Case 77 never ends, yet now we move on to Case 78 - Ummon's Farm Rice-Cake ...
After the seeming complexity of the last two Koans, seeming to dance the relative and absolute in various formuli and symbols, we now come back to an affirmation of utmost simplicity.
Today's Koan finds the teaching which even transcends ideas of Buddhas and Zen Ancestors in the simplest, plainest, most taste-free of things, an unadorned rice cake.
This Koan reminds me of a couple of others which compare the Buddha's Truth to the most ordinary of things ...
Tozan was asked by a monastic, “What is Buddha?” Tozan replied, “Three pounds of flax.”
A monk asked Seigen,“What is the essence of Buddhism?” Seigen said, “What is the price of rice in Roryo?”
... or even the profane ...
A student of the way asked Ummon, “What is Buddha?” Ummon replied, “Dried shitstick.”
Shishin's comments also compare dressing, eating, peeing and defecating, and the "flies in the latrine," to that which transcends Buddha and Ancestors.
In the Preface, the boundless, priceless open of heaven covers all the separate things, with their relative measures and values, which fill the earth.
The line about "a hundred schemes" seems to mean all the fancy formuli and philosophizing about this. Isn't there someone who known how to dance the dance, advance and retreat in this world of duality, without all that?
But truly, are all these Koans that we have seen, both the complex or simple, expressing something different or the same?
Gassho, J
SatTodayLAH
After the seeming complexity of the last two Koans, seeming to dance the relative and absolute in various formuli and symbols, we now come back to an affirmation of utmost simplicity.
Today's Koan finds the teaching which even transcends ideas of Buddhas and Zen Ancestors in the simplest, plainest, most taste-free of things, an unadorned rice cake.
This Koan reminds me of a couple of others which compare the Buddha's Truth to the most ordinary of things ...
Tozan was asked by a monastic, “What is Buddha?” Tozan replied, “Three pounds of flax.”
A monk asked Seigen,“What is the essence of Buddhism?” Seigen said, “What is the price of rice in Roryo?”
... or even the profane ...
A student of the way asked Ummon, “What is Buddha?” Ummon replied, “Dried shitstick.”
Shishin's comments also compare dressing, eating, peeing and defecating, and the "flies in the latrine," to that which transcends Buddha and Ancestors.
In the Preface, the boundless, priceless open of heaven covers all the separate things, with their relative measures and values, which fill the earth.
The line about "a hundred schemes" seems to mean all the fancy formuli and philosophizing about this. Isn't there someone who known how to dance the dance, advance and retreat in this world of duality, without all that?
But truly, are all these Koans that we have seen, both the complex or simple, expressing something different or the same?
Gassho, J
SatTodayLAH
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