• HANDOKAI - Walking the Zen Christian Path

    Publicado el 30 Julio 2009 admin No hay comentarios

    Selections from the writings and talks of
    Thomas G. Hand

     

    Edited by Judy Howe Hayes
    Thomas G. Hand, S.J. (1920.2005)
    c 2006 by Judy Howe Hayes. Second revised edition of
    original 2004 edition. For information, address the editor at
    jhayes@unm.edu. Proceeds from the sale of this publication go to
    the Mercy Center East-West Meditation Program.

     

     

     

    Contents

    Crossing Over Together.Editor’s introduction v
    Handokai: .Crossing Over Together Community. ix
    I A Paradigm Shift 1
    From Ego-centered to Source-centered . . . . . . . . . . 3
    Constituents of Reality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
    Evolution of Consciousness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
    God.In_nite and Finite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
    A Bi-polar God? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    The Trinity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
    The In_nite God and Finite Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
    Personal God.The Responsible One . . . . . . . . . . 16
    Is Eternity in Time? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
    Whom Do We Follow? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
    II The Flow of Love 23
    Into the Light . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
    Faith, Flow and the Reign of God . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
    Inside-out Love . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
    Divine Love As Self-giving . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
    Unconditional Love . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
    The Flow of Freedom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
    The Bodhisattva Christ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
    Body Energy Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
    Repentence and Forgiveness of Sin . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
    iii
    The Flow of Grace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
    Grace or Payment.We Can’t Have Both . . . . . . . . . 46
    III Walking the Zen Christian Path 49
    A Better Christian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
    A Revelation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
    Freedom from Sin in Meditation . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
    Entering the Heart through Zen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
    The Zen Tradition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
    Empty Being, Wondrous Being! . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
    The Ordinary Mind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
    Direct Experience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
    Following the Breath, Following the Heart . . . . . . . . 63
    Nature Communion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
    Contemplative Awareness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
    The Mystery of Ch’ang and Freedom from Fear . . . . . 71
    A Zen K¯oan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
    Inside Mu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
    A Gospel K¯oan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
    .Come and See. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
    Entering the Reign of God . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
    The Coming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
    K¯uk¯o Nyorai . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
    Coming into a New Mode of Perception . . . . . . 90
    .Behold I Make All Things New. . . . . . . . . . 91
    In the Here and Now . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
    Clouds and Sky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
    God As Manifest Activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
    Be Born Again from the Empty Sky Womb . . . . 102
    IV Words Out Of Silence 105
    Dawn Wisdom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
    A Christening Meditation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
    The Deer’s Cry: A Pilgrim’s Poem . . . . . . . . . . . . 115

    CROSSING OVER TOGETHER

     

    Editor’s Introduction
    .O Beauty, ever ancient, ever new. .St. Augustine
    During the past several decades, many sincere Western spiritual
    seekers faced the East and did not look back until an impulse arose
    from within calling them to return to their roots, or to at least reexamine
    the traditions they had left behind. The interfaith dialogues
    and ecumenical discussions that have been going on within the religious
    community over the years to address the issues of spiritual
    identity and practice in this pluralistic age have revealed the inner
    con_icts that some have experienced. Among many of those who
    did not look to the East for answers but stayed within their Christian
    tradition, there had also been growing dissatisfaction as they longed
    for a deeper interpretation of the scriptural texts they had relied on
    for so long for inspiration.

    The need for a new examination of some fundamental questions
    began to arise as the teachings of Eastern spiritual traditions
    and terms associated with their practices became integrated into the
    vocabulary of these seekers. With this in_uence, some new de_nitions
    of old terms began to take shape within the meditation commuv
    nity. As these sincere seekers tried to reconcile issues of faith and
    practice, they also began seeking supportive spiritual communities.
    Thomas G. Hand, S.J., whose evolutionary and at times revolutionary
    ideas are presented here, has provided a home for such seekers.
    Through the thoughtful and inspired teachings of Fr. Hand, we
    have come to understand even more fully how spiritual life is a process
    of revelation which involves an evolution of consciousness and
    transformation of perception. The new heaven and the new earth
    that can be experienced is a coming to the fullness of Presence that
    is our fundamental nature, an all-inclusive expansion of awareness
    in which we always .live and move and have our being.. In fact,
    it is this awareness that is Being itself and we need look no further
    than our experience as it arises moment to moment to enter into
    this .reign of God.. Fr. Hand has always encouraged the group of
    meditators who sit together as the Handokai at the Mercy Center
    in Burlingame, California, in Japan, and other locations, to simply
    expand their awareness within their own paths. This is done without
    the burden of doctrine or dogma that one often feels one must
    conform to in a spiritual community.

    Although well grounded and professed in the Christian tradition,
    his twenty-nine years in Japan, six of them having been spent
    in Zen meditation training with Yasutani and Yamada R¯oshi, have
    profoundly in_uenced his thinking, given him a unique understanding
    of the deeper message of the Christian scriptures and opened up
    new possibilities for interpretation of the traditional teachings. He
    suggests that it is essential that the New Testament be read not necessarily
    as a factual account of external events, but as a manual for
    a coming to the internal experience of enlightenment. By doing so,
    we discover that it is by entrusting ourselves to and sharing in the
    enlightened state of Christ, right here and now, that we may attain
    freedom, rather than through the promise of a salvation to be realized
    in some distant future.
    Through the years, Fr. Hand has always indicated in his talks
    that he is a fellow traveler on the path and that truths are provisional,
    representing an aspect or stage in the continuing process of
    the evolution of perception, a journey that we are all on together.
    It is because he has taught with the humble attitude of being a participant
    in this process and with a willingness to share his insights
    openly, honestly and fearlessly, that so many consider him to be
    not only a spiritual mentor and teacher, but a friend in a continuing
    re_nement of thought and unfolding revelation of a more global
    approach to religion for this stage in our evolution.

    I am humbled and inspired by this project of compiling a small
    portion of the teachings presented in the talks and writings of
    Fr. Hand for students to re_ect upon. This project is being done in
    2004 as part of the celebration of the 20th anniversary of the Handokai,
    and for the friends and students who together celebrate and
    commemorate the life and work of its founder, who has affectionately
    become known simply as Hando. This effort is being made in
    gratitude for the spiritual home he has created wherever the group
    of Handokai meditators gather in the spirit of openness and sincerity
    to explore the many facets of spiritual life. This is a home where all
    can engage in meditation and the spiritual quest without prejudice
    or demands of any kind, where all can sit together in one heart, and
    for which we are all grateful.

    .J. H. H.

    Editor’s note

    The process of editing this small portion of the lectures and writings
    of Fr. Hand has been challenging. First, as spoken language and
    written language are often quite different, the problem of making the
    changes necessary for the text to _ow, and not change the meaning,
    provided ample opportunity for re_ection. In addition, there was so
    much material to choose from that I just let my intuition guide me
    as to what to include in this small book. Throughout the process,
    my intention has been to preserve the language and the characteristic
    way in which Fr. Hand expressed himself in his talks, while at
    the same time removing repetitions that are always present in lectures
    and combining and re-arranging sentences to create a smooth
    presentation. I have also entered a few passages from other sources
    which he has used over the years.

    To keep the integrity of Fr. Hand’s message, presenting the complete
    talks would have been the ideal. However, for the sake of
    including as many of his thoughts as possible, it was necessary to
    minimize the text and combine his teachings from various sources.
    Although I was kindly encouraged by him to make this project my
    own, I hope that through the editing process I have not inadvertently
    changed the meaning of a sentence or a phrase, and that despite the
    editing, we can still clearly hear his voice and his heart speaking to
    us from these pages.

    Since the _rst printing of this book, our dear teacher and friend
    has .crossed over.. Although we miss his physical presence, we
    rejoice with him in his passing.

    HANDOKAI

    Crossing Over Together Community.

    The name given to the meditation group and the program developed
    by Hando is Handokai which means .together we gather together in
    crossing over to new life..
    HAN The meaning of the _rst character is .to accompany.. It is
    formed of the character for .person. and the character for
    .half..
    DO The second character is .to cross over. and has a rich variety
    of meanings. One image is to cross over the stormy seas of
    life to the new life of heaven. Another way of understanding
    this is to cross over the relative world to the Absolute,
    to establish one’s consciousness in both realms and then simply
    move along in the _ow of non-dualism. Again, it means

    ix
    to cross from our egocentric, dualistic, subject-object awareness
    to the non-dual self-awareness of Being itself, i.e. Divine
    Consciousness.
    KAI The third character indicates a meeting, party, society or
    group.
    Combined, these ideograms indicate we are a .crossing over
    together society.. This is what we are all about. We are on the pilgrimage
    together, and this makes all the difference. The Zen teacher
    D¯ogen says that in just sitting we manifest enlightenment, in the
    sense that every action is of the Divine Source. In the same way, by
    just sitting and being together on the path, we express and bring to
    our awareness our most intimate reality-our oneness.
    .We are only whole when walking with another/others..

    PART I
    A PARADIGM SHIFT

    FROM EGO-CENTERED TO SOURCE-CENTERED

    After living and working for so many years in Japan, in late spring
    of 1984 while spending some time in California, it became clear
    that I was not to return to Japan. It was then that I joined the staff
    of Mercy Center, Burlingame. Fifty years before, during the Great
    Depression, these very Sisters had taken me into their school for
    almost nothing. It was high time to directly pay back a little of the
    debt I owed them. This man with one foot on either side of the
    Paci_c was now to become a bridge on the spiritual path joining
    East and West to, I hoped, bene_t both.

    As I gradually adapted to life back in the U.S., one thing was
    clear.that there is a deeply felt dissatisfaction in the hearts of
    many Christians. For example, the movements begun by the Vatican
    Council II for a greater place for the laity at every level of
    the Catholic church life seemed to me to be engendering in thousands
    of people: (1) a longing for deeper spirituality, and (2) for
    those who had gone to Eastern religions to ful_ll this longing, a
    need to integrate all that they had experienced together with their
    Christian roots. Ever since coming to Mercy Center, I have been
    working with such people in a highly ecumenical and inter-religious
    effort toward the revitalization of both our humanity and Christianity.
    There are many movements in Christian churches today that
    are working toward renewal. I am convinced that one of the most
    important is that which learns from the profound enlightenment of
    Eastern spiritual heritages. Like all elements in creation, Christianity
    must evolve.

    What appeared to me at that time was that what I was observing
    was all about paradigm shift.the need for a new paradigm on
    which to build a whole new world. The movement toward such a
    shift continues to swell around the world. Before looking at the
    components of this in detail, I feel that we need to focus more in
    general on the paradigm shift itself. How big a shift is needed?
    Where is it to come from? How can it happen? Is it even allowed
    and is it essential to the revitalization of Christianity?

    For a profound paradigm change, the integrating center of the
    construct must change. With the Copernicus revolution, the center
    shifted from the earth to the sun, and a whole new and more real
    experience of our world entered human consciousness. In the matter
    of our experience of self, for well over 4,000 years the human ego
    has been more or less the center of our vision of reality for most
    of humanity. All during this time, the voices of Buddha, Lao Tzu,
    Moses, the great Hindu mystics, Christ Jesus, Mohammed, and all
    such enlightened beings have proclaimed the error of egocentrism,
    but its widespread tyranny has continued right up to the present.
    Jesus’ message was to deny your ego self, and .Follow me. into the
    reign of God. But how few have really done this?

    There is much we can learn from the great Copernican paradigm
    change of over 400 years ago. For centuries and centuries, the earth
    was taken to be the center of the universe. Sun, moon, planets,
    and stars were seen to move around it in perfectly circular, regular
    orbits. The earth was _xed in its position and everything was seen
    as related to it. That was geo-centrism. From very early times in
    the West, there were people who saw the error of this prevailing
    cosmological paradigm.

    The fundamental teaching about the human self was presented
    by Jesus two millennia ago, yet ego-centrism remains rampant.
    How long will this time lag continue in the case of the shift from
    the little local self to the God-centered paradigm for human living?
    I believe that we have the opportunity for a huge reduction of this
    lag as we move into the 21st century. The astounding acceleration
    of change even in the 20th century is apparent to everyone. However,
    because of the internet and other amazing means of communication,
    the rate of change increases by quantum leaps each year.

    The actual possibility of a massive paradigm shift for all humanity
    is right here before us. It is all tremendously exciting. What must
    we do to insure its appropriate realization? There is no question that
    what is called for is a profound shift away from the model of human
    life that is built on the ego-centric consciousness of our day to a
    wholeness-centered life. This may sound a bit vague, but it should
    become clearer as we go along.

    There is bound to be powerful opposition to the great paradigm
    shift of the post modern era. Probably this opposition will come
    from many groups with obvious good will such as conservative
    churches and scripture-based fundamentalist groups, from the scienti
    _c community, perhaps, and from all those elements in the general
    culture which cherish stability and are uncomfortable with radical
    change. Such groups perform the necessary and important functions
    of putting the brakes on over-rapid change and forestalling future
    shock. In general, the greatest opposition will arise from the pervading
    mental-egoic consciousness still prevalent and certainly present
    to some degree in all of us. The law of change is that death to one
    stage is an absolute prerequisite for movement to a new stage. But
    the ego certainly doesn’t want to relinquish its central dominance.
    It does not want to die. Yet, nothing other than this great death can
    create the shift. The lines are drawn. The evolutionary challenge is
    ringing out, out of the depths of our own being.

    CONSTITUENTS OF REALITY

     

    The world is moving, changing, dynamic. The _ow of life is the
    movement of the formless Source into form manifestation. It is also
    the movement of manifestation back to the Source, in order to move
    or rise into new form. In this we _nd three basic constituents of
    reality: the Source, the form and the movement. Here it is extremely
    important to realize that these are not three beings. The Source
    alone is not an existent being. A form manifestation alone is not an
    existent being, nor is the movement. The three together constitute a
    being and Being itself. You could describe them as components of
    existence.

    To .exist. is an interesting verb. It means to stand (sta) out (ex).
    The form manifestation stands out from the pure undifferentiated
    Source. To exist demands all three of the components. Every being
    is a dynamic formless/form/movement reality. All reality is only
    the one _ow. This is the _ow of the formless into form and form
    back to the Source.the Source in in_nite potency. Every formmanifestation
    is an existential act of this potency. One Source, many
    manifestations; the _ow is the Holy Spirit. These three are not distinct
    beings; they are constituents of all being. In fact, to put it in
    other terms, the Source and the form in movement constitute the
    bi-polar energy _eld of all reality.

    When we speak of three constituents, where is God in all this?
    Let’s take the matter of the third constituent _rst. Actually, it is
    indicated in the English word be-ing. This .ing. expresses action
    or movement. Be-ing is dynamic. It is moving. There is only
    being when the formless Source moves into form, into act. Without
    this movement, there is no being. Thus movement is the third
    constituent or component of being. I like to call this movement the
    _ow. The _ow is circular.Source to form, and then form back to
    Source. Only by returning to the Source can a being rise to a higher
    state, receive more life. This is at the heart of evolution.
    I’d ask you to keep these ideas in mind when we examine Christianity
    and enter into a deeper understanding of the Christ-life and
    the Trinity.

    EVOLUTION OF CONSCIOUSNESS

     

    About 4500 years ago, a de_nite change began in human consciousness.
    It did not happen everywhere at once, and even today there are
    some cultures left where the change is still to take place. What happened
    at that time was that humans began to be aware of themselves
    as separate, unique, responsible, individual subjects. Before this,
    the self was primarily a group self. The individual did not experience
    her/himself as distinct from the family and tribe. The discovery
    of the self as an individual subject with personal responsibility was
    such a great event that this kind of ego-centric self consciousness
    has taken over and dominates human consciousness today. In the
    West, certainly, most of us live under the tyranny of ego consciousness.
    What we see is determined by the way we see reality. Jesus
    expresses this very well when he told us, .For where your treasure
    is, there will your heart be also.. (Luke 12:34) In this stage of evolution
    a person can understand Christ as the archetypal human and
    at the _nal stage one experiences the bi-polar nature of Reality, that
    everything is formless and form, what is known inWestern philosophy
    as the .coincidence of opposites.. In Christianity this translates
    into the teaching of the Trinity. God as Source is formless. The
    Logos or Son is the Source in form manifestation. The continual
    movement from Source into manifestation and back to the Source is
    the Spirit, the basis of all evolution.

    How can the discovery of the Source reveal that each of us is
    one with everything and why does this experience so change our
    self-identi_cation that the .I. of each one now extends to the universe?
    Why does enlightenment move us from a self awareness that
    excludes everyone and everything else..I am not you..to one
    that includes everyone and everything..I am you.? The reason is
    that the Source cannot be divided. In the formless there is no thing
    to divide. The Source is totally present in every manifestation. The
    Source, the .all-mighty,. is holographically present at all times in
    every existent being. .Holos. means .whole. and .graph. means
    written; the whole is written in every part. As a consequence, we
    can say philosophically that the Source pervades all and that you
    are one with the Source. Ultimately, you are the Source. Therefore,
    wherever the Source is manifesting, you are.

    GOD.INFINITE AND FINITE

     

    Both philosophy and theology describe God as the perfect, in_nite
    Being. On the other hand, all creatures great and small are said to be
    very _nite, limited beings-usually very imperfect. Now, the whole
    goal of human life is described as union with God. My simple question
    is: how can _nite being become one with In_nite Being? If
    the human becomes in_nite, then it is no longer _nite. It is in_-
    nite like God. That is not union of two beings. The human side
    is eliminated. Or, if the In_nite actually becomes a _nite human
    being, then the In_nite is eliminated. The incarnation of the divine
    Being as a human is often called a .mystery.. I do not wish to be
    impolite, but to me it is not a mystery, but rather a mysti_cation of
    the impossible. On the one hand we have an actual way of being
    that is unlimited, unbounded in any way. On the other is a mode
    of being that is essentially limited. These two modes of being are
    incompatible. Again I ask you, how can in_nite .Being. and _nite
    .being. become one without the destruction of one side? Union is
    two becoming one, while remaining two.

    Along this same line is the problem of God being totally .other.
    to us. Because God is said to be in_nite and we are _nite, God is
    spoken of as .the Other.. With this perspective, given the absolute
    other-ness between divine nature and human nature, how can we
    become one with God?

    In Zen we speak in terms of form and emptiness; these two are
    equivalent to _nite and in_nite, but we do not speak of them as
    .beings.. That is the crucial point. Form (_nite) and emptiness
    (in_nite) are not distinct beings. They are distinct constituents of
    being. To describe enlightenment in philosophical terms, this is
    what is seen. Full enlightenment always includes an experience of
    both emptiness and form. This emptiness is not .nothing.. It is .nothing-
    ness. and it is important to understand this subtle difference.
    It may sound like a contradiction, but what I mean to say by
    .no-thing-ness. is that the void, or emptiness that Zen speaks of is
    not a .being. but the inexpressible, formless, constituent of being.
    It is pure potency, whereas, form is act. I think those philosophical
    terms shed light on what Zen enlightenment is. The void is
    in_nite power to manifest itself in an unlimited number of limited
    ways. Any and all possible forms are contained in the emptiness
    potentially. Likewise, we think of God as having in_nite power to
    manifest and all possible forms are contained within the potentiality,
    the creative drive of this divine, all powerful Being.

    What one discovers in the enlightenment experience of Zen is
    the in_nite, but it’s not in_nite .being. as something distinct. It is
    the in_nite source of being.just one of the three constituents of
    being. The void is experienced as the Source of all form beings.
    Pure potency manifests itself in the myriad of _nite beings, the
    form world, the world of phenomena. A form is an act of the pure
    potency. Form is act. emptiness is potency. Form is also a constituent
    of being. Form and emptiness are one because they are
    two constituents making up being. As human beings, you and I are
    formless/form beings. Every existent being is formless/form.

    A BI-POLAR GOD?

    These four short sentences, the very heart of the Heart Sutra in
    Mahayana Buddhism, have had a powerful and enlightening in_uence
    over my mind. The Ultimate Reality is that which Christians
    call God. The Ultimate is complex; it is bi-polar as the Heart Sutra
    indicates, and is also what the Christian doctrine of the Trinity enunciates.
    The connection between the formless/form teaching of Buddhism
    is a way of enlightening the concept of the Trinity.
    Shiki fu i k¯u. Form is not other than emptiness.
    K¯u fu i shiki. emptiness is not other than Form.
    Shiki soku ze k¯u. Form is emptiness.

