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Zen Perspectives on Spirituality and Spiritual Practice in Hard Times

31 October 2020 at 20:42
Β  Β  This morning I was listening to Tom Wardle, one of our Empty Moon Zen dharma teachers give the talk at our Saturday morning program. I was struck by several things. One was the clarity of his message, the review of what our practices are, what they are not, and how they help us […]

HOW ARE WE FREE? A Meditation on a Zen Koan

24 October 2020 at 22:41
HOW ARE WE FREE? Mo Weinhardt Empty Moon Zen Β  I’ve been thinking a lot about time, and how I experience time β€” particularly throughout this crazy year of 2020, but really throughout my entire life. And even though every person who has ever lived encounters it uniquely, our wildly fluctuating experience of time is […]

A Meditation on What My Grandmother Taught Me

18 October 2020 at 19:54
Β  Β  Β  A Meditation on What My Grandmother Taught Me First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles 18 November, 2020 James Ishmael Ford My father was a will-o’-the-wisp with more than a passing affection for the drink. In his life he never held steady employment. As a consequence, we were poor, sometimes desperately poor. And […]

Recalling William Tyndale of the Golden Tongue

6 October 2020 at 22:39
Β  Β  The lovely and good folk of the Episcopal church celebrate the life of William Tyndale on this day, the 6th of October. Normally such feast days are observed on the anniversary of the death of the person to be honored. In this case it is an approximation, as we’re only sure he died […]

Translating God

29 September 2020 at 08:00
Translating God Glenn Taylor Webb Understanding the great mystery of existence from birth to death is important to some people, including me. Many paths to understanding existence lead more deeply into the unknowable than others.Β  In terms of religion, faith in God inspires believers on all paths to accept whatever happens as God’s Will.Β  What […]

A PILGRIM’S PROGRESS: Β Zen, Maps of the Spiritual Life, Miscellaneous Traps, and, of course, the Fat Guy

5 September 2020 at 18:41
A PILGRIM’S PROGRESS Β Zen, Maps of the Spiritual Life, Miscellaneous Traps, and, of course, the Fat Guy James Ishmael Ford Β  People take up Zen for any number of reasons. But those who stay find they’re on a spiritual quest. Words like enlightenment and awakening become the holy grail of that quest. Images shift. And […]

Fiddlesticks: Recalling the First Colored Sound Cartoon

16 August 2020 at 14:55
  How time flies. It was on this day, the 16th of August in 1930 that Ub Iwerks released the first color and sound cartoon. Ninety years. On the one hand a blink of the eye. And on the other, well, its looking hard at a hundred and that’s quite a while ago… Fiddlesticks featured […]

AN INTRODUCTION TO THE ZEN KOAN

14 August 2020 at 23:05
    AN INTRODUCTION TO THE ZEN KOAN James Ishmael Ford The Case Zhaozhou visited a hermit. He asked, “Is anybody in? Anybody in?” The hermit lifted up his fist. Zhaozhou said, “the water is too shallow for a ship to anchor.” Later he went to a hermit, and asked, “Is anybody in? Anybody in?” […]

The Bodhisattva Path: A Meditation on Soto Zen’s Three Pure Precepts

31 July 2020 at 14:24
      The Bodhisattva Path:A Meditation on Soto Zen’s Three Pure Precepts   James Myoun Ford The three pure precepts of Japanese Soto Zen are also known as the three root precepts, because they sink into the deep soil of the tradition. They offer a succinct summation of the Bodhisattva way. I believe the […]

Toujours gai: Or, What to do in Hard Times

29 July 2020 at 14:55
      Donald Robert Perry Marquis was born on this day, the 29th of July, in 1878. In his long career he was at one time or another a newspaper columnist, a playwright, novelist, and a poet. Today he is mostly remembered as the creator of Archy and Mehitabel. According to Wikipedia, Archy was a […]

THE FIFTH OF JULY: A Buddhist Analysis of What’s Wrong, and What Might be Right.

6 July 2020 at 08:00
  THE FIFTH OF JULY A Buddhist Analysis of What’s Wrong, and What Might be Right. James Ishmael Ford “The life of a nation. Is secure only while the nation is honest, truthful, and virtuous.” Frederick Douglass To be totally honest, I’ve had a lot of trouble focusing on today’s reflection. There are all sorts […]

A MEDITATION ON FATHERS & FATHERING IN HARD TIMES

21 June 2020 at 19:53
  A MEDITATION ON FATHERS & FATHERING IN HARD TIMES Featuring a little Carl Jung, some James Hillman, and a dash of Zen James Ishmael Ford “When one has not had a good father, one must create one.” “When one has not had a good father, one must create one.” Friedrich Nietzsche Last year in […]

