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Frequently Asked Questions About Ch'an/Zen
and Introductory Reading List
Question: What is Ch'an/Zen?
Answer: What is Ch'an [Zen]?
Ch'an is the name of mind. What is mind? Mind is the substance of
Ch'an. Bodhidharma came from the West and expounded only the direct
pointing at man's mind. At first, the term Ch'an was not used, but
the outcome of this direct pointing was the subsequent awakening
(of followers of the sect). In their questions and answers, that
(which had no name) was referred to as Ch'an (for convenience's
sake). However, Ch'an cannot be understood by learning or by a lucky
chance. When the self-mind (svacitta) is realized, either speech
or silence, and motions or stillness, is unexpectedly Ch'an. At
the moment of this unexpected Ch'an, automatically the mind manifests
itself. Thus we know that Ch'an does not stray from mind and that
mind does not stray from Ch'an. Ch'an and mind are, therefore, two
names of the same substance. -- From the _Chung Feng Kuang Lu_
Question: What is the mind
of Zen?
Answer: Here is what Zen
Grandmaster Hsi Yun says, "This pure mind, the source of everything,
shines on all with the brilliance of its own perfection, but the
people of the world do not awake to it, regard only that which sees,
hears, feels, and knows as mind."
Question: Does Ch' an/Zen
teach no reliance on the words of the Buddha?
Answer: No. Here are the
words of the Zen Grandmaster Tsung-mi, "If one just depends on the
sayings of the Buddha and does not infer for himself, his realization
will be no more than a matter of baseless faith. If one just holds
on to direct perception, taking what he perceives for himself to
be authoritative without comparing it to the sayings of the Buddha,
then how can he know whether it is true or false."
Question: Isn' t Zen a transmission
outside the scriptures?
Answer: How can the assertion
"outside of scripture" have meaning without first knowing what is
"inside scripture"? In addition, the familiar quatrain to which
you are referring was first introduced by Nan-ch'uan P'u-yüan. What
this means is that it was not the original and true teaching of
Zen which did not include this slogan, having only three slogans.
Question: Is the main teaching
of Zen to sit on a pillow and achieve mindlessness?
Answer: No. Here is what
Zen Grandmaster Shên-hui says, "If it is right to sit in zazen,
then why should Vimalakirti scold Shâriputra for sitting in meditation
in the woods?" Again, here is what Zen Grandmaster Lin-chi says,
"There are bald-headed and blind monks who after eating rice and
satisfying their hunger, immediately sit in zazen to look into their
mental activities and arrest their thoughts so that the latter cannot
arise again. These people hate disturbance and seek quiet; this
is the way of heretics."
Question: So what is this
"zazen"?
Answer: According to Zen
Grandmaster Shên-hui it means, "to see into one's original nature".
Question: Is Zen the path
of 'sudden enlightenment'?
Answer: Here is what Zen
Grandmaster Shên-hui has to say, "All those who want to learn the
Way must achieve Sudden Enlightenment to be followed by Gradual
Cultivation. It is like child-birth, which is a sudden affair, but
the child will require a long process of nurture and education before
he attains his full bodily and intellectual growth."
Question: Does Zen teach
that all beings have actual Buddha-nature?
Answer: No. Here is what
Lord Buddha says, "Good sons! If it is said that the Buddha-nature
abides in sentient beings, it is wrong." [Mahâparinirvâna Sutra]
Question: Is our true mind
just ordinary thoughts?
Answer: No. This is misleading,
tending to be the modern . cult. interpretation of traditional Ch.
an. Here is what Zen Grandmaster WuChu said, "True mind does not
follow thoughts when they are created, and it does not follow thoughts
when they become extinct.... This spiritual essence is ultimately
unobtainable and imperceptible, but can be seen by the eyes as suchness.
It is nothing but the object of intuitive attainment."
Question: Are modern books
on Zen pretty reliable?
Answer: It depends. Books
like _Three Pillars of Zen_ which claims to speak authoritatively
on behalf of Soto and Rinzai is really a "New Religion" book about
Sanbo Kyodan Zen founded in 1954. Please be advised that the lion's
share of American Zen masters who have published thus far have no
legalities with Japanese Zen institutions - and most originally
came from the Sanbo Kyodan Zen line separating from it afterwards,
like Kapleau, Aitken, Joko Beck, Glassman, etc.
Question: So should I not
read books by these authors?
Answer: And I am just saying
beware. They don't paint a complete picture of Zen.
The following short list of books is meant
to help the beginner gain, not only a philosophical understanding
of Zen, but also, at least, an intellectual understanding of Wisdom
of Buddha. There are many other books available, so many that space
on this FAQ does not permit anything close to a comprehensive list.
Instead we give this short list which covers most fundamental aspects
of Zen and the Mind doctrine. There are also many other wonderful
writers and books on this subject, this list is INTRODUCTORY
ONLY. You are encouraged to use your intuition when selecting
material to read.
May these books be the
Point of departure of your path to Awakening.

Titles with the icon,
can be directly ordered though Amazon books online.
*A
Buddhist Bible* Edited by Dwight Goddard:(Boston : Beacon Press,1970,
c1938) This book has translations of the Diamond Sutra, Dao
De King (more popularly known as Tao Te Ching), the Platform Sutra
of the Sixth Zen Patriarch, the Awakening of Faith Shastra, solid
fundamental discussions of the historical Buddha and his teachings.
*The
Zen teachings of Master Lin-chi*, trans. Burton Watson (Boston
: Shambhala Publications, 1993)
*The
Zen teaching of Bodhidharma*, trans. Red Pine (San Francisco :
North Point Press, 1987)
*The
record of Tung-shan*, trans. William F. Powell (Honolulu : University
of Hawaii Press, 1986)
*Minding
Mind : A Course in Basic Meditation* Translated
by Thomas Cleary. Some types of meditation are aimed at promoting
a sense of confidence and well-being in everyday life, while other
types focus on producing altered states of consciousness, transcending
the world, or developing skills for serving other people.
The instructions in this book focus on the highest type of all,
"Pure, clear meditation": a state of true objectivity that enables
the practitioner to use all of the other types of meditation freely
and consciously, with out becoming fixated or obsessed.
*The
Zen teaching of Hui Hai on sudden illumination*, trans. John Blofeld
(London : Rider,1969, c1962)
*The
Zen teaching of Huang Po on the transmission of mind*, trans.
John Blofeld (Chu Ch'an) (London : The Buddhist Society,1968,
c1958)
*Ch'an
and Zen teaching*, ed. & trans. Lu K`uan Yu (Charles Luk).
(London : Rider,1960)
Paul
Reps, *Zen flesh, Zen bones* (Tokyo, Rutland, Vt. : C.E. Tuttle
Co., 1957)
D.T.
Suzuki, *Manual of Zen Buddhism*, (London, New York : Published
for the Buddhist Society, by Rider,1956)
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