
| born: c. 770 died: c. 850 place: China |
| stories: Blue Cliff Record, Case 11 Osho Live Zen, ch. 5 Zen: The Quantum Leap From Mind to No-mind, ch. 3, ch. 15 The Original Man, ch. 3 Nansen: The Point of Departure, ch. 7 |
| oshobob The Living Workshop |
| Zen Masters |
| Obaku addressed the assembly and said, “You are all partakers of brewer’s grain. If you go on studying Zen like that, you will never finish it. Do you know that in all the land of T’ang there is no Zen teacher?” Then a monk came forward and said, “But surely there are those who teach disciples and preside over the assemblies. What about that?” Obaku said, “I do not say that there is no Zen, but that there is no Zen teacher...” I hope things are very simple…. If there is no Catholic church, no pope, there will be no Christianity, because Christianity has nothing to do with existence’s essence. If there is no shankaracharya and no Hindu monks, existence will just remain the same as it is. Their being or not being does not affect existence. Certainly their doctrines will disappear, their congregations will not be held anymore. Their teachers and their masters and their disciples will not be there. And if these people think Hinduism is dependent on these scriptures, shankaracharyas, then certainly there will be no Hinduism either. Except Zen, no religion has been so intensely clear about its own existential status. The others are only aware about their theologies, their scriptures, their teachers, their masters, their disciples. They are all very superficial – just waves on the ocean. But Zen has never for a single moment identified itself with the waves. It consistently emphasizes, “I am the ocean. Waves come and go; the ocean remains. Many more waves will come and go; it does not affect the ocean in any way.” Obaku was right when he said that there is no Zen. There were many teachers and many followers, but they don’t constitute the reality of Zen... --Osho Live Zen, ch. 5 |