Zen’s Precepts in Five Minutes

16 June 2020 at 00:11
          Zen’s Precepts in Five Minutes James Ishmael Ford When most people think of Zen, if they do, they probably think of some kind of expansive consciousness. Based on what I see on social media, expansive into vagueness. That “moment of Zen” is usually a non sequitur of one sort or […]

WHERE TWO OR THREE ARE GATHERED: A Zen Priest Reflects on the Nature of Sacred Spaces

7 June 2020 at 19:35
        WHERE TWO OR THREE ARE GATHERED A Zen Priest Reflects on the Nature of Sacred Spaces James Ishmael Ford Come, come, whoever you are. Wanderer, worshiper, lover of leaving. It doesn’t matter. Ours is not a caravan of despair. Come, even if you have broken your vows a thousand times. Come, […]

A HOPEFUL DOUBT: A Zen priest considers Faith and Engagement

3 June 2020 at 19:35
I was recently contacted by a podcaster who wanted to gather a few faith leaders’ thoughts on current events and how faith fits into the matter, or doesn’t. I thought it does. And said sure. The text that follows is mostly what I said for the podcast. However, I then recorded a somewhat more expanded […]

Two Cheers for Religious Studies & a Pointer

28 May 2020 at 21:15
Religious Studies emerged within European & American academic circles in the Nineteenth century. The attempt has been to unravel some of those threads of human cultures that have distinctive features that can be described as religious or spiritual. The kick off was a bit of a mess, a ton of unexamined assumptions were packed into […]

A Footnote on the Spinoza Problem

25 May 2020 at 18:16
    I’ve just finished Irvin Yalom’s novel, the Spinoza Problem. It’s one of those “novels of ideas,” and a lovely example. Irvin Yalom is no doubt best known as as an academic and principal theorist in the development of Existential therapy. Here he shows how he can bring that passion into literature. The story […]

THE CONNOISSEUR OF SADNESS: Exploring The Hurt & the Healing of Our Lives Through a Zen Koan

23 May 2020 at 19:13
      THE CONNOISSEUR OF SADNESS Exploring The Hurt & the Healing of Our Lives Through a Zen Koan James Ishmael Ford The Story Our founding ancestor was facing the wall. A student on the intimate way, Huike, while standing in the snow, cut off his arm, and presented it to the master. He […]

MY RELIGION IS KINDNESS A Zen Meditation

12 May 2020 at 00:00
      MY RELIGION IS KINDNESS A Zen Meditation James Ishmael Ford   The Dalai Lama once famously declared, “My religion is very simple. My religion is kindness.” I find it joins for me with an anecdote about the writer Aldous Huxley. As he approached his death he said, “It’s rather embarrassing to have […]

ZEN IN FIVE MINUTES: Is Zen a Religion?

4 May 2020 at 21:16
  Zen in Five Minutes: Is Zen a religion? James Ishmael Ford A number of years ago I served on the membership committee of the American Zen Teachers Association. It had been formed largely out of a list of names compiled by some of that second generation of Zen teachers such as Bernie Glassman and […]

HOW ZEN IS LIKE AA AND WEIGHT WATCHERS

29 April 2020 at 17:33
  HOW ZEN IS LIKE AA AND WEIGHT WATCHERS James Ishmael Ford Yesterday I made a quick run to our closest grocery store. While there for the first time in a bit there was flour. It was ten pounds. I thought about that, and the fact we live in a thousand square foot condo and […]

ZEN IN FIVE MINUTES

28 April 2020 at 00:03
    ZEN IN FIVE MINUTES Okay Zen in Six Minutes & Thirty-three seconds James Ishmael Ford The poet and traveler on the intimate way Jane Hirschfield summarizes Zen with three principles. Everything is connected. Everything changes. Pay attention. The word Zen actually means meditation. That’s where we get the pay attention part. Meditation is […]

WHAT WILL YOU DO? The Zen Koan of the Old Woman and the Burning Hut

24 April 2020 at 02:04
    WHAT WILL YOU DO? Commenting on a Traditional Zen Koan James Myoun Ford The Case There was an old woman who supported a hermit. For twenty years she always had a girl take the hermit his food and wait on him. One day she told the girl to give the monk a close […]

What Did Jesus Drink?

