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  1. Oct 2, 2002 · Zen sends us looking inside us for enlightenment. There's no need to search outside ourselves for the answers; we can find the answers in the same place that we found the questions.

  2. Zen is the Japanese form of the Sanskrit word dhyana, "meditation," and is a school of Buddhism which has had significant impact in Japan and Europe and America.Founded in China in the 6th century ...

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  3. A little history of Zen Buddhism Zen grew from the experience of Shakyamuni Buddha, who realised awakening in the posture of dhyana ( zazen, Zen meditation) in India in the 5th century BCE. This experience has since been transmitted uninterrupted, from master to disciple, creating the zen lineage. After it had been established in India for almost 1000 years, the monk Bodhidharma took the ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ZenZen - Wikipedia

    Zen is also called 佛心宗, fóxīnzōng (Chinese) or busshin-shū (Japanese), 1 the "Buddha-mind school," 1 20 21 from fó-xīn, "Buddha-mind"; web 1 "this term can refer either to the (or a) Buddha's compassionate and enlightened mind, or to the originally clear and pure mind inherent in all beings to which they must awaken."

  5. Sep 20, 2024 · Although Zen Buddhism in China is traditionally dated to the 5th century, it actually first came to prominence in the early 8th century, when Wuhou (625–705), who seized power from the ruling Tang dynasty (618–907) to become empress of the short-lived Zhou dynasty (690–705), patronized Zen teachers as her court priests. After Empress Wuhou died and the Tang dynasty was restored to power ...

  6. October 2002. The essential element of Zen Buddhism is found in its name, for zen means “meditation.”. Zen teaches that enlightenment is achieved through the profound realization that one is already an enlightened being. This awakening can happen gradually or in a flash of insight (as emphasized by the Sōtō and Rinzai schools, respectively).

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  8. Zen finally found a foothold in China—where it was called Chan, from dhyana, Sanskrit for meditation—after one of the worst disasters in the country’s history, the An Lushan rebellion (755–763 CE), a civil war estimated to have killed two-thirds of the population. It was during this crisis that people embraced Zen’s teaching that claimed to directly point to the enlightened mind ...

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