Dogen & Koans
People who study the Buddha
Dharma should first know the sayings of Buddhas and ancestors, without being
confused by those outside the way.
Eihei Koroku, Leighton &
Okumura
We should by all means have as our investigation
through training and practice an exploration that broadly spans the sayings of
all the Buddhas and Ancestors.
Shobogenzo, Kokyo, Hubert Nearman
While much progress has been made in the scholarly
arena, the popular stereotype of Dogen's Zen as being "non-koan" or
even "anti-koan" persists. While it is true that the surviving
"Soto" Zen lineages have largely lost contact with the koan teachings
and practices, this is certainly not the case with Dogen's own teachings.
As the renowned Buddhist scholar, T. Griffith Foulk
points out:
If there was anything that was distinctive about the
Ch'an monasteries, it was not the stress on zazen or the occasional ritual in
which the entire community was required to perform manual labor together
(fushin samu) - those practices were common to all the public monasteries. No,
what distinguished the training in Ch'an monasteries was chiefly the teaching
style of the abbots, who based their talks and debates on the koan literature
that was the hallmark of the Ch'an tradition.
T. Griffith Foulk, History of the Soto Zen School
Indeed, as Foulk goes on to say, it was familiarity with this literature that distinguished a monastic as a "Zen monastic" in Sung China (where Dogen "accomplished his task"). Moreover, the mastery of this literature and the ability to demonstrate that mastery was the main distinguishing characteristic of an authentic "Zen master."
It is true that Soto teachers gained prestige from
their membership in the Zen lineage, and that to become a member one had to
master the tradition of commenting on koans.
T. Griffith Foulk, History of the Soto Zen School
As is clear from all of Dogen's works, Zen without
study was not Zen at all - thus, for instance, he wrote:
You cannot realize the Buddha's Way if you do not
aim to practice the Way, and It will be ever more distant from you if you do
not aim to study It.
Shobogenzo, Shinjin Gakudo, Rev. Hubert Nearman
And:
When students are beginners, whether they have the
mind of the Way or not, they should carefully read and study the Sagely
Teachings of the sutras and shastras.
Shobogenzo-Zuimonki, (Record of Things Heard, Thomas
Cleary)
He also made it very clear that "koans" or
"sayings" (of the Zen ancestors) were as essential to Zen study as
were Buddhist scriptures, for instance:
Even so, over the last couple of centuries or so in
Great Sung China, certain mistaken, smelly skin bags have said, "There's
no need for you to keep the sayings of the Ancestral Masters in mind, much less
is there any need for long study of Scriptural Teachings or for your trying to
make use of Them. Simply, make your body and mind like a dead tree or cold
ashes, like a broken wooden ladle or a bottomless tub." Folks like these
have become a type of non-Buddhist or celestial demon, and to no good purpose.
They seek to make use of things that are useless, and accordingly, they twist
the Teachings of the Buddhas and Ancestors into wild and perverted teaching.
What a pity! How terribly sad!
Shobogenzo, Bukkyo, Hubert Nearman
Following, then, are a collection of passages from
Dogen's works that give some general, some specific, some subtle, and always
reliable instruction on how Zen students can best approach the koans. Enjoy!
------
When Students of the Way are looking at sayings, you
must exert your power to the utmost and examine them very very closely.
Shobogenzo-Zuimonki, (Record of Things Heard, Thomas
Cleary)
In encountering these sayings and expressions of
Theirs, do not treat them as something apart from the Buddha's assembly, for
They are Buddhas turning the Wheel of the Dharma. Because this Wheel of the
Dharma encompasses everything in all directions, the Great Ocean, Mount Sumeru,
all lands, and all thoughts and things have fully manifested themselves.
Shobogenzo, Muchu Setsumu, Hubert Nearman
The reality [i.e. "koan" TB] of eternal
buddhas is present; it is, namely, the teaching, practice, and experience of
"the thirty-seven elements of bodhi." The entanglement of
ascending and descending through their classification is just the entangled
state of reality, which we call "the buddhas" and which we call
"the patriarchs."