    K¯u soku ze shiki emptiness is Form.
    Shiki The ideogram means color, but here it certainly has
    the meaning of the original Sanskrit r¯upa.physical
    shape, form, phenomenon, manifestation.
    K¯u The _rst meaning of the ideogram is sky, precisely as
    empty space. Here it expresses the famous Sanskrit
    term ´s¯unyat¯a, emptiness.
    Fu A negative like .not..
    I Means apart from, separate, different.
    Soku An important word meaning immediate, nothing
    between.

    Ze Has various meanings: right, exact; this; the verb .to
    be..
    There are various translations and interpretations of these lines
    and there are many nuanced understandings of both form and emptiness,
    especially of the latter. What I want to expose here is how my
    understanding of these lines has affected my whole version of reality.
    The profound effect the Heart Sutra had on me occurred even
    though my reading of the text may not have squared with the traditional
    Mahayana interpretation.

    First, I would like to note that form and emptiness seem to be
    put on equal footing. In lines one and three, form is the subject.
    In two and four, the subject is emptiness. Form is not reduced to
    emptiness. R¯upa, form, stands in some kind of equality with emptiness,
    ´s¯unyat¯a. In his excellent book, The Heart of Buddhist Wisdom,
    Douglas A. Fox works from a Sanskrit text of the sutra. Immediately
    following our four verses, the Sanskrit has a line that is not in the
    Chinese version. Fox’s translation of this line enforces the balance
    of r¯upa and ´s¯unyata: .That which is form equals emptiness, and
    that which is emptiness is also form..

    Wisdom is insight into reality. The insight given in this wisdom
    text reveals that at the very heart of reality there is duality but this
    cannot be the duality of two existent beings. It is not as if you have
    one building block called form and another block called emptiness
    which you place side by side and then have that which we name
    .reality.. This would totally contradict the other insight found in
    all wisdom teachings.that somehow everything is one. Mahayana,
    above all, completely rejects a block-plus-block dualism.

    On the other hand, these two are somehow distinct and radically
    opposed to each other. The word .form. certainly indicates something
    different from emptiness. emptiness, in itself, surely has no
    form and is beyond all categories. This analysis teaches that existent
    reality is form/formless. Everything that is, is constituted of
    these two principles of .being.. Existence is a bi-polar coincidence
    of opposites. Again, neither of these two opposite poles, neither
    form nor formlessness, is an existent being of itself. They are constituents
    of being. As opposites they come together to constitute
    reality.

    Let us turn now to Ultimate Reality, to that which Christians call
    God. The expression .bi-polar. is especially helpful here. Once
    while preparing a presentation for a Buddhist-Christian dialogue
    day sponsored by the Center for the Paci_c Rim at the University of
    San Francisco, while putting together some re_ections on the Heart
    Sutra, I came across the title of a talk given at a recent convention
    of the American Academy of Religion: .Complex Ultimates: The
    Three-Bodied Buddha, the Two-Natured Brahman, and the Bi-polar
    God. given by Jeffrey D. Long, University of Chicago. The words
    .complex ultimates. and .bi-polar God. rang a bell within me. Yes!
    The Ultimate is complex; it is bi-polar. This is just what the Heart
    Sutra says. It is also what the Christian doctrine of the Trinity enunciates.

    THE TRINITY

    When I made the connection between the formless/form teaching
    of Buddhism and the Father/Son doctrine of Christianity, I found
    this Mahayana understanding of reality enlightened the Trinity for
    me. Let us re_ect for a moment on what Christian tradition says
    about the _rst two .persons.. The _rst is father, mother, generator,
    creator, the source out of which everything arises. The second is
    son, daughter, only begotten, generated, manifestation, the pattern
    (Logos) according to which everything exists. These two are clearly
    distinct and opposite to each other, but at the same time are one
    Ultimate Reality. As with formlessness and form, neither the _rst
    nor the second Person is a self-existent being, because they join
    (together with the Spirit) to constitute only one God, one divine
    Being. Neither ever exists apart from the other. In the Christian
    paradigm the Ultimate is clearly a complex being, a bi-polar God
    who exists as a .coincidence of opposites..

    The question, of course, arises as to the validity of identifying
    the emptiness pole of the Heart Sutra with the Father and the Form
    pole with the Son. Certainly there are many things in the Buddhist
    and in the Christian analyses of reality that do not totally agree;
    however, the two systems do come together in positing a bi-polar
    ultimate.

    At the beginning of the New Testament Letter to the Colossians,
    there are some profound and beautiful poetic lines. They appear to
    be a quotation of what was most likely an early liturgical hymn.
    Lines 13-14 of Chapter one spoke of .His beloved Son.. This is
    the subject of the relative clause that follows: .Who is the image of
    the invisible God, the _rstborn of all of all creation. For in him were
    created all things in heaven and earth. . . . (Colossians 1:15.16) God
    is here called .invisible.. This is traditional Hebrew teaching. Yahweh
    cannot be seen, therefore one is to use no graphic image of
    God. As this insight developed in Christianity under the impact of
    Greek philosophy, God is always af_rmed as in_nite, beyond all
    limits, but can an in_nite reality have no form since the very idea of
    form means shape and boundary?

    THE INFINITE GOD AND FINITE FORM

    We are so accustomed to the statement .God is in_nite. that we
    don’t often notice the possible confusion it contains. If you take the
    sentence to mean that God is only in_nite, then how can God be
    triune? How can there be two, let alone three .Persons. in God? To
    have two there must be some kind of difference and distinction. But
    if in_nity is the only reality in God, how can there be any difference?
    There can be no boundaries in in_nity to distinguish it from in_nity.
    The opposite of formlessness cannot be formlessness. An absolutely
    empty sky (k¯u) has nothing to distinguish it from empty sky.

    Take the example of an empty cup. It is a bi-polar reality made
    of the cup and the emptiness. Remove the con_ning cup form and
    you do not have anything at all! To have cup emptiness you must
    have a form (container) that is empty. So also, there cannot be
    ´S¯unyat¯a without r¯upa (emptiness without form), yin without yang
    (expansion without contraction), negative without positive, a parent
    without a child. Ultimately, mono-polar reality is a contradiction in
    terms and unreal.

    Let us return for a moment to the lines in the Heart Sutra .shiki
    soku ze k¯u. K¯u soku ze shiki.. Earlier I gave the usual translation
    of these sentences: .Form is emptiness. Emptiness is form..
    But this hardly brings out the force of the word .soku.. Take the
    Japanese expression .sokushi. which means .instant death.. A person
    is alive; the next instant dead. There is nothing between the two
    states. Soku means nothing between, immediate, so immediate that
    when it joins two, the two constitute only one reality. To bring this
    out we can translate the sentences as: .Form `is-es’ immediately
    together with emptiness. and vice versa. They never exist apart. To
    say that God is formless must be balanced by God as form. If we
    say that God is in_nite, we must also af_rm that God is _nite.

    To say that the Divine is in_nite, invisible, indivisible, indescribable
    and formless is true. But this can only be said of one pole
    of the bi-polar God, the _rst .person.. If there truly are two .persons
    . then the second must be distinct and opposite, i.e. in some
    sense _nite, visible, describable and in form. I feel that the logic in
    all this is impeccable. This .image of the invisible God, the _rstborn
    of all creation. is the .Son,. the universal form, the Logos (pattern)
    according to which are .created all things in heaven and earth..
    I would like to reinforce this unusual position about God by
    looking again at the other two sentences from the Heart Sutra which
    we have been considering: .Shiki fu i k¯u. Ku f¯u i shiki.. They can be
    retranslated into, .Form is not incompatible with emptiness. Emptiness
    is not incompatible with form.. This translation expresses one
    of the great lights of my life. For many, many years I have pondered
    over the connection between God and creatures and how it is that
    we can become one with God. I was brought up on the fundamental
    af_rmation that in_nite and _nite are absolutely distinct. If a being
    is in_nite, it cannot in any way be _nite, and vice versa. The two are
    contradictory opposites. How, then, can a _nite creature be one with
    the in_nite God? What is more, how can there be a .God-man..
    divine Incarnation?

    As I recall, one of the early shifts toward some solution of this
    problem came during a stay in Taiwan. One day while walking,
    tired from writing, it suddenly dawned on me: In_nity and _niteness,
    eternity and time are not incompatible! They do not mutually
    exclude each other, because they are not in the same category. Large
    and small with regard to the same norm are incompatible because
    they are both in the category of size, but in_nity is not in any category
    at all. At the time I hardly understood all the implications of
    this insight. As the light grew over the years, I came to realize that
    the two opposites are compatible also, because they are not existent
    beings and then the term .constituents of being. came to me in
    regards to form and emptiness, and _nally as to the persons of the
    Trinity.

    PERSONAL GOD.THE RESPONSIBLE ONE

    What is the most evolved notion that man has of this universe?
    It is intelligence. . . in the beginning that intelligence
    becomes involved, and in the end, that intelligence becomes
    evolved. The sum total of the intelligence displayed in the
    universe must, therefore, be the involved universal intelligence
    unfolding itself. This universal intelligence is what
    we call God. This Cosmic intelligence gets involved, and it
    manifests, evolves itself, until it becomes the perfect person,
    the Christ-like, the Buddha-like one. Then it goes back to
    the Source. That is why all the scriptures say, .In him we
    live and move and have our being..
    .Vivekananda

    To talk about God as formless Source moving into formmanifestation
    seems terribly impersonal. First of all, let me say that
    I certainly hold that God is personal. The divine Source is intelli-
    gent and knows how to act according to the divine nature. What we
    call a .person. is an intelligent, responsible doer. From this we can
    understand that God is a vast, unlimited .person. whose power of
    intelligence and action is unlimited. This is the .One True Person
    of no rank,. that the great Zen master Rinzai speaks of. It is hard
    to speak about this divine person in English because we have to use
    either .she,. .he. or .it.. All these put God into a limited category
    and are false designations. The Source is intelligent and responsible
    for all action everywhere in the universe. In this sense, it must
    be thought of as personal-not a limited, human person, but the allembracing,
    divine Person manifesting as individual persons. And
    again, each one of us is identical with this Source.

    Take the very enlightening text where Moses meets God on
    Mount Sinai when attracted by the burning bush. This was a Selfrevelation
    of God to Moses. When Moses asked how he should
    respond when the Israelites asked for the name of the God who sent
    him, God replied, .Thus shall you say to the Israelites, I AM has
    sent me to you.. (Exodus 3:13) This was Moses’ great enlightenment
    experience. He came to know the .Person of no rank.. The
    people of that time had many gods as it was still the age of the gods.
    There was the god of fertility who produced the harvest and gave
    children, the god who waged war, the god who gave peace, the god
    of the sea, the god of this nation or that. But this was a revelation
    of the .One God of Being.. This is the God who is simply the
    great I AM. Wherever there is .is-ing,..manifestation.this God
    is responsible. The name .I AM. is written .Yahweh. in the Bible.
    Yahweh is the third person of I AM, .the One Who Is.. This is the
    one doer in all creation, the .person. who is doing everything. So
    we may understand that God as essentially personal.

    But please do not think of God.of the Source.as a big imper-
    sonal power running everything. The Source I speak of is an intelligent,
    loving, personal power. The very essence of the Source is
    to give life, to manifest. In philosophy, one of my professors liked
    to quote the Latin phrase, .bonum est diffusivum sui..good is diffusive
    of itself. The Source wants only to _ow out into form manifestation.
    This _owing is love.total self-giving. Though we are
    many, we are all one _ow. We live in love. Rejoice in Yahweh, the
    One-Who-Is.

    IS ETERNITY IN TIME?

    As we often understand it, everlasting means that a life starts and
    then continues forever. But that is not eternal life. Eternal has neither
    end nor beginning. This point is crucial. I’m sure we can agree
    that eternal life is God’s life, divine life. Union with God and possessing
    eternal life mean the same thing. If you follow the ordinary
    Christian thought system, .entry into union with God. and .entering
    eternal life. seems to me to be contradictory. As I understand
    Christian thought, there is the same difference between eternal and
    temporal life as there is between God and creatures. It is a difference
    in be-ing. Therefore, if you enter eternal life, your temporal
    life has to cease. What’s more, if you enter eternal life, your participation
    in eternal life has a beginning. Zen says that you already
    are eternal life. Entry into divine life, eternal life, is an awareness
    event. You become conscious of what your life already is. All life
    is eternal/temporal.

    The word .eternal. must be understood as being outside time
    altogether. Eternal does not mean a long, long time as we ordinarily
    think of it. It is not .time. so it does not compete with
    time! Just as each of us is formless/form _ow, so we are each eter-
    nal/temporal _ow. There is no incompatibility between time and
    eternity, form and formless, because they are not separate states of
    .being.. They are components of being. Our actual life is always
    and ultimately eternal/temporal. We are very conscious of being in
    time. To become aware of ourselves as eternal is .entry. into eternal
    life.

    What is the experience of the formless like? It is the experience
    of the in_nite, of total disintegration. It is like being in pure space,
    the empty sky-no categories, no boundaries, no boxes. There is no
    relativity, no here, no there, no inside, no outside. There are no
    dimensions, nothing to go around. You are not a point in this space
    as there are no objects in this space; therefore, there is no time.
    Your being, your existence is not a point in time for .you. have
    entered into eternity. This is the eternal life that Jesus is always
    talking about, but in Christianity it is referred to as everlasting life,
    something that goes on and on in time. But both the Hebrew and
    Greek word for this means no beginning and no end which is not in
    time but is the eternal Now. It has no reference to the past or the
    future.

    In this experience of entering into the in_nite, if there is no
    point, or place, no time or object, then there is no .self.. There
    is no .me. looking at all these objects. There is no relationship
    between .me. and the rest of the world. The .me. is gone (and
    there is simply .I AM.). There is no .looker. or anything to think
    about. Therefore you have no name. Jesus says to deny our self but
    we do not know what that means.
    Do not try to withdraw into yourself, for to put it simply, I do
    not want you to be anywhere, no, not outside, above, behind,
    or beside yourself.

    But to this you say: .Where shall I be? By your reck-
    oning I am to be nowhere!. Exactly. In fact, you have
    expressed it rather well, for I would indeed have you be
    nowhere. Why? Because nowhere, physically is everywhere
    spiritually. Understand this clearly: your spiritual work is
    not located in any particular place. But when your mind
    consciously focuses on anything, you are there in that place
    spiritually, as certainly as your body is located in a de_nite
    place right now. Your senses and faculties will be frustrated
    for lack of something to dwell on and they will chide you
    for doing nothing. But never mind. Go on with this nothing,
    moved only by your love for God. Never give up but steadfastly
    persevere in this nothingness, consciously longing that
    you may always choose to possess God through love, whom
    no one can possess through knowledge, wrestling with this
    blind nothingness, then to be like some great lord traveling
    everywhere and enjoying the world as if he owned it.
    (The Cloud of Unknowing, chapter 68.)

    WHOM DO WE FOLLOW?

    .If you want to become my follower, you must deny your
    self, take up your cross and follow me.. (Matthew 16:24)
    Who is the .me. that Jesus says we are to follow? The condition
    for enlightenment is non-attachment to the ego self, a surrender
    of the ego self that we have so laboriously built up. This
    non-attachment will certainly lead to a whole new experience of
    our selves.
    When Jesus says you must deny yourself and invites us to follow
    him into his self-experience, he is leading us into a whole new selfreality,
    self-identity. The real meaning of .deny yourself. is to urge
    us to that experience of reality in which there is literally no self,
    no other, and where we have no name. No self, no name. When
    Jesus invites us to .follow me,. he is not asking anyone to become
    a male Jew of the _rst century (as an exclusive self). Rather, he is
    saying that when we follow his .me. in .follow me,. we are invited
    to actualize our True Self.

    We must clearly understand what Jesus is calling us to when he
    says, .Follow me.. Is he merely inviting us into a great social organization
    called the Church, in which we _nd the emotional support
    of many kind people, the guidance of clear doctrine, the strength of
    moral teaching and the inspiration of beautiful liturgies? It is true
    that these make up what we call a religion, but all these elements,
    as helpful as they are, are secondary. In them we do not have the
    core of the call Jesus offers to each of us and to every human being.
    Simply put, he invites us to join him in his experience of Reality,
    his enlightenment.

    The actual being of each one of us is far more than we think
    it is, and our being includes a more perfect power of perception
    than the one we ordinarily use. Many elements make up our selfidenti
    _cation, and the powers of perception we use to determine this
    identity are our senses, our memory and above all, our intellect. The
    intellect distinguishes, puts things into box-like categories which
    exclude all other categories. We feel we _t into a particular box
    based on family, race, society, etc. The self-identity of Jesus Christ
    as the enlightened one is outside all boxes and is far more than we
    have ever thought ourselves to be. When Jesus says .follow me. we
    are to follow him into his experience of reality, to share in his (allinclusive)
    self-identity and to do this we need to employ a totally
    different mode of perception than that which gives us our ordinary
    self-knowledge.

    After Jesus’ baptism experience.an enlightenment and
    empowerment experience.he was in an immensely advanced state
    of awareness in which he experienced himself and all creation differently
    than we usually do (with our ordinary mind). As physical
    matter evolves to higher and higher forms, the awareness that goes
    with all existence also advances. Nowadays some people say that
    we humans are about to experience a quantum leap in consciousness
    into a new age. Jesus and all the great masters were pioneers
    of a NewWorld. The advanced consciousness of Jesus is a model of
    evolution and is saying to you and to me that it’s time to move on.
    .Ever since the words `Follow me’ were _rst spoken to
    Matthew, they have echoed down through the centuries to
    this day, releasing the divine power within.. .Hando

    PART II
    THE FLOW OF LOVE

    INTO THE LIGHT

    .Beloved, I am writing no new commandment to you but an
    old commandment that you had from the beginning. The old
    commandment is the word you have heard. And yet I do
    write a new commandment to you, which holds true of him
    (Jesus) and among you, for the darkness is passing away, and
    the true light is already shining.. (John 2:7.8)

    This commandment invites us to follow the imperative that is at
    the heart of humanity, at the heart of each one of us. This is not
    a law enacted outside us. Jesus is simply telling us to follow this
    fundamental drive from within. If it were a command only from
    the outside it would take away our freedom. If this commandment
    arises from within, then why does Jesus call it new?
    Snow covers earth and sky,
    Everything is new.

    My body is concealed inside a silver world
    Suddenly I enter a treasury of light
    A place forever free of any trace of dust.
    .Te-Ch’ing
    The light is the truth about what we humans are. What is new is
    that everyone is called to enter into this light. Jesus represents the
    next great advance in the evolution of human consciousness. The
    Old Testament was a great advance for its time, but Jesus, by his
    own enlightenment, is calling all to move to a new way of experiencing
    reality. This light was present in old times, but it was not
    thought of as being general and available to all. Now we are all
    invited to a new age of light and love. .Love your neighbor as yourself.
    . (Matthew 19:19) The self referred to here is the true and uni-
    versal Self. Expression of this love is an expression of the light that
    we are.

    In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was
    baptized by John in the Jordan. And just as he was coming
    out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the
    Spirit like a dove descending on him. And a voice came from
    Heaven and said .This is my son, the Beloved, with whom I
    am well pleased.. (Matthew 3:17)

    Here he receives the fullness of divine energy. In the scriptures
    the dove is a symbol not of peace, but of love. Since to love is to
    discover the oneness of all things and fully live it, for Jesus this was
    an experience of profound oneness with all creation.

    A Christian baptism is to be plunged into the _ow of the Source
    and the form in movement. The movement is the Holy Spirit. The
    Spirit is said to proceed from the Father and the Son. I take this
    to mean that there is movement from the Source into form; then
    movement from the form back to the Source. That is the nature of
    all reality. There is only the _ow.

    Christians seem to believe that at their baptism they receive
    eternal life for the _rst time and become children of God. I have
    problems with that way of thinking. When Zen teachers talk to
    Christians they sometimes describe kensh¯o (an enlightenment experience)
    as a baptism because in enlightenment a person’s consciousness
    is plunged into awareness of the true self that has always been
    within. It is just as it was at the baptism of Jesus. He was told, .You
    are my beloved Son.. He was not newly made into the Son of the
    Father. His true self was revealed to his awareness. So it is with
    any Christian baptism, I’d say. It is a revelation of what you already
    are. The newness is in the awareness and in the integrating of one’s
    whole life according to this self-realization. For Jesus this was the
    daigo tettei, the great enlightenment that Zen talks about.the great
    (dai) de_nitive (tettei) enlightenment (go). This experience led to
    the total transformation of his life. This transformation was a process
    of integration.