23 April 2020 at 21:35
    My grandmother, Bolene Bernard, was my first spiritual guide. She was an elder in her independent Baptist churches and a prayer warrior. Grandma was a wise and courageous woman. She was always poor. The only bad decision I know she made was in her choice of a husband. She worked mostly as a […]

A Zen Priest Thinks about the Parable of the Good Samaritan

19 April 2020 at 19:48
  Today I shared a reflection on Jesus’ parable the Good Samaritan at the UU Church in Anaheim, which I currently serve as consulting minister. I accidentally live streamed it from our Empty Moon Facebook page, rather than the Unitarian Universalist Church in Anaheim‘s page. Considering my own path and the inter spiritual message of […]

A CRICKET, SINGING Zen Commentary on Gateless Gate, Case 10

4 April 2020 at 18:21
      A CRICKET, SINGING Zen Commentary on Gateless Gate, Case 10 James Ishmael Ford A student of the intimate way came to the master Caoshan Benji. He said “My name is Qingshui. I am solitary and destitute. Please give me alms.” The master responded, “Venerable Shui!” Quinshui immediately responded, “Yes!” Master Caoshan replied, […]

Some Zen Advice from Facebook

4 April 2020 at 00:10
    On Facebook today Zen teacher Renshin Bunce cited a version of a classic Zen text from another teacher on the great way Koshin Paley Ellison. Let me respectfully remind you: Life and Death are of supreme importance. Time swiftly passes by and opportunity is lost. On this night, the days of our life […]

TOWARD A SOULFUL ZEN A Review of Pamela Weiss’ β€œA Bigger Sky: Awakening a Fierce Feminine Buddhism”

28 March 2020 at 19:39
      TOWARD A SOULFUL ZEN A Review of Pamela Weiss, “A Bigger Sky: Awakening a Fierce Feminine Buddhism”   James Ishmael Ford   I recently received a review copy of “A Bigger Sky: Awakening a Fierce Feminine Buddhism” by Pamela Weiss. It’s due out at the beginning of June this year. I was […]

Recalling Willigis Jager, Benedictine Friar, and Zen Master

23 March 2020 at 19:17
    I just learned from my old dharma friend Ken Ireland that Father Willigis Jager died this past Friday. Willigis Jäger was born on the 7th of March, 1925. He entered the Benedictine Order in 1946. He was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in 1952. In 1960 his work took him, among other destinations, […]

WALKING THROUGH THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW Reflecting on the 23rd Psalm, Buddhism, Nondual Christianity, Broken Hearts, and a way of Intimacy

22 March 2020 at 18:48
      WALKING THROUGH THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW Reflecting on the 23rd Psalm, Buddhism, Nondual Christianity, Broken Hearts, and a way of Intimacy James Ishmael Ford I think it was two years ago. Jan & I went to the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana to see the special exhibition of Frank Hurley’s amazing photographs […]

AS EASY AS FALLING OFF A LOG Investigating the Zen Koan of a Non-Attained Buddha

21 March 2020 at 17:05
      AS EASY AS FALLING OFF A LOG Investigating the Zen Koan of a Non-Attained Buddha   James Ishmael Ford (The video is our beginning attempt to offer a Saturday program during the coronavirus. We have not mastered the medium, as you can readily tell by the fact we’re sideways through the sitting part […]

BODHIDHARMA SIGHED: Zen Comments on the Gateless Gate, Case 41

14 March 2020 at 17:37
    BODHIDHARMA SIGHED Zen Comments on the Gateless Gate, Case 41 James Ishmael Ford   Let me tell you a story. Once upon a time long ago and far away there was a virtuous woman and her husband. Life was good in nearly all ways. They had a lovely home, a farm that produced […]

The Bodhisattva Way and a Robe of Many Colors: Commenting on a Zen Koan

9 March 2020 at 20:46
    The Bodhisattva Way and a Robe of Many Colors Commenting on a Zen Koan James Ishmael Ford The Case Yunmen said, “See how vast and wide the world is! Why do you put on your seven-piece robe at the sound of the bell?” Gateless Gate, Case 16 I love this koan. In some […]

Householder Zen, Priests, and An Experiment Begins in Australia

8 March 2020 at 20:15
        On Wednesday last, Jan & I climbed aboard a Virgin Australia plane at LAX and spent the next fourteen hours winging our way to Brisbane, Australia. Perhaps because of health concerns, maybe just the luck of the draw, the flight was light and we were able to find two rows of […]

THE BIRTH OF GOD And What It Can Mean for Us

1 March 2020 at 20:00
    THE BIRTH OF GOD And What It Can Mean for Us James Ishmael Ford As you may know I am now teaching a class in the Buddhist chaplaincy program at the University of the West. It has been an amazing experience. It has also pushed me in a lot of areas. Not least, […]

Xizhong and his Magical Cart: Comments on a Zen Koan

29 February 2020 at 21:28
    Xizhong and his Magical Cart James Ishmael Ford The master of the intimate way Yuean Shanguo said to a student of the way, “Xizhong, who invented the wheel, made a hundred carts.” Then the master asked, “If you take off the wheels, the axel, and the rest of it, what would be vividly […]

