Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Broadcasted from Hogen Sensei’s home in Pennsylvania, 6/27/2020
Blue Cliff Record, Case #87
“Medicine and sickness heal each other. The whole world is medicine. Where do you find the self?” Speaking on this simple, powerful koan via Zoom from his home, Hogen Sensei explores how poison is transformed into medicine, how medicine can be misused as poison, and how we can meet the great challenge of this time with honesty, clarity, and humility, within the freedom of no-self. He emphasizes that rage itself can heal, quoting Zenju Earthlyn Manuel Sensei, who writes of anger as “a burning from which I am able to speak on injustice from a place that includes the liberating nature of all beings.”
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Mountain Monastery – Broadcasted from Hogen Sensei’s home in Pennsylvania 04/19/2020
From the Eihei Koroku
Please note that there are a few words in this recording that are not clear due to technical difficulties.
From his home in rural Pennsylvania, Hogen Sensei offers this talk on the path of realization as this world at this time—a Buddha field manifesting wisdom and wholeness of all phenomenon—which is our world, the world of things and people, where nothing seems certain. We take refuge in the three treasures of Buddha, dharma and sangha especially by looking deeply within ourselves, at our honest feelings, and our tenderness and fears. “Emotions can also become refuges,” he says, by returning to our roots, our willingness to witness difficulty, to practice our feelings and not neglect the simple joys and surprise in day to day life.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 03/08/2020
Exploring the study text for the 2020 Spring Ango, Dogen’s Mountains and Rivers Sutra, Hogen opens the Spring Ango at the Zen Center of New York City, reviewing the meaning and history of Ango, a three-month period of intensive training and dedication to practice. Ango helps us realize that our practice is about aspiration, not accomplishment. We become more alive through increased intimacy with the teaching. Ango is one answer to the question, “What are you going to do about it?” It invites us to turn both inwards with concentration to our practice, and outwards with compassion to the world outside the Monastery.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 03/07/2020
True Dharma Eye, Case 260
Hogen Sensei asks: How do you actually wake up, using the events of your life to become real? In the koan, the monastic asks Caoshan “Where do we go to avoid the heat?” We come to practice for answers to the “heat,” the many forms of delusion and suffering. Sensei says that even when suffering we can be present with fundamental acceptance and love, and then “no suffering can reach there”. There is a goodness that does not belong to bad or good judgements, and wherever you may find yourself, you are standing in the midst of the Buddha Field. Each thing is whole and complete, so, start with yourself and be present.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 03/06/2020
Working with the Diamond Sutra, Hogen Sensei asks: “How may we overcome the fear of birth and death and arrive at the state that is as indestructible as a diamond?” To cultivate the life of the bodhisattva, as the Buddha urges us, we can question and examine the illusion of the fixed sense of “me” and dedicate our efforts to liberate all beings. Even in the midst of our karma, we can lift away the defilements that obscure the luminous mind which sees all things with clarity. In a gentle and non-obsessive way, we can continuously turn toward the Bodhisattva Path.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 02/23/2020
In approaching a Zen koan, Hogen Sensei encourages us to let go of our passion to acquire understanding by grasping for answers. Rather, if we can let teaching stories begin to move us without grasping, our whole life can begin to unfold more clearly. Toward this end he explores Pablo Neruda’s famous poem “Keeping Quiet” and a koan, “Stop the Distant Temple Bell,” as both bringing fuller awareness to our lives and to the fundamental questions which bring us to spiritual practice: what is this life of ours, and how can we engage it in the wholeness of our being?