    After Jesus’ baptism in the Jordan River, he spent forty days
    in the desert in integration. And as was described, temptations are
    a part of this process. He stayed in the desert until every thought
    he had was born of God, every word he spoke, every emotion he
    had, every step he took.all his actions.were born of God. That is
    integration or .perfection. as we used to call it. Each element in his
    human composite matured as a perfect manifestation of the light and
    love of his inner core. His every thought and sensation, his every
    emotion and act of will was born of God. He is now experiencing
    the .reign of God.. From this time on, each step he takes, each word
    he speaks, each gesture he makes is born of God. Wholly in the _ow,
    he is one with the wild beasts and the angels. Filled with light and
    power he now goes forth as the .Light of the world,. manifesting
    light and power. Simply put, he himself is the Good News.
    .I am the light of the world,. says the Lord within. Are you
    willing to see the light? To follow the light means to die to all
    security except the light.

    FAITH, FLOW AND THE REIGN OF GOD

    .And indeed, your Heavenly Father knows that you need all
    of these things. But strive _rst for the reign of God and
    God’s righteousness and all these things will be given to
    you.. (Matthew 6:33)

    The basic idea is simple: Do not think about winning; if you do,
    you lose. When you think about winning, you are not free. That is
    karmic action, action (action with desire), and you will not be able
    to produce pure action. You are not in the divine _ow. When you
    are not thinking of yourself, you are doing wu wei (ego-less action
    or no effort). If you are doing something with the desire to win, you
    are doing yu wei (action with effort, not moving with the _ow).
    What do we act for? Often we act in order to have others think
    well of us. We do not like to be embarrassed. We do not like to
    make a mistake. We like to be thought well of. Faith means that
    we intuit that there is an abundant providence at work and we allow
    ourselves to surrender to and go into that _ow. This is wu wei. It
    has no goals. It simply gives. This _ow is the self-giving nature of
    God.

    Jesus says, .Strive for the reign of God.. How does God reign?
    How do we enter into the reign of God? If we do, then all our needs
    will be taken care of. How do we enter this reign of God? God
    is inside us and within all creation. There is a movement that we
    call the Holy Spirit or the reign of God, the active providence, the
    active governance of God that is taking place within everything. We
    surrender and get into that _ow and that is entering into the reign of
    God. It is not something from the outside. As it says in Acts 17:28,
    .In Him we live and move and have our being..

    When you are really inside yourself, then you’re an .inside-out.
    person. You are free. When you are really inside yourself, what is
    that self that you _nd? It is the very self of God. As Catherine of
    Sienna said, .God is my `me’.. And Jesus said, .I and my Father
    are one.. When we get into that oneness we are in the reign of God.
    If you want to know what God’s will is for you, go in and _nd out
    what you really want to do, go in and in. The will of God is not
    to be known from the outside-in, but from the inside-out. You will
    still be acting, and you will be the same in a very real sense, but you
    will be acting from inside the divine self. Your little personhood is
    inside the divine personhood. Our little being is inside the divine
    being. In God’s life.in God’s (creative) movement.we move. In
    God’s being we .be.. That is the reign of God.

    INSIDE-OUT LOVE

    .In meditation we surrender, let go, let down the barriers so
    that the inner eye of love may be opened..
    .Hando
    When something takes over our mind such as when we are .in
    love,. we become bound in a kind of captivity. We lose our freedom.
    The ideal is complete freedom in the midst of deep love and
    affection. When you are truly free you are an inside-out person.
    You can be said to be an outside-in person when we are made happy
    or sad merely by the way the one we love smiles or frowns at us;
    then we are governed by someone outside us and we are not free.
    Although the affection we feel is natural and good, it must also be
    free and detached. This freedom can only be activated when we go
    deep into that place where we are all one and unbound, in Christ
    Consciousness. Only the human love that is nothing but divine love
    in manifestation is truly free. This may seem heartless to some, but
    it is attachment itself that makes us heartless. It robs us of our true
    heart, which is always fee and unattached.

    When you react, you are pitting your ego against another. Reaction
    is to return the same action as the one done to me. This is
    slavery. Love does not react.

    DIVINE LOVE AS SELF-GIVING

    .I give you a new commandment, that you love one another.
    Just as I have loved you, you should love one another. By
    this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you
    have love for one another.. (John 13:34-35)

    The key to understanding this text, in fact the key to the whole
    Gospel, is found in the word .my.. The most important word in all
    our scriptures is Jesus’ personal pronoun I, me, my, mine. These
    little words do not primarily refer to Jesus of Nazareth as separate
    and distinct from every other human being. Through this pronoun
    Jesus is not identifying his all-exclusive, individual self. Rather, he
    is indicating his all-inclusive Self. This is the one archetypal Self
    that is present in every person, without exception. His disciples
    discovered this universal Self shining out perfectly in Jesus. This
    means that when they met him they were meeting their own self.
    How does God act? The action of God is to give.to give life, to
    give being. That is what we mean by .Creator.. God never reacts,
    but simply acts, simply gives. There are no conditions to God’s
    actions. If there were any conditions to God’s actions, he would be a
    servant to those conditions and would be dependent on them. There
    cannot be any conditions to God’s giving, otherwise God would be
    dependent. Let us think of when we act from our self without being
    dependent upon a result. When we act from our self in this way,
    what do we give? We give our self. We are independent. We simply
    act.

    What God is, God shares. God is life, God is being, so all God’s
    actions are life-giving and self-giving, are giving of the divine self.
    Now what do we call that kind of action? We call it love. That
    is what love is. Love is to give your self. Love is a many-faceted
    thing and one of the ways of talking about love is that love is giving.
    Love is self-giving. What did Jesus say? .If you have love for one
    another, by this shall all people know that you are my disciples..
    Willingness to receive is all there is. What we bring to this
    process is the willingness to receive. If you are willing to receive
    the movement of the spirit, if you are willing to let this process take
    over your life, it is absolutely going to change your life. It will
    change the life you have been living. It will destroy your security,
    destroy your little self-rule. It’s going to destroy your ego. Because
    of this, there are not many people who are willing to receive, to give
    up, to give in, to open up (to this love) and surrender our resistance.
    .Like the bird that leaves the security of branch and tree and
    rises to be carried on the wind in the sky, so we leave all
    things to go with the _ow of the Spirit..
    .Hando

    UNCONDITIONAL LOVE

    Compassion is a manifestation of unconditional love. It is hard for
    us to really envision such love, even to accept it, let alone practice it.
    And yet this is what every Christian and every human being is called
    to. This is the way the evolution of the human spirit is leading.to
    love with no conditions. Most of our love is reactive. If a person
    is good to us, we like the person, and if they do very much good,
    we love them. If people do us harm we hate them. That is reactive.
    But true love does not react. Jesus says there is a different level of
    seeing things, of seeing people. .Re-act. means you do again, you
    return the act that was done to you. Somebody is good to me, I do
    good to them. Somebody does me harm, I want to have revenge.

    The reason that love is not reactive is because it is always present
    from the moment we meet a person because they are human. You
    are already one with every human. Whatever the person does, it
    does not change this actual, fundamental oneness.

    If someone you love does something unkind, you will feel sorry,
    more sorry for the person than for yourself. Once we actually see the
    oneness of all people and all things, then we actually are .in love.
    with everything and everybody, no matter what the person or thing
    does. Jesus never said, .Do this and I will love you. Stop doing
    that and then I will love you.. Actions will change the appearance
    of love into sadness, joy, happiness or unhappiness, but the basis
    of love is unconditional. Jesus helps or heals a person, shows them
    that love and compassion, and then says, .Go now and sin no more..
    (John 8:11) The love is independent of the sin. In fact, if anything,
    sin attracts Jesus. He came to call sinners. This is a different type
    of relationship than what we ordinarily understand and experience.
    On the cross Jesus says, .Father, forgive them, for they know
    not what they do.. (Luke 32:34) Here we see unconditional love
    turn into unconditional forgiveness. Sometimes the church errs in
    this matter by putting conditions on forgiveness. Forgiveness must
    come _rst, and then it may be necessary to do something to right the
    wrongs.

    More is in us than we dream of. We are unique individuals but
    at the same time we are the embodiment of the human archetype,
    the .Son of Man.. We are Christ. All our lives we are nothing
    but divine energy, the Trinity individualized, the Spirit, the _ow.
    At the root of each human being is a radiant being, a revolutionary
    dynamo, reaching for resurrection. Each time we see a person we
    see the whole potential of the spirit, individualized, no matter what
    condition the person is in.

    THE FLOW OF FREEDOM

    .Now the Lord is the spirit, and where the spirit of the Lord
    is, there is freedom.. (2 Corinthians 3:17)

    When each one of us as an individual is governed by what others
    think or say or do, we are still in a kind of servitude. Ask yourself,
    .What are my chains and how heavy are they?.
    We _nd this explanation of the _ow in the 25th chapter of the
    Tao T.e Ching by Lao Tzu:
    Human energy _ow is governed by that of the earth.
    Earth energy _ow is governed by that of the universe.
    The universe energy _ow is governed by that of the _ow.
    The _ow (Tao) is governed by its own self.

    Pure freedom is found in the last line. When all creation shares
    in the pure _ow (Tao), then the whole cosmos is free. We humans
    are the problem. We can get out of the _ow. The only being that is
    truly free is the one who is not ruled by a force outside of itself. A
    liberated person is self-actualized. When A Zen master examines a
    student, the one great characteristic looked for is spontaneity.
    Anyone who comes to directly experience reality just as it is has
    no inhibitions from the outside or inside. The ego-self of individual
    manifestation takes its place within the one true Self and shares in
    the one great, non-reactive action (wu wei in Chinese). The _ow,
    the Tao, is this one source-in-action.

    This creative _ow is unconditional. It asks for nothing. It only
    gives of its own being, its life. All conditions destroy this freedom.
    Attachments to success, reward, avoidance of punishment.
    attachment to anything.creates captivity. An independent person
    is an inside-out, not an outside-in person.

    In John 8:31 Jesus outlines the independence (salvation) process
    perfectly: .If you remain in my words, you will truly be my
    disciples and you will know the truth and the truth will make you
    free.. To paraphrase this we may say .If you live my transmission of
    enlightenment, you will experience Reality as it is and Reality.the
    Divine Flow.will draw you into freedom..

    THE BODHISATTVA CHRIST

    In reality, no man is a stranger to him because he looks on
    each one as a brother. And none is his enemy. All are his
    friends. Even those who hurt or offend him in everyday life
    are as dear to him as his best friends and all the good he
    desires for his best friend he desires for them. . . the warmth
    of his love reaches out to them all.friend, enemy, stranger,
    and kin alike. If there is any partiality at all, it is more likely
    to be toward his enemy than toward his friend. (The Cloud
    of Unknowing. See Johnston, p. 82.)

    An earthly bodhisattva is one who is here on this earth dedicated
    to living a life of love and compassion out of his or her wisdom,
    and along with everyone else is returning to the Source with great
    struggle. Christ was such a bodhisattva. Paul in his letter to the
    Hebrews says that Jesus had to become like his fellow humans in
    every way in order to expiate the sins of the people. Since he himself
    was tested through his suffering, he was able to help those who were
    also suffering. He has traveled the path and through entrustment we
    can follow the same path.

    A characteristic of the bodhisattva is the use of .skillful means..
    This term means that she or he takes up any possible means to be
    of help to people, to induce people to enlightenment and ultimately
    assist in liberation for all. A bodhisattva is one who uses any and
    all skillful means to be of service and the primary means that an
    earthly bodhisattva uses is his or her own life. The passion, death
    and resurrection of Jesus demonstrate this.

    There is a famous poem from the Indian Buddhist tradition of
    the ninth century which expresses the love an earthly bodhisattva
    has for all humanity:

    Thus by the virtue collected
    Through all that I have done,
    May the pain of every living creature
    Be completely cleared away!
    May I be the doctor and the medicine,
    And may I be the nurse
    For all sick beings in the world
    Until everyone is healed.
    May a rain of food and drink descend
    To clear away the pain of thirst and hunger.
    And during the eon of famine,
    May I change myself into food and drink!
    May I become an inexhaustible treasure
    For those who are poor and destitute;
    May I turn into all the things they need
    And may these be placed close beside them!
    Without any sense of loss,
    I shall give up my body and enjoyments,
    As well as my virtues of past, present and future,
    For the sake of bene_ting all!
    By giving up all, sorrow is transcended
    And my mind will realize the sorrowless state.
    It is best that I now give up everything to all beings
    In the same way as I shall at death!
    Having given this body up
    For the pleasure of all living beings
    By killing, abusing, and beating it,
    May they always do as they please!
    When anyone encounters me,
    May it not be meaningless for him!
    Whether those who encounter me
    Conceive a faithful or an angry thought,
    May that always become the source
    for ful_lling all their wishes.
    May all who say bad things to me
    Or cause me any other harm,
    And those who mock and insult me
    Have the fortune to awaken fully.
    May I be the savior for those without one,
    The guide for all travelers along the way,
    May I be a bridge, a boat and a ship
    For all who wish to cross the water!
    Just like space
    And the great elements such as earth,
    May I always support the life
    Of all the countless creatures.
    And until they pass away from pain,
    May I also be the source of life
    For the realms of varied beings
    That reach unto the ends of space.
    ´Santideva, A Guide to the Bodhisattva’s Way of Life, quoted
    in The Christ and the Boddhisattva, p. 74.

    We need an unlimited display, or offering of love to shake us
    out of our ego-centric ways. You cannot have true love if you are
    ego-centric. The only true love is that which is Source-centric, not
    ego-centric. That is the reign of God and the reign of love. Only that
    is the ultimate and unconquerable love. We must go to the source
    of our union, the source of our oneness because love is to discover
    and accept our oneness. Jesus as a true bodhisattva, by living a life
    of love and going through his terrible suffering and death, shows us
    the way to die and to enter into this love. He is giving us what we
    need for our own salvation.

    We see by the way Jesus died the way we also have to die.
    by giving up everything. He lost everything. In this detachment,
    in making oneself totally free, we can go into the unlimited in_nite
    Source and _nd that Source as the essence of our being. Jesus manifests
    through his suffering and death what is happening within his
    own heart and what must happen in our own hearts. To die physically
    is useless and not at all liberating unless we die to our own
    will, to our mind. Unless we have that total detachment we do not
    really die when we die physically. If there is no Great Death of the
    small, limited ego there can be no Great Resurrection.

    Jesus’ physical dying represents his internal detachment which
    we must go through ourselves. He was stripped of his garments and
    had no possessions left. We must do the same. He had no reputation
    or good name left and was treated as nothing. That is what we must
    become willing to experience ourselves. He lost his place in society
    and his identi_cation as a teacher as all of his disciples _ed. He
    showed that he had given up his family identity by telling Mary
    that John was her son; Jesus was no longer her son. There were no
    quali_cations left. Finally there is his relationship with God which
    was lost. .My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?. He
    teaches us, through his own death, how to face the absolute void
    and surrender. We all have to do that. We have to face the void and
    simply surrender.

    At Gethsemane he accepts the loss of everything and the characteristic
    of his death becomes apparent to him. He accepts all the
    terrible aspects of humanity, transforming it all into love. He experiences
    his communion with all humanity, accepting the burden of
    unity with the terrible suffering of humanity and takes it all to his
    heart. This then becomes his own suffering. It is all an act of love.
    There is nothing but love which brings Christ to this suffering and
    loss. He loses everything and goes into the empty tomb that, as the
    early Church Fathers liked to say, becomes the womb out of which
    new life is born, the womb of the eternal Mother, the Source out of
    which all life arises.

    He is still Jesus the individual, but the pure bodhisattva
    archetype of compassion, wisdom and power that are universal to
    all creation is now a perfect _ow within him. The _ow of the spirit
    is pure and at ease. The Chinese understood that when they talked
    about wu wei which means there is no ego action interfering with
    the pure _ow. That is resurrection. What does that mean? There is
    perfect freedom with no restraint of any kind. In the in_nite Source
    manifesting freely there is no obstacle to the _ow of compassion,
    wisdom and power. This is the Bodhisattva Christ.

    BODY ENERGY FLOW

    .Where attention goes, energy _ows and life grows..
    .Hando
    In a state of relaxation, energy can move more freely within you,
    especially in the three great centers of the belly, the heart and the
    brow. Enlightenment is an energy _ow that goes on beneath our
    ordinary awareness. It is ultimately the movement of the Holy Spirit
    and our bodies also become enlightened. The patterns we have
    in our bodies can be great obstacles to full awareness. Over the
    years our muscles, nerves, organs and even bone structures take in
    many tensions, fears and constrictions from within our own psyches.
    These psychological patterns get locked into the body as stubborn
    physiological patterns. These blocks are resistant to the free _ow of
    energy and the spontaneous movement of the divine spirit.

    As energy moves throughout the body, it runs into places of
    resistance in the muscles and nerve complexes. Since these places
    in the body can be material solidi_cations of psychological patterns,
    the energy _ow activates and comes up against powerful emotional
    habits. These patterns themselves arise out of a general mind-set
    which governs the whole human complex. This mind-set, this overarching
    personal structure, is centered around what we call .the
    ego..

    The ego arises when we perceive ourselves as unique, separate
    individuals. At present the ego way of identifying ourselves is so
    strong that it has become a tyrant that will allow no rivals. A fullblown
    ego tends to assume center stage in our psyche as a ruler.
    Everything is seen and processed in reference to .me.. And this
    .me. is the exclusive, separate, unique individual. The result is
    ego-centrism. We become self-centered in the narrowest meaning
    of .self.. This is self-love at its worst and it is not in tune with our
    true reality.

    This ego is always afraid of anyone who threatens to supercede
    its reign over our lives. It defends its territory by casting doubt
    on the reality of the higher Self. It rejects as untrue any other
    way of living than its own precious self-centered way. The narrow
    ego way of reacting to being displaced by a higher, more inclusive,
    integrated self is through fear, anger, anxiety, doubt and rejection.
    When we become defensive, these aggressive reaction patterns of
    the ego manifest directly in our bodies.

    Consciousness arises only as and when there is movement.
    Full consciousness can come only when there is full movement of
    energy. Each one of our human powers must be holistically integrated
    into the one great _ow of the spirit. All of our psychological
    and physical blocks must melt away and allow the spontaneous
    action of a .child of God.. It is a process of integration even into the
    cells of your body. Our whole value system and our way of seeing
    things may make us feel that we are separate from many people and
    from the world, but later in the process you will be able to experience
    a full integration with everyone and everything. In Zen there
    is the saying, .Daigo kizoku..in Great Enlightenment there is a
    return to the world. Only after full enlightenment and complete
    integration will we really feel at home in this world.

    REPENTENCE AND FORGIVENESS OF SIN

    Lakes, mountains
    Brooks, _owers, trees
    Never sin.
    .Shin Min
    Nature is impeccable. A morning glory never sins. Even if a seed
    falls into a crack in the blacktop of a parking lot, the _ower doesn’t
    complain. It simply manifests its being in its given circumstances.
    Nor does it envy the _ower two meters away that is growing in fertile
    ground. A _ower’s life is one of entrustment, total surrender to
    the creative _ow of the Source. Isn’t it remarkable that we can read
    the word ._ower. as ._ow-er.? This pattern of living purely in the
    Flow of the Source is what we call Logos. Jesus of Nazareth as the
    embodiment of logos says, .I do nothing on my own, but I speak
    these things as the Father has instructed me.. (John 8:28) Nature
    lives this Christ pattern.

    Forgiveness means freedom to be, to become the _ow of the
    spirit. That is what forgiveness from sin means in the New Testament.
    .The time is ful_lled, and the kingdom of God has come
    near; repent, and believe in the Good News.. ( Mark 1:15) In the
    phrase .the time is ful_lled,. the English word .time. refers to the
    Greek word kairos. This word refers not to temporal time which
    the Greeks called chronos, but to a period when some preordained,
    special event is about to happen. Here the event is the reign of God
    and Jesus is inviting everyone to share in his experience.

    This invitation to enter the reign of God is concealed by the
    word .repent. which is the inadequate translation of the Greek word
    metanoeite. Repent means to feel sorry, to regret, which comes from
    the Latin word penitemini. This is the word used for metanoeite
    when the Bible was translated from the Greek by Saint Jerome.
    Meta means a change over, and the verb noeo means to perceive,
    to apprehend. So metanoe¯o has to do with a change of perception,
    a moving into a whole new way of seeing reality. Within its context
    this one word also calls all the followers of Jesus to a contemplative
    way of life. To become contemplative can be understood as
    engaging in the practice of meditation which is fundamental in our
    spiritual training.