ZEN & THE WEST: Nearly Random Thoughts on Clerical Marriage in Buddhism, Women teaching, and the Rise of Householder Zen

23 February 2020 at 22:01
ZEN & THE WEST Nearly Random Thoughts on Clerical Marriage in Buddhism, Women teaching, and the Rise of Householder Zen James Ishmael Ford Recently I had the opportunity to attend a panel discussion on Buddhist clerical marriage in Japan, Korea, and the West. The panelists included the Reverend Dr Hwansoo Kim, Taego order priest and […]

VOTING WITH CLIMATE CHANGE IN MIND: A Citizen’s Guide

19 February 2020 at 17:29
  VOTING WITH CLIMATE CHANGE IN MIND A Citizen’s Guide Tom Bowman (My old friend Tom Bowman, a Zen person as well as a climate activist posted his research into the views about engaging climate change among the current candidates for the presidency of the United States. He did it as a series of posts to […]

Giordano Bruno is Burned at the Stake

17 February 2020 at 20:57
    On this day, the 17th of February, in 1600 Giordano Bruno, former friar, amazing thinker, difficult personality, and arguably the “first” martyr to science was burned alive at the stake. Apparently on his way to the stake they drove a spike through his tongue to stop him from talking. I am fascinated by […]

MANY LOVES A Small Reflection on the Spiritual Life

16 February 2020 at 20:00
    MANY LOVES  A Small Reflection on the Spiritual Life James Ishmael Ford   Today I want to talk of love as the many splendored thing that it is. Frankly, love is a subject one should return to regularly in a church, don’t you think? And we’re still quite close to Valentine’s Day. I’d […]

Enter Christmas Humphreys, Western Buddhist Ancestor

15 February 2020 at 16:28
    Travers Christmas Humphreys was born In Ealing, Middlesex, England, on this day, the 15th of February, in 1901. The son of a judge. In his teen years his elder brother died and this opened the doors to that great quest through which many before and since have walked. While at school he was […]

Thinking of Shunryu Suzuki

11 February 2020 at 20:02
    I notice that it was on this day, the 11th of February, in 1971, that half the great Zen missionary to the West, Shunryu Suzuki‘s ashes were interred at Tassajara, the mountain training center he had founded. Six days later the other half would be interred in Japan. He is one of the […]

Introducing the Deep Way: Three Aspects to an Authentic Spiritual Practice

30 January 2020 at 19:53
No doubt there are as many ways into the interior life as there are humans. And there is even a bottom line to it all: Ultimately life is the teacher. This said here are three things that you can consciously take on that can grow into the Deep Way: 1) You need some shut up […]

Recalling the Buddhist poet and general all around trouble maker, Su Dongpo

25 January 2020 at 17:28
      I wrote this last year. I thought it worth sharing again this year, with a few small edits… According to Matthew Ciolek’s Zen Buddhist Calendar today is the birthday of Su Dongpo. The listing noted he was an esteemed if controversial bureaucrat, lay Buddhist practitioner, and poet. I thought that interesting enough […]

Zen Master Juzhi & the Matter of the Finger That Wasn’t There

23 January 2020 at 21:34
Zen Master Juzhi & the Matter of the Finger that Wasn’t There James Myoun Ford Whenever the master Jinhua Juzhi was asked about the intimate matter, he simply raised one finger. One day a visitor asked his young attendant what his master taught. The young man raised a finger. When the master heard about this, […]

Eating the Fruit of the Knowledge of Good and Evil: A Zen Commentary

21 January 2020 at 18:52
  From 2017. Seemed worth sharing again… Eating the Fruit of the Knowledge of Good & Evil: A Zen Commentary James Ishmael Ford The Text Now the serpent was more crafty than any other wild animal that the Lord God had made. He said to the woman, ‘Did God say, “You shall not eat from […]

Our Original Face: A Zen Master’s Invitation

21 January 2020 at 09:00
    Daido Kokushi, also Myoho Shucho, was the founding abbot of the great Rinzai Zen monastery Daitokuji. It was on this day, the 21st of January, in 1324, he was involved in a debate organized by the former emperor Hanazono between him and representatives of the Tendai and Shingon traditions. At the end of […]

Zen Meditation: Basic Instructions

20 January 2020 at 23:54
    I just watched a good introduction to Zen meditation by Daishin Morgan, retired abbot of Throssel Hole Buddhist Abbey. While we are both dharma successors of the late Houn Jiyu Kennett, I’ve never met him. I was impressed with his introduction. It inspired me to provide some thoughts of my own, along with […]

