Enter your search keyword(s):

Click to search our directories-AllWebHunt, Encyclopedic, TopChoice, Or Google, Alexa, About & Yahoo:

 


Teachings
Home / Top / Society / Religion and Spirituality / Buddhism / Lineages / Zen / Teachings
Related articles

Edit | Discuss Article

Zen

  1. redirect

Zen (Japanese: Zen, 禅; Chinese: Chán;, 禪; Korean: Seon, 선; Sanskrit: dhyā na, ध्यान) is a branch of Mahāyāna Buddhism, practiced especially in China, Japan, and Korea, that incorporates Taoist thought. It stresses the role of meditation in pursuing enlightenment. Because Zen is the name for this branch in Japanese as well as in English, this article will concern itself with both traditional Zen in Japan and with Zen as an international phenomenon. For information specific to Asian countries other than Japan, please follow the appropriate links below.

Table of contents
1 Spread of Zen
2 Zen in Japan
3 Zen teachings and practices
4 "Zen" in Western pop-culture
5 See also
6 External links
7 Further reading

Spread of Zen

Traditionally, Zen traces its roots back to Indian Buddhism, where it was known by "dhyā na" (ध्यान), a Sanskrit term for meditation. This name was transliterated into Chinese as Chán; (禪); "Chán" was later transliterated into Korean as Seon, and then into Japanese as "Zen."

According to these traditional accounts, an Indian monk named Bodhidharma brought Zen Buddhism to China in the fifth century. Later, Korean monks studying in China learned of Zen and spread it as far as to Japan around the seventh century.

Zen in Japan

The following Zen traditions still exist in Japan: Rinzai, Soto, and Obaku. Originally formulated by the eponymous Chinese master Linji (Rinzai in Japanese), the Rinzai school was introduced to Japan in 1191 by Eisai. Dogen, who studied under Eisai, would later carry the Caodong, or "Soto" Zen school to Japan from China. Obaku was introduced in the 17th century by a Ingen, a Chinese monk.

Zen teachings and practices

Zen teachings often criticize textual study and worldly action, concentrating primarily on meditation in pursuit of an unmediated awareness of the processes of the world and the mind. However, these teachings are themselves also deeply rooted in the Buddhist textual tradition, drawing primarily on Mahāyāna sutras composed in India and China, and on the recorded teachings of masters in the various Zen traditions themselves.

Zazen

Zen meditation is called zazen. Zazen translates approximately to "sitting meditation", although it can be applied to practice in any posture. During zazen, practitioners usually assume a lotus, half-lotus, burmese, or seiza position. Rinzai practitioners typically sit facing the center of the room, while Soto practitioners sit facing a wall. Awareness is directed towards complete cognizance of one's posture and breathing. In this way, practitioners seek to transcend thought and be directly aware of the universe.

In Soto, shikantaza meditation, sometimes translated as "just-sitting," i.e., a meditation with no objects, anchors, "seeds," or content, is the primary form of practice. Considerable textual, philosophical, and phenomenological justification of this practice can be found in Dogen's Shobogenzo.

Koan practice

The Zen schools (especially but not exclusively Rinzai) also employ koans (Japanese; Chinese: gongan; Korean: gong'an). The term is borrowed from that for a signpost used in ancient China, on which new laws were announced to the public. In much the same sense, a koan embodies a realized principle, or law of reality. Koans, which are often paradoxical are not meant to be apprehended rationally but rather to be realized in experience.

"Zen" in Western pop-culture

Many modern students have made the mistake of thinking that since much of Zen sounds like nonsense, especially in translation and out of context, any clever nonsense is also Zen. This is not the case, but see Discordianism and the Church of the SubGenius for modern semiserious religions influenced by this idea.

