So you
On Jul 9, 2012 9:40 PM, "Joe" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Fine discussion; tnx.  I hope I understand your rephrasing.
>
> I think that all or most zen teachers can be counted on to do the right
thing for you, whatever you may need (to awaken, and to have the experience
of emptiness, and to maintain this).

In my experience coworkers, spouses, children, dogs and spiders can also be
counted on.  "when you first trod upon the Buddha path, 10,000
Boddhisattvas spring up to assist." Everything around constantly busts up
thoughts and points to this moment. the teachers laughing dismissal of
judging thoughts in dokusan is an.opportunity, as is the fumble footed
kinhin leader.

>
> If they sell water by the river, just wait until you have tasted it on
the day you awaken, and for the weeks and months afterwards, if you have
not already.  It's not special, once you have tasted it.

This picture is seems to point away from the fundamental wholeness of each
moment. Reading it, the whole panoply of something to be gained is
activated in my brain, till i laugh and sigh.

>
> As far as orthodoxy is concerned, all I mean to try to convey is that the
Buddhist scriptures support what zen teachers say, and teach, and that the
sutras confirm the experience of emptiness which zen students experience
through their work with their teacher and sangha in one's practice.

you don't say it out right, but it keeps sounding like without work we are
in danger of experiencing something other than emptiness.  which would
sound absurd!  next you will be claiming that if we work hard enough, we
will lose a real self.

>
> One can test one's awakening against the scriptures to see if it measures
up, in case a zen teacher is not around to do the testing.  But it's still
safest to see the teacher, especially when we are green.

Ha, that is funny. Hmm, let me measure this discrete thing.

>
> --Joe
>
> PS  Zen teachers recognize that there are "Outer Paths", which are not
Ch'an.  These are the esoteric schools, and even Tantric schools.  They may
emphasize development of sidhis, powers, etc., and tend to de-emphasize the
primacy of emptiness.  Although these things come along naturally with
Ch'an enlightenment, Ch'an de-emphasizes them, accepts them, but does not
teach ways to enhance or exploit them, and instead uniformly emphasizes
emptiness, from which spring (operate naturally...) wisdom, and compassion.
>
> Wisdom and Compassion, springing from emptiness, are the important things
in the Mahayana for a Bodhisattva; siddhis are not.
>
> Theravada is different, perhaps, along with Vajrayana; I don't know.
>
> --Joe
>
> > Let me rephrase my question:
> >
> > Is there orthodoxy, inside of which is the experience of ordinary
reality
> > and outside of which is delusion?
> >
> > the question falls apart in the face of the current moment.  I ask it
> > because your words seem to show a belief that Zen teachers do something
> > other than sell water by the river, or that there is some right Zen and
> > some other different stuff.   Sorry if i am confused.
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
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