"Life has an endless supply of voices at its disposal when it wishes to call out to us. Do you have an equal number with which to respond?"
- Barry Magid
- Barry Magid
Saturday Zen Service, Nov 15: 10:00am - 11:45am.
Koan of the Week
Gateless Gate #8: "Xizhong Makes Carts"
Case:
Master Yuean asked a monk, "Xizhong made a hundred carts. If he took off both wheels and removed the axle, what would he make clear about the cart?"
Wumen's Commentary:
If you can realize this at once, your eye will be a shooting star and your spiritual activity like catching lightning.
Seung Sahn's Commentary:
In the vast sky, clouds appear and disappear. Already everything is clear.
Wumen's Verse:
Where the active wheel revolves,
Even a master fails,
It moves in four directions: above and below,
South and north, east and west.
Yuelin's Verse:
The ocean god knows it's valuable, but doesn't know its price;
Left in the human world, its light illumines the night.
The founder of Zen smiles and nods his head;
Who knows the action hasn't a seam or gap?
Old Japanese Poem:
Put grasses together and tie twigs one to another:
Behold, here is a cottage!
Dismantle it and take it to pieces:
Behold, it is the original grass field!
NOTES:
According to Chinese legend, Xizhong, the inventor of the wheel, made many wheels and carts. Some translations say "Xizhong made 100 carts." Others say he "made a cart whose wheels had 100 spokes."
Yuean (1079-1152) was a later Zen master of the 22nd generation on the Mazu-Linji side:
Mazu -> Baizhang -> Huangbo -> Linji -> Xinghua -> Nanyuan -> Fengxue -> Shoushan -> Fenyang -> Shishuang -> Yangqi -> Baiyun -> Wuzu -> Kaifu -> Yuean
Yuean was the dharma great-grandfather of Wumen (25th generation).
Hotetsu's Verse:
This cart called my life, so painstakingly constructed:
So magnificent and intricate, wheels of 100 spokes.
How lovely to roll along in my cart,
If a bit bumpy sometimes.
I took it all apart once -- a friend helped.
I forget whether we ever put it back together.
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