Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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The Importance of Buddhadharma in the Modern World
Chan Master Sheng Yen |Lecture by Master Sheng-yen on October 13, 1991. Reprinted with permission from Chan Newsletter 89, November 1991.
The world we live in has a genuine need for Buddhadharma. There are many fine things in the modern world, but there is much that is less than desirable. The world is becoming smaller and more crowded and people are getting busier and busier.
As a child, I read a Chinese novel called…
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Methods of Practice in the Chan Hall
Chan Master Xuyun (Hsu Yun) |This is part two of a translation of a text by the great Chan master of the early part of the 20th century, Hsu Yun (1839-1959). It is reprinted by permission of the Institute of Chung Hwa Buddhist Culture, New York, from Chan Newsletter 87, August 1991. The first part of this talk appeared in New Chan Forum No.4. Spring 1992.
1. Introduction:
Many people come to ask me for guidance. This makes…
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Essentials of Chan Practice
Chan Master Xuyun (Hsu Yun) |This is part one of a translation of a text by the great Chan master of the early part of the 20th century, Hsu Yun (1839-1959). It is reprinted by permission of the Institute of Chung Hwa Buddhist Culture, New York, from Chan Newsletter 87, August 1991. The first part of this talk appeared in New Chan Forum No.7. Spring 1993.
The Prerequisites and Understanding Necessary to Begin Chan Practice
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Human Conciousness in the Chan Perspective
Chan Master Sheng Yen |Edited version of a lecture delivered by Master Sheng-yen at Brooklyn College on November 8, 1990. From Chan Newsletter No.84, March 1991, with permission.
Buddhism generally divides human consciousness into False Mind and True Mind. False Mind, sometimes called the illusory mind, refers to the mental activity of ordinary sentient beings. This mind is filled with innumerable vexations that arise…
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Thus Come, Thus Gone
Chan Master Sheng Yen |A special lecture given by Master Sheng-yen at the Chan Center, New York, on 4th November 1990. First published in Chan Newsletter No. 98, July 93 and reprinted here, slightly edited, with permission.
Chan is "thus come, thus gone." Everything is Chan; this is "thus come." Nothing is Chan; this is "thus gone." Today I want to investigate these words. I think they will give you new insights into…
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Chan and Daily Life
Chan Master Sheng Yen |A lecture given by Master Sheng-yen at the Washington University, St. Louis Missouri on April 17th, 1990. Presented in edited form with the permission of the Institute of Chung Hwa Buddhist Culture, Elmhurst, New York. Originally printed in Chan Newsletter, May 1990.
You may have the impression that, having written numerous books on the subject, I know a great deal about Buddhism. But throughout…
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Guarding the One
Chan Master Sheng Yen |Talks given by Master Sheng-yen on the first two evenings of the Chan retreat in April 1989.
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I have only been in your country for a day, but already I have learnt something about you people. You have a love for ancient things. This house is hundreds of years old, you treasure the worm-eaten beams and the crumbling stone walls, the bent timbers of the old barn. In Taiwan we are busily engaged…
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False and True Self
Chan Master Sheng Yen |Reprinted with permission from Chan Newsletter, 69, 1988 and lightly edited. Based on a talk given on JHC's first visit to Shifu.
Ananda asks the Buddha about the nature of the self. Is there an all-encompassing ego, a true self that unites everyone in the world, or is there a self at all? I'm going to talk about this question and discuss how it is dealt with by "outer path" systems of thought…
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Between Master and Disciple: Neither Anger Nor Love
Chan Master Sheng Yen |A practitioner should not feel proud if a master thinks highly of her, wishes to accept her, and shows affection for her. If he or she is driven away by the master, the disciple should feel no hatred. Similarly the master should not feel proud even if surrounded by many followers. Nor should there be unhappiness if all the practitioners leave.
Maintaining such an attitude of equanimity is not…
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No Thought of Gain or Loss is Freedom from Samsara
Chan Master Sheng Yen |A lecture by Master Sheng-yen based on The Sutra of Complete Enlightenment November 6, 1983. First published in Chan Newsletter No.33, Non 1983. Reprinted with permission.
In Chan training you may not be able to attain to the highest level of understanding right away, but you can get a small, subtle idea of Buddhahood. The Sutra of Complete Enlightenment speaks of the wisdom of a Buddha, not that…
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