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                    Self-Power 
                      and Other-Power  Zen Buddhism 
                  emphasizes man's ability to develop himself through his own 
                  inner strength and states that by his determination and constant 
                  practice he can attain the state of enlightenment and spiritual 
                  perfection known as Buddhahood. This reliance upon one's own 
                  effort as the way to enlightenment is known as "self-power," 
                  and the philosophy of self-power forms the basis for practice 
                  in both the Rinzai and Soto schools of Zen. However, Buddhism 
                  includes not only the conception of self-power, but also the 
                  conception of an "other-power," the compassionate power radiating 
                  from the heart of Amita Buddha, the glorified Buddha of the 
                  Great Vehicle. The philosophy of the "other-power" provides 
                  the central conception of Pure Land Buddhism, a devotional form 
                  of Buddhism which flourished in China, Vietnam, Korea and Japan. 
                  But the concept of the other-power is not altogether foreign 
                  to Zen. In Zen Buddhism there have been attempts to fuse the 
                  concepts of self-power and other-power into a synthetic whole, 
                  and the result of this synthesis has been very fruitful for 
                  both theory and practice. The union 
                  of self-power and other-power runs throughout the practice of 
                  Zen in China and Vietnam, and while the two main Japanese Zen 
                  sects, Rinzai and Soto, tend to emphasize self-power exclusively, 
                  there is a third sect called Obaku Zen, which takes the fusion 
                  of the two powers as its basic method of cultivation. Some scholars, 
                  such as D. T. Suzuki, do not regard the reliance upon the "other" 
                  as authentic Zen, but this author's viewpoint is different. 
                  Any method which leads to the calming and purification of the 
                  mind and the realization of our true nature can be considered 
                  as Zen. Zen is the Japanese equivalent of the Sanskrit word 
                  dhyana, "concentration" or "meditation." If the method of combining 
                  self-power and other-power as practiced in the syncretic Zen 
                  schools leads to the attainment of a concentrated mind and the 
                  opening of enlightenment, then that method is legitimate Zen. The methods 
                  of self-power and other-power were both originally taught by 
                  Sakyamuni Buddha, the founder of Buddhism. According to the 
                  teaching of the Buddha, every living being has a Buddha nature. 
                  Therefore, it is within the potential of every man to realize 
                  that Buddha nature and to become enlightened. But to reach that 
                  state is a tremendously difficult task, calling for dauntless 
                  courage and unflinching will power. Thus, very few people are 
                  capable of reaching enlightenment by themselves; very few have 
                  the required spiritual qualification. For the majority of people 
                  it is necessary to rely upon the help of others, and here we 
                  find the germ of the "other-power" schools. It is as if a boat 
                  were wrecked while floating down a river. Those who are good 
                  swimmers would be able to save themselves, but what are they 
                  to do who cannot swim as well! They must call for help and rely 
                  upon a better swimmer to bring them to the safety of the riverbank. 
                  In other words, they must rely upon someone else to save them. 
                  Similarly, while we all have the potential to become Buddhas, 
                  very few can accomplish Buddhahood through their own unaided 
                  striving. Most must rely upon the help of others to reach the 
                  safe shore of enlightenment. In Obaku 
                  Zen and the Pure Land schools, practitioners rely upon the compassionate 
                  power of Amita Buddha. This may sound rather remote from orthodox 
                  Zen, but if we consider the matter carefully, we will find that 
                  the difference between Obaku Zen and Pure Land Buddhism on the 
                  one hand, and the Rinzai and Soto Zen schools on the other, 
                  is only a difference of degree, not of kind. Practice in Rinzai 
                  and Soto requires the Master to teach the student how to sit, 
                  how to discipline his mind, how to work with the koan or practice 
                  shikantaza, and he depends upon the wisdom and spiritual skill 
                  of the Master to guide him to enlightenment. Without 
                  the constant prodding of the Master, how many people would reach 
                  satori! True, the Zen master cannot give enlightenment, but 
                  still he stands as a hand reaching to the disciple from the 
                  "other shore," ever ready to extend to him whatever help he 
                  requires. Now if the Zen master is able to assist in the struggle 
                  to reach enlightenment, then how much more help can we expect 
                  from the Master who has reached Perfect Enlightenment, the Buddha! 
