"God, Emptiness, and the True Self" by Abe Masao



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ABE MASAO  

God, Emptiness, and the True Self

Abe Masao (b. 1915) is a disciple of both Hisamatsu Shin’ichi and 



Nishitani Keiji, and maintained a close contact with D. T. Suzuki during 

the last ten years of his life. 

After studying law, philosophy, and comparative religion at Japanese 

universities, Abe attended Columbia University and Union Theological 

Seminary on a Rockefeller Research Fellowship. He was lecturer at Otani 

University, Kyoto University, and Hanazono Zen College and a full profes­

sor of philosophy at Nara University of Education. He has held numerous 

visiting professorships, among others at Columbia University, the 

University of Chicago, Carleton College, Claremont Graduate School, 

Princeton University, etc., and was appointed full professor at Claremont 

College. He has lectured with exceptional frequency in Japan and the 

United States, including such important lectureships as the Berry Lecture 

at the University of Hawaii and the Stewart Lecture in World Religion at 

Princeton University. 

The Japan Foundation sponsored his study trips to England, the 

European continent, India, etc., where he also presented noted papers at 

innumerable conferences and symposia. Professor Abe is a prolific writer 

whose essays appear frequently in such learned journals as The Eastern 



Buddhist,  Japanese Religions,  Japan Studies,  Indian Philosophy and Culture

Young BuddhistInternational Philosophical QuarterlyReligious StudiesJournal 

of Chinese PhilosophyTheologische Zeitschrift, etc., and he contributed chap­

ters to many books as well as articles in Japanese. 

Abe Masao has also translated classics like D¿ gen and works by Nishida 

and Hisamatsu into English. 

His professorship at Claremont College may well be seen as a first 

bridgehead of the Kyoto School on the American continent. 

A Zen master said, “Wash out your mouth after you utter the word 

‘Buddha.’ ” Another master said, “There is one word I do not like to 

* “God, Emptiness, and the True Self,” The Eastern Buddhist II/2 (1969): 15-30. 

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From the World Wisdom online library: www. 

worldwisdom.com/public/library/default.aspx



The Buddha Eye 

hear, and that is ‘Buddha.’”  Wu-tsu Fa-yen (Jap.: H¿en, d. 1104), a 

Chinese Zen master of the Sung dynasty, said, “Buddhas and 

Patriarchs are your deadly enemies; satori is nothing but dust on the 

mind. Rather be a man who does nothing, just leisurely passing the 

time. Be like a deaf-mute in the world of sounds and colors.” At the 

close of his life, Dait¿ (1282-1338) of the Kamakura era of Japan left 

the following death verse: 

I have cut off Buddhas and Patriarchs;  

The Blown Hair (Sword) is always burnished;

When the wheel turns,  

The empty void gnashes its teeth.  

Or in Kobori Nanrei’s translation: 

Kill Buddhas and Patriarchs;  

I have been sharpening the sword Suimo;

When the wheel turns [the moment of death],

ÿ¥nyatþ gnashes its teeth.  

Chao-chou (Jap.: J¿sh¥, 778-897), a distinguished Zen master of 

T’ang China, while passing through the main hall of his temple, saw 

a monk who was bowing reverently before Buddha. Chao-chou 

immediately slapped the monk. The latter said, “Is it not a laudable 

thing to pay respect to Buddha?” 

“Yes,” answered the master, “but it is better to go without even a 

laudable thing.” 

What is the reason for this antagonistic attitude toward Buddhas 

and Patriarchs among the followers of Zen? Are not Buddhas 

enlightened ones? Is not Sakyamuni Buddha their Lord? Are not 

the Patriarchs great masters who awakened to Buddhist truth? What 

do Zen followers mean by “doing nothing” and “empty void”? 

There is even the following severe statement in the Lin-chi lu 

(Jap.: Rinzairoku), one of the most famous Zen records of China. 

Encountering a Buddha, killing the Buddha;  

Encountering a Patriarch, killing the Patriarch;

Encountering an Arhat, killing the Arhat;  

Encountering mother or father, killing mother or father;

Encountering a relative, killing the relative,  

Only thus does one attain liberation and disentanglement

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God, Emptiness, and the True Self 

from all things, thereby becoming completely unfettered and 

free. 

