Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Paperback Zen Teachings of Jesus Book

ISBN: 0824514815

ISBN13: 9780824514815

Zen Teachings of Jesus

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$7.59
Save $7.36!
List Price $14.95
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Book Overview

This is the spiritual side of Zen, that art to trust and accept life that coincides with the core of the Gospel message. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

The Future of Christianity

It was the strangest thing. As I read, Gospel passages kept popping into my head. When I read what came next, the author chose the same aforementioned passages. As a perpetual "beginner" at zazen, I would have liked to have someday written this book, for it tells it as I presently see it, and , I believe, how many more Christians are seeing "IT". As we grow in our assimilation of the "Good News" we discover that this "news" as it comes in the Gospel of Mark: "Metanoiesete[Change the way you think about reality] for the Kingdom of Heaven is within you". This book is as helpful as Suzuki's "Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind". As scientific knowledge grows, we have an increasing sense that the "Tao" of it all needs neither time nor space in which to exist, but rather remains inconceivable within us. Someone once related to me the motto for zen should be, "NOW, HERE, THIS!" I would add a fourth, "WITHIN!" To add to this, the Christian belief that the "Inconceivable" has conceived of Tao's Very Self within a young Jewish girl so as to reveal Tao in human signs, is just impossible to believe without overflowing with gratitude, joy and love. A great book and I heartily recommemnd it.

The Zen of Jesus's way in the world

Kenneth Leong's book will let you see a very different Jesus. For me, it was the first time that anyone has helped me win a strong sense of how Jesus might well have lived his life, how he might have come across to the people he met, and of how he walked out the door of the house each day and went about waiting on God (and not for God)in the experience of everyday life, in every encounter met along the road. Leong does this by taking the `religion" of the everyday, Zen, and especially the Zen that keeps to its Taoist and Chinese roots, and translates this Zen into a series of key qualities, key ways of being in the world. These include a powerful and sustained awareness, insight, simplicity, gentleness, a devotion to the ordinary (as opposed to the supernatural), zest for the everyday encounter, a strong sense of humor, and a deep acknowledgement of the paradox at the root of everything. This is not the Zen of a militant monasticism, the Zen of Japan.This Zen is the art of living, of accepting the world as it is, and of desiring not what you don't have but what you already are. When the key attributes of this way of being in the world are puzzled out, they seem to fit how Jesus might very well have been, of how he encountered the Spirit at table, on the road, at the well, and on the cross. Leong also argues that the Gospels and Jesus' words are best seen as Zen-like koans or puzzles that often have no rational solution, puzzles that jar the seeker into a completely different way of seeing the world, of finding the path to the I AM.Here is the biggest koan of all: Jesus saying, I am the Way. Many Christians believe that Jesus was saying, "Believe in me [the Christ] for I am the only Way to God." The words of Jesus have been used to shore up the orthodoxy of the established church or the fundamentalist's vision of the Bible as the inerrant Word of God.Leong struggles with this koan and comes to a different, more Gnostic view: Paraphrasing Leong, he renders this koan as: The path of the I AM [is] the way. Leong's hard struggle with the `I am the Way' koan helps the reader find his own reaction to Jesus' words. Here is my feeble attempt to understand I am the Way. "The path to the Kingdom is found through my way of being in the world, my way of attemding to and knowing the ordinary miracle of the world. Follow this way or path to freedom, to finding the Kingdom in our midst." Leong's interpretation of the resurrection is very brave. He sees the resurrection not as the event of the bodily raising of the dead Jesus, but rather the transformation in the disciples that was won in Jesus' deep acceptance of death as a reality of life, as his way of overcoming [the fear of] death. Jesus waited on death, where waiting means that he attended to and underwent the pain and suffering of death as the last and ultimate path toward life lived in the Presence. This extraordinary acceptance finally opened the eyes of the disciples.The Zen Teachings of Jesus is the

A Smile Behind the "Letter"