Shobogenzo, Sanjushichi-bon-bodai-bunpo, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
Our Highest Ancestor in India, Shakyamuni Buddha,
once said, "The snowcapped Himalayas are a metaphor for the great
nirvana." You need to know that He is speaking metaphorically about
something that can be metaphoric. 'Something that can be metaphoric' implies
that the mountains and nirvana are somehow intimately connected and that they
are connected in a straightforward manner. When He uses the term 'snow-capped
Himalayas', He is using the actual snowcapped Himalayas as a metaphor, just as
when He uses the term 'great nirvana', He is using the actual great nirvana as
a metaphor.
Shobogenzo, Hotsu Mujo Shin, Hubert Nearman
Students of the Way, even if you attain
enlightenment, do not think that this is now the ultimate and thus abandon your
practice of the Way. The Way is endless. Even if you are enlightened, you
should still practice the Way. Consider the ancient story of the lecturer Liang
Sui calling upon Ma Yu.
Shobogenzo-Zuimonki, (Record of Things Heard, Thomas
Cleary)
Once you attain this state of suchness and attain
the harmonious unity of activity and understanding possessed by the
Buddha-patriarchs, you examine exhaustively all the thoughts and views of this
attainment.
Shobogenzo, Sammai-O-Zammai, Waddell & Abe
There are those who say that after bodhisattvas
become Buddhas, they discontinue practice because there is nothing left for
them to do. Such people are mundane persons who have no direct knowledge of the
Way of the Buddhas and Ancestors.
Shobogenzo, Shoho
Jisso, Hubert Nearman
Devote your energy to a Way that points directly to
suchness. Revere the person of complete attainment beyond all human agency.
Gain accord with the enlightenment of the Buddhas.
Fukanzazengi, Waddell and Abe
This Dharma is the very being and spirit of what the
Buddhas and Ancestors have personally and correctly Transmitted; It is the very
words and phrases used to describe That which the Buddhas and Ancestors
directly experienced; It is the very Light in which the Buddhas and Ancestors
clearly abide and to which They hold.
Shobogenzo, Senjo, Hubert Nearman
The Buddhas and Ancestors have been many indeed.
Their deeds are instructive for teaching others the Way to supreme
enlightenment. Among those deeds are not a few examples of 'bone-crushing'
diligence. For instance, you can draw instruction from the Second Ancestor
Eka's 'severing of his arm'. And do not miss the meaning behind the Buddha's
action in a previous life when He covered the mud with His long hair.
Shobogenzo, Keisei Sanshoku, Hubert Nearman
In the
house of the Buddhist patriarchs, some experience it directly and some do not experience
it directly, but reading sutras and requesting the benefit [of the teaching] are the common tools of everyday life.
Shobogenzo, Kankin, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
Good counselors, in every
case, are thoroughly versed in the sutras...
...We should know that in the
Buddha's truth there are inevitably Buddhist sutras; we should learn in
practice, as the mountains and the oceans, their universal text and their
profound meaning; and we should make them our standard for pursuing the truth.
Shobogenzo, Bukkyo, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
In addition, 'to open a Scriptural text' means that
you clarify for yourself what the Buddha taught as the principles for training
and practice in both the 'sudden approach' and the 'gradual approach'.
Shobogenzo, Bendowa, Hubert Nearman
Their stories appear one after
another in Records of the Torch such as Den[to-roku], Ko[to-roku],
Zoku[to-roku], Futo-roku, and so on. When they were liberated from the
small vehicle view which is limited thinking about philosophy and precepts and
they revered the great truth authentically transmitted by the Buddhist
patriarchs, they all became Buddhist patriarchs. People today also should learn
from the ancestral masters of the past.
Shobogenzo, Den-E, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
The great Master says, "I
call this bamboo and wood." We must completely master, both before it
is voiced and after it becomes words, this unprecedented and unrepeatable
snippet of an expression.
