2020/11/09

Constructing Korea’s Won Buddhism as a New Religion Don Baker

 Constructing Korea’s Won Buddhism as a New Religion:

Self-differentiation and Inter-religious Dialogue


Don Baker

University of British Columbia

Published in International Journal for the Study of New Religions 3:1 (2012), pp. 47-70.


   (Image courtesy of Won Buddhist Headquarters) 

Abstract: Won Buddhism is one of the largest and most respected of Korea’s new religions, yet it still encounters difficulties in wining recognition as a new religion because of the use of Buddhism in its name and some Buddhist elements in its doctrines. To strengthen its claim to independent religious status, Won Buddhism makes sure its worship halls, its rituals, and its clerical wear are quite different from what is seen in traditional Korean Buddhism. It also emphasizes elements in its teachings that differ from those of traditional Buddhism. In addition, over the last few decades, it has become one of the most active promoters of inter-religious dialogue in Korea. Acting as an independent partner in inter-religious dialogue strengthens Won Buddhism’s claim that it is not simply another Buddhist denomination but is a separate and distinct religion in its own right. 

Key Words:  Won Buddhism, Sot’aesan, Ilwŏnsang, Chŏngsan, Ethics of Triple Identity


Won Buddhism is one of the oldest, largest, and most respected members of what are called “the native religions of the Korean people” (minjok chonggyo). (Yoon, Kim, Yook, and Park. 2005) Koreans use that term to refer to organized religions that emerged in Korea, distinguishing them from religions such as Buddhism, Confucianism, and Christianity that were imported onto the peninsula. Outsiders usually refer to the 14 religious organizations that are members of the Association of Korean Native Religions (Han’guk minjok chonggyo hyŏbŭihoe), as well as many other new Korean religious movements such as the Unification Church, as new religions. Some of the members of that association, such as Taejonggyo [the Religion of the Grand Progenitor], reject that label, insisting that they are not new religions. Instead, they are revivals of the original religion of the Korean people. Won Buddhism, however, does not shy away from being described as new. In fact, it proudly proclaims that it is “a new religion for a new age.” The founder himself stated he had founded what he considered to be a new religious movement. (Won Buddhism website b) 

There are some among the leadership of Korea’s mainstream Buddhist community, however, who dispute Won Buddhism’s claim that it is a new religion. They are joined by a few scholars who agree with them that Won Buddhism is more Buddhist than new. (Kim Bokin 2000, 12) In fact, a recent book on Buddhism in the twentieth century included Won Buddhism as an example of the “renovation and reformation of Buddhist faith and practice.” (Heine and Prebish 2003, 7) Such mainstream Buddhists and scholars do not deny that the religious movement known today as Won Buddhism traces its origins to a group brought together in the second decade of the twentieth century by Park Chungbin (1891-1943), usually referred to by his sobriquet as Sot’aesan. However, they insist that Won Buddhism is nothing but another Buddhist denomination and therefore is quite different from the other “native religions of the Korean people,” those which worship Korean gods such as Tan’gun (worshipped by Taejonggyo) or Kang Chŭngsan (worshipped by Daesoon Jinrihoe and several other new religious groups). 


 

Park Chungbin (Image courtesy of Won Buddhist Headquarters)


To understand the relationship of Won Buddhism to mainstream Korean Buddhism as well as to Korea’s community of new religions, it is necessary to examine briefly the religious environment in the Republic of Korea. (Won Buddhism has no presence in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, on the northern side of the demilitarized zone that divides the Korean peninsula.) Korea differs from most countries in that it has no single dominant religious community. According to the last government census, taken in 2005, almost 23% of South Koreans said they were Buddhists, around 18% said they were Protestant Christians, and almost 11% said they were Roman Catholics. 47% said they had no religious affiliation at all. That leaves very few left to check the “Won Buddhist” box on the government census form. Only 129,907 did so, out of a total South Korean population of 47,041,434 at that time. (T’onggyero sesang pogi website) It is likely that there are more Won Buddhists than that, since, even twenty years ago when census takers found less that 90,000 people affirming that they were Won Buddhists, there were already at least 500 Won Buddhist ritual halls in Korea and over 7,500 Won Buddhist clergy. Won Buddhist officials claimed at that time that their religious community numbered over 1,175,000. (Han’guk Chonggyo sahoe yŏn’guso 1993, 1084) The actual figure of active Won Buddhists was probably somewhere in between the census figures and what Won Buddhist headquarters claimed. Nevertheless, it is clear that the Won Buddhism community is much smaller than the Protestant, Catholic, and mainstream Buddhist communities and therefore Won Buddhist leaders have to work hard to make sure their organization is not overlooked. 

Attracting attention as a new Korean religion is made more difficult for Won Buddhists by two features of Korean Buddhism today: the dominance of the Jogye order and the large number of small Buddhist denominations. The Jogye order dominates the image of Korean Buddhism among both Koreans themselves and among non-Koreans who study Korean Buddhism today. The Jogye order is a Mahayana order founded in the aftermath of Korea’s liberation from Japanese colonial rule in 1945. It claims to be the legitimate successor to a long tradition of Buddhism in Korea because of its promotion of traditional meditative practices and also because it is run by celibate monks. Most monks during the 35 years of Japanese colonial rule were married, following the example set by modern Japanese Buddhism. After 1945, successive nationalistic governments in South Korea favored the celibate monks over married monks, seeing them as free of any taint of contamination from Japanese Buddhism. The government even took major temples away from married monks and gave them to the Jogye order. (Sørensen 1999) As a result, the Jogye order is the richest and most powerful Buddhist order in Korea today. On its websites, it even portrays itself as simply Korean Buddhism, rather than one of many denominations of Buddhism in Korea. (Jogye order website)

However, the Jogye order is not the only Buddhist organization in Korea today. In fact, besides the Jogye order, there are 26 other Korean Buddhist orders enrolled in the Association of Korean Buddhist Orders, ranging from the large T’aego order of married clerics and the esoteric-ritual oriented Ch’ŏnt’ae order, which is large enough to operate its own university, to many smaller orders, such as the Korean Maitreya order and the Korean Pure Land order, that are much smaller than Won Buddhism is. (Association of Korean Buddhist Orders website)

Won Buddhism is not a member of that association of Korean Buddhist denominations, though there was an attempt to convince Won Buddhism to join several years ago. Actually, that was an attempt, in 1999, to convince the Won Buddhist authorities to rejoin that association, since Won Buddhism had been among the original members but had left in the 1980s to protect its properties from disputes within the mainstream Buddhism community over the ownership of religious assets. (Pulgyo chongbo sent’ŏ website) Instead of joining that umbrella Korean Buddhist organization, Won Buddhists authorities strive to maintain their order’s autonomy as a separate and distinct indigenous Korean religion, even though it differs significantly from other indigenous Korean religions in that its worship services are not centered on worship of a Korean god. 

Not only does Won Buddhism not promote the worship of a Korean god, it does not promote the worship of any God at all. Instead, its practitioners direct their spiritual gaze at an empty circle. Some might question, therefore, whether it is a religion at all. There are at least two other new spiritual movements emerging from modern Korea that do not promote worship of any particular God: Dahn World and Maum Meditation. (Dahn World website, Maum Meditation website) Both, because of their promises of spiritual enlightenment, their reliance on prescribed rituals, and their use of terminology similar to that used by Daoism and Buddhism respectively, appear to some outside observers to be new religions. However, both Dahn World and Maum Meditation insist that they are not religions at all. Won Buddhism does not share their aversion to the “religion” label. Instead, as already noted, despite the fact that it is more anthropocentric than theocentric, it insists that it is a real religion. After all, if Zen Buddhism can be called a religion, why can’t Won Buddhism be likewise? 

If we accept self-definition as sufficient, then Won Buddhism is without a doubt a new religion.  However, just as some groups that say they are not religious have the religion label pinned on them by outside observers, it is possible that outsiders may not agree with the self-labeling of Won Buddhism as a new religion, separate and distinct from “old Buddhism.” We therefore should examine its origins, its doctrines, its scriptures, its rituals, and its distinctive practices to see whether, in fact, it is truly a new religion or is merely one more occupant of the big tent that is Buddhism. We should also examine how Won Buddhist authorities have tried to convince others that Won Buddhism should be treated as a distinct religious organization rather than as a minor member of the broader Korean Buddhist community. If we engage in such an examination, we will discover that Won Buddhism has established itself as a new religion in two ways: first of all, it has distinguished itself internally by developing not only its own scriptures and rituals but even its own architecture and terminology, and, second, it has gained recognition externally that it constitutes as separate and distinct religious community in its own right through ecumenical interaction with other religious communities. 


The non-Buddhist origins of Won Buddhism


There is already enough English-language scholarship on the teachings and practices of Won Buddhism that I do not need to go into much detail here. (Chung, 1984; Pye 2002) Instead, I will focus on aspects the leaders of Won Buddhism have emphasized in order to promote an image of Won Buddhism in which its distinctiveness is highlighted. 

There are two reasons often cited for declaring Won Buddhism a new religion rather than just another Buddhist denomination. First of all, when Sot’aesan has his enlightenment experience on April 28, 1916, he had not received any Buddhist training or been directed in his search for enlightenment by a Buddhist master. (Kim Pokin 2000, 3-4, Yang 2008, 81) In fact, he claimed that he didn’t even realize that his insight into the interconnectedness of all phenomena, and that behind all those interconnected phenomena lay one unified cosmic Thusness, was similar to what the Buddha had taught 2,500 years earlier until he read the Diamond Sutra. (Park Kwangsoo 2003, 170) Since he reached his insight independently, Won Buddhists say, it is accurate to say that his insight is similar to that of the Buddha but is not a Buddhist insight. 

Secondly, Won Buddhism emerged out of a series of non-Buddhist changes to Korea’s religious culture in the late eighteenth and into the nineteenth century, before Won Buddhism itself was formed. The first non-Buddhist alteration to Korea’s traditional religious culture in modern times came from the introduction of Christianity, in the form of Roman Catholicism, in the last quarter of the 18th century. Catholicism introduced a radical new idea to Korea--monotheism. Traditionally Koreans, when they believed in gods, believed in many gods. They may have believed that some of those gods were more powerful than the other gods, but they never singled out one God and one God only for worship. (Baker 2002) Even Buddhists in Korea worshipped many different manifestations of Buddha and never used the sort of exclusivist language we associate with monotheism (There was no equivalent of Japan’s Nichiren Buddhism in pre-modern Korean). However, Catholics insisted that there was only one God and no other spirits should be worshipped. 

The first modern Korean new religion, Tonghak, which emerged in the 1860s, accepted this Catholic notion of monotheism. Although it did not teach worship of the Catholic God, it focused its spiritual gaze on a single supernatural presence called Sangje (C. Shangdi), Ch’ŏnju (the Lord of Heaven, the Catholic word for God in Korea), or Hannullim (a variant vernacular version of the Lord of Heaven) and did not talk about or try to interact with other supernatural personalities. Early in the 20th century, another new religion appeared which then fragmented into a cluster of new religious organizations focused on the worship of Kang Chŭngsan (1871-1909), whom they call Sangjenim, the Lord of High. Though the Kang Chŭngsan religions are not strictly monotheistic, since they preach the existence of many powerful supernatural personalities, their emphasis on Sangjenim as the incarnation on earth of the supreme lord on high and the most powerful by far of all the gods shows that they, too, have been influenced by the monotheism Catholicism introduced to Korea. Won Buddhism emerged after Tonghak had been preaching its theology for over half a century, and a decade after Kang Chŭngsan left this earth. However, Won Buddhists didn’t adopt the God of Catholicism, of Tonghak, or of the Chŭngsan religions. Instead, they promoted what may be called a mono-devotional rather than a monotheistic approach. Influenced by the new trend away from polytheism, Won Buddhists have excluded from their worship halls the many statues found in traditional Korean Buddhist temples. In their place, they have a circle, called Ilwŏnsang, which they use to represent the undifferentiated thusness of ultimate reality. (In a bow to the Buddhist elements in Won Buddhist teachings, they also call that circle the Dharmakaya Buddha). (Chung, 1987) 

 

Directing the spiritual gaze at the Ilwŏnsang (Photo courtesy of Won Buddhist Headquarters)

