22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Three Dogen texts with basic interpretation., October 11, 2001
This review is from: Beyond Sanity & Madness Way of Zen Mas (Tuttle Library of Enlightenment) (Paperback)
BEYOND SANITY AND MADNESS : The Way of Zen Master Dogen. By Dennis Genpo Merzel. 276 pp. Boston : Charles E. Tuttle Co., Inc., 1994.
ISBN 0-8048-3035-5 (Pbk).
Zen Master Dogen (1200-1253), founder of the Soto sect and perhaps the most brilliant mind Japan has ever produced, is a true giant of Asian thought. Comparable in religious intensity to the great medieval Rhineland mystic Meister Eckhart (d. cir. 1327), he was also philosophic genius whose works are of an astounding richness and profundity.
Studies of Dogen's writings tend to be of two kinds. On the one hand we have works by distinguished academics such as William R. LaFleur, Carl Bielefeldt, Hee-Jin Kim, Thomas P. Kasulis, Masao Abe, and Francis H. Cook whose main focus of attention is Dogen's rich philosophic content. All of these scholars are well worth reading, and a handy collection of their articles will be found in LaFleur's 'Dogen Studies' (University of Hawaii Press, 1985).
Then there are the practising Zenists such as Kosho Uchiyama Roshi, Taezan Maezumi Roshi, and the present writer, Dennis Genpo Merzel, men who are perhaps drawn more to Dogen for what he can teach them about practice. But whether of a practical or more theoretical bent, anyone who is in any way working to improve our understanding of Dogen and to disseminate his thought more widely deserves our gratitude.
Dennis Genpo Merzel, who is the founder of Kanzeon Sangha and the Abbot of Kanzeon Zen Center Utah, tells us that his book "does not offer any sort of scholarly analysis of Dogen Zenji's teaching, but rather discusses the essential features in his vision of Zen training and practice" (p.xii). To this end he has modified earier translations of three Dogen texts and written a basic commentary to each. The texts are:
1. GAKUDO YOJINSHU - 'Points to Watch in Practicing the Way,' (tr. Yuho Yokoi) which deals with basic points concerning Zen training.
2. YUIBUTSU YOBUTSU - 'Only Buddha and Buddha,' (tr. Tanahashi and Brown) on transcendental wisdom and its transmission from teacher to student.
3. BODAISATTA SHISHOBO - 'The Four Benevolent Ways of the Bodhisattva,' (tr. Kosen Nishiyama) which elucidates the practice of _dana_ or giving (almsgiving; loving words; beneficial actions; identification with others as the expression of compassion).
Genpo Sensei's elementary commentary is preceded by a very interesting brief Introduction by Hakuyu Taizan Maezumi Roshi (from whom I have borrowed a few words), and the book is rounded out with three appendixes which repeat the texts (but this time minus commentary), a Glossary of Zen Terminology, and a brief Bibliography.
It seems to me that this book would be of use to those who are are coming to Dogen for the first time, and who would like a simple and straightforward account of his basic thought. One way such readers might tackle a first reading of this book would be to read the complete texts in the appendixes first, referring to the commentary only as needed. Afterwards, those who would like to learn more about Dogen's vision of Zen practice might care to take a look at the following somewhat fuller treatment :
HOW TO RAISE AN OX : Zen Practice as Taught in Zen Master Dogen's Shobogenzo - Including Ten Newly Translated Essays by Francis Dojun Cook. Foreword by Taizan Maezumi Roshi. 216 pp. Los Angeles, California : Center Publications, 1978 and reprinted.
How to Raise an Ox: Zen Practice as Taught in Zen Master Dogen's Shobogenzo
A more general approach to Dogen, and one which gives an even wider selection of writings, will be found in :
MOON IN A DEWDROP - WRITINGS OF ZEN MASTER DOGEN. Edited by Kazuaki Tanahashi. Translated by Robert Aitken, Philip Whalen, et al. 356 pp. San Francisco: North Point Press, 1985 and reprinted.
Moon in a Dewdrop: Writings of Zen Master Dogen -
But whether you read Dogen as mediated by Genpo Sensei or Cook or Tanahashi or some other Zenist or scholar, you should certainly read some Dogen, if only to appreciate what Kazuaki Tanahashi meant when he stated that the time is ripe for Dogen to become part of the common human heritage. He really is that wonderful.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent commentary on Dogen, December 11, 1999
This review is from: Beyond Sanity & Madness Way of Zen Mas (Tuttle Library of Enlightenment) (Paperback)
I have quite a collection of books about Buddhist teachings and the teachers, mostly from the Theravada traditions. Until I read this one, Dogen and Zen was very much a mystery to me. Next to "The Three Pillars of Zen" by Kaplan Roshi, it has provided insight where I had none before.
I am fortunate enough to live in the very same city as the author Genpo Roshi, abbot of the Kanzeon center, and it did play a role in my electing to visit the center. I strongly recommend this book to anyone who wishes to understand the writings of Dogen, and to learn a bit more about Zen.
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