These words may remind some readers of the madman described 



in Nietzsche’s Die Fröhliche Wissenschaft who shouts, “God is dead! 

God stays dead! And we have killed Him.” Are Zen followers who 

kill Buddhas to attain liberation madmen such as Nietzsche 

described? Are they radical nihilists in Nietzsche’s sense? Are they 

atheists who not only reject Scriptures but also deny the existence 

of God? What do they mean by the “liberation” that is attained only 

by killing Buddhas and Patriarchs? 

To answer these questions properly and to understand Zen’s 

position precisely, let me call your attention to some more Zen say­

ings. 


A Zen master once said: “Let a man’s ideal rise as high as the 

crown of Vairocana Buddha (highest divinity), but let his life be so 

full of humility as to be prostrate even at the feet of a baby.” 

In the “Verses of the Ten Ox-Herding Pictures,” Kuo-an Chi-yuan 

(Jap.: Kakuan), a Zen master of the Sung dynasty, said: 

Worldly passions fallen away,  

Empty of all holy intent  

I linger not where Buddha is, and

Hasten by where there is no Buddha.  

What do all these examples mean? When a Zen master said, 

“Cleanse the mouth thoroughly after you utter the word ‘Buddha,’” 

or “There is one word I do not like to hear, and that is ‘Buddha,’” he 

sounds like a recent Christian theologian who, by means of linguis­

tic analysis, insists that the word “God” is theologically meaningless. 

The ancient Chinese Zen master, though unfamiliar with the disci­

pline of linguistic analysis, must have found something odious 

about the word  “Buddha.” The Christian theologian who empha­

sizes the inadequacy of the word  “God” still points to the ultimate 

meaning realized in the Gospel. In other words, he seems to con­

clude that not God but the word “God” is dead. Zen’s position, how­

ever, is more radical. Statements such as “Buddhas and Patriarchs 

are your deadly enemies” and “I have cut off Buddhas and 

Patriarchs,” and emphasis on “doing nothing” and the “empty void” 

take us beyond the Death-of-God theologians. This seems especially 



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The Buddha Eye 

to be true of Lin-chi’s above-mentioned saying: “Encountering a 

Buddha, killing the Buddha.” 

What is the real meaning of these frightful words? The fourth 

and fifth lines of Lin-chi’s saying, about encountering mother or 

father or a relative and killing them, remind me of Jesus’ words: 

If any one comes to me and does not hate his own father and moth­

er and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his 

own life, he cannot be my disciple (Luke 14:26)

With these words Jesus asked his followers to follow him even if 

this meant opposing earthly obligations. 

Lin-chi’s words (“Encountering mother or father or relative, kill 

them”) mean much the same as Jesus’ words—though Lin-chi’s 

expression is more extreme. The renunciation of the worldly life 

and the hatred for even one’s own life are necessary conditions 

among all the higher religions for entering into the religious life. 

Thus Jesus said: 

Truly, I say to you, there is no man who has left house or wife or 

brothers or parents or children, for the sake of the kingdom of God, 

who will not receive manifold more in this time, and in the age to 

come eternal life (Luke 18:29, 30)

In contrast to Jesus’ emphasis on doing things “for the sake of the 

kingdom of God,” Lin-chi says that by “encountering a Buddha, 

killing the Buddha,” and so on, “only thus does one attain libera­

tion.” This is simply because for Lin-chi to attain real liberation it is 

necessary not only to transcend worldly morality but also to rid one­

self of religious pietism. Zen does not teach that we come to the 

Ultimate Reality through encountering and believing in Buddha. 

For even then we are not altogether liberated from a dichotomy 

between the object and the subject of faith. In other words, if we 

believed in Buddha, Buddha would become more or less objecti­

fied. And an objectified Buddha cannot be the Ultimate Reality. To 

attain Ultimate Reality and liberation, Zen insists, one must tran­

scend even religious transcendent realities such as Buddhas, Patri­

archs, and so forth. Only when both worldly morality and religious 

pietism, both the secular and the holy, both immanence and tran­

scendence, are completely left behind, does one come to Ultimate 

Reality and attain real liberation. 

