The Bodhidharma Anthology: The Earliest Records of Zen
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Jeffrey L. Broughton provides a reliable annotated translation of the Bodhidharma Anthology along with a detailed study of its nature, content, and background. His work is especially important for its rendering of the three Records, which contain some of the earliest Zen dialogues and constitute the real beginnings of Zen literature.
The vivid dialogues and sayings of Master Yuan, a long-forgotten member of the Bodhidharma circle, are the hallmark of the Records. Master Yuan consistently criticizes reliance on the Dharma, on teachers, on meditative practice, and on scripture, all of which lead to self-deception and confusion, he says. According to Master Yuan, if one has spirit and does not seek anything, including the teachings of Buddhism, then one will attain the quietude of liberation. The boldness in Yuan's utterances prefigures much of the full-blown Zen tradition we recognize today.
Broughton utilizes a Tibetan translation of the Bodhidharma Anthology as an informative gloss on the Chinese original. Placing the anthology within the context of the Tun-huang Zen manuscripts as a whole, he proposes a new approach to the study of Zen, one that concentrates on literary history, a genealogy of texts rather than the usual genealogy of masters.
In the early part of this century, the discovery of a walled-up cave in northwest China led to the retrieval of a lost early Ch'an (Zen) literature of the T'ang dynasty (618-907). One of the recovered Zen texts was a seven-piece collection, the Bodhidh
Jeffrey L. Broughton
Jeffrey L. Broughton is Professor of Religious Studies at California State University, Long Beach.
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The Bodhidharma Anthology - Jeffrey L. Broughton
The Bodhidharma Anthology
The Philip E. Lilienthal imprint honors special books
in commemoration of a man whose work
at the University of California Press from 1954 to 1979
was marked by dedication to young authors
and to high standards in the field of Asian Studies.
Friends, family, authors, and foundations
have together endowed the Lilienthal Fund,
which enables the Press to publish under this imprint
selected books in a way that reflects the taste and judgment
of a great and beloved editor.
The Bodhidharma Anthology
The Earliest Records of Zen
Jeffrey L. Broughton
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS
Berkeley / Los Angeles / London
The publisher gratefully acknowledges
the generous contribution to this book
provided by the Philip E. Lilienthal Asian Studies Endowment,
which is supported by a major gift
from Sally Lilienthal.
University of California Press
Berkeley and Los Angeles, California
University of California Press, Ltd.
London, England
© 1999 by
The Regents of the University of California
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bodhidharma, 6th cent.
[Selections. English. 1999]
The Bodhidharma anthology: the earliest records of Zen /
Jeffrey L. Broughton.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-520-21200-2 (alk. paper). — ISBN 0-520-21972-4 (pbk.; alk. paper)
i. Zen Buddhism—Early works to 1800. I. Broughton,
Jeffrey L., 1944-. II. Title.
BQ9299.B623E5 1999
294.3'927—dc2i 98-18245
Printed in the United States of America 987654321
The paper used in this publication is both acid-free and totally chlorine-free (TCF). It meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984.
To Patricia
Contents
Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations and Conventions
1. Introduction
2. Translation of the Seven Texts of the Bodhidharma Anthology
3.Commentary on the Biography, Two Entrances, and Two Letters
4. Commentary on the Records
Appendix A. The Stratigraphy of the Tun-huang Ch’an Manuscripts
Appendix B. Toward a Literary History of Early Ch’an
Notes
Glossary of Chinese Logographs
Works Cited
Index
Acknowledgments
I am deeply indebted to the late Professor Philip B. Yampolsky for having introduced me to the study of early Ch'an texts. I am grateful for his kind and gentle guidance and for his suggestion of Tsung- mi’s Ch'an Preface as a dissertation subject. The National Endowment for the Humanities gave me a Translation Grant in the early 1980s that allowed me to spend two years in Kyoto, during which I began a project to translate the key texts of early Ch'an. I thank NEH. I would like to thank Professor Ueyama Daishun for introducing me to Tibetan Ch'an texts and Tun-huang manuscript studies during that two-year period. I am grateful to the First Seat
at Shōfuku-ji in Hakata (Fukuoka) in the late 1980s for allowing me a glimpse of a Zen monk. The Press’s two readers, Professors Carl Bielefeldt and Lewis Lancaster, wrote insightful reports on the manuscript that made a number of valuable suggestions, and I am grateful. I thank Professor F. Stanley Jones for reading the manuscript and offering judicious comments. Lastly, I thank Michael Murry for all his assistance.
