2020-02-09T18:53:49-08:00

    The Case The master Huoan asked, “Why is it the Western Barbarian has no beard?” Gateless Gate, Case 4   I’m enormously fond of this case. It’s deceptively simple. In fact people in our lineage come upon it at a moment when most can “easily” pass it in the technical sense of Zen’s koan tradition. But, to get it deeply? Well, that can very much be another matter. A matter for a lifetime. It’s similar to the Mu... Read more

2020-02-03T06:54:31-08:00

  CHANGE & NOT KNOWING Darwin, Huxley, & the Shape of Naturalistic Religion James Ishmael Ford My “six-year old just got out of bed to tell me that here apple cores turn into soil & she can plant seeds in that soil to grow into apples. ‘Mommy, it’s a circle. You have to write that on the internet. What if they don’t know!’” Lynna Odel, found on the Internet As I’m sure most here know, the 12th of February is... Read more

2020-01-31T18:28:31-08:00

Today is Imbolc, a festival of my ancestors marking the beginning of Spring, half way between the winter solstice & the spring equinox. And let me tell you, like my people on that little island for so long, so long, at this moment I’m ready for Spring. This has been a hard winter. I’m also among that crowd that are pretty sure dealing with Imbolc and the lady at the heart of its celebration is the fairly obvious origin for... Read more

2020-01-30T11:53:19-08:00

No doubt there are as many ways into the interior life as there are humans. And there is even a bottom line to it all: Ultimately life is the teacher. This said here are three things that you can consciously take on that can grow into the Deep Way: 1) You need some shut up time. If you’re making noise all the time it is hard to pay attention, hard to notice the lessons and the lesson. 2) You need... Read more

2020-01-27T12:50:36-08:00

  The Mysteries of Love The Three Eras of Universalism  A version of this was first delivered at the Unitarian Universalist Church in Anaheim, California, on Sunday, the 19th of January, 2020. Revised and a little expanded it was delivered at the First Unitarian Church of Providence, Rhode Island, on the 26th of January. Then, with a few tweaks more it was delivered on the 27th of January, at the Fraters of the Wayside Inn, in Sudbury, Massachusetts,  James Ishmael... Read more

2020-01-25T09:33:07-08:00

      I wrote this last year. I thought it worth sharing again this year, with a few small edits… According to Matthew Ciolek’s Zen Buddhist Calendar today is the birthday of Su Dongpo. The listing noted he was an esteemed if controversial bureaucrat, lay Buddhist practitioner, and poet. I thought that interesting enough to look a bit further. Wikipedia says Professor Ciolek’s dates are wrong, marking his birth as the 8th of January in 1037 and his death... Read more

2020-01-24T10:28:26-08:00

Zen Master Juzhi & the Matter of the Finger that Wasn’t There James Myoun Ford Whenever the master Jinhua Juzhi was asked about the intimate matter, he simply raised one finger. One day a visitor asked his young attendant what his master taught. The young man raised a finger. When the master heard about this, he cut the young man’s finger with a sharp knife. The attendant began to scream and grasping his bleeding hand ran toward the exit. As... Read more

2020-01-21T10:52:23-08:00

  From 2017. Seemed worth sharing again… Eating the Fruit of the Knowledge of Good & Evil: A Zen Commentary James Ishmael Ford The Text Now the serpent was more crafty than any other wild animal that the Lord God had made. He said to the woman, ‘Did God say, “You shall not eat from any tree in the garden”?’ The woman said to the serpent, ‘We may eat of the fruit of the trees in the garden; but God... Read more

2020-01-21T08:40:16-08:00

    Daido Kokushi, also know as Myoho Shucho, was the founding abbot of the great Rinzai Zen monastery Daitokuji. It was on this day, the 21st of January, in 1324, that he was invited to a debate organized by the former emperor Hanazono between him and representatives of the Tendai and Shingon traditions. At the end of it the emperor declared the Zen monk the winner. As the emperor was a sponsor of the monk, perhaps not too much... Read more

2022-12-17T12:15:23-08:00

    I just watched a good introduction to Zen meditation by Daishin Morgan, retired abbot of Throssel Hole Buddhist Abbey. While we are both dharma successors of the late Houn Jiyu Kennett, I’ve never met him. I was impressed with his introduction. It inspired me to provide some thoughts of my own, along with some videos about Zen meditation, all gathered together on a single page. As a beginning some of my own thoughts which are posted at our... Read more

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