The fundamental aim of Buddhism is to attain emancipation 

from all bondage arising from the duality of birth and death. 



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God, Emptiness, and the True Self 

Another word for this is samsþra, which is also linked with the dual­

ities of right and wrong, good and evil, etc. Emancipation from sam­

sþra by transcending the duality of birth and death is called nirvþna

the goal of the Buddhist life. 

Throughout its long history, Mahþyþna Buddhism has empha­

sized: “Do not abide in samsþra, nor abide in nirvþna.” If one abides 

in so-called nirvþna  by transcending samsþra, one is not yet free 

from attachment, namely, attachment to nirvþna itself. Being con­

fined by the discrimination between nirvþna and samsþra, one is still 

selfishly concerned with his own salvation, forgetting the suffering 

of others in samsþra. In nirvþna one may be liberated from the dual­

ities of birth and death, right and wrong, good and evil, etc. But 

even then one is not liberated from a higher-level duality, i.e., the 

duality of samsþra and nirvþna, or the duality of the secular and the 

sacred. To attain thorough emancipation one must also be liberat­

ed from this higher-level duality. The Bodhisattva idea is essential to 

Mahþyþna Buddhism. Not clinging to his own salvation, the 

Bodhisattva is one who devotes himself to saving others who suffer 

from various attachments—attachments to nirvþna as well as to sam­

sþra—by negating or transcending the so-called nirvþna  which is 

attained simply by transcending samsþra. 

Therefore,  nirvþna  in the Mahþyþna sense, while transcending 

samsþra, is simply the realization of samsþra  as really samsþra, no  

more, no less, by a thoroughgoing return to samsþra  itself. This is 

why, in Mahþyþna Buddhism, it is often said of true nirvþna  that 

samsþra-as-it-is is nirvþna.” This paradoxical statement is based on 

the dialectical character of the true nirvþna, which is, logically 

speaking, the negation of negation; that is, absolute affirmation, or 

the transcendence of transcendence; that is, absolute immanence. 

This negation of negation is no less than the affirmation of affir­

mation. The transcendence of transcendence is nothing other than 

the immanence of immanence. These are verbal expressions of 

Ultimate Reality, because Ultimate Reality is neither negative nor 

affirmative, neither immanent nor transcendent in the relative 

sense of those terms. It is beyond these dualities. Nirvþna  in 

Mahþyþna Buddhism is expressed as “samsþra-as-it-is is nirvþna,” and 



“nirvþna-as-it-is  is  samsþra.” This is simply the Buddhist way of 

expressing Ultimate Reality. Since nirvþna is nothing but Ultimate 

Reality, to attain nirvþna in the above sense means to attain libera­

tion from every sort of duality. 



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The Buddha Eye 

Zen takes this Mahþyþna position in its characteristically radical 

way. “Killing a Buddha” and “killing a Patriarch” are Zen expres­

sions for “not abiding in nirvþna.” 

Now we can see what Lin-chi meant when he said, “Encountering 

a Buddha, killing the Buddha; encountering a Patriarch, killing the 

Patriarch. . . . Only thus does one attain liberation and disentangle­

ment from all things.” In this way, Zen radically tries to transcend 

religious transcendence itself to attain thoroughgoing freedom. 

Therefore the words and acts of the Zen masters mentioned earlier, 

though they seem to be extremely antireligious and blasphemous, 

are rather to be regarded as paradoxical expressions of the ultimate 

truth of religion. 

Since the ultimate truth of religion for Zen is entirely beyond 

duality, Zen prefers to express it in a negative way. When Emperor 

Wu of the Liang dynasty asked Bodhidharma, “What is the ultimate 

principle of the holy truth?” the First Patriarch replied: “Emptiness, 

no holiness.” 

In his “Song of Enlightenment” Yung-chia (Jap.: Y¿ka, 665-713) 

said: 


In clear seeing, there is not one single thing: 

There is neither man nor Buddha. 

On the other hand, in Christianity, when Jesus emphasized action 

for the sake of the kingdom of God, the kingdom of God is not sim­

ply transcendent. Being asked by the Pharisees when the kingdom 

of God was coming, Jesus answered them, “Behold, the kingdom of 

God is within you.” With this answer Jesus declared that God’s rule 

is a new spiritual principle already operative in the lives of men, and 

perhaps referred to his own presence in the midst of his followers. 

