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 Zen Buddhism As Creative Religion 
 
 On
the current impact of Zen on the West it might perhaps be said that never before
have so many evinced such interest in anything so little understood. Certainly,
Zen tantalizes by its very inscruta�bility. Yet were Zen simply a thing opaque,
how could it have evoked the eulogies of painters, psychiatrists, and
philosophers? Sheer mystery has not the power permanently to attract, whereas it is just by its creative fusion of mystery and meaning that Zen speaks to the deepest level of man�s being. Zen is neither purpose�ful nor wanton mystification; it is ultimately unfathomable because it is inexhaustible. Its elusiveness is the elusiveness ingredient in all that is alive, and the uniqueness of Zen is that it goes beyond books and beliefs to life itself. The
intent of Zen Buddhism is to bring man into union with life and with himself,
or, in other words, to awaken in him the knowl�edge of who he really is. The
unawakened man sees himself as in the world, but the world seems to him to be
clearly something other than his own very self. This self he takes to be only a
fragment of an unknown totality, a fragment now threatened, now supported by the
other fragments with which it is in contact. He thus operates on things from a
position which is external to them, and his deal�ings with life are only
manipulations of its fragments. Because of this separation from life, his
efforts at adjustment are never regu�lated by any sense of wholeness, and he is
forever colliding with those portions of life which his piecemeal calculations
had not envisaged. His inner life exactly mirrors the outer fragmentation; his separa�tion from all things is mysteriously matched by an alienation from himself as well. From whatever angle he would approach himself, he is not able to lay hands on his wholeness and to muster all of his being behind any project whatsoever. Whether he en�deavors to express himself in word or in deed, he is never, as common parlance puts it, �all there,� and so far as his responses have been endorsed by only a portion of himself, they cannot but fall short of perfect authenticity. No man can be wholehearted unless he has come into his own wholeness. When
the agent is not wholly present in his action, then the action remains an
appearance - an �acting� - rather than a thing completely real. Man�s inner life and his dealings with the world are thus 
both infected with unreality in the measure that he is separated from himself 
and from his world. Both forms of estrangement, Buddhism has always claimed, are 
tied to man�s ignorance of his own true being. It is from this state of 
alienation from life and ignorance of self that Zen proposes to rescue him.  The unreal life is a life forever unconsummated. The man who stands apart from 
things, unable to give himself to them, receives payment in kind; because his 
relation to things is an external one, these things, in turn, withhold their 
full reality from him. When life is contemplated objectively, nowhere is there 
to be found any�thing that is free of limitations, nothing that fully satisfies 
the yearning of the human heart. It is only when man�s experience of life is 
integral that it �means everything� to him; only when the subject is not outside 
the object, where each lives in the other as well as in itself�only then is life 
complete from moment to moment.  Otherwise, one remains imperfectly reconciled to life, somewhat disappointed in 
one�s share, and beset by the fear that even this will one day be cut off by 
death. He who has not found his own true being may clutch feverishly at fugitive 
satisfactions in the endeavor to maximize his allotment. Or he may preach and 
prac�tice stoic resignation, or look forward to some sort of posthumous 
compensation for the shortcomings of finite existence. In all these cases he is 
operating as a stranger in life, and he cannot in perfect sincerity and 
wholeheartedness embrace life and say of it, as the Creator Himself is supposed 
to have said, that it is exceedingly good. Man�s awareness of himself as 
something apart from life is the symptom of his fallen condition, and until he 
overcomes it, he must feel himself  ... a stranger and afraid, In a world I never made.  How does man come to be in this state of alienation from self and estrangement 
from all that is? Why could not the Prodigal Son stay at home and enjoy his 
father�s bounty? Why had Adam to lose Paradise? Why did infinite Perfection 
create this world of im�perfections? Shall we say that without the Fail there is 
no Re�demption, without the departure there is no joyous homecoming, without the 
finite infinity is only an abstraction? Zen is not prepared to linger over the 
questions nor over any of the answers. If pressed for a statement, Zen would 
only say,  �Find your own way home, and then you will understand the departure and the 
return.�  To find one�s way home would be to undo the Fall and to achieve a re-entry into 
life. The outer world would then no longer be out�side ourselves, and nothing 
would be seen as simply an ob-ject, i.e., as something which we re-ject or 
dis-own. In the union with life which overcomes man�s alienation, the universe 
becomes his very own; he lives in it even as it lives in him. Life is no longer 
a collec�tion of fragments externally and accidentally related, but a living 
whole in which the parts retain their identity as parts and yet at the same time 
are fully united with the whole. And the unity of all things is reflected in the 
wholeness of his inner life. His left hand knoweth what his right hand doeth, 
and his name is no longer legion. With his energies no more diminished by the 
warfare of the segments of his own being, man is then, for the first time, able 
to give life his undivided attention from moment to moment. His actions can then 
be truly characterized as wholeness responding to wholeness, and his life is 
then no longer, as heretofore, a matter of fragments pushing or being pushed by 
other fragments. Such an unconditional union with life and with oneself is far beyond anything 
that could be called acceptance or reconciliation. To be reconciled to one�s 
lot, to accept the universe, to try to make a virtue of necessity�such attitudes 
remain on the plane of duality where there is still a separation between the man 
and what he adjusts to. Both acceptance and rejection are conditioned by 
separation. Neither can be absolutely wholehearted.  To-be-one-with is something beyond acceptance and rejection or any kind of 
affirmation and denial. What it signifies is love in the absolute sense of the 
term, and the miracle of love is just this, that in defiance of the laws of 
logic, love transcends individuality even as it cherishes and enhances 
individuality. Love overcomes separateness and yet maintains it at the same 
time. Were the separateness something final there could be no real contact and 
no love. Without the separateness, on the other hand, there would be no poles 
