Dragoon6779,

Welcome to the Yahoo! Zen Forum!

You ask interesting and I think important questions, but if others respond to 
your post I think you'll find there are differing opinions on this.  Following 
is my opinion:

First of all you speak of 'Zen' and 'Buddhism' as if they were the same thing.  
In my opinion they are not.  I practice zen but do not claim to be Buddhist.  I 
do not believe, as most do, that zen is a dependent sub-set (or sect) of 
Buddhism.

So with that preamble I will answer your questions, asked directly and implied:

'zen' (lower case 'z') is not a subset of any religion (like Buddhism) nor is 
it a religion itself.  'zen' is neither non-theistic or theistic.  'zen' is 
a-theistic.  Theism is just another dualistic concept created by your 
discriminating mind (intellect) and is therefor illusory.  The same can be said 
of the dualism diesm/non-diesm.

'Zen' (upper case 'Z') is a shortened form of 'Zen Buddhism'.  I beleive Zen 
Buddhsim to be a Buddhist expression of zen - not a subset of Buddhsim.  It's 
zen with all the Buddhist bells and whistles stuck all over it.

I will defer to those who claim to be Buddhsit as to whether Zen (Buddhsim) or 
Buddhism proper is theist or diest or not.  I can tell you that I live in 
Thailand where about 95% or the people claim to be Buddhsit (Theravada), and 
they certainly practice Buddhism as if it were theist.  I can also tell you 
that most Westerners will claim Buddhsim is not theist and more of a philosophy 
- in spite of what the vast majority of Buddhist throughout the world practice.

...Bill!



--- In [email protected], "dragoon6779" <dragoon6779@...> wrote:
>
> Hi,
> 
> I am interested in Zen. I have read that Buddhism is non-theistic, and I have 
> been told that actually it is not that Buddhism is non-theistic, rather 
> Buddhism (originally in a pragmatic approach) does not take a theistic or 
> non-theistic stance. I know there are many who consider themselves both 
> Christian and Zen, but given the 4 Noble Truths, and the 4 Seals, I am not 
> sure how it is reconciled, furthermore, Deism is not the same as theism of 
> course, so I wonder if the apparent problems are reduced if not gone by 
> holding to deism. I have searched high and low online and cannot find much. 
> thank you
>




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