We might say, therefore, that the kingdom of God is both immanent 

and transcendent. 

This may be especially true when we remind ourselves of the 

Christian belief that the kingdom is within only because it has first 

entered this world in Jesus, who was the incarnation of God. Jesus 

Christ as the incarnation of God may be said to be a symbol of “tran­

scending even the religious transcendence.” In the well-known pas­

sage of the Letter to the Philippians, Saint Paul said: 

Have this mind among yourselves, which was in Christ Jesus, who, 

though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God 

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God, Emptiness, and the True Self 

a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of a ser­

vant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human 

form he humbled himself and became obedient unto death, even 

death on a cross (2:5-8). 

As clearly shown in this passage, Jesus Christ is God who became 

flesh by emptying or abnegating himself, even unto death. It is real­

ly through this kenotic negation that flesh and spirit, the secular and 

the sacred, the immanent and the transcendent became identical in 

Jesus Christ. Indeed, Jesus Christ may be said to be the Christian 

symbol of Ultimate Reality. So far, this Christian idea of the kenotic 

Christ is close to Zen’s idea of “neither man nor Buddha.” At least 

it may be said that Christianity and Zen equally represent Ultimate 

Reality, where the immanent and the transcendent, the secular and 

the sacred, are paradoxically one. 

In Christianity, however, Ultimate Reality as paradoxical oneness 

was realized in history only in Jesus Christ as the incarnation of 

God. Indeed, Jesus Christ is the Mediator between God and man, 

the Redeemer of man’s sin against God, and the only historical 

event through which man encounters God. Accordingly, it is 

through faith in Jesus as the Christ that one can participate in 

Ultimate Reality. 

In this sense, being the Ultimate Reality, Jesus Christ is somewhat 

transcendent to man. He is the object, not the subject, of faith. 

Therefore, the relation between Christ and his believer is dualistic. 

A kind of objectification still remains. In this respect Zen parts com­

pany with Christianity. 

Of course, as Paul admirably stated: “I have been crucified with 

Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me; and the 

life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved 

me and gave himself for me” (Gal. 2:20). Christian faith has a mys­

tical aspect which emphasizes the identification of the faithful with 

Christ. 

Further, as Paul said, “we are . . . always carrying in the body the 

death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our 

bodies” (2 Cor. 4:10). Paul died Jesus’ death and lived Jesus’ life. 

And this, for Paul, meant being “baptized into Christ,” “putting on 

Christ” (Gal. 3:27), and “being changed into his likeness” through 

the Spirit (2 Cor. 3:18). 

Being “in Christ” in this way, i.e., identifying with Christ as 

Ultimate Reality is, if I am not wrong, the quintessence of Christian 

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The Buddha Eye 

faith. The essence of Zen, however, is not identification with Christ 

or with Buddha, but identification with emptiness. For Zen, identi­

fication—to use this term—with an Ultimate Reality that is substan­

tial is not the true realization of Ultimate Reality. Hence Zen’s 

emphasis on “emptiness, no holiness,” and “neither man nor 

Buddha.” 

So far Zen is much closer to the via negativa or negative theology 

of Medieval Christianity than to the more orthodox form of the 

Christian faith. For instance, in his Mystical Theology,  Pseudo-

Dionysius the Areopagite wrote about God as follows: 

Ascending higher, we say . . . 

not definable, 

not nameable, 

not knowable, 

not dark, not light, 

not untrue, not true, 

not affirmable, not deniable, 

for 

while we affirm or deny of those orders of beings 



that are akin to Him 

we neither affirm nor deny Him 

that is beyond 

all affirmation as unique universal Cause and 

all negation as simple preeminent Cause, 

free of all and 

to all transcendent.

This is strikingly similar to Zen’s expressions of the Buddha-nature 



or mind. 

