Sutra
BookTable of Contents
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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
21-30
by
Yung-chia Hsuan-ch'e (Yoka Genkaku)
Walking
is Zen, sitting is Zen;
Speaking or silent, active or quiet, the essence is at peace.
Even facing the sword of death, our mind is unmoved;
Even drinking poison, our mind is quiet.
Meditation
is practiced in four ways. First, your mind and body are still. This is
the source of all of your Zen actions. Second, your body is still but
your mind moves, as in reading or listening to a lecture. Third, your
mind is still but your body moves, as in walking. Fourth, your mind and
body move as you do your work in daily life. Thus, at each moment a good
Zen student experiences the Mind-Essence at ease.
Our teacher,
Shakyamuni, met Dipankara Buddha
And for many eons he trained as Kshanti, the ascetic.
Many births, many deaths;
I am serene in this cycle,--there is no end to it.
Some people
may be interested in past lives, but Zen students see life as an eternal
presence. Stories of "incarnation" insinuate the idea of individual personality
distorting the vision of truth seekers. When you extend time and narrow
space, you will see Buddha Sakyamuni receiving Dhamma from Dipankara Buddha
many millions of years ago, but when you extend space and limit time,
you will see Ksanti, or perseverance, mastering human affairs. It is
the actual business of the present moment. Until students of occultism
understand this and come to their senses, spiritual gold-diggers will
strike it rich here and abroad.
Since I abruptly
realized the unborn,
I have had no reason for joy or sorrow
At any honor or disgrace.
I have entered the deep mountains to silence and beauty;
In a profound valley beneath high cliffs,
I sit under the old pine trees.
Zazen in my rustic cottage
Is peaceful, lonely, and truly comfortable.
When you truly awaken,
You have no formal merit.
In the multiplicity of the relative world,
You cannot find such freedom.
Self-centered merit brings the joy of heaven itself,
But it is like shooting an arrow at the sky;
When the force is exhausted, it falls to the earth,
And then everything goes wrong.
Why should this be better
Than the true way of the absolute,
Directly penetrating the ground of Tathagata?
Just take hold of the source
And never mind the branches.
It is like a treasure-moon
Enclosed in a beautiful emerald.
Now I understand this Mani-jewel
And my gain is the gain of everyone endlessly.
The moon shines on the river,
The wind blows through the pines,--
Whose providence is this long beautiful evening?
The Buddha-nature jewel of morality
Is impressed on the ground of my mind,
And my robe is the dew, the fog, the cloud, and the mist.
The preceding
stanza is a koan. You must work hard to catch a glimpse of it. If you
think that I am hiding something from you, you are the guilty one. I am
concealing nothing from you.
A bowl once
calmed dragons
And a staff separated fighting tigers;
The rings on this staff jingle musically.
The form of these expressions is not to be taken lightly;
The treasure-staff of the Tathagata
Has left traces for us to follow.
Legend says
that Buddha Sakyamuni conquered dragons making them so small that they
stayed in his begging bowl. With his staff, a Zen master once stopped
the fighting of two tigers and so saved them from killing each other.
These stories are neither symbols nor miracles. When you attain the mani-gem,
you too can perform the same deeds.
The awakened
one does not seek truth--
Does not cut off delusion.
Truth and delusion are both vacant and without form,
But this no-form is neither empty nor not empty;
It is the truly real form of the Tathagata.
To assist
you in the interpretation of the stanza above, I shall paraphrase a portion
of Shin-jin-mei, a poem written by the Third
Patriarch in China.
Truth is like vast space without entrance or exit. There is
nothing more nor nothing less. Foolish people limit themselves covering
their eyes but truth is never hidden. Some attend lectures trying to
grasp truth in the words of others. Some accumulate books and try to
dig truth from them. They are all wrong. A few of the wiser ones may
learn meditation in their effort to reach an inner void. They choose
the void rather than outer entanglements, but it is still the same old
dualistic trick. Just think non-thinking if you are a true Zen student.
There you do not know anything, but you are with everything. There is
no choice nor preference, and dualism will vanish by itself. But if
you stop moving and hold quietness, that quietness is ever in motion.
If children make a noise, you will scold them loudly so that the situation
is worse than before. Just forget and ignore the noise, and you will
attain peace of mind. When you forget your liking and disliking, you
will get a glimpse of oneness. The serenity of this middle way is quite
different from the inner void.
The mind-mirror is clear, so there are no obstacles.
Its brilliance illuminates the universe
To the depths and in every grain of sand.
Multitudinous things of the cosmos
Are all reflected in the mind,
And this full clarity is beyond inner and outer.
Here is
another portion of Shin-jin-mei to interpret the preceding stanza:
Zen
transcends time and space. Ten thousand years are nothing but a thought
after all. What you have seen is what you had in the whole world.
If your thought transcends time and space, you will know that the
smallest thing is large and the largest thing is small, that being
is non-being and non-being is being. Without such experience you will
hesitate to do anything. If you can realize that one is many, and
many are one, your Zen will be completed.
Faith and Mind-Essence are not separate from each other. You will
see only the 'not two.' The 'not two' is the faith. The 'not two is
the Mind-Essence. There is no other way but silence to express it
properly. This silence is not the past. This silence is not the present.
This silence is not the future.
To live in
nothingness is to ignore cause and effect;
This chaos leads only to disaster.
The one who clings to vacancy, rejecting the world of things,
Escapes from drowning but leaps into fire.
When Buddhism
denies the existence of everything, this of course includes the existence
of emptiness. There is order, and there is the law of causation. The use
of the word "emptiness" implies that which cannot be spoken.
11-20
Stanzas 31- 40
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 |