    This word .repentance. does not simply mean to be sorry, but
    to change your whole way of seeing reality. However, the ordinary
    understanding of repentance is to be sorry. Sin is regarded as an
    offence against God, as though God might forgive and say .Okay, I
    am no longer offended.. Is this the core of the message of Christ? I
    believe it is not.

    What do we mean by forgiveness of sin? We must re-translate
    this as it is not adequate. Over the years our understanding has
    deviated from the real meaning of those words and we have lost
    the message. Therefore, in Christianity is it meant that when we
    received the _rst preaching of the Word, the Good News, it was
    simply to be sorry, to admit our offence against God and receive
    forgiveness for the guilt? It is much more than this, but the words
    do not tell us this. We only understand that we are to be sorry and
    be reconciled with God.

    We must take up the idea of forgiveness in order to understand
    repentance. It has been said that sin is, before all else, an offense
    against God, a rupture of communion with Him. In other words,
    it is by sin that we separate ourselves from God and by sin God
    cannot help but be offended. Sin is regarded as a disobedience to
    the commands of God, that it makes God angry and God punishes
    us for this offense. An offense is to feel hurt, angry, and it is justice
    to punish us for this offense. This is not the New Testament teaching
    and it is not what Jesus came to teach. Simply put, it is low-level
    awareness and we must move on from there.

    When we think of justice, there comes the idea that there are
    scales that must be balanced.the punishment equals the crime. Is
    this what Jesus meant? Not at all. He says, .You have heard an eye
    for an eye. (Matthew 5:38) as in the scale of Justice. But then he
    says .Love your enemies.. (v. 44). Love does not know that kind of
    justice so the whole idea of sin should not be taken in that legalistic
    way. The Hebrew mind was very legalistic and they had covenants
    and laws regarding sin. Unfaithfulness to the law, a breach of the
    law, created the need for punishment. An eye for an eye, accord-
    ing to this legalistic system of justice, demanded penance, making
    amends, reparation.we mend what we’ve done.

    All of this must be looked at as simply being off the path and the
    primary thing that must be done is to get back on the path, get back
    in the _ow. God does not demand payment and you do not need
    a punishment. We have come to understand through this legalistic
    way of thinking that if we repent God will accept us as no longer
    being guilty of our offenses and we are back in the state of grace.
    The whole issue of offense against God is dualistic thinking, seeing
    God as the Great Other. We feel that we have done something
    against God. The spiritual path of Christianity is much more than
    this. We even regard the sacrament of communion as something
    that frees us from the power of sin.God has been offended and we
    reconcile ourselves.

    Forgiveness means .to free.. What are we becoming free from?
    We are becoming free from sin which is conceived of as having a
    power over us. The New Testament idea personi_es sin. We bring
    God down to the human level, anthropomorphism, and we bring sin
    up to the human level which is called personi_cation. The original
    .fall. gave a personi_cation of sorts through the serpent. Sin is
    conceived as a living power and we are slaves to this sin. With
    forgiveness we are simply free from a power that takes us away
    from the truth. There is a power that moves us away from our true
    path and that is .sin.. Forgiveness of sin means freedom from that
    power.

    When we say the words .forgiveness of sin. we must ask ourselves,
    .What does that mean to me? Does it now express what the
    New Testament writers said? Does what it means to us today mean
    what they said then?. To understand this, we must look at the type
    of language, the symbolism, the underlying mindset of the Hebrews
    of Jesus’ time and the early Christians.

    The Hebrew word for sin means primarily to make an error, to
    be wayward. The element of offense against God is not in that word.
    The idea of offense is only there when we treat God as a human
    form. We anthropomorphize God and give God human emotions
    and qualities such as kindness and anger. We say that God hears,
    thinks, desires, loves, hates, commands, moves. We continue to use
    language that we easily understand but which is a very misleading
    means of using words. We feel that God is just the .Big Boss.
    upstairs, a .Big Superman.. We are not careful enough in the use of
    these words. We now speak of God as a divine presence, but there
    is no word for that in Hebrew. We translate .the face of God. to the
    .presence of God.. Presence is a more abstract way of speaking of
    God and not as anthropomorphic.

    The basic idea of sin in the Judeo-Christian tradition is that it
    is an aberration, waywardness, being off the mark.a very simple
    idea. The result is that if we go against the truth, we will feel pain;
    we will feel dis-ease and will have diverted our energy off our true
    path. That suffering is what is called .dukkha. in the Buddhist tradition.
    We feel a need for the truth, for true life, and it is this aberration,
    this feeling of need that we call suffering. Along with this we
    may also feel the suffering of remorse and regret.

    Great problems arise when we take the anthropomorphisms of
    the Bible not as _gurative language but as literal and factual. The
    problem then becomes thinking of God as the Great Other and we
    sink into profound dualism; this is the great problem of Christianity.
    In past times they knew that God was beyond all human traits but
    they used anthropomorphic language. The problem then became
    that we began to think we have a relationship with God as .the
    Other..

    Psychologically we may feel a separation from God, but God is
    not an .other.. Saint Augustine says, .God is more intimate to you
    than you are to yourself,. and Meister Eckhart says, .Between God
    and me there is no between.. The relational idea must be revised
    and we must ask ourselves if there can really be an offense against
    God. We are never separated from the rest of humanity and God,
    but everything we do affects the universal human energy form _eld
    and this is where the offense is, how the separation may be felt.
    Every human being is within and affected by that form _eld and
    that form _eld is operative in their lives, so everything we do is
    affecting everybody. Thus if I sin and get off the path I contribute
    to the whole form _eld of humanity by moving away from reality,
    from truth.

    THE FLOW OF GRACE

    Does God then ever change? Stop giving? Cannot. The only thing
    that can stop the movement of this giving of divine love is our
    unwillingness to go along with the process. We can take ourselves
    out of the process and that is what we call sin. It is being off the
    mark, off the path. There is a path of divine life.giving, always
    giving greater and greater life.but we take ourselves outside the
    path of that divine giving. So what do we do about sin? All we have
    to do is get back on the path. God does not get angry or put down
    conditions to the giving of life. God cannot do that, for he is faithful
    to his own reality which is Self-giving. You do not have to do
    anything but get back on the path, get back into this stream of life,
    the self-giving of God’s love. God’s giving, God’s love is unconditional.
    No conditions. This is what is meant by grace. Grace simply
    means favor and we cannot fall out of God’s favor. We can only
    take ourselves out of the stream by putting obstacles in the way of
    this life-giving love, but that does not change God, as that love is
    unconditional.

    Take for example the prodigal son. Isn’t it revealing that we took
    the wonderful parable of unconditional love and called it the .prodigal
    son.? That is not the emphasis, the accent.the prodigality of
    the son. What Jesus is teaching here is the Father’s unconditional
    love, of the Father’s giving, of grace. The son certainly did go off
    the path and was outside the father’s in_uence. He took the talents
    that the father had given him and wasted them. But when the son
    appears in the distance the father rushes towards him and embraces
    him, showing he is in the family. He did not chastise the son, telling
    him, .You have gone off the path, you have offended me, you have
    to do this and that and then you can come back into the family..
    There is no need to earn the father’s love, even if we have gone off
    the path. It is love without conditions.

    GRACE OR PAYMENT.WE CAN’T HAVE BOTH

    We hear in the language used in the New Testament that we are
    .redeemed. by the blood of Christ. Now what is this sacri_ce of
    appeasement? Is this the message of the New Covenant? Absolutely
    not. We say that we are saved by grace and that means that God
    gives love and grace and self freely and unconditionally. But then
    we say that Jesus put down conditions and that God would save
    us through a ransom or through Jesus’ death which paid a price.
    Making Jesus into a redeemer in that sense goes against the teaching
    of grace. It is a total contradiction and you cannot have both. If you
    pay a price for something, you are not getting a gift, but getting a
    payment. This is not grace. We are children of God; we are ruled
    not by the old law, but by the rule of the spirit and this is the key to
    all the rest. Metanoia means that we open ourselves up to the light
    of the spirit and we are totally transformed. We entrust ourselves to
    the _ow of the spirit.

    Well, what did Jesus do? What was it that happened on Calvary?
    What did he give? Jesus offered himself so that he could be taken to
    the highest level of divine manifestation and that action of offering
    oneself, of dying to everything and being taken to the Father as the
    highest level of divine manifestation. That movement to the Source
    he has imprinted in the human energy form _eld. That is why when
    we hear of this, we feel it as a yearning of our own heart and also
    want it for ourselves and when we allow this action to take over our
    lives, we are made holy. It is surrendering to this action of Jesus, of
    self-sacri_ce that saves. Salvation is moving into pure freedom so
    that every action we do is born of God and not out of need or wish
    to attain a goal. This action is born out of pure love of God.
    This is what the death of Jesus was about. It was not a sacri_ce
    that pays a penalty or a price. It was a making holy by becoming
    detached from everything, by giving up everything so that he would
    be taken into the pure freedom of God. This pattern has been given
    to us so we may attain freedom in our own lives. When Jesus says
    .Follow me,. we can understand it to mean that through following
    him into this experience we may also become sancti_ed and be
    taken into the pure freedom of God.

    PART III
    WALKING THE ZEN
    CHRISTIAN PATH

    Caught by the call
    Of the _owers and mountain, I forget
    How steep the path is.
    .Hando

    A BETTER CHRISTIAN

    .Tasukaremashita!. translates as .I was saved!. (Or helped! Or
    rescued!) This is what I’ve always said about my experience in
    Japan: .Tasukaremashita!. The Japanese consciousness in general
    and, in particular, my contact with Buddhism has totally changed
    my life, made me into a better, richer human, and revitalized my
    Christianity.

    Direct and intimate contact with Buddhism didn’t actually begin
    for me until 1969. I had been going to the zendo (meditation hall) in
    Kamakura for about three months when I was granted shoken (sho.
    mutual, ken.seeing). In this simple ceremony, I met the Zen master
    Yamada K¯oun R¯oshi in a very formal way and was accepted as his
    disciple in all things pertaining to Zen. Actually, Yamada R¯oshi
    was still called Sensei (Teacher) at that time. He was gradually
    taking over the direction of the Kamakura Zendo from its founder
    Yasutani R¯oshi. As I remember, there were three of us who went
    into the Sensei’s room together for a simple ceremony and then were
    interviewed individually. The Sensei’s question to me was, .What
    is your kokorozashi?. (Your aspiration or intention in entering the
    Zen path.) I wasn’t very clear about this. My life still abounded in
    vagueness. In going to the zendo, I hadn’t followed my head at all.
    I’d obeyed a gut feeling, so I had no ready answer to the question.
    I _nally blurted out something about togo, integration. Well, the
    Sensei didn’t quite understand what I meant and neither did I. For
    some reason, I went on to say that I was a Catholic Christian.that
    I intended to live and die as such, but that I really felt Zen was
    important for me. .Oh,. said Yamada Sensei. .Yes. Remember
    that there are two kinds of Zen. There’s Buddhist Zen with all its
    teachings, images, chants, etc. Then there’s just Zen, which goes
    with any religion. You just do Zen and you will become a better
    Christian..

    Yamada R¯oshi was a big man both physically and spiritually.
    His heart was broad and his insight true. With that shoken, I formally
    entered a path that, just as he said, was to transform my Christianity.
    Looking back now, I realize clearly that my problem, as a
    Christian, was that I was too much in my head. My spiritual path
    was intellectual rather than experiential.

    A REVELATION

    I was standing on the platform of the old wooden station of the
    Taura district of Yokosuka waiting for the familiar cream and blue
    Yokosuka Line train and reading a small book by the theologian
    Karl Rahner titled, Nature and Grace. Over 40 years later, as I check
    in this book, I _nd Rahner arguing against .the widespread view of
    grace. as .a supernature above man’s conscious, spiritual and moral
    life.. He says that it’s not surprising .when a man takes very little
    interest in this mysterious superstructure of his being; this grace is
    not present where he is present to himself in his immediate selfawareness.
    . Rather, he maintains that the movements of grace are a
    real part of one’s conscious existence; that these .existential facts.
    of his concrete (his .historical.) nature are not just accidents of his
    being beyond his consciousness, but make themselves apparent in
    his experience of himself. (All the italics in these quotations have
    been added by the author.)

    Even now, after all these years, I can still remember the impact
    such words as these had on me on that station platform and after. To
    say that we can and should be conscious of grace in our daily lives
    opened up a whole new level of life to me. Rahner was speaking
    about direct experience..immediate self-awareness.. It seemed
    as if all my life I had been thinking about these things. Especially
    during my three years of philosophical and four years of theological
    training I had studied and learned all about grace. However,
    the realities dealt with in all those studies had remained just
    ideas. Above all, supernatural grace, essential as it was deemed,
    had always seemed far above and beyond any direct experience.
    Some years after my reading of Rahner, when Thomas Merton
    spoke in Anchorage as he left the U.S. for the last time, he said
    very simply that the Church in the U.S. is too cerebral. Well, I was
    certainly a product of my time in this regard. For years and years
    I lived mainly in my head, in my intellect. My approach to life
    was to analyze, categorize, and de_ne. None of these operations of
    the mind can bring one to immediate awareness, which is the only
    experience that transforms us.

    FREEDOM FROM SIN IN MEDITATION

    At Handokai our meditation practice has roots both in Zen and
    Christian meditation practice. It is an amalgam. Though basically
    Christian, the Zen roots are apparent in the externals of our sitting
    together. Buddhist insight has had a profound affect on me, to such
    an extent that I have literally not only become a better Christian and
    generally a better person, but my whole understanding of Christianity
    has been enlightened, profoundly enlightened, and I have a
    much better and deeper understanding of what Christianity is all
    about because of Buddhism.
    .When you sit even once, the merit obliterates countless
    wrong doings. How can there be evil realms? The Pure Land
    is not far away.. .Hakuin

    One text we have often used for our Wednesday night talks is
    this famous poem written in rather ordinary Japanese by the great
    17th century Zen master, Hakuin. In it he says that for the person
    who does one sitting, one session of true meditation, the accumulated
    immeasurable waywardness (sins) will all be annihilated.

    What is he speaking about? The main thing is to remember what
    sin means to the Japanese Buddhist, or to any Buddhist. We must
    get out of our western idea of sin. We were taught when we were
    little children that sin is an offense against God; in a sense it makes
    God angry and we must do something to atone for that sin. That is
    not what sin means here. It does not mean sin in the western sense.
    It basically means .waywardness,. of being .off the mark.. When
    he says that all of our sins will be wiped away with one sitting he
    means that all our waywardness is simply gone, has perished (while
    sitting).

    Where are our sins? Every action that we perform goes into our
    individual human energy form _eld, as into a memory bank. Every
    action that we have done, good or bad, has gone into and become
    a part of the individual energy _eld, our being, our .is-ing.. It also
    goes into the universal energy form _eld. Everything that we are
    doing now and have ever done in the past or will do in the future
    in_uences the whole energy _eld and in_uences the whole human
    race. Everything we do is there in that _eld. However, if we sit
    and really go into true meditation, we go into what we like to call
    the _ow. There is one great movement that is our fundamental life
    movement, our life force into action. That movement and action
    come directly from our fundamental Divine Source. We are nothing
    but that movement manifested in that hour of sitting and when
    we forget all our waywardness, forget everything and just open and
    allow the attention of our heart to bring us into that one _ow, at that
    moment we are pure.we are impeccable.

    When I was studying theology, we were taught that if a person
    really turns to God with all their heart, by that very act all their sins
    are forgiven. Legalistically, in regards to church doctrine, we should
    confess our sins, but they are already forgiven. It is interesting that
    Hakuin uses the word .Pure Land. in his poem.that the Pure Land,
    indeed, the Pure Land is not far away. You have already come into
    the state you are trying to get to. The Pure land is the Buddhist
    Heaven. It is called .pure. because there is no waywardness there.
    This Pure Land can also be understood as .the reign of God. and is
    not far away, but here now.

    If we allow ourselves in meditation to really let everything go,
    and by just watching our breath, saying the Jesus prayer or by doing
    centering prayer.whatever our focus of attention is.by really
    doing it and forgetting everything else, we will be taken into the
    Pure Land, into the reign of God. We have already reached where
    we are trying to go, but the reason why we have to keep meditating
    is because we don’t stay, we slip back. This beautiful text of Hakuin
    tells us what a wonderful thing it is to sit in meditation. So, as we
    always say, .Let’s sit..

    ENTERING THE HEART THROUGH ZEN

    .Our hearts are made for Thee, O God, and they are restless
    until they rest in Thee.. .St. Augustine

    Zazen, the practice of meditation, is holistic. We quiet the body
    so that we may in_uence and quiet the mind in order to allow the
    heart to take its natural course to the Source. This is the .heart.
    St. Augustine speaks of in these famous lines. This heart is not the
    physical organ or the seat of emotions. It is the power by which we
    can experience the In_nite.

    Perhaps no word in Buddhist writings is more important than
    .shin. (hsin in Chinese). This Sino-Japanese ideogram is consistently
    translated into English as .mind.. I feel this to be a very serious
    mistake as for most westerners, mind has to do with our ordinary
    intellection, our thinking. The basic meaning of the ideogram
    .shin. is in a sense the physical heart, the emotional center, the
    whole of a person’s psychology, and _nally, as the core or inner
    essence. All these meanings can be found in Buddhist texts, but the
    last is most common.

    Although for many years shin was usually translated into
    English as .mind,. anyone who knows Chinese or Japanese knows
    that this is too restrictive a rendering. Lately many translate it
    as .heart/mind. or even as .psyche.. The point is that shin is an
    extremely big, all-encompassing word. Besides meaning the physical
    heart and the vague .heart of a person,. it also refers to all the
    interior faculties and activities of the human person such as intuiting,
    conceptualizing, reasoning, willing, imagining, and emoting of
    all kinds. English words such as .core,. .essence,. and even .soul.
    if you will, are much closer to the real meaning. It is the meaning
    of shin as the heart, the essence of pines and cedars that the nun
    Ry¯o-Nen asks us to listen to with our shin in her famous poem:
    Sixty-six times have these eyes beheld the changing scenes
    of autumn.

    I have said enough about moonlight. Ask me no more.
    Only listen to the voice of pines and cedars,
    when no wind stirs.

    THE ZEN TRADITION

    There are basically two schools in Zen regarding enlightenment, the
    sudden and the gradual enlightenment schools. In general, S¯ot¯o Zen
    favors the gradual, Rinzai the sudden. The Sambo Kyodan School,
    which has roots in both S¯ot¯o and Rinzai practices, seems to favor the
    sudden, but yet acknowledges the gradual. Sudden enlightenment
    is usually preceded by a build-up of tension and happens in very
    perceptible experiences that clearly lift a person up to new levels
    of awareness. The practice of using a k¯oan, assigned by the master
    or naturally arisen, takes over the mind and the person is grasped
    by intense searching. Finally, there is a strong, even tremendous
    breakthrough, followed by an often extended period of integration
    of the light into the person’s psychology and behavioral patterns.
    [Editor's note:] Chinul, the Korean Zen Master of the 12th century,
    says in regards to a seeker who experiences sudden awakening and
    the process of gradual cultivation that follows:

    . . .He looks for the Buddha outside his mind. While he is
    thus wandering aimlessly, the entrance to the road might by
    chance be pointed out by a wise advisor. If in one thought he
    then follows back the light of his mind to its source and sees
    his own original nature, he will discover that the ground of
    his nature is innately free of de_lement, and that he himself
    is originally endowed with the non-out_ow wisdom nature
    which is not a hair’s breadth different from that of all the
    Buddhas. Hence it is called sudden awakening.

    Next let us consider gradual cultivation. Although he has
    awakened to the fact that his original nature is no different
    from that of the Buddhas, the beginningless habitenergies
    are extremely dif_cult to remove suddenly and so
    he must continue to cultivate while relying on this awaken-
    ing. Through this gradual permeation, his endeavors reach
    completion. He constantly nurtures the embryo, and after a
    long time he becomes a saint. Hence it is called `gradual cultivation’.
    . (Buddhist Scriptures, edited by Donald Lopez.)

    On the gradual path to enlightenment there are not as many _reworks
    and the steps are not as large and intense; there is just a steady
    growth, in small increments, of insight and integration. I often speak
    of the gradual path as that of the commonplace kensh ¯o (enlightenment
    experience). There are little insights, shifts of consciousness
    that take place in our lives all the time. Sometimes we hardly perceive
    them, but they are real growth. A very great deal of progress
    goes on within us at a level we are not aware of at all. I often ask
    students to not sell themselves short. They are all enlightened to
    some degree, and that the phenomenon of commonplace kensh ¯o is
    actually quite common. The important thing is to keep faithful to
    one’s practice.

