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2024 Year-end Invitation from Hokuto Osho

December 11, 2024 by Devyani Sadh

By Hokuto Daniel Diffin Osho

May you live in interesting times.

This curse, supposedly from ancient China, was first pronounced in a speech by a British diplomat in 1936. At that time, the Great Depression had a grip on America and Europe, Hitler was building the German army and threatening neighboring countries, and the great international debate centered on whether it was communism or fascism that would eventually rule the world. Interesting times, indeed.

Once again, we live in interesting times. The world seems filled with madness, badness, and worse. And yet, we have no choice but to go on, turning to one another to lift each other up.

At times like these, the concept of refuge becomes increasingly important. How do you take refuge? Where do you take refuge? When the world is filled with madness, where do you find sanity, purpose, and community?

I take refuge in the Buddha
I take refuge in the Dharma
I take refuge in the Sangha

We find refuge in the example of the Buddha and the living Bodhisattvas among us; we find refuge in the teachings, accumulated and refined over the centuries, and renewed in each of us every time we sit in the clarity of zazen; and we find refuge in the community of like-minded practitioners, practicing for no other purpose than to find the wisdom, compassion, and joy that is everybody’s birthright.

The three treasures are our refuge; the three refuges are our treasure.

These treasures are available to each of us, and are accessible anytime, anywhere. And yet…discovering and exploring them through practice also requires an actual physical place of refuge and dedicated teachers to guide us deeper into the dharma.

We are very fortunate that the Zen Studies Society provides us with both an urban temple and a beautiful mountain monastery where the Sangha can gather and study with wonderful teachers, especially our Abbot, Chigan Roshi, and our beloved retired Abbot, Shinge Roshi, as well as a growing number of associated Dharma teachers.

Filed Under: Hokuto Osho

2024 MRC The Original Face Before You Were Born

July 19, 2024 by Devyani Sadh

By Hokuto Daniel Diffin Osho

Perhaps you know the story of Kyogen Chikan, who studied under the renowned Zen Master Isan Reiyu. Despite years of sincere effort and diligent practice, when Isan asked him to demonstrate the original face he had before he was born, Kyogen was speechless, unable to respond. Frustrated and ashamed, he burned the sutras and notes he’d accumulated and left the monastery, retiring to the gravesite of National Teacher Chu, which had been neglected and become overgrown with weeds. There, he passed months then years, humbly tending the grounds. One day, working in the garden, he dislodged a pebble that struck a hollow bamboo stalk. THWOCK! Suddenly, everything changed! He saw his own original face and the original nature of all things. Afterward, he sent a verse to Isan, who recognized his enlightenment. But Isan’s Dharma Heir, Kyozan, decided to visit Kyogen, to test his enlightenment. In answer to Kyozan’s questions, Kyogen wrote another verse:

Last year’s poverty was not real poverty.
This year’s poverty is finally genuine poverty.
In last year’s poverty there was still ground where I could plant my hoe,
In this year’s poverty, not even the hoe remains.

We are spiritual descendants of Kyogen, searching for our original face, our true nature; and, like Kyogen, we need to tend the grounds, patiently and humbly, until our true nature is revealed and we discover ‘genuine poverty.’ But we live in 21st Century America, not 8th Century China, so how do we ‘tend the grounds?’

For those of us who have chosen the Zen Studies Society and its temples as our spiritual home, we do so by seeking refuge in the beloved community of our Sangha and participating in all the activities that ZSS offers. But we must also ‘tend the grounds’ by caring for the physical condition of our temples.

Last year, the Zen Studies Society launched the Monastery Restoration Campaign, raising funds to repair and upgrade the aging infrastructure and grounds of Dai Bosatsu Zendo. Thanks to your generosity, we have made great progress, updating the heating system for our temples, and beginning the installation of a solar array to lower energy costs and greatly improve our carbon footprint. The beautiful Bonsho bell tower that was in danger of collapse has been rebuilt, and other vitally necessary repairs have begun. Envisioned as a multi-year campaign, we are proud of our success in the first year, having raised just over half of the required funds; but for the work to be accomplished, we need each of you to be as generous as possible this year.

So please ‘tend the grounds’ both through your participation in all the activities that ZSS offers and through generously supporting the Monastery Restoration Campaign.

Filed Under: Hokuto Osho, Hokuto Osho

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