and rooted in the past. People new to Buddhism in the West often encounter unfamiliar or culturally distant rituals as they are exposed to a new tradition. For some, this leads to hesitation or skepticism; for others, it opens the door to unexpected insights. Despite such modern tensions, ritual practices remain central for much of the Buddhist world.     

Meditation is often seen as the heart of Buddhist practice in the West—but it’s frequently framed in psychological or scientific terms, detached from any ritual roots. Viewing meditation as a type of ritual—with structure, repetition, and a dedicated space, like returning to the same cushion each morning—can subtly alter one’s relationship to the practice. The emphasis shifts from getting results to simply showing up.


Rituals in Transition

As Buddhism moves into new cultural settings, ritual forms begin to adapt. Generally, these adjustments unfold gradually, shaped by institutions, teachers, and practitioners alike. What emerges over time reflects both continuity and change. 

In the West, Buddhist rituals are still developing and may look different from what came before. However, even as new forms come into being, ritual continues to ask: What do we value enough to preserve, repeat, and pass on?
Recommended Material on Ritual
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Via Daily Dharma: What Comes Just Comes

 

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What Comes Just Comes

Do not measure your practice by the experience of others. My experience is mine; yours is yours. Indeed, I should not even try to replicate my own experience in zazen. What comes just comes—or it does not.

Myozan Ian Kilroy, “Fear of Losing Oneself”


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Mindfulness Across Buddhist Traditions
By Nina Müller
Can mindfulness be taught outside the Buddhist context and divorced from the dharma? 
Read more »

Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Intention: Cultivating Lovingkindness

 


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RIGHT INTENTION
Cultivating Lovingkindness
Whatever you intend, whatever you plan, and whatever you have a tendency toward, that will become the basis on which your mind is established. (SN 12.40) Develop meditation on lovingkindness, for when you develop meditation on lovingkindness, all ill will is abandoned. (MN 62) 

Lovingkindness succeeds when it makes ill will subside. (Vm 9.93)
Reflection
Ill will is a generic term for all kinds of aversion, from mild annoyance to raging hatred. These emotions make up a good deal of our daily experience, and generally we are not too happy when we are aversive. The danger is that if we allow these states to persist and even grow, we are ensuring that our minds will become more inclined toward them. On the other hand, developing lovingkindness will incline the mind in the other direction.

Daily Practice
It may feel like you have no protection against ill will, but you do. Lovingkindness is its antidote, and it can be applied at any time. Because we cannot experience two emotions at the exact same time, all healthy states will block out all unhealthy states and vice versa. Try dosing yourself with kindness every time you feel annoyed and see what happens. Any aversion you might feel will immediately subside.

Tomorrow: Refraining from False Speech
One week from today: Cultivating Compassion

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