    Zen is totally consistent in strictly down-grading the ordinary
    intellect. Ideas and concepts are suppressed (i.e. given no attention)
    because they are not .open. and are always at least one step
    removed from direct experience. They categorize, put things into
    boxes, whereas what we are seeking has no boundaries and can
    never be boxed in. Although Zen teachers do, of course, use the
    ordinary intellect and ordinary language in communicating experience
    and in practical instruction, nevertheless, they are entirely sincere
    when they describe in the four famous phrases one hears again
    and again, what Zen is:

    A special transmission outside teaching (kyo-ge-betsu-den)
    Not dependent on writings (fu-ryu-mon-ji)
    Direct attention to a person’s inner essence (jiki-shi-nin-shin)
    Seeing one’s nature and becoming a
    Buddha
    (ken-sh¯o-jo-butsu)

    EMPTY BEING, WONDROUS BEING!

    Zen meditation begins with what is called a .Great Faith Root..
    .Daishinkon. in Japanese. (dai.big, shin.faith, entrustment,
    kon.root.)

    What do we have faith in? We accept the reality of something
    and we entrust ourselves to it. In Zen, we accept the reality of the
    Buddha-nature (Christ-nature in Christianity), and in the idea that
    everything is the Buddha-nature. That is basic faith and you entrust
    yourself to this reality to reveal itself. Not only are you the Buddhanature
    but you can be conscious of and experience yourself as such.
    You are entrusting yourself to your true self.

    In Japanese this Buddha-nature is called .k¯u.. In Sanskrit it
    is called .´s¯unyat¯a.. Both of these words in a sense mean .emptiness.
    . However k¯u is not mere emptiness. It is that which is living,
    dynamic, devoid of mass, un_xed, beyond individuality or personality
    and the matrix of all phenomena. All phenomena arises out of
    this emptiness which is only empty from the standpoint of our _xation
    with categories. It is empty of all categories. It does not mean
    .nothing. in the sense of annihilation as in .no thing.. It means
    .nothing. in the sense of having no identi_able, concrete category,
    and all phenomena arise out of this emptiness. The meaning of k ¯u as
    emptiness simply negates any identi_able being or category. .Shin
    k¯u ny¯o y¯u. is a beautiful Zen phrase meaning .true emptiness is
    wondrous being, indescribable being.. It is this experience of the
    formless that is bliss, is perfect oneness. This is ultimate reality,
    basic teaching. This formless is here and it can be experienced. I
    can experience it. That is what Jesus meant when he said, .I must
    go to the Father.. The Father is this emptiness as formless Source.
    How do we experience our own formless nature? It is only by
    insight. It is not done by talking about it. You will not become
    enlightened in any way but through intuition, by direct perception.
    The opposite of this is conceptual thinking. It is like looking at a
    map. You will not have the experience of the place by looking at
    the map. It is only when you actually go to the city that you experience
    it. That is direct perception. Concepts, images, memories.all
    those things.are not direct perception and that will never satisfy
    our hunger for the discovery of our true nature which is only experienced
    through direct knowledge.

    My body is like a phantom, like bubbles on a stream. My
    mind, looking into itself, is as formless as empty-space, yet
    somewhere within sounds are perceived. Who is hearing?
    Should you question yourself in this wise with profound
    absorption, never slackening the intensity of your effort,
    your rational mind eventually will exhaust itself and only
    questioning at the deepest level will remain. Finally you will
    lose awareness of your own body. Your long-held conceptions
    and notions will perish, after absolute questioning, in
    the way that every drop of water vanishes from a tub broken
    open at the bottom, and perfect enlightenment will follow
    like _owers suddenly blooming on withered trees.

    With such realization you achieve true emancipation. But
    even now repeatedly cast off what has been realized, turning
    back to the subject that realizes, that is, to the root bottom,
    and resolutely go on. Your Self-nature will then grow
    brighter and more transparent as your delusive feelings perish,
    like a gem gaining luster under repeated polishing, until
    at last it positively illumines the entire universe. Don’t doubt
    this!
    .Bassui, quoted in Kapleau, The Pillars of Zen, p. 171.

    THE ORDINARY MIND

    Why can’t we come to this insight? What is in the way? All kinds
    of things get in the way of this basic, saving insight. This insight
    is salvation, but there are all kinds of obstacles and they differ with
    each one of us. The main problem for us human beings at this stage
    of consciousness evolution is our ordinary mind. We are in a mental,
    egoic state of development. It took thousands of years for the human
    race to come up to this level of intellectual perception and to come
    to a full consciousness of .self. as an individual and now we _nd
    when we get here that we have to drop it all. To get to the next stage
    we have to die to this stage.

    What does this .ordinary mind. mean? What is this mental
    movement within us? It includes conceptual knowledge, reasoning
    through comparing, judging, memory, images and imagination.
    A concept is a mental picture (which is a great accomplishment) but
    concepts are different than direct experience. We perceive through
    concepts. You can have a wonderful concept of sugar but you cannot
    enjoy it. It is a mental abstraction. We are standing back from
    the object of our perception and are not in direct experience. Our
    sense perception is the closest thing to direct perception.

    Secondly, you take those mental images and compare and analyze
    and do all kinds of mental gymnastics. The third thing is judging.
    To judge you must stand back and compare.this is good, this
    is bad, this is right, this is wrong, this is pleasant, that is unpleasant.
    You stand outside the _ow and are not in it. Judging is dualism,
    separation.

    The next is memory. It is amazing how much time we can spend
    recalling things. Memory is not direct perception. It is not salvation
    and is not really living. We can only imagine things in the past and
    in the future. It takes us out of our direct experience of the here and
    now.

    Why is it that this ordinary mind is such a problem? It is because
    it took such work to develop this way of conceptualizing, reasoning,
    judging and so forth that it has now taken over our psyche and we
    are governed by it, dominated by it. In as much as it does not allow
    us to go beyond it, it is a tyrant. We are slaves to the mind! It took so
    long to develop it and now we _nd we have a tyrant. However, there
    is no reason why we cannot go beyond that stage of development
    today. We can be pioneers of the new age in the very best sense of
    the term .new age.. What can we do? How can we still the mind
    and allow the intuition of Being to be experienced? The answer is
    meditation. In fact, Zen means meditation.

    DIRECT EXPERIENCE

    All of these mental operations are dualistic and imply a separation
    from experiential reality. They are separating us from direct experience
    and we will never be satis_ed with them. We think about some
    object, we imagine some object. When we have a subject thinking
    about some object we have a subject-object consciousness that is
    dualistic. It is not oneness and it is not holistic.

    We long for oneness, for unity, but without destroying our individuality.
    How do we come to that? None of these operations of the
    ordinary mind can give us direct experience. We must leave them
    aside if we are to enter into experiential insight. However, we can
    use them to gradually move us towards the experience of the Source,
    of our true nature. It may help us to sit and think, .Who am I?. and
    to use the mind, the imagination. One can get all kinds of answers
    with the ordinary mind, but you will ultimately not be ful_lled. That
    ordinary mind can bring you closer and closer to the experience of
    reality through re_nement of this mind until _nally it has to say .I
    give up,. and that giving up is death to the ordinary mind and to the
    ego structure that is created by that mind. Surrendering, dying, you
    go into the experience of emptiness, of the Source, to the .Father..
    When you experience that emptiness as Source, everything comes
    back and reveals itself in truth.

    The teaching of my _rst Zen teacher, the great Yasutani R¯oshi
    regarding kensh¯o is that it is seeing directly into your true nature
    and realizing that you and the universe are basically one. You do
    not have an ultimate nature that is different or separate from mine.
    At the level of the formless we are one, but not a numerical oneness,
    as the void cannot be enumerated, cannot be divided.

    .Once you have perceived this you will know down to your
    bowels the meaning of human existence and therefore know
    the peaceful existence that arises from such a revolutionary
    insight. The road to such knowledge is zazen (meditation)..
    .Yasutani R¯oshi

    FOLLOWING THE BREATH, FOLLOWING THE
    HEART

    .Each breath is a priceless work. Each time you let go of
    thoughts of past and future it is an erosion of your ego. It
    can only be done one breath at a time.. .Hando
    With shikantaza, the meditation practice of .just sitting,. there
    is nothing but the naked stirring of the heart. You do not clothe that
    stirring with anything. What are you doing? You are just following
    your heart, which is formless. But what about Zen meditation with a
    minimal object, with something to put your monkey mind to, something
    to focus on? You can start with counting your breath which
    may be a complex process. You can be aware of the breath going
    into your nostrils. You can feel your chest expanding and contracting.
    You can feel that you are breathing from the belly, or from the
    whole body. Just the breathing itself is complex, and then you may
    add to that the counting. You can just count the inhalations which
    is more activating or the exhalations which is more quieting. If you
    feel you are going to sleep you can count your inhalations. If you
    feel okay or you are restless, you can count your exhalations. With
    meditation on the breath you must decide whether you are going to
    be attentive primarily to the sensations experienced in the breathing
    process or to counting, to saying the numbers.

    Whatever it is you decide upon, it is a rather active process and
    that is how one can come to a focus, to one-pointedness of the mind.
    Once you have done that, it is recommended that you stop counting
    and just become aware of the breathing process, of being aware of
    the breath in the nostrils, in the belly, of the chest expanding and
    contracting. You make no judgments while practicing; you are just
    aware and may _nd that eventually the breath becomes slower and
    deeper. My recommendation is that you just breathe from the belly
    and be aware of the whole body expanding and contracting.

    This little exercise in breathing then becomes imbued with the
    fundamental search of your being, the yearning of your heart for
    the experience of the In_nite. Each breath takes on the dignity, the
    immense importance of that search, which is the most fundamental
    thing in human nature. Each breath becomes a tremendous event.
    When you begin to experience that, you know you are on the path
    and each breath becomes more and more wonderful and you _nd
    that you can engage in this practice of following the breath for years.
    NENJ¯O
    A _ower blooms purely
    Falls purely
    And without complaint
    Lives in the now
    Saku mo mushin
    Chiru mo mushin
    Hana wa nagekazu
    Ima wo ikiru
    .Shinmin Sakamura

    Two Sino-Japanese characters form a perfect ideogram to
    express mindfulness: Nen indicates the present, now; J ¯o indicates
    the whole interior of a human being from the physical heart to the
    very core or essence of all reality. Here it clearly means all our
    power of awareness and attention. When these powers are together
    and focused on the .here and now,. we are in a state of .nen.. A
    powerful practice is to focus all one’s powers of attention as an
    expression of praise, devotion and entrustment to a name or presence
    of a savior such as Amitabha for Pure Land Buddhists (or to
    Christ for Christians.) In Christianity this practice is paralleled by
    the nen of the Jesus prayer. For this practice to bear fruit a person
    must become totally absorbed in the recitation. This is indicated by
    the second Japanese character .j¯o. (Chinese..ding.). This same
    ideogram the Chinese used to express the Sanskrit samadhi which
    indicates _xed, stable.

    When you totally _x your attention on saying a verbal phrase, on
    your breath or on any .here and now. event, you become absorbed
    in it. You, as subject, are no longer separate from the event.the
    breath, the word, the act of sitting. The dualism of you, subject,
    observing your breath, object, is replaced by non-dual awareness.
    Now you are in the state of nenj¯o. You are _xed in mindfulness.
    Ordinary mental activity recedes and you are in the here and now,
    directly experiencing and not looking from the outside. You are
    experiencing from the inside out rather than from the outside in.
    This, and only this, is the state in which the _ower of enlightenment
    blossoms. That is why stable, total mindfulness is the immediate
    goal of our practice.

    NATURE COMMUNION

    I experientially learned about mindfulness one crisp winter day in
    the hills of Kamakura across the road from our Language School in
    Japan. I was walking by myself on a trail along one side of a small
    valley. The other side was a typical winter scene.a slope covered
    with bare trees and thickets, with a few pines and other evergreens
    interspersed here and there. I stopped, stood still and stared at the
    scene. At _rst glance it was nice, but not all that arrestingly beautiful.
    However, as I kept looking I became aware of an immense
    variety of shapes and colors. The vegetation was brown, russet, tan,
    grey, green and even chalky white, in amazingly subtle pastels. As I
    gazed, the shape of each tree, bush and outcropping of rock came to
    stand out as individual and unique. Fascinated, I kept gazing. Next,
    the distinct clarity of details began to merge into a remarkable harmony.
    No shade or shape was out of place. Everything was melding
    into, as G.M. Hopkins said, .One sweet especial rural scene..
    Here, sad to say, my ordinary mind interrupted the process.
    It effectively stopped the movement into communion. I began to
    re_ect about the scene and about my gazing. Even at the time I
    knew that if I could have continued to gaze without adding on mental
    re_ections and labels, if I had not begun thinking about how I
    could share this with others, I would have lost myself in the harmonious
    oneness of the Self. The subtle, quiet, .nothing unusual.
    reality there before my eyes was radiating the Whole. All the trees,
    shrubs and grasses of that hillside were impeccably manifesting the
    Whole. By mindfulness my perception was becoming attuned not
    just to the many, but also to the One. If my simple, bare attention
    had not wavered, I could have entered in and discovered the Self.
    If we quiet the pluralistic and dualistic mind, the rest of the process
    is almost inevitable. The heart will take its natural course to
    God. A new mode of perception will arise in the psyche. In the
    light of non-dual consciousness, we will experience the coincidence
    of the many and the one. This is true contemplation
    It is this contemplative ideal which has effectively kept me in
    the Society of Jesus these many years. Our founder, Ignatius of
    Loyola, gave us as our primary mode of living the _nding of God in
    all things. A true Jesuit is said to be a contemplativus in actione, a
    person who is contemplative in his activities, no matter what. What I
    didn’t really understand for many years was the crucial importance
    of mindfulness practice in order to realize this ideal. In point of
    time, it was only after I had been a Jesuit for about thirty years and
    had begun the disciplined attention of Zen that I experienced that
    .contemplative seeing. in the Kamakura hills.

    CONTEMPLATIVE AWARENESS

    Contemplation is a matter of direct awareness. It is a mode of
    perception in which you share in the very being of, say, a daffodil.
    Every movement, i.e., every act of existence has a builtin
    self-awareness. We call this consciousness (con, from cum,
    together with; scious, from scire, to know, be aware). This daffodil’s
    being is constituted by both its act of existence and its builtin
    self-awareness. If, through simple, bare attention, you come to
    forget your own self-awareness, you can actually share in the selfawareness
    of this daffodil. Your identity melds into the identity of
    the _ower. In this sense you become the _ower. Such a contemplative
    communion can only happen when you go out of your preoccupation
    with the self-centered awareness of your being as separate.
    Subject-object perception must drop away. Once in this contemplative
    mode of perception, it is an easy step to move into the
    Self-awareness of Being itself. Plants, because of their purity, are
    excellent for such contemplative insight. This results in becoming
    one with Being itself and therefore with all beings without exception.
    This is why Zen teachers say that the universe is in every grain
    of rice. And why Ignatius of Loyola calls on us to _nd God in all
    things.

    .I stopped, stood still, and stared..

    Consider the word .stopped. in the above account of my seeing the
    Kamakura hillside. The _rst step on the contemplative path is to
    stop. Often this means to stop physically. You are walking in thick
    woods. Suddenly a beautiful meadow opens out before you. To
    enjoy the scene you stop walking; this for the sake of simplicity of
    attention. While walking you have to keep one eye open for rocks,
    roots, puddles on the trail. So, to put your full attention on the
    meadow, you stop. Meditation, for example, zazen, is the same.
    You stop all physical movement so as to enter into mindfulness.
    Even the walking done during meditation time is done in simplicity
    on a clear, level place as you _x your total attention either on each
    step or on the same focal point you’ve been using while sitting.

    However, interior stopping is vastly more important and, sad
    to say, immensely more dif_cult. In order to reduce and then stop
    our ordinary pluralistic/dualistic awareness, we draw our attention
    away from the past, the future, from abstractions, re_ections, from
    expectations and worries.from all such distractions.and move
    into simple, bare attention to one focal point (e.g. breathing). This
    can even shift into attention without any object.

    If we were perfectly disciplined in attention, one moment of
    bare attention would bring us into unity consciousness. As it is, we
    usually have to keep on looking and looking, often plagued by distractions.
    This is the hard part and takes real effort. We need to persevere
    until non-dual consciousness begins to arise in our psyche.
    When this happens, the effort to focus turns into effortless effort.
    Take again mindfulness to the _ower. Our path to true awareness
    begins in the individual existence of this _ower. The eternal
    One is to be found in this .here and now _ower.. This _ower is
    what leads us to experience the common whole.

    Put yourself again beside a lovely meadow you have discovered
    in a forest. Having stopped, you keep looking at all the unique
    details. As you continue to give bare attention to the meadow, the
    beautiful harmony of all the various elements of the scene arises in
    your awareness. Each _ower, each blade of grass, fallen log, tiny
    shrub and bit of moss.all separate.come together. Each unique,
    they join in a commonality. Their diversity is existentially compat-
    ible with their being one. This is the bi-polar universe before your
    very eyes. Think of how colors in nature never clash. The tints
    and shades we humans put together are often in disharmony. Isn’t it
    because, apart from when humans interfere, nature is always in the
    _ow, which means not just harmony but oneness?
    Deep among ten thousand peaks I sit alone cross-legged
    A solitary thought _lls my empty mind
    My body is the moon that lights the winter sky
    In rivers and in lakes are only its re_ections
    .Te-ch’ing, cited in The Clouds Should Know Me By Now.

    Harmony is only a passage to communion. Not only are all
    the elements of the meadow scene together in one energy _ow, you
    are in that same _ow, too. As you keep gazing, you enter into the
    oneness of the meadow and all things. In this experience, the duality
    of subject (you looking) and object (_owers, grass, etc.) drops away.
    You enter into what truly must be termed divine awareness. You
    and the scene, while existing as many beings, are at the same time
    one being. Just as each being has its concommitment singular and
    unique awareness, Being has unity consciousness. Mindfulness is
    engaged in to bring us all the way to the one ultimate awareness we
    all share. In the state of full consciousness we must say to each tree,
    rock or blade of grass, .We are one Self.. .You are me and I am
    you.. This Being/being Self-awareness is enlightenment.the goal
    of mindfulness.

    * * *

    Editor’s Note: Fr. Hand has often talked about coming to a state of
    consciousness in which one can say .I am the tree.. An illustration
    of this state of full consciousness in regards to nature that Hando
    has spoken of can be found in this experience of Ashokananda, the
    Vedanta teacher from India who was head of the Vedanta Society of
    San Francisco for many years until his death in 1969:
    One day, looking at a huge Banyan tree, he was suddenly
    thunderstruck by the tremendous life force manifested there.
    When he was near trees, his mind would sometimes grow
    very quiet, and his ordinary, human consciousness would
    be obliterated, as it were, and tree consciousness would
    take its place, a consciousness entirely unlike our own.a
    different time sense, a different way of knowing and feeling,
    indescribable in terms of human (ordinary) consciousness.
    He felt at one with trees, just as we feel at one with
    human beings. Later, when returning to human consciousness,
    he could not remember what tree consciousness was
    like. Human (ordinary) consciousness is so very different.
    . . . Finding trees to be not at all inferior to human beings,
    he came to the conclusion that there are different types of
    consciousness in the scheme of things.not higher or lower
    in the scale of evolution, but different types.of equal value
    and equal potential. But this, he always added, was his own
    peculiar idea which one may or may not accept.
    (Sister Gargi, A Heart Poured Out, p. 63 and p. 70)

    THE MYSTERY OF Ch’ang AND FREEDOM FROM
    FEAR

    The great Taoist mystic, Lao Tz_u, speaks from the heart of reality
    when he calls the Path (Tao) of mystery, .ch’ang.. He does this in
    the very _rst line of his Tao T.e Ching when he says .the Way can
    be expressed, but not the ch’ang way..

    No one English word can give an adequate translation of ch’ang.
    .Usual,. .ordinary,. .habitual,. .common,. and .constant. are all
    given in dictionaries. The question here is what this word meant
    to the early Taoist and Zen masters who followed them. This is no
    idle or simply academic question. To answer it will take us to the
    very heart of reality. To actually experience ch’ang is the _rst great
    step to full enlightenment. However, to enter the mystery land of
    ch’ang, we must start from the .Land of Kuan,. as this is were our
    awareness most often, or always, abides.

