Hi,
This week is pp 235 to 241 (ending at "Right in light").
I have to confess my impression that either Okumura Roshi is not explaining himself so well in these pages, or he is unclear or fudging a little for some reason. Perhaps it is simply my lack of understanding. However, if I understand him, he is making a point close to the following:
When Indian Buddhism came from India to China, there was an influence of some Daoist beliefs which can be seen in writings such as the Sandokai. However, the Daoists had a tendency to reify (turn into a concrete entity or thing) their notion of "the Source." That is a bit different from the Indian Buddhist concept of "Emptiness" as simply a description of the nature of things as being "empty" of independent existence. It is also rather different from the general Mahayana Buddhist notion of the "Absolute" or "Emptiness" as so very fluid that this is more a process or dance than a solid being or thing. We sometimes say "even emptiness is empty" to avoid it being turned into an entity called "Emptiness." Nonetheless, this was always a bit ambiguous in Mahayana Buddhism, and often the "Absolute" or "Buddha Nature" and the like are spoken about almost as if they are some thing which is the source of all the division of the world.
We also see that the state of separate things and the absolute/empty state are two overlapping faces.
I hope I am not muddling up the discussion more!
By the way, the lines about tree and leaves in the Sandokai this week were the inspiration for the Treeleaf name.
Gassho, J
SatTodayLAH
This week is pp 235 to 241 (ending at "Right in light").
I have to confess my impression that either Okumura Roshi is not explaining himself so well in these pages, or he is unclear or fudging a little for some reason. Perhaps it is simply my lack of understanding. However, if I understand him, he is making a point close to the following:
When Indian Buddhism came from India to China, there was an influence of some Daoist beliefs which can be seen in writings such as the Sandokai. However, the Daoists had a tendency to reify (turn into a concrete entity or thing) their notion of "the Source." That is a bit different from the Indian Buddhist concept of "Emptiness" as simply a description of the nature of things as being "empty" of independent existence. It is also rather different from the general Mahayana Buddhist notion of the "Absolute" or "Emptiness" as so very fluid that this is more a process or dance than a solid being or thing. We sometimes say "even emptiness is empty" to avoid it being turned into an entity called "Emptiness." Nonetheless, this was always a bit ambiguous in Mahayana Buddhism, and often the "Absolute" or "Buddha Nature" and the like are spoken about almost as if they are some thing which is the source of all the division of the world.
We also see that the state of separate things and the absolute/empty state are two overlapping faces.
I hope I am not muddling up the discussion more!
By the way, the lines about tree and leaves in the Sandokai this week were the inspiration for the Treeleaf name.
Gassho, J
SatTodayLAH
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