for the love to exist between. So that where love exists between A and B. it can 
be truly said that although A is A and B is B, still, and at the same time, A is 
B and B is A. And this is the sort of loving union with life at which Zen aims, 
and which it achieves, and thus Zen may most descriptively be defined as the 
absolute love of life.  Perfect love casteth out all fear. When life is complete from moment to moment, 
where is there room for anxiety concerning the morrow? Anxiety is symptomatic of 
separateness from life; it is the fear that one may not attain what one hopes 
for or that one may lose what one momentarily clutches. Not that the life of 
love is without problems; challenge and response must always remain the warp and 
woof of life. It is only that where there is union with life the problems are 
real�not ego-projected�and the responses are creative and wholehearted, not 
forced or vacillating.  So he who lives in union with life must sooner or later die and face death. How 
does the man of Zen die? In absolute wholeheart�edness. He relates to death as 
he relates to life; death is not some�thing that strikes him down from without, 
and hence it has no terrors for him. He is one with his dying as he is one with 
his living, and in some ineffable way he is beyond birth and death even as he is 
born and as he dies. Eternity, for Zen, is not a posthumous state of affairs. To 
live in eternity is tap the infinity of the moment.  Man�s fallen condition, his ignorance and his finitude, is not just his lack of 
information. His ignorance and his alienation, accord�ing to Buddhism, do not 
stem from a merely intellectual error which would be rectified by presenting him 
with a statement of the truth. It is his very being that is in error, indeed, 
the truth of the matter is that his being is constituted by the error. To 
over�come the error he must overcome himself, and the error will be vanquished 
only after a struggle unto death. Every level of love entails a dying and a 
resurrection, and the rebirth into the life of absolute love comes after what 
Zen calls the Great Death. No one is prepared to take that last step until he 
has first exhausted all his other resources, and finally stands emptied of all 
contrivances for meeting life. Only then will the need for reality drive him to 
the final abandoning of his self. The practice and discipline of Zen is to bring 
one to this point.  The Great Death is also the Great Awakening, and the existen�tial awakening to 
one�s true Self is called enlightenment (satori, in Japanese). It is the entry 
into the life of non-duality where one is no longer caught by the play of the 
opposites, where self is not set over against other, nor are ideals in conflict 
with realities. As love has degrees of depth, so does that union with life and 
with oneself which is called enlightenment. There is no final enlightenment, as 
there is no final perfection of love, for life itself is not final or finished. 
The true Zen person does not look upon satori as a momen�tary experience after 
which somehow all of life�s problems will vanish. What vanishes is not life�s 
problems, but man�s exteriority vis-�-vis those problems. He now deals with all 
problems and with himself from within instead of from without�that is the great 
difference.  As he is now one with his tasks, they are not to hnn mere ob�stacles to be 
disposed of so that he may begin the business of �really living.� His tasks are 
his life, and he lives in the Now, not in the abstract future. it is in the 
uncreative life that the doer Is separated from what he does, and it is his 
divorce from life that makes him look before and after and pine for what is not. 
The creative artist does not value the final product above the process which 
created it, and the man of Zen makes a creative art of life itself, gives 
himself wholeheartedly to all its moments, and per�ceives no radical difference 
between means and ends.  The unenlightened person remains unknowing of his own root-age in life, and he 
thus confronts life as something quite other than himself. From his position of 
externality, he vacillates be�tween two alternative modes of dealing with life, 
both uncreative and equally unsatisfying. As an idealist, his intent may be 
called sadistic; he would bend life to his will and compel it to take the shape 
of his idea for it. As a realist, he masochistically allows life to have its way 
with him; he is not prepared to oppose life in the name of any principle. 
Likewise, in coping with his own nature, he may try actively to retailor his own 
being in accordance with some ideal pattern, or he may be passively driven by 
his immediate impulses and passions without any effort to subdue them or even to 
channel them. In the one case, his life becomes effortful, tense, and angular; 
in the other case, it becomes an unstructured miscel�lany and threatens to 
dissipate into chaos. Neither manner of ap�proach brings him to the condition of 
the enlightened man, whose relation to himself and to all life is creative and 
graceful. The enlightened man is neither fighting life nor passively submitting 
to it. He is one with life, and this being-one-with-life and the 
being-one-with-oneself are for Zen the very substance of the re�ligious life.
 As unity with life is not a static goal but a dynamic one, enlight�enment does 
not signify the end of Zen practice, but only its real beginning. As 
enlightenment becomes ever deeper, Zen practice and everyday life become ever 
less distinguishable, which means that one�s Zen and one�s life are becoming 
realities, and are ceasing to be formalities alone. Religion can then no longer 
be thought of as a department within life, nor can Zen appear as a specific 
technique for achieving a particular goal. Reality, or the life of truth, is not 
a goal to be reached by a certain process. Unless the process be real, how shall 
it lead to reality as a goal? The real life, which is the religious life, 
emerges only where the goal is present in the process and where consummation is 
achieved at every moment. This is �Zen beyond Zen� about which nothing can any 
longer be said, for it is nothing special. The life of truth is nothing special 
and no label can be attached to it. Reality itself is nameless, and where 
religion and life have become perfectly one there is no longer anything to be 
called Zen Buddhism. Zen is thus the only religion whose aim is to forget 
itself. Zen Buddhism, in the last analysis, is not so much a religion as it is a 
pointing to the religious life itself. It is not concerned to defend a point of 
view or to propagate a set of beliefs about the absolute basis of life, but 
rather to lay hold on that absolute life itself. Its method is not to supply the 
mind with formal truths; it seeks only to help each person arrive at the 
existential discovery of his own true Self and thus to have him pass from the 
inauthentic life of formal posturing to the life of truth or the creative life. 