    A kuan is a barrier. The k¯oan collection of The Mumonkan
    is translated as .Gateless Barrier.. The .Land of Barriers. is the
    world of separation. For example, when we speak of the nineteenth
    century, we put up barriers when we say 1800.1899, and create a
    certain segment of time. The segment is separated from all other
    centuries of the past or future. Such a period of time is not ch’ang
    because ch’ang refers to that which is common to all time periods.
    It can therefore be translated as .eternal.. When I say I live in a
    certain place, I have delineated a space that is separate from every
    other place in the universe. This too is not ch’ang, which has no
    space limitation. Even words like .good. and .beautiful. are not
    ch’ang because they have opposites.

    So, what is common to all reality? The only thing common to
    all beings is Being itself, pure and simple. But why is it so imperative
    that we actually experience .Being. as such? Psychologically
    speaking, it is because only in this experience do we fully escape the
    frightening isolation of our egos. Only in the unity of pure Being do
    we know the love that casts out all fear and enter into unlimited joy.
    Pure Being is the ultimate reality and we are made for this experience.
    As St. Augustine says, .Our hearts are made for thee, O God,
    and they are restless until they rest in thee..

    Full enlightenment is when we know both the .Land of ch’ang.
    and the .Land of guan..both constituents of reality.the absolute
    and the relative, and the One expressed in the many. This is not
    the numerical .one. but the One that excludes all other numbers.
    How can we enter the mystery land of ch’ang? Who can ascend
    the mountain of the One-who-is? .The clean of hand and the pure
    of heart.. (Psalm 24) The whole psyche must be unrestricted and
    totally open. It is a matter of attuning our psyche to that which we
    long to experience.the In_nite.

    A ZEN K¯O AN

    What is a k¯oan? It is an anecdote, or a text from a s¯utra, in which
    a Zen teacher communicates or transmits enlightenment. We must
    remember what transmission means. For full transmission it means
    that the light has to come from the teacher and the light must be
    received, or activated in the disciple. It is very much like a radio
    transmission that sends out sound waves. If I have a receiver on
    the same wave length, the transmission is received. K¯oan work is
    making oneself into a .receiver..

    Yasutani R¯oshi says, .You have been counting your breath and
    doing shikantaza. It is possible to come to awakening through these
    exercises alone, but the quickest way is through a k ¯oan.. To see how
    one may work with a k¯oan, I would like to take the Zen k¯oan .mu,.
    (or .wu. in Chinese) meaning .no. in English.

    In the Zen story, a monk asked Master J¯osh¯u, .Does a dog have
    Buddha-nature?. J¯osh¯u responded, .No!. which communicated
    his profound enlightenment. In Japanese, this .mu. is .no,. but it
    means much more than simply stating a negative.

    When J¯osh¯u says .mu. what is he saying no to? He is saying no
    to intellectualism. Do not just ask about it (with the ordinary mind),
    do not just think about it. When J¯osh¯u said .mu. he put his whole
    heart and soul into it. Ever since that time this syllable has been
    echoing down Zen halls and bringing thousands to enlightenment.

    What do you do with it? You use the syllable to open yourself out
    to enlightenment. You use it as a skillful means to open yourself out
    to the very same enlightenment that J¯osh¯u transmitted. You make
    yourself into a receiver of the transmission by using this syllable
    mu. This usually means by continuing to repeat it to the rhythm of
    your breathing, such as on the inhalation and the exhalation.

    This is not devotional, but shares in the element of devotion as it
    has a built-in faith. You really do entrust yourself to the transmission
    of enlightenment that you know is given in that syllable. It is based
    on faith. The big point is to not let that syllable get into your head
    and into your intellection. You do not use the intellect to solve a
    k¯oan. You can use intellect to start by asking, .What is mu?. But
    then you must drop the question.

    A k¯oan, contrary to the popular conception in this country, is
    not a riddle. It is not a conundrum. The example that I have used
    before is, .What is it that is black and white and read all over?. The
    answer is a newspaper. You have solved the riddle, but did it affect
    your life? No. It just made you happy to solve it. A k ¯oan is not like
    that at all. It has nothing to do with this and although it often seems
    like a riddle, that is not what it is.

    The _rst thing you want to do when you start to use a k ¯oan
    as your practice is to _nd the .wato.. The _rst character of this
    Japanese word means a unit of speech, to talk, to speak. The second
    character means a .head. or the key expression. What is the
    phrase or word in which the enlightenment experience is transmitted?
    That is what you look for. In the mu k¯oan, the word that is the
    wato is .mu.. You then take that mu, that transmission of enlightenment
    from the master, and become totally absorbed in it. It is not
    a subject-object experience. Yamada R¯oshi told me many times:
    .Become one with mu!. What he is saying is an excellent expression
    of what one means when using the word .zen..
    The Japanese word .zen. comes from the Chinese word
    .ch’an.. This came from the word .j.n¯ana. in Sanskrit which
    means the state of absorption, or sam¯adhi. Such a state is reached
    through having one’s entire attention dwell uninterruptedly on a
    physical or mental object of meditation. Your total attention is _xed
    there and through this absorption in the object the passions fade
    away.especially the passion to intellectualize. You become totally
    absorbed in the word or phrase until everything else drops away.
    Why do you want that? Because it stops the ordinary mind and the
    inner insight can open. Otherwise you are stuck in mental imagery,
    mental concepts.you are outside direct experience.

    In the Mumonkan, the collection of k¯oans, the _rst is this about
    J¯osh¯u’s dog. After giving the k¯oan, Mumon gives the commentary.
    He says, .Make your whole body a mass of doubt.. By this he
    means we become a mass of frustration because we cannot get it,
    cannot understand, cannot break through. Then he says to get your
    whole being into it. .Day and night, keep digging into it. Don’t
    think in terms of `have’ or `have not.’ Do not think about such
    things. It is like swallowing a red hot iron ball. You try to vomit
    it out but you can’t.. Gradually you purify yourself; the whole
    world of conditioned thoughts and imagery and everything and all
    that causes us suffering drops aside. Gradually you purify yourself,
    eliminating mistaken knowledge and attitudes you have held from
    the past. .Outside and inside become one. You are like a mute person
    who has had a dream. You know it for yourself alone. Suddenly
    mu breaks open. . . . How then should you work with it? Exhaust
    your life energy on this one word mu. If you do not falter, then it’s
    done. A single spark lights your dharma candle..

    In the beginning you try and catch mu, catch the wato, but then
    the k¯oan catches you. You cannot let it go. It’s got you. When that
    happens you know that you are working from deep within yourself.
    The questioning is not presented from the outside, but the whole of
    that creative power that is keeping you in existence right now, the
    whole of that power is engaged in that one question. Then you can
    sit for hours.

    Inside Mu

    Literally the expression .mu. means .no,. or .nothing..it is a
    negatizer meaning unbreakable, indivisible, empty, formless, in_-
    nite. Mu is the expression of the living, functioning, dynamic
    Buddha-nature. However, the signi_cance of J¯osh¯u’s answer does
    not lie in that word. This simple, meaningless sound becomes the
    symbol of what we are seeking. It becomes the expression of the
    living, functioning, dynamic Buddha-nature. What you must do is
    discover the spirit, or essence of mu, not through intellectual analysis
    but by searching into your innermost being. You look inside. It
    is a process of self-identi_cation. Yasutani R¯oshi says, .You must
    demonstrate to me vividly that you understand mu as a living truth
    without recourse to conceptions, theories or abstract explanations.
    Remember, you cannot understand mu through ordinary cognitions.
    You must understand it with your whole being.. This is the heart of
    Zen; this is the transmission of Zen.

    When you do the practice of mu to the rhythm of your breathing,
    the very simple activity which you put all your attention to is the act
    of saying this syllable mu within yourself. What you are attentive
    to is saying that word, the sound inside yourself. At the beginning
    it is mechanical and sometimes distasteful, but gradually there will
    be times when this simple act of saying the word becomes imbued
    with the most fundamental hunger and search in your own being.
    In Christian terms, when that is felt it is called the .stirring of the
    heart.. You can continue doing it, saying .mu. on and on for years
    as it becomes that which is most sacred and most profound in your
    own being. Another word you could use could be .Om.. Just say
    it within yourself. Don’t think about it and try to understand it with
    your analytical mind. Just say it. You can also say .Amen.. Just
    say it with each breath, or you can say .Maranatha.Lord, come..
    A word that has no meaning is valuable simply because it has no
    meaning to our ordinary mind. As one Zen master said: .Words
    with meaning are dead words. Words without meaning are alive..
    Words with meaning can trap you. You get trapped in the meaning
    and your ordinary mind draws you away from the object. Likewise,
    being in the present, fully present in the now, we lose the
    subject-object relationship. We come into the in_nite, into a timeless
    reality. Distraction by the ordinary mind brings us outside this
    reality into time and into dualistic thinking.

    Going back to that fundamental question of whether the dog has
    Buddha-nature, we _nd that the question itself is dualistic. It is not
    a question of whether a dog has Buddha-nature, or if I have the
    Buddha-nature. The .no. or .mu. of J¯osh¯u is not an answer to the
    question but an answer to the way the question is asked. It is not a
    question of whether it has or has not. It is not a question of what
    you have, but of what you are, the recognition, the discovery of what
    you are. This Buddha-nature has no concepts but is full Being.
    Now, just as the ordinary mind rules, takes over and dominates
    our ordinary psyche, so the mu search.mu or any other word used
    in this was as the truth of yourself. must take over your consciousness.
    Your whole psyche is only hearing mu, seeing mu, tasting mu.
    Everything that happens becomes mu.

    Regarding this k¯oan practice, Yasutani R¯oshi says, .You begin
    by concentrating intensely but then you slacken off. For a time you
    hold onto mu as I hold onto my baton and then you relax it like
    this.(drops it). That will never do. You will never get anywhere if
    you meditate for awhile and then slack off. When you walk, only
    mu walks. When you eat, only mu eats. When you work, only mu
    works. When you come before me, only mu appears. When you
    prostrate yourself, it is mu that prostrates. When speaking, it is mu
    that speaks. When lying down to sleep, it is mu that sleeps, it is
    mu that awakes. Having reached the point when your sleeping, your
    tasting, your thinking are nothing but mu, suddenly you directly
    perceive mu..

    R¯oshi also says that .to realize your Self-nature you have to
    break out of the cul-de-sac of logic and analysis. The ordinary question
    demands a rational answer, but trying to answer, .What is mu?.
    rationally is like trying to smash your _st through an iron wall. This
    question forces you into a realm beyond reasoning. But your whole
    effort to solve it is not without meaning. What you are really trying
    to _nd out is, .What is my true Self?.

    Do not separate yourself from whatever you are putting your
    attention to. Do not separate yourself for one second. When you
    go outside, the bird is singing and it’s singing mu. The planes overhead
    are roaring out mu. Everything becomes mu. It takes over your
    consciousness. When you are in that state, mu becomes an expression
    of your fundamental nature, that which you have been seeking.
    Whether it is mu, om, amen, or breathing, remain in that state and
    keep coming back to it.

    In meditation we concentrate on one simple thing, the breath,
    the sensations, the counting, the word, the k¯oan, or simply sitting.
    The act of thinking, imagination, dissipates the power of your concentration
    and the power of perception. We need to concentrate on
    one simple thing. Simple means narrow, con_ned, focused. .Strive
    to enter through the narrow door.. (Luke 13:14) Entering into the
    .narrow door. is the same teaching we receive in Zen.

    Concentrate on the here and now.not on the past, not on the
    future. The reign of God is present and .at hand.. This narrow
    focus opens out to the In_nite and we are taken into the reign of
    God.

    A GOSPEL K¯O AN

    As we have understood, the k¯oan is an anecdote, a saying or an
    action in which a true teacher transmits his or her enlightenment.
    Transmission of enlightenment is the main point. This transmission
    of enlightenment is to happen within oneself and demands an
    entirely different mode of perception than that of the ordinary intellect.
    To help practitioners, Zen created k¯oan collections. Seeing
    how valuable these are on the spiritual path, we can ask ourselves if
    there is anything comparable in Christianity. In answer to this I say
    that the Gospels are truly texts whose primary purpose is to transmit
    enlightenment. Although somewhat the same type of documents, in
    Zen the collections are disjointed presentations of different masters.
    In the Gospels the text is more continuous and only the Master Jesus
    is presented.

    As an example of a Gospel k¯oan, when asked by the Pharisees
    when the kingdom of God would come, Jesus said in reply, .The
    coming of the kingdom of God cannot be observed, and no one will
    announce, `Look, here it is’ or, `There it is,’ for behold, the kingdom
    of God is within you.. (Luke 17:20.21).

    How does one work with the text in order to share in this lifegiving
    Light? The _rst step is to _nd the key phrase, word or action
    in which the master is transmitting enlightenment. One phrase may
    be, .The coming of the kingdom cannot be observed.. Here Jesus
    is speaking from his own experience, is transmitting enlightenment.
    Only by a radical change of mind-set can this kingdom be experienced.
    Another wato may be found in .the kingdom of God is within
    you.. Once the key phrase is found, you are to keep it in mind until
    you become absorbed in it. It must take over your whole psyche.
    Where attention goes, energy _ows. You become so much one with
    the phrase that the original energy transmitted in it _ows into you
    and you join the Master in the realm of higher awareness. Total
    absorption is the one essential core of k¯oan practice. Only this will
    activate the divine creative power within each of us, leading to rebirth
    and re-creation.

    .Come and See.
    You may also let the following k¯oan from the Gospel of John (1:35.
    39) be your practice:

    John the Baptist is at the river Jordan standing with two of
    his disciples and as he watched Jesus walk by, he exclaimed,
    .Look, here is the lamb of God!. The two disciples heard
    him say this, and they followed Jesus. When Jesus turned
    and saw them following, he said to them, .What are you
    looking for?. (.What are you seeking?.) They said to him,
    .Rabbi (teacher), where are you staying?. (.Where do you
    abide?.) He said to them, .Come and see.. They came and
    saw and stayed where he was staying and they remained with
    him that day. It was about four o’clock in the afternoon.

    This text seems so obvious and simple on the surface, but let’s go
    inside because it is an extraordinarily rich introduction to the Gospel
    of John. How can you actually work with this text?
    The two disciples are standing still and Jesus is moving. How to
    move forward? They follow Jesus. John says .behold the Lamb of
    God.. A lamb is a metaphor. There is something about a lamb that
    is carried (meta) over (phor) and found in Jesus. What is it about a
    lamb that is applied to Jesus? Most think of the lamb as the servant
    of Yahweh as described in the Book of Isaiah, chapter 3, where the
    servant is compared to a lamb that is led to slaughter. That is the
    metaphorical element that is brought forward to talk about Jesus.
    A lamb is a being that follows the will of God, even to its death,
    without ever complaining.

    It is a further elaboration, something added on when we think of
    a lamb as a sacri_ce, as paying a price. It is not necessary to include
    that in the interpretation. Jesus is obedient even unto death, but that
    this is atonement and a making up to an angry God for our sins is an
    element that we do not have to adopt. A lamb obeys, submits, never
    rebels, a lamb does not go against the movement of the spirit, of the
    plan of God. That is what is meant here. The original Aramaic word
    that is translated as .lamb. is .taly¯a. and that means both lamb and
    servant. Jesus is the one who follows as the .servant. of God and
    not necessarily as the .(sacri_cial) lamb. of God.

    The whole scene is set with Jesus as the one who does the will
    and who follows the will of God, even unto death. So what did
    the disciples do? They followed the one who follows. That is the
    Christian path. By doing so they are taken into the divine plan per-
    fectly because Jesus is the perfect living out of the divine plan, the
    movement of the spirit, or the reign of God.

    When the disciples heard John and saw Jesus, it was the beginning
    of their faith. They heard John say, .Here is the servant of
    Yahweh, the one who follows God.. As Paul said, faith comes from
    hearing. Jesus turned and saw them following and asks them what
    they are seeking, why they are following. He tests them by this
    question and their answer seemed so shallow, on the surface. However,
    they were not asking if he is staying in a cave, or in a house or
    a little hut. Although many people may take it that way, that is not
    what the Gospel of John is communicating. This is a fundamental
    question that comes out of their faith and insight and their entrustment
    to follow. They want more clarity and further insight about
    this being .Jesus..

    The Greek word .to stay. (menein) is used often in the Gospel
    of John and it always has the idea of where you live with your whole
    being, where your thoughts, mind, heart, interest and will is. Menein
    is not just to live, but to abide, to stay. In this text it is not just
    bodily staying, but means where you are absorbed, where you are
    with your total being. One of the most beautiful examples of the
    use of this word .menein. as .abide. is when Jesus says, .Abide
    in Me as I abide in the Father.. It is a mystical word and a very
    important word to understand for the intellectual understanding of
    this k¯oan. This statement, this word used in John, is of fundamental
    importance and is a fundamental question. When asked where he
    abides, what does Jesus reply? .Come and see.. It is an invitation
    to enlightenment. Again, the ordinary Greek word .to see. as it is
    used in John becomes a mystical word. It is enlightenment. You see
    it again at the time of the resurrection. The technical phrase is .I
    have `seen’ the Lord.. This is not just physical.

    Jesus said to them, .Come and see. and they came and saw
    where he was staying, where he was abiding. That is their _rst
    enlightenment experience and it says they remained with him that
    day. The same word .menein. was used in the text indicating that
    they abided in the consciousness of Christ that day. In the Zen tradition,
    daigo tettei is a great enlightenment experience in which your
    whole life is integrated, but this experience of the disciples may
    have been what the Japanese would call a kensh¯o experience. Going
    on, the text originally said, .It was the tenth hour. rather than .It
    was four o’clock in the afternoon.. Keeping the original hour .ten,.
    which the Hebrew expressed, has greater meaning as in Hebrew, ten
    also means completion. .It was the tenth hour. means it was the
    hour of completion.

    How do we work on this Gospel k¯oan? What is the wato in
    this text? You can use the phrase, .They followed Jesus,. or, .What
    are you seeking?. or, .Come and see,. or, .They came and saw..
    You just let those words work in you, work until something catches
    you, something activates the deepest movement of your psyche.
    You can take any one of those words; however, I would say that
    the main point of transmission actually is found between two statements,
    .Come and see. and, .They came and saw.. But let’s just
    take, .Come and see..

    When working on this phrase .Come and see,. just listen to it.
    It’s an invitation to enlightenment. And if you really listen to it,
    even without words you will be asking. .Lord, please show me; let
    me see, Lord, that I may see.. If you really say that with your whole
    being, then very easily you may enter into a dialogue with Jesus
    beginning in your mind. You may _nd yourself asking, .What is it
    that I am being invited to? Where is your abode? Where do you
    live? Is it the reign of God? Is it the _ow, the movement of the
    spirit? Is that where you abide? Is it the plan of the divine Spirit,
    the Source, the Father? Is it that you abide in me and everyone and
    everything else?.

    You may continue carrying on that dialogue by asking, .Where
    do you stay?. Nowhere in the text does it say where Jesus was
    .staying.. Then to the next question, .Do you live in the _ow of
    the spirit?. Jesus may answer .No.. .Well, do you abide in me and
    all people and everything around me?. Jesus may answer .No!.
    Why does he say .no.? One way to understand this is to remember
    that all those are ideas and in the realm of ordinary thought. So
    much of our Christian writing is there.in ideas.but that is not the
    enlightenment transmission of the Gospel. We are in the .ordinary
    mind. and spin off into theology and then what are we left with?
    We are left with the longing to see, to experience our fundamental
    being. And yet Jesus says that you are not going to .see. with your
    intellect. It is a different mode of perception.

    What we have to do then is to take something like .come and
    see. and repeat it until the ordinary mind stops or repeat it until it
    engages the deepest creative power of the spirit that you are, and
    you do not need the words any more. You just sit. Only by quieting
    the mind do you say any k¯oan.

    Entering the Reign of God

    How will the solution to the k¯oan come? Suppose that you are working
    on the k¯oan and your mind has become quiet. You are just sitting
    there, rather stuck. You go out from your meditation at the end of
    the day and may be getting ready for bed when your stomach really
    starts to hurt. As a matter of fact, it may have been hurting all day
    or for a couple of weeks and it is really painful right now. Well,
    your mind kicks in and says, .Maybe I have an ulcer,. or .Maybe I
    have cancer!. Your emotions start kicking in and that creates more
    thought, .Oh my gosh, I have to go see a doctor!. and it goes on and
    on, .Suppose I die and I have all these things I should have gotten
    rid of,. and suddenly in the midst of all that your Zen comes in and
    you stop.and suddenly there is a little sharp pain and you rejoice
    because you realize that this little pain right here is the reign of God,
    this is where Jesus is staying. This is where I stay. This is my abode,
    and it is a very concrete experience. It is not an idea any more. It is
    a reality, happening. The pain opens you up, and since you had this
    training of stopping the mind.boom.it happens. This is the _ow
    of the spirit. This is where Jesus abides. This is what I am seeking.
    And in that pain you _nd joy and peace, a little enlightenment
    experience. That is where it usually happens.