Shobogenzo, Sangai-Yuishin, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
(Asked by Ejo about the "use" of Nansen
killing the cat) If it were not a turning word, we could not say, 'Mountains,
rivers, and the great earth, are the marvelously pure illumined mind'; and we
could not say, 'The very mind is Buddha.' So in the expression of this turning
word, see that the cat is identical to the Buddha-body. Furthermore, hearing
these words, a student may suddenly become enlightened.
Shobogenzo-Zuimonki, (Record of Things Heard, Thomas
Cleary)
With
regard to the realization of this matter of secret talk, not only the
World-Honored Sakyamuni has secret talk: all the Buddhist patriarchs have
secret talk. A world-honored one always has secret talk. And one who has secret
talk inevitably has Mahakasyapa's state of nothing being concealed. We should
learn in practice and should not forget the truth that if there are a hundred
thousand world-honored ones there are a hundred thousand Mahakasyapas.
"Learning in practice" means not intending to understand at once but
striving painstakingly hundreds of times, or thousands of times, as if working
to cut a hard object. We should not think that when a person has something to
relate we will be able to understand it at once.
Shobogenzo, Mitsugo, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
Dig in the earth to search for
heaven; meet with sun face and moon face buddhas. Dig a hole in the sky to
plant the seed of a lotus that will blossom neither red not white [without and
color]. Play with Linji's lump of red flesh, and penetrate the width of
Xuefeng's ancient mirror. Furthermore, burn up Danxia's wooden Buddha, and
smelt a hundred times the iron ox at Shanfu. Don't laugh when the cold ash is
revived. Return for a while to a warm place [the meditation hall] and
deliberate about this.
Eihei Koroku, Leighton &
Okumura
Beginners and later students
who wish to learn in practice the non-emotional preaching of the Dharma should
get straight into diligent research of this story of the National Master.
Shobogenzo, Muju-Seppoi, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
Without taking a step bow to
the three government offices. The entryway that has long been locked is now
wide open. Sit and cut through the billions of tangled vines to penetrate all
of the ten thousand functionings and arouse the wind and thunder.
Eihei Koroku, Leighton &
Okumura
Remember, we attain the truth
when listening to a four-line verse, and we attain the state of truth when
listening to a single phrase. Why is it that a four-line verse and a single
phrase can have such a mystical effect? Because they are the Buddha-Dharma.
Shobogenzo, Den-E, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
Someone with an iron tongue
and spike beak can bite through the model koans from ancient or modern times.
Eihei Koroku, Leighton &
Okumura
Neither of these venerable
patriarchs is of humble ancestry: [Seppo] is a distant descendant of Seigen and
[Sansho] is a distant descendant of Nangaku. That they have been dwelling in
and retaining the eternal mirror is [evidenced] as described above. They may be
a criterion for students of later ages.
Shobogenzo, Kokyo, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
There again, many wrong people think, "Spoken
teaching and active demeanor are insubstantial matters. The silent and unmoving
state is the true reality." Expressions like this also are not the
Buddha-Dharma. They are the speculations of people who have heard sutras and
teachings of Brahmadeva, Isvara, and the like...
They utterly lack the light of clear discrimination.
Sanjushichi-bon-bodai-bunpo, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
National Master Daisho is an
excellent disciple of the eternal Buddha of Sokei. He is a great good counselor
in heaven above and in the human world. We should clarify the fundamental
teaching set forth by the Nation Master, and regard it as a criterion for
learning in practice.
Shobogenzo, Soku-Shin-Ze-Butsu, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
Don't you see that someone
said, "Atop Mount Wutai, the clouds are making steamed rice; below the
steps to the Buddha hall, a dog urinates up toward the heavens. At the top of a
flagpole, dumplings are cooking; three monkeys a sorting coins in the
night."
Brothers, if you can
comprehend this saying, you will know the mind of the three vehicles and twelve
divisions of the teaching. Do you want to clearly understand the meaning of the
ancestor [Bodhidharma] coming from the west?
After a pause Dogen said:
Pierce your nostrils for yourself. Search for the fiery lotus in the water of
mind. Study this.
Eihei Koroku, Leighton &
Okumura
The sixth patriarch says, "people
have south and north, but the Buddha-nature is without south and north."
