8. Man is not
Good-natured nor Bad-natured, but Buddha-natured.
We have had already
occasion to observe that Zen teaches Buddha-nature, which all sentient beings
are endowed with. The term 'Buddha-nature,'1 as accepted generally by
Buddhists, means a latent and undeveloped nature, which enables its owner to
become Enlightened when it is developed and brought to actuality.2
Therefore man, according to Zen, is not good-natured nor bad-natured in the
relative sense, as accepted generally by common sense, of these terms, but
Buddha-natured in the sense of non-duality. A good person (of common sense)
differs from a bad person (of common sense), not in his inborn Buddha-nature,
but in the extent of his expressing it in deeds. Even if men are equally
endowed with that nature, yet their different states of development do not
allow them to express it to an equal extent in conduct. Buddha-nature may be
compared with the sun, and individual mind with the sky. Then an Enlightened
mind is like the sky in fair weather, when nothing prevents the beams of the
sun; while an ignorant mind is like the sky in cloudy weather, when the sun
sheds faint light; and an evil mind is like the sky in stormy weather, when the
sun seems to be out of existence. It comes under our daily observation that
even a robber or a murderer may prove to be a good father and a loving husband
to his wife and children. He is an honest fellow when he remains at home. The
sun of Buddha-nature gives light within the wall of his house, but without the
house the darkness of foul crimes shrouds him.
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