    Very rarely does a person have an enlightenment experience just
    sitting in meditation. It will nearly always be a little bit of something
    that shocks. It might just be the bell at the end of the meditation
    period. Many people have been enlightened by that sound. This
    sound can free us from the ordinary mind. The concrete experience
    of that bell.it is not a thought at all. Another example, and we have
    all experienced it, is to look at a _ower. There is such purity there.
    There is the reign of God in perfect, unsullied innocence. There is
    no sin, no waywardness there. Just as in a bird song. There is purity
    itself.

    These are some thoughts that I hope can bring us into the richness
    of the Gospels.

    THE COMING

    .But the hour is coming, and is now here. . . . (John 4:23)
    .Parousia. is a Greek word meaning .a coming to be beside.
    and was used when the presence of the person came. The Latin
    word .adventus. means .to come.. The English word .to come to.
    emphasizes the point that the process we are talking about when we
    speak of .the coming. is primarily a consciousness process. When
    we say, .Come, Holy Spirit. what do we mean? When we break out
    of our little shells and look at this idea of .coming to. we may _nd
    an avenue into a spirituality that will really _t where we are today.
    I would like to look at it as an awareness of global spirituality with
    its many variations.

    We may look at the idea of .coming. as a Biblical way of
    expressing the creative drive of .being. and since God is pure
    Being, Being itself, then we are speaking about the creative drive
    of God. God is the One who Is. That is the meaning of the Hebrew
    name Yahweh. When Moses spoke to God on Sinai, God said, .Say
    `I AM’ has sent me to you.. (Exodus 3:14) .I AM. is the name of
    God as Being with no quali_cations.not being the god of war, the
    god of love.just pure Being and this pure Being, this .is-ing. is
    always creative.

    .Creative. is a very interesting word. It comes from the Indo-
    European root .ker.. When we make the `k’ into a `c,’ that word
    .ker. means to increase, to grow and is related to Ceres, the goddess
    of growing things. So pure Being, God, is always moving into
    greater self-manifestation. That is what we call creation. We are
    speaking here of an evolutionary drive, about observing how things
    change, moving from one form of being always to a higher form.
    This is the pattern of creation.

    The urge to live is always an urge to live more fully. We are
    never satis_ed and we experience suffering from feeling this lack.
    The suffering of not being satis_ed is called .dukkha,. the Pali word
    upon which all of Buddhism is built. Suffering doesn’t mean you
    have a pain in your little toe. It is the fundamental dissatisfaction
    we feel as the need to grow. If we go back to the Source from which
    all growth happens and get into that _ow of Being, we solve the
    problem of suffering. Going back to the Source and experiencing
    everything evolving, arising out of that Source is enlightenment. I
    maintain that this is powerfully taught in the Christian scriptures.
    Another characteristic of the .coming to. is that it is a presence,
    a personal presence. It is an experience of oneself within the one
    Self that is responsible for everything. It is not the Great Other Self.
    That is a mistake we make about God. It is the Self within whom
    we have ourselves, the God in which .we live and move and have
    our being..

    When we speak about evolution, a real insight of our times, we
    begin to realize that evolution is holistic and not just physical. You
    cannot separate the physical from the whole human being, the whole
    of reality. It is the movement of Being, of Reality, to higher forms
    with increasing levels of perception, increasing levels of consciousness.
    I like to use this term .coming to,. not just .the coming,. for
    it stresses a movement into a higher form of awareness as well as a
    higher form of physical being. What we are looking at is a holistic
    advance of the whole human species with creation moving towards,
    a coming to, higher and higher levels of experience, of knowledge,
    of seeing. We must speak about the evolution of consciousness, the
    evolution of awareness. The .coming. is a coming to a higher and
    higher form of awareness, and physical being also.

    See what love Abba has bestowed on us so we might be
    called .children of God.. The reason that the world does
    not know us is that it did not know him, the perfect one born
    of God. Beloved, we are God’s children now. What shall
    be has not yet been revealed. We do know that when it is
    revealed, we shall be like God for we shall know God as
    God is. (John 3:12)

    That is the completion of the whole process of .the coming,. or
    the .coming to,. but at the same time we must know that we are
    already the children of God. In old terms this revelation was called
    the Beati_c Vision.

    K¯uk¯o Nyorai

    All religions contain the idea that we are always moving into higher
    and higher forms of life. In Japan there is the Maitreya bodhisattva,
    the savior being that will come and inaugurate a great, new, wonderful
    age. There is an expression that is extremely deep.a beautiful
    expression that has taken me at least 30 or 40 years to understand
    the meaning of..Shakyamuni ny¯orai,. and _nally the light
    has dawned.

    In Japanese, Chinese and probably in Korean Zen also, there
    is the character .k¯u. which means .the void..the formless, the
    empty sky, pure empty space with no stars, no sun, no form at all;
    that is the negative way of speaking of the Absolute.no form. You
    cannot call it source; you cannot call it anything at all. We must
    go to this and become this. .K¯o. means .to go,. to go into that
    formlessless. The Father is the emptiness, this formlessness. When
    the formless comes into form, this is the positive expression of the
    formless.

    The term .nyo. speaks of this emptiness in a positive way and
    is saying .the same,. or .like.. When you have total sameness you
    have no form, but it is a positive way of saying the same Absolute
    and the word .rai. means .to come.. Therefore, the meaning is
    the .Absolute come,. or the .Absolute manifested,. having come in
    Shakyamuni Buddha or any other enlightened being. So we can say
    .Jesus Nyorai,. the one who is perfectly manifesting the Absolute.
    The Absolute come, the Incarnation of God. That is what .the coming
    . is all about. We are to be that coming. We are to _nd ourselves
    as the Absolute.

    We can put the birth of Jesus within the context of this coming
    process. It is when we look at the birth of Jesus as part of an
    immense movement of the spirit that is bringing a new and powerful
    energy into the human energy form _eld and our individual
    form _eld that we see the birth of Jesus in the context that we can
    really celebrate. All the teachings of the birth of Jesus in Mathew
    and Luke have been contrived to lead us to an advance in awareness
    and we need not see them as historical documents. The best modern
    biblical scholarship does not treat those texts as purely historical
    documents. They are primarily teaching us the process of a .coming
    to.. Therefore they are teaching us how to advance to a higher
    manifestation of divine life.

    The church has always taught us that contemplating the birth of
    Jesus is to enter into the Christ life. So the accounts in the texts of
    Matthew and Luke are not necessarily a factual account of Jesus’
    birth, but a presentation of one human being in whom the Absolute
    has come, perfectly. Therefore they are a manual teaching us and
    leading us to our birth as Christ. . . as our coming, as the .nyorai..
    The Christ state of life is a rebirth, born of the movement of the
    spirit. Jesus brings us into the reign of God, out of the reign of the
    ego in which we suffer.
    Coming into a New Mode of Perception
    When Jesus said he must pass from this world to the Father, to the
    formless, we understand that one must to go into the formless before
    coming back into the form. We must go into total disintegration
    before we can come into a new world. Therefore, when the scriptures
    say the whole world will disintegrate.the sun will lose its
    light, and so forth.it is talking about this as psycho-mystical experience.
    When John of the cross says .nada, nada. he is telling us
    that we must let go of everything and hang on to nothing and he
    really means it.no thing, no forms. We are talking here about a
    whole new mode of perception.

    That is the only way it is going to happen. Talking about the
    physical birth of Jesus is talking about the Christ state of life as a
    rebirth, born by the movement of the spirit. He is one who brings us
    into the .reign of God. and out of the .reign of ego. in which we
    suffer. Just as Jesus’ coming process ended with his resurrection, so
    our process of coming into the experience of ourselves as a manifestation
    of the Absolute, of the Source, is a coming to a new mode
    of perception.metanoia.

    Looking at the eschatological texts in the Gospels which are
    highly mystical, the coming that is described in the Old and New
    Testament is talked about as the .Day of the Lord. or simply .that
    Day.. It is also called .Coming in the name of the Lord,. .The
    coming of the kingdom. or of .the reign of God.. And _nally, these
    days we talk about the .coming of Christ.. So, what is that really
    all about?

    What this .coming. is, and how and when it is to happen, is
    expressed in the New Testament. In the thirteenth chapter of Mark
    we _nd the term .eschata. which means the _nal things, the com-
    pletion, the end of things. This is what .eschatological. means. The
    New Revised Standard Version and the New American Bible have
    translated it as .until the end of the age.. (Matthew 28:20) Why
    did they translate it that way? It is very clear that this phrase means
    the .consummation. or the .completion.. It means .I am with you
    until the completion of the process. I have gone through it and I
    will be with you until you have gone through it.. The word is not a
    temporal word but a completion word. It means a process, and until
    the process is complete, I am with you. When we read the Bible
    as it is really written, it is a challenge to our spirits. The two great
    terms, metanoia and gregoroiatae, mean to change the whole way
    you see reality.be awake, watch! This process occurs when we sit
    in meditation.

    Luke 17:20 talks about the coming of the kingdom of God,
    which is one expression we use for coming to higher and higher life.
    .Asked by the Pharisees when the coming of the kingdom of God
    would be, Jesus replied, `the coming of the Kingdom of God cannot
    be observed and no one will announce .There it is!. For behold, the
    kingdom of God is within you.’ . This Gospel k¯oan, if you really
    understand it, will take you into enlightenment. It is an interior
    event, a psycho-mystical event. Your whole psyche changes. Your
    whole mode of perception must change, and then you are brought
    into the mystery which cannot be expressed.

    .Behold I Make All Things New.
    .Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth.. (Revelations
    21:1)
    Jesus said the heavens and earth will pass away. The disintegration
    comes _rst and then comes a new heaven and a new earth. The
    former heaven and earth pass away and then he speaks of the New
    Jerusalem. .God will wipe away every tear from their eyes. . . for
    the old order has passed away.. (Revelations1:4) . For the old order
    has passed away, and the one who sat on the throne said, `Behold, I
    make all things new.’ . (Revelations 21:5)

    We must be mindful and
    use a little caution about the idea of newness.
    In a very beautiful Augustinian phrase we hear the words .O
    Beauty, ever ancient, ever new.. This is a wonderful expression
    as there is no newness in God, but God is always becoming new.
    The manifestation is the same and also new.a new perception. We
    always have the fullness of being. It is never divided up even though
    we see a million separate and different manifestations. We have the
    One and the many, and the One is always ancient and yet the many
    are always changing; there is always newness. This is an example of
    the bi-polar nature of reality, that everything is the co-incidence, the
    happening together of opposites, and you must not choose either.
    When we speak about newness, we must maintain the Ancient One.
    O Beauty, ever ancient, ever new, never changing, always changing.
    That is Reality.

    With that caution about newness and that dichotomy we spoke
    of, I would like to look at .the coming. as a coming into new forms
    of manifestation. The fundamental law of evolutionary movement,
    call it change or you can call it creation, is to increase or grow. The
    fundamental law of evolutionary movement is that the old must die
    so the new can arise. We are familiar with this, but let us accept it
    as also meaning that for the coming there must be a leaving. There
    cannot be total transformation without total disintegration. There
    cannot be rebirth without dying to the old. Things cannot come to
    pass without passing away.

    In order to receive the increase of the creative energy we must
    return to that energy Source. We must go back and start over again
    each time. This death, this passing away is expressed by the words
    .to return to the Source.. Jesus died to his life in Galilee and was
    reborn at Jordan. He died at Calvary and was born to a new heaven
    and to a new earth, a new creation, a new world. John in the Book of
    Glory, chapter 13, said .Before the feast of the Passover, Jesus knew
    that his hour had come to pass from this world to the Father.. (John
    13:1) It was necessary for him to go into disintegration, into the
    formlessness of the Source. He embraced that fearful journey out
    of love and the same verse continues by saying that he loved them
    until the end. He loved them until the completion of the process.
    Now it is time to move on to a whole new way of seeing reality.
    That is what the word .metanoia. means, the word that is so often
    sadly translated as .repent.. The word .repent. comes right from
    the Latin. When St. Jerome translated the Bible from the Greek
    into Latin, he translated the Greek word .metanoia. into .penatemane
    . which means .repent, regret, be sorry,. but that is not what
    .metanoia. means. .Metanoia. means to change your whole way
    of seeing reality and therefore change your whole life. That very
    word is a call to enlightenment. It is a challenge to move into the
    new stage of the evolution of perception. So when we speak about
    the coming, we can call it .a coming to seeing reality the way it
    is.. The mind that prevents this coming into a new way of seeing
    reality is clever, cunning like a serpent. The mental mode which
    is described in the third chapter of Genesis is represented by the
    serpent, which is the symbol of the human mind.

    What is this metanoia, this new mode of perception? We may
    call it insight, or intuition. I love the good old English word insight.
    It is not standing outside and looking in and thinking, judging,
    analyzing. It is not a subject-object experience, but being one with
    the experience and then seeing. With that energy of experience of
    being inside Being, you come to the Intuition of Being. When one
    is perfectly in the _ow, one will use anything to transmit this primal
    experience, the bliss-full experience and this is the Bodhisattva, or
    the Savior in Christian terms. Not only is he in the _ow, he is the
    _ow of increasing action.

    In the Here and Now

    Then is the completion of this process going to happen? Through
    the centuries people have made a mistake about this. They have
    conceived it as happening at the end of time, in a long, remote and
    distant future. The Gospels never say that. They say there are signs
    of this completion event, but they don’t say it is in the remote future.
    On the contrary, they say it is .at hand,. it is right here and now.
    The early Christians lived in common awaiting for the parousia,
    the coming. They were awaiting that great day of the coming of the
    Lord, as though the Lord is coming from the outside! The Gospels
    do not say that, but that is the picture we get, a waiting for this
    remote event. The very fact that the Gospels say that the time of the
    coming is inde_nite, means it all depends on you. If you create the
    proper conditions it will happen and that is the teaching of Christ
    and it can happen now, today.

    The coming is an interior consciousness event. The new creation
    does not mean that everything (external) is going to change, it
    means that your ability to experience reality is going to change. If
    the coming of the kingdom, of the coming of Christ, of the day of
    the Lord, the great psycho-mystical experience is right here at hand,
    here and now, why don’t we see it? What do we have to do? Why
    isn’t it happening for each one of us? That is the big question. It is
    because we are not willing, we are not willing to receive.
    The _rst chapter of the Gospel of John is a highly elaborated
    text, much more sophisticated than we imagine. We just do not
    have the consciousness of the mystic. Like a scientist, we collect
    data and put facts together to come to some conclusion. Mystics
    arrive at what they know differently. In the Gospel of John the _rst
    words are, .What are you looking for? What are you seeking?. It is
    to be willing. Willing means to surrender your whole being to the
    evolutionary process, to the creative movement, and that movement
    can only come to its completion in enlightenment and empowerment
    if you are willing to surrender.

    Do not go off into thinking about experience, thinking about
    enlightenment. The manifestation of reality, the mystical experience
    is contained in this breath, this word that you’re saying, this mantra,
    this act of sitting. It is present right now! Everything we want to _nd
    is found in this breath, this act of sitting, this step. If you think about
    it, then you are not in it. We are to unite our will with the creative
    drive of Being itself, God, and only then will this happen. When we
    get off into our own will, we short circuit the whole process. We
    must have the willingness to receive total Being. Jesus put into the
    human energy form _eld. It is in that we all have been consecrated,
    have been made holy, have been made whole.

    What we bring to this process is the willingness to receive. If
    you are willing to receive the movement of the spirit, if you are
    willing to let this process take over, it is absolutely going to change
    your life. It will change the life you have been living, will destroy
    your security, destroy your little self rule.it is going to destroy
    your ego. Because of this there are not many people who are really
    willing to receive, to give up, to give in, and not resist.
    It is frightening to let go of everything and jump into the abyss.
    you have to surrender. Only then can you die and discover your true
    Self.after you let it all go. This is metanoia. This is .the coming..
    .Meditation is like standing on the edge of an in_nite abyss and
    hearing Christ say the word, `Come.’ .

    CLOUDS AND SKY

    The kettle
    Hung from the sky of freedom.
    Is it for boiling tea
    Over a cloud?
    .Hakuin

    Ever since I can remember, I’ve loved clouds. Clouds are like
    pilgrims, moved by the spirit. Secondly, clouds are the source of
    water, of life. Third, clouds are misty phenomena that hide and
    reveal the truth of Reality. The sky is the actualization of that reality
    that we are all seeking to experience. The sky is emptiness that is
    pure energy taking shape as all that exists.

    In Japanese, the Zen trainee is called an .unsui,. a name that
    is made up of two characters.one which is .cloud,. and the other,
    .water.. So, the trainee is .cloud-water,. a cloud that is moved by
    the wind, by the spirit. The trainee’s life is to _ow, like water, and
    that training is to last all one’s life.

    Just as a white summer cloud, in harmony with heaven and
    earth, freely _oats in the blue sky from horizon to horizon,
    following the breath of the atmosphere, in the same way, the
    Pilgrim abandons himself to the breath of that greater life
    that wells up from the depth of being and leads beyond the
    farthest horizons to an aim which is already present within,
    though hidden from sight. .Lama Govinda

    We are always pilgrims, and a cloud is the perfect expression of
    the pilgrim life. The cloud never goes against the wind, against the
    air currents. The shape of the cloud is created by these currents and
    it moves across the sky according to these currents. The cloud has
    no ego-centric impulse to go against the _ow, even to maintain its
    visible existence, its form. It does not try to maintain its form and
    existence contrary to the molding and the melting in_uence of the
    air temperature. In fact, a cloud is nothing but air which has cooled
    to the dew-point. That is all that the cloud is. Therefore, the cloud
    is the perfect pilgrim, not only moved by the spirit, but existing by
    the Spirit, Spirit .is-ing..

    Resting at my open window I gaze out at the mountains
    A thousand peaks of blue and purple rise above the pines
    Without a thought or care, white clouds come and go
    So totally accepting, so totally relaxed.

    .Te-ch’ing, cited in The Clouds Must Know Me By Now.
    Secondly, clouds give water, give life. When we think about
    it, the way a cloud gives water.gives life.is by losing itself, by
    self-giving. The very rain that we receive is nothing but that cloud
    changing form, becoming rain and falling down. Most of the rain
    that is created and falls never reaches the ground. When clouds let
    go of rain, of life-giving water, they let go of themselves. So much
    so that in this life-giving process clouds will disappear, unless they
    pick up more vapor and are .reborn..

    Let us think a little more about clouds, and how they are .nebulous.
    . As you know, I love words and their derivations, so what
    does the word .nebulous. come from? It comes from the Indo-
    European root .nebh. which means .cloud.. From that comes the
    Latin word .nebulae. and from that we get .nebulous,. which for us
    means unformed, unclear. That is one of the very important special
    characteristics of clouds. They are not _xed in a particular form,
    and they do not have _xed, categorized boundaries; that is also a
    description of the enlightened person. So clouds are born of the
    empty sky (k¯u); they take shape and melt back into the sky.

    Clouds are teachers. They teach us the _ow of reality, literally
    what the stream of life is like. In the forward of the book The Way
    of the White Clouds by Lama Govinda, he quotes from the poem
    .Song of the Eastern Snow Mountain.:

    On the peak of the white snow mountain in the East,
    A white cloud seems to be rising toward the sky.
    At the instant of beholding it,
    I remember my teacher.
    And pondering over his kindness,
    Faith stirs in me.

    Why does the cloud remind this pilgrim of the teacher? What
    does a true spiritual teacher teach us? It does not have to be about
    the phenomenal world, this world of color, shape, and all the rest.
    Rather, the teacher draws us toward the experience of the formless
    within form, to the Source of manifestation, to the presence
    of God within the world of appearances. That is just what the sky
    and clouds do. The faith of the student was stirred because one of
    the inner meanings of faith is that it is the eye that can see through
    the phenomena of form to the formless within. Therefore, clouds
    are our teachers and out of this idea comes the traditional idea that
    God is hidden in a cloud.

    We have seen that perfect humility is an integral part of
    the contemplative’s simple, blind love. Wholly intent upon
    God, this simple love beats unceasingly upon the dark Cloud
    of Unknowing, leaving all discursive thought beneath the
    Cloud of Forgetting. (The Cloud of Unknowing)
    We have to un-know all those clear categories and divisions the
    mind creates and become like a cloud and just melt into the oneness
    of the formless, of the absolute, of the empty sky. So, as the clouds
    teach us, there is one reality within the myriad of realities. Clouds
    are never the same shape, yet they manifest within the same sky and
    exist as constituents of the total reality.