We should take this expression and make effort to get inside the words. We
should reflect on the words "south and north" with naked mind.
Shobogenzo, Bussho, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
We should exhaust life after
life investigating the intention of these words.
Shobogenzo, Bussho, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
When we examine just this one part of the stories,
it is clear that Tando still had not endorsed Soko. Even though time and time
again Tando aimed at opening Soko up, the latter ultimately kept missing that
one experience, and there is no way of compensating for that, for one cannot
omit that experience...
Soko did not thoroughly explore his own statement,
"That is precisely what Soko is suspicious of," nor did he drop it
off, or break it open, or give rise to the Great Doubt, or break through that
doubting...
It is so pitiful how he failed to understand what
the Ancestors of the Buddha were saying to him in their talks and writings. He
did not grasp that to study and train is to awaken to one's True Self. He did
not hear that to delve deeply into the writings of myriad generations is to
come to realize what that Self truly is.
Without proper study, there are errors like these
and there is self-deception like his.
Because this was the way 'Meditation Master' Soko
was, in his assembly there was not a single disciple, or even half a one, who
had a trustworthy nose ring, but there were many who were pretend monks.
Failure to intuitively grasp what the Buddha Dharma
is and failure to intellectually understand what the Buddha Dharma is are both
just like this. Beyond any question, novice trainees here and now should
explore the Matter in detail with their Master. Do not be negligent out of
pride.
Shobogenzo, Jisho Zammai, Hubert Nearman
------------
In Shobogenzo, Zazenshin, his most incisive teaching on zazen, Dogen refutes two
fallacies about zazen prevalent in his own time - both continue into our own
day. First is the wrong view that zazen is "just sitting" and
"letting things be" - thoughts, sounds, smells, etc. (e.g. Just let
things come and go", "there is nothing special to realize",
"just sit and attain peace of mind", etc.).
In recent years, however, stupid unreliable people
have said, "In the effort of Zazen, to attain peace of mind is
everything. Just this is the state of tranquility." This opinion is
beneath even scholars of the small vehicle. It is inferior even to the vehicles
of men and gods. How can we call such people of the Buddha-Dharma? In the Great
Kingdom of Buddha-Dharma today, people of such effort are many. It is
lamentable that the Patriarch's truth has gone to ruin.
Shobogenzo, Zazenshin, Hubert Nearman
------------
In Shobogenzo, Genjokoan, Dogen describes in
detail the fundamental point of Zen (one translation of Genjokoan is, Actualizing
the Fundamental Point). Near the end of his exposition, Dogen uses a Zen
koan to illustrate the non-dual nature of practice and enlightenment.
Zen Master Hotetsu of Mayoku-zan mountain is using a
fan. A monk comes by and asks, "The nature of air is to be ever-present,
and there is no place that [air] cannot reach. Why does the Master use a
fan?"
The Master says, "You have only understood that
the nature of air is to be ever-present, but you do not yet know the truth that
there is no place [air] cannot reach."
The monk says, "What is the truth of there
being no place [air] cannot reach?"
At this, the Master just [carries on] using the fan.
The monk does prostrations.
Shobogenzo, Genjokoan, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
Dogen goes on to say:
The real experience of the Buddha-Dharma, the
vigorous road of the authentic transmission, is like this.
Shobogenzo, Genjokoan, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
------------
Understand that to receive this Teaching, keep to
It, accurately recite It to others, and explore Its implications is precisely
what 'defending and protecting Wisdom' means.
Shobogenzo, Makahannya-haramitsu, Hubert Nearman
Meditation Master Engo once said,
"Birth-and-death and coming-and-going are a person's true Real Body."
By exploring this expression, we will come to know ourselves and we will give
our consideration to the Buddha Dharma.
Chosa once said, "The whole universe in all ten
directions is a person's true Real Body. The whole universe in all ten
directions lies within the radiant brightness of one's own True Self."
But, in general, even veteran trainees in present-day Sung China still do not
know that they need to explore a saying like this through their training.
