PZI Events Calendar
W E L C O M E to the PZI Events Calendar! Here you will find all upcoming events and registration links for PZI Zen Online retreats, sesshins, and weekly meditations & talks. Search by individual event, day, or month. Save to your Google Calendar or iCal Calendar. No experience required to participate. All event times are Pacific Time. Questions? Contact Emlyn Guiney
F E A T U R E D
September 15 Sunday Zen: With John Tarrant & Friends
September 21 Daylong: With John Tarrant & Tess Beasley
October 22–27 Fall Sesshin: with John Tarrant & PZI Teachers
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MONDAY ZEN: The Mountain Cloud Welcome with Jon Joseph
January 23, 2023 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Free – $10REGISTER
Join us for a third (and final) exploration of the legacy of Koun Yamada Roshi, our ancestral teacher, in anticipation of our January 30th Zen Luminaries event about Yamada, with guests Ruben Habito and PZI’s David Weinstein.
Mazu said to the assembly, “If you have a staff, I will give it to you. If you have no staff, I will take it away from you.” —The Gateless Barrier, Case 44
For whoever has, to him more will be given, and he will have abundance; but whoever does not have, even what he has will be taken away from him. —Matthew, 13:12
For the last couple of weeks, we have been exploring the extraordinary legacy of Koun Yamada, our ancestral teacher at Pacific Zen and one of the most influential Japanese Zen teachers to Westerners in the last century. Yamada did not see kensho as a strictly Buddhist awakening, and welcomed the many Christian clerics who came to study with him.
Ha had built a small zendo on his property in Kamakura that comfortably fit about two dozen people, a number that more than doubled during retreats and sesshin. Many of Yamada’s students came from overseas—the US, Europe, and South Asia—to study at SanUn Zendo, a lay zendo. The greatest in number where Christian clerics who perhaps made up a third of the foreign participants and nearly half of his thirty-six dharma heirs. These were mostly Catholic priests and nuns from many orders: Jesuits, Benedictines, Maryknolls, Marists and others. Some had come to Japan as missionaries and took up meditation while there; others had come to Kamakura just to practice with Yamada.
What they found was a tremendous openness, acceptance, and respect for their dedication to the spiritual path. Koun Yamada did not believe Zen was a religion but a practice that could be embraced by those of any faith. He was fond of saying, “If you are a Buddhist, Zen will make you a better Buddhist. If a Christian, Zen will make you a better Christian.” He commented once that Frere Hugo Enomiya-Lasalle, a Jesuit missionary who came to Japan in the 1930s and was for decades his student, had “integrated his koan practice into his life far better than I.”
Despite Yamada’s large Christian following, he never lectured on the similarities between the teachings of Christ and Zen. His single mention of Christianity was in his commentary in The Gateless Gate, in reference to the above Mazu koan, where he quotes one of his students:
“I was very interested to hear from one of the (Catholic) sisters in the zendo here that Christ uttered words that are almost identical: ‘To him who has, will more be given; and from him who has not, even what he has will be taken away.’ I wonder what Christ truly meant when he said that.”
Always intellectually curious, Yamada was open to discussion about Christian mysticism. He once asked Ruben Habito, a Jesuit who had studied with him for eighteen years, to teach him The Spiritual Exercises, a famous series of meditations, contemplations, and prayers created by Ignatius of Loyola.
In his book, Healing Breath, Habito recalls a time when some students were chatting over tea in Yamada’s living room after evening sitting. A Christian practitioner mentioned,
“‘We Christians believe that the bread offered in the Eucharist is the real body of Christ.’ Whereupon Yamada Roshi, without the least bit of surprise or doubt replied, ‘Of course!’”
Join us for a koan, meditation, dharma talk and conversation.
Register to participate. All are welcome.
—Jon Joseph