The following quote on The Transmission of the Light is from Abbot John Daido Loori, M.R.O., given during the Soto School's Tokubetsu sesshin, Spring 1995 and explains rather quickly "Transmission of the Light":
Moreover, the really wonderful thing about the transmission of the light is that it has nothing to do with something going from A to B. We use the word "transmission" but it is a little misleading. The first words out of the Buddha's mouth when he realized himself were: "All sentient beings possess the Tathagatha's wisdom virtue." Each and every one of us. The light that is transmitted is precisely the Buddha wisdom we are born with. Transmission doesn't give us something that is different from or outside of us. It is more a process of discovery, of realizing the inherent perfection that is the life of each one of us. Transmission doesn't happen at any one point in time. The formality of it may. One day your Dharma brother or sister is walking around with a black kesa, and suddenly the next day they're wearing a brown one - but the process is endless, the practice is endless. Each time we take the bodhi seat we verify and actualize the enlightenment of the Buddha, of all Buddhas past, present and future.
Shakyamuni Buddha
Ancestors in India
- Mahakashyapa
- Ananda
- Shanavasin
- Upagupta
- Dhitika
- Mishaka
- Vasumitra
- Buddhanandi
- Buddhamitra
- Parshva
- Punyayasha
- Anabodhi
- Kipimala
- Nagarjuna
- Kanadeva
- Rahulabhadra
- Samghanandi
- Samghayathata
- Kumaralata
- Shayata
- Vasubandhu
- Manorata
- Haklenayasha
- Simhabodhi
- Bashashita
- Punyamitra
- Prajnadhara
- Bodhidharma
Ancestors in China
- Bodhidharma
- Hui-k'o
- Seng-ts'an
- Tao-hsin
- Hung-jen
- Hui-neng
Although Zen is recognized as a legitimate denomination of Buddhism many people think it seeks to transmit the
spirit of Buddhism without demanding allegiance to the
teachings of the Buddha. It's claimed thrust is beyond the Doctrines often using not the scriptures of the Buddha, but what is called mondo and koans
to reveal truths from within which will inturn unfold bodhi (Enlightenment). Some even bypass that. In either case
it is an attempt for a direct Transmission of the Light outside the scriptures.
Many critics see Zen Buddhism as non-religious AND non-Buddhist. Zen-adherents see it as an attempt to
shortcut "reaching" Enlightenment by going around all the bells and whistles, Enlightenment being the only true and actual goal of all the Buddhist precepts.
As you can see from the above list, however, and regardless of what one says, if taken to be an accurate representation, there is a direct lineage from the Buddha to the Zen patriarchs.
Zen or Ch'an Buddhism is a movement within the
Buddhist religion that stresses the practice of
meditation as the means to Enlightenment. Zen and Ch'an are,
respectively, Japanese and Chinese attempts to render the
Sanskrit term for meditation: Dhyana.
Zen's roots may be traced to India, but it was in East Asia, that is, China and eventually Japan, that
the movement became distinct and flourished. Like other Chinese
Buddhist orders, Ch'an first established itself as a lineage of
masters emphasizing the teachings of a particular text, in this
case the Lankavatara Sutra. Bodhidharma, the first Ch'an
Patriarch in China, who is said to have arrived there from India
c. 470 AD, was a master of this text. He also emphasized the
practice of contemplative sitting, and legend has it that he
himself spent 9 years in meditation facing a wall.
With the importance of lineages, Ch'an stressed the master-disciple
relationship, and Bodhidharma was followed by a series of
patriarchs each of whom received the Dharma (religious truth)
directly from his predecessor and teacher. By the 7th century,
however, splits in the line of transmission began to develop, the
most important of which was between Shen-hsiu (606-706) and
Hui-neng (638-713), disciples of the Fifth Patriarch, Hung-jen.
According to legend, Hui-neng defeated
Hung-jen in a stanza writing competition, thereby demonstrating his Enlightenment.
He was then secretly named the Sixth Patriarch
but had to flee south for fear of his rival's jealousy.
The split between Shen-hsiu and Hui-neng accounts for the southern
and northern branches of Ch'an, which competed vigorously for
prestige and state support. Hui-neng's branch dominated in the long
run, and by 796 an imperial decree settled the matter in his favor
posthumously. By then, however, Hui-neng's branch was itself
beginning to subdivide into several different schools.
The subsequent history of Ch'an in China was mixed. It
suffered from the great persecution of Buddhism in 845. It
recovered better than many Buddhist schools, however, partly
because, in contrast to other monastic communities, Ch'an monks
engaged in physical labor, which made them less dependent on state
and lay support. During the Sung dynasty (960-1279), Ch'an again
prospered and was a leading influence on the development of Chinese
art and neo-Confucian culture.
It was during this period that Ch'an was first established in Japan.
Within 30 years of each other, two Japanese monks, Eisai (1141-1215)
and Dogen (1200-53), went to China, where they trained respectively
in the Lin-chi (Rinzai) and Dong-shan (Soto)
schools of Ch'an. These they then introduced into Japan. Rinzai
emphasizes the use of Koans, mental stumbling blocks or riddles
that the meditator must solve to the satisfaction of his master.
Soto lays more stress on seated meditation without conscious
striving for a goal (zazen), although Dogen's meditation method, "just sitting" or Shikantaza is in a class of its own. Both schools fostered good relations
with the shoguns and became closely associated with the Japanese
military class. Rinzai in particular was highly influential during
the Ashikaga period (1338-1573), when Zen played an important role
in propagating neo-Confucianism and infusing its own unique spirit
into Japanese art and culture.
The heart of Zen monasticism is the practice of meditation; it is
this feature that has been most popular in Zen's spread to the West.
Zen meditation highlights the experience of Enlightenment, or Satori
(Chinese: wu), and the possibility of attaining it in this life.
The strict training of Zen monks, the daily physical chores, the
constant wrestling with koans, the long hours of sitting in
meditation, and the special intensive periods of practice (sesshin)
are all directed toward this end.
At the same time, Enlightenment is generally thought of as being
sudden. The meditator needs to be jolted awake, and the one who typically
initiates this is the seeker's master, although there are many, many instances of Enlightenment occuring "out of the blue"
that is, from hearing a sound, feeling the wind, seeing a star, etc., when "the mind is ripe."
The master-disciple relationship
often involves private interviews (dokusan) in which the Zen trait of
unconventionality sometimes comes to the fore. The master
allows no refuge in the Buddha or the sutras but demands from his
disciple a direct answer to his assigned koan. Conversely, the
master may goad the disciple by remaining silent or
compassionately help him out, but with the constant aim of trying
to cause a breakthrough from conventional to Absolute Truth.
FOR YOUR ENLIGHTENMENT PLEASURE SEE ALSO:
NOTE: Each of the chapters in this, the Ch'an/Zen section, uses it's own stand-alone outside expert sources for content except this chapter. The above core paragraphs are excerpted from an article written by Joseph M. Kitagawa and John S. Strong and offered for use through Believe/RIS. The article has been re-edited, modified, and updated by the Wanderling only for our purposes here.