In the Shobogenzo,
Dogen Zenji says that whether one is clever or dull doesn't matter. If we
practice zazen, we will get the same attainment. This is Buddhist
understanding, or a Buddhist idea, of human character. This point should always
be remembered, especially by the intelligent ones. When the clever ones do not
help others, the Sangha will be destroyed. Only when clever and talented people
help others will the Sangha last long. This is our teaching. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-D as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Saturday, June 29, 2019
Friday, June 28, 2019
Clever
In a sutra it says, "If a clever
heretic studies, he will lose his life, but a clever Buddhist will gain from
his cleverness." This kind of story is found all over. [DC note: You don't have to think of the words "heretic" and "Buddhist" here in a limited away. You could say foolish and wise or whatever works for you. ] -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-D as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Thursday, June 27, 2019
Commenting on the Lotus Sutra
Here appears
Dipankara. Usually, as you know, Dipankara Bodhisattva is the oldest of all the
Bodhisattvas. But according to this sutra, even before Dipankara there were so
many Bodhisattvas, like Srigarba, whose enlightened name is Vimalanetra, or
like Varaprabha, or Kandrasuryapradipa. And what does this mean? Actually,
there is no first bodhisattva. Actually, everyone is a bodhisattva. This sutra
suggests this kind of teaching. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-D as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Wednesday, June 26, 2019
Kalpa
Did I explain another way of understanding one kalpa? There is a big rock, like Tassajara. And every five hundred years, maybe, or more, an angel comes to the rock, and she makes her sleeve rub off some stone. When that stone has vanished from the angel's sleeve rubbing it, it is one kalpa. So there are many ways of explaining what one kalpa is. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-D as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Tuesday, June 25, 2019
Commenting on the Lotus Stura
The last kalpa will
be when everything will go, including human life. Juko is the name for the
kalpas when everything existed pretty firmly, without losing its form, and eko
[samvarta kalpa] means the time at the end of juko when everything will
disintegrate. Integrated age and disintegrated age. An integrated age is twenty
kalpas long, and one kalpa is our lifespan going up and down, from ten to
eighty thousand years. [That means beings evolving from lifespans of ten to eighty thousand years and back so it's just an inconceivable number.
Student 1: Will there still be Buddha after the disintegration?
S.R.: There is a koan which is exactly the same as your question.
Student 1: What is the answer to the koan?
S.R.: That is also a koan, so this is your homework. Interesting question. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-D as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Student 1: Will there still be Buddha after the disintegration?
S.R.: There is a koan which is exactly the same as your question.
Student 1: What is the answer to the koan?
S.R.: That is also a koan, so this is your homework. Interesting question. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-D as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Monday, June 24, 2019
Suzuki reading and commenting on the Lotus Sutra
"He (some Buddha) spoke during
fully sixty intermediate kalpas, always sitting on the same seat with the
immovable body and tranquil mind. And the whole assembly continued sitting on
the same seats, listening to the preaching of the Lord for sixty intermediate
kalpas, there being not a single creature in that assembly who felt fatigue of
body or mind."
A great difference from my lecture! What does it mean, by the way? Do you understand what it means? -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-D as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
A great difference from my lecture! What does it mean, by the way? Do you understand what it means? -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-D as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Saturday, June 22, 2019
Same name?
This teaching wasn't
new. Even before Buddha started to tell the Lotus Sutra, Kandrasuryapradipa
appeared and told the same teaching. And one after another, Kandrasuryapradipa
Buddhas appeared in the same name and left the same teaching. That is what
Manjusri saw, actually, in his previous life. This is your homework. What does
it mean? You may wonder if this is just a fairy tale or if it means something.
This is, I think, good homework for you. And if you want to ask this on the
final day of the training period, during question and answer, you can ask me.
Be careful not to get a big slap, okay? What does it mean? One after another,
Buddhas appeared in the same name, Kandrasuryapradipa, and told the same
Saddharma Pundarika Sutra. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-D as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Friday, June 21, 2019
Concluding this lecture on the Lotus Sutra
"...and to the
Bodhisattvas he preached the law connected with the six Perfections, and
terminating in the knowledge of the omniscient, after the attainment of
supreme, perfect enlightenment." So far the teaching was for sravakas and
pratyekas, and now the teaching is for the bodhisattvas. For the bodhisattva,
Buddha gave the teaching of the six paramitas. I think I explained them
already. Dana Paramita, bestowing of material and teaching; Sila Paramita,
keeping the precepts; Ksanti Paramita, the practice of patience; Virya
Paramita, zeal and progress; Dhyana Paramita, the practice
of meditation; and Prajna Paramita, wisdom paramita, the power to discern truth
or reality.
