Dear All,
This post is only for folks interested in obscure Zen history.
I have long insisted that the roots of Shikantaza, Just Sitting, "letting thoughts go without getting entangled," are echoed way back, even in the Platform Sutra said to be the teachings of the 6th Zen Ancestor in China, Huineng, in the 7th century AD.
It is nice when an historian finds much the same. In his article (LINK), "Reification and Deconstruction of Buddha Nature in Chinese Chan," Prof. Youru Wang comments on the difference between letting thought go, and the emphasis in other corners of Buddhism on being rid of all thought (as advocated by others, such as Shenxiu). Wang says ...
The paper also focuses on the fact that Huineng of the Platform Sutra finds enlightenment right in life, not escaping it ...
What is thus discovered is the most profound Liberation of the Buddha. These are, of course, foundational aspects of Shikantaza.
Gassho, J
stlah
This post is only for folks interested in obscure Zen history.
I have long insisted that the roots of Shikantaza, Just Sitting, "letting thoughts go without getting entangled," are echoed way back, even in the Platform Sutra said to be the teachings of the 6th Zen Ancestor in China, Huineng, in the 7th century AD.
It is nice when an historian finds much the same. In his article (LINK), "Reification and Deconstruction of Buddha Nature in Chinese Chan," Prof. Youru Wang comments on the difference between letting thought go, and the emphasis in other corners of Buddhism on being rid of all thought (as advocated by others, such as Shenxiu). Wang says ...
... Huineng did not simply fall back on the opposite of Shenxiu's abandonment of all thoughts, such as an emphasis on the importance of thoughts. Rather, Huineng proposed something that is neither Shenxiu's nor its opposite. Huineng's endeavor is a typical deconstructive one. He interpreted wunian ["no" or "mu" thought] as follows:
.
Huineng did several things to dismantle Shenxiu's misleading ideas. First, Huineng appealed to the causal chain of thoughts and things. All thoughts and things are interrelated and one causes another. We all live with this flow of thoughts and things, and no one can stop it. Huineng regarded this unceasing flow, this non-abiding, as the essential condition for human existence or human nature (weiren benxing l~,KTg~) (Chan: 50). Both freedom from thoughts (here referring to Shenxiu's idea) and attachment to thoughts (a common illness addressed by Buddhist soteriological discourses) are, for Huineng, two extremities that run counter to this essential condition or nature.
For this reason, they are a hindrance to the way of liberation. Huineng's solution to this problem is to maintain the Middle Way. Though difficult, his advice is not to stop something that you will never be able to stop, but to detach yourself from it. This is none other than flowing together with thoughts and things. To some extent, to practice this (as a soteriological expedient) is to return to your own nature.
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No-thought means not to be carried away by thought in the process of thought ....
Successive thoughts do not stop; prior thoughts, present thoughts, and future
thoughts follow one after the other without cessation . . . . If one instant of
thought clings, then successive thoughts cling; this is known as being fettered. If
in all things successive thoughts do not cling, then you are unfettered. Therefore,
we consider this non-abiding essential. (Yampolsky: 138; minor change in translation
made)
But do not stop thinking about everything and eliminate all thoughts. As soon as
thought stops, one dies and is reborn elsewhere. (Chan: 51)
What is no-thought? The [dharma] of no-thought means: even though you see all
things, you do not attach to them . . . . Even though you are in the midst of six
dusts, you do not stand apart from them, yet are not stained by them, and are free
to come and go. (Yampolsky: 153)
If you do not think of anything in order to stop all thoughts, that is bondage by
[dharmas]. That is called a one-sided view. (Chan: 83; minor change in translation made)
Successive thoughts do not stop; prior thoughts, present thoughts, and future
thoughts follow one after the other without cessation . . . . If one instant of
thought clings, then successive thoughts cling; this is known as being fettered. If
in all things successive thoughts do not cling, then you are unfettered. Therefore,
we consider this non-abiding essential. (Yampolsky: 138; minor change in translation
made)
But do not stop thinking about everything and eliminate all thoughts. As soon as
thought stops, one dies and is reborn elsewhere. (Chan: 51)
What is no-thought? The [dharma] of no-thought means: even though you see all
things, you do not attach to them . . . . Even though you are in the midst of six
dusts, you do not stand apart from them, yet are not stained by them, and are free
to come and go. (Yampolsky: 153)
If you do not think of anything in order to stop all thoughts, that is bondage by
[dharmas]. That is called a one-sided view. (Chan: 83; minor change in translation made)
Huineng did several things to dismantle Shenxiu's misleading ideas. First, Huineng appealed to the causal chain of thoughts and things. All thoughts and things are interrelated and one causes another. We all live with this flow of thoughts and things, and no one can stop it. Huineng regarded this unceasing flow, this non-abiding, as the essential condition for human existence or human nature (weiren benxing l~,KTg~) (Chan: 50). Both freedom from thoughts (here referring to Shenxiu's idea) and attachment to thoughts (a common illness addressed by Buddhist soteriological discourses) are, for Huineng, two extremities that run counter to this essential condition or nature.
For this reason, they are a hindrance to the way of liberation. Huineng's solution to this problem is to maintain the Middle Way. Though difficult, his advice is not to stop something that you will never be able to stop, but to detach yourself from it. This is none other than flowing together with thoughts and things. To some extent, to practice this (as a soteriological expedient) is to return to your own nature.
Huineng's use of "self nature" is actually unique, for it tends to emphasize more plainly the possibility of existential awakening within the living body and mind of every sentient being. It underlines the point that every human being can actualize this possibility or this goal through the practice of non-attachment in all everyday circumstances. As we have indicated, it does not stress the need to establish a Buddha nature or true mind dearly distinguishable from the living mind of every sentient being, namely, the mind in samsara. Attaining Buddhahood is but the existential transformation of the same mind of the human being in everyday life.
Gassho, J
stlah
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