Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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One Thought for a Thousand Years: A Chan Hall meditation
John Crook |Out of the corner of my eye I catch a glimpse of Bodhisattva Ksitigarbharaja seated upon the offering table in the Chan hall. As usual his serene countenance glows quietly there. I take a closer look. His expression of peace and tranquillity begins to enter and then to flood my mind. Time becomes motionless yet the soft wind gently moves the branches beyond the window, the distant rustle of the…
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Working with a Master
John Crook |What is it like for a lay practitioner to work with a master over a period of time? A single retreat provides an introductory experience but what if one persists through a series of such events? This would indeed be a requirement if the aim was to train in Chan. Training takes time but does it take one anywhere?
To assist those for whom this question may be relevant, I attempt to answer it…
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On the Path of Dharma: Bill Pickard's letters to Eric Johns 1984-1987
Edited by John Crook |In NCF 18 Eric Johns described how he set out to discover the Buddha Way by visiting Bill Pickard at Mousehole in Cornwall where there was a small group living under his instruction in Soto Zen. During the subsequent years of Eric's training as a monk (Sik Hin Lic) in Hong Kong, Korea and Japan, Bill sustained a flow of letters to him, acting very much as an older spiritual counsellor to a young…
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Language and Freedom: Meaning in Zen. Review by John Crook
John Crook |What is the place of Zen in contemporary thought, the relation of Buddhist metaphysics to philosophy and the value of ancient texts to thinking people today? These and related questions form the subject matter of this intelligent, subtle and provoking book. Dale S. Wright, Professor of Religious Studies, Occidental College, Los Angeles, provides a thought provoking read especially for those of us…
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Welsh Mandala
John Crook |Akshobya
Dark light before dawn
no wind and in the silence
a fox barking on the hill;
suddenly in the candle lit room
the cold landscape unfurls
invisible rocks, burrows of badgers
trolling the turf for bulbs and insects
the starlit dome, dusk before dawn
Blue immensity.Ratnasambhava
Sunrise, far to the SSE
almost at the point of turning
a midwinter sky lined by the tracery of trees,
northern thrushes… -
Dangers in Devotion: Buddhist Cults and the Tasks of a Guru
John Crook |Paper presented at the conference 'The Psychology of Awakening II' at Dartington Hall, October 1998 (1)
Western Buddhism: Problems and Presentations
In recent years a number of cases of individual corruption in sexual and financial matters have been exposed in Buddhist organisations, usually the result of the behaviour or indiscretions of individuals in leadership roles(2). Ken Jones' recent…
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The Fenceless Gate
John Crook |for Hughie
High in the hills of Wales
somewhere above Ceredigion
a fenceless gate swings in the wind.Bold spirit are you?
A rugged glance, good boots or a 4 by 4
and you're away.among sheep and ravens
cloudwise among crags
bogs and sudden mista falling white out
lost in the desert
chilly too.Coming down a valley no one ever saw before
the dead still sing in the Inn.
Finding a way home not so easy… -
Chan Revival in Mainland China
John Crook |Chan Buddhism is undergoing a marked revival in mainland China. Monasteries are renewing their fabric and providing services to the public. Meditation is starting again for young monks in the Chan halls. In July 1997, with my old friend Yiu Yan-nang as interpreter, I visited two of the most famous monasteries in southern China and was surprised by what we found.
When I entered China from Hong…
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The Western Chan Fellowship: Constitutional Discussion
John Crook |First meeting: June 1996: In June 1996 John Crook called an assembly of Chan practitioners to a meeting at the Maenllwyd to consider his proposal to respond to numerous requests for a development in the field of Chan practice in the UK by setting up a charitable institution to promote Chan in Great Britain.
The following persons attended: Tim Paine, Frank Tait, Caroline Paine, Simon Child, Sally…
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Visiting Mother
John Crook |Copper whispers blowing in the wind,
beech leaves chase the rough grasses down the field.
At ninety two, I ask myself,
will she see another spring?
She rests there, quiet, her busy conversation gone,
anxieties softened now in forgetfulness of age.
Beside her in the garden, dozing off,
I see her smiling in a ray of autumn sun.
She set my character in grooves
so like her own, wakeful mornings worrying;
skille…
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