Zen and the Art of Saving the Planet (2021) by Thich Nhat Hanh is the closest thing I know of to what you're looking for. I think I posted about it here a few months ago, soon after I read it. If not, I can say more about it now.Queequeg wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 1:04 pmI've been thinking about a "Buddhist" paradigm of practice that goes from the cushion to installing renewable energy, etc. Arguably many people are already doing that but not quite as part of an integrated view of practice. I'd like to see a teaching for modern people in the developed world, like the ones we find in sutras that relate Dharma practice to being a merchant or farmer or sovereign. I've ad hoc included what I suppose are shinto inspired animism in my daily life as a way to relate to the world around me, but something broader is needed I think. Something that would relate solar panel installation and the like to merit making.Kim O'Hara wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2023 3:46 amA Christian perspective ( sorry, but I need to describe it so that we can look at Buddhist parallels) on this is that God does act in the world but acts through ourselves, uses our hands and minds. That is, he doesn't actually do anything like make it miraculously rain on the Canadian wildfires or send jaguars rampaging through the Amazonian jungle to stop people cutting it down, but inspires us to act to protect (His) creation.
In Mahayana terms, I think the same applies. Prayers and aspirations are the seeds of compassionate action, but the action has to be ours.
We save the spider from drowning in the tub by picking it up and taking it outside. Similarly, we save the lives of countless small animals in a patch of forest by organising a community grpup or petition convinging the council to leave it as wilderness, and we reduce the horrific impact of climate change by reducing our own environmental footprints and voting for governments who will take similar actions on a larger scale.
Sure, it starts with the dharma. But dharma that doesn't leave the cushion is ... I don't know; I would have to be rude about it, and I don't want to offend anyone so I will leave you to fill in the gap for yourselves.
Kim
In any case, his 'interbeing' answers the same need as your 'shinto inspired animism' (and perhaps my Taoist leanings) in embedding a broader compassion in our practice.
Kim
P.S. Here's something else of his that's relevant - https://www.dharmawheel.net/viewtopic.p ... 68#p650168