Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

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  • bayamo
    Member
    • Nov 2009
    • 411

    #16
    Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

    That's just what this "punk" stance Noah and Brad are posturing themselves in an attempt to turn their zen infamy into some kind of fame and fortune. Turning rebellion into money.
    interesting view to keep in mind.. i havent read levines books, but i have heard a few of his talks.. i have read warners books and they are certainly what has introduced me the most to the zen view, dohen's shobogenzo, and just sitting..

    even the bible says "test the spirits" so i dont just take anything warner writes or says as undisputed fact.. no ones perfect and you cant please everyone, but so far i have found his books helpful..
    gassho
    Oh, yeah. If I didn't have inner peace, I'd go completely psycho on all you guys all the time.
    Carl Carlson

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    • Jundo
      Treeleaf Founder and Priest
      • Apr 2006
      • 40943

      #17
      Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

      I posted this today on a ZFI thread about the whole topic of Genpo Roshi, Big Mind, Brad ... and it seemed appropriate to post it here too. I hope I am "Right Speeching" ...


      So, let me say this ...

      I think Brad is a vibrant, gifted teacher (I sometimes compare him to one of those firey Tibetan "Dharma Protecting" dieties who turn their anger and wrath and lighting toward fighting ignorance.) who tries to find his own voice to speak the Dharma in modern terms, and who gets a lot of new butts on Zafus ... yet who sometimes says too much, occasionally ill chosen or going to extremes.

      I think Genpo is a vibrant, gifted teacher who tries to find his own voice to speak the Dharma in modern terms, and who gets a lot of new butts on Zafus ... yet who sometimes says too much, occasionally ill chosen or going to extremes. (For the life of me, I do not know what that talk was about with Trungpa grabbing his crotch and turning his Yang into a little girl!) :shock: {note from Jundo: referring to a strange story that Genpo told in a video a Makyo experience he had}

      I think Nishijima Roshi is a vibrant (for a 90 year old guy), gifted teacher, who tries to find his own voice to speak the Dharma in modern terms, and who gets a lot of new butts on Zafus ... yet who sometimes says too much, occasionally ill chosen or going to extremes. (He has introduced some brilliant, original perspectives on understanding Dogen ... he was one of the first teachers to say that there are physiological/neurological aspects to Zazen ... and he gets a bit carried away with both sometimes, but heck, he's old. Like the rest of us, he is just trying to express in words and ideas some things hard to express in words and ideas, nailing jello to the wall)

      I think Jundo Cohen is a (not-so-)vibrant, (sometimes-)gifted teacher who tries to find his own (verbose) voice to speak the Dharma in modern terms, and who gets a lot of new butts on Zafus ... yet who sometimes says too much, occasionally ill chosen or going to extremes.

      Heck, I think Bodhidharma and Eno, Hakuin, Rinzai and Dogen ... Maezumi and both Suzukis and Trungpa and Seung Sahn and all the rest ... all the Ancestors, ancient and modern ... the Buddha too!! ... were each vibrant, gifted teachers who tried to find their own voice to speak the Dharma in terms of their times, and who got a lot of new butts on Zafus ... yet who sometimes said too much, occasionally ill chosen or going to extremes.

      And that is more than I should have said on this topic ... in words probably too much, ill chosen and going to extremes.

      Gassho, J
      ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

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      • Stephanie

        #18
        Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

        Our judgments of others are nearly always wrong because we never have the full story.

        If people are deceived by false teachers (something I do not believe Brad to be), it will only be their own will to the truth that will wake them up from the deception. We can share information about how we ourselves were deceived (which I think is a good thing to do), and challenge those who are placed or place themselves in positions of authority, but at the end of the day, it is only a will to the truth that will wake us up from the deceptions of others and our own self-deceptions. The latter are always much more insidious and I believe more people would be awakened if we took on our self-deceptions as vehemently as we take on the deceptions of others.

        Wrathful and harsh words have the power to wake people up, just as kind and gentle words do. I think it's foolish to judge a teacher by the "flavor" of their teaching. Vanilla is not more enlightened than chocolate (and vice versa). All this is what Dogen might have called "the colors of the mind." The color of the panel on the stage light is not the issue in question. The issue is the light behind the panel that projects the color onto the stage. As they might say on the streets of New York, "Don't get it twisted."

        All that matters on this path is, Are you awake? Do you really know the things you think you know? I have a real bad "knowing problem"--I think I know a lot of shit. But I really don't. None of us do. Most of the things we say to ourselves or others, we don't really know.

        What do you really know, with absolute certainty?

        Are you sure?