Shobogenzo, Sangai Yuishin, Hubert Nearman
Those who have not illuminated each dharma, dharma
by dharma, cannot be called clear-eyed, and they are not the attainment of the
truth; how could they be called the Buddhist patriarchs of the eternal past and
present? Therefore, we should be absolutely certain that the Buddhist
patriarchs have, in every case, received the one-to-one transmission of zazen.
To be illuminated by the presence of the Buddhist patriarchs' brightness is to
exert oneself in the investigation of this sitting in zazen.
Shobogenzo, Komyo, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
Securing the Marrow and communicating the Dharma
inevitably depend on sincere devotion and a trusting heart. Sincerity and trust
do not in the least come from outside ourselves, nor is there any place within
from which they emerge.
Shobogenzo, Raihai Tokuzui, Hubert Nearman
A monk asks Great Master Shinsai of Joshu,
"Does even a dog have the Buddha-nature or not?"
We should clarify the meaning of this question.
"A dog" is a dog. The question does not ask whether the Buddha-nature
can or cannot exist in the dog; it asks whether even an iron man learns the
truth. To happen upon such a poison hand may be a matter for deep regret, and
at the same time the scene recalls the meeting, after thirty years, with half a
sacred person.
Joshu says, "Mu." When we hear this
expression, there are concrete paths by which to learn it: the "Mu"
with which the Buddha-nature describes itself may be described like this; the
"Mu" which describes the dog itself may be expressed like this; and
"Mu," as exclaimed by an onlooker, may be described like this. There
may come a day when this "Mu" becomes merely the grinding away of a
stone.
Shobogenzo, Bussho, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
Meditation Master Daikan Eno of Mount Sokei once
gave instruction to Nangaku saying, "What has come about like this?"
These words show that Nangaku's being 'such a person' is beyond doubt because
he is beyond intellectual understanding. And because "What has come about
like this" is the What, you should thoroughly explore through your
training that all the myriad things that comprise the universe are, beyond any
doubt, the What. And you should thoroughly explore through your training that
each and every single thing is, beyond any doubt, the What. The What is not
subject to doubt, for It is That Which Comes Like This.
Shobogenzo, Immo, Hubert Nearman
-----------
The language of koans is the language of myth, thus
it includes and transcends the ordinary language of literal description. Dogen
frequently reminds us to discern the difference between the ordinary language
of common speech and that of the Buddhist ancestor. In Bussho, for
instance, he explains that the wisdom Zen Master Obaku's words differ from the
ordinary literal meaning expressed:
We should not suppose that this expression means
what it says... We should exhaust life after life investigating the intention
of these words.
Shobogenzo, Bussho, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
(Consider also, Dogen instruction on koan introspection
specific to - Sitting with Kyogen's koan, "The Man Up a Tree").
Even so, in thinking about it, if you make use of
'not deliberately thinking about it', as well as of 'not deliberately thinking
about anything', your efforts on your meditation cushion will naturally be like
those of our dear old friend Kyogen. When you sit as still as a mountain on
your own cushion, as our dear friend Kyogen has already done, you too will be
exploring this dialogue in detail with him, even though he has not yet opened his
mouth. Not only will you be making free use of our dear Kyogen's Eye to look
upon the dialogue, but you will also be using It to break through and see the
meaning of Shakyamuni Buddha's Treasure House of the Eye of the True Teaching.
Shobogenzo, Soshi Seirai I, Hubert Nearman
(Notice that Dogen goes on to explain that our
"breaking through and seeing the meaning" of koans, needs to be
inclusive of being able to express it verbally - for instance, with a teacher
in the dokusan room).
Until you have actually arrived at That which is
above and beyond Buddhahood, you will not have directly experienced That which
is above and beyond Buddhahood. Until you can put It into words, you have not
directly experienced That which is above and beyond Buddhahood.
Shobogenzo, Soshi Seirai I, Hubert Nearman
Dogen consistently reiterates this throughout his
works, for example:
Even if your exploration of the intent behind what
Ungan said were one hundred percent, if you are still unable to put It in
words, then your have not thoroughly explored the Matter.