Abbreviations and Conventions
Citations from the Stein, Pelliot, and Peking collections are in the following form: Stein Ch. 1880; Pelliot Ch. 3018, Pelliot Tib. 116; Peking su 99; and so forth.
Citations from T are in the following form: volume:page, column, (and if necessary) line. Thus, T 50:569020 indicates volume 50, page 569, column b, line 20. In citations in the form "T no. x," x indicates T document number.
Citations from ZZ are in the following form: series (i, 2, and 2B), case, volume:page, column. For example, ZZ 1, 14, 3:277a.
The following transliteration systems have been used: Wade-Giles for Chinese; Hepburn for Japanese; and T. V. Wylie for Tibetan.
Sanskrit Buddhist terms that appear in Webster’s Third New International Dictionary are treated as English words and left unitalicized and without diacritics (except for titles of texts). For a partial list of such terms, see Roger Jackson, Terms of Sanskrit and Pali Origin Acceptable as English Words.
I have added madhyamika
lmadhyamaka.
Usage of the readings Ch'an
(Chinese) and Zen
(Japanese) for the logograph that was picked originally as a Chinese transliteration of a Middle Indic form of Sanskrit dhyāna (meditation) is not entirely consistent. Though both appear in Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, the latter is far more familiar to English-speaking audiences. I have used Zen
where the broadest possible recognition is desirable, as in the title of this volume, in the introduction, and in the footnotes to the translation. I have also used it in cases where the subject is Japanese scholarship, the Japanese Zen school, or the whole of the East Asian tradition of this school as it is known in the West. In more technical contexts, such as the commentaries on the translation, the appendices, and the endnotes, I have employed Ch'an.
1. Introduction
Countless portraits by East Asian artists have attempted to catch the essence of the enigmatic Buddhist master known by the name Bodhidharma or Bodhidharmatara, the founder
of Zen. He is usually represented as an Indian with a full beard, rings in his ears, dressed in a simple monk’s robe; the best portraits catch an elusive glimmer in his eyes. Many Zen texts describe him as an aristocratic South Indian in an incarnation series of the bodhisattva Avalokitesvara. He is said to be the twenty-eighth patriarch in the transmission of the lamp of enlightenment down from Sakyamuni Buddha and the six Buddhas preceding him.
A Japanese scholar some time ago wrote of two approaches to this Bodhidharma: the approach of Zen monks enduring the rigors of the training hall; and that of modern scholarship.¹ Needless to say, these approaches have little in common. The practicing monks try to grasp the meaning of the patriarch through Zen meditation—that is, by a constant practice of gazing at
or holding up
the topics, usually a word or phrase, of certain cases (kōan), dialogues or stories associated with him. This is the form of meditation known as gazing-at-the-topic Zen,
the mainstay of all Korean Son (Zen) and important as well in Japanese Zen. As the classic theoretician of the practice of gazing at the topic states, in this method the trainee is not to employ discriminative understanding, doctrinal understanding, thinking or calculation, intuition, verbal strategy, absolute nonchalance, engagement, analysis of the words, or anything else; one should simply twenty-four hours a day and in all four postures constantly raise up the topic and constantly be aware of it.
²
The topic is no more than a tool that can be used to bum up all defilements and views, the things that bind the trainee to the suffering cycle of rebirth, much as a candle flame melts snowflakes. There is no absolute truth in the case and topic, and there certainly is nothing of the scholarly impulse, nothing historical.
Scholars, focused on what really
happened, have tried to clarify the historical figure Bodhidharma by stripping away the legendary accretions. They have pored over all the sources, Buddhist as well as non-Buddhist, and peeled away the layers of the Bodhidharma onion. More recently, a scholar has brought literary theory into play in an attempt to present Bodhidharma as a literary paradigm.³ At this point it is useful to make a distinction between the traditional or in-house story, Zen’s own history of its origins and development, and the work of modern historians. Some would argue that it is quite impossible for modern scholars of Zen to evade the traditional story and stand in immediate temporal relation with the sources
in telling the biography of Bodhidharma or that of any other early Zen figure.⁴ Their case is quite convincing.
