Master Dogen's Shobogenzo: A Layman's Reading
Hello, I'm Harry, a student of Zen Buddhism with my teachers the late Gudo Nishijima Roshi and Peter Rocca Sensei. I live and work a lay person's life in Belfast.
On this blog I'll be reading and reflecting upon Shobogenzo, the masterwork of Zen Master Eihei Dogen, the 13th century philosopher-monk and founder of Soto Zen Buddhism in Japan.
Shobogenzo ('True Dharma Eye Treasury") is an ambitious literary expression of Master Dogen's zazen practice as he brings his 'Dharma eye' to bear on such things as Buddhist teachings, Zen koans, the central practice of zazen, and essential themes including time and life/death and what it is to exist in this dance of coming and going, realisation and delusion, and also what it is to experience in our practice of zazen that which we are prior to the dance of words or ideas or any opposing, conditioned things at all.
Master Dogen, besides being a gifted philosopher, was a poet who dared to attempt to express what many Zen Masters refrained from talking about. His Zen Buddhism is affirmative and conversational, exploratory, and challenging. He valued language as a means of liberation and clarification that could help us go beyond all fetters to free our body and mind from suffering, while simultaneously freeing the body-mind of all beings and all things.
"The whole Universe in all ten directions is just one human body."
I'll begin with one of Master Dogen's most enduring and famous chapters from Shobogenzo, a piece originally written for a lay student of his. It's called Genjokoan, sometimes translated as 'The Koan Realised' or 'Reality Realised'.
First post coming soon...
I am waiting with anticipation, especially as I love Genjokoan...!
ReplyDeleteThanks for dropping by, Angela.
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