Shobogenzo, Kannon, Hubert Nearman
-----------
In Dogen's day the primary corpus of texts was the
same for all lineages of Zen. This interrelation of Zen and
the classic koan literature of the Zen masters had been popularly recognized
long enough to have become victimized by widespread vulgarization. In fact,
according to his own account, by Dogen's time the authentic understanding of
koan literature had become overshadowed by a debased understanding of it.
Similar to his testimony of widespread neglect and aberrant approaches to
zazen, Dogen asserted that the "non-Buddhist" notion of Zen koans as
being "irrational" was so pervasive that the "few true
people" could not correct it.
To understand Dogen's utilization of the traditional
Buddhist literature, especially the Zen records, consider how he distinguished
the "authentic understanding" of koans by Buddha ancestors from the
"non-Buddhist" notions of the many. According to Dogen, Buddha
ancestors consider koans intimately; that is, not apart from their
own self (i.e. the "true self"). A "non-Buddhist",
according to Dogen, considers koans remotely; that is, as apart from
their own self (i.e. from the perspective of the "ego-self" which
is a misperceived as the "true self").
The misperception or false perspective of the
ego-centric self is the first issue Buddhists are instructed about. This is the
central topic of the Buddhist doctrines of "no self," which portray
the "true self" as empty of any division between "self" and
"other than self." Hence, there is no separation between practice and
not-practice, thinking and not-thinking, etc. As is characteristic of all Zen
masters, Dogen wholeheartedly affirms that from the perspective of the true
self, even the "defiling passions" are Buddha nature as it is. Thus,
when Buddha ancestors consider koans they do so in the wholeness of their
being; excluding no aspect of their true human nature, not the least of which
is the human intellect.
Contrary to distorted notions of Zen as a
"separate transmission" and "beyond" language, reason, and
intellect, and "apart" from words, letters, and verbal teachings, Zen
is not separate, beyond, or apart from anything in the whole universe. Thus, to
imagine that one could possibly comprehend Zen koans by excluding any aspect of
their humanity from the process is simply to add delusion to delusion.
To clarify Dogen's view of koan introspection we can
consider his critique of the fallacy that koans are "irrational," or
"provisional," and that the use of the intellect is
"nonessential." Here is one such account:
In the nation of Great Sung China today, there is a
certain type of unreliable person that has now grown to be quite a crowd. They
have gotten to the point where they cannot be bested by the few true people.
This bunch says such things as the following:
Just like the comments about Eno's walking on water
or the one about Nansen's buying a scythe, what is being said is beyond
anything that reason can grasp. In other words, any remark that involves the
use of intellect is not the Zen talk of an Ancestor of the Buddha, whereas a
remark that goes beyond anything that reason can handle is what comprises a
'remark' by an Ancestor of the Buddha. As a consequence, we would say that
Meditation Master Obaku's applying a stick to his disciples or Meditation
Master Rinzai's giving forth with a loud yell go far beyond rational
understanding and do not involve the use of intellect. We consider this to be
what is meant by the great awakening to That which precedes the arising of any
discrimination. The reason why the ancient virtuous Masters so often made
skillful use of verbal phrases to cut through the spiritual entanglements of
their disciples was precisely because these phrases were beyond rational
understanding.
Fellows who talk like this have never met a genuine
teacher, nor do they have an eye for learning through training. They are
foolish puppies who are not even worth discussing. For the past two or three
centuries in the land of Sung China, such devilish imps and 'little shavers'
like the Gang of Six have been many. Alas, the Great Way of the Buddha's
Ancestors has become diseased! This explanation of those people cannot compare
even with that of the shravakas who follow the Lesser Course; it is even more
confused than that of non-Buddhists. These fellows are not laity nor are they
monks; they are not gods or humans. And when it comes to exploring the Buddha's
Way, they are more befuddled than beasts. The stories which the 'little shavers'
refer to as going beyond anything that reason can grasp only go beyond anything
their reason can grasp: it was not that way for any Ancestor of the Buddha.