Thank you very much. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-C as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Thursday, June 20, 2019
Same
We say the Four Noble
Truths and Eightfold Path are teachings for the sravakas, and the Twelve Links
of Causality is a teaching for pratyekas, but according to recent results of
scholarship, Buddha actually taught both of those teachings without separating
them: sometimes the Four Noble Truths and the holy Eight fold Path, sometimes
the Twelve Links of Causality. And if you analyze those two teachings, they are
two different versions of the same teaching. What he meant was the same. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-C as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
Interdependency
Those teachings
starting from birth, old age, sickness, death, sorrow, lamentation, woe, grief,
uneasiness and Nirvana are the teaching of interdependency. Most scholars used
to understand this as a teaching of causality: birth is the cause of old age,
and birth is the cause of sickness. Because we were born, we have old age and
sickness and death. But this is actually the teaching of interdependency and is
another form of the four noble truths. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-C as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
On the Other Hand
[following from yesterday] But you should know
how complicated our Dharma is. Very complicated, but very clear, you know. But
to make it clear, we have to make a good effort. Sometimes it looks like some
story, and you may think if you read those scriptures, that there's no truth in
them, that they are just fairy tales or stories, but it is not so. The
underlying thought is very deep and accurate. So as long as we are studying it,
we should make it clear. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-C as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Monday, June 17, 2019
Suzuki stops reading from the Lotus Sutra to say:
Oh, I'm sorry. Maybe
it is too tedious for you. (lots of laughter in this paragraph) I almost gave
up already, so I can imagine how you feel. When I was young, I would go to
school by train. As long as the train was going, I was sleeping, but when the
train stopped, I woke up. I woke up suddenly because I had to get off. As long
as my tedious lecture is going, you may sleep. If I stop my lecture, you should
wake up. There will be no need to remember these things, you know. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-C as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Saturday, June 15, 2019
Reading and Commenting on the Lotus Sutra
2nd title: Vidyacaranasampanna
[myogyo soku] is one who can see through things, who knows his former life, and
who has perfect enlightenment. This is also an attainment of the Arhat. In the
morning we pray to have three wisdoms or powers, the Arhat's power. Nowadays we
have science instead of those three powers, so maybe that is why he translated
it as "science". -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-C as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Friday, June 14, 2019
Reading and Commenting on the Lotus Sutra
First of the ten titles: Tathagata [nyorai]
means a man who comes from the truth and who does not stay in any realm of form
or form world, who comes from truth and who goes back to the truth, or someone
who preaches right Dharma and right law, or someone who observes things as it
is. Arhat [arakan] is one who has attained perfect enlightenment, the
attainment of the Theravada Buddhist. Samyaksambuddha [shohenchi] is Buddha who
knows everything and who knows things as it is, who has no discrepancy or one
sided understanding or observation. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-C as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Thursday, June 13, 2019
Merit
Q: Roshi, when we
chant the Maka [Hannya Haramita] Shingyo, in what sense is there merit? And
can we give this merit to others?
R: Yes, to help. When you become familiar with the shingyo, what you will do will naturally explain your understanding, your attitude. Even though you don't realize it, there is a big difference between the people who can recite sutras and those who cannot. So, of course, that you can recite sutras will help others. From my cabin, when I am resting, I can see out of the window in front of my sink. Before you enter the restroom, you bow. And I think you are just doing it, you know, like this, maybe, because you get accustomed to it. But I thought, if people saw someone bowing to that place, what kind of feelings would they have? The people might not know what it meant, but I think you would give them some feeling. You just do it, you know. And that's a very valuable thing. This is the same thing as reciting the sutra.
Buddha's disciples converted many learned scholars to Buddhism, like Sariputra, who converted when he saw a monk walking on the street with a very steady feeling. So, we say that each one of the 250 characters of the "Prajna Paramita Sutra" is a bodhisattva, is Buddha. This is more than just how we understand it. That is this merit for us and for others. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-B as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
R: Yes, to help. When you become familiar with the shingyo, what you will do will naturally explain your understanding, your attitude. Even though you don't realize it, there is a big difference between the people who can recite sutras and those who cannot. So, of course, that you can recite sutras will help others. From my cabin, when I am resting, I can see out of the window in front of my sink. Before you enter the restroom, you bow. And I think you are just doing it, you know, like this, maybe, because you get accustomed to it. But I thought, if people saw someone bowing to that place, what kind of feelings would they have? The people might not know what it meant, but I think you would give them some feeling. You just do it, you know. And that's a very valuable thing. This is the same thing as reciting the sutra.