Moreover, Won Buddhism shows in its scriptures that it picked up some key ideas from earlier non-Buddhist Korean new religions. A very important idea in Won Buddhism is that Korea is undergoing a great transformation (Kaebyŏk) that will create a paradise on this earth. This is an idea that had been earlier promoted by Tonghak as well as by Kang Chŭngsan. The Won Buddhist notion of Kaebyŏk is a little different from theirs. In Won Buddhism, Kaebyŏk does not refer to an actual physical cosmic cataclysm out of which the new world will emerge. Instead, it is used in a more metaphorical sense to refer to the dramatic changes science and technology are bringing to the modern world, and the spiritual transformation that should accompany that transformation in the material world. This is not a Buddhist notion, yet it is core to the teachings of Won Buddhism. Won Buddhism also reflects some influence from the “there is a spark of the divine in every human being” teaching of the Tonghak religion as well as some influence from the assertion of Kang Chŭngsan that the problems of the world today arise from the competitive nature of the human community and that those problems can be overcome if we learn to work together for mutual benefit rather than against each other for individual benefit. (Chung, 2003b)  These are not traditional Buddhist ideas either. Yet they are core to the Won Buddhism worldview. Nor are the similarities between Won Buddhist ideas and those of Tonghak and the Chŭngsan religions simply a coincidence. Both Sot’aesan and his most important immediate disciple, Song Kyu, better known today as Chŏngsan (1900-1962), had contact with the ideas of Tonghak and Kang Chŭngsan before the founding of Won Buddhism as a separate religious tradition. (Chung 2003b)


Buddhist elements in Won Buddhism


Won Buddhist leaders do not claim, however, that there are no traditional Buddhist elements in Won Buddhism. Won Buddhists do not hide the fact that they believe in karma and reincarnation. For example, Sot’aesan is quoted as saying, in support of belief in karma and reincarnation, 


"A person who upsets someone deeply by making false insinuations will suffer from heartburn in his next life. A person who enjoys furtively probing into or eavesdropping on others’ secrets will suffer humiliation and embarrassment in his next life by being born as a bastard, and so forth. A person who readily exposes others’ secrets and readily embarrasses them in front of other people so that they blush with shame will, in his next life, have some ugly marks or scars on his face that will hamper him all his life." (Committee for the Authorized Translation of Won-Buddhist Scriptures 2006, 241)


Won Buddhists also believe that the problems we see in the world around us are caused by our own minds and can be cured when we become enlightened. Won Buddhism is similar to traditional Buddhism in its assertion that we do not need to rely on a divine being to help us overcome our problems. Instead, we only need to look within to discover the strength that lies within our own true nature. Moreover, Won Buddhist publications promote sitting meditation as one approach to discovering our own true nature. Though it is not as central in Won Buddhist practice as it is in the monasteries of Korea’s dominant Jogye order, many Won Buddhists find it a favored spiritual practice. (Ch’a 2003) Most of these traditional Buddhist ideas are not as prominent in Won Buddhism as they are in mainstream Buddhism in Korea. In addition, they are often overshadowed by Won Buddhist teachings that are quite different from what is taught in Buddhist temples and in Mahayana sutras.  

One traditional Buddhist idea that is prominent in Won Buddhism appears in the founder’s statement of why he founded this new religious movement: “our founding motive is to lead all sentient beings, who are drowning in the turbulent sea of suffering, to a vast and immeasurable paradise by expanding spiritual power and conquering material power.” (Committee for the Authorized Translation of Won-Buddhist Scriptures 2006, 1) However, the Won Buddhist approach to saving all sentient beings from suffering differs in many significant aspects from traditional Buddhist approaches. 


The Unique Appearance of Won Buddhism


After Won Buddhism gained formal recognition as an independent religious body separate and distinct from mainstream Buddhist organizations in Korea in 1948, it took steps to reduce its use of traditional Buddhist terminology in order to highlight its distinctiveness. Won Buddhists still refer to their meditation practices as sŏn, the Korean pronunciation for the Chinese character Japanese pronounce Zen. They also refer to chanting the Buddha’s name as “yŏmbul,” the same term used in Jogye and other mainstream Korean Buddhist temples for that practice. However, in 1963, when they issued a new edition of their scriptures, they distanced themselves from mainstream Buddhism by dropping from those scriptures some technical Buddhist terms that had not become part of everyday Korean Buddhist discourse. 

For example, in the doctrinal chart in which Won Buddhism displays what it considers its most important tenets and practices, there is a significant difference between what is seen in the 1962 edition from what was seen in the 1943 edition. The current version of that chart has near the top a box in which is written “The Threefold Study: Cultivating the Spirit, Inquiry into Human Affairs and Universal Principles, Choice in Action.” That box replaces a box in which had been written “Threefold Practice: Mindful karmic action (sīla —follow the nature), Spiritual Cultivation (samādhi —nourish nature), Inquiry into facts and principles ( prajñā—see into the Nature).” (Compare Chung 2003a, 116, with Committee for the Authorized Translation of Won-Buddhist Scriptures 2006, viii-ix.) It is obvious that Won Buddhist authorities have tried to expunge from their scriptures terms that Koreans would see as imported Buddhist terms rather than original Korean terms. 

The official explanation for this change appear in the History of Won Buddhism, where it is explained that “the parts that underwent partial revision and reprinting in Won Buddhist year 34 (1949), the parts that could be interpreted as if Sot’aesan’s original purpose had been confined to a certain region or a certain religious denomination, were rectified to follow his real intention.” (Department of International Affairs 2010, 108) In other words, they did not want Sot’aesan to appear as if he were tailoring his message to the followers of a “certain religious denomination,” meaning traditional Buddhism. However, in the eyes of one scholar of Won Buddhism, “During the redaction process some tenets crucial to the integrity of the doctrine were altered with the effect that the light of the original writer’s wisdom was significantly dimmed.” (Chung 2003a, xiv) 

That same scholar is also unhappy with the shift within Won Buddhism away from a focus on Ilwŏn, the Buddha-body perceived as the ultimate undifferentiated ground of reality, to a focus on the Ilwŏnsang, an actual circle drawn to represent Ilwŏn. Bongkil Chung writes, “Beings of lower capacity might mistake Ilwŏnsang, the circular symbol, for Dharmakâya Buddha just as they mistake the finger for the moon when the moon is behind the clouds.” He changes the line in the official scriptures today from “ to know one's own mind which as perfect, complete, utterly fair as impartial as Irwŏnsang” to what he says is the original wording: “ to know one's own mind which as perfect, complete, utterly fair as impartial as Irwŏn, namely prajñā-wisdom.” (Chung 2003a, 81) 

Won-Buddhism is not only moving away from some traditional Buddhist terminology, its leaders have also taken steps to make it look quite different from traditional Korean Buddhism. Not only have Won Buddhists coined their own terminology, Won Buddhists also wear distinctive clerical clothing, and conduct their distinctive weekly rituals in buildings with their own distinctive architecture. Won Buddhist clerics, both men and women, are called “kyomunim,” which literally means “someone devoted to the teachings.” Mainstream Buddhist clerics in Korea are called “sŭnim” instead. Moreover, the majority of Won Buddhist clerics are women (1,300 Won Buddhist clerics are women compared to only 700 men) and wear a modified version of the traditional Korean women’s clothing rather than the traditional Buddhist nun’s robes. They also do not shave their head like traditional nuns do. Instead, they wear their hair up in the bun worn traditionally by married Korean women. Despite their hairstyle, like mainstream Buddhist nuns Won Buddhist nuns are celibate. However, male Won Buddhist clerics tend to be married. Moreover, except when they are performing some ritual function, male Won Buddhist clerics dress like any other Korean man living a white-collar life style. They do not shave their head or wear monk’s robes. The clothing styles and hair styles for Won Buddhist clerics are not used just to distinguish them from traditional Buddhist monks and nuns. Instead, they dress the way they do to emphasize that Won Buddhism is a Buddhism that is integrated into everyday urban life, not a Buddhism of remote mountain monasteries. (According to Won Buddhists, as well as many scholars of the history of Korean Buddhism, under government pressure mainstream Buddhism during the Chosŏn dynasty (1392-1910) withdrew from society into isolated temples in the foothills of Korea’s many mountains.)  

 

From left to right, a Won Buddhist nun, a mainstream Buddhist nun, and a Catholic nun.

(Photo courtesy of Won Buddhist headquarters)


Similarly, Won Buddhist temples, both inside and outside, tend to look more like the Christian churches so common in Korean cities than like traditional Korean temples found in mountain valleys. They call their temples “kyodang,” which means “a place for teaching,” and do not use the mainstream Korean Buddhist terms “sach’al” or “chŏl.” Moreover, you enter a typical Won Buddhist parish temple through a foyer, where you can pick up a copy of the weekly parish bulletin. On a Sunday morning, you then normally sit in pews during a service that one prominent contemporary Won Buddhist admits, “is similar to that of a Protestant service. The ceremony is held on Sundays, and includes meditation, hymns, and preaching.” (Yang 2008, 87) I have found some newer Won Buddhist temples that have pushed the pews to the sides of the main worship hall to leave room in the middle for cushions for the use of those who prefer the traditional Buddhist practice of sitting on the floor during rituals. Nevertheless, no one familiar with traditional Korean temples would mistake a Won Buddhist temple for a typical Korean Buddhist temple or a Won Buddhist ritual for a traditional Korean Buddhist ritual. Someone who walked into a Won Buddhist temple expecting the usual display of multiple Buddhist statues would be particularly struck by the lack of such statues. In their place, prominently displayed on the front wall, in front of an altar, is a large circle, the Ilwŏnsang. It is toward that circle, rather than Buddhist statues, that Won Buddhists direct their devotions. 


 

A typical Won Buddhist urban temple. (Photo by author)

 

A typical Sunday service (Photo courtesy of Won Buddhist Headquarters)


Unique aspects of Won Buddhist Teachings


The central role of the Ilwŏnsang is just one feature of Won Buddhist ritual that Won Buddhist leaders point to as evidence that the differences between Won Buddhism and mainstream Korean Buddhism are more than matters of appearance. Significant doctrinal and philosophical differences can also be found. For example, little is said in Won Buddhist scriptures or Won Buddhist sermons about the world being “unreal” or about a need to cultivate detachment from the phenomenal world of constant change. Nor are Won Buddhists told to still all their desires. Instead, they are told that they need to make sure that their actions are informed by correct knowledge and appropriate desires. 

Though Won Buddhists agree with mainstream Buddhists that everything in the world is connected to everything else, for Won Buddhists, as it was for Korea’s Neo-Confucians, those interconnections do not subtract from the reality of the world of experience. Instead, they constitute reality. Won Buddhists are encouraged to understand the network of interconnections so that they can act in accordance with it. They are not encouraged to try to rise above it. 

Similarly, though Won Buddhists sound at first like mainstream Buddhists when they describe the original human mind as “empty,” they do not use that term to focus on the mind as originally undifferentiated thusness. Instead, their discussions of the human mind resonate with Neo-Confucian descriptions of the fundamental human mind as empty of biases and partiality. In other words, an empty mind is not a mind empty of all specific content. Rather, it is a mind that is calm and clear and therefore is able to perceive the world around it as that world really is, in all its complexity and diversity. Just as in mainstream Buddhism, one goal of Won Buddhist cultivation is cognitive clarity. However, in mainstream Buddhism cognitive clarity is a tool for gaining release from this world of suffering by seeing clearly the illusory nature of the things of this world. In Won Buddhism, on the other hand, cognitive clarity is presented as an important pre-condition for the sort of appropriate action that will bring an end of human suffering by making this world a better place. Even when Won Buddhists engage in the quiet sitting-meditation that is a hallmark of Buddhism, they do not do so simply to cultivate an awareness of the true nature of the universe. Their main objective is to calm the mind so that it can show them how to act appropriately. (Chong 1997, 19) As Sot’aesan explained, 


"The reason a person cultivating the Way endeavors to see the nature is to know the original realm of the nature and, by using one’s mind and body without fault like that realm, to achieve perfect buddhahood. If one only tries to see one’s nature but not to achieve Buddhahood, this would be of little use, like an axe that is well crafted, but made of lead." (Committee for the Authorized Translation of Won-Buddhist Scriptures 2006, 285) 


In other words, enlightenment is not true enlightenment if the insight enlightenment has provided is not realized in action. 