In Pseudo-Dionysius, identification or union with God means that 

man enters the godhead by getting rid of what is man—a process 

called  theosis, i.e., deification. This position of Pseudo-Dionysius 

became the basis of subsequent Christian mysticism. It may not be 

wrong to say that for him the Godhead in which one is united is the 

“emptiness” of the indefinable One. The words “nothing, nothing, 

nothing” fill the pages of The Dark Night of the Soul, written by Saint 

John of the Cross. For him nothingness meant “sweeping away of 

images and thoughts of God to meet Him in the darkness and 

obscurity of pure faith which is above all concepts.”



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God, Emptiness, and the True Self 

Despite the great similarity between Zen and Christian mysticism 

we should not overlook an essential difference between them. In 

the above-quoted passage, Pseudo-Dionysius calls that which is 

beyond all affirmation and all negation by the term him.  Many 

Christian mystics call God “Thou.” In Zen, however, what is beyond 

all affirmation and all negation—that is, Ultimate Reality—should 

not be “him” or “thou” but “self’ or one’s “true self.” 

I am not concerned here with verbal expressions but with the 

reality behind the words. If Ultimate Reality, while being taken as 

nothingness or emptiness, should be called “him” or “thou,” it is, 

from the Zen point of view, no longer ultimate. 

For in this case “nothingness” or “emptiness” is still taken as 

something outside of oneself; in other words, it is still more or less 

objectified. “Nothingness” or “emptiness” therefore becomes some­

thing  merely named “nothingness” or “emptiness.” It is not true 

nothingness or true emptiness. True emptiness is never an object 

found outside of oneself. It is what is really nonobjectifiable. Precisely 

for this reason, it is the ground of true subjectivity. In Christian mys­

ticism, it is true that God is often called nothingness or the unknow­

able. However, if this is taken as the ultimate, or the object of the 

soul’s longing, it is not the same as true nothingness in Zen. In Zen, 

this is found only by negating “nothingness” as the end, and “empti­

ness” as the object of one’s spiritual quest. 

To reach the Zen position, one must be reconverted or turned 

back from “nothingness” as the end to “nothingness” as the ground, 

from “emptiness” as the object to “emptiness” as the true subject. 

Ultimate Reality is not something far away, over there. It is right 

here, right now. Everything starts from the here and now. Otherwise 

everything loses its reality. 

Consequently, while Zen emphasizes emptiness, it rejects mere 

attachment to emptiness. While Zen insists on killing the Buddha, 

it does not cling to what is non-Buddha. As quoted earlier, Kuo-an 

said in his “Verses of the Ten Ox-Herding Pictures”: 

Worldly passions fallen away,  

Empty of all holy intent.  

Here both worldly passions and holy intent are left behind.

I linger not where Buddha is, and

Hasten by where there is no Buddha.  

With these words Kuo-an tried to show that if one takes what is 

non-Buddha as the ultimate, what is non-Buddha turns into a 



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The Buddha Eye 

Buddha. Real emptiness, which is called in Buddhism ý¥nyatþ, is not 

a nihilistic position that simply negates religious values. 

Overcoming nihilism within itself, it is the existential ground of lib­

eration or freedom in which one finds for himself liberation even 

from what is non-Buddha, liberation even from a rigid view of 

emptiness. 

Zen’s strong criticism of attachment to emptiness or non-

Buddhaness is seen in the following stories: 

A monk asked Chao-chou, “When I bring nothing at all with me, 

what do you say?” 

Chao-chou said, “Throw it away!” 

“But,” protested the monk, “I said I bring nothing at all; what do 

you say I should throw away?” 

“Then carry it off,” was the retort of Chao-chou. 

In commenting on this D. T. Suzuki says: “J¿sh¥ (Chao-chou) has 

thus plainly exposed the fruitlessness of a nihilistic philosophy. To 

reach the goal of Zen, even the idea of ‘having nothing’ ought to be 

done away with. Buddha reveals himself when he is no more assert­

ed; that is, for Buddha’s sake, Buddha is to be given up. This is the 

only way to come to the realization of the truth of Zen.”

Huang-po (Jap.: šbaku, d. 850) was bowing low before a figure 



of Buddha in the sanctuary, when a fellow disciple saw him and 

asked: “It is said in Zen ‘Seek nothing from the Buddha, nor from 

the Dharma, nor from the samgha.’ What do you seek by bowing?” 