Zen is not an ideology but an ultimate therapy through which man comes into the 
possession of what is truly his own and attains spiritual freedom.  Other religions, of course, have also proclaimed that the truth would set man 
free, but for Zen this saving truth is the truth of one�s own being, and, as 
such, it is concrete and personal and can never be enshrined in any formula 
which would be available to all and sundry. The truth of one�s being must be 
grasped in and through one�s being; it is a living truth and cannot be known 
abstractly or contemplated from the outside. No one can perceive it for another, 
no one can relate it to another�each must come to it by himself and through 
himself. Reality is inimitable, and the truth of one�s own being cannot be 
patterned on that of another. Living truth must be forged, it cannot be 
followed. The Zen dis�ciple who tries to win approval by quoting the master�s 
own words only earns a blow from the master�s staff.  That is to say the living truth is not a teaching, and one does not come by the 
truth of one�s being simply through adhering to a teaching. Since there was a 
time when you were without the teach�ing, that teaching is something external to 
your being. The teaching is only something to which you cling, Zen would point 
out, some�thing you try to absorb into yourself. But the very effort to heed the 
teaching indicates that it is something alien to your very self. A teaching is 
something general and abstract, and that is why Zen possesses no stock of 
teachings, no code, no creed. Zen has no truth to impose on the individual, for 
any truth of this sort would be an �imposition� and would fall short of being 
the kind of living truth which alone can confer reality and set men free. No 
truth that is imposed on an individual from without can be perfectly real for 
him, nor can such a truth ever evoke the unqualified en�dorsement of his entire 
being. The effort to conform to the specifi�cations of a truth supposed to 
emanate from on high will never attain the proportions of a perfectly sincere 
response. The inevitable outcome of the futile effort to force oneself into the 
acceptance of what is not truly one�s own is that sense of sin so conspicuous in 
the devotees of a supernatural deity.  If the living truth is not to be transmitted as a formal teaching, how, then, 
does one apprehend it? Not by any act of intellectual understanding, nor by any 
act of feeling, nor by the exercise of any faculty whatsoever. Man will never 
come to his wholeness through any partial response, and no fragment of man�s 
being, neither his head nor his heart, can be the instrument of his salvation. 
Zen is not anti-intellectual any more than it is anti-emotional. It is in the 
strictest sense non-partisan, for it will not take sides with any of the parts 
of man�s being, but is concerned only to arrive at his wholeness. Zen opposes 
the intellect and the feelings alike not as expressions of man�s wholeness, but 
only as would-be usurpers of that wholeness.  As for the intellect, the farthest it can go is to understand why the reality of 
Zen is beyond its reach. In relation to the living truth of his own being, man�s 
problem is not how to understand it, how to fix it as an intellectual 
possession, but rather how to be one with it, how to live out of it.  The intellect is by its nature �grasping,� but it is only abstractions and not 
concrete realities that fall within its �grasp.�  The intellect understands when it has succeeded in fitting the unknown into a 
framework of familiar ideas. But every ideological framework is a limited 
structure, and therefore everything understandable is of limited content and 
potentiality.  The intellect contacts not reality in its concreteness, but always only an 
abstracted portion of it. Intellection yields no more than a point of view, but 
never the living wholeness itself which is inexhaustibly fertile and allows for 
an infinity of possible points of view. In the deepest sense, therefore, �Know 
thyself� cannot mean �Understand thyself� (this is the limitation of 
psychoanalysis and of every merely psychologi�cal approach to the self). 
�Understand thyself� could mean only �Grasp one or several of the infinitely 
many aspects of thyself.�  The wish to understand is the wish to possess, but nothing that is living admits 
of being possessed. Possession is a relation to an abstraction; you cannot 
approach anything living with the idea of possessing its living quality. If you 
try to make its living con�creteness your own by an act of possession, you will 
merely kill It. Living things become ours not by being grasped, but by being 
loved. It is in the union of the spirit that living things become ours even as 
they remain themselves.  Life must be given the freedom to grow. So a living truth can never be fixated 
in a formula, in a creed, in a catechism. It is not an objective phenomenon that 
can be preserved in a treasure chest and passed onto one�s heirs. When it is 
locked up in a strong�box, it quickly dies, and what remains is only the stench 
of death.  There are, of course, embalming techniques that will keep the corpse from utter 
decay for an indefinite period, but embalming has not the power to revivify. 
This is the recurring tragedy in the history of religions. Again and again the 
living word is born into the world. Again and again it is treated as an 
objective commodity that can be grasped and enshrined forever in the form of a 
ritual, a creed, or an organization.  But living truth soon loses its life when it is thus confined, that is, the 
forms capture only an abstracted portion of the living whole, but the living 
essence of things eludes every form or formulation. Zen alone, among the world�s 
religions, makes no claim to the possession of the truth, for only Zen has 
clearly realized that living truth cannot be possessed. Any religion that 
believes it �has� the truth must be dealing only in abstract or formal truth.
 The intellect can yield an understanding of life, indeed, many possible 
understandings of life, but it cannot bring man into union with life and with 
himself. For intellect, by its very nature, separates the subject from the 
object, the knower from what he knows. What the intellect grasps it objectifes; 
its relation to things is always �standoffish.� This is true even when man tries 
to under�stand himself intellectually�he must stand outside himself to look at 
himself. He who looks and that at which he looks are never the same, and thus 
the effort to understand oneself in this way means that one has merely 
perpetuated the inner division in one�s being and that one is no closer to 
overcoming one�s alienation from one�self. (That is why no one can ever achieve 
wholeness with himself through psychoanalysis alone or through any merely 
psycho�logical technique. Every psychological approach deals only with the self as objectified. and not 
with man�s integral being in which there is no split between the self that knows 
and the self that is known as an object.) It is not by understanding ourselves 
that we unite with ourselves, Zen would say, but only plunging into our�selves. 
