Dear all
This week we will be looking at sections 48-50 of the sutra, as we approach the death of the six patriarch.
In section 48 it is told that Huineng recognises he is close to the end of his life and he asks his monks if there is anything they wish him to clarify. Some of them cry and he admonishes them, praising Shen-hui for not differentiating between like and dislike, and telling everyone that our true nature is not subject to coming and going.
Huineng then recites a gatha for the community to help them understand the nature of all things. He tells us to get rid of all that we think is true and that will free us from all that is false. As the Hsin Hsin Ming says: “If you wish to know the truth then hold no opinions for or against anything.”
In section 49, Fa-hai asks to whom the dharma robe will be passed and, as is one of the themes of this sutra, Huineng says that the dharma has already been given (in the form of this sutra) and the robe is no longer needed as a sign of that transmission. He also says that twenty years after his death someone will come forward and carry forth the teachings, distinguishing that which is true from what is not. This refers to Shen-hui, who is one of the fundamental proponents of the southern school against the northern.
Huineng recites verses from each of the six patriarchs, including himself, each using the theme of seeds and flowers to represent our potential and awakening.
In section 50, Huineng gives two verses he has composed about Bodhidharma’s own verse, the first talking of false flowers blown apart by karmic winds and the second of cultivating true flowers through the development of prajna wisdom (another of the key themes of the sutra).
Questions
Wishing you all a beautiful week.
Gassho
Kokuu
-sattoday/lah-
This week we will be looking at sections 48-50 of the sutra, as we approach the death of the six patriarch.
In section 48 it is told that Huineng recognises he is close to the end of his life and he asks his monks if there is anything they wish him to clarify. Some of them cry and he admonishes them, praising Shen-hui for not differentiating between like and dislike, and telling everyone that our true nature is not subject to coming and going.
Huineng then recites a gatha for the community to help them understand the nature of all things. He tells us to get rid of all that we think is true and that will free us from all that is false. As the Hsin Hsin Ming says: “If you wish to know the truth then hold no opinions for or against anything.”
In section 49, Fa-hai asks to whom the dharma robe will be passed and, as is one of the themes of this sutra, Huineng says that the dharma has already been given (in the form of this sutra) and the robe is no longer needed as a sign of that transmission. He also says that twenty years after his death someone will come forward and carry forth the teachings, distinguishing that which is true from what is not. This refers to Shen-hui, who is one of the fundamental proponents of the southern school against the northern.
Huineng recites verses from each of the six patriarchs, including himself, each using the theme of seeds and flowers to represent our potential and awakening.
In section 50, Huineng gives two verses he has composed about Bodhidharma’s own verse, the first talking of false flowers blown apart by karmic winds and the second of cultivating true flowers through the development of prajna wisdom (another of the key themes of the sutra).
Questions
- As ‘our true nature is not subject to coming and going’ do you think we should be upset when those close to us pass? Do we ever reach a place of treating good and bad the same?
- In the gatha, Huineng tells us to ‘in movement find what doesn’t move’. What is he pointing to. What doesn’t move? What is always present?
Wishing you all a beautiful week.
Gassho
Kokuu
-sattoday/lah-
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