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 02/16/2020
The Blue Cliff Record, Case 14
Where is the place where the absolute nature of reality meets the relative details of our lives? The place where each is identical to the other? The “teachings of a whole lifetime” referenced in this koan presented by Hogen Sensei comes down to the practice and realization of the Buddha, the “appropriate statement” perhaps when the self is seen and released and forgotten, when the absolute nature of reality is present in the relative aspects of our life, in every step of our practice.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 02/15/2020
Shantideva taught about guarding our minds as you would tame a wild elephant, using “the rope of mindfulness” to hold the elephant on all sides. Thinking we can control outcomes, on the other hand, says Hogen Sensei, generally leads to trouble for ourselves and others. Awakening to the disasters we cause can be humbling, but may also awaken the “guardians of mind,” which allow mindful activity and non-harming to thrive.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 12/08/2019
On Sunday, December 8, Hogen Sensei gave the bodhisattva precepts to Donna Nicolino in a jukai ceremony after a week of training at Fire Lotus Temple. In addition to the hand-made rakusu and lineage chart of the ancestors, Donna received the dharma name Dojaku, meaning “Dynamic Tranquility.”
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Transmission of the Light, Case 31
Zen Mountain Monastery, 11/21/2019
What does it mean to be ill, yet be free from illness? This may be one of the most difficult ways that we can encounter nonduality. Hogen Sensei reminds us that we should not pretend that our experience of sickness does not exist, even though there is no “I” that can ultimately be found. If our work is seeing into the emptiness of things, how do we offer the Dharma when someone, perhaps ourselves, is ill or suffering?
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 11/03/2019
Blue Cliff Record, Case 79
Hogen Sensei explores the question: How can we understand the difference between absolute and relative? How can we rest in emptiness and yet manifest in each situation as true wisdom and compassion? Using T’ou Tzu’s famous koan as an entry into the mystery of absolute and relative truths, Sensei looks at morality that is not just absolute and not just relative, but specific to the situation. Our task is to investigate our life, using these two fundamental truths to find the wisdom that will eventually arise from practice.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 11/02/2019
Hogen Sensei uses singer Aimee Mann’s lyrics, “For the sake of momentum, I have allowed my fears to get larger than life,” to explore alternatives to the momentum of karma. While we remain embedded in our accumulated karma, frozen in place by our fears, how can we open our hearts? Moments of a quiet mind in zazen, in which there is a sense of nothing else—this is the doorway into wholeness. Hogen Sensei reminds us of this and asks: “Right now you are alive. So what is the plan? What will you do with it?”
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 10/31/2019
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Dharma Encounter
Zen Mountain Monastery, 10/27/2019
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Mountain Monastery, 10/23/2019
True Dharma Eye, Case 141. The Buddha is expected to give a talk, but, shortly after taking the teacher’s seat, abruptly gets up and leaves. His attendant, Mahākāśyapa, claims the dharma has been expounded – that is, that the talk has been given. How can this be? Hogen Sensei explains the wisdom teaching – the just sitting – in the Buddha’s silence.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 10/13/2019
In this question and answer session with sangha members, Hogen Sensei explores The Second Noble Truth—the cause of suffering is craving, or thirst.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
True Dharma Eye, Case 52
Zen Mountain Monastery, 09/27/2019
What is the nourishment we need to sustain ourselves, to take a good look at our own actions, to awaken and live from a realized perspective? Delusion creates suffering for ourselves and all beings, so how do we leap free, like the golden fish, from the net? Or, is living in the net just fine as it is? Hogen Sensei explores awakening, realization, and practice in the “real thing” of our lives.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 09/15/2019
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 09/12/2019
Please note – the audio at the start is of variable quality but improves during the talk.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, 09/08/2019
Geoffrey Shugen Arnold, Roshi
Zen Mountain Monastery, New York, Sunday 05/29/2022
Dharma Encounter at the Conclusion of the Ocean Gathering Sesshin (and concluding the Spring Ango)
Using the Parable of the Good Physician from the Lotus Sutra, Shugen Roshi brought up questions for students to engage with him in Dharma Encounter. How can we be skillful when we are under the sway of our defilements and we don’t want to turn towards the medicine? How do we help others when they don’t want to take the medicine? When someone perceives medicine as poison, what is skillful? These and other question were engaged in live, unrehearsed dialog at the end of our 90 day ango training period.
