Tag: kenshō
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The 13th-Century Monk Who Said ‘Ignore Everyone’—And Why It’s the Secret to Deeper Listening

Introduction: The Practitioner’s Paradox In any spiritual path, a fundamental tension exists between two essential guides: the wisdom of others and the truth of our own experience. On one hand, we have sacred texts, traditions, and teachers—a map charted by those who have already walked the path. To ignore this map is to risk getting…
William Altig
Buddha’s gaze, Buddha-nature, daimoku, Expedient Means (Upāya), experiential insight, fundamental darkness (ganpon no mumyō), Gohonzon, golden words of the Buddha, guru (lama), Guru Yoga, Ichinen Sanzen, insight meditation, Kaidan, kalyāṇa-mitta (spiritual friend), Kamakura period, Kangyur, kenshō, kōans, Kālāma Sūtta, Latter Day of the Law, Lotus Sūtra, Mahayana philosophy, Mappō, Mutual Inclusion of the Ten Realms (jikkai gogu), Namu Myōhō-renge-kyō, Nichiren, Nichiren Buddhism, Nyosetsu Shugyō-shō, One Vehicle (Ekayāna), Pali Canon (Tipiṭaka), practitioner’s paradox, provisional doctrines, satori, scriptural authority, scriptural literalism, Shakubuku, shōju, spiritual bypassing, Tathāgatagarbha, Ten Realms, Tengyur, Theravada Buddhism, Three Great Hidden Dharmas, Three Thousand Realms, Tiantai School, transmission outside the scriptures, Vajrayana Buddhism, vipassanā, zazen, Zen Buddhism