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        • bayamo
          Member
          • Nov 2009
          • 411

          #19
          Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

          Originally posted by Stephanie
          All that matters on this path is, Are you awake? Do you really know the things you think you know? I have a real bad "knowing problem"--I think I know a lot of shit. But I really don't. None of us do. Most of the things we say to ourselves or others, we don't really know.
          stephanie
          that comment in blod really helped me.. i think that is what it comes down to in most any situation..

          jundo
          good post..

          gassho
          Oh, yeah. If I didn't have inner peace, I'd go completely psycho on all you guys all the time.
          Carl Carlson

          Comment

          • bayamo
            Member
            • Nov 2009
            • 411

            #20
            Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

            Originally posted by chugai
            I think there is a duty to warn.


            Originally posted by Jundo
            We have some interesting topic under discussion in the Jukai forum ... worth taking to heart ...

            PRECEPTS VIII - To Refrain from Discussing Faults of Others
            viewtopic.php?p=29666#p29666

            PRECEPTS IX - To Refrain from Self-Praise & Judging Others
            viewtopic.php?p=30011#p30011

            ... and who is a teacher, and what is a teaching, may not be so obvious on first glance. Positive, constructive criticism of the benefits and demerits of a certain teacher or teaching can easily turn into something else, ad hominem attacks, personal prejudices, intolerance, deafness (to the message as opposed to the wrapping paper it comes in) and such.

            We should be cautious.

            Gassho, J
            I think the concern is when a particular teacher or teachings may be dangerous, to cite an extreme example, Aum Shinrikyo
            Oh, yeah. If I didn't have inner peace, I'd go completely psycho on all you guys all the time.
            Carl Carlson

            Comment

            • Stephanie

              #21
              Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

              Originally posted by chugai
              Als sie mich holten,
              gab es keinen mehr, der protestierte. ---- Martin Niemöller

              Originally posted by Stephanie
              What do you really know, with absolute certainty?

              Are you sure?
              What's the implication here? That holding back from judging another person's spiritual realization, when lacking the knowledge and wisdom to make such a judgment accurately, is akin to refusing to stand against the Nazis? I hope you're kidding...

              I am the last one to say we shouldn't criticize teachers. For one, teachers should not be given exceptions to social laws and standards. Also, a teacher who lies should be called out as a liar. But I find it supremely foolish when the peanut gallery starts going on about how a teacher is "false" because his or her personality doesn't fit into a naive spiritual ideal of a calm, blissful Buddhist floating two inches above the ground. I believe people should be able to air foolish opinions, but I am also going to challenge them when I hear them.

              Comment

              • Stephanie

                #22
                Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

                My issue is not with people saying, "This teacher expresses anger in his/her words." My issue is with people going from there and saying, "So they are obviously not a 'true' teacher." The most help I have gotten along the Way has come from very unexpected and surprising places and people, most of whom have sported some obvious imperfections. A good teacher can be rude and aggressive; these traits are not required, any more than being "nicey nice" is required, but they do not negate the possibility of good teaching. Along the path, I've needed and been helped by a slap in the face more often than kind, gentle speech. We all need kindness and gentleness but perhaps not from our spiritual teachers, whose first and foremost duty is to the truth. Most notable Zen teachers in the lineage were not "lovey dovey." A lot of them were aggressive with students and went off on what could only be called rants about false Buddhism, etc.

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                • bayamo
                  Member
                  • Nov 2009
                  • 411

                  #23
                  Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

                  Originally posted by chugai
                  The implication is -- when it flies, walks,talks,shits,eats,reproduces,swims, etc like a spade is just call it a spade and don't play games with semantics and intellectual musings -- because in the meantime somebody might get hurt. I've been around the elephant enough times to draw a picture. Which brings me to a whole new subject -- how did the one blind guy touch an elephants side and think it was a wall or even like a wall? I touched an elephant when i was five and it was nothing at all like a wall.
                  i can totally deal and agree with calling a spade a spade, no problems there..
                  but i have no idea what the elephant story has to do with this..
                  gassho
                  Oh, yeah. If I didn't have inner peace, I'd go completely psycho on all you guys all the time.
                  Carl Carlson

                  Comment

                  • AlanLa
                    Member
                    • Mar 2008
                    • 1405

                    #24
                    Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

                    I have no opinion of Brad or Noah, never read them. But how can I know someone's experience? What to me may look like a "pose" might be that person's real experience. Such a mistaken perception has happened to many of us, if not all, on both sides: perceiver and the one being perceived. So with that possibility of mistaken perceptions, maybe sometimes a duty to caution is more appropriate than a duty to warn.
                    AL (Jigen) in:
                    Faith/Trust
                    Courage/Love
                    Awareness/Action!

                    I sat today

                    Comment

                    • Yellow Pine
                      Member
                      • Oct 2009
                      • 13

                      #25
                      Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

                      by chugai on Mon Nov 23, 2009 2:44 pm

                      Hot Topic is not rebellion against the status quo of American culture ... it is an accepted kid tested mommy approved "brand" of American culture ... "branding" is posing ... look at any weekend warrior riding a Harley and wearing his leathers on Saturday and driving his Prius (or insert whatever four wheeled cage) and wearing his monkeysuit to work Mon-Fri ... same/same ...
                      Yea...the marketing & branding of Sit Down and Shut Up seemed to trivialize the subject...much like TV images of the war in Iraq are trivialized by being sandwiched in between ads for Viagra and Chevys. The cover screamed consumerism...but that's the American way...any path to an end? The mall as monastery? Perhaps...