Buddha's disciples converted many learned scholars to Buddhism, like Sariputra, who converted when he saw a monk walking on the street with a very steady feeling. So, we say that each one of the 250 characters of the "Prajna Paramita Sutra" is a bodhisattva, is Buddha. This is more than just how we understand it. That is this merit for us and for others. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-B as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Wednesday, June 12, 2019
Scripture
Q: In Hinduism they
often wonder about good karma and bad karma and merit. And when the Emperor
asked Bodhidharma about the merit in making many temples, Bodhidharma said,
"No merit." In what sense is there merit in reading or chanting the
sutra?
R: To sit is to read the sutra. We understand in the opposite way. Let me explain this point. This is a very good question. In another school, for instance, they say, "You should read the scripture with your body. You should experience it." When they say this, it means that even if a person is going to be killed, the sword will be broken in two, piece by piece. If that kind of thing happens to him, it means he reads the scripture by his experience, with his body.
R: To sit is to read the sutra. We understand in the opposite way. Let me explain this point. This is a very good question. In another school, for instance, they say, "You should read the scripture with your body. You should experience it." When they say this, it means that even if a person is going to be killed, the sword will be broken in two, piece by piece. If that kind of thing happens to him, it means he reads the scripture by his experience, with his body.
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
Worlds
Q: Last night you
mentioned the world of form, the world of desire, and the world of no form.
Would you explain what the world of form is and how that differs from the world
of desire?
R: The world of desire is the world of attachment. The world of form is the world as it is, including desires. We have desires; everything has a kind of desire. But if we observe desire as it is, that is also the form world, not the desire world. The world of no form is easily obtained in your deep zazen. When you do not feel your body, you're deep, you know. That is the world of non form. Those are the worlds where every being exists. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-B as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
R: The world of desire is the world of attachment. The world of form is the world as it is, including desires. We have desires; everything has a kind of desire. But if we observe desire as it is, that is also the form world, not the desire world. The world of no form is easily obtained in your deep zazen. When you do not feel your body, you're deep, you know. That is the world of non form. Those are the worlds where every being exists. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-B as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Monday, June 10, 2019
Blade
Q: Roshi, you said
not to stop thinking, but to be free from thinking, and I wonder if you could
explain what it means to be free from thinking?
R: What I meant was don't be bound by your thinking. When you reach a conclusion by thinking, you will have some definite idea. Actually, that is why you think: to have a definite answer. But that is not possible.
Q: So what should you do?
R: You can think, and thinking will help you, of course. But you should know, at the same time, that that answer will not be definite. So you think, but you are free from thinking. That is what I meant: to have what we call a double edged blade. So double-edge think: don't think and think. It works two ways. This is the double nature, the double construction of Buddhist philosophy: thinking construction and non thinking construction. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-B as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
R: What I meant was don't be bound by your thinking. When you reach a conclusion by thinking, you will have some definite idea. Actually, that is why you think: to have a definite answer. But that is not possible.
Q: So what should you do?
R: You can think, and thinking will help you, of course. But you should know, at the same time, that that answer will not be definite. So you think, but you are free from thinking. That is what I meant: to have what we call a double edged blade. So double-edge think: don't think and think. It works two ways. This is the double nature, the double construction of Buddhist philosophy: thinking construction and non thinking construction. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-B as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Saturday, June 8, 2019
Reading, commenting on Lotus Sutra
"I see thousands
of kotis of stupas, numerous as the sand of the Ganges, which have been raised
by these sons of the Jina and now adorn kotis of grounds."
Friday, June 7, 2019
Worshiping
"Further, I
see," "I" means Maitreya Bodhisattva "O Manjughosha, many
Bodhisattvas who have displayed steadiness under the rule of the departed
Sugatas, and now are worshiping the relics of the Jinas."
We have already seen many things. First of all, we saw many Buddhas entering meditation, and we saw this earth was shaking in six ways, and a ray issued from the Buddha's forehead, and we saw people incarnated in the six states of living beings, heavenly, human, animal, asura, hungry ghost, hell. And we also saw buddhas in each world, and heard the Law preached by them. We saw Buddha's four congregations: monks, nuns, male and female devotees, and we saw bodhisattvas who are helping others, and Buddha finally entering Nirvana. And the last vision will be building stupas and mounds for Buddha, and worshiping Buddha's tomb. This is the whole story of this sutra. [DC comment - we worship the relics of the Jinas by practicing sincerely and diligently.] -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-B as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
We have already seen many things. First of all, we saw many Buddhas entering meditation, and we saw this earth was shaking in six ways, and a ray issued from the Buddha's forehead, and we saw people incarnated in the six states of living beings, heavenly, human, animal, asura, hungry ghost, hell. And we also saw buddhas in each world, and heard the Law preached by them. We saw Buddha's four congregations: monks, nuns, male and female devotees, and we saw bodhisattvas who are helping others, and Buddha finally entering Nirvana. And the last vision will be building stupas and mounds for Buddha, and worshiping Buddha's tomb. This is the whole story of this sutra. [DC comment - we worship the relics of the Jinas by practicing sincerely and diligently.] -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-B as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC
Thursday, June 6, 2019
Reading n Commenting on Lotus Sutra
"(There are)
sons of the Sugata who try to reach enlightenment by wisdom; they understand
the law of indifference and avoid acting at the antinomy (of things),
unattached like birds in the sky."
