13. Universal Life is
Universal Spirit.
These considerations
naturally lead us to see that Universal Life is not a blind vital force, but
Creative Spirit, or Mind, or Consciousness, which unfolds itself in myriads of
ways. Everything in the universe, according to Zen, lives and acts, and at the
same time discloses its spirit. To be alive is identically the same as to be
spiritual. As the poet has his song, so does the nightingale, so does the
cricket, so does the rivulet. As we are pleased or offended, so are horses, so
are dogs, so are sparrows, ants, earthworms, and mushrooms. Simpler the body,
simpler its spirit; more complicated the body, more complicated its spirit.
'Mind slumbers in the pebble, dreams in the plant, gathers energy in the
animal, and awakens to self-conscious discovery in the soul of man.'
It is this Creative,
Universal Spirit that sends forth Aurora to illuminate the sky, that makes
Diana shed her benign rays and Æolus play on his harp, wreathes spring with
flowers, that clothes autumn with gold, that induces plants to put forth
blossoms, that incites animals to be energetic, and that awakens consciousness
in man. The author of Mahavaipulya-purnabuddha-sutra expressly states our idea
when he says: "Mountains, rivers, skies, the earth: all these are embraced
in the True Spirit, enlightened and mysterious." Rin-zai also says:
"Spirit is formless, but it penetrates through the world in the ten
directions."1 The Sixth Patriarch expresses the same idea more
explicitly: "What creates the phenomena is Mind; what transcends all the
phenomena is Buddha."2
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