Posted 
02. Mar, 2010 by 
                Hokai Sobol                                                                             “When in doubt, bow.” 
– anonymous master
 
 
Now we are conscious evolutionary beings, an evolving intelligence  becoming aware of its own potential to go beyond present limitations.  This very well applies to the way we go about Dharma. Living Dharma is  about discovering the radical, indestructible, dynamic continuity, and  then serving it fully, by best means available, for the benefit of  everyone. 
 A Project for the New Buddhist Century 
 The days of initial immigrant Dharma are gone, but mainstream  Buddhists still tend to frame a lot of their thinking in East/West  terms, so the most frequently made threefold division isn’t View,  Meditation, and Action, or even Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha, but instead  it’s Zen, Tibetan Buddhism, and Vipassana. Perhaps it’s due to  marketplace pressure and the ubiquitous brand™ management, that  influence our classifications. Or perhaps it’s an attempt to create an  impossible diversity, for these three modes of the tradition have never  co-existed alongside, their historical forms never touching in any  manner whatsoever. What will come of them in a shared timespace remains  to be seen. Meanwhile, we also have a number of Buddhisms known by their  national designation, including Korean, Chinese, but also American  Buddhism. 
 A different distinction, however, needs to be made. What we ought to  discern at this point is the three horizons, invisible to classical  teachings, within which all previous threefold divisions, including the  Zen-Tibetan-Vipassana, can be approached, practiced and interpreted: the  strongly felt but often unnamed traditional, modern, and postmodern  frameworks.  
 Because these frameworks include worldviews, identities, values,  needs, and self-evident truths, they exert huge influence on the way  Dharma in any form is understood, practiced, organized, and promoted.  Typically they produce fundamentalist, rationalist, and relativist  approaches to every aspect of Sangha, of Dharma, and of Buddha.  
 In terms of historical development, traditional precedes modern which  precedes postmodern. There’s an undeniable organic continuity between  them. Nonetheless, because of a dialectic tension, the three are  notorious for deep mutual distrust, known at large as culture war. Such  behavior is somewhat tragicomical, being reminiscent of actions by three  generations in a dysfunctional family. As Frederick Jackson Turner  wrote, “The evolutionarily later always subsumes and includes the  evolutionarily earlier.” 
 Whether our practice is in the Vipassana, Zen, Tibetan, or any other  stream of Dharma with headquarters in either East or West, we may go  about it in any of the three ways. And any of these three ways has  moderate and extreme manifestations. Traditional brings many values to  the table, but can also produce rigidity and dogmatism. Modern  approaches will emphasize pragmatism and critical inquiry, while often  sliding into rationalism and reductionism. Postmodern approaches will  assert the need for sensitivity and inclusion, and yet discard the many  virtues of tradition and rationality as oppressive and limiting, while  unwittingly paving the way for extreme relativism. 
 Now, the way to go forward is to develop and sustain objectivity in  relation to all these, because we need their healthy aspects to  establish a robust Dharma for the 21st century. To midwife a relevant,  emergent Buddhadharma, we need what’s best in traditional, modern, and  postmodern stages of psychological, cultural, and institutional  unfolding, in addition to the unhindered ultimate realization, however  defined, measured, or tested. In the words of the Integral philosopher  Ken Wilber, we must “transcend and include.” That, in short, is the  basis for a new Buddhist century.
2 comments:
Hey William,
I'm glad to hear that you're digging the articles on the magazine. :-D
-Vince
I am - very much. The new Buddhist Geeks site rocks and the article are a great addition to an already great Buddhist resource.
Peace,
Bill
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