7. The Awakening of the
Innermost Wisdom.
Having set ourselves free
from the misconception of Self, next we must awaken our innermost wisdom, pure
and divine, called the Mind of Buddha,1 or Bodhi,2 or
Prajña3 by Zen masters. It is the divine light, the inner heaven, the
key to all moral treasures, the centre of thought and consciousness, the source
of all influence and power, the seat
of kindness, justice, sympathy,
impartial love, humanity, and mercy, the measure of all things. When this
innermost wisdom is fully awakened, we are able to realize that each and
everyone of us is identical in spirit, in essence, in nature with the universal
life or Buddha, that each ever lives face to face with Buddha, that each is
beset by the abundant grace of the Blessed One, that He arouses his moral
nature, that He opens his spiritual eyes, that He unfolds his new capacity,
that He appoints his mission, and that life is not an ocean of birth, disease,
old age, and death, nor the vale of tears, but the holy temple of Buddha, the
Pure Land,1 where be can enjoy the bliss of Nirvana.
Then our minds go through
an entire revolution. We are no more troubled by anger and hatred, no more
bitten by envy and ambition, no more stung by sorrow and chagrin, no more
overwhelmed by melancholy and despair. Not that we become passionless or simply
intellectual, but that we have purified passions, which, instead of troubling
us, inspire us with noble aspirations, such as anger and hatred against
injustice, cruelty, and dishonesty, sorrow and lamentation for human frailty,
mirth and joy for the welfare of follow-beings, pity and sympathy for suffering
creatures. The same change purifies our intellect. Scepticism and sophistry
give way to firm conviction; criticism and hypothesis to right judgment; and
inference and argument to realization.
What we merely observed
before we now touch with heart as well. What we knew in relation of difference
before we now understand in relation of unity as well. How things happen was
our chief concern before, but now we consider as well bow much value they have.
What was outside us before now comes within us. What was dead and indifferent
before grows now alive and lovable to us. What was insignificant and empty
before becomes now important,
and has profound meaning.
Wherever we go we find beauty; whomever we meet we find good; whatever we get
we receive with gratitude. This is the reason why the Zenists not only regarded
all their fellow-beings as their benefactors, but felt gratitude even towards
fuel and water. The present writer knows a contemporary Zenist who would not
drink even a cup of water without first making a salutation to it. Such an
attitude of Zen toward things may well be illustrated by the following example:
Süeh Fung (Sep-po) and Kin Shan (Kin-zan), once travelling through a
mountainous district, saw a leaf of the rape floating down the stream. Thereon
Kin Shan said: "Let us go up, dear brother, along the stream that we may
find a sage living up on the mountain. I hope we shall find a good teacher in
him." "No," replied Süeh Fung, "for he cannot be a sage who
wastes even a leaf of the rape. He will be no good teacher for us."
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