                  The Zen master can help because he has realized a certain amount 
                  of wisdom and compassion. And so the Buddha can provide us with 
                  inexhaustible help because he has reached the state of perfect 
                  wisdom and infinite compassion. Even the very existence of the 
                  path of self-power is in a sense due to the "other-power" of 
                  the Buddha. For it was the Buddha who in his compassion taught 
                  the path to enlightenment and thereby made that path accessible 
                  to mankind. The Buddha is the person who helps us by showing 
                  us the Way, and we are the persons who work and practice it 
                  by ourselves. That is a union of self-power and other-power. 
                  If the self-power and other-power work together to assist each 
                  other, then we can go anywhere, reach anywhere we wish. By fusing 
                  these two powers in our daily practice, we can enter the gates 
                  of enlightenment and abide in the city of Nirvana. According 
                  to the Buddha, there were in the past other Buddhas who were 
                  his predecessors, and there will be in the future other Buddhas 
                  who will be his successors. The Buddha who is the primary focus 
                  of devotion in the Pure Land schools and in Obaku Zen is a Buddha 
                  of the remote past called Amita Buddha. Many aeons ago, the 
                  story told by Sakyamuni Buddha goes, there lived a Bodhisattva 
                  named Dharmakara, who practiced the meditations of compassion 
                  and loving-kindness. In his meditation he saw that all living 
                  beings are subject to suffering, to the sorrows of birth, old 
                  age, illness and death. Witnessing this suffering aroused in 
                  him a great compassion, and out of this compassion he vowed 
                  that when he attained Buddhahood he would create a special paradise 
                  in the Western region where there would be no more suffering. 
                  Through the power of his vow he would enable any living being 
                  recollecting his name and calling upon his help to be reborn 
                  in the Western paradise. Since the Bodhisattva Dharmakara, after 
                  several long aeons of self-cultivation, did attain Perfect Enlightenment 
                  and become the Buddha Amita, this means that his Great Vow is 
                  now a reality. The paradise has been established and is accessible 
                  to all who with a mind of sincere faith take refuge in the compassion 
                  and grace of Amita Buddha. The Western 
                  paradise is not, however, the final goal for the Pure Land Buddhist, 
                  not even for those who seek rebirth there. Rather, it is an 
                  intermediary abode where the most favorable conditions for self-cultivation 
                  have been set up and secured. While there are some men who by 
                  practicing can reach enlightenment in this world, many find 
                  difficult obstacles confronting them along the path. The necessity 
                  for work, the attractions of the senses, the threat of illness 
                  and infirmity and the gross entanglements of materiality all 
                  stand as barriers across our path. In the Western Paradise none 
                  of these barriers are present. Everything there is radiant, 
                  peaceful and beautiful. No defilements can be found, for all 
                  shines with purity. Therefore, the country of Amita Buddha is 
                  called the Pure Land. Those who are reborn into the Pure Land 
                  dwell in the midst of lotus flowers. They are always in the 
                  presence of Amita Buddha and the assemblies of Bodhisattvas 
                  presided over by the Bodhisattva Kwan-Yin, the embodiment of 
                  universal compassion. In the midst of these pure conditions 
                  it is easy to develop concentration and wisdom and attain Perfect 
                  Enlightenment. The way 
                  to attain rebirth in the Western Paradise is by devotion to 
                  Amita Buddha. This devotion is expressed by reciting the sutras 
                  that teach about Amita, by chanting His Name, by meditating 
                  upon His Image and by calling to mind His Wisdom, Virtue and 
                  Compassion. Those who are capable of placing single-minded faith 
                  in the Great Vow of Amita will enter the Pure Land where they 
                  will meet all favorable conditions for practice and never again 
                  fall into this world of suffering. This way is called the "easy 
                  path" (Jap. igyo) in contrast to the "difficult path" (nangyo) 
                  of self-power. The practice of the "easy path" is very popular 
                  in China, Vietnam, Korea and Mongolia, and also in the Pure 
                  Land schools of Japan, the Jodoshu and the Jodoshinshu. Belief 
                  in the "otherpower" of the Buddha also helps us to develop our 
                  selfpower. Therefore, in the Far East a form of practice was 
                  developed by Mahayana Buddhists which combines formal meditation 
                  with the chanting of the Buddha's name. In this 
                  method the practitioners sit before an image of the Buddha and 
                  chant the Buddha's name, quietly and calmly, while at the same 
                  time meditating upon the Buddha image or an internalized visualization 
                  of the Buddha. As the mind deepens in meditation, a point is 