Geoffrey Shugen Arnold, Roshi
Zen Mountain Monastery, New York, Saturday 05/28/2022
From Master Dogen’s Shobogenzo Fascicle “Bussho: Buddha Nature”
When do the seeds of our practice ripen? Will our Buddha Nature appear at some moment in the future, or is it present now and we just don’t see it? In this talk, Shugen Roshi explores the relationship between practice and time, how we practice for the now and observe the cause and effect of our karma over time.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Mountain Monastery, New York, Friday 05/27/2022
Dharma Talk during the Ocean Gathering Sesshin
Drawing on the lyrics of the song ‘Momentum’ by Aimee Mann, Hogen Sensei illuminates how much our lives are driven by fear. What is the alternative to fear? When we are fearful, what is it that we do not want to feel? Instead of a strategy of numbness, how do we turn towards and disrupt the momentum of our fearful karmic patterns?
Geoffrey Shugen Arnold, Roshi
Zen Mountain Monastery, New York, Thursday Evening 05/26/2022
Dharma Talk during the Ocean Gathering Sesshin Fusatsu Ceremony
To navigate the Path, the Buddha taught an approach of skillful means. But what does that term mean for us as unique individuals, with our own karma, and in a world that is not fixed? In this talk, Shugen Roshi takes up this essential teaching as part of a Renewal of Bodhisattva Vows ceremony.
Danica Shoan Ankele, Senior Monastic and Dharma Holder
Zen Mountain Monastery, New York, Wednesday 05/25/2022
How does one accomplish Buddhahood? And how long does it take to do so? Using the story of the Dragon King’s Daughter from the Lotus Sutra, senior Monastic Shoan Ankele investigate this precarious question and offers guidance on the art of letting go.
Ron Hogen Green, Sensei
Zen Mountain Monastery, New York, Sunday 05/22/2022
What is true compassion and how do we develop it? If Buddhist teachings say a compassionate heart is our birthright, what must we do to reveal it? With Leonard Cohen’s song Sisters of Mercy as a muse, Hogen Sensei explores the nature of compassion, its relationship to wisdom and loving-kindness, and the vital role our own suffering plays.
Geoffrey Shugen Arnold, Roshi
Zen Mountain Monastery, New York, Sunday 05/15/2022
From the Book of Serenity, Case 18 – Zhaozhou’s Dog
If buddha nature is ineffable, if it has no characteristics, then how do we turn towards it? We want to direct our attention towards it so we can examine it and realize it. But it doesn’t exist. It doesn’t have a form. So how do we study that which is our true self, our true nature? Shugen Roshi takes up these questions using the well known koan “Does a dog have buddha nature?”
Degna Chikei Levister, Senior Lay Student
Zen Center of New York City, Fire Lotus Temple, Sunday 05/15/2022
How do we bring all of who we are into practice? How do we embrace the full reality of the world while not getting turned around by external causes and conditions? In this talk, Chikei Levister explores the teachings of Zen Master Hongzhi on the practice of true reality.
Geoffrey Shugen Arnold, Roshi
Zen Mountain Monastery, New York, Sunday 05/08/2022
From Master Wu-men’s Gateless Gate, Case 35 – Ch’ien and Her Soul Are Separated
How do we remain undivided amidst the divisive forces within and around us? And where can we truly go to seek wholeness in our lives? In this talk, Shugen Roshi explores the experience of division and wholeness, and how Zen practice brings us closer to the heart of the matter.
Jody Hojin Kimmel, Sensei
Zen Center of New York City, Fire Lotus Temple, Sunday 05/08/2022
How do we practice fearlessness in the midst of fear? In this talk, Hojin Sensei invokes the dragon – a being that is often referenced in the Zen tradition as an embodiment of our enlightened nature. It is through turning around and facing the dragon with direct, kind awareness, she says, that we develop our capacity for fearlessness.