This demands a movement that is the exact opposite of what is required by an act 
of understanding.  For Zen, life itself is not something to be contemplated and understood 
objectively. To understand is to stand aside. The objective stance is motivated 
by the desire to dominate and to re�duce to manageable proportions the object of 
knowledge. Under�standing, unlike love, is a one-way relationship, an act of 
conquest in which I maintain my own being intact and remain the captain of all I 
survey. One gains the whole world by thus objectifying it, but one loses the 
soul of things, and what profit is there in it? It is what Mephistopheles offered Faust, what Satan constantly dangles before 
the eyes of all men: power at the expense of reality. To be related to the world 
objectively is to be related to it ab�stractly, and one�s life is then 
increasingly pervaded by unreality. Is not this the ultimate reason for the vacuous quality character�izing so much 
of modern life? Technological society is the product of a purely abstract 
relation to life. Its triumphs� are the work of Intellect bent on conquest, and 
it is no wonder that the products of technology are in the end so deeply 
unsatisfying.  Life becomes real not as an exclusively intellectual product, but when it is 
created by wholeness responding to wholeness. The integral union with life 
cannot result from the fragmented, exteri�orized, and abstract effort to 
dominate life either by physical or intellectual conquest. Reality is 
encountered not in the act of un�derstanding but only in the act of giving 
oneself, that is of dying to one�s position of exteriority to life. He who seeks 
to save his life of exteriority shall lose it and fall into unreality.  So far as Zen is none other than the life of truth itself, one cannot really be 
informed about Zen, one can only be transformed by Zen. He who seeks to be 
informed about Zen still thinks of Zen as an objective content which can be 
grasped from the outside. He who understands Zen no longer has Zen itself, but 
only some for�mula or formulation. Every such formula will enable him to answer 
certain questions about Zen, as a menu answers certain questions about the 
forthcoming dinner. But sooner or later there will come questions that are not 
answerable on the basis of the formula. Sooner or later whoever tries to live on 
the basis of his �under�standing� of Zen or on the basis of any �understanding� 
of life will find himself colliding with reality. Reality is not a formula, and 
one must turn from the menu to the turkey if one would know its taste.  Most Westerners are long habituated to regarding the various religions 
abstractly in the fashion of a voter contemplating com�peting party platforms: 
the platforms are there in advance of the voter�s decision. Each party is 
defined by the stand it professes to take in relation to certain principles and 
to concrete issues, and the voter has only to decide which party shall get his 
vote. Similarly, the religions of the world are commonly thought of as so many 
competing platforms of doctrines and precepts. The religious seeker has only to 
weigh their respective claims to truth and to affiliate himself with whichever 
one he concludes �has the truth.� But Zen is not one of several possible truths 
which the mind may contemplate.  If one were to ask a Zen master whether Zen is true, the reply might come in the 
form of a question put to the questioner: Are you true? The reality of Zen and 
one�s own reality cannot be sepa�rated. In the area of abstract or formal or 
objective truths, the being of the knower does not affect the truth of what is 
known. But where living truth is concerned, the relation of the knower to the truth is 
not an external one: the relation of the individual to the truth is itself part 
of the truth. The wish to know the truth without oneself entering into the truth 
is a wish that cannot be satisfied as far as the truth of Zen is concerned. 
Hence one cannot stand outside the living truth and inspect it. Absolute reality 
will not sit for its photograph.  The truth of Zen is nothing one can cling to or believe in. It is not possible 
to be for a living truth; one can only be in it. Partisan�ship is of the mind, 
which is always outside whatever it may be for or against. Where a religion 
stands for certain truths, it ipso facto stands outside them and it is defining 
itself in relation to abstrac�tions. Zen would say that so long as you know what 
you stand for, you don�t really stand for it, it is not yet truly yours, which 
means that your stance is to some degree a posturing. When you have really 
grasped the point there is no point to grasp. Absolute knowl�edge has nothing to 
know. Absolute faith has no object. A religion that calls for faith in something 
definite is not in touch with the Living God.  A truth that is definite is a truth that can be defined. Such a truth has a 
finis. But life itself being forever a matter of unfinished business, the truth 
that lives must be a truth that is unbounded, without a finis, in-finite rather 
than de-finite. Zen is not a doctrine, nor a set of ideas nor a position. It is not subsumable 
under any sort of �ism.� It cannot be classified as either theism, atheism, or 
agnosticism. It is affiliated with no particular school of philosophy; it is no 
closer to idealism than to materialism. It has no view about the nature of 
reality; it formulates no system of ethics, propounds no political ideology.  The living substance of Zen is not any kind of canned goods at�tractively 
arrayed in a shop window in order to tempt the purchaser.  Whatever it may put forth is not intended as a presentation of the objective 
content of Zen, and it is ultimately wrong to appeal to the words of any Zen 
master or any Zen text to corroborate one�s understanding of Zen.  Zen will be found not in the words them�selves, but only in penetrating to the 
living source from which come these words and from which an infinity of other 
wordings could come. Otherwise, one has again only the outer form and not the 
inner reality itself. Zen, in short, is wholly of the spirit, and it does not 
admit of an objective transmission. It can be appropriated only creatively, and 
we shall have understood the Zen master�s words only when we have entered into 
them in the way in which Bee�thoven�s �Diabelli Variations� have �understood� 
the theme which he took from Diabelli.  The creative relation to life is the opposite of the abstract and external 
relation, for creativity is present only when the grasper and the grasped are 
one, when the creator has entered into his creation, where he has been molded 
even as he molds. It is the uncreative transaction which is merely manipulative 
and technical and where the being of the manipulator remains outside the 
proc�ess and unaffected by it. To say that Zen admits only of a creative 
appropriation is to say that it becomes available to us only as we give 
ourselves to it. There is no window shopping possible in the realm of the 
spirit, and we cannot first look at Zen to see whether we should like buy it. 
The substance of Zen does not exist apart from the creative act which 
appropriates it.  Zen is thus the only religion that demands creativity rather than conformity 
from its adherents, and which uncompromisingly re�jects anything which they have 
begged or borrowed from a source other than themselves. Conformity can only be 
formal posturing; it can never be wholehearted assent. Zen urges man on to find 
what is truly his, for in that alone does he possess something which neither 
principalities nor powers nor Buddha nor God can remove from him. In his true 
Self alone does man attain an absolute ground�ing in life, and standing there he 
may embrace all life without fear.  The experience of most persons with religion could hardly have occasioned the 
suspicion that religion and creative living have any�thing whatsoever in common. 
Religion has most often served as a paradigm of the uncreative life, for in the 
overwhelming majority of its manifestations it has not encouraged individuality, 
freedom, and self-expression, but rather the opposites of these, namely, 
sub�mission to authority, conformity to a law or a creed, the denying of self. 
