All by itself

The way gives them life; Virtue rears them; Things give them shape; Circumstances bring them to maturity. Therefore the myriad creatures all revere the way and honour virtue. Yet the way is revered and virtue honoured not because this is decreed by any authority but because it is natural for them to be treated so.

Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching (51)

This passage, among others, has given rise to the Taoist concept of ziran, “just-so-ness” (Suzuki). The way goes on; to be truly human is to walk in the way, to “accord with the Tao”: “Therefore there is such a thing as aligning one’s actions with the Tao. If you accord with the Tao you become one with it.” (Tao Te Ching tr. Muller).

It is so simple, but how can it be done? Like Jiddu Krishnamurti’s teaching on choiceless awareness, it can be frustrating to read words like this, with little or no indication of a practice. (There isn’t one in either Krishnamurti or in the Tao Te Ching.) I have often written of shikantaza, the Sōtō Zen practice of “just sitting”, in its simplicity and quiet; but I have also found myself drawing parallels with the Eastern Orthodox practice of hesychasm, and with the Pure Land practice of the Nembutsu. Both of these can of course be seen as a variety of prayer, and many of their practitioners would argue strongly that this is so. But the repetition of a short phrase, either the Jesus Prayer or the Nembutsu, has a quality of practice that is not quite expressed either by the word “prayer” or the word “mantra”, as I understand it.

Let me try and explain. The Nembutsu in particular, often transliterated “Namo Amida Bu”, is usually translated, “I take refuge in Amitābha Buddha”. Amitābha is a compound of the Sanskrit words amita (“without bound, infinite”) and ābhā (“light, splendour”). The recitation of the Nembutsu is seen, in Jōdo Shinshū, as the practitioner’s response to tariki (“other power”) – the power of Amitābha, sometimes expressed as simply “the way things are”. The practitioner does not cause anything by their practice, nor do they plead for anything to be done for them: they merely acknowledge its having been done. They “accord with the way”. As Shinran, the founder of Jōdo Shinshū, wrote:

For myself, I do not have even a single disciple. For if I brought people to say the nembutsu through my own efforts, then they might be my disciples. But it is indeed preposterous to call persons “my disciples” when they say the nembutsu having received the working of Amida.

The beauty, it seems to me, of practices such as hesychasm and Nembutsu is their extreme simplicity, coupled with their explicit renunciation of any sense that it is the practitioner’s hard work that is at stake in the process of awakening.

(It’s important, too, to recognise that, despite all our acceptance of the way, of “other power”, this is not a way of passivity – an accusation often levelled at Christian Quietists from the C12 Beguines right through to William Pollard and Francis Frith among C19 Quakers! To walk in the way may at times be active indeed; the point being to walk in accordance with the way, not to cease walking altogether!)

It seems to me that any practice, like its practitioner, needs simply to disappear in contemplation. How this is to be achieved is indeed a paradox: the falling away of purposive action isn’t an achievement at all. An achievement would be the result of purposive action. Enter a practice of total simplicity and poverty of intent, such as either the shikantaza, “just sitting”, or the Nembutsu – the total “hands-off” (shinjin) entrusting of oneself to the way.

3 thoughts on “All by itself

  1. Pingback: All by itself | Silent Assemblies

  2. Tom E's avatarTom E

    A very interesting post- thank you- with much to think about. Just on one aspect, whether the nembutsu is a mantra (or prayer), I think it depends to some extent on which ‘version’ of the pure land tradition you are dealing with. In Japan, it was developed with great creativity and originality, initially by Honen, Shinran, etc., and by other thinkers more recently, but is very different to the version found in other Asian countries, notably China.

    In China, nembutsu (or nianfo) seems to have many uses, is viewed in many different ways, was fused with Ch’an (which didn’t seem to happen in Japan, except for the small Obaku Zen sect, brought directly from China later on), which led to it being a zen meditation mantra, thought to be particularly effective in purifying the mind. It was also not thought to be solely the action of ‘other power’ but something you did yourself, though ‘other power’ was considered to be one of the reasons it was effective. The Chinese ascribe all kinds of benefits to it, including medicinal ones!

    It’s a complex, but fascinating, story, which we are just beginning to understand, thanks partly to an increasing number of books on the subject (eg. those of Charles Jones).

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    1. Mike Farley's avatarMike Farley Post author

      Thank you, Tom! Yes I absolutely agree about the multiplicity of understandings of the nembutsu in different places at different times. I was sticking to Jodo Shinsu – mainly because that’s the only one I know a little about, but also as the “other power” teaching accords with my own experience – see my other recent posts!

      There’s a lot to read and think about here. I must investigate Charles Jones further, along with Alfred Bloom, whom I’m reading at the moment.

      Cheers – Mike

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