Another way to promote recognition that Won Buddhism is very different from mainstream Buddism is to point to the originality of the Won Buddhist solution to the problems of human suffering. According to Won Buddhist texts, ignorance of the illusory nature of the world of everyday experience is not the primary reason we suffer. Nor do we suffer primarily because we look for permanence in an impermanent world. According to those texts, those traditional Buddhist explanations are too vague to serve as useful guides for how to overcome suffering. Won Buddhism focuses instead on four specific reasons it identifies for unhappiness and suffering. They are 1) our inability to rely on our own resources, which causes us to be financially dependent on others who may not be able to provide us what we need; 2) the lack of wisdom in our leaders, who therefore mislead us into acting against our own best self-interest and the best interest of our community; 3) the lack of universal education, which keeps us from learning how to better our lives, and 4) selfishness, which leads us to act in ways that in the long run hurt us more than they help us. (Chung 1984, 24)

Won Buddhists often draw outside observers’ attention to the fact that, according to Won Buddhist doctrine, the most effective way to relieve human suffering is not to encourage detachment from the things of this world but instead to promote more appropriate ways of interacting with this world. That includes promoting universal education in all sorts of subjects, no just religion, since universal education allows everyone to gain the education they need to become economically self-reliant. Won Buddhist texts also encourage helping people recognize which potential leaders are wise and which are not, and encouraging them to follow those who are wise rather than those who are not (though Won Buddhism, as an organization, does not endorse any particular political leaders). And Won Buddhists, both clergy and laity, engage in various public service and charitable activities in order to counteract selfish tendencies. 

These are not just abstract prescriptions. One of the first things Sot’aesan did after his enlightenment experience was lead his followers in a project to reclaim some coastal wasteland for farming. (Chong 1997, 5, Adams 2009, 5) The Won Buddhist organization has also built schools, including Wonkwang University, which includes one of Korea’s best medical schools teaching traditional (Chinese-style) medicine. And the Won Buddhist organization runs orphanages and social welfare centers in Korea and also dispatches medical missionaries overseas. (Won Buddhism website b) 

Won Buddhist leaders try to direct our attention to the fact that Sot’aesan taught that appropriate action in this world to reduce and eventually eliminate human suffering should be based on the assumption that we suffer because we do not realize what the interconnectedness of all things means to us personally and therefore we do not let our connections to everything around us direct our actions. In other words, we suffer because we do not realize how dependent we are on others, and how much we owe to others, and as a consequence we end up acting inappropriately, acting in ways that are contrary to both our own long-term self-interest as well as the best interest of our community.  

In another striking departure from traditional Buddhist teachings Won Buddhist leaders like to point out, according to Won Buddhist publications it is more important to cultivate an attitude of gratitude than an attitude of detachment. In particular, according to Won Buddhist teachings, there are four things we need to be grateful for. These “four graces,” as Won Buddhist texts call them, are “heaven and earth” (nature), for providing us with the air we need to breathe, the water we need to drink, and the earth we need to stand on and cultivate crops in; our parents, for giving us our lives; our fellow human beings, for providing us with such things as houses, roads, machines, medical care, and all other things we cannot provide for ourselves acting alone; and, finally, law, by which Won Buddhists mean the rules and regulations that make a safe, orderly, and predictable society possible. (Committee for the Authorized Translation of Won-Buddhist Scriptures 2006, 9-22, Chung 1988, 437-38) 

Sot’aesan was not the first to talk about the need to cultivate an attitude of gratitude. In Japan several centuries earlier Nichiren (1222-1282) has also preached about four things to be grateful for. However, Nichiren taught the need to be grateful for those things that had made it possible for him to live as a boddhisattva on this earth. Sot’aesan was more down to earth. He taught that we need to cultivate an attitude of gratitude toward nature, our parents, our fellow human beings, and our laws in order to work together more effectively with others to reduce and eventually eliminate the causes of suffering in this world. (McCormick 1997)


Interfaith Dialogue and Independence of Won Buddhism


Differences in doctrine and practice are not the only features Won Buddhist leaders point to in order to argue that Won Buddhism is separate and distinct from mainstream Buddhism. Before 1945 the relationship between Won Buddhism and mainstream Korean Buddhism was somewhat blurred, although Won Buddhists already had established a distinct community marked off by differences in both doctrine and practice from other Buddhist groups in Korea at that time. However, the term Won Buddhism was not used. Instead, the group we now call “Won Buddhism” called itself the “Society for the study of the Buddhist Dharma.” It was only in 1948 that Won Buddhism formally became Won Buddhism. (Chong 1997, 34)

That raises the question of why Won Buddhist leaders waited until after 1945 to insist on a separate and distinct identity for their religious community. I would like to suggest a possible answer. Before 1945, Korea was under Japanese colonial rule, and the Japanese imperial government tried to bring all Buddhist organizations in Korea under Japanese rule. The main concern of Won Buddhists at that time was shared by other Korean Buddhist groups. They all wanted to maintain some autonomy within the parameters established by the Japanese colonial government. In 1945, the Japanese were sent home and were no longer a threat. However, Won Buddhist leaders wanted to disassociate themselves from the battle within mainstream Buddhism that broke out after the Japanese withdrew. As noted earlier, the Japanese had strongly encouraged monks to marry, as Japanese monks did. Most Korean monks in the 1920s and 1930s did so. The new government of the Republic of Korea (better known as South Korea), which emerged in 1948, viewed married monks as a legacy of the despised Japanese colonial rule. Married monks were treated as collaborators with the Japanese and therefore the anti-Japanese government of South Korea wanted to keep them from playing an important or respected role in post-colonial Korea. This led to a battle between married and celibate monks for control of temples and Buddhist institutions that lasted into the 1970s. (Sørensen 1999, Kim Kwangsik 2000) 

Male clerics in Won Buddhism are more often married than not. However, Won Buddhists did not want to be associated with the married monks in mainstream Buddhism for fear of incurring the disfavor of the government. Nor did they want to join the government-favored organization of celibate monks, since that would have forced them to conform to mainstream Buddhist expectations of what Buddhist rituals, Buddhist scriptures, Buddhist clergy, and Buddhist temples should look like. In order to maintain the autonomy that allowed them to practice their unique approach to Buddhism, they resisted pressure to become a sub-denomination within the umbrella Jogye Order that dominates mainstream Korean Buddhism today.  

Once Won Buddhism felt confident that the government recognized it as a new religious order (that recognition wasn’t official until the early 1960s) (Department of International Affairs of Won Buddhism 2010, 123-24), it began reaching out to other religious communities to try to gain their recognition as well. Interfaith dialogue became an important means for Won Buddhism to establish its distinctive identity. By convincing leaders and representatives of other religious organizations to meet with Won Buddhist leaders and representatives and treat them as worthy of dialogue in their own right, rather than as representatives of the Jogye order or other branches of mainstream Buddhism, Won Buddhism gained recognition as separate and distinct from mainstream Buddhism. 

Inter-faith dialogue is particularly important in a country like South Korea, in which, as noted earlier, no one religion dominates. According to the most recent census, in 2005 53% of Koreans claimed a specific religious affiliation. (There are over 100,000 practicing shamans in Korea, but their clients do not appear on the census as “shamanists,” so it is likely that that actual percentage of the South Korean population engaging in religious practices is far above 53%.) Of those 53%, as noted earlier, 22.8% (10.7 million) said they were Buddhists, 18.3% (8.6 million) said they were Protestant Christians, 10.9% (5.1 million) said they were Roman Catholics, and only 0.03% said they were Won Buddhists. Such division of the religious community provides Won Buddhism room to maneuver for attention, since no one religious organization is so dominant that it can ignore the rest. Moreover, religious leaders in Korea have tried to create broad-based coalitions of religious leaders to ensure that they will not be ignored by the government, which otherwise might be inclined to dismiss individual religious organizations as representing only a minority of the population. Bringing Won Buddhism into such coalitions allows them to add one more person to their executive committees, making them appear even larger and more powerful. Won Buddhism has taken advantage of this situation and has become very active on the inter-faith front in Korea.   

This is despite the fact that, officially, there are very few Won Buddhists. The number of Won Buddhists is surely higher than the 130,000 the government’s census takers found. There may be as many as half a million to one million Won Buddhists out of a South Korean population of 50 million today. Nevertheless, it is clear that Won Buddhism is a relatively small religion, when compared to the size of the mainstream Buddhist, Protestant, and Catholic communities. There is a real danger that Won Buddhism will be overlooked when religions in Korea are counted. To ensure that does not happen, Won Buddhism has actively participated in inter-faith dialogues with its larger partners. 

Won Buddhist interest in inter-faith dialogue is not simply out of a desire to be recognized, however. There is an inter-faith element to the core teachings of Won Buddhism. That inter-faith element reaches all the way to the founder, Sot’aesan. We already pointed out that Sot’aesan reported that he reached enlightenment without going through the usual formal Buddhist training or guidance given those pursuing that goal. Moreover, after his original enlightenment experience, he read seminal books from a variety of religious traditions, including Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism, and even Christianity (he read the Bible). Only then, he says, did he realize that the insights he gained from his enlightenment, insights into the nature of reality and how to overcome the suffering living in this world entails, were closer to those of the Buddha than to those of the founders of other religious traditions. (Department of International Affairs of Won Buddhism 2010, 16)

The Scriptures of Won Buddhism relate the story of a conversation between Sot’aesan and a Christian minister. Sot’aesan advises that minister to widen his perspective. He warns him that people who only pay attention to their own ways of doing things “fall into onesideness, producing gaps that become like mountains of silver and ramparts of iron. This is the reason for all the antagonism and conflicts between countries, churches, and individuals.” (Committee for the Authorized Translation of Won-Buddhist Scriptures 2006, 314) This particular anecdote is interpreted not as a criticism of Christianity –-Won Buddhist criticisms of other religions tend to be muted–-but as a call for his own disciples to be open to the insights of other religions. That interpretation is supported by another statement of Sot’aesan. He is quoted in the Scriptures as saying, “In all matters, I do not gain knowledge only by inquiring to myself, but I acquire knowledge for my use when meeting with various people….when I talk with adherents of other religions, I gain knowledge of those religions.” (Committee for the Authorized Translation of Won-Buddhist Scriptures2006, 166) 

When Sot’aesan was alive (he died in 1943), he was too concerned with putting his order on a sound footing and maintaining its distinctive identity to devote much time or energy to dialogues with other religions. The same was true of his successor as head of Won Buddhism Song Kyu (1900-1962), known as Chŏngsan) for the first decade or so he was Head Dharma Master. However, in the last years of his life, Chŏngsan brought inter-faith dialogue to the fore with his proclamation in 1961 of the “Ethics of Triple Identity.” 

There are three principles to the Ethics of Triple Identity. The first principle is the principle of Identical Origin. “This implies that all people of religion must harmonize with one another, with the knowledge that the fundamental origin of all religions and religious sects is one…. Although their doctrines are expressed in different names and forms, a careful inquiry into their fundamental sources will show that the fundamental tenets are not contrary to the truth of Ilwŏn. Therefore, all religions are generally of identical origin.” (Chung 2012, 217) The Won Buddhist belief that Ilwŏn means that ultimately everything is one, without any real differences among them, is utilized to support an attitude of respect for, and outreach toward, other religions. 

The second principle of the Ethics of Triple Identity is the “bond of one vital force. This principle implies that all races and all sentient beings should be united in grand harmony by awakening to the truth that they are all fellow beings bonded together by the one vital force.” (Chung 2012, 217) This principle draws on the traditional Sino-Korean belief that everything in the universe is composed of ki (C. Qi), the matter-and-energy that both provides the material substance for everything in the material world and animates those entities that are animated. It also draws on the teachings in Tonghak (a new Korean religion which preceded Won Buddhism by half a century) that elevate ki into a new level of importance as the spark of the divine, the Creative Force in the Cosmos, that can be found within the heart-and-mind of every human being.

The third principle is the principle of “renewal with one aim. This implies that, being awakened to the truth that all enterprises and proposals help toward the renewal of the world, all should unite in grand harmony.” He wrote that there is a great variety of political and business projects. However, “their original aims, as an inquiry into their fundamental sources shows, are all to make this world a better place.” (Chung 2012, 218) This third principle reflects the beginnings of the Won Buddhist community in a project to make the world a better place by getting residents of some impoverished villages to work together in order to reclaim tidal land for agriculture. (Chong 1997, 13, Department of International Affairs of Won Buddhism 2010, 23-24) 

The stress on the ultimate unity of all religions was continued by the next Head Dharma Master, Kim Daega (1914-1998), better known as Taesan. Taesan declared

 “The doctrines and institutions advocated by each religion can be different. However, consider that there can be no difference when it comes to the ultimate goal aspired to by each religion, the ultimate goal being the salvation of mankind founded on truth and love. Consider that this world is one. If we consider these two things, we see that the truth which is fundamental to each religion can only be one…. “All religions must, without conditions and excuses, mutually open their doors, talk seriously and meet as brothers and sisters.” (Taesan 2005, 18-19)

He went to say that the tremendous advance in material civilization in the modern world is pulling human beings deeper and deeper into materialism and “the power of the human spirit is becoming weakened….  At this point, as we, without hesitation, earnestly appeal for all religions to unite harmoniously for the sake of happiness and peace, I present the establishment of United Religions…which will, from a position of equality with the United Nations, do the job of humanity’s spiritual mother.” (Taesa 2005, 20) 

The official hymnal of Won Buddhism even includes a couple of hymns proclaiming that all religions are essentially the same. One of those hymns, “Song of the Principle of Nature,” goes as follows:

“So many different branches, such a myriad of leaves, so many brilliant colors spring out of only one root. All that exists we see as countless variations. Looking again, we see there is only one energy.” 

