So here is this extraordinary phenomenon. Now, let me sayâhaving presented you with all these fireworksâlet me say a few sober things about Zen as a historical phenomenon. Zen is a subdivision of MahÄyÄna Buddhism. And, as you know, that is the school of Buddhism which is concerned with realizing Buddha-nature in this world; not necessarily by going off to the mountains, or by renouncing family life, everyday life, et cetera, et ceteraâas if that were an entanglementâbut realizing, in the midst of life, the possibility of becoming a Buddha.
And so, the great ideal personality of MahÄyÄna Buddhism is the Bodhisattvaâa word now applied to somebody who has attained NirvÄáča, but instead of disappearing, comes back in many, many guises. Thereâs a famous painting of one of the Bodhisattvas in the form of a prostitute. And Bodhisattvas in Zen art are often represented as bums. Thereâs the beautiful one over there, painted by Sengai, of the bum Hoteiâor BĂčdĂ i in Chineseâwho is always immensely fat. And heâs saying, Buddha is dead. Maitreyaâwho is supposed to be the next Buddhaâhasnât come yet. I had a wonderful sleep and didnât even dream about Confucius. And heâs just stretching and yawning as he wakes up.
So Zen is MahÄyÄnaâIndian MahÄyÄna Buddhismâtranslated into Chinese and therefore deeply influenced by Taoism and Confucianism. Zen monks brought Confucian ideas to Japan. And the origins of Zen lie actually around the year 414 A.D., at which time a great Hindu scholar by the name of KumÄrajÄ«va was translatingâwith a group of assistantsâthe Buddha sĆ«tras into Chinese. One of his students taught that all beings whatsoever have the capacity to become Buddha, to become enlightenedâeven rocks and stonesâand that even heretics and evil-doers have the Buddha-nature, or Buddha potentiality, in them. And everybody said he was a dreadful heretic. But then a text called the NirvÄáča SĆ«tra came from India, which said precisely that. So everybody had to admit that this man was right. He also began to teach that awakening must be instantaneous; it's a kind of all-or-nothing state. I don't mean that there aren't degrees of its intensityâbut once you see the pinciple, you see the whole thing. As they say: when the bottom falls out of the bucket, all the water goes together. Those men, then, promulgated the way of sudden awakening. Bodhidharma came later, and he is supposedâin legendâto have been followed by a line of six patriarchs, of which he was the first.
The second was named EkaâIâm using the Japanese pronunciationâwho was formerly a general of the army. Then the third was SĆsan, who wrote the XĂŹnxÄ«n MĂng, which is the most marvelous little summary of Buddhism in verse. And so on, until they came to EnĆ, the sixth patriarch. You knowâperhaps, more familiarlyâhis Chinese name, HuĂŹnĂ©ng. He died in 715 A.D. Heâs the real founder of Chinese Zen; the man who synthesized the whole thing, and was theâat least, his collected discourses are contained in what is called the Platform SĆ«tra. And any student of Zen should read the Platform SĆ«tra.
But EnĆ really fused Zen with the Chinese way of doing things, and he emphasized very thoroughly: Do not think you are going to attain Buddhahood by sitting down all day and keeping your mind blank. Because a lot of those students who practice DhyÄnaâwhich is Sanskrit for ChĂĄn, which is Chinese for Zen, which is, in turn, Japaneseâit means âmeditationââor âcontemplation,â perhaps, would be a better translation in English. And everybody thought that the proper way to contemplate was to be as still as possible. But, according to Zen, that is to be a stone Buddha instead of a living Buddha.
Now, I can knock a stone Buddha on the head, clunk, and it has no feelings, and so itâs a stone Buddha. There was a famous Zen master called Tanka, who went to a little lonely temple on a freezing cold night. And he took the Buddha imageâone of the Buddha imagesâoff the altar, split it up, and made a fire. And when the attendant of the temple came in the morningâhorrified! Broke the image, and Tanka took his stick, started raking in the ashes. And the temple priest said, What are you looking for? He said, Iâm looking for the ĆarÄ«ra, that is to say, the jewels that are supposed to be found in the body of a genuine Buddha when heâs cremated. So the priest said, You couldnât expect to find ĆarÄ«ra from a wooden Buddha. In that case, said Tanka, let me have that other Buddha for my fire.
Thatâs, you see, the difference between living Buddha and stone Buddha. But a person who thinks that, in order to be awakened, you have to be heartlessâto have no emotions, no feelings, that you couldnât possibly lose your temper, or get angry, or feel annoyed, or depressedâthose people havenât got the right idea at all. If thatâs your ideal, said EnĆ, you might just as well be a block of wood or a piece of stone. What he wanted you to understand is that your real mindâwhile all those emotions are going onâis imperturbable. Just like when you move your hand through the sky you donât leave a track. The birds donât stain the blue when they pass by. And when the water reflects the image of the geese, the reflection doesnât stick there.
So, to be pure-minded, in the Zen wayâor clear-minded is a better way of translating itâis not to have no thoughts; itâs not a question of not thinking about dirty things. One great master of the Tang dynasty, when asked, What is Buddha? believe it or not, answered, A dried turd. So itâs not that kind of purity. It is purity, clarity, in the sense that your mind isnât sticky. You donât harbor grievances. You donât be attached to the past. You go with it, with life. Life is flowing all the time. That is the Tao: the flow of life. You are going along with it whether you want to or not. Youâre like people in a stream. You can swim against the stream, but youâll still be moved along by it and all youâll do is wear yourself out in futility. But if you swim with the stream, the whole strength of the stream is yours. Of course, the difficulty that so many of us have is finding out which way the stream is going. But certainly, as it goes, all the past vanishes. The future has not yet arrived. And there is only one place to be, which is here and now. And there is no way of being anywhere else. None whatever. If you understand that thoroughly, your task is finished. You then become instantaneous and also momentous.