An Introduction to Zen Buddhism Quotes
An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
by
D.T. Suzuki5,319 ratings, 3.95 average rating, 247 reviews
Open Preview
An Introduction to Zen Buddhism Quotes
Showing 1-30 of 75
“The idea of Zen is to catch life as it flows. There is nothing extraordinary or mysterious about Zen. I raise my hand ; I take a book from the other side of the desk ; I hear the boys playing ball outside my window; I see the clouds blown away beyond the neighbouring wood: — in all these I am practising Zen, I am living Zen. No wordy discussions is necessary, nor any explanation. I do not know why — and there is no need of explaining, but when the sun rises the whole world dances with joy and everybody’s heart is filled with bliss. If Zen is at all conceivable, it must be taken hold of here.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“If there is anything Zen strongly emphasizes it is the attainment of freedom; that is, freedom from all unnatural encumbrances. Meditation is something artificially put on; it does not belong to the native activity of the mind. Upon what do the fowls of the air meditate? Upon what do the fish in the water meditate? They fly; they swim. Is not that enough? Who wants to fix his mind on the unity of God and man, or on the nothingness of life? Who wants to be arrested in the daily manifestations of his life-activity by such meditations as the goodness of a divine being or the everlasting fire of hell?”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“We teach ourselves; Zen merely points the way.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“When a thing is denied, the very denial involves something not denied.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“The way to ascend unto God is to descend into one's self"; -- these are Hugo's words. "If thou wishest to search out the deep things of God, search out the depths of thine own spirit";”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“the finger pointing at the moon remains a finger and under no circumstances can it be changed into the moon itself.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Taking it all in all, Zen is emphatically a matter of personal experience; if anything can be called radically empirical, it is Zen. No amount of reading, no amount of teaching, no amount of contemplation will ever make one a Zen master. Life itself must be grasped in the midst of its flow; to stop it for examination and analysis is to kill it, leaving its cold corpse to be embraced.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Zen has nothing to do with letters, words, or sutras.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“In Zen there must be satori; there must be a general mental upheaval which destroys the old accumulations of intellection and lays down the foundation for a new life; there must be the awakening of a new sense which will review the old things from a hitherto undreamed-of angle of observation.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Zen professes itself to be the spirit of Buddhism, but in fact it is the spirit of all religions and philosophies. When Zen is thoroughly understood, absolute peace of mind is attained, and a man lives as he ought to live.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“The basic idea of Zen is to come in touch with the inner workings of our being, and to do so in the most direct way possible, without resorting to anything external or superadded.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“How hard, then, and yet how easy it is to understand Zen! Hard because to understand it is not to understand it; easy because not to understand it is to understand it.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Zen perceives and feels, and does not abstract and meditate. Zen penetrates and is finally lost in the immersion. Meditation, on the other hand, is outspokenly dualistic and consequently inevitably superficial.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“In Christianity we seem to be too conscious of God, though we say that in him we live and move and have our being. Zen wants to have this last trace of God-consciousness, if possible, obliterated. That is why Zen masters advise us not to linger where the Buddha is, and to pass quickly away where he is not.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Is satori something that is not at all capable of intellectual analysis? Yes, it is an experience which no amount of explanation or argument can make communicable to others unless the latter themselves had it previously. If satori is amenable to analysis in the sense that by so doing it becomes perfectly clear to another who has never had it, that satori will be no satori. For a satori turned into a concept ceases to be itself; and there will no more be a Zen experience.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“The idea of Zen is to catch lie as it flows. There is nothing extraordinary or mysterious about Zen. [...]. No wordy discussion is necessary, nor any explanation. I do not know why—and there is no need of explaining, but when the sun rises the whole world dances with joy and everybody's heart is filled with bliss. If Zen is at all conceivable, it must be taken hold of here.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“There is something rejuvenating in the possession of Zen. The spring flowers look prettier, and the mountain stream runs cooler and more transparent. The subjective revolution that brings about this state of things cannot be called abnormal. When life becomes more enjoyable and its expense broadens to include the universe itself, there must be something in *satori* that is quite precious and well worth one's striving after.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“All the causes, all the conditions of satori are in the mind; they are merely waiting for the maturing. [...] From the very beginning nothing has been kept from you, all that you wished to see has been there all the time before you, it was only yourself that closed the eye to the fact. Therefore, there is in Zen nothing to explain, nothing to teach, that will add to your knowledge. Unless it grows out of yourself no knowledge is really yours, it is only a borrowed plumage.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“[W]e must remember that the finger pointing at the moon remains a finger and under no circumstances can it be changed into the moon itself. Danger always lurks where the intellect slyly creeps in and takes the index for the moon itself.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“They justly compare Zen to lightning. The rapidity, however, does not constitute Zen; its naturalness, its freedom from artificialities, its being expressive of life itself, its originality—these are the essential characteristics of Zen.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Copying is slavery. The letter must never be followed, only the spirit is to be grasped.