Wednesday, June 5, 2019
Reading and commenting on Lotus Sutra
"Others set
forth the law of quietness, by many myriads of illustrations and proofs; they
preach it to thousands of kotis of living beings; these are tending to supreme
enlightenment by science."
A Brief History of Tassajara event sponsor requests RSVP
The prestigious Book Club of California (BCC) is hosting an event for this book.
Lee Doyle, daughter of author Marilyn McDonald and Tassajara historian David Rogers will make presentation
on Monday, June 10th, 5 to 7pm
Here's a link to the BCC page for upcoming programs
BCC requests that those attending make a reservation online at <programs@bccbooks.org> or by calling 415 781-7532, ext. 3.
Nearby BART Stations: Powell, Montgomery
Nearby Muni lines: 2, 3, 8, 10, 12, 30, 45
Nearest Parking Garage: The Stockton Street Garage
Cuke.com page for A Brief History of Tassajara
Lee Doyle, daughter of author Marilyn McDonald and Tassajara historian David Rogers will make presentation
on Monday, June 10th, 5 to 7pm
Here's a link to the BCC page for upcoming programs
BCC requests that those attending make a reservation online at <programs@bccbooks.org> or by calling 415 781-7532, ext. 3.
The club is conveniently located near the entrance to Chinatown, in the heart of San Francisco’s chic shopping and museum district, at:
312 Sutter Street, Suite 500 (cross street Grant)
San Francisco, CA 94108
312 Sutter Street, Suite 500 (cross street Grant)
San Francisco, CA 94108
Nearby BART Stations: Powell, Montgomery
Nearby Muni lines: 2, 3, 8, 10, 12, 30, 45
Nearest Parking Garage: The Stockton Street Garage
Tuesday, June 4, 2019
Reading from, commenting on the Lotus Sutra
"When they have,
with joyful feelings, made such various and splendid donations, they rouse
their energy in order to obtain enlightenment; these are those who try to reach
supreme enlightenment by means of charitableness."
Monday, June 3, 2019
June 10th event in SF for A Brief History of Tassajara
The prestigious Book Club of California (BCC) is hosting an event for this book.
Lee Doyle, daughter of author Marilyn McDonald and Tassajara historian David Rogers will make presentation
on Monday, June 10th, 5 to 7pm
Here's a link to the BCC page for upcoming programs
BCC requests that those attending make a reservation online at <programs@bccbooks.org> or by calling 415 781-7532, ext. 3.
Lee Doyle, daughter of author Marilyn McDonald and Tassajara historian David Rogers will make presentation
on Monday, June 10th, 5 to 7pm
Here's a link to the BCC page for upcoming programs
BCC requests that those attending make a reservation online at <programs@bccbooks.org> or by calling 415 781-7532, ext. 3.
The club is conveniently located near the entrance to Chinatown, in the heart of San Francisco’s chic shopping and museum district, at:
312 Sutter Street, Suite 500 (cross street Grant)
San Francisco, CA 94108
312 Sutter Street, Suite 500 (cross street Grant)
San Francisco, CA 94108
Nearby BART Stations: Powell, Montgomery
Nearby Muni lines: 2, 3, 8, 10, 12, 30, 45
Nearest Parking Garage: The Stockton Street Garage
Cuke.com page for A Brief History of TassajaraNearby Muni lines: 2, 3, 8, 10, 12, 30, 45
Nearest Parking Garage: The Stockton Street Garage
Reading from Lotus Sutra and commenting
"Some present
the leaders of men and their disciples with neat and lovely gardens abounding
with fruits and beautiful flowers, to serve as places of daily
recreation."
Saturday, June 1, 2019
Meditation
Does someone know
what "meditation" means? "To meditate" looks like
"contemplate on something," but I don't know what
"meditate" means. But someone said it can be translated as "to
be attentive to something." So if we understand meditation, and if we use
the word "meditate" in that sense, I think it is a good translation,
but usually by "meditate" we mean to "dwell on something,"
or to "concentrate on" something. "Contemplation" is also
meditation, but the more fundamental attitude or practice, is attentiveness. -------------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-02-00-A as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC