Read Zen's Chinese Heritage: The Masters and Their Teachings Online

Authors: Andy Ferguson

Tags: #Religion, #Buddhism, #Zen, #Biography & Autobiography, #Religious, #Philosophy

Zen's Chinese Heritage: The Masters and Their Teachings (28 page)

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Damei said, “Go now. Come back tomorrow.”

The next day Jiashan again came to Damei and raised the question of the previous day.

Damei said, “The one who’s intimate doesn’t ask. The one who asks isn’t intimate.” (Years later, when Jiashan was abbot, he said, “At that time I lost my eye.”)

One day, Damei suddenly said to his disciples, “When it comes it can’t be held back. When it goes it can’t be pursued.”

When Damei paused, the monks heard the sound of a squirrel.

Damei said, “It’s just this thing! Not some other thing! Each of you! Uphold and sustain it well. Now I pass away.”

Upon saying these words, Damei left the world.

([Later,] the eminent teacher Yongming Yanshou praised Damei, saying, “When Damei first attained the Way, he said, ‘Mind is Buddha.’ At the very end he taught the monks, ‘It’s just this, not something else.’ The source of the myriad dharmas penetrates the thousand saints’ bones. Truth, though transformed, is unmoving. How would one halt its coming forth and passing away?”)

GUIZONG ZHICHANG

 

GUIZONG ZHICHANG (n.d.) was a disciple of Mazu. He came from ancient Jiangling (located in modern Hubei Province). Almost nothing is recorded of Guizong’s early life, nor are the dates of his birth and death known. After leaving Mazu, he lived near Mt. Lu at Guizong Temple.
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During his lifetime he gained considerable fame as an expounder of Zen. When the famous Tang dynasty poet and statesman Bai Zhuyi served as the magistrate of Jiangzhou, he often visited and paid his respects to Guizong.

Master Zhichang of Guizong Temple of Mt. Lu entered the hall and addressed the monks, saying, “The virtuous of former times were not without knowledge and understanding. Those great adepts were not of the common stream. People these days are unable to be self-empowered, nor can they stand alone. They just idly pass the time. All of you here, don’t make the error of employing your mind. No one can do it for you. Moreover, there is no ‘place’ where the mind can be used. Don’t be seeking it somewhere else. Up to now you have been acting in accordance with someone else’s understanding. Your own speech is completely obstructed. The light does not shine through. There are obstructions blocking your vision.”

A monk asked Zen master Guizong, “What is the essential mystery?”

Guizong said, “No one can understand it.”

The monk said, “How about those who seek it?”

Guizong said, “Those who seek it miss it completely.”

The monk said, “How about those who don’t seek it?”

Guizong said, “Go! There’s no place for you to use your mind.”

The monk said, “Then, is there no expedient gate through which you can help me to enter?”

Guizong said, “Kwan Yin’s sublime wisdom can save the world from suffering.”

The monk said, “What is Kwan Yin’s sublime wisdom?”
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The master struck the top of the incense urn three times with his staff and said, “Did you hear that or not?”

The monk said, “I heard it.”

Guizong said, “Why didn’t I hear it?”

The monk was silent.

The master then took his staff and got down from the seat.

An unusual story about Guizong is entitled “The Causation of Guizong Chopping the Snake.”

One day a scriptural monk came to visit Guizong as he was weeding the garden with a hoe.
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Suddenly, a snake appeared. Guizong took the hoe and chopped it in two.

The monk said, “Long have I heard that Guizong was a crude-mannered teacher.”

Guizong said, “Are you crude or am I crude?”

The monk then asked, “What is ‘crude’?”

Guizong held the hoe upright in the air.

The monk said, “What is ‘refined’?”

Guizong then assumed a posture to chop the snake.

The monk said, “If you let it, it will go away by itself.”

Guizong said, “If I let it go away, how could you see me chop the snake?”

The monk was speechless.

Yunyan came to visit. Guizong assumed a pose of drawing a bow at him. After a long pause, Yunyan assumed a pose of drawing a sword.

Guizong said, “You’re too late!”

Guizong entered the hall and addressed the monks, saying, “I want to speak about Zen. All of you, gather around.”

The monks gathered closely around Guizong.

Guizong said, “Listen to Bodhisattva Kwan Yin’s practice. Its goodness extends everywhere.”

Someone asked, “What is Kwan Yin’s practice?”

Guizong pointed with his finger and said, “Do you still hear it?”

The monks said, “We hear it.”

Guizong said, “What is this pack of fools looking for?”

He took his staff and chased the monks out of the hall. With a big laugh he went back to the abbot’s quarters.

A monk was leaving the monastery.

Guizong asked him, “Where are you going?”

The monk said, “I’m going everywhere to study the five flavors of Zen.”

Guizong said, “Everywhere else has five Zen flavors. Here I only have one-flavored Zen.”

The monk said, “What is one-flavored Zen?”

Guizong hit him.

The monk said, “I understand! I understand!”

Guizong said, “Speak! Speak!”

BOOK: Zen's Chinese Heritage: The Masters and Their Teachings
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