Higher affirmations live in the spirit. And where is the spirit? Seek it in your everyday experience, and therein lies abundance of proof for all you need.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
Higher affirmations live in the spirit. And where is the spirit? Seek it in your everyday experience, and therein lies abundance of proof for all you need.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Както казват учителите по Дзен, коан е само парче тухла, с която чукаш по вратата, показалец, насочен към луната. Той има за цел да синтезира или да преодолява — без значение коя дума ще изберете — дуализма на сетивата. Докато съзнанието не е свободно да приеме звук от една ръка, то остава ограничено и раздвоено в своя вреда. Вместо да намери ключа към тайните на съзиданието, съзнанието е безнадеждно погребано в относителността на нещата, т. е. неистинската им страна. Докато съзнанието не се освободи от оковите, то никога няма да разглежда света в неговата цялост и да бъде удовлетворено. Всъщност звукът, произведен от едната ръка, стига и горе до рая, и долу до ада, така както „истинското лице“ на човека е обърнато към цялото пространство на съзиданието и до края на времето.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“In the study of Zen, the power of an all-illuminating insight must go hand in hand with a deep sense of humility and meekness of heart.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Религия ли е Дзен? Дзен не е религия в общоприетия смисъл на думата, защото в Дзен няма Бог, пред който да се прекланяме, няма обреди и церемонии, които да спазваме, няма отвъдна обител за мъртвите, и най-сетне, в Дзен няма душа, за чието благополучие да отговаря друг, за чието безсмъртие да се грижат хората. Дзен ще рече освободеност от цялото това бреме на догми и религиозни вярвания.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“This acquiring of a new viewpoint in Zen is called *satori* (*wu* in Chinese) and its verb form is *satoru*. Without it there is no Zen, for the life of Zen begins with the "opening of *satori*". *Satori* may be defined as intuitive looking-into, in contradistinction to intellectual and logical understanding. Whatever the definition, *satori* means the unfolding of a new world hitherto unperceived in the confusion of the dualistic mind.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Personal experience, therefore, is everything in Zen. No ideas are intelligible to those who have no backing of experience.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Jesus said, "When thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth; that thine alms may be in secret." This is the "secret virtue" of Buddhism. But when the account goes on to say that "Thy Father who seeth in secret shall recompense thee", we see a deep cleavage between Buddhism and Christianity. As long as there is any thought of anybody, be he God or devil, knowing of our doings and making recompense, Zen would say, "You are not yet one of us." Deeds that are the product of such thought leave "traces" and "shadows". If a spirit is tracing your doings, he will in no time get hold of you and make you account for what you have done; Zen will have none of it. The perfect garment shows no seams, inside and outside; it is one complete piece and nobody can tell where the work began, or how it was woven. In Zen, therefore, no traces of self-conceit or self-glorification are to be left behind even after the doing of good, much less the thought of recompense, even by God.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“When Tanka (Tan-hsia) of the T'ang dynasty stopped at Yerinji in the Capital, it was severely cold; so taking down one of the Buddha images enshrined there, he made a fire of it and warmed himself. The keeper of the shrine, seeing this, was greatly incensed, and exclaimed:
"How dare you burn my wooden image of the Buddha?"
Tanka began to search in the ashes as if he were looking for something, and said:
"I am gathering the holy sariras* from the burnt ashes." "How," said the keeper, "can you get sariras from a wooden Buddha?"
Tanka retorted, "If there are no sariras to be found in it, may I have the remaining two Buddhas for my fire?"
* Sarira (shari in J. and she-li in C.) literally means the "body", but in Buddhism it is a kind of mineral deposit found in the human body after cremation. The value of such deposits is understood by the Buddhists to correspond to the saintliness of life.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
"How dare you burn my wooden image of the Buddha?"
Tanka began to search in the ashes as if he were looking for something, and said:
"I am gathering the holy sariras* from the burnt ashes." "How," said the keeper, "can you get sariras from a wooden Buddha?"
Tanka retorted, "If there are no sariras to be found in it, may I have the remaining two Buddhas for my fire?"
* Sarira (shari in J. and she-li in C.) literally means the "body", but in Buddhism it is a kind of mineral deposit found in the human body after cremation. The value of such deposits is understood by the Buddhists to correspond to the saintliness of life.”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Zen attempts to take hold of life in its act of living; to stop the flow of life and to look into it is not the business of Zen. [...] Satori is attained in the midst of this activity and not by suppressing it[.]”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
“Here lies the value of the Zen discipline, as it gives birth to the unshakable conviction that there is something indeed going beyond mere intellection.
The wall of koan once broken through and the intellectual obstructions well cleared off, you come back, so to speak, to your everyday relatively constructed consciousness. [...] Zen is now the most ordinary thing in the world. A field that we formerly supposed to lie far beyond is now found to be the very field in which we walk, day in, day out. When we come out of satori we see the familiar world with all its multitudinous objects and ideas together with their logicalness, and
pronounce them "good".”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
The wall of koan once broken through and the intellectual obstructions well cleared off, you come back, so to speak, to your everyday relatively constructed consciousness. [...] Zen is now the most ordinary thing in the world. A field that we formerly supposed to lie far beyond is now found to be the very field in which we walk, day in, day out. When we come out of satori we see the familiar world with all its multitudinous objects and ideas together with their logicalness, and
pronounce them "good".”
― An Introduction to Zen Buddhism