The major religions of mankind, as they are understood and practiced, could 
hardly be described as calls to creativity.  If one thinks of religion as an attempt to conquer the hazards of finitude by 
cleaving to a truth or a reality beyond oneself, then the intent of Zen as a 
religion must remain unfathomable. One cannot be a Zen Buddhist in the way in 
which one may be a Christian or a Moslem. For there is no formal content which 
Zen holds up as embodying the ultimate truth about life and to which it asks the 
disciple to conform. Zen seeks reality, and reality is gained not in 
con-form-ity--which can only yield a correct form - but in creativity which goes 
beyond form-ality to reality.  Zen has only one thing to say finally, and that is �To thine own self be true; 
thou canst not then be false to any man.� Or �Be true to any man, thou canst not 
then be false to thine own self.� Or �Be true to anything, thou canst not then 
be false to anything else.� In short, �Be true,� that is, �Be the living truth 
itself.� �Be real, be reality itself.� Or in the shortest possible terms, Zen 
would only say, �Be�  All of the procedures of Zen have the aim not of aligning man with a truth which 
transcends him but in awakening him to the living truth which is the Kingdom of 
Heaven within him.  The life of authenticity, the life of integrity, the life of holiness or 
whole�ness, the life of truth, the life of reality, the creative life, the life 
of freedom�all these are for Zen equivalent expressions designating the same 
sort of life, which is, namely, the life emanating from and endorsed by the 
totality of one�s being which is not separate from the totality of what is. 
This, for Zen, is the essentially religious life, and its alternative is the 
partial life, the fragmented life, the life of posturing and insincerity, the 
life that stands aside and will not unite with things, the life that is 
uncreative and therefore un-holy because it is un-whole-some.  Where Zen takes on the lineaments of a formal religion, it is yet to be 
differentiated from other formal religions in this, that it gives no sacramental 
significance to its pedagogical forms. Instead, it constantly urges the disciple 
to penetrate its forms and to en�counter the living reality. It exhorts him to 
discover who he really is and so attain to the fullest and freest expression of 
himself. Its goal is not the subordination of individuality in a common pattern 
of formal belief. Other religions may proclaim the priesthood of all believers, 
but Zen goes infinitely further in requiring of each that he discover his own 
Buddhahood, that is, absolute reality. Other faiths may confirm their devotees; 
Zen alone wishes to graduate them. In the end, it is the only religion that has 
heeded Jehovah�s injunction to Pharaoh to �Let my people go,� and it has dared 
to remind Jehovah Himself that He must not claim exemption from His own 
injunction.  Whatever one may deem to be the historical relations between Zen and that noble 
Indian who is the reputed founder of Buddhism, it must be apparent that Zen 
cannot contemplate creating followers of the Buddha.  A follower is by definition an imitator, an epigone, a conformist, in short, an 
uncreative spirit who is trying to hitch a ride on the vehicle of another. For 
the Zen Buddhist, the religious life can never be simply an imitation of the 
Buddha.  Truth of being is inimitable. Whoever would copy its external forms, for�getting 
the individuality in which it is invariably rooted, finds him�self forcing life 
to fit an abstraction. The Zen Buddhist is a follower of the Buddha only in the 
respect that, like the Buddha, he is follow�ing no one, but only searching with 
might and main for the truth of his being. The Buddha was a religious pioneer, 
not a Buddhist, and so must all be pioneers who wish to live in the truth. 
Borrowed plumage, Zen says, does not grow. If we would soar, we shall have to 
sprout wings from our own living substance.  But if Zen is opposed to mere conformity, it is equally hostile to mere 
nonconformity. The life of truth is to be gained neither through conformity nor 
through nonconformity. Both alike imply a divorce between man and that which he 
conforms to or rebels against. Reality is attained in creativity, which is as 
removed from nonconformity as it is from conformity since it emerges out of the 
union of man and his object. When this is understood, it is evident how far they 
are from grasping the intent of Zen who see it as a call to anti-nomianism, or 
who imagine that the state of enlighten�ment is manifested only in those who are 
as different from the ordinary as possible.  Spiritual freedom is no closer to impulsive spontaneity than it is to stale 
conformity. The assertion of the ego is as unreal as its denial.  Zen is beyond all these dualisms, and nowhere does it recommend the expression 
of self in complete indifference to the needs of others.  The truth that Zen seeks is not one thing as opposed to another, for such a 
truth could never restore man to wholeness. Zen does not take sides, for it does 
not want anything that is merely a side of life or of the living truth.  Whenever Zen seems to assert or deny it is doing so merely provisionally or 
pedagogically. If it finds you attached to A, Zen will assert not-A, not because 
it wishes to up�hold the exclusive truth of not-A, but only to break your 
attach�ment to A. If you go on to cling to not-A, you completely miss the point, 
and you will find that Zen is now once again asserting A.  So if Zen appears to oppose conformity in religion and in life, it is not for 
the sake of asserting that there is a greater truth in being a nonconformist. To 
be, to be the living truth is not to have one�s reality defined by something 
external. The conformist defines him�self in relation to what he is for, the 
nonconformist in relation to what he is against; both are but appendages to the 
abstractions which they are for or against. Moreover, the conformist is aware of 
his conformity against the background of actual or possible non�conformity; the 
nonconformist is aware of himself as against the background of possible or 
actual conformity. So each defines him�self in relation to his opposite, and 
thus each needs the other, if only as a possibility, in order to grasp himself. 
