Diamond Sangha
Sesshin Sutra Book
December 1991 version
Translations/revisions by Robert Aitken Roshi
of the Diamond Sangha Zen Buddhist Society,
Koko An, 2119 Kaloa Way, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA 96822
SHODOKA
Song
on Realizing the Tao
1-10
by
Yung-chia Hsuan-ch'e (Yoka Genkaku)
An exetremely abridged
version of Nyogen Senzaki's commentary follows each stanza. Observing
the traditional style of explication, he has somethig to say about every
line, every half line, of every stanza.
His comments include
stories alluded to in the verse, explanation of terms and concepts, and
at times challenging the reader to come forth with his or her understanding.
It's clear that his
intent was to instruct and help his students understand and interpret
this poem. It's no wonder that Robert Aitken calls his old teacher "an
American Hotei."
Nyogen's liberal
translation of Shodoka is a "grandmotherly" rendition well worth
investigating. The leaner version given here is meant to facilitate group
recitation, as well as preserve the meaning of the original Chinese.
For Nyogen's translation
and the full commentary refer to Buddhism
and Zen by Nyogen Senzaki and Ruth Strout McCandless.
There is the leisurely one,
Walking the Tao, beyond philosophy,
Not avoiding fantasy, not seeking truth.
The real nature of ignorance is the Buddha-nature itself; The empty delusory
body is the very body of the Dharma.
If you try
to avoid idle thoughts or delusions when you meditate, you cannot enter
Samadhi. Whoever seeks after the truth will remain behind the truth. What
you consider idle thoughts or delusions are nothing but waves on the vast
ocean of Buddha-nature.Just as there are no waves apart from the water,
there is no delusion, no idle thought, no ignorance separate from Buddha-nature.
When the Dharma body awakens completely,
There is nothing at all.
The source of our self-nature
Is the Buddha of innocent truth.
Mental and physical reactions come and go
Like clouds in the empty sky;
Greed, hatred, and ignorance appear and disappear
Like bubbles on the surface of the sea.
When one
recognizes the Dharma-body as such, no matter
hw beautifully he may define it or describe it, he is still lingering
in dualism. but once he has unified himself with the Dharma-body, there
is no more and there is no less.
America
has had Zen students in the past, has them in the present, and will have
many of them in the future. They mingle easily with so-called worldlings.
They play with children, repect king and beggars, and handle gold and
silver as pebbles and stones.
When we realize
actuality,
There is no distinction between mind and thing
And the path to hell instantly vanishes.
If this is a lie to fool the world,
My tongue may be cut out forever.
When Yokadaishi
said, "If you live in this Zen, you can leave hell in your dreams of yesterday,
and make your own paradise wherever you stand. . . ," he did not mean
that an enlightened man can ignore the law of causation. A person creates
his own hell in which to suffer, and no one can save him but himself.
Once we awaken
to the Tathagata-Zen,
The six noble deeds and the ten thousand
good actions
Are already complete within us.
In our dream we see the six levels of illusion
clearly;
After we awaken the whole universe is empty.
. .
. one whose meditation is mature receives the same genealogical
wisdom. For this reason, Zen lives vividly through human experiences,
transcending all scriptures and sectarian doctrines.
No bad fortune,
no good fortune, no loss, no gain;
Never seek such things in eternal serenity.
For years the dusty mirror has gone uncleaned,
Now let us polish it completely, once and for all.
Who has
no-thought? Who is not-born?
If we are truly not-born,
We are not un-born either.
Ask a robot if this is not so.
How can we realize ourselves
By virtuous deeds or by seeking the Buddha?
Yokadaishi
says, "Ask a robot whether he is happy or not." I can hear you complain,
"Is Zen going to compel me to become a robot?" Do you wish to suffer,
filling your mind with illusions? Do you know nothing of the joy of giving
thoughts enough room in which to stretch themselves and grow? A Zen student
has more time to enjoy life because he allows himself to think or to do
one thing at a time, and does not block the flow of inner wisdom with
the trash of delusions.
Release your
hold on earth, water, fire, wind; Drink and eat as you wish in eternal
serenity. All things are transient and completely empty; This is the great
enlightenment of the Tathagata.
Buddhism
does not see mind and body as two different things. When it refers to
the four elements, earth, water, fire, and air, it does not mean only
the elements of the material world, but also the conditions of the mind
as psychological phenomena. In Pali these four elements are called pathavi
(solidity), apo (cohesion), tejo (radiability), and vayn (movability).
Zen does not cling to these elements but instead lives in Mind-Essence
leaving behind both mind and body. A Zen student "drinks or eats," that
is, he lives his everyday life according to his own true nature.
Transience,
emptiness and enlightenment --
These are the ultimate truths of Buddhism;
Keeping and teaching them is true Sangha devotion.
If you don`t agree, please ask me about it.
Cut out directly the root of it all, --
This is the very point of the Buddha-seal.
I can't respond to any concern about leaves and branches.
People do
not recognize the Mani-jewel.
Living intimately within the Tathagata-garbha,
It operates our sight, hearing, smell, taste, sensation, awareness;
And all of these are empty, yet not empty.
The mani-jewel
is a legendary gem of old India that fulfills all desires of its possessor.
Buddhists work for desirelessness, treasuring calmness and contentment
and looking forward to the highest wisdom and moral perfection. Yokadaishi
uses "mani-jewel" metaphorically, saying that it can be found in "the
secret place of Tathagata." But Tathagata
has nothing to do with time or place.
Everything
appears through contact of subjective and objective elements, and you
recognize and name them in terms of relativity. This is the performance
of the mani-jewel, which subjectively you call your true-self, and objectively,
Buddha-nature.
Stanzas
11- 20
Sutra
BookTable of Contents
Notes and comments are
lifted from the endnotes of the Empty Sky compilation of these Zen Buddhist
texts and The Syllabus section of Encouraging
Words - zen buddhist teachings for western students by Robert Aitken
Roshi |