The other hymn, “Song of Three Equal Morals,” provides an even more explicit statement of the Won Buddhist doctrine that all religions are really just variations on one religion: “Many churches, many priests, preaching of their many beliefs. Many ways to see the same thing, one source, one principle. We are just one household; we are one, just one, circle. We are all working for the same goal.” (Department of International Affairs of Won Buddhism 2003, 86-87) 

Taesan hoped that his proposed United Religions would be a religious equivalent to the United Nations, with “special representatives of each nation's religion.” United Religions was not envisioned as a form for inter-faith dialogue only. Rather, he hoped it would provide an institutional foundation for various religions from around the world to

“make a combined effort performing all activities from a religious dimension and for the promotion of human prosperity: activities of communication and friendship between religions, activities of combined education for the sake of the salvation of the human spirit, activities of united service for the sake of wiping out the disease of human poverty and ignorance, activities for the sake of a solution to the moral problems of humanity, and religious activities for the sake of prevention of war.” (Taesam 2005, 21)

Won Buddhism was never able to realize its dream of a religious equivalent of the United Nations. Instead, it has had to settle for active involvement in a number of inter-religious organizations, including the United Religions Initiative, which originated in the United States but had a monk from Korea’s mainstream Jogye Order among its founding members. (United Religions Initiative website)




 

Won Buddhist clerics, Roman Catholics nuns, and Buddhist clerics from the Jogye order join hands to encircle the monument honoring Sot’aesan’s enlightenment. (Photo courtesy of Won Buddhist Headquarters) 


 Motivated by the “Ethics of Triple Identity,” Won Buddhism has asserted its distinctive character through participation in inter-faith organizations in three distinct ways. First of all, it is an active member of the Association of Native Korean Religions. This is a way to proclaim that it is an indigenous Korean religion, not an imported religion using scriptures of foreign origin like the Jogye order. Second, it participates as an independent organization in international Buddhist organizations such as the World Fellowship of Buddhists, both to strengthen its identity as Buddhist and to show on the world stage that it is a different religious organization from mainstream Korean Buddhism. Third, at home it is an active member of the Korean Council of Religious Leaders (which includes Catholic, Protestant, mainstream Buddhist, and Confucian representatives, as well as representatives from Won Buddhism and another new religion, Ch’ŏndogyo) and the Korean Conference of Religion for Peace (which also includes Muslim representatives). By placing its representatives alongside Jogye representatives in such Korean ecumenical organizations, Won Buddhist enhances its visibility as a separate and distinct religious community. It has done the same thing outside of Korea. It has joined the Asian Council of Religion for Peace as well as the World Conference on Religion and Peace. It also has an office at the United Nations as a recognized NGO. Won Buddhism is using its inter-faith activities to ensure that other religious organizations, both inside and outside of Korea, recognize Won Buddhism as a separate and distinct religion. 

One more inter-faith activity deserves mention: Samsohoe, “The Association of Three Smiles,” established in 1988 to bring together Roman Catholic nuns, Jogye Buddhist nuns, and Won Buddhist nuns to present concerts of their respective sacred music together and to also travel around the world together, visiting the sacred sites of each others’ religions. (Joongang Daily 1997) Again, by standing alongside Jogye representatives, Won Buddhist clerics proudly proclaim their independent status. In this particular case, photos of the nuns from those three traditions standing together in their markedly different clerical clothing strengthens the image of Won Buddhism as just as distinct from mainstream Korean Buddhism as Roman Catholicism is.  


Conclusion 


Are the various differences we have noted between Won Buddhism and other forms of Buddhism in Korea sufficient to create a gap between Won Buddhism and mainstream Korean Buddhist organizations large enough to justify labeling Won Buddhism a new religion? Have the leaders of Won Buddhism managed to carve out a separate space for Won Buddhism on Korea’s diverse religious landscape? I agree with Won Buddhists as well as scholars such as Daniel J. Adams and Michael Pye that the answer is “yes,” particularly when we take into account the direction Won Buddhism has been moving in the last few decades. 

 Won Buddhism called itself an “association for the study of the Buddhist dharma” until 1947 when, taking advantage of the religious freedom that appeared on the Korean peninsula after the Japanese occupation of Korea ended with Japan’s defeat in World War II, Won Buddhism registered for the first time as a new religion and adopted the name Won Buddhism. (Chong 1997, 34) Moreover, as noted earlier, in 1962 Won Buddhism revised some of its earlier scriptures to minimize terminology that appeared too close to mainstream Buddhist terminology. (Chung 2003a, xiv, 353-356, Jin Park 2004) On top of that, rank-and-file Won Buddhists themselves appear to be becoming more conscious of themselves as Won Buddhists rather than as simply Buddhists. In the 2005 census in South Korea, as noted above, around 130,000 people declared that they were Won Buddhists, compared to only 86,000 ten years earlier, in the 1995 census. At noted earlier, there are probably more Won Buddhists than that in South Korea. Won Buddhist authorities recently claimed to have over a million members, attending over 550 temples in South Korea alone as well as over 50 temples outside of Korea. (Won Buddhism website b) The number of temples in Korea, as well as the size of the membership claimed by Won Buddhist headquarters, has stayed roughly the same over the last twenty years, though the number of Won Buddhist temples overseas has grown from 30 to 50 or so. Though that claim of over one million Won Buddhists may be somewhat exaggerated, still it is probably safe to assume that quite a few of the 10.7 million South Koreans who wrote on government census forms that they were Buddhists frequently attend services at Won Buddhist temples, which would make them Won Buddhists in the eyes of Won Buddhist authorities. Moreover, given the almost 46% increase in those declaring themselves Won Buddhists in 2005, compared to the 1995 census, it is also safe to assume that there is a growing trend among Won Buddhists to identify themselves specifically as such. In other words, the distinction between mainstream Buddhism and Won Buddhism, and the identity of Won Buddhism as a new religion, among the rank-and file appears to be strengthening. 

Won Buddhism has also gained more visibility in the public arena. In 2009, when a state funeral was held for former president Kim Daejung, representatives for four different religious traditions were asked to participate in the funeral rites. Even though Kim was a devout Roman Catholic, those who watched that funeral on television could see that, in addition to Catholic clerics, there were also clerics representing Korea’s Protestant community, the Buddhist Jogye community, and Won Buddhism. (Adams 2009, 1) That was a sign that Won Buddhism had gained recognition as one of the four major religious communities on the Korean peninsula. 

Ironically, while Won Buddhism appears to be winning the battle for independent recognition in Korea itself, it has found that, outside of Korea, it needs to emphasize its Buddhist roots. A recent newspaper article by a Won Buddhist missionary in the United States revealed that the Westerners most likely to show an interest in Won Buddhism are those who have grown tired of the highly defined religiosity of Christianity and are looking for a spiritual philosophy or what they might term “spirituality” instead. Often they are drawn to Buddhist philosophy and meditation practices. Won Buddhism, to attract such potential converts, needs to point to its similarities with Buddhism while at the same time distinguishing itself from its many other Buddhist competitors in the West by presented itself as a reformed Buddhism more appropriate for the modern world than traditional Buddhism. (Ha Sangŭi 2011)

That strategy is apparent on the home page of the Won Buddhism meditation center outside the city of Philadelphia in the US. There Won Buddhism is described as “a reformed Buddhism in that it embraces the original Buddha’s teachings and makes it relevant and suitable to contemporary society.” (Won Buddhist website c) Michael Pye, who observed Won Buddhism in Korea, argued that it should not be considered a reformed Buddhism because it has diverged too much from original Buddhism. However, if he had observed Won Buddhist missionaries in the West, he may have modified his conclusion. Won Buddhist missionaries define Won Buddhism as a reform of Buddhism, not in the sense of a “true or loyal form of an original tradition which had been overlaid or lost,” (Pye 2002, 132) but in the sense of an improvement on that original tradition to match changes in the world in which Buddhism must operate. 

Won Buddhist leaders, both in Korea and abroad, will tell you that Won Buddhism is both a Buddhist religion and a new religion, since it is a new form of Buddhism for a new age. In other words, it is a new Buddhist religion, a conclusion Pye and I share. (Pye 2002, 141) Although Won Buddhism has enough Buddhist coloring that the use of Buddhism in its name is not unjustified, and Won Buddhism is not being disingenuous when it presents itself to potential Western converts as a from of Buddhism, its leaders have ensured that it is different enough from the many varieties of traditional Buddhism that it looks like a new religion and should be accepted as such. After all, if we can talk about Soka Gakkai as a new religion rather than as just another Buddhist denomination, surely we can grant Won Buddhism the same independent existence. 





Print References:

Adams, Daniel J.  

2009   “Won Buddhism in Korea: A New Religious Movement Comes of Age.” Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch 84: 1-35

Baker, Don

2002   “Hananim, Hanŭnim, Hanullim, and Hanŏllim: The Construction of Terminology for Korean Monotheism.” Review of Korean Studies, 5 (1): 105-131

Ch'a Oksung 

2003  Chŭngsan'gyo. Wŏnbulgyo: Han'gugin ŭi chonggyo kyŏnghŏm [Chŭngsan'gyo and Wŏnbulgyo: the religious experiences of Koreans]. Seoul: Seokwangsa.

Chong, Key Ray 

1997   Won Buddhism: A History and Theology of Korea’s New Religion. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press.

Committee for the Authorized Translation of Won-Buddhist Scriptures 

2006   The Scriptures of Won-Buddhism. Iksan, Korea: Wonkwang Publishing, 2006.

Chung, Bong-kil 

1984    “What is Won Buddhism?” Korea Journal 24 (5) :18-31

1987    “The Concept of Dharmakaya in Won Buddhism: Metaphysical and Religious Dimensions,” Korea Journal 27 (1): 4-15

1988    “Won Buddhism: A Synthesis of The Moral Systems of Confucianism And Buddhism,” Journal of Chinese Philosophy 15 (4): 425-448

2003a  The Scriptures of Won Buddhism: A Translation of the Wŏnbulgyo Kyojŏn with Introduction Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. 

2003b “Won Buddhism: the historical context of Sot’aesan’s reformation of Buddhism for the modern world, ” in Steven Heine and Charles S. Prebish, ed. Buddhism in the Modern World New York: Oxford University Press: 143-167

2012    The Dharma Master Chongsan of Won Buddhism: Analects and Writings Albany, NY: SUNY Press

Department of International Affairs of Won Buddhism, ed. 

2003    Hymns of Won Buddhism Iksan, Korea; WonKwang Publishing Company

2010   History of Won Buddhism, Published online. Available at 

http://www.wonbuddhism.org/resources   Accessed 15/01/2012.  

Ha Sangŭi

2011   “Mirae chonggyorosŏ wōnbulgyoŭi [The significance of Won Buddhism as a religion for the future,” Wŏnbulgyo sinmun Sept. 30, 2011 Accessed on June 4, 2012, at http://www.wonnews.co.kr/news/articleView.html?idxno=102006


Han’guk Chonggyo sahoe yŏn’guso, ed. 

1993   Han’guk chonggyo yŏn’gam [A yearbook of religion in Korea] Seoul: Korea Halimwon

Heine, Steven and Charles S. Prebish, ed. 

2003   Buddhism in the Modern World: Adaptations of an Ancient Tradition New York: Oxford University Press

Joongang Daily 

1997   “Three Smiles---- lessons in faith and true spiritual understanding.” November 16, 1997.  Accessed January 14, 2011 at http://article.joinsmsn.com/news/article/article.asp?total_id=2949094http://article.joinsmsn.com/news/article/article.asp?total_id=2949094

Kim, Bokin 

2000   Concerns and Issues in Won Buddhism Philadelphia: Won Publications, 2000

Kim Dogong 

2010   “The Relation between Buddhism and Won Buddhism” Journal of the Korean Academy of New Religions, Special Edition, August 2010: 166-98

Kim Kwangsik 

2000  Uriga sara-on han’guk pulgyo paengnyŏn [A hundred years of Korean Buddhism we have lived through] Seoul: Minjoksa

McCormick, Ryuei Michael  

1997   “The Four Graces According to Sot’aesan and Nichren, ” Won Buddhist Studies, Vol. II (1997). Available on the internet at http://nichirenscoffeehouse.net/Ryuei/4Graces.html Accessed June 14, 2011.