But this means that each is alienated from his true Self.  Every position is matched by an opposition, for positions are only sides, and 
wherever there is a side, there is an opposite side. Zen is not a position, nor 
is it a mere defiance of all positions. This is the meaning of the advice that 
Zen gives that we are not to re�main where there is a Buddha and we are to 
depart from the place where there is no Buddha.  Where there is a Buddha, living truth has jelled into an objective form. Where 
there is no Buddha you have sheer iconoclasm and nothing positive. Zen is beyond 
affirma�tion and denial. It is beyond the wisdom of security and the wis�dom of 
insecurity. Creativity cannot be locked up in a formula, neither is it 
synonymous with sheer impulsiveness.  Life calls for form, discipline, meaning, structure, universality, but where 
these are overdone ossification sets in and death finally ensues. Life needs 
naturalness, freedom, individuality, but where these are absolutized, and there 
is nothing to balance these purely centrifugal tendencies, the energies of life 
quickly dissipate.  The mystery of the creative act�which is the religious act�is that it does not 
slight either of life�s opposing requirements. In creativity both form and 
matter, discipline and freedom, abstract univer�sality and concrete 
particularity, meaning and embodiment are perfectly fused�or, Zen would say, in 
a state of non-separation to begin with. A want of creativity is manifested 
either by the formal elements suppressing the matter and the individuality, or 
by a chaotic bursting through of all forms in meaningless self-assertion.  The first peril attends all those who would absolutize the virtues of 
classicism, the second, those who worship at the altar of romanticism. Zen 
avoids both equally and urges us on to the creative center from which both are 
falsely abstracted.  Creativity is neither classicist nor romanticist, and the creative life, whether 
in the arts or elsewhere, is neither a stale adherence to fixed patterns nor the 
apotheosis of individuality in defiance of all constraining forms. The freedom 
which is defined only in rela�tion to myself will be as unreal as the 
suppression of myself in the name of something beyond myself. To conform to a 
form and to op�pose a form are equally easy ways of evading life�s call to 
creativity, and, therefore, ultimately equally unsatisfying. Zen�which is the 
art of living creatively�calls for a transcendance of the dichotomy between self 
and not-self and thus of conformity and noncomform�ity. This dualism exists so 
long as man is alienated from life and from himself; it disappears when he 
enters into union with life and finds his Self.  The creative relation to the Buddha is neither a following nor a disobedience of 
the Buddha but a union with the spirit or the reality of the Buddha Nature. It 
is only in this way that one can avoid the twin evils of suppressing and of 
expressing individuality. It is only in this way that one comes to a basis on 
which one can be true to oneself and yet not be false to any man. This absolute 
basis is the true Self, and unless we possess it we had better not try to be 
true to ourselves.  To be true to the momentary, relativistically con�ditioned, whimsical self is 
not Zen, for it is to separate from life, which is a movement opposite to what 
Zen requires. He who thinks that Zen is an invitation to anarchy is only trapped 
by another form�he is making a form of formlessness. To blind one�self to the 
long-range and common needs of man is to forget that my Self is not only my self 
but also my other, and it is to the Self that Zen bids us to be true.  Understanding this, we shall then know how to deal with the query: Does Zen have 
any moral principles? One may as well ask: Does Shakespeare have any literary 
principles? Does Bach have any musical principles? The answer is No�if the 
questions imply that one can produce real music, real literature, or real 
goodness by merely patterning one�s production on any definable set of 
antece�dent principles. The answer is Yes �if the questions imply that real 
music, real literature, or real goodness can be engendlered by sheer 
impulsiveness.  Creative reality is not less but more than anything that can be specified by 
principle, and Zen, therefore, comes not to destroy the Law but to fulfill it. 
Except the righteous�ness of the Zen seeker exceed that of the followers of 
principles and the breakers of principles, he can in no wise enter the King�dom 
of Heaven. The Kingdom of Heaven is for creative spirits alone. Real goodness is 
creative goodness as real music is creative music.  For Zen, since the living truth is never to be found at either pole of any 
duality, there must be not one, but two equal and opposite ways of being 
immoral�that is untrue to life. One way is to try to subsume the infinite 
content of life under principles; the other way is to do whatever you will 
whenever you will it. If the latter sin against life is the one committed by the 
followers of Satan, then is not the former the one to which the followers of the 
Heavenly Father are prone? There is only one way to be moral and that is to have 
transcended the dualism of rules and no rules and to do the right thing at the 
tight time in the right way, and this calls for an act of creation in the living 
context. It is neither some�thing that can be antecedently specified nor is it 
something to be extemporized out of sheer spontaneity.  Creative morality, that is Zen, is beyond rules and no rules, and one comes to 
it only when one finally gives up trying to cope with life from the outside. The 
enlightened man who has entered into union with life resolves the dualism of 
conformity vs. antinomianism, and only he can say with Confucius: �I can do 
whatever my heart desires without con�travening principles.�  Life itsellf becomes an art only when we unite with it, as all creativity 
emerges from the union of the artist and his task. So long as man remains on the 
outside and attempts to grasp the truth with his mind, he can only endlessly 
proliferate theories and points of view which will never contain the living 
truth which he needs to become whole.  The truth that sets man free is not a �position,� for all positions are finally 
�poses� which can never muster the endorsement of mans entire �being and which 
always remain ex�ternal to the reality which they would grasp. Zen points to man 
being Itself which is beyond every this or that, and it is just this no-thing in 
every man that makes him feel insincere when he pre�tends that he is wholly 
identifiable as this or that.  The man who remains on the outside of life, content to inspect it as a 
spectator, arrives at truths which are only speculative and not living, and they 
will always be opposed by other points of view. If he desires to get beyond 
points of view to the concrete reality of life itself, he will have to 
