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Tathagata True Dharma (Ru Lai Zheng Fa) Moving Meditation Retreat  for English Speakers in Las Vegas, November 13 & 14, 2025-Updated

Photo of Practicing "Moving Meditation", Benevolence Temple, Las Vegas, NV.
Practicing “Moving Meditation”, Benevolence Temple, Las Vegas, NV.

Last June the Abbots from the Benevolence and Pure Cultivation Temples in Las Vegas,  Venerable Zhengda Jiaozun and Venerable Fa Chao, led a demonstration of their unique form of moving or running Zen practice with the help of monastic and lay disciples from their temples. This was part of the annual program held each summer or late spring at the Holy Heavenly Lake in Buddhist Town in Hesperia, California.

Those temples have agreed to sponsor a two-day Meditation Retreat (workshop) on November 13 and 14 at the Benevolence Temple located at 700 East St. Louis Avenue, Las Vegas with English translation for those of us who would like to learn and practice this method but who do not understand Chinese. The following is a very short video of our experience of this form of moving meditation that we saw in June.

The first day, November 13, 2025, starting at 8:30 am, is for registration and preparations and with an orientation session on the rules and procedures from 2:30 until 5:00 pm. The formal meditation practice takes place on the second day, November 14, from 9:00 am until 5:30 pm. There will be a total of ten meditation sessions–5 sitting meditation sessions and 5 walking or moving meditation sessions that day. Meals will be provided by the temple for all attendees throughout both days. There are no fees for participating in this event, but you must register to attend as noted above. You should read H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha’s The Great Dharma of Zen Meditation in preparation for this mini retreat.

This is how this method works: In ancient times before clocks were invented, burning incense served as a method of tracking time. Thus, each “incense” here represents a unit of time rather than just a fragrance. The true timekeeper in the meditation hall is the Weinuo (hall discipline master), who adjusts the pace according to the practitioners’ condition.

The varying session lengths you see—some 40 minutes, others 60—are carefully designed to balance movement and seated meditation. This rhythmic alternation helps beginners adapt more easily to the hall’s discipline. The walking meditation before each sitting session serves to activate one’s energy and blood circulation through movement, preparing the body and mind for stillness.

Moreover, the walking meditation may stop abruptly at any moment. If one continues walking after the signal, it indicates distracted attention, and that person may receive a reminder with the incense board (cudgel or xiāng bǎn in Chinese; keisaku or kyōsaku in Japanese). This practice helps make mental wandering immediately apparent, allowing practitioners to notice scattered thoughts in real time.

The following article provides more background on this meditation method and links to even more.

During the late afternoon of June 3. 2025, Ven. Zhengda Jiaozun started in a field next to Heavenly Lake with a summary of her Buddha Master’s (H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III’s) The Great Dharma of Zen Meditation while Ven. Fa Chao, with help from his assistant monks, explained how Walking or Moving Meditation was practiced. I am guessing there were a couple hundred participants with an extra row of chairs around the mandala for spectators. Even with—or maybe because of—the intermittent threat of rain, it was impressive. However, everything was in Chinese, and there was no attempt to officially translate anything for the handful of English speakers present. We did not attempt to film the actual meditation practice or even the specific instruction, but a Benevolence Temple nun, Fa Zhi, provided the above picture of how they do this at their temple without the ominous threat and actual rain that we had in Hesperia. She also translated for Ven. Fa Chao who explained a lot more about this practice in a follow up ZOOM call.

I had seen and heard enough to want to know more and see if there was any way we could get an English demonstration of this practice. My first thought was to have the monks and nuns from Las Vegas join our meditation retreat at the Unitarian Camp de Benneville Pines we had planned for September. Zhengda was most cooperative and assigned the talented translator, Fa Zhi to work with me on arrangements. With some help from my friend James Debates, who had moved to Las Vegas and was very good at making things happen, I had a very informative ZOOM meeting with Ven. Fa Chao, made possible by Fa Zhi’s translation. They were willing to come to the retreat, but we were only able to get 4 days and only had the use of one very nice cabin and a small meeting room—neither suitable for this practice. If we had been there for the full seven days and had use of their very lovely large lodge for the practice like I wanted, we could have learned this “moving” form of zen practice, but probably would also have experienced the monsoon flooding that washed out the road to the camp from the south and flooded the camp.

