Methodical and Gradual Path Stemmed from “Sudden Teaching”— Significance and Application of Master Sheng-Yen’s Teaching of Meditation in the Modern Age

碩士 === 法鼓佛教學院 === 佛教學系 === 103 === From the practical and training perspective, Master Sheng-Yen’s teaching of meditation is characterized by methodical and gradual approaches and thus reforms the stereotypical identification of “sudden approach” in Chan tradition. However, his fundamental meditati...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ya-Wen Chang, 張雅雯
Other Authors: Wei-Jjen Teng
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/07621097801968997183
Description
Summary:碩士 === 法鼓佛教學院 === 佛教學系 === 103 === From the practical and training perspective, Master Sheng-Yen’s teaching of meditation is characterized by methodical and gradual approaches and thus reforms the stereotypical identification of “sudden approach” in Chan tradition. However, his fundamental meditation theory is actually stemmed from the “sudden teaching” of Chan School, i.e. the teaching of “emptiness’’. By situating Master Sheng-Yen’s teaching of meditation within the practical context on the path to enlightenment and taking a hermeneutical shift from philological to “systematical”, historical and objective interpretations, this research argues that although Master Sheng-Yen’s gradual training style is methodologically distinct form the “direct” and “sudden” Chan tradition, its essence is the very concept of “emptiness’’ in Zu-Shi Chan(祖師禪). Based on the concept of “emptiness” and “the dependent origination”, the diverse application of “sudden”, “direct”, “gradual” and “stepwise” approaches in his teaching is practically for purpose of guiding different students; it is neither a “method-free” “sudden” approach, nor a rigid “following-through” of a gradual step-by-step instruction. Therefore, Master Sheng-Yen’s teaching of meditation signifies a modern outlook in its application, in which the emptiness-based pluralism and non-essentialism valued by modernity is realized. Indeed, the Buddhist teaching of “no-attachment” and “liberating-insight” instructs us to respect all diverse values in religion, culture and politics. In addition, as a remedy to Postmodernism which is in struggle of endless deconstruction and re-deconstruction, Master Sheng -Yen’s threefold layout for meditation of “upholding, letting-go and re-upholding”(「提起、放下、再提起」), practically provides us a way, after deconstruction, to a reconstructive methodology, and thus avoid the pitfall of ever-deconstruction of “postmodernism”.