2025-08-15T09:24:27-07:00

I’ve been drawn into Zen Buddhist reflections on (mostly) Christian holy days over the past few years. One such day is the Assumption of Mary. It’s is a Christian festival universally celebrated in the liturgical churches. It’s marked in the Eastern Christian churches on the 15th of August as the Dormition of the Theotokos. And in the Roman calendar for the same day it’s called the feast of the Assumption of Mary. In the Anglican calendar the day is traditionally... Read more

2025-08-11T16:36:54-07:00

Robert Ingersoll was born on the 11th of August, 1833. He is pretty important in the general formation of my spiritual life. And I continue to feel his influence on my more spare Buddhism. So I like to reflect on him and his contributions from time to time. What follows is something I keep working at. I expect to get it right within the next decade or so… Writer Kimberly Winston wrote of the good colonel, as he was usually... Read more

2025-08-07T10:59:50-07:00

This past Saturday at our monthly Empty Moon half day sit, Roshi Edward Sanshin Oberholtzer offered a reflection out of the anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on the 6th and 9ths of August in 1945. I asked his permission to share it here at my blog and he graciously consented. *** On a splendid August day like today, it’s easy to put out of our minds that eighty years ago, people in Hiroshima, Japan were gazing... Read more

2025-07-22T10:59:27-07:00

  The 22nd of July is marked out as a feast for Mary Magdalene. As best I can, I try to note this day every year. As a person of the Zen way, but also marked profoundly by my natal Christianity, I am deeply interested in several threads of the Christian tradition. And very high on that list is Mary Magdalene. As I noted, over the years I’ve paused to reflect on this most remarkable and in some ways mysterious... Read more

2025-07-08T06:42:49-07:00

  “One is a Buddhist if he or she accepts the following four truths: All compounded things are impermanent. All emotions are pain. All things have no inherent existence. Nirvana is beyond concepts.” Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse[1] A quick look at the Mahayana. Over the long course of its history Buddhism has divided into two major schools. Three is you separate the Vajrayana from the Mahayana. We’ll briefly look at that. But first, the way of the elders, the Theravada. Its... Read more

2025-06-30T09:20:46-07:00

More than a decade ago I shared a list of a dozen observations, which I titled “The Zen of Seeing.” I recently stumbled upon it again. I dropped a few, reframed a few. And I share them because I think they may be useful to my sisters and brothers on this long winding road. Some come whole cloth from somewhere in the depths of my heart. Others I heard some or all of. Eventually they became my own. Take what... Read more

2025-06-21T15:23:01-07:00

Changsha sent a student of the intimate to ask Master Hui, “What about before you saw Nanquan?” Hui simply sat still for a little while. “What about after seeing him?” “Nothing special.” The student returned and told Changsha what had transpired. Changsha observed, “The enlightened person sits on the top of a hundred-foot pole; She has entered the way but is not yet genuine. She must take a step from the top of the pole, And worlds in the ten directions... Read more

2025-06-15T07:24:43-07:00

  Trinity Sunday. Okay. I am a Zen Buddhist.  And, yes, I’m also a Unitarian Universalist minister. Now, those who know of such things understand there need be no contradiction between being a Zen Buddhist and UU clergy. But, I was born into and raised a Christian. In my case of the fundamentalist sort in one of the Baptist variations. And, also, I’ve always taken the Christian streams of both Unitarianism and Universalism seriously. I also wrestle with the tradition... Read more

2025-06-09T11:37:57-07:00

Once again my friend the old Zen hand Ken Ireland wrote a piece over at his Buddha, SJ blog that I thought deserved a bit wider platform. And, once again, he graciously consented to my reprinting it here at Monkey Mind. I hope you enjoy. And, perhaps more importantly, I hope it expands your understanding of Zen meditation. *** I currently live in Thailand which is a Buddhist monarchy. The king and royal family enjoy the highest rank. Protocol, to... Read more

2025-05-27T11:59:58-07:00

When I was notified that my first book, published as This Very Moment, and a second edition, In This Very Moment, had gone out of print I felt a wave of emotions. The book had a long run. It was meant as an introduction to Zen; in the first edition it was aimed at the Unitarian Universalist world, in the second for a broader audience. I was grateful for the opportunity. And I think it was useful. And, as I re-read it,... Read more

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