THE PRICE OF POTATOES IN IDAHO A Small Meditation on a traditional Zen Koan

15 January 2020 at 09:00
  THE PRICE OF POTATOES IN IDAHO A Small Meditation on a traditional Zen Koan  James Myoun Ford Empty Moon Zen  A student of the intimate way asked master Qingyuan, “What is the essence of Buddhism?” Qingyuan replied, “What is the price of rice in Luling?” Book of Serenity, Case 5 I’m very fond of […]

A Feast for the Ass

14 January 2020 at 09:00
    Today, the 14th of January, was celebrated throughout Europe during the Middle Ages as the Feast of the Ass. I find it one of those small sadnesses that this observance has passed from common use. And, well, I, for one, advocate for its reclamation. According to my google searches the feast is generally […]

Enter the Swami

12 January 2020 at 09:00
      I’ve been blogging long enough that there are several occasions in the calendar that I wish to mark out, but which I’ve written most of what I have to say. So, with small tweaks I’m beginning to repost. Swami Vivkeananda is someone I consider quite important. Narendranath Datta was born in Calcutta […]

Recalling that Explorer of the Human HeartMind, William James

11 January 2020 at 09:00
  What is now quickly receding in memory, back in the summer of 2000, Jan, auntie & I moved out to New England where I would serve as senior minister of the First Unitarian Society in Newton, Massachusetts. We would end up spending fourteen years in New England, first there, and later in Providence, Rhode […]

The Zen Priest Recalls an Old Story & Thinks It Points to Something

9 January 2020 at 20:11
The sages of the intimate way tell a story. Once upon a time, a very long time ago, and, of course, very, very far away there was a man. In his youth he’d been called into the practices of the intimate way. And even considered becoming a monastic. But, well, life. He entered the family […]

Ernest & Dorothy Hunt: Early Links in the Golden Chain of Buddhism Coming West

2 January 2020 at 21:58
  Ernest Hunt was born in Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, England, on the 16th of August, in 1878. It’s said he encountered Buddhism in Asia as a merchant marine. It is said that he was preparing for ordination as an Anglican priest when he decided his heart led him to formally convert to Buddhism. One version I […]

The Zen Priest’s Briefest Meditation for the New Year

1 January 2020 at 16:55
  Yesterday felt a perfect way to conclude the old year. A small band of us from the Empty Moon Zen sangha and the Zen meditation group of the Long Beach Buddhist Church gathered at the church at four in the afternoon for two hours of Zen meditation. We then moved over to the Hondo, […]

The Mad Monk Dies

30 December 2019 at 16:48
    Here we are. It’s the eve of the eve of a new year. And, for me the time I like to annually note it was on this day, the 30th of December in 1916, that Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin was murdered. There’s a small connection for me. And that’s part of why I notice […]

Brad Warner’s Letters to a Dead Friend About Zen: A Review

25 December 2019 at 19:48
  Letters to a Dead Friend About Zen: A Review James Ishmael Ford A while back I was asked if I wanted a review copy of Brad Warner’s new book. I was intrigued with the title and responded that while I was slammed for time, if they were willing to wait, I would read it. […]

Ram Das and the Call to Be Here Now

23 December 2019 at 17:16
Ram Das has died. I find myself thinking of this as a major marker for my own life. And, with that, and much larger, a marker on the passing of a phase of American and Western spirituality. In many ways I think of Ram Das as the avatar of the Age of Aquarius. Richard Alpert […]

The Zen priest finds himself thinking of Thomas the Doubter as a paragon of the Intimate Way, the Secret Heart of Religions

21 December 2019 at 23:31
  Today, the 21st of December, the ever lovely Anglican communion celebrates a feast in honor of Jesus’ companion, the Apostle Thomas. I love Thomas for three reasons. The first is that he is the doubter. The words are put in Thomas’ mouth in the (nearly completely a-historical visionary) gospel according to John. There he […]

Happy Birthday, John Steinbeck!

20 December 2019 at 09:00
      John Steinbeck, American novelist, winner of the Nobel Prize for literature died on this day,  the 20th of December in 1968. Since his death his fortunes have fallen and risen, perhaps demonstrating his complexity. Steinbeck is of course the author Grapes of Wrath which published eighty years ago, this year, on the 14th […]

The Great Cloud Dies: Recalling Zen Master Daiun Sogaku Harada

12 December 2019 at 19:55
    Daiun Sogaku Harada died on this day, the 12th of December in 1961. He was born in Obama, Fukui Prefecture on the 13th of October, 1871. Sogaku was tonsured as a Soto monastic at the age of 7. At twenty he entered the Rinzai monastery, Shogenji, where he had several openings. He also […]

