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I am Catholic however I find a great deal of inspiration from zen stories. Is it fine for me to do this? They seem to also hold a great deal of wisdom.
I really like that imagery. I am very much a Catholic, however, because of my personal upbringing and life experiences I have many, many friends with a very wide range of belief systems. This is strictly my own opinion and I am sure there are many here who will disagree with me, but I believe God can teach us many lessons using any tools he sees fit. My kite soars far and high and my Catholic faith holds me steadfast. I too know that God will never let go of that string!!!I could probably say a lot more but for me being a Catholic Christian is a lot like being a kite held by God, who lets me wander as far as my string will allow, while never, ever letting me go.
I guess what I’m trying to say is, I personally don’t see how the story of emptying your cup (or any other zen story) could not benefit you. I am sure we will both be told otherwise.I am Catholic however I find a great deal of inspiration from zen stories. Is it fine for me to do this? They seem to also hold a great deal of wisdom.
I have very little knowledge of Zen stories, but you have me curious.I am Catholic however I find a great deal of inspiration from zen stories. Is it fine for me to do this? They seem to also hold a great deal of wisdom.
This statement would be an inaccurate depiction of Zen, or any other Buddhist tradition. If there is only the phenomenal world, and if there is nothing that “transcends” this phenomenal world, then there would be no possibility of enlightenment.Code:6) There is no other reality than this phenomenal world. Whereas the unenlightened only see the physical objects around them, the enlightened in addition to this see the Buddha nature within the phenomenal world.
Perhaps that is an influence of the Dao. I don’t know. The article claims that Chan is not pure Buddhism, but syncretic. Zen Buddhism would then presumably carry that forward in the same tradition.This statement would be an inaccurate depiction of Zen, or any other Buddhist tradition. If there is only the phenomenal world, and if there is nothing that “transcends” this phenomenal world, then there would be no possibility of enlightenment.
Thomas Merton wrote a book trying to see if there was anything in common between Zen Buddhism and Christianity called “Zen and the Birds of Appetite”. Last half of the book was very interesting and thought had some good points. I think the Catholic Church would agree that there are some good things in Buddhism, since the Catholic Church is not Manichaean, but I do think some books which do try to find common ground between Christianity and other religions can end up distorting true Christianity. Kind of a slippery slope maybe?I am Catholic however I find a great deal of inspiration from zen stories. Is it fine for me to do this? They seem to also hold a great deal of wisdom.
Zen certainly has Daoist influence, but even Daoism posits that the phenomenal world is not the only reality. The “Dao” itself symbolizes this non-phenomenal reality, as this apophatic statement from the Dao De Ching demonstrates: “The “Dao” that can be spoken is not the true Dao.”Perhaps that is an influence of the Dao. I don’t know. The article claims that Chan is not pure Buddhism, but syncretic. Zen Buddhism would then presumably carry that forward in the same tradition.
Perhaps some Daoists might view phenomenal realms as merely illusion, but overall (from my experience) Daoists seem to see the phenomenal realm as “real”, but not as real in the same sense that the Dao is real.My understanding of Daoism is that the phenomenal world is not reality at all; it is only an illusion, a manifestation of the Dao. Only the Dao is real. It “gives everything and asks nothing in return.”
Xuan
This statement would be an inaccurate depiction of Zen, or any other Buddhist tradition. If there is only the phenomenal world, and if there is nothing that “transcends” this phenomenal world, then there would be no possibility of enlightenment.Hesychios;7919945 said:6) There is no other reality than this phenomenal world. Whereas the unenlightened only see the physical objects around them, the enlightened in addition to this see the Buddha nature within the phenomenal world.
In the sense that nirvana is only realized within the context of samsara, then, yes, I would agree.I disagree. Hesychios has it right. The Buddha attained nirvana at age 35. He died age 80. For 45 years he was living in the same phenomenal world as everyone around him yet he was also in nirvana.
We are always ‘here and now’. If we cannot be enlightened ‘here and now’ then we cannot be enlightened at all. We are always ‘here’ and it is always ‘now’.
Samsara does not have the slightest distinction from Nirvana.
Nirvana does not have the slightest distinction from Samsara.
Whatever is the end of Nirvana, that is the end of Samsara.
There is not even a very subtle slight distinction between the two.
rossum
- Nagarjuna, Mulamadhyamakakarika 25:19-20
That is the first I have heard of that, unless you are talking about parinirvana, which long predates the Madhyamika.And insofar as nirvana in Madhyamika is not considered the highest state, then, yes, I would agree.
Agreed.In any event, the claim that “phenomenal reality is the only reality” implies, from a Western perspective, that the only reality is the reality of matter and energy as defined by modern science, a perspective that would be rejected, whether one is Madhyamika or Theravada.
Well, let me put it this way: Nirvana transcends Samsara, and yet there is not even a very subtle slight distinction between the two.That is the first I have heard of that, unless you are talking about parinirvana, which long predates the Madhyamika.