NASBA seeks to:
- Support affiliated fellowships and groups in Mahayana
and Shin Buddhist practice, liturgical and organizational development.
- Deepen the Buddhist spiritual practice and experience
for all participants.
- Provide technical, financial, organizational support and
collaboration opportunities.
- Develop new affiliated communities throughout
North America
and beyond.
- Share the Buddha’s message of compassion,
love and wisdom, and impart the practices that realize the deepest inner potential of every human being, which is Buddhahood.
Our Mission: Our main task is to provide positive and nurturing environments
that explore our human potential and cultivate the direct spiritual awakening to the Oneness of life, symbolized as Amida
Buddha. Together, we are actively engaged in
the Buddhist teachings and practices to transform ourselves in service to other beings
and the world. As equals practitioners, we encourage one another to understand, accept and live by the Buddha Dharma, sharing
its message of peace, hope and compassion with all.
Our Inspiration: Anchored in the Mahayana tradition, we are dedicated to the teachings of the
historical Buddha and the 13th century Japanese reformer, Shinran Shonin, the founder of Shin Buddhism or Jodo Shinshu. In addition, we are inspired by the iconoclastic and meditative Soto Zen tradition, as
an effective skillful means to better cultivate a calm and lucid heart and mind to hear the spiritual light
within us. We are also open to all Buddhist traditions and the entirety of world spirituality and wisdom.
Our Journey: We are called to entrust ourselves to the heart of Great Compassion, symbolized
as Amida Buddha, to live by her calling, to gracefully experience the unfolding of life and to practice love and compassion
with others. As a result, we are spiritually transformed, experiencing a renewed life of joy, purpose, and gratitude and dedicated
to promoting the welfare of all sentient beings.
Our Practices: While our inclusion of Soto Zen practice acknowledges the value we place on inner
silence through meditation, the heart of Shin practice is about integrating spirituality with daily living by developing
deeper compassion; practicing monpo or deep hearing (mindfulness); and voicing the nembutsu (Namo-Amida-Butsu)
as a direct expression of our trust in and gratitude for the ultimate Oneness of life. We engage in community service,
support one another’s spiritual growth, and strive to remember that we are all foolish humans doing the best that we
can.
The NASBA’s Guiding Principles
Our international association honors the Six Principles of Harmony, taught by the historical Buddha, Shakyamuni
over 2, 500 years ago in Northern India. These Six Principles are our organization’s
guiding values. NASBA diligently seeks to maintain a harmonious, friendly, and open-minded atmosphere. The Six Principles of Harmony
are:
1. Sharing similar viewpoints and aspirations
2. Practicing the same ethical precepts
3. Living and practicing peacefully
together
4. Abstaining from quarrelling and bickering
5. Experiencing the inner peace and
joy that results from community practice
6. Sharing our benefits so as to be
a blessing to each other and to the world