Park, Jin

2004  “Review of Chung, Bongkil, The Scriptures of Won Buddhism: A Translation of the WOnbulgyo kyojOn with Introduction. H-Buddhism, H-Net Reviews. January, 2004. Accessed at http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=8735 on 11/6/2012


Park Kwangsoo 

2003  “Sot’aesan’s Essays on the Reformation of Korean Buddhism,” International Journal of Buddhist Thought and Culture, 3: 169-94

Michael Pye

2002   “Won Buddhism as a Korean New Religion,” Numen 49:2: 113-41

Sørensen, Henrik H. 

1999  “Buddhism and Secular Power in Twentieth-Century Korea,” Ian Harris, ed, Buddhism and Politics in Twentieth-century Asia London: Continuum:127-152

Taesan 

2005  “The Necessity of the Establishment of the United Religions,” Living Buddha: The Won-Buddhist Review, vol. 1 (1):18-21

Yang Eun-yong 

2008  “The History, Basic Beliefs, Rituals, and Structure of Won-Buddhism,” in Kim Sunghae and James Heisig, Encounters: The New Religions of Korea and Christianity Seoul: Royal Asiatic Society: 73-93

Yoon Yee-heum, Kim Sang-yil, Yook Suk-san, and Park Kwang-soo, ed. 

2005  Korean Native Religions (Seoul: Association of Korean New Religions

 

Websites:

Association of Korean Buddhist Orders Accessed at http://kboa.or.kr/ on 9/12/2012 

Pulgyo chongbo sent’ŏ, ed [Buddhist information Center], “Wŏnbulgyonŭn Pulgyo in’ga?  Minjok chonggyo in’ga? [Is Won Buddhism Buddhism or an indigenous religion?]  Accessed at http://www.budgate.net/Scripts/poll/poll.asp?prot=article&id=8 on 3/6, 2012 

Dahn World Accessed at http://www.dahnyoga.com On 9/6. 2012

Jogye order  Accessed at http://www.koreanbuddhism.net on 3/6/2012 

Maum Meditation Accessed at http://maum.org/eng/  on 9.6/2012 

T ’onggyero sesang pogi [Looking at the world through statistics], On RainbowsBlog, accessed at http://instatistics.officetutor.org/380  on 3/6, 2012. 

United Religions Initiative Accessed at http://www.uri.org/  on 9/6/2011.




Won Buddhism  (English-language web pages) 

a  http://www.wonbuddhism.org/resources Accessed 11/6/2012

b  http://www.wonbuddhism.info/info/page/3.html This page is now off-line. Last accessed 6/6/2011.

c.  http://phila.wonbuddhism.info/eng2/won/won1.html Accessed 4/6/2012 

WonKwang University http://www.wku.ac.kr/english  Accessed 11/6/2012


알라딘: 깨달음 이후 빨랫감 After the Ecstasy, the Laundry

알라딘: 깨달음 이후 빨랫감

깨달음 이후 빨랫감 - 깨달음, 그 뒤의 이야기들   
잭 콘필드 (지은이),이균형 (옮긴이)한문화2011-10-07원제 : After the Ecstasy, the Laundry (2001년)

392쪽152*223mm (A5신)549gISBN : 9788956991306

 After the Ecstasy, the Laundry: How the Heart Grows Wise on the Spiritual Path 

책소개

대부분의 영적 수행담은 깨달음으로 막을 내린다. 하지만 그 뒤에 어떻게 되었는지를 묻는다면 어떨까? 깨달음을 얻는다고 하여 세속을 초월한 어떤 물리적인 공간으로 차원 이동을 하는 것도 아니고, 친구나 가족들과 결별하는 것도 아니며, 생계를 위한 생업에서 자유로워지는 것도 아니다. 깨달은 뒤에도 삶은 계속된다. 이 책은 수행과 일상을 어떻게 바라보고 조화시킬 수 있는지에 대한 지혜로운 대답들을 간직한 드문 책이다.

이 책은 깨달음에 대한 동서양의 지혜를 총 망라하고 있어, 독자에게 제공하는 지적 즐거움도 상당하다. 장의 앞머리마다 등장하는 선시나 선의 경구들은 읽는 재미를 더하며, 수행의 각 단계마다 그에 해당하는 선사나 구루, 성자들의 일화가 등장하여 그들의 모습에 견주어 자기의 수행을 돌아보게 한다. <성서>, <숫타니파타>, <역경>, <탈무드>, 이슬람 신비주의인 수피의 잠언에서 한국 출신의 세계적인 선사 숭산 스님의 일화, 그리고 <모리와 함께 한 화요일>, <내가 배워야 할 모든 것은 유치원에서 배웠다> 같은 지극히 현대적인 책들에 이르기까지, 깨달음의 과정을 바라보는 다양한 관점을 만날 수 있다.
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목차
머리말 | 절을 올리며 · 8
책을 읽기 전에 | 정직한 질문 몇 가지 · 12

1부 깨달음으로 나아가기
1장 바바야가와 우리의 신성한 열망 · 24
2장 마음의 수호자들 : 빛의 천사, 눈물의 바다 · 51
3장 입문의 불꽃 · 68

2부 깨어남enlightment
4장 세상의 어머니인 마음 : 슬픔의 문 · 96
5장 무無이자 모든 것 : 공空의 문 · 109
6장 당신은 진정 누구인가? : 일체성의 문과 견성 · 125
7장 문 없는 문 : 영원한 지금의 문 · 136

3부 깨달은 후에도 삶은 계속된다
8장 견성 너머 : 깨달음의 지도地圖 · 152
9장 깨달은 후에도 삶은 계속된다 · 169
10장 더러운 빨랫감 · 189

4부 빨랫감 속에서 깨어나기
11장 깨어남의 만다라 : 무엇을 소외시키고 있는가 · 214
12장 이 몸이 곧 부처 · 227
13장 깨어난 감정과 일상 속의 완성 · 254
14장 가족 카르마 · 283
15장 많은 형제들과 자매들 : 공동체라는 선물 · 311
16장 모든 존재와 함께 깨어나기 · 338
17장 지혜로운 자의 웃음 · 365

옮긴이의 말 · 388
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책속에서
수백만의 사람들이 위대한 성자로 생각하는 우리 주지 스님인 아잔 차에게 내가, 스승님은 늘 완전히 깨달은 존재처럼 행동하지만은 않는다고 불평했을 때, 그는 웃으면서 그것이 좋은 일이라고 말하였다. “왜냐하면 그렇지 않으면 네가 아직도 네 밖에서 붓다를 찾을 수 있다고 생각하고 있을테니까. 하지만 그는 여기엔 없어.” (책을 읽기 전에, 20쪽)  접기

대부분의 수행은 자기 몸을 뒤덮고 있었던 ‘용의 비닐’을 벗겨내는 데서부터 출발한다. 수행의 시작과 함께, 우리는 우리의 몸과 마음이 얼마나 갑갑하고 흉측한 껍질들로 덮여 있었는지를 자각하게 된다. 기도든 명상이든 헌신이든, 이를 통해 드러나는 첫 번째 비늘은 우리 몸에 각인된 습관적인 긴장이다. 이때 할 일은 단지 가만히 앉아서 긴장된 부위 - 어깨나 등, 턱이나 다리 등 - 의 경직 상태가 드러나기를 기다리는 것이다. 삶에서 갈등이나 어려움을 만날 때마다 우리는 습관적으로 몸을 위축시킨다. 그리하여 빌헬름 라이히가 말하는 ‘성격적 갑옷’이 형성되는 것이다. (2장 마음의 수호자들 : 빛의 천사, 눈물의 바다 56쪽)  접기

‘죽음의 신’은 나치케타에게 거울을 주면서, 거울 속에서 그의 존재의 근원을 찾아내라고 한다. 이 탐구의 밑바닥에서, 명상가는 비어 있음의 경험을 발견할 수 있다. 이 비어 있음은 두 가지 측면을 지니고 있다. 즉 자아의 비어 있음과 허공의 비어 있음이다. (5장 무無이자 모든 것 : 공空의 문)

성 요한에 따르면, 먼저 세속적인 일들에 대한 입맛을 잃는 ‘김각의 어두운 밤’이 찾아온다. 이것은 심각한 상실의 기간이다. 과거에 위안을 주었던 모든 것들이 의미를 상실한다. 가장 찬란한 영광을 맛보고 나서 우리는 가슴의 길에 대해 분명히 알지도 못 한 채 메마르고 황폐한 땅으로 들어간다. 십자가의 성 요한은 이 기간을 자만과 탐욕과 노여움으로부터 인격을 정화하는 인내의 시간으로 묘사한다. (……) ‘감각의 어두운 밤’ 다음에는 ‘영혼의 어두운 밤’이 찾아온다. 여기서는 더욱 깊은 정화와 복종이 요구된다. 이곳은 <구약 성서>에 나오는 욥의 심판에서 보는 것과 같은 혼란과 비탄의 연옥이다. 이 정화의 과정으로부터 오로지 ‘신’만을 향하는 열정적 사랑과 열망이 일어난다. (8장 견성 너머 : 깨달음의 지도, 157-158)  접기

스즈끼 선사는 이렇게 말한다. “엄밀하게 말해서, 깨달음 사람은 없다. 오직 깨달음의 행위만이 있다.” 깨달음을 주장하는 자아가 있다면 그것은 깨달음이 아니다. 대신 그는 이렇게 말을 잇는다. “우리가 이야기하고 있는 것은 순간 순간의 깨달음, 깨달음 다음의 또 다른 깨달음에 대해서이다.(8장 견성 너머 : 깨달음의 지도, 168)  접기
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추천글

아름다운 책이다. 그의 언어는 우리의 호흡만큼이나 단순하면서도 사랑스럽다.
- 나탈리 골드버그 (『뼛속까지 내려가서 써라』의 저자) 

아이들을 깨워 밥을 먹이고 버스에 태워 등교시키는 일은 추운 새벽에 대웅전에서 염불을 외는 것만큼이나 어렵다. 어느 쪽이 어느 쪽보다 낫지도 않고 더 훌륭하지도 않다. 또한 둘 다 매우 지겨운 일이기도 하다. 이 책의 수행과 일상이 모두 중요하며 사실은 하나라는 중요한 사실을 우리에게 알려준다. 수행은 삶에서 달아나는 것이 아니라 그것에 직면하는 일이기 때문이다.
- 게리 스나이더 

잭 콘필드는 영적 삶을 탐구하는 이들에게 이상적인 길벗이다.
- 다니엘 골먼 (심리학자, 경영사상가, 《EQ 감성지능》 저자) 

잭 콘필드는 뛰어난 이야기꾼이자, 훌륭한 스승이다.
- 틱낫한 (승려, 명상가, 평화운동가, 시인) 

깨달음 후에도 삶은 계속된다 - 고광영 

저자 및 역자소개
잭 콘필드 (Jack Kornfield) (지은이) 

태국, 미얀마, 인도에서 승려로 수행한 뒤1 974년부터 세계 곳곳에서 명상수행을 지도하고 있다.
임상심리학 박사이기도 한 그는 미국에 테라와다 불교를 소개한 1세대로 꼽힌다. 통찰명상수행원(Insight Meditation Society)과 스피릿록(Spirit Rock) 명상센터 등 지금은 미국 내 최대 불교 수행 그룹이 된 곳들의 설립자이기도 하다.
100년 전통의 영성 매거진인 영국의 <왓킨스Watkins>지(誌)는 교황, 달라이 라마 등과 함께 매해 그를 ‘현존하는 영성 지도자 100인’에 선정하고 있다.