So let us begin with the traditional story. Here is the gist of the traditional story of Bodhidharma found in the tenth-century transmission record entitled Record of the Patriarchal Hall (Tsu-t’ang chi).⁵ Prajfiātāra, the twenty-seventh patriarch, is an East Indian of the priestly class, a Brahman, who ventures to South India and acquires as a disciple the third son of a great South Indian king. (The third son’s name is Bodhitāra, which Prajfiātāra eventually changes to Bodhidharma and which in some sources becomes Bodhidharmatāra or Dharmatra. That his father was a king implies that he was of the warrior, and not the priestly, class, which echoes Sākyamuni Buddha’s origins.) At a banquet given by the king, Prajfiātāra is the only master who does not read the scriptural sutras; he represents a transmission of Buddhist truth outside the Buddhist scriptures. He transmits the ‘storehouse of the true Dharma eye
to his successor Bodhidharma and dies in 457 C.E. Prajfiātāra’s final injunction is for Bodhidharma to go to China sixty-seven years thence.
The disciple’s journey is long and presumably hazardous, taking three years. In 527 he lands in the area of present-day Canton in South China. Within days he makes his way to the court of the Liang Dynasty in the city of Nanking, where he has several memorable exchanges with Emperor Wu, perhaps one of the most fervent patrons of Buddhism in all of Chinese history. The emperor asks about the highest meaning of noble truth (ārya-satya), and the Indian answers: There is no noble [truth].
The emperor, perhaps growing a bit frustrated, asks: Who is standing before me?
The Indian answers: I do not know.
The emperor then asks how much karmic merit he has accumulated from ordaining Buddhist monks, building monasteries, having sutras copied, and commissioning artisans to create Buddha images. The Indian answers: No merit.
After a few weeks at court Bodhidharma realizes that this encounter with the Chinese emperor is not going well; in Buddhist terms, it is karmically unfavorable. The Indian master then proceeds northward. He crosses the Yangtze River and makes his way to the state of Wei in the North, the Chinese heartland. (Many paintings in East Asia show him crossing the Yangtze on a reed.) Meanwhile Emperor Wu seems to have realized that he has lost a golden opportunity. A mysterious monk, answering the emperor’s query about the departed master, states that he is actually the bodhisattva Avalokitesvara, transmitter of the seal of Buddha Mind.
Bodhidharma’s journey brings him to the area of the eastern capital Lo-yang and the nearby sacred mountain Mount Sung. He spends nine years on the western peak of Mount Sung, which is the site of the famous Shao-lin Monastery. (This western peak is known as Few Caves
or Small Caves.
) A fortyish Chinese monk by the name of Shen-kuang, who is well versed in classical Chinese literature, soon encounters the Indian. Whenever Shen-kuang asks a question of the master, he receives only silence. In order to show his sincerity in seeking the teaching of Buddhism, Shen-kuang stands in the deep nocturnal snow. Bodhidharma’s response to this gesture is to ask the Chinese monk why he is standing in the snow and to inform him that he is pursuing Dharma in a petty frame of mind. Shen-kuang thereupon takes a dagger, cuts off his left arm, and politely lays it before the patriarch. The Indian master accepts this demonstration of sincerity and renames his Chinese disciple Hui-k'o, a name meaning something like his wisdom will do.
There are several dialogues between the two. For example, Hui-k'o asks for his mind to be quieted. Bodhidharma orders Hui-k'o to bring mind to him, but when Hui-k'o says he cannot apprehend it, Bodhidharma states that quieting of mind is over. At these words Hui-k'o has a great awakening. Hui-k'o asks the master if his teaching encompasses any written documents. Bodhidharma replies that his teaching is a mind- to-mind transmission and does not rely on the written word.
Bodhidharma announces that three have apprehended his teaching. He employs a body metaphor to indicate their levels of apprehension. Hui-k'o has gotten the marrow of the bones; the obscure Tao-yū, the Zen version of an independent or solitary Buddha, one who achieves enlightenment but chooses not to teach and retreats into silence, has gotten the bone; and the nun named Dharani (Magic Formula or Incantation) has gotten the flesh. (This metaphor of body parts makes Hui-k'o the straight or direct successor and the other two collateral.) The Indian patriarch also announces to Hui-k'o that he is transmitting to him the robe that has been handed down from patriarch to patriarch since Sakyamuni Buddha as an external sign of the internal Dharma seal.