One of my biggest gripes with Christianity, the religion of my childhood, had been the way that it seemed at some levels to preach indiscriminate equality and tolerance, while at the same time having the tendency to set people against one another. Kenneth Leong's book helped me to sort out this conundrum by providing a key element that had been lacking in all of my, and many others', somber attempts: laughter! Mr. Leong speculates, for instance, that Jesus' "commands" often place intentionally ridiculous demands on his listeners as a way of moving them out of their preconcieved -- and all too often idolized -- versions of "holiness." When a person closely considers a commandment like "if your right eye offends thee, pluck it out", it becomes painfully visible that no such plucking is possible. In the moment of readjustment -- the moment that is repeatedly created by Jesus, one of the truest Zen masters -- a person sudddenly becomes aware of the futility of "fighting". When we stop fighting, we let go. When we let go, it becomes easy to "love our enemies": especially when we realize that they are our own prejudices and hang ups! The possibility of loving one's enemies ties back into my gripe with Christianity -- it says love your enemies, but then seems to create more enemies. Kenneth Leong's book reveals that it is not the poetry of a subtly smiling Jesus that has caused such battles, but the way that it is often overlooked. One of the most interesting and enjoyable things that I noticed while reading Mr. Leong's book, is the way that it not only speaks of Jesus' Zen Teachings, but it does so in such a Zenlike way. The author must have went through quite a battle to be able to come to the point where he could write such a simple and profound interpretation of Jesus' truly beautiful insight to the art of living. In comaprison, my overpersonalized, convoluted, and perhaps perplexing account of Mr. Leong's book at least serves as a testament to its thought provoking and eye opening message.I highly recommend this book!

K. Leong has done a great service to the world.

I have been piecing together my personal insight together for many years concerning the words of Jesus. On occasion I would talk with people about it. I received in return many quirky smiles and condencending attitudes which is what many of you readers today may have also received when you approached the same 'sacred' subject' . It was just better not to talk about it. The way I saw Jesus and the more traditional views were radically different. And much of which I perceived cannot be put into words and, if you understand the nature of this book you will understand what I am referring to. So imagine my extreme joy at finding this gem of a book. I don't care what people think, I really don't, but it is nice to find 'like thinking ' individuals on a subject that is so expansive and yet yields so little fruit. This book is a wonderful find. You will be glad you found it too. For me it clarifies what I have found myself and puts it into a organized fashion that I have not had time to do. This book is not a huge tome and yet it covers an impressive depth and wide range of thought and non-thought. The presence of J. Krishnamurti is very obvious to me. His unique way of cutting through to the heart of the matter is what Leong has brought to this book. Mr Leong also uses quotes from spiritual teachers troughout time in a compelling and enlightening way. Thank you Kenneth Leong. You have done the world a great service.

A "must-read" for the serious seeker....

Every once in a while I come across a work that I want to give to everyone I know with the admonition "You have to read this book." _The Zen Teachings of Jesus_ is such a book.Using parables from the Gospels, Mr. Leong finds and follows the common threads woven through Zen and Christianity, explaining them in a way that is at once illuminating, profound, and very accessible. As an example, I have had many problems over the years with the notions of sin and good and evil. It always seemed to me that the Christians were onto something but did not have it quite right, and that the Buddhists would not talk about it at all. Mr. Leong approaches these topics with the deftness of an Aikido master, and, in two or three chapters (with a little help from C. S. Lewis), sets everything in order. His chapter entitled "The Usual Hell," where he talks about the "fire, worms, monsters, and secrets of hell" (there are nine secrets) from a Zen perspective! is worth the purchase of the book all by itself.There are a few books in my spiritual library that I go back to again and again, like old friends. This will be one of them. I bought it three weeks ago, and I am already on my third reading. I recommend it heartily to anyone searching for a fresh perspective on Zen or Christianity, or for the common avenues that run through both paths. It is a unifying experience.You have to read this book.
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured