Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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-  The Place of the Dharma in Our TimeJohn Crook |Read more of: The Place of the Dharma in Our TimePart I - The World We're InIntroductionTo appreciate the role that the Buddha Dharma may come to play in Western culture we need to have an understanding of the way our lives are framed by the world that both shapes us and within which we play a part. So momentous have been the changes in recent years that our suppositions about who and why we are need a constant updating. To appreciate such a… 
-  Black Slugs - One Here - One ThereAnonymous |Read more of: Black Slugs - One Here - One ThereThis was the first occasion I had been at the Maenllwyd and from the start it had a magical feel to it - like entering a different time and space. Coming up the track to the house and its surroundings was just like entering a live jewel. At this time of year the place was brimful of bird sound, lambs, insects and wind in the trees. All these and the environment were, as I was to discover, to take… 
-  Silent IlluminationMartin Tebbs |Read more of: Silent IlluminationThe following poem was written by Martin Tebbs during the Chan retreat with Master Sheng Yen at Maenllwyd in June 1995. The last line refers the woolly socks given to Shifu by two Polish students who attended the retreat (Eds.) Today everything is different, 
 Everything the same.
 
 How is it different?
 In a cloudless sky the swallows glide
 effortlessly, leaving no trace;
 Young lambs call and call.
 
 How…
-  SonataRoger Green |Read more of: SonataThey said not a word 
 The visitor, the host
 and the white chrysanthemum.
 
 The Old Pond
 A frog jumped in
 Plop!
 What?
 
 ...the listener who listens in the snow,
 and nothing himself
 Beholds nothing that is not there,
 and nothing that is.
 
 What is?
 
 What th'? What that?What? What th'?
 s,is,is,is,is,is,is,is,is
 And I am. And I am that.
 Neither and both
 and that.
 
 But
 What is it?
 
 What is
 is, and I am
 This.
 What is
 is and I…
-  Words of a GuruJohn Crook |Read more of: Words of a GuruRoger Housden was taking a tour party down the river Ganges. Half way they stopped in Lucknow and Roger took the participants to visit one of the truly insightful gurus of modern India, a man of no-nonsense clarity. All but one of his party stayed on. Even the Ganges was forgotten. Poonja is a Hindu without a label. Whether derived from Sankaracharya or the Buddha or both his thought is direct,… 
-  MaturityAnonymous |Read more of: MaturityPrevious Western Zen Retreats have been enormously powerful and emotional experiences and I brought with me all sorts of expectations. My koan was "What is life?" The aspect of my life that came up over and over again was to do with my work, specifically the job I am doing now, which involves four hours travelling a day and is turning out more and more to be not what I want to do. Last summer on… 
-  The Zen of Social ActionKen Jones |Read more of: The Zen of Social Action1. The Privatisation of the DharmaBuddhism comes to Westerners as a monkish other worldly religion of meditation embedded in a culture of monasticism. It brings with it all the assumptions of a traditional hierarchical culture where society and nature were perceived as an unchanging back drop to the human condition. Public virtues enjoined upon 'householders' (and even rulers), charitable… 
-  Why the Cook Bakes the BreadTim Blanc |Read more of: Why the Cook Bakes the BreadWhy have I come to this desolate place? Why have I kept pushing myself to find the ultimate 'truth'? Why did I launch myself on this quest, why didn't I just ignore my doubts, close my eyes and enjoy the bliss of uncaring ignorance? Such were my thoughts as I struggled up the muddy path, against a bitterly wet wind, towards the cloud shrouded hills. My destination was a Dharma retreat, famed for… 
-  No Success, No FailureAnonymous |Read more of: No Success, No FailureI came to the New York retreat unsure of what to expect. Earlier retreats at Maenllwyd had afforded powerful experiences and insight into dilemmas. In the back of my mind however I began to feel that in some way I was beginning to second guess the retreat process and was becoming too familiar with John's centre in Wales. I wanted to embark on a retreat with no idea of where I might come out at the… 
-  Reading Sutras as a Spiritual PracticeChan Master Sheng Yen |Read more of: Reading Sutras as a Spiritual PracticeA talk delivered at Tibet House in New York City, on 5 November, 1994 and edited by Linda Peer and Harry Miller, edited with permission for NCF by John Crook 1998. In this talk Shifu tells us about the traditional uses to which the Sutras are put in China. Some of us may like to make use of these methods. For Westerners Sutra reading is also important. In particular the oldest Sutras, the ones… 
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The articles on this website have been submitted by various authors. The views expressed do not necessarily represent the views of the Western Chan Fellowship.
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