At the age of 150 Bodhidharma dies and is buried on Mount Hsiung- erh to the west of Lo-yang. Three years later, a Chinese diplomatic official, the Wei commissioner Sung Yūn, returning from a mission to the West, meets Bodhidharma in the Pamirs Mountains; Bodhidharma is on his way back to the West. The Indian, with a single shoe in hand, predicts to Sung Yūn that his sovereign has died—a prediction that is duly confirmed upon the commissioner’s return to China. Bodhidharma’s stupa, or reliquary mound, is subsequently opened, and indeed the contents consist of a single shoe. He came to China, left a trace, and went back to the West. Emperor Wu, who missed the point when he had the chance, composed a funeral inscription.
Let us turn to the literature associated with the name Bodhidharma. Of the ten texts we now have attributed to Bodhidharma or claiming to present his teaching, the one generally held to contain material that is authentic in some sense is the Bodhidharma Anthology, which itself is composed of seven texts. Over time I have come to consider it crucial to emphasize the individuality of the texts of this anthology rather than to fall into thinking of the anthology as one piece:
1. Biography: a preface containing a brief biography of the Dharma Master,
Bodhidharma, who is presented as the third son of a South Indian king who ventures to North China and teaches quieting mind
or wall-examining.
2. Two Entrances: an exposition of his teaching of entrance by principle and entrance by practice. The former involves awakening to the realization that all sentient beings are identical to the True Nature, although the True Nature is not revealed because of an unreal covering of adventitious dust; if one abides in wall-examining
without dabbling in the scriptures, one will tally with principle.
Wall-examining is not explained. Entering by practice includes four practices: having patience in the face of suffering in the present, because one knows it is due to the ripening of bad intentional actions in the past; being aware that, if good things come to one in the present, the conditions for such things will eventually run out and the things themselves will disappear; seeking for nothing; and being in accord with intrinsic purity.
3. First Letter: a letter in which an anonymous author describes how he spent years in fruitless study of the scriptures until he came to realize the pearl of the mind through practice; the appended verses are a friendly admonition to those in the same situation.
4. Second Letter: a letter in which an anonymous author argues that delusion and awakening are but one thing, and that some unnamed people are igniting disputations by erecting names, terms, and principles.
5. Record I: lecture materials and anonymous dialogues, which contain a substantial number, of colloquial elements (in contrast to the first four parts above, which are all cast in a literary, and not a spoken, style); contains one saying attributed to Bodhidharma.
6. Record II: named and anonymous dialogues, many of which are attributed to an otherwise unknown master named Yūan and to Hui-k'o, who serves as Bodhidharma’s successor in the traditional story; contains even more colloquial elements.
7. Record III: named sayings, including sayings attributed to Bodhidharma, Hui-k'o, and Yūan; contains fewer colloquial usages.
The Bodhidharma Anthology as a continuum was discovered only in the early part of this century, and it is fair to describe it as one of the most important finds among the Tun-huang manuscripts, a small portion of which constitute the Dead Sea Scrolls
of Zen (see appendix A). In the early summer of 1935 the Japanese Zen layman Suzuki Daisetsu, also known as D. T. Suzuki, arrived in Peiping, present-day Beijing, in order to seek out Zen texts in the collection of Tun-huang manuscripts housed in the National Library. Tens of thousands of manuscripts had been discovered in a hidden chamber in the Tun-huang cave complex in Northwest China in the early years of the twentieth century and were subsequently carried off to various libraries and museums in Europe and East Asia. Having perused a catalogue of the Chinese collection and having noted some intriguing Zen-related entries, Suzuki was able to find and reproduce a number of Zen texts, including an anthology that came to be called the Long Scroll of the Treatise on the Two Entrances and Four Practices (Ninyu shigyōron chōkansu); he subsequently published the reproductions in Japan.⁶ The Long Scroll is the work I have dubbed the Bodhidharma Anthology.
The Biography, Two Entrances, First Letter, Second Letter, and even Record I of the Bodhidharma Anthology were at least known of when Suzuki discovered the Long Scroll manuscript, but the dialogues and sayings following Record I, which Suzuki called Miscellaneous Record II (Zatsuroku dai-ni), were unknown at the time, in spite of the fact that brief quotations from these dialogues and sayings were buried in a famous traditional Zen collection transmitted in East Asia. I have given Suzuki’s two Miscellaneous Records the titles Record I, Record II, and Record III. (Subsequent manuscript discoveries have considerably extended his Miscellaneous Record II, and I have divided it into two parts.) Unfortunately, for the next half century or so virtually no one paid any attention to the highly colloquial Miscellaneous Record II, a treasure store of dialogues and sayings of proto-Zen. One of the most important Zen texts found among the Tun-huang manuscripts was totally ignored.