                  reached where subject and object become one. No longer is the 
                  Buddha the object and the meditator the subject, but the meditator 
                  becomes one with the Buddha. When this happens, this is the 
                  state of "One Mind Samadhi," and here there is no longer any 
                  distinction between Zen and Pure Land, self-power or other-power, 
                  wisdom or compassion, for all has become merged into the brightness 
                  of the Infinite Light. According 
                  to a popular Buddhist belief, whenever a person aspires to become 
                  a Buddhist, a lotus-flower blossoms in the Pure Land. When a 
                  person becomes a Buddhist, this means that he is beginning to 
                  practice the way of wisdom, compassion and virtue, so by the 
                  operation of the law of cause and effect, in the perfect world 
                  created by the compassion of Amita Buddha, a lotus flower, the 
                  symbol of inner spiritual awakening, awaits his rebirth into 
                  the realm of spiritual perfection. The Western paradise is called 
                  the Pure Land because it is the land of purity, and all who 
                  are reborn there are pure. Everything in the Pure Land teaches 
                  the Dharma. Even the birds sing the songs of the Dharma, the 
                  rivers hum sutras as they go flowing by and flowers blossom 
                  in harmony with the blossoming of wisdom. In the Pure Land everything 
                  is a stepping stone on the way to Perfect Enlightenment. This concept 
                  is similar to the teaching of Zen. In Zen we do not learn only 
                  from a book or teacher, but from everything, and we do not learn 
                  only in a temple or a meditation center, but everywhere. For 
                  Zen is experience itself, the truth of life as it is ever flowing 
                  by and encompassing us on all sides. So if we approach life 
                  with an open mind, everything can be our teacher. The way of 
                  Zen is not a withdrawal from life, but the realization of truth 
                  in all the activities of everyday life. We can learn from our 
                  fellow men, from the arts. This is why Zen developed the cultivation 
                  of such arts as gardening, poetry, painting, tea ceremony and 
                  flower arrangement -- as expressions of and keys to the attainment 
                  of enlightenment. Zen has even found a vehicle in the martial 
                  arts. The first supporters of Zen when it was introduced from 
                  China to Japan were the samurai, the warrior class, who found 
                  in Zen's emphasis on self-control and equanimity of mind a method 
                  of discipline conducive to their own ends. Zen has also influenced 
                  the development of techniques of self-defense like judo and 
                  karate. The principle underlying these different applications 
                  of Zen is that any field of activity can serve as a means for 
                  realizing the truth of Zen. In the same way, according to the 
                  Pure Land teaching, everything in the Paradise of Amita Buddha 
                  is a teacher of the Dharma. There are 
                  three methods of meditation practiced in the combined Zen-Pure 
                  Land schools. The first is the chanting of the Buddha's name. 
                  The second method is the meditation upon the form of the Buddha. 
                  The follower chooses a particularly appealing image of the Buddha 
                  and begins by focusing upon that image until he can picture 
                  it clearly for himself; then he closes his eyes and tries to 
                  visualize the form of the Buddha internally. The third method 
                  is to meditate upon the virtues of the Buddha. The Buddha is 
                  the embodiment of perfect wisdom and infinite compassion. Either 
                  one or both of these virtues together may be taken as the subject 
                  of practice. If we choose the compassion of the Buddha, we reflect 
                  that the Buddha's compassion makes no distinction between subject 
                  and object or between enemies and friends, but pours down upon 
                  all equally. This compassion 
                  is different from ordinary love. Ordinary love works according 
                  to various discriminations: we love ourselves, but not others; 
                  our relatives, but not strangers; our friends, but not enemies. 
                  However, the compassion of the Buddha extends equally to everyone. 
                  Like the Buddha, we should extend our love and compassion outward 
                  to all alike, to everyone everywhere, without making any distinctions. 
                  Again, if we choose to meditate on the Buddha's wisdom, we imagine 
                  the light of wisdom radiating from the figure of the Buddha 
                  and growing larger and larger and brighter and brighter until 
                  it merges with our own inner light. At this point we and the 
                  Buddha become one. When this stage is reached, then this world 
                  will become transformed into the Pure Land, this Samsara become 
                  Nirvana, and all the bliss and purity of the Western paradise 
                  become realized in the here and now of everyday life. Here the 
                  Zen and Pure Land schools meet in that common center from which 
                  they both emanate, the One Mind of Buddha, which is our own 
                  true and permanent Essence of Mind.   |