Instead, I offered to come to Las Vegas to experience the moving meditation with English translation of the protocols, which will happen at the Benevolence Temple on November 13 and 14.

Ven. Fa Chao also explained that according to elder monks, the general methods of practice across the five Chinese Chan (Zen) schools are largely the same, differing mainly in specific details. These five schools are known as the the Wei Yang, Lin Ji (Japanese Rinzai), Cao Dong (Japanese Soto), Yu Men, and Fa Yan Schools. Today, among existing Chan monasteries, the Zhen Ru Chan Temple is considered to have preserved the most complete regulations of the Chan Hall and specific methods of practice. At present, the Wei Yang School’s traditional bell-and-board (used to mark time and guide monastic routine) still hangs in the Chan Hall at Mount Yunju. Ven. Fa Chao also said that the Chan hall regulations they follow in Las Vegas are inherited from the Zhen Ru Chan Temple on Yunju Mountain in Jiangxi Province, China. Ven. Fa Chao trained and practiced in China at this temple.

 I believe that the running-walking zen method used at the Gaomin monastery described by our Buddha Master in His Great Dharma of Zen Practice is an example of the same method they are using, only in a much less extreme form and is suitable for lay practitioners as well as monastics.

As I understand, they have a daily meditation starting around 2 or 3 in the afternoon in both of  their temples, primarily for their monastics. However, sometimes serious lay practitioners also participate. They start with moving meditation, walking or running in circles with those who are able running faster in the center and others running slower in the outer circles, each to their own ability. The leader of the session determines the qualifications of who participates. Sometimes the focus may be on physical skill allowing only the most adept, sometimes more on inclusion to allow many. This enables people of different ages and mobility to participate. At least in ancient times in the Gaomin Monastery, only the athletically adept could participate.  Likewise, sometimes it may be only male monks, sometimes both male and female, and sometimes both lay and monastic. However, if possible, males would be on one side and females on the other like was done at Holy Heavenly Lakes. After the moving practice is finished, everyone goes to their seats or cushions, silently chants the two or three mantras from The Great Dharma of Zen Practice or the Heart Sutra and begin to practice their silent sitting meditation. There may be tea and snacks provided as well.

We do need to know how many will attend to make appropriate arrangements. These sessions will be open to any serious Buddhist practitioner. We just need to know your name and any limitations you may have. Please complete the form above ASAP. The temple only has space for 80 participants. I hope to see you there and, if we are able to learn this method, to sponsor another full seven-day retreat somewhere next year where we can practice it. Please also let me know if you are interested in that as well.

Gaomin Monastery Example from H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III’s The Great Dharma of Zen Practice:

(Everyone answers: No.)

(Everyone answers: I understand.)

CLICK for January 23, 2026 video of Ru Lai Zheng Fa Meditation Retreat at the Benevolence Temple in Las Vegas, November 13-14, 2025

CLICK for November 26, 2025, article on Zhen Ru Chan Temple, Jiangxi, China, that includes a video of monks practicing this type of moving meditation.

CLICK for October 13, 2025, article on Venerable Xu Yun (1839-1959), an accomplished Qing Dynasty (1644-1912) Zen Master and Patriarch of five Chinese Zen schools—Wei Yang,  Lin Ji, Cao Dong, Yu Men, and Fa Yan.  Xu Yun shares his own experiences at the Gaomin Monastery.

CLICK for September 23, 2025, article on “Road to UU Camp washed out after retreat”.

CLICK for August 27, 2025, article on the Gaomin Monastery in Yangzhou, China reflecting H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III’s teachings from The Great Dharma of Zen Practice.

CLICK for August 12, 2025, introduction to and the entire text of the discourse given on the Great Dharma of Zen Practice.

CLICK for February 5, 2025, article on other teachings by H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III on meditation.

CLICK for January 21, 1924, article on the opening of the beautiful Benevolence Temple, Las Vegas, NV. 

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Thus Have I Seen (and Heard) on zhaxizhuoma.org is a blog offered by Zhaxi Zhuoma for English-speaking followers and those interested in the teachings and activities of H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III. Read more about this blog

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Most of the quotes from H.H Dorje Chang Buddha III posted on this blog are from unapproved translations and may contain errors. Likewise the contents of this blog have not been reviewed or approved by the Buddha and should be considered as reference material and not Buddha-dharma.

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