Let the dead bury the dead was the statement I think. Your observation 
on what arrives on the American shores suggests that we also Give Life 
to Life to quote Dogen. This means let's not passively or slavishly 
worship what arrives but wholeheartedly enfuse it. Easier said than 
done--but there's the challenge.
Just a personal note. I will be back in the USA in April and would 
very much want to connect with Zen groups. I've been out of the US 
loop. Will be on the East Coast but also out West. Any reccomnedations 
are welcome.
DRWu


--- In [email protected], "Rev. Fudo Michael Koppang" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
.> wrote:
> Well Said. Much Of What Passes For Zen In The West Arrives Stillborn 
Or Severly Ill. I Have Pretty Much Given Up Worrying About All The 
Dead And Dying Zen, And Concentrate On Keeping What I Was Passed Alive 
And Healthy. Be Well, Fudo
> 
> --- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> 
> Thanks for the last few postings that put into perspective the sutra 
> reading. Zen is life and it is Buddhism. There is a context that the 
> sutras (in part ) offer but it needs to connect into life. As a 
> teacher of Buddhism at University and a resident of Asia for many 
> years I can say that the Sutras are a part of practice but reliance 
on 
> them as the primary element of Buddhism has killed Buddhism. Nothing 
> is sadder than seeing the heartfelt questions and struggles of young 
> people in Buddhist lands dismissed by arrogant scholar monks "when 
you 
> pass grade 9 in pali studies then you know the answer." The 
> alternative is not mushy New Agism but teachings that are 
intergrated 
> into life experience both on the part of the teacher and yes by us 
the 
> students. Without a mature practice (applying mindfulness in daily 
> life) most sutra reading is prajna (wisdom) killing, an evasion of 
> activating intelligence in favor of becoming a know-it-all 
authority. 
> All great revivals in Buddhism while not rejecting sutras spoke from 
> non-conceptual wisdom and challenged student to do the same. Sadly 
> american buddhism is already half dead because it is the word game 
of 
> an over educated elite (I include myself) that has made an ego 
> business of it.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Noble Eightfold Path: Right View, Right Intention, Right Speech, 
Right  Action, Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, Right Concentration, 
Right Livelihood 
> Yahoo! Groups Links
> 
> 
> 
>  
> 
> 
> 
> ------------------
> Rev. Fudo Michael Koppang
> --------------------
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