With no regrets, let us now move on to all of Chapter 2, only a few pages ... the Verse of Atonement.
Okumura Roshi touches on two faces (two faces of the single faceless coin) of this Verse: First, repentance for our acts of excess desire, anger and other harmful acts in this world. We undertake the Precepts vowing to avoid taking life, taking what is not given, anger, harmful speech, jealousy and so much more ... and sometimes we fall short. Humans sometimes fall short. We reflect and repent, fix what we can, try to balance the scales of Karma with greater good, do what we can not to repeat ...
But there is also that aspect of the Mahayana Precepts, and Zazen, where no Precept can be broken from the start, never was and never could be. There is no taker and nothing to take or in need of taking, no killer and no killed nor birth and death.
Unfortunately, this second face if left alone can lead to a kind of amorality (e.g., since there is ultimately no killing and nothing to steal, might as well kill and steal! This attitude sometimes surfaced during Japanese Buddhism's brushes with nationalism and war during the period of the Second World War). The first facet should not be neglected either.
I would like to ask folks to listen to an old talk by me on this ...
SIT-A-LONG with JUNDO: ATONEMENT / AT-ONE-MENT
How does the Verse of Atonement/at-One-ment, and these two facets, come to play together in your life?
Gassho, J
SatTodayLAH
PS - I notice the first post in the above thread is by our long time member Engyo, who left this visible world a few years ago. I dedicate all our study here this week to him.
Okumura Roshi touches on two faces (two faces of the single faceless coin) of this Verse: First, repentance for our acts of excess desire, anger and other harmful acts in this world. We undertake the Precepts vowing to avoid taking life, taking what is not given, anger, harmful speech, jealousy and so much more ... and sometimes we fall short. Humans sometimes fall short. We reflect and repent, fix what we can, try to balance the scales of Karma with greater good, do what we can not to repeat ...
But there is also that aspect of the Mahayana Precepts, and Zazen, where no Precept can be broken from the start, never was and never could be. There is no taker and nothing to take or in need of taking, no killer and no killed nor birth and death.
Unfortunately, this second face if left alone can lead to a kind of amorality (e.g., since there is ultimately no killing and nothing to steal, might as well kill and steal! This attitude sometimes surfaced during Japanese Buddhism's brushes with nationalism and war during the period of the Second World War). The first facet should not be neglected either.
I would like to ask folks to listen to an old talk by me on this ...
SIT-A-LONG with JUNDO: ATONEMENT / AT-ONE-MENT
How does the Verse of Atonement/at-One-ment, and these two facets, come to play together in your life?
Gassho, J
SatTodayLAH
PS - I notice the first post in the above thread is by our long time member Engyo, who left this visible world a few years ago. I dedicate all our study here this week to him.
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