저서로는 
『마음이 아플 땐 불교심리학The Wise Heart』
『처음 만나는 명상 레슨Meditation For Beginners』, 
『어려울 때 힘이 되는 8가지 명상A Lamp In The Darkness 』, 
『마음의 숲을 거닐다A Path with Heart』, 
『깨달음 이후 빨랫감After the E

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이균형 (옮긴이) 

1958년생으로 전기공학을 전공했고, 20대 후반에 정신세계에 입문한 이래로 영미권의 영성서적을 꾸준히 번역해왔다. 옮긴 책으로 《홀로그램 우주》, 《상처받지 않는 영혼》, 《자발적 진화》, 《우주가 사라지다》, 《그리스도의 편지》, 《예수아 채널링》 등 30여 권과 지은 책으로 《우주의 홀로그래피》가 있다.
최근작 : <우주의 홀로그래피>,<비르발의 지혜문답> … 총 47종 (모두보기)
출판사 소개
한문화 
도서 모두보기
  
신간알림 신청
최근작 : <당당한 육아>,<스누피의 글쓰기 완전정복>,<우리 아이는 어쩌다 입을 닫았을까>등 총 117종
대표분야 : 심리학/정신분석학 17위 (브랜드 지수 55,575점) 


출판사 제공 책소개

1. 깨달음, 그 이후를 이야기하는 드문 책
깨달음을 이야기하는 책은 많습니다. 영원한 현재를 살라, 가슴 뛰는 삶을 살라, 만물과 하나임을 회복하라, 삶이라는 꿈에서 깨어나라…… 등등의 좋은 말을 우리에게 일러줌으로써 수행으로 이끌고, 수행에 대한 마음가짐을 다잡게 합니다. 그러나 그렇게 해서 깨달음을 얻는 뒤에는 어떻게 되는 건가요? 깨달음을 얻는다고 하여 세속을 초월한 어떤 물리적인 공간으로 차원 이동을 하는 것도 아니고, 친구나 가족들과 결별하는 것도 아니며, 생계를 위한 생업에서 자유로워지는 것도 아닙니다. 깨달은 뒤에도 삶은 계속됩니다. 깨달은 채로 삶을 은퇴할 수는 없습니다. 이 책은 수행과 일상을 어떻게 바라보고 조화시킬 수 있는지에 대한 지혜로운 대답들을 간직한 드문 책입니다.

2. 마음 공부의 전 과정을 통찰한다
영성을 고양시키는 책들은 많지만, 수행의 전 과정을 아우르고 조언을 제시하는 책은 적습니다. 이 책은 수행의 각 단계마다 그때 그때 몸과 마음에 어떤 현상이 일어나는지, 그것이 어떤 의미를 가지고 있는지, 그리고 그런 현상들에 어떻게 대응을 하면 좋은지를 친절하게 안내해주고 있어 마음 공부를 하고 있거나 마음 공부에 대해 관심이 있는 이들을 위한 훌륭한 안내서로도 손색이 없습니다. 우리가 어떻게 영적인 탐구를 시작하며, 그 사이에 일어나는 개인적인 불행이나 신비한 영적 체험들을 어떻게 이해하면 좋을지에 대해서도 많은 선각자들의 예를 빌어 소상하게 조언합니다. 그럼으로써 수행의 과정에서 필연적으로 등장하는 어둠과 퇴보의 경험 속에 위축되어 있는 이들에게 용기를 주고, 자신의 매 순간을 긍정할 수 있는 지혜를 줍니다.

3. 수행에 대한 동서양의 지혜를 모았다
서양에서 영성에 대한 공부를 시작하여, 동양에서 실제 수행에 입문한 저자의 이력에서도 예상할 수 있듯이 이 책은 깨달음에 대한 동서양의 지혜를 총 망라하고 있어, 독자에게 제공하는 지적 즐거움도 상당합니다. 장의 앞머리마다 등장하는 선시나 선의 경구들은 읽는 재미를 더하며, 수행의 각 단계마다 그에 해당하는 선사나 구루, 성자들의 일화가 등장하여 그들의 모습에 견주어 자기의 수행을 돌아보게 합니다. <성서>, <숫타니파타>, <역경>, <탈무드>, 이슬람 신비주의인 수피의 잠언에서 한국 출신의 세계적인 선사 숭산 스님의 일화, 그리고 <모리와 함께 한 화요일>, <내가 배워야 할 모든 것은 유치원에서 배웠다> 같은 지극히 현대적인 책들에 이르기까지, 깨달음의 과정을 바라보는 다양한 관점을 만날 수 있습니다. 접기
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공감순 
     
영적 수행과 일상의 조화를 어떻게 이뤄나가야 할 지를 알려주는 책인데 내용이 썩 잘 들어오지는 않습니다.  구매
바다 2013-09-03 공감 (2) 댓글 (0)
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공감
     
깨달음이라는 그 높은 언덕을 올라간 다음, 그걸 몸으로 살아야 하는 일상의 단계, 하산의 단계를 친절하고 균형잡힌 시각으로 안내한다. 수많은 영성서적이 놓치고 있는 점들을 잘 가르쳐주는 소중한 책이기도 하다  구매
할랑이 2014-03-15 공감 (2) 댓글 (0)
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늘 그렇지는 않다

내가 올바른 깨달음을 얻었음을 스승께서 인정하셨던 그 정진 수련 이후 몇 달을 환희 속에서 지내다가, 나는 어느새 좌절에 빠져버렸다. 나중에 나는 단지 토니 패커를 만나보기 위해서 다른 수련회에 참가했다. 어느 날 저녁 강연에서 그녀는 큰 열림을 경험한 후에 사람들이 종종 좌절에 빠지게 된다는 사실을 언급했다. 이것을 듣는 순간, 나의 좌절은 한결 가벼워지기 시작했다. 마치 일어나고 있는 일을 그대로 받아들이는 데에 누군가의 허락이 필요하기나 했던 것처럼 말이다. -p.181

 

언젠가 나는 스승에게 깨달음을 얻었다는 이야기를 들은 적이 있다. 그것은 말뿐이었다. 내게는 아무 일도 일어나지 않았다. 여러 해 전에 어느 선원의 초심자 수행에서 내가 사라지고 희열만이 가득한 체험을 했다. 나는 뻔뻔스럽게도 점검시간에 "나는 깨달았다"고 말했다. 점검을 받고 집으로 돌아왔다. 그러나 그 희열은 오래 가지 않았다. 대신 나는 그 상태가 깨달음이 아니라면 무엇인지 궁금해서 초기경전을 읽게 되었다. 깨달음이 아닌 삼매체험이 얼마나 자주, 많은 사람에게 일어나는 일인지 점차 알게 되었다. 얼마 전 아주 우연히 다시 내게 무언가 일어났다. 그 체험이 아이를 키우면서 하려고 해도 되지 않았던 명상을 가능하게 해 주었다. 그러나 예전의 명상이 아니었다. 치솟는 망상과 혼침이 끝도 없이 계속되다 그것이 잠시 멈추었을 때, 가두어져 있는 과거와 변형된 환영들이 나를 압도했다. 울음이 자주 터져나왔다. 나의 울음과 기억과 무능감과 내면의 중얼거림들...그리고 자주 찾아오는 지나친 피로가 지긋지긋했다. 어디론가 달아나고 싶었다. 그러나 이 모든 것들이 내게 붙어 있어서, 그게 나여서 달아날 곳이 없었다. 달아나지 않겠다고 결심하자 환영들이 달라졌다. 나는 죽고 싶었던 것이 아니었다. 어떻게 이토록 일관되게 달아나고만 있었을까...생각할 무렵 우연히 혜덕화님의 서재에서 이 책을 봤다. 별 생각없이 주문한 책이었다. 그런데 나와 비교할 수 없는 명상지도자들과 깨달은 이들이 수년을 겪었던 황홀과 환희 뒤에 모든 것을 잃고 절망과 좌절 속에 있는 모습을 보았다. 그 모습에서 말할 수 없는 깊은 위로, 안도감을 느꼈다. 마치 내게 일어나고 있는 일을 그대로 받아들이는 데 누군가의 허락이 필요하기나 했던 것처럼 그 지긋지긋하던 것들이 자연스러운 것으로 느껴졌다. 이 책을 읽은 그날 하루는 정말 신비로운 날이었다. 그런 날도 있는 모양이다.

 

새해에 "모든 조건지어진 것은 무상하다"는 말씀을 가슴에 담고 한 해를 보내기로 했었다. 여기 스즈끼 선사의 말이 있다. "늘 그렇지는 않다"(p.182). 정말 위로가 된다. 환희와 희열을 경험한다 해도 늘 그럴 수는 없다. 고통과 울음 속에 있다 해도 늘 그렇지는 않다. 내게 불친절한 누군가에게 잠시 화가 날 수는 있겠지만 그가 늘 그렇지는 않으리라고 생각하니 깊은 증오로 이어지지 않는다. 때로 걷잡을 수 없는 생각과 감정에 빠진다. 근래 그랬었다. 그런데 그 무거웠던 생각들이 순식간에 사라졌다. 그 순간에 그토록 중요해 보였던 감정들이 거짓말처럼 사라졌다. 앞으로도 그렇게 어딘가에 빠질 것이다. 그러면 잠시 웅크리고 앉아 기다려볼 생각이다. 몇 시간이나 며칠, 혹은 몇 달이 될지도 모르지만 늘 그렇지는 않을 것이다. "내가 거기에 감쪽같이 빠져 있었군, 그렇지?"(p.367)하며 웃을지도 모른다. 일어났다 사라지는 것들. 느린 화면처럼 그것들을 본다.

이 책을 다시 읽고 있다. 나 자신에 대한 위로뿐만 아니라 수행지도자들에 대한 터무니없는 환상에 대해서도 생각해 본다. 완벽한 사람은 없다. 누군가에게 완벽한 모습을 기대한다면 그 기대 자체가 비현실적이다. 누가 깨달았는지 그렇지 않은지 알 수 없다. 그러나 올바른 사람은 경지에 있지 않고 태도에 있다. 이 책에 등장하는 많은 수행자들이 몇 해를 황홀경이나 높은 경지에 있다 가족의 외면과 질병, 내면의 좌절을 겪으면서 겸손하게 현재를 사는 법을 깨친다. 그 태도야말로 그들에게 존경심을 갖게 한다. 또한 나를 뭉클하게 한 것은 단 한차례의 특별한 경험 없이 수십 년을 수행해서 그가 얻은 변화가 진솔함이었다는 고백이다. 경전에 부처님께서 선정을 얻은 사람이 나는 선정을 얻었는데 저 사람은 얻지 못했구나 생각한다면 그는 바른 사람이 아니라고 하셨다. 바른 사람은 선정을 얻었느냐 얻지 못했느냐가 아니라 그의 태도에 있다. 초발심이 곧 바른 깨달음이라는 말씀이 떠오른다.  

지금 여기에 있는 것 외에 무엇도 없다. 무엇을 가져도, 무엇을 느껴도 그것을 잃을까 염려하는 순간 평화는 사라진다. 어떻게 지금 여기에 있을까? 오래도록, 정말 지나치게 오래도록 과거와 미래, 후회와 불안으로 살아와서 익숙해지지가 않는다. "있는 그대로 지금 여기에" 라니! 그렇게 살아보질 않았다. 아잔 차 스님이 그것에 대해 이야기하신다.

"숨쉴 시간은 있는가? 결심을 했다면 그냥 거기에 주의를 보내야 한다. 이것이 우리의 수행이다. 어디에 있든지, 무슨 일이 일어나든지 숨을 쉬는 것, 온전히 그 자리에 있는 것, 진실을 보는 것 말이다"-p.83

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우리는 모두 내 삶의 수행자 
예전에 읽었던 책이다.

읽으면서 마음에 와 닿은 글귀들은 있었지만, 별다른 생각 없이 읽고 넘어갔다. 요즘 유식 강의를 들으면서, 강의 하시는 스님은 깨달으셨다고 하시는데, 정말 깨달은 사람 맞나? 의구심이 일어날 때가 있었다. 책을 다시 찾아 읽게 된 이유이다.

그 사람의 신을 신고 십리를 걸어보지 않고는 그 사람에 대해 말하지 말라던 인디언의 속담이 아니더라도, 저렇게 말할 때에는 저렇게 말할 수밖에 없는 무언가가 있겠지. 나는 깨달은 사람이 아니니, 그렇다고 열심히 수행하는 사람도 아니니 섣불리 무어라 말할 수는 없지만, 이 책을 읽고 나니 무언가 이해의 실마리는 잡게 된다.

 "한 불교지도자는 깨달음이 '인격적 변성'을 가져오리라고 기대했다고 말했다. 그러나 실제로는 그것이 '비인격적 변성'이었음을 알고는 놀랐다는 것이다. 변성은 가슴의 열림이지 인격의 변화가 아니다."p261

 깨달은 이후에도 삶은 계속된다. 우리는 신부님, 스님, 수도자에 대해 우리의 관념의 틀 속에서 만든 우상과 신성의 옷을 입혀 놓고는 상대가 조금만 실수를 해도 의심의 눈초리를 보낸다. 하지만 가만히 생각해보면, 수행자 아닌 사람이 어디 있을까?