Recalling the Shunryu Suzuki and Zen in America

4 December 2019 at 09:00
      The Zen priest Shunryu Suzuki died on this day, 48 years ago, the 4th of December, in 1971. I write about him from time to time. Here I repeat some of that, with some editing and a small addition or two… To begin at the beginning there are actually two Suzukis who […]

The Jesuit & the Zen Master: Recalling a Sixteenth Century Encounter

3 December 2019 at 19:53
    Today, the 3rd of December is the feast of Francis Xavier, the Jesuit missionary to Japan. While fervently hostile to nonChristian religions, and with some blood, if indirectly, on his hands in that regard, I believe he is also the first Westerner to write a moderately accurate report of Zen in a European […]

Wishing Everyone a Blessed Feast of Saints Barlaam & Josaphat!

27 November 2019 at 09:00
      Last week I had the enormous honor of being invited to participate in a panel discussion of Buddhism and Christianity as a journey between at the annual gathering of the Society for Christina Buddhist Studies. There were four of us on the panel proper. I would say two of us were Christians […]

I Am Grateful, So Grateful. Noting the Day Zen Master Koun Yamada Had His Great Awakening.

26 November 2019 at 09:00
    It was today, the 26th of November, 1953, that a Japanese business executive Koun Yamada had his great awakening experience. This would be a critical event in the evolution of koan Zen in the West. Koun Yamada was born in Nihonmatsu, Japan, in 1907. He attended school and later university with Soen Nakagawa, […]

Mr Darwin’s Troublesome Book is Published

24 November 2019 at 23:35
On this day, the 24th of November, in 1859 Charles Darwin published his magnum opus On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. A hundred and sixty years! My, how time flies… Of course with this book we all began an inexorable […]

OFFERING INCENSE: Reflecting on my journey Between

24 November 2019 at 20:25
  OFFERING INCENSE: REFLECTING ON MY JOURNEY BETWEEN  James Ishmael Ford (This past Saturday I got up early, made coffee, and drove down to San Diego. I’d been invited by Leo Lefebure to join a panel sponsored by the Society for Buddhist Christian Studies which was being held at the American Academy of Religion’s conference. […]

Kennedy Is Assassinated: Memories, Dreams, History

22 November 2019 at 09:00
    Fifty-six years ago today in Dallas President John Fitzgerald Kennedy was assassinated. It was a lifetime ago. Actually two lifetimes. The parents of adults today were not yet born. Fifty-six years ago is a long time. For most of us today this is simply history. And. For me its memory. Memory seared into […]

The Crazy Cloud Exits: Zen master Ikkyu Dies…

21 November 2019 at 23:43
    “The autumn breeze of a single night of love is better than a hundred thousand years of sitting meditation.” Ikkyu (translated by John Stevens) Ikkyu Sojun died on this day, the 21st of November, in 1481, five hundred and thirty-eight years ago. There is no doubt these more than five hundred years have not […]

Introducing Zen Buddhism: Some Brief Online Resources

21 November 2019 at 01:58
  Dear Laurie, It was wonderful meeting you at our Tuesday evening gathering for zazen. We look forward to you and your friends visiting with us on Saturday. I offered to provide some simple introductory resources. Here’s a quick offering of links to articles I’ve written on Buddhism and Zen. I hope you find them […]

Turn Turn Turn…

19 November 2019 at 17:27
      “Don’t Trust Anyone Over Thirty” was my generations’ motto. I just looked it up it was coined by Berkeley Free Speech activist Jack Weinberg. Ironically, I notice he himself was born in 1940, so not actually a Boomer, even if the motto was fully owned and copyrighted by my Boomer cohort. Or, […]

Mr Lincoln Speaks of a New Birth

19 November 2019 at 16:57
  I believe that there are three documents that speak to the true American dream. The first was the American Declaration of Independence, published on the 4th of July, 1776. It established a vision. The other two were both delivered by Abraham Lincoln. Together they would reshape, refocus us, call us, as he said, to […]

THE MEAT CUTTER’S APPRENTICE: From the Collected Stories of the Intimate Way

18 November 2019 at 23:11
      The Meat Cutter’s Apprentice James Ishmael Ford Once upon a time, long ago and quite far away… There was a young man named Raw Silk. Since adolescence Raw Silk found he burned with a desire to know God. After some struggles, there briefly was a romantic interest, and there were the constant […]

Getting Real: Or, the Velveteen Rabbit as a Commentary on an Ancient Zen Koan

17 November 2019 at 20:00
      Getting Real Or, the Velveteen Rabbit as a Commentary on an Ancient Zen Koan James Ishmael Ford There’s a Facebook meme going around that purports to be an analysis of cockroach opinion. Apparently, they see the future looking pretty good. At least for cockroaches. As far as human beings go, we seem […]

