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Why
Do We Chant?
One Sunday
evening, after a Dharma talk at the International Zen Center of New York,
a student asked Seung Sahn Soen-sa, "Why do you chant? Isn't sitting
Zen enough?"
Soen-sa said, "This is a very important matter. We bow together,
chant together, eat together, sit together, and do many other things together
here at the Zen Center. Why do we practice together?
"Everybody has different karma. So all people have different situations,
different conditions, and different opinions. One person is a monk, another
is a student, another works in a factory; one person always keeps a clear
mind, another is often troubled or dissatisfied; one person likes the
women's movement, another doesn't. But everybody thinks, 'My opinion is
correct!' Even Zen Masters are like this. Ten Zen Masters will have ten
different ways of teaching, and each Zen Master will think that his way
is the best. Americans have an American opinion; Orientals have an Oriental
opinion. Different opinions result in different actions, which make different
karma. So when you hold on to your own opinions, it is very difficult
to control your karma, and your life will remain difficult. Your wrong
opinions continue, so your bad karma continues. But at our Zen Centers,
we live together and practice together, and all of us abide by the Temple
Rules. People come to us with many strong likes and dislikes, and gradually
cut them all off. Everybody bows together 108 times at five-thirty in
the morning, everybody sits together, everybody eats together, everybody
works together. Sometimes you don't feel like bowing; but this is a temple
rule so you bow. Sometimes you don't want to chant, to sleep; but you
chant. Sometimes you are tired and want to but you know that if you don't
come to sitting, people will wonder why; so you sit.
"When we eat, we eat in ritual style, with four bowls; and after
we finish eating, we wash out the bowls with tea, using our index finger
to clean them. The first few times we ate this way, nobody liked it. One
person from the Cambridge Zen Center came to me very upset. 'I can't stand
this way of eating! The tea gets full of garbage! I can't drink it!' I
said to him, 'Do you know the Heart Sutra?' 'Yes.' 'Doesn't it say that
things are neither tainted nor pure?' 'Yes.' 'Then why can't you drink
the tea?' 'Because it's filthy" " (Laughter from the audience.)
"'Why is it filthy? These crumbs are from the food that you already
ate. If you think the tea is dirty, it is dirty. If you think it is clean,
it is clean.' He said, 'You're right. I will drink the tea."' (Laughter.)
"So we live together and act together. Acting together means cutting
off my opinions, cutting off my condition, cutting off my situation. Then
we become empty mind. We return to white paper. Then our true opinion,
our true condition, our true situation will appear. When we bow together
and chant together and eat together, our minds become one mind. It is
like on the sea. When the wind comes, there are many waves. When the wind
dies down, the waves become smaller. When the wind stops, the water becomes
a mirror, in which everything is reflected-mountains, trees, clouds. Our
mind is the same. When we have many desires and many opinions, there are
many big waves. But after we sit Zen and act together for some time, our
opinions and desires disappear. The waves become smaller and smaller.
Then our mind is like a clear mirror, and everything we see or hear or
smell or taste or touch or think is the truth. Then it is very easy to
understand other people's minds. Their minds are reflected in my mind.
"So chanting is very important. At first you won't understand. But
after you chant regularly, you will understand. 'Ah, chanting-very
good feeling!' It is the same with bowing 108 times. At first people don't
like this. Why do we bow? We are not bowing to Buddha, we are bowing to
ourselves. Small I is bowing to Big I. Then Small I disappears and becomes
Big I. This is true bowing. So come practice with us. You will soon understand."
The student bowed and said, "Thank you very much."
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