It is the colloquial element in these dialogues and sayings—the fact that they are closer to the spoken words of teaching masters, less reworked into the literary language—that should have caught our attention. Use of the colloquial is at the heart of the Zen tradition and its literature; of the Buddhist traditions of China, Zen is distinguished by its preference for Chinese literary genres, most notably the colloquial record of the sayings and dialogues of the master (yii-lu) on the model of the Confucian Analects. An eminent scholar of Chinese literature has described the Analects as a collection of fragmentary dialogues and sayings, couched in what appears to be the conversational style of the period, simple in diction and forceful in expression.
⁷ We can trace the precursors of Zen’s adoption of this quintessential Chinese literary genre directly back to Record II and Record III.⁸
A propensity for choosing vernaculars, spoken languages of localities, to express Buddhist religious teachings is nothing new, for it can be traced back to the Buddha himself. Various early Buddhist texts record a story in which disciples born to the educated elite, the priestly class, make a case to the Buddha that the exalted message is being mispronounced and bastardized by various disciples reciting the message in their own vernaculars.⁹ Their suggestion is to recast the teachings in a form of Sanskrit, the language of the learned and priestly class.
The Buddha emphatically rejects this idea, stating that the teachings should be taught in the spoken language of the locality. He stresses that the fine niceties of cultured language are irrelevant; only accurate transmission of the content is important. Thus, the Records of the Bodhidharma Anthology, the earliest Zen books of recorded sayings we have, constitute nothing new in the sweep of Buddhist history. They and the later vast recorded-sayings literature of Zen are perfectly congruent with the thrust of the early Buddhist tradition.
For decades discussion of the Long Scroll or Bodhidharma Anthology, both Japanese and Western, has concentrated on the second section, the Two Entrances, and has come to the consensus that only this text can be attributed to Bodhidharma.¹⁰ Eminent monks of medieval China and modern scholars from around the world have produced many exegeses of the two entrances and the baffling term wall-examining
(pi-kuan) mentioned in the Biography and Two Entrances; in the traditional story Bodhidharma is usually said to have practiced wall-examining for nine years.¹¹ Though much exegetical ingenuity has gone into this project, the exclusive focus on the two entrances has obscured the importance of the Records. In fact, the Records have been so eclipsed that they pass unnoticed in most treatments of early Zen.
A purpose of this book is to give the Records, particularly Record II and Record III, their due as the real beginnings of Zen literature, the true ancestors of the Zen genre known as recorded sayings. Any reader— studen«. or practitioner—who has thrilled to the power of the most famous of all Zen recorded-sayings books, the Record of Lin-chi (Lin-chi lu), will recognize the ancestral genius of portions of the Records. Let us now turn to a complete translation of the Bodhidharma Anthology, which is followed by commentary on all seven of its texts.¹²
2. Translation of the Seven Texts
of the Bodhidharma Anthology
Text no. I: Biography
1. The Dharma Master was a South Indian of the Western
Region. He was the third son of a great Indian king. His divine insight was dear; whatever he heard, he understood. His ambition lay in the Mahayana path, and so he put aside his white layman’s robe for the black robe of a monk. He merged with the sagely lineage and made it flourish. His dark mind was empty and quiescent. He comprehended the events of the world. He understood both Buddhist and non-Buddhist teachings. His virtue surpassed that of the leaders of the age.
Lamenting the decline of the true teaching in the outlands, he subsequently crossed distant mountains and seas, traveling about propagating the teaching in Han and Wei. Of scholars who had extinguished
Dharma: The word dharma has a range of meanings in Buddhist texts. Two of the most important are the teaching of the Buddhas (Law; Doctrine; Dharma; sometimes referring to the sutras that set forth the Dharma), and the fundamental elements of existence (dharmas). There are a number of lists of dharmas, one of the most influential being a list of seventy-five that is divided into conditioned and unconditioned dharmas. The seventy-two conditioned dharmas run from sense organs and respective sense objects (the eye and its object forms, etc.) to mentals (sensation; faith; stupidity; shamelessness; anger; regret; etc.) to