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
52-60
by
Yung-chia Hsuan-ch'e (Yoka Genkaku)
The Buddha's
doctrine of directness
Is not a matter for human emotion.
If you doubt this or feel uncertain,
Then you must discuss it with me.
This is not the free rein of a mountain monk's ego.
I fear your training may lead to wrong views
Of permanent soul or complete extinction.
Zen allows
no student to waste his time even for a second. If you have a koan, work
on it; if you have no koan, just count your breath. Do not acknowledge
doubt. Just keep on meditating. This is the only means of learning to
walk the Middle Way.
Being is
not being; non-being is not non-being;
Miss this rule by a hair,
And you are off by a thousand miles.
Understanding it, the dragon-child abruptly attains Buddhahood;
Misunderstanding it, the greatest scholar falls into hell.
The Saddharma-pundanka-sutra
mentions an infant female dragon that attained realization, and in the
Mahaparinirvana-sutra is found the story of Zensho, the learned disciple,
who suffered the tortures of hell. But why search the scriptures when
we witness such examples every day of our lives? Sex, age, and intellectuality
have nothing to do with enlightenment.
From my youth
I piled studies upon studies,
In sutras and sastras I searched and researched,
Classifying terms and forms, oblivious to fatigue.
I entered the sea to count the sands in vain
And then the Tathagata scolded me kindly
As I read "What profit in counting your neighbor's treasure?"
My work had been scattered and entirely useless,
For years I was dust blown by the wind.
A Zen student
must spend more time in meditation than he does in reading. . . even Zen
books. Without your own experience you will be a stranger to Zen and a
philosophical tramp. Find your own treasure.
If the seed-nature
is wrong, misunderstandings arise,
And the Buddha's doctrine of immediacy cannot be attained.
Shravaka and Pratyeka students may study earnestly
But they lack aspiration.
Others may be very clever,
But they lack prajna.
Confucius
said, "By nature men are almost alike; by practice they are far apart."
Those who love all sentient beings will meditate to save them, thereby
developing their own character in Zen. The mind of Cravaka is ready to
listen to an enlightened man, but only to eliminate its own suffering.
Some study Zen to overcome weaknesses such as temper, cowardliness, and
excitability. These are selfish students. The mind of Pratyeka-Buddha
is also alert for study, but its motive is not altruistic. Non-Buddhistic
scholars have dualistic knowledge, which makes them intellectual, but
they lack Prajna and realize that their efforts will not bring mankind
true happiness.
Stupid ones,
childish ones,
They suppose there is something in an empty fist.
They mistake the pointing finger for the moon.
They are idle dreamers lost in form and sensation.
When Zen
opens its closed fist to show that there is nothing within, spiritual
customers are lost. These people enjoy the intoxication of illusion, and
knowing nothing, they recite the scriptures and attend the services with
enthusiasm. They are idle dreamers, easily deluded, and their wrongly
developed characters find the abrupt system of emancipation difficult
to understand.
Not supposing something is the Tathagata.
This is truly called Kwan-Yin, the Bodhisattva who sees freely.
When awakened we find karmic hindrances fundamentally empty.
But when not awakened, we must repay all our debts.
Once you
realize that nothing exists, everything being the manifestation of Mind-Essence,
which is also free of being and non-being, you are Tathagata, the Enlightened
One. The Enlightened One has to pay his karmic debts just as anyone else
does, but he does not worry about them nor does he contract new debts.
The hungry
are served a king's repast,
And they cannot eat.
The sick meet the king of doctors;
Why don't they recover?
The practice of Zen in this greedy world
This is the power of wise vision.
The lotus lives in the midst of the fire;
It is never destroyed.
Is your
hunger satisfied when another eats? Is your thirst quenched when another
drinks? Are you rested when another sleeps? By whose efforts will you
be enlightened?
41-51
Stanzas 61- 70
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 |