Dogen on Sectarianism
Do not concede that the Buddha-Dharma might even exist among
people who claim to be ‘the Zen sect.’ Who has invented the name ‘Zen sect’?
None of the buddhas and ancestral masters has ever used the name ‘Zen sect.’
The identification of Dogen’s doctrine and
methodology with the Soto sect was not established by Dogen or his single successor,
Koun Ejo (1198-1280).
Dogen was only identified as the ‘founder of the Soto sect’ well after his
death. Moreover, it is irrefutable that Dogen not only did not intend to found
a sect, but that he explicitly and forcefully disparaged the very notion of it.
The view that Buddhism could be divided into
separate entities is fundamentally contrary to the central principles of
Dogen’s teachings. There was only one authentic Buddhism (or Buddha-Dharma);
any ‘Buddhism’ that was not authentic
Buddhism was not Buddhism at all. The notion that ‘Zen’ itself consisted of a
separate distinct sect of Buddhism is
adamantly refuted in Dogen’s own writings. In Shobogenzo, Butsudo, his most comprehensive elucidation of what
does, and does not constitute authentic Buddhism, Dogen articulates his view of
the notion that the Buddha-Dharma could be divided into sects in no uncertain
terms:
Remember, the name ‘Zen sect’
has been devised by demons and devils. People who have called themselves a name
used by demons and devils may themselves be a band of demons; they are not the
children and grandchildren of the Buddhist patriarchs.
Dogen
did, of course, recognize the fact that, regardless of its accuracy or
rationality, Buddhism was and is commonly identified and discussed in ‘sectarian’
terms by reliable sources as well as unreliable ones. However, in his
acknowledgement and explanation as to the causes for the term ‘Zen sect’ having
fallen into common usage, he makes no apologies or justifications for the fact,
as is common today, but plainly describes it as ‘a degeneration.’
We should be absolutely certain
that [the Buddha’s truth] has never been called ‘the Zen sect.’ Nevertheless, the
common folk of recent ages, in their stupidity, do not know the old customs,
and people who have not received the transmission of past buddhas wrongly say, ‘Within
the Buddha-Dharma there are the lineages and customs of the five sects.’ This
is a degeneration that has been left to follow its natural course.
Moreover,
Dogen’s repudiation was clearly directed to be inclusive of any and all notions of separate schools
or sects within the Buddha-Dharma, many of which he named and described in detail
– including the very ‘sect’ that his own primary lineage within the
Buddha-Dharma had come to be identified with. Indeed, he treated the
identification of authentic Buddhism with the ‘Soto sect’ to the fullness of
his not small capacity for expressing scornful contempt:
The great master has never
shown to the assembly any fist or wink of an eye that advocated the use of the
name ‘Sōtō sect.’ Furthermore, there was no flotsam mixed in among his
disciples, and so there was no disciple who used the name ‘Tōzan sect.’ How
much less could they speak of a ‘Sōtō sect’? The name ‘Sōtō sect’ may be the
result of including the name Sōzan. In such a case, Ungo and Dōan would have to
be included too. Ungo is a guiding master in the human world and in the heavens
above, and he is more venerable than Sōzan. We can conclude, in regard to this
name ‘Sōtō,’ that some stinking skinbag belonging to a side lineage, seeing
himself as equal [to Tōzan], has devised the name ‘Sōtō sect.’
As Dogen’s words leave no doubt concerning his own
views on the matter I need not dwell on the point, except to stress that it
harmonizes perfectly with a central principle of his whole vision; the unity of all authentic Buddhist
expressions (i.e. form/essence transmissions of truth). The summum bonum of the
Buddha-Dharma, the ‘supreme truth’ of enlightenment, according to Dogen, is at
once various and differentiated (i.e. a manifest appearance in and as duality) and
unified and undifferentiated (i.e. a manifest appearance in and of nonduality)
– each and all the myriad expressions
of Buddhas are the one thing ‘which
every buddha and every patriarch transmits and authentically receives.’
That which
every buddha and every patriarch transmits and authentically receives is the
right-Dharma-eye treasury and the supreme truth of bodhi. The Dharma that the
Buddhist Patriarch possessed has been transmitted in its entirety by buddhas,
and there are no innovations to be added to the Dharma at all. This principle
is the bones of the Dharma and the marrow of the truth.
Clearly, Dogen’s view of the unity of the
Buddha-Dharma is not confined to a ‘select collection’, ‘authorized version’,
or ‘special transmission.’ Not only did Dogen refute all notions of sectarian
exclusivity, he explicitly asserted the unity of all the traditional Buddhist expressions
(i.e. both the Mahayana and Theravada [Hinayana] scriptures and treatises) and
all the expressions of genuine Zen ancestors (i.e. verbal and written doctrines,
treatises, records, koan collections, etc.). In Dogen’s view, to understand the
expression of Zen as a ‘separate transmission outside the teachings’ literally rather than poetically, was not only
to be deluded about the nature of Zen/Buddhism, but to be in the dark even
about the basic nature of language, thinking, and reason. All notions
about written or verbal teachings as somehow non-essential to authentic Zen
practice-enlightenment were denigrated by Dogen as delusional and heretical, even
imbecilic and vulgar. To Dogen all the expressions of Buddhas and Buddha
ancestors, written or otherwise, are part and parcel with Buddhism itself, intrinsic
elements of the ‘rightly transmitted Buddha-Dharma.’ All expressions of Buddhas
are expressions of truth, and all expressions of truth are expressions of
Buddha.
2 comments:
Hi Ted. Perhaps you remember me from a few comments and emails last year. I have enjoyed readings your posts since then. A few questions on this one:
1. How do you feel about Dogen's contempt for followers of other religions, or people who take up views he finds heretical? It's at least shockingly opposed to the modern spiritual trope that all paths point in the same direction, no? To tip my hand here, whenever I read the Shobogenzo, I find Dogen's extreme contempt for, say, Taoists or lazy people very upsetting and mostly discordant with the profound wisdom evident throughout so much of the text.
2. All sayings of Buddhas are expressions of truth, and all true statements are sayings of Buddhas? I think most Buddhists would assent to the first proposition, but I imagine many would at least be suspicious of the second. If this is the case, is Buddhism a form of philosophy? (Or perhaps ~all~ of philosophy ~plus~ something else?) Could you perhaps expand on the equivalence between true statements and words of Buddhas?
Hello Tommy,
Of course I remember you – good to hear you again.
Please see my reply in the main blog page - April 16 (the comment section does not have the capacity for the characters needed).
Please treasure yourself.
Ted
Post a Comment