Thinking About that Problem We All Live With & What Love Actually Looks Like

14 November 2019 at 22:24
    It was fifty-nine years ago today, on the 14th of November in 1960, that six-year old Ruby Bridges integrated the New Orleans Elementary School district. The photographs from that time are hard to witness. But, Norman Rockwell’s painting of that time, The Problem We All Live With, well, it raises the stakes in […]

James Luther Adams

12 November 2019 at 17:26
  (I wrote this last year. I’m reposting today in honor of the occasion, the Reverend Doctor James Luther Adams birthday…) What is now many years ago when Jan & I first moved to New England’s rocky and lovely soil, Jan wanted to go to the Cambridge cemetery to put a rose on Henry James’ […]

Rohatsu 2019 in Seattle, with the Reverend James Myoun Ford

10 November 2019 at 22:29
Join Us for An Intensive Zen Meditation Retreat, adapted for non-residential attendance. Thursday, December 5 through Sunday, December 8 University Unitarian Church, 6556 – 35th Ave NE, Seattle WA 98155 In the Zen tradition, December calls us to steadily intensify practice in daily life, inspired by the Buddha’s awakening together with the world and all beings, […]

Boundless Way Coming & Going Three Week Intensive Retreat

10 November 2019 at 22:22
  Coming and Going Sesshin 2020 Three-week Residential and Non-Residential Open House Meditation Retreat   January 3 – 24, 2020 Boundless Way Temple, Worcester, MA www.worcesterzen.org   Please join us at our annual open house Zen retreat at Boundless Way Temple.We will be open every day from 6 am to 9 pm during this sesshin.Here […]

The Gateless Barrier is Published, and the Zen Way is Revealed for All

5 November 2019 at 19:36
    The Gateless Barrier (sometimes Gateless Gate) (無門關 Wúménguān; Japanese: 無門関 Mumonkan) was first published on this day, the 5th of November, in 1228. And with that seven hundred and ninety-one years of admonition, invitation, and general all around Zen hilarity ensues… The Gateless Barrier is an anthology of forty-eight koans, those brief and […]

Yes. Wonderful Things

4 November 2019 at 18:25
    It was on this day, the 4th of November, in 1923, just shy of three weeks after his excavation team uncovered steps Howard Carter hoped would lead to the Pharaoh Tutankhamen’s tomb, that the archeologist unsealed what would prove one of the great Egyptian treasure troves. As he looked into the darkness illuminated […]

Saint Death, Holy Death, the Goddess Kali, and the Mysterious Intimations of Life and Death

1 November 2019 at 22:51
  In the traditional Christian calendar today is the feast of All Saints. This is a holy day I count as important, linked as it is to both All Hallow’s Eve and All Soul’s Day, a mysterious trifecta. However, within some circles, particularly those called “folk Catholics” this is also the feast of Santa Muerte, […]

Thinking about the Madness of Crowds, and their Occasional Wisdom

30 October 2019 at 18:24
    What a piece of worke is a man! how Noble in Reason? how infinite in faculty? in forme and mouing how expresse and admirable? in Action, how like an Angel? in apprehension, how like a God? It was today, the 30th of October, or rather this evening back in 1938 that Orson Welles’ […]

A Brief Introduction to the Soto School of Zen

27 October 2019 at 16:19
      As we’re working on our Empty Moon website we quickly saw a need for a brief overview of the Soto school. The Wikipedia article on Soto is a flawed document, but nonetheless contains much useful information. We used it as a template, cutting anything that felt extraneous to that brief overview, while […]

Remembering Ida B Wells

26 October 2019 at 21:54
      It was on this day, the 26th of October in 1892 that Ida B. Wells’s Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases was published. In honor of the occasion and its author, I wrote a version of this biographical appreciation last year. With a few tweaks, here it is again… Ida B. Wells […]

Toward a Circumscribed Relativism: Another Mind Bubble from an Aging Western Zen Priest

25 October 2019 at 17:14
      “The disparity between common Japanese religious practices and belief-centric views of religion was again brought into relief when a prominent psychology professor from the US, who was temporarily visiting my lab in Japan, encountered the domestic co-existence of Buddhist and Shinto altars. Most traditional family homes in Japan house both a Buddhist […]

What’s In a Word: A Small Meditation on Who is and Who is Not a Buddhist

24 October 2019 at 19:15
Buddhism. Buddhism is a subject dear to my heart. And. Words matter. Although… “’When I use a word,’ Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, ‘it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.’ ‘The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things.’ ‘The question […]

