Somewhere around
567 BC a young prince named Siddhartha Gautama was born in Lumbini , Nepal . He grew up shielded from all suffering or at
least that’s what we’re told. But on the
birthday of his first son and after being exposed to things like disease , old
age and death he ran away from home in search of an answer to life. The fact
that Buddha lived, and taught, and died is proved by an overwhelming amount of
evidence. After about five years of
searching he sat under a tree and contemplated everything that he had seen and
heard and been taught. He considered the human condition and after about 50
days of setting under that tree he had an epiphany. Some people choose to call
it his enlightenment the older texts indicate that he himself referred to it as
his awakening. Upon due consideration he
gave a sermon. That sermon is often called the first turning of the wheel. It
was written down later on in the form of a doctor’s diagnosis and prescription as it
would have been given in the time that Siddhartha lived. What we now call the four noble truths were
his observations that he considered self-evident. They are listed below.
Four Noble Truths
1. Suffering exists
2. Suffering arises from attachment to desires
3. Suffering ceases when attachment to desire ceases
4. Freedom from suffering is possible by practicing the Eightfold Path
What we call science presently
estimates that the modern form of humanity has been on the earth for about
200,000 years. All things considered
that a young prince should notice 2584 years ago that the most striking thing
about the human condition was the heritage of human sorrow is not an amazing
thing in and of itself. But it cannot be denied that his turning of this wheel
and the medicine which he prescribed for that heritage of suffering changed the
world forever.
His
prescription for mitigating this sorrow and the suffering is now called the
eightfold path. Literally thousands upon
thousands of Buddhist practitioners, scholars and yogis have written and
contemplated and analyzed and re-analyzed those two paragraphs which
Siddhartha taught so many years ago. And
of course with each application of each individuals perception and intellect
and their own experience of suffering there has resulted an almost endless
parade of interpretations of those few words Buddha taught on so many years
ago.
Modern Zen
practitioners for the most part have surgically removed the concepts of karma
and rebirth from the teachings. But even with this dissection the truth of
Buddha's observations still hold fast to the human condition. Anyone who says they have never suffered is
lying to you or to themselves or to both.
Now comes a few simple
questions. Has your practice of Zen reduce the amount of suffering that you
have experienced since you started practicing Zen? Since you started practicing Zen have you
changed? Has your teachers words had the
effect of reducing your suffering. Are
you happier now that you have sat for hours meditating than you were
before? Has the obscurity of Zen and
it’s amorphous paradoxes helped you in
any way? When you set under the steely
gaze of your Zen master and he says you can expect nothing from Zen what’s
really going on in your mind?
I only ask that
you be truthful with yourself on dealing with these questions. You can brush
them aside and ignore their consequence or you can give them due consideration
the choice is of course always yours.
Long ago
when I was practicing another form of Buddhism I was taught a fable. In which the teachings and precepts of
Buddhism were boiled down into a little story that even a child could
understand. The ancient teacher of
Buddhist wisdom looked up at an all powerful king who had just asked him what
the nature of Buddhist teachings were. He responded that:
1. Do
as little harm as you can.
2. Do
as much good as you can.
3. Try
to purify your heart.
I have looked down the tunnel of
time and taken unto myself this heritage of sorrow that we all carry with us. I
have lived and died and been reborn upon the rising of each sun. It’s useless
to tell people to change because change is inevitable. It’s useless to raise your fist at the sky
and curse your fate. It is however
absolutely mandatory that we look within ourselves for the truth that lies
within.
If I had but a couple of minutes
left of breath, and I wished to tell you something before I go, it would be:
1.
Do as little harm as you can.
2. Do
as much good as you can.
3. Try
to purify your heart.