Living a life of vow

A record of my training as a chaplain and other things Zen.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Talk about crazy hope


The assignment was to free associate.  What fun.

“The capacity for faith is at its strongest in childhood; which is why religions apply themselves before all else to getting those tender years into their possession....Religion is truth expressed in allegory and myth and thus made accessible and digestible to mankind at large...Religion is like a glow worm that is only visible in the darkness.”  (Arthur Schopenhauer, German Philosopher 1788-1860)


Are you kidding?  Really?  Someone wrote that down / said it out loud?  That the goal is to catch’em young when they are most impressionable?  That implies that the tenets of religion won’t stand the test of reasoned scrutiny (associated with adulthood and a more mature mind).  It makes explicit that religion is something that needs to be snuck in, under the radar.  Something that folks get hooked in to -  habituated to -  before they can question. (Wait, but wasn’t that something Schopenhaurer was trying to make plain?  Ah!)

This certainly is what I experienced in my brief Roman Catholic upbringing.  There was an explicit positioning of authority, of a source of wisdom that I was to accept without question.  Youthful questioner that I was, it didn’t work.  I kept asking questions that were not answered to my satisfaction.  And thus, the Roman Catholic becomes a Buddhist - a “practice” more than a religion, in which the core commandment is to sit, see for yourself.

Funny, as a result of practice, I have a greater respect for spiritual and religious authority – but I have an internal barometer that tells me when that authority is real. It’s something that is so evident, i.e., when someone is grounded as a result of personal exploration and inquiry.  And it is a very different presence from someone who is speaking more from faith than from inquiry and exploration.  I wish I could define it clearly – engagement is evident, openness is evident, active listening, compassion, and love. 

I’ve been in the presence of that authority: the words and lives of my Zen teachers, reading the works of contemporary Zen teachers like Okumura, Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo – a British zen teacher in the Tibetan tradition who lived for over a decade in a cave in the Himalayas, or Ostaseski, or the hospital's own Rev. S when she speaks about what is happening in a pastoral counseling encounter.  The words and ideas shared by these people ring true.  Religion does not give their words authority, their words and experience gives authority to their religion, as they illuminate universal, human truth from the ground of their faith.

And just this weekend, I heard its opposite.  A woman who was deeply grounded in her faith. Who attends regular Bible study.  Who spoke about her concern for her husband’s lack of faith.  And the most poignant statement from that encounter was this:  “I know better, and yet, as I think about it…the lust for life is so strong…..I am so surprised, so ashamed.”  She was unable to find what she sought from her religion – a world view, reassurance, an end to fear, and comfort.

So what does Buddhism offer to me?  Every morning (okay, most mornings), I rise from sleep and sit with myself on a cushion in a cold room.  I watch what I have come to think of as the uncontrollable “drool” of my mind activate.  I practice saying “okay” and “what next”.  I practice a lightness of view.  When the fears emerge I see them as part of that uncontrollable, unstoppable-as-long-as-I-am-living drool of thought, and have “faith” that something else will follow, a new fear, a new question, a new joy, a new anger, a new insight, a new inanity.  I practice compassion towards all of it and treat it….as I would drool.  I take it, and myself, with appropriate lightness.  Then, despite whatever has emerged, I say these words: “May this practice end greed, anger, delusion, and the hardship of all beings.” 

It undercuts ego.  I can’t end all suffering, but I have a “faith” that the practice of clear seeing and presence, done by millions over millennia, might have the energy to free us all. 

Talk about crazy hope. 

“A glowworm invisible only in the dark”?  Hmmm.  In a sutra recited daily, Buddhists say: 

“Light is also darkness, do not move with it as darkness.  Darkness is light, do not see it as light.  Light and darkness are not one, not two.  Like the foot before and the foot behind in walking, each thing has its own being, which is not different from its place and function.”  Light illuminates differences.  Darkness shows them to be less meaningful.  In the dim glow, perhaps we can just be wary and not bump our heads in heedless disrespect of the terrain of our faith and our very-human struggle!