What is the essence that is transmitted?

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  • Yugen
    • Mar 2025

    What is the essence that is transmitted?

    I’ve spent a considerable amount of time with my friend Tim Buckley over the last several months as he faced his diagnosis and realized that there was a finite limit on the number of things he wanted to accomplish – a matter of too many things to do and not enough time to finish them in – he came face to face with the great matter – the fact of his own demise. In this time he began to wonder, as he approached dharma transmission, what exactly is transmitted in a particular lineage. Put another way, what is the essence that is transmitted?

    He was quick to point out that this “essence” often distinguishes one lineage from another. He asked me what the essence of my lineage was – and this served as material for a series of conversations through the late summer, autumn, and into early winter. Though there is no one “right” answer, I’d like to share with you my thoughts on this question as it pertains to our lineage, and it’s relationship to the precepts as we approach a Jukai ceremony later this week.

    The Renpo Niwa / Gudo Nishijima lineage in which our Teacher Jundo (and we) reside is best known I believe for the belief that zen practice and enlightenment are not restricted to a monastic setting or particular social class or group – i.e., monks, warriors, or landed nobility and aristocrats. Renpo Niwa began ordaining people outside of Eiheiji – Gudo Nishijima being an example. Perhaps he realized that Zen was in meed of diversification, even reinvigoration - monastic walls had begun to stifle Zen Buddhism and render it socially and ontologically arteriosclerotic. Our lineage is known for breaking down the boundaries between ordained and monastic practice – Nishijima and our teacher Jundo, and Nishijima’s other dharma heirs (Gustav Erickson and Bard Warner for example) are “out in the world” – they have professional lives and day jobs in addition to their zen ministries…..

    Our lineage represents the belief that zen must evolve if it is to be resilient, lively, and relevant. Our place of practice is not only the zendo, it is our families, the kitchen, the backyard, the place of employment, the hospital, the mountaintop. Life presents us with a dizzying number of opportunities to practice – and as a Sangha we support one another in that practice. We are “good friends” to one another – priests are not authority figures or disciplinarians. We are not a lineage of Samurai or Tokugawa era landholders – our zen is not martial – you might have heard the term “farmer zen” – ours is a lineage of householders who work the land, work the field and fabric of life. Our teachers and priests are guides – fellow practitioners whose human, errors, missteps and suffering are just as instructive as their dharma talks – maybe more so.

    Which brings us to the precepts. The precepts are not a list of proscriptions or rules to be followed on a checklist – this is to render them lifeless, uninspiring, and even unhelpful. The precepts are something we live in every moment of our lives – and we take vows to uphold them, to strive to follow them. And then two minutes later, we invariably break them.

    Why then take vows to uphold precepts knowing we shall fail, over and over, in the process? Why will we make in the course of our practice and lives what my dear friend Zenshin Tim Buckley terms “mistake after mistake?”

    These mistakes provide an endless source of material for our practice. And as Kosho Uchiyama teaches us, we enter the cycle of vow and repentance. We take vows knowing that as human beings we shall fall short. And we also vow to repent – to take responsibility for our actions and set about on the path once again - a journey that will take all our lives.

    The precepts provide a guide for achieving the clarity that is needed to “realize” practice and our lives in the present moment – if we abuse sexuality, misuse intoxicants, use deceitful or harmful speech, or disparage the three treasures, there is all sorts of clutter between us and a clear path to freedom. The precepts provide the means to existential freedom – and clarity of practice. "It" is available to us here - now - and the precepts point us in that direction. It is perhaps our destiny and nature to look for things everywhere but right in front of us - which is why we have practice, and guidelines to practice. The precepts are breadcrumbs that provide a trail back to ourselves . Our sanghamates are fellow travelers we meet along the way. We share sustenance and stories, then go on our way.

    Our lineage holds that all our lives are our practice – that the walls of our zendo are delineated by heaven and earth an all that is in between. Our lineage stands for the knowledge that where those who follow us take the tradition is uncharted territory – there is great faith – faith that the tradition will take forms we do not recognize and at the same time remain true to its origins – and great doubt – doubt sufficient to encourage a lifelong search for individual truth – and the great determination to stay on this difficult path.

    For these dynamics to carry the tradition forward Zen must remain resilient, lively, even playful – it must leave the walls of convention – its practitioners are responsible for its essence and at the same time for its freedom.

    Please consider this as you prepare for Jukai, and support one another in practice. Where are you going to take your practice? Where will you take our tradition? How are you going to care for it? How will you give it meaning? How are you going to live it?

    We are all responsible. Not just priests, but all of us. Where it goes is up to you.

    This, I would submit to you, is the essence of our lineage.

    Peace, explore, and never give up.