How Zen Came to Become Zen: Barbara O’Brien’s β€œThe Circle of the Way”

18 October 2019 at 13:46
      Just got my copy. Barbara O’Brien’s The Circle of the Way: A Concise History of Zen from the Buddha to this Modern World. (Shambhala Press, Boulder, 2020) I was fortunate enough to be able to read it in galleys. And have been recommending it to anyone who would listen. Finally it’s here. This […]

My Bhutan Pilgrimage-ish, Part Tourism, Part Leaning into the Spirituality of a Himalayan Buddhist Country

16 October 2019 at 03:02
    When Marla and Charles from Two Truths invited me to come aboard as teaching staff for their trip to Bhutan I said no. I begged off being old and fat and not up for something seriously physically demanding. They persisted. I am glad they did. That I was able to add in a […]

Bhutan: Where the Yeti Run Free. Okay, It’s Migoli. But, You Get the Point.

14 October 2019 at 11:30
    Here’s a little Bhutanese trivia. Okay. If you have an interest in cryptozoology, you may well already know this. But it was news to me. In the year 2001 the Royal Bhutanese government created the Sakteng Wildlife Sanctuary, some two hundred and fifty square mile protected habitat for the Migoli. It also protects […]

A caravan. A pilgrimage. And at the very same time just a group of tourists. The Zen Priest Continues His Bhutan Adventure

13 October 2019 at 00:13
    “The essence of retreat is setting up a boundary – we are talking about a boundary of time, setting up a boundary between past and future, which ideally means we remain in the present.” Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche The days begin to fold, one into another. While I’ve been resistant to calling our gathering […]

Through a Bhutanese Window: The Zen Priest Reflects

11 October 2019 at 23:42
  Today was a midpoint in the seminar/retreat part of our pilgrimage. I have decided that while we are a tour group, pilgrimage is the better term. At least for some of us. And that’s always the case, isn’t it? Any group is a mixed bag. We are each of us on our own journey […]

The Zen Priest in Bhutan: Glad for the Day

11 October 2019 at 00:36
We continue our seminar with spurts of meditation. First a word about where we are gathering. It’s called Thekchog Choki Gatsel. It was founded by the late Tibetan exile, later head of the Ningmapa sect, and near as I can tell all around Buddhist saint, Dilgo Khyentse. The Rinpoche was born in 1910 in Eastern […]

A Stream of Prayer: The Zen Priest Lingers in Thimphu

4 October 2019 at 13:08
  Another chockablock day on my Two Truths adventure to the kingdom of Bhutan. This second day was devoted to exploring a few corners of the capital city, Thimphu. It is both the capital and the largest city n the country, the world’s youngest parliamentary democracy, organized as a constitutional monarchy. The royal palace, the […]

Dreaming of the Buddha’s Ashes: Last Day in Bangkok

1 October 2019 at 08:00
  With a single day left I decided, against much good advice to go to visit the Grand Palace. The other day as I was driving with my Bangkok friends we drove by the imposing campus that has served as the official home of the kings of Siam since 1782. They said as wonderful as […]

A Zen Priest Visits the Site Where Fr Thomas Merton Died

29 September 2019 at 22:30
    “My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going. I do not see the road ahead of me. I cannot know for certain where it will end. Nor do I really know myself, and the fact that I think that I am following your will does not mean that I am […]

Beginning my Asian Adventure: Or, an Innocent Abroad

26 September 2019 at 17:55
        Here I am ensconced in Tom Bradley International Terminal at LAX. I’ve made it through security. Apparently the heavy lifting will be on the other side when I arrive (by way of a three hour layover in Taipai) in Bangkok some twenty-one hours from now. If I am lucky once I […]

Recalling the First Woman to Run for President: Victoria Woodhull

23 September 2019 at 23:56
      “If you spliced the genes of Hillary Clinton, Madonna, Heidi Fleiss and Margaret Thatcher, you might have someone like Victoria Woodhull.” Atlanta Journal & Constitution I shared this a couple of years ago. I thought it worth sharing again. So, I’ve tweaked it a bit, and here it is… Victoria California Claflin […]

Every Day is a Good Day: A Zen Talk with James Myoun Ford

22 September 2019 at 14:10
  A Dharma talk on Yunmen’s Every Day is a Good Day by James Myoun Ford Anaheim Zen Sangha Empty Moon Zen Network

Happy Birthday, Leonard Cohen!

21 September 2019 at 14:05
      Wrote this a couple of years ago. Lightly edited and reprinted… Leonard Norman Cohen was born on this day, the 21st of September, in 1934, in Westmont, an English-speaking enclave of Montreal. His mother was the child of a renowned rabbi and scholar, his father the son of a founder of the […]
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