relinquish his post as spectator and enter into union with life. This is what 
Zen bids him to do.  For Reality is chaste and will not bare herself to strangers; she will give 
herself only to him who is united with her in holy matrimony. This is mysticism, 
to be sure; it is the wish of the mystic to overcome his exteriority to life and 
to join in the life of things. Mysticism is the art of living in union with 
life, and the living truth must be mysti�cal truth. Satan is the mystical 
marriage with life.  So the Zen seeker after spiritual freedom is not on the lookout for a true 
position, Zen is not a point of view, and the living truth cannot be located in 
any position. Only the dead are fixed in posi�tion, and to take a position is to 
surrender the privileges and perils of the living for the secure fixity of the 
dead.  Zen seeks simply the creative union with life, and in relation to this goal, 
every dogma, every creedal formulation, every ideology, every philosophical 
system represent a kind of heresy. For heresy is literally the choosing of a 
position, the taking of a side, i.e., the wish to reduce a living wholeness to 
one of its formulatable aspects. A life based on a point of view is a life 
immobilized around a partiality and thus bound to collide with other lives 
circumscribed by different partialities. The mark of every heresy is that it is 
opposed by other heresies, and this means that no heresy, that is no position as 
such, can be absolute. That alone is absolute which is confirmed in everything 
and by everything and which encounters no opposition anywhere, and thia certain 
set of ideas about himself, about his universe, and about that which is supposed 
to be the source of both. Since every set of ideas is limited and also fixed, 
sooner or later it proves to be incommen�surate with the infinite content of 
life.  As the discrepancy between idea and actual experience be�gins to become 
manifest, two alternatives are open to the would-be believer: he may persist in 
clinging to the idea with unreasoning fanaticism, or he may begin to modify the 
idea. In the former event, he must deny life and experience in order to affirm 
the absolute truth of his idea; in the latter case, he is faithful to life and 
ex�perience, but at the cost of surrendering his previous claim to an absolutely 
true idea, and then the religion which is based on this idea becomes ever less 
capable of providing the believer with strength and security.  In the warfare of science and religion, fundamentalist orthodoxy has chosen the 
first of these alternatives; the various forms of liberal theology have taken 
the second. Neither is able to meet the spiritual needs of modern man with 
integrity, for each possesses something that the other lacks. Only that religion 
can integrally satisfy the needs of modem man which gives to life an absolute 
underpinning, on the one hand, but which allows for the endless change, which is 
also of the essence of life, on the other hand. No religion committed to an 
idea, no religion comprising a definable teaching, no religion dedicated to a 
formulatable creed or code is in a position to do this.  No formulation can be absolutely univer�sal, for all formulations are 
conditioned by various relativities, and all formulations must periodically 
submit to revision in the light of man�s growing experience. Life is forever a 
matter of un�finished business, and the living truth will not be covered by any 
formula. Zen claims absolute catholicity just because it is not en�tangled with 
concepts or formulae of any sort. Zen makes no historical claims nor is it 
rooted to any spot on the earth�s surface. Its meaning is not confined to any 
particular set of categories or restricted by any limited perspectives. It may 
thus justifiably claim to be absolutely universal and to speak to all men 
every�where who are concerned with achieving an ultimate grounding in life.  For a thousand years the West tried to center every department of life around 
the idea of God and to regulate every activity of life by principles derived 
from theology. But with the Renaissance came the revolt�in the name of 
individuality and self-expression - against the religious totalitarianism which 
would harness all of a life to a single idea. In ethics as in art, in education 
and in econom�ics, in politics, in law, in literature and in music and 
philosophy, modern life is the rebellion of individuality against imposed form.
 And yet no one can claim that modern man is altogether happy In his freedom and 
individuality, for these have been acquired by the negation of form and meaning, 
and thus it is no wonder that the feeling of life�s meaninglessness is such a 
widespread symptom of our times. The freedom that modern man has achieved by his 
rebellion is not real or spiritual freedom; it is ultimately unsatisfy�ing 
because it excludes its opposite, which means that it is only a half-truth or 
half-reality.  Modern life is therefore as deficient as medieval life. In the Middle Ages, 
freedom and individuality were subordinated to ultimate meaning; in modern 
times, man possesses freedom, but life has lost its ultimate meaning. Each epoch 
has endeavored unsuccessfully to absolutize what is only half of man�s total 
need. Human life requires both absolute freedom and abso�lute meaning in order 
to be fully real, and as long as man�s integral need is denied, he will continue 
to vacillate from one pole to the other, absolutizing each half-truth in 
alternation.  No supernaturalistic religion can fulfill man�s integral need, for every such 
religion is partisan and therefore partial by definition.  It does not accord metaphysical parity to the opposite poles of human life, but 
ever seeks reality and truth in the subordination of one pole to the other. 
Wherever God is thought of as confronting man, man�s freedom is limited by God�s 
will and law. Theistic religion pretends that life�s need for absolute freedom 
can be denied, and that a life of truth can be achieved through con�formity to 
the transcendent will of God.  But, in fact, when man tries to subordinate himself to God, he always finds 
there is a Devil in his own breast who urges him to deny God and express 
himself. The Devil is God�s polar counterpart and the champion of life�s urge to 
freedom. The Devil is a half-reality, as God is, and each must be given his due.
 Where Thy will is other than my will, I shall never be able wholeheartedly to 
say �Thy will be done.� It is not in His will that we shall find our peace, but 
only in that which is neither His nor ours but which simply is.  Neither the City of God nor the City of Satan is the true home�land of the human 
spirit, seeing that man can never sojourn for very long in either domain without 
feeling the call to visit the other. Neither in nature nor in supernature, 
neither in the finite nor in the infinite, neither in time nor in eternity, 
neither in the material nor in the ideal does life find its absolute grounding. 