See also

External links

Further reading


Source | Copyright


Webmasters: Add your website here:

Readers: Edit | Discuss Listings

All Things Zen
Koan of Zen master Ch'ing Yuan Wei-hsin on emptiness, enlightenment, dependent origination, satori.
http://members.tripod.com/SpEd2work/AllThingsZen.html

Essentials of Buddhism
Lists out the key points of Buddhism in a nutshell.
http://home.earthlink.net/~srama/index.html

Hakuin
"In the realm of the thousand buddhas He is hated by the thousand buddhas; Among the crowd of demons He is detested by the crowd of demons. He crushes the silent-illumination heretics of today, And massacres the heterodox blind monks of this generation. This filthy blind old shavepate Adds more foulness still to foulness."
http://www.ozemail.com.au/~ksolway/hakuin.html

Zen Master Seung Sahn's Temple Rules

http://www.kwanumzen.com/misc/temple-rules.html

What The Buddha Said

http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Thebes/5683/BuddhaSaid.html

Teachings of Bodhidharma

http://www.cs.virginia.edu/~alb/zen/bodhidharma.html

Master Hsu Yun's Teachings
Dharma discourses by a historical Chinese Ch'an master.
http://www.hsuyun.com/en/hsuyun/hsuyun-dharmaeng.html

Zen Texts
A large miscellaneous collection of Zen Texts.
http://www.sacred-texts.com/bud/zen/

BuddhaNet File library
Dozens of .zip files of Zen teachings
http://www.buddhanet.net/ftp11.htm

What do you think, my friend?
Selection of writings on Buddhism
http://www.serve.com/cmtan/buddhism/

The Zen Teachings of Bodhidharma
Includes the Bloodstream, Wake Up, and Breakthruough sermons.
http://hjem.get2net.dk/civet-cat/zen-writings/teachings-of-bodhidharma.htm

Awakening 101
A free online Dharma course that explores the Enlightenment experience in the Zen tradition, presented by the Wanderling, an anonymous, uncertified Zen teacher.
http://www.geocities.com/the_wanderling/awakening101.html

Dogen's Writings about Time
"... Don't try to measure this by your mind. Don't try to explain it by your words. When you let go of your body and mind and forget them completely, when you throw yourself into the Buddha's abode. When everything is done by the Buddha, when you follow the Buddha Mind without effort or anxiety - you break free from life's suffering and become the Buddha."
http://www.zenki.com/time01.htm

Bendowa, by Dogen
Discusses zazen; more specifically it tells how to perfect the Buddhist way through zazen.
http://www.zenki.com/bendo01.htm

Fukanzazengi (Rules for Zazen), by Dogen
"The true way is universal; so why is training and enlightenment differentiated?"
http://www.zenki.com/Fukanzazengi.html

Zazenyojinki (Points to Watch in Zazen), by Keizan
"Zazen clears up the human-being mind immediately and lets him dwell in his true essence. This is called showing one's natural face and expressing one's real self. It is freedom from body and mind and release from sitting and lying down. So think neither of good nor on evil. Zazen transcends both the unenlightened and the sage, rises above the dualism of delusion and enlightenment, and crosses over the division of beings and Buddha. Through zazen we break free from all things, forsake myriad relations, do nothing, and stop the working of the six sense organs."
http://www.zenki.com/Keizan01.htm

Fukanzazengi
"The way is completely present where you are, so of what use is practice or enlightenment? However, if there is the slightest difference in the beginning between you and the way, the result will be a greater separation than between heaven and earth. If th slightest dualistic thinking arises, you will lose your Buddha-mind...."
http://www.dx.sakura.ne.jp/~kameno/zazen/fukan.html

Fukan zazengi
Translated by the Stanford Zen Translation Project.
http://www.stanford.edu/group/scbs/sztp3/translations/gongyo_seiten/translations/part_3/fukan_zazengi.html

How to Practice
The essential idea of Zen practice.
http://www.io.com/~snewton/zen/practice.html

Soto Zen Ancestors in China
The recorded teachings of Tang-dynasty Chan masters Shitou Xiqian, Qingyuan Xingsi, Yaoshan Weiyen, and Yunyan Tansheng, translated into English.
http://home.att.net/~sotozen

The Ten Precepts
Dai Bosatsu version.
http://www.digitalzendo.com/?library&step=7



Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
 Submit a Site - Open Directory Project (modified) - Become an Editor

Modified contents copyright 2008. All rights reserved.