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Zen

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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


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Talks on Zen Practice and Meditation
Talks on Zen practice and meditation by American Soto Zen teachers in the lineage of Shunryu Suzuki, Roshi
http://www.intrex.net/chzg/talklist.htm

Dharma Discourses from Zen Mountain Monastery
A Dharma Discourse or Dharma Talk is a presentation of a traditional Zen koan - an apparently paradoxical statement that challenges who we think we are, what the nature of the reality is, and what the true activity of our life is. Discourses by Abbot John Daido Loori, Bonnie Myotai Treace Sensei, and Geoffrey Shugen Arnold Sensei.
http://www.mro.org/zmm/dharmateachings/index.html

Archive of Dharma Talks from The Village Zendo
"Tireless Lotus", "On Anger", "On Faithmind", "Medicine and Sickness"
http://www.villagezendo.org/sections/talks.htm

Training story for the month
Trevor Leggett's Web site provides information about the books of Trevor Leggett on the subjects of Upanshadic yoga, Zen and Budo. Trevor Leggett's books also cover Judo and Shogi.
http://www.leggett.co.uk/zsm.htm

The Zen Project
Large collection of Zen talks by various Zen teachers.
http://www.zenproject.faithweb.com/

Talks by Zoketsu Norman Fischer
Zoketsu Norman Fischer teaches at the Everyday Zen Foundation.
http://www.everydayzen.org/edz/

Dharma Talks by Gilbert Gutierrez, Riverside Ch'an Meditation Group
Large number of talks by Gilbert Gutierrez, who has studied and practiced meditation for over twenty five years and is a student of Venerable Ch'an Master Sheng-yen. Many of the articles have a particularly Ch'an (Zen) flavor while others are more general in their approach to Buddhist principles and practice.
http://geocities.com/Athens/Styx/2905/chanarticles.html

Dharma Talks by Zoketsu Norman Fischer
Extensive collection of talks by the teacher of the Everyday Zen Foundation.
http://www.everydayzen.org/edz/teachings.asp

Dharma Talks from the Albuquerque Zen Center
Taking Refuge, Mindfulness, Faith in Everyday Practice, Shin (Heart or Mind), Sitting Practice, Our Nature, Self and No-self, Peace of Mind.
http://www.azc.org/azc-talk-!menu.html

Love & Marriage: Zen Buddhist Reflections
A dharma talk on Buddhist marriage, by James Ishmael Ford, Sensei.
http://lifestylenutritionmanagement.com/loveandmarriage.htm

WZEN.org
The audio streaming site of Dharma Communications, is an original webcast of talks by teachers of the Mountains and Rivers Order.
http://wzen.org/

Talks by Nyogen Yeo, Sensei
Mind is Buddha, The Great Mystery, Waiting for No One.
http://www.hazymoon.com/teaching.htm

Dharma Talks by Taigen Dan Leighton
Given at Mountain Source Sangha.
http://www.mtsource.org/dharmatalks.html

Dharma Talks by P'arang Geri Larkin
Given at Still Point Zen Buddhist Temple.
http://www.stillpointzenbuddhisttemple.org/dharma_talks/index.htm

Original Mind
By Shodo Harada Roshi. "In Buddhism, its often said that humans' Original Mind, that Mind we have at birth, is like a clear mirror, pure and uncluttered, with nothing in it whatsoever. Without shape, form or color. If something comes before it, the mirror only reflects it, but the mirror itself gives birth to nothing. If what has been reflected leaves, its image disappears, but the mirror itself loses nothing. Within the mirror there is no birth, no death. No matter how dirty a thing is which is reflected, the mirror doesn't get dirty, nor does it become beautiful because something beautiful is reflected in it. The mirror doesn't get dirty, clean or beautiful. Just because something is reflected doesn't mean anything increases in it either, nor does anything ever decrease. A mirror is without increase or decrease."
http://www.itteki-ji.org/origmind.html

On Questioning
Questioning as the core of Zen
http://www.sfzc.com/Pages/Library/onquestioning.html

The Way of Zazen, by Shodo Harada Roshi
"If you then continue to practice zazen day after day, kensho will be realized as certainly as you hit the ground when you strike at it. Put everything you have into it."
http://zen.columbia.missouri.org/wayofzazen.html

Dharma Talks from Sweetwater Zen Center
By Anne Seisen Saunders: "Not Knowing is Most Intimate," "The Path is Through Your Self," "If You Practice You Will See It," "The Flower of No Separation." By Taizan Maezumi, Roshi "Life and Death."
http://swzc.org/DharmaTalks.htm

