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 The Reconciliation of Zen and Pure Land Buddhism
 
                      
                         by 
                        Ven. Dr. Karuna Dharma  
                      
                    I am 
                      quite pleased to follow Rev. Thich Tam Tue after his beautiful 
                      lecture last Sunday on Amitabha Buddha. It seems so odd 
                      that Pure Land and Zen should be reconciled, since their 
                      philosophic basis and their view on life vary so much. But 
                      in China, Korea and Vietnam, these two schools did come 
                      to form a syncretic, holistic view of Buddhism. And this 
                      is the topic that I have chosen to speak on today. First, 
                      I should mention a little about the history of Buddhism 
                      in Vietnam. Buddhism came to Vietnam from India by sea in 
                      the first century of the common era, during the time of 
                      King Asoka, India's great Buddhist emperor. They brought, 
                      of course, Hinayana Buddhism, today known as Theravada Buddhism. 
                      Two hundred years later a Chinese community was well established. 
                      From a description of a Chinese convert, who wrote that 
                      the monks wore saffron robes, shaved their heads and ate 
                      only one meal a day, it is clear that Theravadan monks were 
                      serving their community. As you 
                      know, Bodhidharma came from India to China in 520 C.E. and 
                      introduced Zen (or the meditation school) to them. In the 
                      latter part of the sixth century (580 C.E.) a monk came 
                      from India, bringing Zen to Vietnam. His name was Vinitaruci 
                      (Ty ni da lu chi in Vietnamese). Two hundred fifty years 
                      later a Chinese monk entered Vietnam to fulfill his Bodhisattva 
                      vows, to save all living beings. This school became known 
                      as Vo Ngon Thong school. The third Zen school arrived at 
                      the beginning of the eleventh century and was known by its 
                      founder's name, Thao Duong. This school was a union of Zen 
                      and Pure Land. It was 
                      the seventeenth century when Lam Te Buddhism reached Vietnam. 
                      The founding master of this school is the famous Lin Chi, 
                      better known by his Japanese name, Rinzai. This school became 
                      known by the Vietnamese master who popularized the school, 
                      Lieu Quan. It became the most important school in Central 
                      Vietnam, and all Buddhist monks ordained at this temple 
                      are in the Lieu-Quan lineage line. Now, the lineage line 
                      does not necessarily tell you what their practice is. For 
                      example, Rev. Thich Tam-Thien's (Kusala) practice has a 
                      lot of Theravada elements in it. Rev. Thich Tam-An (Ruja) 
                      is totally a Theravada practice. Rev. Thich Tam-Tue (Rev. 
                      Tri Ratna Priya) practices more of the Zen-Pure Land tradition. 
                      Probably the only disciples here who practice primarily 
                      the Lieu-Quan form of Buddhism are myself, Thich Tam-Tri 
                      (Vajra) and Br. Jnana (Lynn). This mixed practice is typical 
                      of Vietnamese Buddhism itself where monks of different traditions 
                      practice together in the same temples: Theravada, Pure Land 
                      and Zen, with a little tantra mixed in for good measure. 
                      This is, I believe, also common in China and Korea. At any 
                      rate, the lineage of this temple is Lieu-Quan, a totally 
                      Zen tradition, coming directly from Lin Chi of China. It 
                      was popularized by monks who felt that Zen had become too 
                      polluted by Pure Land, and who wanted to revert to pure 
                      Thien or Zen. Ven. 
                      Thich Nhat-Hanh says of the Thien school in his book Lotus 
                      in a Sea of Fire: "In 
                      the history of Vietnamese Buddhism, Thien is by far the 
                      most important sect. The practice of Thien is by no means 
                      easy. It requires a profound and powerful inner life, long 
                      and persistent training, and a strong firm will. The attitude 
                      of Thien toward the search for truth and its view of the 
                      problem of living in this world are extremely liberal. Thien 
                      does nor recognize any dogma or belief that would hold back 
                      man's progress in acquiring knowledge or in his daily life. 
                      Thien differs from Orthodox religions in that it is not 
                      conditioned by any set of beliefs. In other words, Thien 
                      is an attitude or methodology for arriving at knowledge 
                      and action. For Thien the techniques of right eating and 
                      drinking, of right breathing and right concentration and 
                      meditation, are far more vital than mere beliefs. A person 
                      who practices Zen meditation does not have to rely on beliefs 
                      of hell, Nirvana, rebirth or causality; he has only to rely 
                      on the reality of his body, his psychology, biology, and 
                      his own past experiences of the instruction of Zen masters 
                      who have preceded him. His aim is to attain, to penetrate 
                      , to see. Once he has attained satori (insight) his action 
                      will conform by itself to reality." So, 
                      you see, this temple was founded by a man who identified 
                      himself as a Zen monk. In fact, I did not learn much of 
                      Pure Land until the refugees arrived from Vietnam. Dr. Thien-An, 
                      understanding Americans, taught us pure Zen, and that was 
                      his point of departure. To the Vietnamese, his point of 
                      departure was Amitabha Buddha and Pure Land thought. Now 
                      how could such divergent attitudes be found in one man and 
                      taught by him? Since 
                      Zen is more a methodology than a system of thought, although 
                      it certainly does have a system of thought, the self-power 
                      of Zen, contains the other power of Pure Land. Once you 
                      have self power, you must have other power. After all, the 
                      Recitation of the Buddha's name is used as a concentration 
                      exercise. This is where Chinese/ Vietnamese Pure Land differs 
                      from Japanese forms. The Vietnamese Pure Land adherents 
                      also meditate whenever they have the time to, whereas Jodosinshu 
                      says that meditation is a mere psychological trick, where 
                      you think you are capable of saving yourself. They say we 
                      must drop meditation and all thoughts of saving ourselves, 
                      and rely only upon Buddha Amitabha to save us. Their practice 
                      is to realize exactly who and what they are, without any 
                      rosy constructs placed upon their realization. If your 
                      practice is to devoid everything in your mind, does it matter 
                      is you use a koan, shikentaza or recreating the Buddha in 
                      your mind? All of these techniques work if they are done 
                      with great diligence and bring the meditator to the same 
                      point, to the satori experience (that is to insight, which 
                      Theravadans praise so much.) When 
                      you begin Pure Land practice, you think of the Buddha and 
                      his Pure Land as being apart from you. But as you practice 
                      it, slowly you come to realize that you and Amitabha are 
                      one and the same. You can experience the Pure Land right 
                      here and now. For 
                      instance, the great Japanese Zen man, D. T. Suzuki was fascinated 
                      by Pure Land. He studied it and translated their writings 
                      in to English. He came to the conclusion that Zen and Pure 
                      Land Buddhism are the same. And Dr. Thien-An certainly believed 
                      it.
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