"아이들을 깨워 밥을 먹이고 버스에 태워 등교시키는 일은 추운 새벽에 대웅전에서 염불을 외는 것만큼이나 어렵다. 어느 쪽이 어느 쪽보다 낫지도 않고 더 훌륭하지도 않다. 또한 둘 다 매우 지겨운 일이기도 하다. 이 책은 수행과 일상이 모두 중요하며 사실은 하나라는 중요한 사실을 우리에게 알려준다, 수행은 삶에서 달아나는 것이 아니라 그것에 직면하는 일이기 때문이다. -게리 스나이더-

유식강의에서 ‘일념단속’을 강조하시는 스님의 말씀이 자주 나온다. 이 책을 읽다가 스님의 말씀과 똑같은 구절을 읽고 깜짝 놀랐다.

“불교계의 심리학에 의하면 카르마의 패턴을 만들어내는 것은 바로 의도라고 가르친다. 모든 행위의 원인과 결과인 카르마는 각 행위에 선행되는 가슴의 의도로부터 나온다. 깨어있지 않으면 우리는 습관과 두려움에 의해 무의식적으로 행동한다. 하지만 자신의 의도에 주의를 기울이고 있으면, 우리는 그것이 ‘두려움의 덩어리’로부터 나오는 것인지, 의도적이고 사려 깊은 관심으로부터 나오는 것인지를 알아차릴 수 있다.” p329

일상생활에서 매 순간 의도를 알아차리기는 참 어렵다. 거의 불가능하다. 상대를 위해 한 말이라고 생각하고 뱉은 말도, 혼자 가만히 생각해보면 ‘친절’의 의도보다는 ‘훈계’의 의도가 숨어 있는 것을 알게 된다. 한 생각 단속만 잘 해도 수행이라던 스님의 말씀에 깊이 공감한다. 그래서 성철스님께서는 ‘자기에게 속지 말라’고 하셨나보다.

책을 정리하고 있다. 이 책도 나와의 이별을 앞두고 있다. 헤어지기 전에 리뷰로 이별 인사를 대신한다.

혜덕화 2013-12-03 공감(5) 댓글(0)
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<이번 생애에서는 여기까지> 1

최 선생님께,

글을 잘(?) 쓰는 줄도 알고, 거절하지 못할 만큼 친하다고 믿기도 해서 청탁하셨지요? 그렇지만 저는 퇴직하면서 이제부터는 아예 한글도 모르는 사람처럼 살자고 다짐을 하고 그 비슷하게 살아온 처지라서 어떻게 글이 잘 써지지 않는군요. 그냥 선생님께 몇 줄 편지로 그간의 소식을 드리고자 합니다.

아시는 것처럼 저는 2009년 2월에 4년 반의 잔여 임기를 반납하고 퇴직을 했습니다. 학생들과 세대 차이가 커서 소통이 어렵다고 느꼈던 것 같습니다. 무엇보다도 지식이나 지성에 회의를 느끼기도 했습니다. 이제 남은 생은 영성을 좇아보자는 생각이었던 것도 같습니다.

그 무렵에 가깝게 지내던 졸업생 한 사람이 <깨달음 이후 빨랫감>이라는 책을 선물했습니다. 저는 그 책에 흠뻑 빠져서 그 해 6월에 바로 그 책의 저자인 잭 콘필드라는 미국인 불교 승려가 설립한 ’Spirit Rock’이라는 명상센터에 가서 1주일간 묵언 수행을 했습니다. 샌프란시스코 근교의 아름다운 산속에서 ‘명상’, ‘깨달음’ 이런 단어들에 빠져서 행복한 시간을 보냈지요.

이것을 시작으로 아난다마르가라는 명상단체에 입문해서 탄트라 철학을 공부하고, 채식을 시작하고 태국의 치앙마이, 인도네시아 발리, 대만과 인도의 여러 도시로 여행을 다녔습니다. 이 여행의 목적은 ‘마음공부’라고도 하겠지만 한 편으로는 따뜻한 나라로 귀촌하기 위한 답사여행이기도 했지요.

11년 1-2월에는 45일간 인도의 주요 도시들을 돌아다니고 12년 2월에 다시 인도의 오로빌이라는 공동체 마을에 한 달을 머물렀습니다. 유네스코가 지원하는 세계 제일의 공동체지요. 한국에서도 공동체를 준비하는 사람들이 견학차 자주 찾는 곳이고 ‘아침 편지’의 고도원 팀과 대구의 정홍규 신부 팀 등도 답사기를 남겼더군요.

많은 분들이 짧은 방문을 아쉬워하며 좋은 인상의 답사기를 남겼지만 저는 여러 날 머물다보니 너무 덥고 음식도 맞지 않아 많이 힘들었습니다. 평범한 인도 사람들의 아귀다툼 같은 일상에 실망하면서 결국 인도식 가르침이나 깨달음이란 것도 그냥 말일뿐이구나 생각도 들었지요. 깨달음이라는 건 어쩌면 신기루일지도 모른다는 생각도 얼핏 있었구요. 멀리서 보면 있는 것 같은데 가까이 가보면 없는 그 신기루 말입니다 ... 이러면서 언뜻 그냥 지리산 근처에서 산채비빔밥이나 먹고 살자고 생각을 하게 되지요.

남들은 10년, 20년 혹은 평생을 바쳐 깨달음을 구한다는데 고작 3년 정도를 어정거리다가 물러선다는 게 어설프지만, 설사 깨달음이라는 놀라운 경지가 있다고 해도 늦게 시작한 공부로 따라가기에는 너무 길이 멀다고 주눅이 든 것이기도 할까요? 아주 머리를 깎고 탁발에 나설 용기는 없었으니까요. ‘이번 생애에서는 여기까지!’하고 타협을 한 것도 같습니다. 깨달음에 대한 욕구마저도 내려놓는다고 거창한 변명을 하면서 인도를 접었습니다.

12년 9월부터 12월까지 넉 달 동안 샌프란시스코 근교의 타말파 연구소라는 곳에서 ‘동작중심표현예술치료’라는 것을 경험했습니다. 동작, 그러니까 춤을 중심으로 그림그리기, 글쓰기 등 작업을 통해서 자신을 발견해가는 프로그램입니다. 이사도라 던컨, 마사 그레이엄의 뒤를 이어 미국의 현대무용을 대표하는 안나 할프린이 세운 학교로 세계적인 명성을 지닌 곳입니다. 역시 구체적인 교육 프로그램이라서 막연한 명상보다는 효과가 있었다고 할까요.

하루 8시간씩 넉 달 동안의 강행군으로 무참히 깨지고 무너지면서 ‘내 모습’을 봅니다. 춤도 못 추고 그림도 못 그리고 영어도 못하고 ... 수업 시간에 그 자리에서 영어로 시를 쓰고 에세이를 쓰라니 죽을 맛이지요.

그런데 다들 잘 하는 겁니다. 미국 학생들은 물론이고 유럽에서 온 젊은이들도 춤이며 그림이며 영어도 곧잘 했지요. 스물일곱 살 불란서 청년은 파티 때 호박죽도 맛있게 끓여왔습니다. 그런 동료(?)들 속에서 하다못해 자전거도 못타는 ‘내 꼴’이 당황스러웠지요.

그렇다고 중간에 돌아올 수도 없고 ... 많이 고통스러워하고 반성하고 고치면서 비워내는 작업을 했습니다. 그러다가 목표가 세워지더군요. 아홉 살 소년으로 돌아가기로 했지요. 잘 하는 건 별로 없지만 천진난만한 아홉 살 소년, 몽정조차 해본 적 없는 순진무구한 아홉 살 소년으로 돌아가기로 목표를 세우고 그 주제로 어찌어찌 졸업공연(?)을 해냈습니다.

꿈만 같군요. 이제 돌아와 정말로 마음을 비우고 지리산 자락에 집을 짓고 들어왔습니다. 이사한 지 다섯 달, 신문은 퇴직하기 2년 전부터 끊었고, 지리산으로 와서는 아직까지 텔레비전도 없이 지내고 있습니다.

제 집 거실에서 바깥을 내다보면 일출이 보이지요. 아침 일찍 거실에 나와 앉아 해뜨기를 기다리고, 낮에는 밭고랑을 두 개쯤 만들면 하루가 갑니다. 잠시 산책을 나가다보면 산꿩이 후드득 날아오르지요. 쑥, 두릅, 머위 등을 따서 전도 부쳐 먹고 국도 끓여 먹고 떡도 해 먹습니다 ... 아무 생각도 하지 않고 그냥 자연친화적으로 살자는 것이 이 시점에서 제 인생의 결론인 것 같습니다.

최 선생님,
이 짧은 편지로 제 원고를 대신해 주세요. 혹시 지리산 근처로 산행하실 선생님들이 연락주시면 기꺼이 안내하겠습니다.

2014년 5월 15일
이 한 섭

추신--여기까지 쓰고 보니 도판(?)에 이름을 올리려고 이리저리 왔다 갔다 하다가 실패한 얘기처럼 되고 말았네요! ... 그래도 다시 보면 여기 내 집이 내 교회이고 내 절이라는 마음/느낌/생각으로 살고 있습니다.
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After the Ecstasy, the Laundry: How the Heart Grows Wise on the Spiritual Path
by Jack Kornfield (Goodreads Author)
 4.03  ·   Rating details ·  5,015 ratings  ·  232 reviews

“Enlightenment does exist,” internationally renowned author and meditation master Jack Kornfield assures us. “Unbounded freedom and joy, oneness with the divine ... these experiences are more common than you know, and not far away.”

But even after achieving such realization — after the ecstasy — we are faced with the day-to-day task of translating that freedom into our imperfect lives. We are faced with the laundry.

Drawing on the experiences and insights of leaders and practitioners within the Buddhist, Christian, Jewish, Hindu, and Sufi traditions, this book offers a uniquely intimate and honest understanding of how the modern spiritual journey unfolds — and how we can prepare our hearts for awakening.

Through moving personal stories and traditional tales, we learn how the enlightened heart navigates the real world of family relationships, emotional pain, earning a living, sickness, loss, and death. (less)
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Paperback, 336 pages
Published October 2nd 2001 by Bantam (first published 2000)
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Steve Woods
Sep 11, 2011Steve Woods rated it it was amazing
Shelves: spirituality
This is a great book. Kornfield has written quite a lot and it's all quality. This book will mean most to those who have been on "the path" for a while; who have struggled with the sense of confusion and doubt from time to time, just not knowing where they are or what they are doing there. That the journey is consistent for all (though not exactly the same) no matter what their tradition is reassuring in many ways. The orientation this work provides and the relaxed way in which it is presented have been of great help to me. It came to me at yet another turning point and helped to push me forward into the place where divisions and differences are melting away. It has been timely. (less)
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James
Aug 01, 2017James rated it really liked it
Shelves: religion-spirituality-gnostic, _openings, adventure-travel-conservation
I'd shelve After the Ecstacy, the Laundry by Jack Kornfield next to Shunryu Suzuki's Zen Mind Beginners Mind.

"In awakening, our whole sense of identity shifts. We let go our small sense of self and enter the unbounded consciousness out of which we come. What becomes known with absolute certainty is that we are not and never have been separate from the world. . . . When our identity expands to include everything, we find peace with the dance of the world. The ocean of life rises and falls within us--birth and death, joy and pain, it is all ours, and our heart is full and empty, large enough to embrace it all" (92-3). 

"Strictly speaking, there are no enlightened people, there is only enlightened activity. . . . What we are speaking about is moment-to-moment enlightenment, one enlightenment after another" (Shunryu Suzuki, 122) 

"Since everything is none other than exactly as it is, one may well just break out in laughter" Long Chen Pa, (281).

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Bish Denham
Oct 10, 2015Bish Denham rated it it was amazing
Shelves: non-fiction
This is not a "how-to" book on how to attain enlightenment, meditate, or become a Buddhist. What it is can best be described by what is written on the back cover. "Drawing on the experiences and insights of leaders and practitioners within the Buddhist, Christian, Jewish, Hindu, and Sufi traditions, this book offers a uniquely intimate and honest understanding of how the modern spiritual journey unfolds -- and how we can prepare our hearts for awaking. Through moving personal stories and traditional tales, we learn how the enlightened heart navigates the real world of family relationships, emotional pain, earning a living, sickness, loss and death."

What became abundantly and wonderfully clear to me as I read this book is that we are all the same. How we choose to make the journey (whether as Buddhist, Christian, Jew, Hindu, etc.) is not important. What is important is that we make the journey. There is no SINGLE way, there is no WRONG way for, it seems, that ALL ways lead us to the same place where we discover we are all ONE and where we have a very similar experience (whether it's called enlightenment, Buddha nature, Christ consciousness, God etc.) If each of us came to understand this single basic truth there would be peace on earth.

