Finding our way to The Way one situation at a time. I don't know how great it will be, but I expect it will be interesting, and I look forward to it going on past all reason because wonder is just that way. Are you coming or not?
Heron Overhead — 11/05/2017, Cape Hatteras National Seashore, Ocrracoke Island, North Carolina
It would be a reasonably close approximation to say that Taoism was being developed by Shamans in and near China by around 1500 BCE, and that Lao Tzu was credited with writing the Tao Te Ching about 500 BCE, and that the Buddha was stirring around in India about that same time.
And that about 206-220 CE Buddhism was being introduced into China from India, and introduced as Ch'an (which became Zen) into Japan about 552 CE.
All of which is to say that we have been handling, refining, interpreting, reinterpreting, passing around religious ideas for over 3,000 years and we do it as though we know what we are talking about.
Here's the rub with Buddhism and Zen: Classic/Traditional Buddhism is strict, by the book (the Dharma) and insistent on doing it like it is supposed to be done-- which is like someone else (Buddhist teachers) says it should be done.
Zen is intuitive, not rational/logical, and is to be experienced, not explained.
Zen is what happened when Buddhism met Taoism. Taoism took what it liked from Buddhism, the experience of enlightenment, doing Zen like they intuit it ought to be done, and threw away Buddhism's scriptures, doctrines rituals, and practices and called itself "Zen Buddhism" in 625-705 CE.
If you don't like what you read here, I invite you to do your own research, making internet inquiries to your complete satisfaction.
I'm retired, and still finding my way--but now, I don't have to pretend that I know what I'm doing.
I retired after 40.5 years as a minister in the Presbyterian Church USA, serving churches in Louisiana, Mississippi and North Carolina. I graduated from Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary, in Austin, Texas, and Northwestern State University in Natchitoches, Louisiana. My wife, Judy, and I have three daughters, five granddaughters, one great granddaughter, and a great grandson on the way, within about ten minutes from where we live--and are enjoying our retirement as much as we have ever enjoyed anything.
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2 thoughts on “January 24, 2025”
What an impressive photo. My 78th birthday occurs tomorrow and I am taking this beautiful bird in flight as a symbol for me to contemplate. Wonderful photo!
What an impressive photo. My 78th birthday occurs tomorrow and I am taking this beautiful bird in flight as a symbol for me to contemplate. Wonderful photo!
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Happy Birthday! And may each be better than the previous one all the way!
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