Nonin Chowaney's Dharma Talks
Dharma Talks given by Nonin Chowaney of the Nebraska Zen Center. "Cooking the Soup", "Emptying Your Cup", "Everyday is a Good Day", "Intimacy", "Karma", "Purifying the Mind", "Putting Our Burden Down" and "Renunciation".
http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/Temple/7228/dharma.html

The Future of the Zen Sangha in the West
Talk by Ishmael Ford, Sensei.
http://luckymojo.com/esoteric/religion/buddhism/zen/zeninamjf.txt

Dharma Talks of Korean Seon (Zen) Masters
Talks by Seon Master Hye Am Sunim, Seon Master Seung Shan, Seon Master Tansung Sunim, Seon Master Nock Won, Seon Master Won Dam,Seon Master Byuk Ahm,Seon Master Chung Han, Seon Master Kwan Eung, Seon Master Ilta, Seon Master Seung Su, Seon Master Do Chon, and Seon Master Bi Rong.
http://www.buddhapia.com/eng/talk/

Talks by Les Kaye
Compassion without Politics, Everyone is Lovable, Non-achievement, Walking past the candy store, On Suzuki Roshi.
http://www.howardwade.com/kannon_do/kdo_talks.html

Dharma Talks from the Clouds in Water Zendo
What is Zen?; Remembering the Heart, Transforming Fear; The Call of the Whip-Or-Will.
http://www.cloudsinwater.org/dharmatalk.htm

Dharma Discources by Kobun Chino Otagawa Roshi
Abbot of Jikoji (Los Gatos, CA), Hokoji (Taos, New Mexico) and Kaikyoshi of the Soto School in the USA.
http://members.aol.com/kyosan1/kobun.htm

Vien Giac Buddhist Temple's list of teachings
20+ dharma talks
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Metro/1494/

Introduction to Zen
By Rev. Denko-San. "Zazen is something that evolves all the time, and basically, if you want to get anywhere with Zen training you just have to sit down and see what happens, see what zazen is today. Tomorrow it's something else. The next day it's something else, next year it's something else. It grows and evolves."
http://www.pinehillzendo.org/introz.html

Talks by Nomon Tim Burnett
Tim Burnett has been a student of Zoketsu Norman Fischer since 1987 when he was a resident at San Francisco Zen Center's Green Gulch Farm.
http://www.bellinghamzen.org/dharmatalk.html

On the Heart Sutra
A talk by Sojun Mel Weitsman, Abbot of the Berkeley Zen Center.
http://www.intrex.net/chzg/mel3.htm

Dharma Talks by Ch'an Master Hsing Yung
Buddhist Perspective on Cause and Condition; Buddhist Perspective on Time and Space; Buddhism's View on Deeds and Behaviors; Buddhism's View on the Wheel of Rebirth; Buddhism for the Perfection of This Life.
http://www.ibps.org/english/lectures.htm

Teachings of Chan Patriarch Hsuan Hua
Talks and commentaries on sutras.
http://online.sfsu.edu/~rone/Buddhism/VenHua/hua.htm

Impermanence
By Thich Nhat Hanh.
http://www.serve.com/cmtan/buddhism/Treasure/impermanence.html

Bathing a Newborn Buddha
By Thich Nhat Hanh. "No boundary exists between the sacred and the profane."
http://www.serve.com/cmtan/buddhism/Treasure/bathing.newborn.html

Venerable Master Kyung-Ho's Inspirational Talk
Master Kyung-Ho (1849-1912 CE) is considered one of the most significant Korean Son teachers of the modern era.
http://www.io.com/~snewton/zen/kyung-ho.html

Dharma Talks from Hakun-un-ji Zen Center
"Posture and Kinhin", "Creative Tension".
http://www.zenarizona.com/talks.htm

Transcripts of Dharma Talks at Plum Village
Plum Village transcriptions of the Venerable Thich Nhat Hanh's dharma talks. New talks are available by email subscription.
http://www.plumvillage.org/DharmaDoors/transcripts/transcripts_of_dharma_talks.htm

Zen Center of Los Angeles, Dharma Talk Archives
A large collection of talks given at ZCLA.
http://www.zencenter.com/news/DharmaTalkArchives.htm

Zen in America
By Sojun Mel Weitsman.
http://www.stanford.edu/group/scbs/Dogen/Dogen_Zen_papers/Weitsman.html



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