                      Tom

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                      • Unmon
                        Member
                        • Mar 2009
                        • 97

                        #26
                        Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

                        "hardcore zen" brought me to soto zen. just made it seem more relatable to me. i've since read and enjoyed (to varying degrees) all of brad warner's books.

                        read noah levine's books, but didn't really care for them as much. the 1st one seemed really preoccupied w/ self promotion. but he does seem to be doing some good work though. a friend (whose opinion i respect) knows him and maintains that he's sincere.

                        publishers are probably hustling an image more than those guys are - they do want to sell books...that's kinda the point. the difference seems that there might be something beneficial and sincere behind what they're selling, whereas hot topic seems fairly hollow. i dunno...
                        Gassho,
                        Tim

                        Comment

                        • AlanLa
                          Member
                          • Mar 2008
                          • 1405

                          #27
                          Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

                          Is Brad's and Noah's "branding" inconsistent with right livelihood? At first glance it doesn't seem that way to me, but I haven't spent much time investigating it.

                          As for the weekend Harley analogy, I have a friend that really likes motorcycles. As an owner of a Suzuki he always bad-mouthed Harleys, and then one day his brother gave him a Harley touring bike. Suddenly he was a big Harley fan. On his birthday he got tons of Harley gifts, lots of Harley clothes and accessories. So now he wears lots of Harley stuff on the weekends when he rides his bike for pleasure. I'm sure there are "True" Harley guys out there that have been into it longer and deeper that would find it easy to look at him and call him a poser, but is he supposed to not ride his motorcycle, not wear his Harley gear? He isn't trying to be a Harley poser. He's just being the same guy he always was, only now with lots more Harley stuff. Was he a "victim" of branding? How so? What harm has it caused to him or anyone else? Which was the "pose," him liking or disliking Harleys, or maybe both? What does it matter? How can we judge his sincerity? What is the point of trying to judge anyone's sincerity?

                          I am sure there are "True" punk rockers out there that have been into it longer and deeper than Brad/Noah, but does that give them the moral authority to judge someone else's punk rocker-ness?
                          AL (Jigen) in:
                          Faith/Trust
                          Courage/Love
                          Awareness/Action!

                          I sat today

                          Comment

                          • bayamo
                            Member
                            • Nov 2009
                            • 411

                            #28
                            Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

                            Originally posted by AlanLa
                            Is Brad's and Noah's "branding" inconsistent with right livelihood? At first glance it doesn't seem that way to me, but I haven't spent much time investigating it.

                            As for the weekend Harley analogy, I have a friend that really likes motorcycles. As an owner of a Suzuki he always bad-mouthed Harleys, and then one day his brother gave him a Harley touring bike. Suddenly he was a big Harley fan. On his birthday he got tons of Harley gifts, lots of Harley clothes and accessories. So now he wears lots of Harley stuff on the weekends when he rides his bike for pleasure. I'm sure there are "True" Harley guys out there that have been into it longer and deeper that would find it easy to look at him and call him a poser, but is he supposed to not ride his motorcycle, not wear his Harley gear? He isn't trying to be a Harley poser. He's just being the same guy he always was, only now with lots more Harley stuff. Was he a "victim" of branding? How so? What harm has it caused to him or anyone else? Which was the "pose," him liking or disliking Harleys, or maybe both? What does it matter? How can we judge his sincerity? What is the point of trying to judge anyone's sincerity?

                            I am sure there are "True" punk rockers out there that have been into it longer and deeper than Brad/Noah, but does that give them the moral authority to judge someone else's punk rocker-ness?
                            gassho
                            Oh, yeah. If I didn't have inner peace, I'd go completely psycho on all you guys all the time.
                            Carl Carlson

                            Comment

                            • chicanobudista
                              Member
                              • Mar 2008
                              • 864

                              #29
                              Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

                              Originally posted by AlanLa
                              I am sure there are "True" punk rockers out there that have been into it longer and deeper than Brad/Noah, but does that give them the moral authority to judge someone else's punk rocker-ness?
                              Yes, it does.










                              :mrgreen:
                              paz,
                              Erik


                              Flor de Nopal Sangha

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                              • chicanobudista
                                Member
                                • Mar 2008
                                • 864

                                #30
                                Re: Punk priest takes on tradition-bound world of Zen

                                My main disagreement with Warner's outlook is his approach to Genpo and his Big Mind (tm) classes. Overall, I agree with this take, but do wish he used different approach to his disagreement.
                                paz,
                                Erik


                                Flor de Nopal Sangha

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