    Both the sky and the clouds teach the same message, but in
    many ways the sky itself is even more mysterious than clouds. First
    of all, let us look into the sky and see what we _nd. We _nd everything.
    When we really look deeply at the sky, we _nd clouds, rain,
    hail, wind, _re as lightning. We hear sound as thunder, _nd birds
    and insects and living things. We see mountains piercing the sky.
    We _nd the sun, the moon, the stars, the planets, including planet
    earth. We tend to think of .earth and sky,. but planet earth is inside
    sky. All is existing within what we call .sky. and this is a key point.
    We cannot experience sky if we see it in opposition to earth. We
    must give up our earth-centric consciousness to truly experience the
    sky. In the same way, we must give up our ego-centric consciousness
    to experience our true Self.

    Also in the sky we see all colors, all the colors of the rainbow.
    We experience air, and that is also a most important point. The sky
    is not just around us everywhere, but we are the sky energy existing
    in this form. I think of the famous poem of Gerard Manley Hopkins
    called, .The Blessed Virgin Compared to the Air we Breathe. in
    which we _nd the line:

    Wild air, world mothering air, nestling me everywhere. . .
    We see that the world and sky is all around us and we are never
    separate from it. As we go higher, or deeper into the sky the air gets
    thinner and thinner. The sky becomes colorless and is no longer
    blue, and although we call it empty sky, it is always full of energy.
    There is no place where there is not energy. In fact, where there is
    the greatest energy, there is no form because it is unbounded and not
    con_ned. Empty sky is pure energy, and everything is born out of
    this energy. Everything is nothing but energy congealed into a form.
    Energy takes on air and light form, then cloud form, rain, snow and
    water form, grass and tree form, mineral, rock and mountain form.
    .you. and .I. form. We are empty sky, pure energy in this form I
    call .me..

    God As Manifest Activity

    This is an amazing reality.that out of this empty space arises
    material form which becomes you and me. Pure energy is everywhere,
    from the most dense, concrete forms of existence to the
    most unclear, wispy forms of existence. Therefore, existent reality
    is this formlessness, this pure energy manifesting in a form; with
    this form/formless reality you can never _nd anything that is pure
    form or pure formlessness. Not one centimeter of the atmosphere is
    motionless. Not one tiny reality is completely motionless. We are
    form/formlessness in motion and that is what everything is. That is
    what we call the universal energy _eld. Out of this universal energy
    _eld we _nd that everything is nothing but its own little energy _eld
    patterned after the manifestation of the universal energy _eld. Put
    in religious terms, St. Paul tells us that .in God we live and move
    and have our being..

    God is this universal energy _eld which is pure intelligence,
    pure subjectivity, and this energy _eld is the source of existence.
    it is existence itself. It is life-giving through movement from the
    formless into form, but the form does not remain _xed. The form
    idea which we call a .soul..even that must evolve, because everything
    is the movement of pure energy, coming into form and then
    being destroyed or transformed to enter into a new form, a new life.
    Therefore, we have creation, destruction and rebirth and that is the
    Pascal mystery, this mystery of going back to the Father and then
    being reborn in the Spirit, the mystery of life. That is what Christ
    Jesus came to teach us. All that mystery of emptiness coming into
    form and going back into emptiness to be reborn into a higher form
    of life is taught in the sky. The sky is the actualization of that reality
    we are all seeking to experience.

    I would like to go back to Buddhism which so strongly in_uences
    my mind and my heart. In Buddhism, one of the objects of
    devotion is the bodhisattva. What is a bodhisattva? It is the personi
    _cation and movement of divine power. It is the personi_cation of
    divine energy. It is a .personi_cation. way of speaking about the
    universal energy _eld by focusing on various aspects of the movement
    of this energy _eld. The bodhisattva of compassion in Chinese
    is Kuan Yin, or in Japanese, Kannon. The way this universal energy
    is acting for our good is to bring us into oneness and into new life,
    to remove our suffering. That is mercy and compassion. No matter
    what we do, that is the way that movement _ows. We can resist it,
    but no matter how much resistance we offer, there will still be the
    _ow of mercy and compassion.

    For Christians, one personi_cation of this same aspect of the
    universal _eld is a concrete historical person, Mary of Nazareth.
    She is the pure, empty womb out of which the perfect form arises.
    She is the one from whom the perfect child is born by the movement
    of the spirit. God is like a womb from which everything arises, or
    is born. This is ordinary Christian teaching. She is like the cloud.
    like the air; Mary has no agenda of her own. .Be it done to me
    according to your word. (Luke 1:38). The word is the movement of
    air into a form arising from a voice which is the Source.

    Be Born Again from the Empty Sky Womb

    Listen to what Jesus teaches in the third chapter of John: .No one
    can do these signs without being born from God. Jesus answered,
    and said to him, `Amen.’ . Those words indicate he is speaking out
    of his enlightenment. He is seeing reality. This is the way it is.

    .I say to you, no one can see the kingdom of God without being
    born from above.. (John 3:3) You cannot experience yourself, and
    the divine life in you, the reign of God, unless you are born from the
    .sky. and experience yourself as such. Nicodemus asked, .How can
    a person once grown old be born again? Surely he cannot re-enter
    his mother’s womb and be born again, can he?. Jesus answered,
    .Amen, amen, I say to you, no one can enter the Kingdom of God
    without being born of water and of the spirit..

    What are clouds made up of? Water and spirit and air. We can
    use this metaphor to understand this teaching by meditating on it.
    Jesus simply says that you must be reborn by going back to the
    womb, the empty sky womb. What is born of _esh is _esh and
    what is born of the spirit is spirit. .Do not be amazed that I told
    you you must be born again. The wind moves, blows where it wills
    and you can hear the sound it makes but you do not know where it
    comes from or where it goes. So it is with everyone who is born
    of the spirit.. Nicodemus answered, .How can this happen?. Jesus
    answered, .You are the teacher of Israel and you do not understand
    this? I say to you, we speak of what we know and we testify to
    what we have seen, but you people do not accept our testimony. If
    I tell you about earthly things and you do not believe, how will you
    believe if I tell you about heavenly things?. He speaks of the movement
    of the universal sphere. No one has gone to heaven except the
    one who has come from heaven, has returned from the empty sky
    experience, the return to the Source of all things. The very movement
    that carries you into form is that same movement that carries
    you again to that empty womb from which new life arises.

    Just as Moses lifted the serpent in the desert, so must the son of
    man be lifted up so that everyone that believes in him might have
    eternal life. One who believes in this process, entrusts oneself to this
    process, will have eternal life. Let us learn of this. Our meditation
    then is nothing but to return to the empty sky womb to be reborn.
    That is what meditation is.

    PART IV
    WORDS OUT OF SILENCE

    Let these words rise out of silence: .I know only suf_ciency. I
    experience no want. All I long for is ful_lled in the here and now.
    This sitting is all I need and all is perfect.. .Hando

    DAWN WISDOM

    In the quiet early morning hours, the dimly lit chapel of the Mercy
    Center has been a place where meditators have silently gathered
    daily in sacred space to enter into the deep stillness of their hearts.
    After an opening chant and ringing of the bell, the meditation session
    begins. At times Hando’s voice will be heard gently guiding
    one’s mind even more deeply into the meditative experience through
    utterances such as these, recorded over the years by a participant
    in these early morning sittings. As these words emerge out of the
    silence, we open out to receive the unifying spirit of sitting together
    with one heart.

    _ We begin this day at the beginning, at the Source, that divine
    Source, creating and radiating from within.

    _ As we gather in the pre-dawn darkness, we nevertheless know
    that the light of the sun is coming. So, no matter where we
    are interiorly, whether in darkness or in light, we know that
    there is always great light coming from within because God
    is light.
    _ Meditation is not a retreat from reality, but an escape to reality,
    a return to the Source, a coming home.
    _ As we remember St. Francis, let us enter into true poverty of
    spirit, letting go of everything in the simplicity of attention of
    the heart.
    _ When the waters are stilled and quiet, we can see the bottom
    of the pool. When our minds are stilled we can see within
    where shines the face of God.
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    _ Whatever form your meditation is taking this morning, let it
    be the cry of your being right now, with all sincerity and truth.
    _ Christ Jesus says there is within each of us a stream of lifegiving
    water. In meditation we allow that stream to arise and
    fructify our lives.
    _ As our being unfolds, the color, shape, the beauty of each one
    of us is distinct. At the center of each of us there is the same
    golden nothingness, no-thing-ness, God.
    _ As we begin this meditation, outside the darkness is ending
    and the light is dawning. Within ourselves let all the patterns
    of darkness go and the light of love and light will arise.
    _ Meditation is silence, is opening out to God, is the stirring of
    the heart, is surrender to the heart.
    _ Meditation is like standing somewhere on the path leading up
    the mountain, the mountain of trust and love, and hearing the
    Lord Jesus say, .Come..
    _ Standing with all the saints, let us recall that to meditate is
    like standing at the edge of an in_nite abyss and hearing Jesus
    Christ and all who have gone before us say, .Come..
    _ As the deer longs for running water, so my heart, my soul,
    longs for thee, oh God.
    _ Like an arrow moving speedily towards its target, let your
    heart be undistracted and attentive.
    _ What we are now doing affects the whole human race, the
    whole planet, the whole cosmos. The scriptures tell us again
    and again that we are all one body. What our body does
    affects the whole body.
    _ We never sit alone. Each one is part of the whole body and
    yet each one is the human race and a little universe. Let the
    quality of our meditation match our responsibility.
    _ Time is so short in our meditation. Without spending time in
    mental speculation, let our meditation be deep within us. Let
    it be the cry of our very being.
    _ According to the Gospel, we must decide whether our house,
    the house of our hearts, will be a .den of thieves,. a den of
    distraction, or a divine temple.
    _ The Haiku poet says: .Oh, the greatness of the one who is not
    enlightened by lightening,. but by the simple act of breathing
    or by a single word repeated or by simply sitting.
    _ The poet Thompson says, .I _ed him down labyrinthine
    ways. of my own mind. The pilgrim seeking God, while
    trapped in the mind, shall never experience the divine presence.
    Let go of mind work. Let the heart, at the deepest level,
    take its natural course.
    _ All our meditation techniques, both interior and exterior, are
    for the sake of detachment. When clinging ends, the heart
    wings to _nd the In_nite in all things.
    _ If there is a drought in the life of the spirit, it is not because of
    any lack in the _ow of the spirit, but because we are not open.
    Meditation is ultimately making ourselves open to the spirit.
    _ We meet death every day. Meditation itself is a kind of dying.
    Christ Jesus says to each one of us, .I come that you may
    have life and heave it to the full..
    _ Just as right now our part of the human family is turned to
    receive the life-giving light and rays of the sun, so let each
    of us, no matter what form we are using, let our meditation
    ultimately be a turning to, a surrender to, the light of Christ.
    _ In meditation we sit in faith. Faith begins with insight. This
    leads to entrustment to the _ow of the Spirit. This leads to
    attunement, of at-one-ment with the Christ. Finally there is
    the integration of all we do in the one _ow of the Christ Spirit.
    _ The power, the wisdom and love of your own true soul, of
    the soul of humanity, of the soul of the whole universe are
    pushing to manifest from within. Meditation is surrender to
    our own true Self.

    A CHRISTENING MEDITATION

    The Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is,
    there is freedom. And all of us with unveiled faces, seeing
    the glory of the Lord, as though re_ected in a mirror, are
    being transformed into the same image from one degree of
    glory to another; for this comes from the Lord, the Spirit.
    (2 Corinthians 3:17-18)

    Hando tells us that meditation can be a very powerful means
    of transformation. Trans-formation is an evolutionary process in
    which we are being formed beyond what we were before. His
    guided meditation included here comes out of a Buddhist meditation
    on the bodhisattva of compassion, who is depicted as having
    a thousand hands with a thousand eyes with which to see and ful-
    _ll the needs of suffering humanity. In this meditation we dedicate
    ourselves to becoming a .Bodhisattva Christ,. and surrender to the
    process of the total sel_ess giving of ourselves for the bene_t of
    all people, of all creation. With the commitment to agape as our
    basic intention, we will be transformed as our life unfolds according
    to our intention. We go into the formless Source which is pure
    potential and actualize the splendor of the Source as we move back
    into our ordinary form brilliantly manifesting the potential of the
    Source. Then everything we do becomes life-giving as we are the
    Source radiating in all we do.

    Begin by visualizing yourself in a very quiet little valley, surrounded
    by hills and all alone. You feel the warmth of the sun, the
    quiet breeze and hear the sounds of the little stream, the birds and
    insects. Smell the fragrance of the _owers, the grass and the trees.
    As you are either lying, sitting, or quietly walking along, ask yourself:
    .What am I here for? What do I want to give my life to? What
    is the real desire of my heart?. As you are meditating and hearing
    the cry from the very depths of your being, you look around at the
    surrounding hills and see that there is one that is a little higher than
    the others, standing by itself, and as you see it you feel a powerful
    attraction. As you are wondering why you feel this irresistible
    attraction to that mountain, Christ Jesus, or your teacher, appears
    beside you. You can see him, but above all, you feel the presence,
    the power. He asks you, .What do you really want? What do you
    want to give your life to?. After you answer him he says, .I am
    here to help you to actualize that dedication of your life.. As he
    says that, he looks up at that mountain and says, .Do you know the
    name of that mountain you are so attracted to?. When you say .no.
    he says, .Some call it Mount Carmel. Others call it Calvary. Can
    you see the roof of a building on the top of that mountain?. When
    he says that, you see just a part of a roof and the attraction becomes
    totally irresistible. And he says, .That is the Temple of Silence on
    top of the Mountain of Silence. To ascend this mountain is the only
    way to the actualization, the realization of your deepest desire. Do
    you want to ascend? When you answer .yes. he smiles and says,
    .Follow me..

    You start along a path and begin climbing, but before you begin
    he turns and says, .If you would follow me you must deny yourself.
    Take up your cross and follow me.. You acknowledge these
    words and keeping your eye on the mountain you follow along. You
    start up through the forest and reach a little meadow where Jesus
    stops and says in strong words, .Here you must lay aside all your
    possessions.your home, your car, your food, your medicines, cosmetics,
    tapes, books, bank account.let it all go. Attached to these
    things, you cannot climb the mountain.. As you let it all go interiorly,
    his face becomes a radiant smile.

    You start walking again further up the winding path into the
    trees and at the base of a rocky crag he stops you and says, .Here
    you must put aside all concerns about your body, your health, your
    strength and your beauty.. Again, in your heart, you give up all
    that. In a sense, you give it into his hands and you feel lighter. With
    a much stronger step, you continue to follow him up the mountain.
    The path winds back upon itself. You climb over a fallen log, and
    as you follow along you notice that the form of Jesus, which was
    so clear at the bottom of the hill, is beginning to become unclear.
    He again stops you and says, .At this place you must let go entirely
    of your reputation. Forget about what people think of you. Forget
    all fears about not being accepted, about not being loved. Forget
    about all perfectionism that comes from such fears.lose yourself
    by letting everything go.. You feel lighter and lighter. You also
    start to feel that your boundaries are less clear as you sense yourself
    beginning to expand. You follow up the path as it becomes steeper,
    but you are lighter and are able to follow.

    At another place on a ledge, Jesus says, .Here drop your place in
    society, your nationality, your diplomas, your profession. Put aside
    even your identity of being a spiritual seeker. Lose all that selfidenti
    _cation.. As you do, you feel diminished and at the same time,
    expanded. Jesus turns and looks deep into your eyes and you feel his
    strength and his power, overcoming the fear that this diminishment
    is causing. You do not know yourself any more, but Jesus says,
    .Follow me..

    Continuing up the mountain, you look back down at the meadow
    and Jesus says, .Come. Come into this dark place.. You go through
    the forest which is now dark, by simply following him and holding
    his hand. He again stops you at the other side and says, .Here you
    must give up your family, your membership in the family which
    gives you a feeling of dependence.your parents, your brothers,
    your sisters, your spouse. Let them all go. Lose even that selfidentity.
    . By now you feel far more naked with a sense of loss. You
    continue to hold onto his hand, one of his thousand hands of mercy
    and love.

    He leads you farther up and you again catch sight of the roof
    of the temple. Whereas it seemed shining from below, somehow it
    seems dark now. As you come in full sight of the Temple of Silence,
    Jesus again stops you and says, .Here, let go of all your images of
    yourself and all your images of God, and of me. You now have
    nothing to hang onto..

    Everything begins to get darker. It has become night, a dark
    night. As you approach the temple, which no longer has a clear
    form, at the door Jesus turns to you and says with great love and
    power, .Here you must die to your old self. Let go of everything.
    your body, your mind, your memory, your imagination, your self,
    and enter the temple.. As you do, the Jesus form disappears and
    your form also disappears. Everything drops away as you step into
    the Temple of Silence. Your last words to Jesus are, .I feel like
    nothing, no thing.. And Jesus’ last word to you is, .Yes, let us
    return to Abba, the Source..

    Remain for awhile in this in_nite space. There is no form here,
    no building, no-thing-ness.a dark night but a warm night, because
    it is your ultimate home.

    Now the darkness begins to become luminous. A beam of light
    begins to appear and you know that Jesus is present within that
    beam. Jesus speaks to you and says, .Join me.. You enter the light
    beam and he says, .Abide in me.. You feel the radiance and bliss
    of this light beam. The light becomes a stream of life extending
    to the whole of creation, a river of living water. That is what you
    are.pure, clear, life-giving spirit.and you say to yourself, .I am
    movement, the _ow, I am spirit.. You feel this stream as your actual
    being and in this stream you feel your oneness with everybody and
    everything. That is the bliss of pure love.

    As you feel yourself extending out to the whole of creation,
    Jesus says, .Yes, you and I.we.are the light of the world. Let us
    return to the world. Your actual home in this world is on the other
    side of the mountain. Let us descend now, following this stream
    of emanation, this spirit.. As you feel yourself moving down the
    mountain, taking form again, Jesus asks, .How do you feel?. You
    say, .I feel expanded, free, light, strong.. As you continue down
    the trail you feel you now have a thousand hands of mercy to assist
    anyone and everyone and each hand has an eye to see what people
    need. Jesus asks, .Who are you?. And you say, .I am Christ.. He
    says, .How do you feel?. You say, .I am risen. Peace is _owing
    from me like a river. I am born of God. I and Abba are one. My life
    stream is eternal life..

    As you continue down the mountain the memories _ood back
    again. Jesus’ last words to you are, .I am with you all days.. As
    you come to the foot of the mountain, you realize you are the same
    as you were before, but also how changed you are.a new creation!
    Now every step is a movement of the spirit. Rejoice!

    THE DEER’S CRY
    A PILGRIM’S POEM

    Hando says, .Come with me now to the early morning Rose Room,
    as we begin a day of a meditation intensive retreat. The sound of
    the mokugyo (wooden drum) has called everyone to their cushions
    or chairs. The bell has rung and now, to unify and intensify our
    meditation energy, we begin chanting the ancient Celtic Pilgrim’s
    Hymn. In the course of this touching chant, three times we sing out,
    `I arise today.’ More and more I realize the truth of this af_rmation.
    This is what life is all about, today and every day.past, present
    and future. We are made to arise to ever higher and more glorious
    manifestation of divine life. Being itself is creative and to create
    means to increase. All beings share in this intrinsic drive to evolve,
    to spiral out and up to more abundant life-manifestation. We are all
    pilgrims climbing the sacred mount of creation..

    I arise today. . .
    Through the strength of heaven, light of the sun,
    Radiance of the moon, splendor of _re,
    Speed of lightning, swiftness of wind,
    Depth of the sea, stability of earth, _rmness of rock.
    I arise today. . .
    Through God’s strength to pilot me,
    God’s eye to look before me,
    God’s wisdom to guide me,
    God’s way to lie before me, God’s shield to protect me
    From all who shall wish me ill,
    Afar and anear, alone and in a multitude,
    Against every cruel merciless power
    That may oppose my body and soul.
    Christ with me.
    Christ before me.
    Christ behind me.
    Christ in me.
    Christ beneath me.
    Christ above me.
    Christ on my right.
    Christ on my left.
    Christ when I lie down.
    Christ when I sit down.
    Christ when I arise.
    Christ to shield me.
    Christ in the heart of everyone who thinks of me.
    Christ in the mouth of everyone who speaks of me.
    I arise today. . .

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