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Rachel
Sep 27, 2010Rachel rated it liked it
I didn't like the beginning of the book where Kornfield provides many different accounts of enlightenment. I am not going to reach enlightenment, or go on a week-long meditation retreat, or join a monastery for years. I am just trying to meditate regularly and be here now and see the world for what it is, rather than what I want it to be. 

The second half of the book was better, but I found that the first person narratives interspersed throughout the book took away from the lesson as often as they added. I think I'll try another of the author's books, and see if I like them better. (less)
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Nancy
Feb 15, 2013Nancy rated it it was amazing
This book has been a constant go-to for strength and inspiration since I first read it years ago. It's filled with countless stories and examples of patience, perseverance and grace through the eyes of a man owning his spiritual path. A must-read for anyone that is exploring buddhism or just merely a more spiritual way to life without dogma of a Religion and the social stigmas that go with it.
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Nicole
Jul 07, 2020Nicole rated it it was amazing
Shelves: non-fiction, social-political, philosophy, inspirational, japanese, psychology, health, spirituality, indian, environmental
More of us have experienced moments of enlightenment awakening than we think. The thing is that after we have that moment of transcendence, that feeling of connection to limitless cosmos, that divine love, we're...still ourselves. Because of that, and because so often these moments don't contain an external witness, we might feel we have less experience of spiritual awareness than we do.

This book is a wonderful affirmation of these moments from a wide range of spiritual traditions, though Buddhism remains at the heart. Jack Kornfield's writing and presence in that writing is tremendously loving and compassionate. "After the Ecstasy..." strives to present "enlightenment" as something that is actually quite accessible, and by stripping it of its romanticization, make us realize that we've likely stumbled across it, or at least near it, before.

When I was in my early and mid-twenties, I was thoroughly miserable, both to be around and in my own mind. Every so often, however, the clouds would burst, and I would have a moment of illumination, where everything fit into a harmonious cosmic whole that I was seamlessly a part of. These moments were horribly brief, and after, I would go back to being a mess. I finally understand now that I had yet to do the therapeutic work I needed to hold onto this feeling, and hadn't wanted to face the trauma I was carrying. I've grateful to it for giving me the insight to realize that I was capable of something beyond feeling shitty about myself, but still clung to the wish that it had stuck. Kornfield reassures us that the transience of that blissful state is normal, and I love him for it.

The great teachers of each spiritual traditions are not the exception. We can all experience the mystic, and probably have. It's the everyday that we struggle with, the forgetting of the whole outside the myriad. Still, it's there, whenever we take a moment to tune into whatever brings us closer to it. (less)
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Mati
Nov 08, 2010Mati rated it really liked it
Shelves: 2010, nonfiction
Meditation and recognition of inner self can be the basic stone of every religion and every philosophical movement. The book is just about that. Finding inner self, calm and the satori or whatever you call it in different ways from Hindu, Jewish to Christianity way. The author put synthesis of the movements and religions only to show how one can reach the ecstasy but also that after touching the peak, there is always the day after which is demanding in the same ways as reaching. However when you know bliss of your awaking there is always some craving to touch it again. The book of calm, I would call it. It was interesting to read. (less)
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Meredith
Jan 15, 2020Meredith rated it really liked it
Shelves: do-less-be-more, non-fiction, life-design, meditation
The flavor of the lessons in this book by Jack Kornfield reminds me of the song at the end of The Hobbit 3, "The Last Goodbye" (https://youtu.be/q8ir8rVl2Z4):

"...Over hill and under tree,
through lands where never light has shone,
by silver streams that run down to the sea,
under cloud, beneath the stars,
over snow on winter's morn –
I turn at last to paths that lead home.
And though, where the road now takes me, I cannot tell,
We came all this way, but now comes the day to bid you farewell.
Many ...more
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Lisa Shultz
Oct 31, 2019Lisa Shultz rated it really liked it
Shelves: spiritual
I started this book years ago and didn't finish it but I kept it. I tried again this year and finished it. I had to sometimes force myself to read not because it wasn't well-written but rather because it is best to read it slowly and contemplate along the way.
I found the gates of awakening of value and in particular the gate of sorrow. It explained my a growing compassion for those who are suffering. "It is as if our consciousness has broken open to the struggles of humanity and the earth itself."

I sometimes fight change. I felt a sense of peace when I read, "The deeper our bow to the awesome changing powers of life, the wiser we will be, and when we embrace them, they turn into a rainbow. Every color shines in the awakened heart."

There are many nuggets of wisdom that resonated with me and I will review the notes I took in the future to refresh myself when needed.
And finally, I leave you with this quote: "To use our life to move the world toward compassion and away from suffering is the only thing that matters." (less)
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Sabrina
Feb 19, 2020Sabrina rated it it was amazing
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Joseph Gendron
May 23, 2020Joseph Gendron rated it really liked it
Good stuff from a knowledgeable and experienced teacher.
"Enlightenment is our Inherent State"
"Spiritual Practice is only What You are Doing Now"
"The Wise Heart is at Peace with the Way Things Are"
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Melissa
Jun 27, 2019Melissa rated it really liked it
Shelves: audible, religion-spirituality
As a beginning mediator, the first few chapters were a bit lost on me, but I enjoyed the rest of the book quite a bit.
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Lucy McCoskey
Oct 12, 2018Lucy McCoskey rated it really liked it
at last, common sense advocating living here & now & just plain loving instead of spending the equivalent of 20 years in a cave. as Kornfield points out, you have to deal with the real world & its & your issues eventually. reality happens ...more
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Jason
Nov 06, 2007Jason rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Jack Kornfield has a great knack for writing in a meaningful, pleasant way. You don't get the feeling that he is arrogant or pretentious despite having great knowledge in an assortment of different spiritual disciplines, primarily Buddhism. The basic premise of this book is that even though it's possible to obtain a fantastic sense of enlightenment and bliss on the spiritual path, we eventually have to come back down to our day-to-day lives. After the Ecstasy the Laundry.

This book has numerous snippets from spiritual masters that pertain to the current subject. It's refreshing to hear stories from people experienced not only in Zen, but Judaism, Sufi, and Christian mysticism. As you read this you'll get the sense and depth of Kornfield's skill as a story teller. Not only does he interject these snippets that he obtained from interviewing several teachers, but he also inserts several quotes from mystics like Rumi and Kabir.

One of the things that touched me the most in this book was how human even the wisest of sages turn out to be. Yes, they have experienced profound levels of enlightenment and yes they are wise. However, they still have to deal with family life, children, bills, stress etc. Many have also suffered relationship difficulties as they tried to juggle their spiritual lives with the compromising you have to do in a committed relationship.

Kornfield does a good job of offering practical advice on how to get over spiritual humps in the road. He suggests that we need to look at things with an open heart, an enhanced sense of compassion, and tolerance for others. This is especially poignant considering the fact that so many other people share different opinions than the ones we do. He also admonishes us to enjoy the mystery of life and to live in the present moment. Only by living in the present can we truly experience life and realize the wonder of it all.

What I have described above remains just a glimpse of the things covered in this book. I feel anyone, regardless of religious persuasion, can gain benefit by reading and contemplating the timeless advice contained within it. Read it for yourself and see if you don't agree. (less)
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gina
Aug 21, 2010gina rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: nonfiction, buddhism, spiritual
A well read audio that definitely would do me good to listen to more than once. I've recommended it to at least one friend who follows the sort of principles outlined in the book. At first I thought this was some sort of "this book is only for people who have reached enlightenment and now what do I do" book, but it isn't. It is for anyone seeking spiritual growth but does focus a lot on those who have reached enlightenment and realized "hey, not much has changed" lol. Which serves as a good example for those of us who merely seek but aren't gurus or leading conferences on the topic. Highly recommended for people who want to encourage love and kindness in their lives. As I try to get rid of the nasty people who surround me in places I can't escape (work, extended family, hell, even everyday events like shopping!) this book made me realize that you can't get rid of these people. No matter how bad or wrong their behavior is, you can only love and accept them. It is very hard not to let them affect you though. I am striving more and more to be who I am on the surface and also inside. (what you see is what you get). And books like this help create that balance. It also makes me really want to go to a retreat lol! (less)
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Ben
May 24, 2011Ben rated it it was ok
There seems to be a sincere attempt to reconcile the world's various spiritual traditions, but in so doing there is a dilution of the messages of each tradition. In trying to find common ground, there is a sense of groundlessness.
In his previous book, "A Path With Heart", Kornfield makes the argument that if one is to achieve fruit in any spiritual practice they must dig one deep whole and stick with their practice; rather than digging a multitude of shallow wholes. Well, in this book he seems to contradict this message, picking from various traditions without providing a sense of cohesiveness.
Although the goal of vanilla-izing all of the world's great spiritual traditions into one mega-spirituality is noble; it seems to only dilute the potential for genuine transformation found in sticking with one path, rather than meandering about from one path to another. (less)
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Donnae
Jul 02, 2008Donnae rated it it was amazing
Shelves: meditation-spirituality
I have a complicated relationship with laundry. I have been thwarted from clean clothing by power outages, a literal bus load of youth campers and the need for one last quarter. The guys at my laundromat duck and laugh when they see me walk through the door. So when I was looking at a list of Jack Kornfield's books and saw this title I knew that I had to read it.

In the book Kornfield discusses the process of spiritual enlightenment and how to return to the world as part of the cycle. I like how he does not get in the way of his subject matter. In several of the books about meditation and spirituality I have read recently the author talks more about themselves then the subject at hand. I also appreciated the myriad stories and quotes Kornfield uses to illustrate his topic. (less)
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Kristen
Feb 21, 2009Kristen rated it really liked it
Took awhile for me to get through, because it was so thought provoking. I found it, for lack of a better word, enlightening. I loved the comparison of different religious and philosophical teachings, and I very much liked how it delved into the "real life" aspect of each person's spiritual journey. We can't all go living in monestaries, convents or retreat houses....most of us live in the real world and have to balance spirituality and secularism. The only difficulty I had with this book was some of the terminology. I have never studied Eastern Philosophy so some of the jargon was lost on me, but I do plan to read more and learn more about the Eastern Religions. I did get a lot out of reading this and recommend it highly! (less)
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Karen
Apr 26, 2015Karen rated it liked it
I'm rating this book which I only read 3/4. Some gems, in here of interest. But at some point
, it felt to me that most of the Seekers who basically stepped out of society to find themselves, had a reason to want to step out. Eventually, what they were put in a position to have to step back into the normal demands of life and face the challenges that caused them to look elsewhere. Life is a challenge, period. And we have to experience it no matter how much you retreat, physically, spiritually or emotionally. I felt the book sad in some ways, that the quest was only partially or temporarily fulfilling. It was an honest perspective. But I did not feel inspired to want to follow their journeys. (less)
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Steven Stark
Jan 20, 2010Steven Stark rated it really liked it
This is another uplifting, encouraging book from Jack Kornfield. It's not a heavy read, but more of a meditation on life and spirituality. It consists mostly of stories and quotations from spiritual teachers in the Buddhist, Christian, Jewish and Sufi traditions, plus more ideas from famous historical figures, etc.

If you like great quotations, read this with a pencil in hand, as you will be circling things on ever other page. Kornfield writes with a very straightforward, nurturing style which reeks of sincerity. A nice guy for sure - and one that can sit for days at a time in a remote Thai forest! (less)
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Heidi The Reader
Aug 27, 2013Heidi The Reader rated it really liked it
Shelves: the-numinous-book-club, buddhism, self-help, spiritual-studies, non-fiction
After the Ecstasy, the Laundry is a masterpiece. Kornfield outlines the shifts of consciousness that we all make each day and how even enlightened monks struggle with their spirituality and families. He brings examples from different religions to create a unified picture of enlightened spirituality and expresses the hope that by raising our own individual consciousness that we may in time change the world. May it be so.

This was the first book that I have read by Jack Kornfield. I may need to pick up A Path with Heart now because I enjoyed this one so much. (less)
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Caroline Crayons
Jan 29, 2010Caroline Crayons rated it it was amazing
Shelves: self-improvement
Jack Kornfield is one of my ....I was going to say "heros" -- role models and teachers. The best thing about him is his humility. There is so much of him in this book, but also so much of other leaders and teachers. I've read a lot of Buddhist writings already. This book touched me deeply. I want to read it again as soon as I have digested the first reading.
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Rose
Mar 18, 2010Rose rated it it was amazing
The book I needed at exactly the right time. His description of the spiritual life meshed with real life was so accurate for western life. I can't take time out to practice full time. Spiritual growth happens in fits and starts and in the meantime the kids have melt downs and bills roll in. It's all in divine order. Thank you, Jack.