Daring to Speak about Our
“Buddha Nature”
May 27,
2015 by Domyo Burk
Patheos
Today I
am giving a short talk at a nearby Zen center as a visiting
teacher. I asked ahead of time what they wanted me to talk about
and one of the suggestions was “How to Realize Your Own Buddha
Nature.”
Oh
heck. The Buddhist concept of buddha nature is a doozy. “Buddha”
means awakened, and in Buddhism it is a central
teaching that all beings have buddha nature whether they
realize it or not. The father of Soto Zen Buddhism, Dogen, turned
that teaching on its head and said, “Living beings are all buddha
nature.”(1) (Get that? They are buddha nature?)
And
then I’m supposed to instruct people about how to realize their own
buddha nature? Who am I to…
And
yet. Something must be said. A response must be given, and the
whole reason I’m a “Zen teacher” is because, presumably, I
have some response to offer.
So I
look within and ask myself: What do I know about buddha nature?
Have I realized my own buddha nature? When did I do that, and how?
Am I still in contact with it right now? For a little while I
flounder and go back to check whether I’ve actually committed to
speaking on this topic, or whether I might be able to wriggle out
of it and speak about something much more innocuous and
down-to-earth.
But no,
this is the value of having to teach. You have to keep learning and
deepening what you know. So I will say something about How to
Realize Your Own Buddha Nature.
Oh, how
we long to know for sure we have a “buddha” – or awakened – nature
somewhere deep inside us. For most of us, this means some kind of
redemptive quality – some innate goodness or wisdom that is a truer
definition of us than our limitations and mistakes are. Even when
we feel very low and out of touch, we try to cultivate faith
that our case isn’t hopeless. We strive to uncover our pure inner
nature in order to be a better person. We sustain ourselves with
the hope that someday we can perceive our buddha nature directly
and those sad, nagging doubts about ourselves will finally fall
away.
The
thing is, buddha nature is far beyond you and me, having and not
having, pure and impure. As long as we want to have
it, direct perception of it eludes us.
Direct
perception of what eludes us? What is
buddha nature? It is so easy to get lost in a thicket of words and
forget that words can only point in the
direction of experience, not provide it or explain it. Right here,
right now, buddha nature is what manifests as soon as I stop
looking anywhere for it. My fingers pause, coming to rest on the
keyboard. Then I think, “Is that it?!” and its gone. But when I
leap to that place of no doubt, awakened nature is
breathing and sound and light and growing plants and sad people and
struggling Zen teachers. Tears of pure joy spring into my
eyes.
To call
it buddha nature is completely unnecessary. Don’t think it is
something special that special people have managed to experience by
doing special things. In his essay “Bussho,” or “Buddha Nature,”
Zen master Dogen quotes an even more ancient Zen master, Nagarjuna,
as saying, “If you want to see buddha nature, first let go of your
pride.”(1)
Our
pride? Is that what is getting in the way? Not our
lack of intelligence, spiritual ignorance, character flaws, bad
habits, mental illness, or laziness?
In this
case, I don’t think pride is about arrogance – that is, having an
inflated view of our own merits. Arrogance is good thing to get rid
of too, but it’s not the main obstacle for most of us. The kind of
pride that prevents us from realizing buddha nature is about not
being willing to surrender. It’s about trying to make it on our own
– to find the answers and fix our life. It’s about making ourselves
worthy of buddha nature (or, to put it in Christian
terms, of Christ’s unconditional love). It’s like we insist on
earning our buddha nature somehow, because then
it will be ours. We will be redeemed.
Of
course, as the buddha said, “Living beings are all
buddha nature” (emphasis mine). It is our very effort to grab a
piece of the divine pie for ourselves that keeps us separate from
it.
However
– and this is very important – the refuge and reward of buddha
nature does not exclude the personal. This is fortunate because
longing to have a buddha nature is perfectly natural and human.
This longing drives and inspires us. We can’t willfully get rid of
it.
Eventually we see
how buddha nature manifests in and through our unique life. Of
course, it also manifests in rocks, trees, cars, stars, and our
aunt Mabel. But it very definitely shines throughout our
particularity; it could not and does not reside anywhere except in
particular manifestations. It is not obstructed by, constrained by,
or dependent upon our details. I look around at my life: These
hands, this room, this house, this little sphere of reality I call
mine – shining with buddha nature.
We do,
in a sense, have a “deeper” awakened nature that defines us more
than our limitations and mistakes do. We can experience it and
rely on it as long as we don’t try to hold on to it – and sometimes
we even end up trying to hold on to it as some thing we
are willing to share with others, like a giant, pure,
communal soul. Even this noble image takes
an experience and makes it into a concept. There’s no
sin in this except that it tends to make the experience itself more
elusive.
It’s
amazing that the personally redemptive quality of buddha nature is
nonetheless real, despite how subtle the experience of buddha
nature is. A growing conviction that buddha nature pervades the
universe – and doesn’t stop when it reaches the boundary of our
personal bag of skin – is profoundly healing to our sad, wounded,
and doubtful selves. We are not denied buddha nature,
no matter who we are. Without losing our individuality, we get to
partake of boundless, luminous being-ness.
Although, again,
once you conceive of some awesome “boundless, luminous being-ness” that some lucky
people have experienced, you’re lost in thought and miss the
radiance right before your very (real) eyes.
And in
case you think it’s just modern folks with low self-esteem who
doubt their buddha nature and long for it? In one of the oldest and
well-loved Buddhist scriptures, the Lotus
Sutra (which dates back at least as far as the 3rd
century CE), there are several chapters in which various
disciples of the Buddha ask him for their own, personal predictions
of buddhahood. Get this: the Buddha himself has just lectured at
length about how all beings will eventually attain buddhahood
(although it may not be for many lifetimes to come), but still his
disciples stand up and ask him, “You
mean me?”
The
Buddha then proceeds to call each disciple by name and
describe how, many eons in the future, he or she will be born
as a practitioner with such-and-such a name, and how he or
she will attain complete enlightenment and be called
such-and-such buddha, and what the special features of their buddha
realm will be. Even after he does this repeatedly and his disciples
should be catching on the to the pattern, the sutra
says:
“Then
the mother of Rahula, the nun Yashodhara, thought: ‘In his
assurances, the World-Honored One has left only my name
unmentioned.’ The Buddha said to Yashodhara: ‘In future lives, in
the midst of the Dharma of hundreds of thousands of billions of
buddhas, by doing bodhisattva practice you will become a great
Dharma teacher, gradually fulfilling the Buddha way…”(2)
Who has
not thought, at times, that only their name will be left off the
list of those with buddha nature – or at least those fortunate
enough to be certain they have it?
It’s an
inexplicable irony that realizing our buddha nature requires
letting go of pride and accepting that we already have it. It’s
also ironic that such surrender can actually require a great deal
of effort. We struggle, let go, struggle again, and let go again.
We find our way, slowly but surely, inspired by the promise of
buddha nature.