Just because they said that such stories are not subject to rational
understanding, you should not fail to learn through your training what the
intellectually comprehendible pathways of the Ancestors of the Buddha are. Even
if these stories were ultimately beyond rational understanding, the
understanding that this bunch has cannot hit the mark. Such people are in great
number everywhere in Sung China, as I have personally witnessed. Sad to say,
they did not recognize that the phrase 'the use of intellect' is itself a use
of words, nor realize that a use of words may liberate us from the use of our
intellect. When I was in Sung China, even though I laughed at them for their
foolish views, they had nothing to say for themselves; they were simply
speechless. Their present negation of rational understanding is nothing but an
erroneous view. Who taught them this? Even though you may say that they have
not had someone to teach them of the true nature of things, nevertheless, the
fact remains that, for all intents and purposes, they still end up being
offspring of the non-Buddhist notion that things arise spontaneously,
independent of any form of causality.
Shobogenzo, Sansuikyo, Hubert Nearman
Here, and through all his writings, Dogen does not
hesitate to use the harshest language to disparage the "diseased"
notions about Zen as some kind of mystical cult that negates "rational
understanding" or "intellectually comprehendible pathways."
Dogen's harsh, often humorous ridicule of "devilish imps" and
"little shavers" offering vulgar views minimizing the value of words,
writings, and intellectual endeavors are characteristic of his works. In any
case, it should be clear that, regardless of Dogen's position on the nature and
function of koans, he regarded them as essential to authentic Zen
practice-enlightenment.
When Ancestors of the Buddha wholeheartedly do the
meditation of Buddhas and Ancestors and undertake to put into practice the
Truth that the Buddhas and Ancestors have expressed, Their expression of what
They have realized represents the effort of three years, or eight years, or
thirty or forty years, as They express what They have realized with all Their
might. Within these time spans, however many decades long they may have been,
there has been no disparity in how 'such a one' has expressed what he or she
has realized. Thus, when you become fully awake, what you will realize through
your direct encounter with It will be the Truth. Because this encounter
confirms as true the direct encounters of former times, when we now express
what we have realized, it is beyond doubt. Thus, our expressing what we have
realized in the present is supported by That which we directly met with in
former times, and we support That which we directly met with in former times by
expressing our realization today. This is why we can now express what we have
realized, for we have personally met with It through our own experience. The
expression of our realization in the present and our direct seeing in the past
are as a single iron bar whose ends are ten thousand miles apart. Our present
efforts are directed by what we have realized of the Way and by what we have
personally encountered.
Shobogenzo, Dotoku, Hubert Nearman
Therefore, once having
understood, you should read the Sage's Teachings many times. And having heard
the words of the teacher, still you should listen to them again. The mind
should grow deeper and deeper.
Shobogenzo-Zuimonki, (Record of Things Heard, Thomas
Cleary)
Accordingly, when persons who have doubts about
learning the Buddha's Way encounter the phrase 'a vision being expressed within
a vision', they vainly imagine that it probably refers to dreaming up things
that actually do not exist, or they suppose that it may be like piling delusion
upon delusion. But this is not so. Even though one says that there is also
delusion within delusion, by all means we need to thoroughly explore, with
utmost effort, the path that penetrates through this expression to the
comprehension of what is really meant by 'piling delusion upon delusion'.
Shobogenzo, Muchu Setsumu, Hubert Nearman
So, clearly, we should preserve and take care of the
teaching that the thoughts and sayings of the Buddha's Ancestors are the tea
and rice of everyday life. The homely fare of everyday life is the thoughts of
Buddhas and the sayings of Ancestors. The Buddhas and Ancestors prepare the tea
and rice, and the tea and rice help sustain and take care of the Buddhas and
Ancestors. Since this is so, we, for our part, do not need to rely on anything
apart from the potency of this tea and rice of Theirs. Simply, we do not
squander the strength of the Buddhas and Ancestors that resides within the
partaking of this tea and rice.
You would do well to explore with great diligence
the remark about not looking back to previous emperors of legendary times such
as Yu, T'ang, Yao, and Shun. You would also do well to explore how to let the
question as to whether there is any word or phrase that you may have for the
benefit of others spring forth from the crown of your head. You should
experiment through your training with your Master to see if you can get it to
spring forth.