    Deep bows
    Yugen
    Last edited by Guest; 01-05-2015, 03:15 AM.
  • Meishin
    Member
    • May 2014
    • 879

    #2
    Thank you, Yugen. Your wise and inspirational words are great assurance that this is the place for practice for this beginner.

    Gassho
    John
    sat today
    Last edited by Meishin; 01-05-2015, 04:18 AM.

    Comment

    • Anshu Bryson
      Member
      • Aug 2014
      • 566

      #3
      Yugen,

      Thank you so very much for this teaching. It has come just at the right time before Jukai. And has perfectly tied together some of the things we have spoken about offline. Thank you, thank you and thank you again.

      Gassho,

      Bryson

      sat today

      Comment

      • Kyotai

        #4
        Yugen, thank you for these words. Bryson and John have said it well, and so it goes for me as well.

        Gassho, Shawn
        Sat today

        Comment

        • Troy
          Member
          • Sep 2013
          • 1318

          #5
          What is the essence that is transmitted?

          Thank you Yugen. I have a better understanding of our lineage. Deep bows


          _|sat2day|_

          Comment

          • Steven
            Member
            • Sep 2013
            • 114

            #6
            That was beautifully written Yugen. Thank you!

            Gassho,
            Steven
            #sat today

            Comment

            • Jika
              Member
              • Jun 2014
              • 1337

              #7
              Yugen,
              thank you for speaking of so much love.
              To and of your dear friend, Zenshin Tim Buckley, who raised this impressive question at such a time of hardship.
              My heart opened to him for discussing this with you.
              Of your love to our lineage, to our practice, to the sangha.
              As you are writing this, whom am I thanking?
              The leaf, the tree, the sunshine that lets all exist?


              Thank you very much.

              Gassho,
              Danny
              #sattoday
              治 Ji
              花 Ka

              Comment

              • Shokai
                Dharma Transmitted Priest
                • Mar 2009
                • 6530

                #8
                _/\_
                Yugen, my dear brother, you have a way of telling it like it is; beautiful (and thank you )

                gassho
                合掌,生開
                gassho, Shokai

                仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai

                "Open to life in a benevolent way"

                https://sarushinzendo.wordpress.com/

                Comment

                • Byokan
                  Senior Priest-in-Training
                  • Apr 2014
                  • 4282

                  #9
                  Hello Yugen,


                  Wow, you have truly captured lightning in a bottle here! This is such a wonderful and essential question to ask and answer. Thank you for sharing your thoughtful, insightful, inspiring exploration.

                  Deep bows and gratitude,

                  Gassho
                  Lisa
                  sat today

                  p.s. much love to Zenshin Tim Buckley and the Sangha there!
                  展道 渺寛 Tendō Byōkan
                  Please take my words with a big grain of salt. I know nothing. Wisdom is only found in our whole-hearted practice together.

                  Comment

                  • Jiken
                    Member
                    • Jan 2011
                    • 753

                    #10
                    Moment by moment. Deep bows brother.

                    Gassho,

                    Jiken

                    Comment

                    • Myosha
                      Member
                      • Mar 2013
                      • 2974

                      #11
                      Thank you for the lesson.


                      Gassho,
                      Myosha sat today
                      "Recognize suffering, remove suffering." - Shakyamuni Buddha when asked, "Uhm . . .what?"

                      Comment

                      • Mp

                        #12
                        Yugen,

                        Your words dance in my ears, thank you. =)

                        Gassho
                        Shingen

                        Sat today

                        Comment

                        • Ishin
                          Member
                          • Jul 2013
                          • 1359

                          #13
                          Thank you for writing this Yugen. I share the other's sentiments above that if anything, this makes me feel like I am in the right place.
                          Gassho
                          C
                          Sat Today!
                          Grateful for your practice

                          Comment

                          • Sekishi
                            Dharma Transmitted Priest
                            • Apr 2013
                            • 5673

                            #14
                            Timely and lovely Yugen.

                            I am currently slogging through the somewhat academic "Soto Zen in Medieval Japan," which spills a fair amount of ink over transmission, what was transmitted, and how did the sangha and temples sustain themselves. How amazing it is to be part of the Gudo Wafu / Nishijima lineage!

                            However, even as the monastic walls thin and we bring our practice out into this "world of red dust" it is clear how important is your point of supporting each other! There are no powerful warrior lords to be our patrons and sustain the monastery walls - our brothers and sisters in practice are themselves providing the shelter!

                            A lovely reminder as Jukai approaches.

                            Deep bows,
                            Sekishi
                            #SatToday
                            Sekishi | 石志 | He/him | Better with a grain of salt, but best ignored entirely.

                            Comment

                            • Shugen
                              Member
                              • Nov 2007
                              • 4532

                              #15
                              Gassho,

                              Shugen

                              #sattoday


                              Shugen
                              Meido Shugen
                              明道 修眼

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