“Seeking nothing from the Buddha, the Dharma, or the samgha is 

the way in which I always bow,” replied Huang-po. 

But his fellow disciple persisted: “For what purpose do you bow?” 

Huang-po slapped his face. “Rude fellow!” exclaimed the other. 

To this Huang-po said, “Where do you think you are, talking of 

rudeness and politeness!” and slapped him again. 

In this way, Huang-po tried to make his companion get rid of his 

negative view of non-Buddhaness. He was anxious to communicate 

the truth of Zen in spite of his apparent brusqueness. While behav­

ing and speaking in a rude and negative way, the spirit of what he 

says is affirmative.

As these stories clearly show, the standpoint of emptiness or 



ý¥nyatþ in Zen is not a negative but an affirmative one. Zen affirms 

the ground of complete liberation—liberation from both the secu­

lar and the holy, from both morality and religion, from both theis­

tic religion and atheistic nihilism. 



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God, Emptiness, and the True Self 

Since the Zen position regarding true emptiness (ý¥nyatþ) tran­

scends both the secular and the sacred (through a negation of nega­

tion), it is itself neither secular nor sacred. And yet, at the same time

it is both secular and sacred. The secular and the sacred are para­

doxically identical, coming together as a dynamic whole outside of 

which there is nothing. 

I, myself, who am now writing about the dynamic whole as the 

true emptiness, do not stand outside of, but within this dynamic 

whole. Of course, the same is true of those who read what I am writ­

ing. 

When you see a Zen master, he may ask you, “Where are you 



from?” “I am from Chicago,” you may reply. “From where did you 

come to Chicago?” the master may ask. 

“I was born in Chicago. Chicago is my hometown,” may be your 

answer. 


“Where did you come from, to your birth in Chicago?” the mas­

ter may still ask. Then what will you answer? 

Some of you may reply, “I was born of my parents. And their back­

ground is Scotland,” and so forth. 

Others, falling back upon the theory of evolution, may answer, 

“My origin may be traced back to the anthropoid apes and from 

them back to the amoeba, or a single cell of some sort.” 

At this point, I do hope the master is not so unkind as not to slap 

your face. Anyhow, he will not be satisfied with your answers. 

Science can answer the question, “How did I get here?” but it can­

not answer the question “Why am I here?” It can explain the cause 

of a fact but not the meaning, or ground of a fact. 

Socrates’ philosophy started from the oracle’s admonition: 

“Know thyself?” and King David once asked, “But who am I, and 

what is my people?” (1 Chron. 29:14) 

Zen is also deeply concerned with the question, “What am I?” ask­

ing it in a way peculiar to Zen, that is: “What is your original face 

before you were born?” Science seeks for the origins of our exis­

tence in a temporal and horizontal sense—a dimension which can 

be pushed back endlessly. To find a definite answer to the question 

of our origin we must go beyond the horizontal dimension and turn 

to the vertical dimension, i.e., the eternal and religious dimension. 

Saint Paul once said, “For in him [the Son of God] all things were 

created . . . and in him all things hold together” (Col. 1:16-17). In 



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Christianity it is through creation, as the eternal work of the only 

God, that all things hold together. Zen, however, raises a further 

question. It asks, “After all things are reduced to oneness, to what 

must the One be reduced?” ÿ¥nyatþ or nothingness in Zen is not a 

“nothing” out of which all things were created by God, but a “noth­

ing” from which God himself emerged. According to Zen, we are 

not creatures of God, but manifestations of emptiness. The ground 

of my existence can and should not be found in the temporal 

dimension, nor even in God. Although this groundlessness is deep 

enough to include even God, it is by no means something objec­

tively observable. On the contrary, groundlessness, realized subjec­

tively, is the only real ground of our existence. It is the ground to 

which we are “reconverted” or turned back by a negation of nega­

tion. 

In the Lin-chi lu, the story is told of Yajñadatta, a very handsome 



young man who used to look in a mirror every morning and smile 

at his image. One morning, for some reason, his face was not 

reflected in the mirror. In his surprise, he thought his head was lost. 