The living truth will not be domiciled at one pole alone of any of these pairs 
of opposites. When Creator is set over against creature, when Heaven is elevated 
over earth, the ultimate meaning of life above its immediate content, then life 
becomes chained to an abstraction.  For Zen, holiness is synonymous with wholeness, and therefore Zen would negate 
neither life�s need for absolute meaning (God) nor life�s equally valid need for 
absolute freedom (Satan). Nor in the case of any of the pairs of opposites 
between which human life fluctuates would Zen wish to attach itself with one 
side more than with the other. The intellect will never find any way of bridging 
these dualisms; to logic, A and not-A remain irreconcil�ably opposed. Hence the 
intellect can never solve man�s ultimate existential problem�which is how to 
become real�that is, whole. So Zen directs man beyond the intellect to the 
living truth of his own Self in which these opposites have never been separated 
out.  Thus the existential resolution of the dualism of freedom and form is concretely 
exemplified in the lives of those who have achieved a deep enlightenment. It is 
the conspicuous absence of any kind of one-sidedness which gives to the Zen 
personality its elemental reality and which makes it at once attractive and 
unique.  In the main, Western man has been alternately drawn toward two opposite ideals 
of life�the one, characterized by Rabelaisian gusto and vitality and freedom 
from all inhibitions, lives by the motto �Do what you will�; the other, the life 
of the �saint,� is character�ized by inner strength and a yoking of all natural 
energies to the transcendent will of God.  The fascination exerted by the enlight�ened Zen personality is just that it 
encompasses both these diver�gent modes of life. The true man, according to Zen, 
has both zestful freedom and inner substance, both strength and discipline on 
the one hand, and naturalness and spontaneity on the other hand. Such integrity 
can never result from forcing myself to do the will of God, nor can it come from 
merely following my own whims. It comes only when I am living out of my true 
Self, which is beyond all such dualisms. Then alone shall I know the service 
that is per�fect freedom, and experience a life that is unconditionally 
meaning�ful and yet free of all constraint.  The life of the unenlightened can never be wholehearted, for it is perpetually 
fissured, or, as the Buddhist would say, based on the discrimination of 
opposites. Always he faces a choice of this or that, unable to have both and yet 
bound to learn sooner or later that each is incomplete without the other. His 
reason opposes his passions; his �higher� nature is at war with his �lower� 
nature; the �law in the members� conflicts with the �law of the mind.� He would 
live for himself and also for others, yet he can find no way to do both. His 
desires conflict with his duties; wishing to serve God he is perennially tempted 
by the Devil. He would live for an ideal and yet he succumbs to the material. He 
pledges allegiance to Heaven, but cannot withstand the lure of earth and its 
pleasures. Whether be tries to be reflective or spontaneous, his actions are 
equally removed from authenticity. His life is a perpetual vacil�lation between 
opposite poles, and his very voice lacks the ring of reality, for it is prompted 
by no more than a part of himself at any time, and never has the backing of his 
entire being.  No ultimate peace can come to one who is thus fissured.  Peace is but another name for the integrity of being which enables man to 
respond to life without inner conflict.  A mind which is in pieces cannot be a mind at peace. Every dualistic recipe for 
achieving the peace that passeth understanding is predestined to failure, for it 
entails the futile attempt of one side of man to coerce the opposite side Into a 
renunciation of its own needs. Man�s real Self Zen would say, is not to be 
sought in any dimension of himself, but only in that from which every 
dimension�whether �higher� or �lower�� is an abstraction. Man�s real Self can 
only be his whole Self, and that must not be identified with any of the warring 
factions which he contains. Until he finds that living center of unity which is 
his integral being, he will know neither peace nor sincerity.  The religions of the West are all dualistic, which means that they accept these 
oppositions as ultimate and always seek for truth in one direction as contrasted 
with its opposite. So Western religion elevates reason over the passions, 
super-nature over nature, the ideal over the material. It has made heaven more 
real than earth, and has put God over all His creatures. But life itself will 
not for very long submit to such Procrustean treatment, and the de�valuated 
fragments periodically reassert themselves. So Western religion has never been 
free of the struggle with materialism, secu�larism, individualism, and the 
loyalty of the Western devotee has always been divided.  Integrity is wholeness, not halfness. Holiness is holistic living, not 
self-conquest. Spiritual freedom is unopposed response, not self-control or 
self-restraint. Wholeheartedness can never even�tuate from the resolution to 
slight what is metaphysically half of reality. A mature religion must concede 
that both the �higher� and the �lower,� both the transcendent and the immediate, 
are equally real, or rather equally unreal and abstract. A mature religion will 
courageously confront the profound mystery embodied in the split itself 
characteristic of human life, and will not seek salvation through any of the 
fragments resulting from the split. For Zen Buddhism, the split is the 
consequence of standing apart from life and inspecting it objectively. The split 
is healed only through the re-entry into life which contacts life�s wholeness.
 Philosophers, who are content with mere �points of view,� may label themselves 
as idealists or as materialists, as supernaturalists or as naturalists. Zen 
seeks for an absolute which is a living whole embracing all the pairs of 
opposites. So Zen sees the religious life not as an opting for transcendent 
meaning in contrast to immediate delights, but rather as the utterly concrete 
life which is not en�tangled in this insoluble dualism. �Deny thyself� must not 
mean merely �Deny thy lower self,� but also �Deny thy higher self�; not merely 
�Deny thy impulsive or passionate sell,� but also �Deny thy controlling will or 
rational sell.� In short, Zen would advise us to deny all those fragments of 
Self which, whether they be called �higher� or �lower,� are only usurpers 
pretending to a throne which is not theirs.  Rather than becoming a party to the strife of systems, religion�s true role is 
to heal the schism in man�s soul by guiding him to that union with life which is 
beyond the dualities. The ultimate wis�dom of Asia, brought to a focus in Zen 
Buddhism, is the perception that truth and reality must never be sought on the 
plane of opposition. What is absolute will not be found in one limited 
perspective as against another. Where there is opposition there is of necessity 
reciprocal limitation, and it is futile to seek Divinity in that which is no 
more real than its opposite. The apotheosis of transcendence, which has been the 
path mistakenly chosen by most of man�s religions, is, in point of fact, an 
idolatrous substitute for authentic religion. For is it not the essence of 
idolatry to accord to what is less than the whole that devotion which is only to 
be rendered to the whole?  As the ultimate psychotherapy, Zen steers man away from the idolatry inherent in 
every form of parti�sanship and directs his course to the living truth which is 
truly all in all and not just an aspect of life erroneously absolutized. The 
center of the circle is the focus of unity for all the radii; stand at the 
center and you comprehend all the radii together; move ever so slightly off 
center, and at once you must choose whether to stand on this radius or on that 
one. It is just man�s off -centeredness which is his ultimate problem, and this 
is the problem which Zen takes up and solves.  Only he who lives from his whole Self can be called truly religious, and what 
characterizes the life of the enlightened soul is just that it has achieved 
creative wholeness. Such a life is graced with absolute freedom, for its 
movements are authored and authorized by the whole being and are in the deepest 
sense unopposed. 
 Such a one will be conspicuously distinguishable from the 
indi�vidual whose religion is still enmeshed in duality and whose life is 
consequently marked by tenseness and incessant struggle as he strives in vain to 
subdue one half of himself to the other half. The Zen life is the life of 
wholeness responding to wholeness, or in other words, the life of absolute love, 
of unconditional union with all that is. To many Westerners it seems 
irresistibly real for this reason. |