Shobogenzo, Kajo, Hubert Nearman
The truth expressed now in the
founding Patriarch's words "What people are able to hear the
non-emotional preaching the Dharma" should be painstakingly researched
through the effort of one life and many lives.
Shobogenzo, Muju-Seppoi, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
Speaking more broadly, those who assert that
provisional Teachings are completely useless are greatly mistaken. They have
not had the meritorious behavior of Ancestors in our tradition genuinely
Transmitted to them, so they are in the dark about the sayings of Buddhas and
Ancestors. Since they have not clarified what this one saying is about, who could
affirm that they had thoroughly explored the sayings of other Buddhas?
Shobogenzo, Gabyo, Hubert Nearman
has never met 'such a person', and, because of this,
he has arbitrarily compiled sayings without picking out just the sayings of
those who are 'such a person'. It is obvious that he does not know what 'such a
person' is.
Shobogenzo, Butsudo, Hubert Nearman
"The Buddha's brightness" means accepting,
retaining, and hearing a single phrase, maintaining, relying on, and upholding
a single dharma, and receiving the one-to-one transmission of zazen. If
[people] are not able to be illuminated by the brightness, they lack this state
of maintenance and reliance and they lack this belief and acceptance. This
being so, even since ancient times, few people have known that zazen is zazen.
Shobogenzo, Komyo, GudoNishijima & Mike Cross
This is why the Buddhas and Ancestors, when singling
out an Ancestor of the Buddha, invariably ask, "Can that person express
their realization or not?"
Shobogenzo, Dotoku, Hubert Nearman
'Not speaking about something' does not mean 'not
expressing something', for being able to express something is not the same as
being able to put it in words.
Shobogenzo, Kaiin Zammai, Hubert Nearman
By exploring through your training what the Buddha
is saying in the present instance, you will fully realize what the assembly of
all Buddhas is, for what He is saying is not a metaphor. The wondrous Dharma of
Buddhas is simply that of each Buddha on His own, just as it is for all the
Buddhas. Therefore, all things, both in a dream state and in an awakened one,
are manifestations of the Truth.
Shobogenzo, Muchu Setsumu, Hubert Nearman
You need to thoroughly investigate expressions like
this so that you may learn to express the Matter yourself. By asking questions
like this, you come to your own understanding of the Matter. And by
investigating the experience of others, you can come to have your own
experience of the Truth. -Shobogenzo, Sangai Yuishin, Hubert Nearman
To give expression to the Dharma for the sake of
others and to put the Dharma into practice for oneself is to hear the Dharma,
to clarify what It is, and to realize It for many lives. Even in this life, if
we are sincere in giving expression to It for the sake of others, it will be
easy for us to realize the Dharma...
At the same time, if you have not yet fully
clarified the Matter, do not think that you cannot express It for someone's
sake. Were you to wait until you had fully clarified It, you would not be equal
to the task even for immeasurable eons.
Shobogenzo, Jisho Zammai, Hubert Nearman
Ever since ancient times, no one has been called
'such a person' who has not uttered at least a single word to express It.
Shobogenzo, Shin Fukatoku, Hubert Nearman
----------------
[N]onduality did not primarily signify the
transcendence of duality so much as it signified the realization of duality.
When one chose and committed oneself to a special course of action, one did so
in such a manner that the action was not an action among others, but the
action-there was nothing but that particular action in the universe so that the
whole universe was created in and through that action...
As we incorporate these observations on Dogen's view
of the body-mind understanding into what I have said about activities and expressions,
it is evident that activities, expressions, and understanding were one and the
same for Dogen. It was not that we acted first and then attempted to
understand, nor was it even that action was a special mode of understanding;
all modes of understanding were necessarily activities and expressions.
~Hee-Jin Kim, Eihei Dogen: Mystical Realist
Porcupine asked, "Do you have any last words
for us?"
Raven said, "Trust."
~Robert Aitken Roshi, Zen Master Raven
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