Thrown into consternation, he searched about everywhere for it, 

but with no success. Finally, he came to realize that the head for 

which he was searching was the very thing that was doing the search­

ing. The fact was that being a careless fellow, he had looked at the 

back of the mirror. Since his head had never been lost, the more he 

searched for it outside of himself, the more frustrated he became. 

The point of this story is that that which is sought is simply that 

which is seeking. Yajñadatta had searched for his head with his 

head. Our real head, however, is by no means something to be 

sought for in front of us, but is something that always exists for each 

of us here and now. Being at the center of one’s searching, it can 

never be objectified. 

You can see my head. When you see my head from where you are, 

it has a particular form and color; it is indeed something. But can you 

see your own head? Unless you objectify your head in a mirror you 

cannot see it by yourself. So, to you, your head has no particular 

form and color. It is not something which can be seen objectively by 

you. It is in this sense formless and colorless to yourselves. We call 

such a thing mu or “nothing” because it is not something objective. 

It is called “nothing” not because, in the present case, our heads are 

missing, but because our heads are now functioning as the living 

heads. As such they are nonobjectifiable. 

66  



God, Emptiness, and the True Self 

The same is true of our “self.” We often ask ourselves, “What am 

I?” and get used to searching for an answer somewhere outside of 

ourselves. Yet the answer to the question, “What am I?” lies in the 

question itself. The answer to the question can only be found in this 

here and now where I am—and which I am fundamentally. 

The ground of our existence is nothingness, ý¥nyatþ, because it 

can never be objectified. This ý¥nyatþ is deep enough to encompass 

even God, the “object” of mystical union as well as the object of 

faith. For ý¥nyatþ  is the nothingness from which God himself 

emerged.  ÿ¥nyatþ  is the very ground of the self and thereby the 

ground of everything to which we are related. The realization of 

ÿ¥nyatþ-as-such is precisely what is meant by the self-awakening of 

Dharma. ÿ¥nyatþ  as the nonobjectifiable ground of our existence 

expands endlessly into all directions. The same is true of “awakening in 

the Dharma.”  Can we talk about the relationship between ourselves 

and the world without being, ourselves, in the expanding awaken­

ing of the self which embraces the relationship itself? Can we even 

talk about the divine-human relationship without a still deeper 

ground which makes this relationship possible? And is not the still 

deeper ground for the divine-human relationship the endlessly 

expanding ý¥nyatþ or self-awakening? 

All I-Thou relationships among men and between man and God 

are possible only within an endlessly expanding self-awakening. Zen 

calls this our “Original Face,” the face we have before we are born. 

“Before we are born” does not refer to “before” in its temporal 

sense, but in its ontological sense. The discovery of one’s prenatal 

face—in its ontological sense—places us within an endlessly 

expanding self-awakening. 

To the extent that we are men, whether from the East or from the 

West, this is equally true of all of us. We should not think that we will 

come to our awakening at some future time and place and will then 



be  awakened. On the contrary, we are  originally—right here and 

now—in the expanding of self-awakening that spreads endlessly into 

all directions. This is why we can talk about relationships with the 

world and about an I-Thou relationship with God. Nevertheless, just 

as Yajñadatta looked for his head outside of himself, we are used to 

looking for our true self outside of ourselves. This is our basic illu­

sion, which Buddhism calls mþyþ or avidyþ, i.e., ignorance. When we 

realize this basic illusion for what it is, we immediately find that, in 

our depths, we are grounded in endlessly expanding self-awakening. 

67  



The Buddha Eye 

The “Song of Zazen” by Hakuin, an outstanding Zen master of 

the middle Tokugawa era of Japan, expresses the point well: 

Sentient beings are really Buddha.

Like water and ice—  

Apart from water, no ice;  

Outside of sentient beings, no Buddha.

Not knowing it is near

They seek for it afar!

Just like being in water—  

But crying for thirst!  

Taking as form the formless form

Going or coming you are always there  

Taking as thought the thoughtless thought

Singing and dancing are Dharma’s voice.

How vast the boundless sky of samþdhi,  

How bright the moon of Fourfold Wisdom.

What now is there to seek?

With nirvþna revealed before you,

This very place is the Lotus Land,

This very body is Buddha.  

NOTES 


1. Elmer O’Brien, Varieties of Mystical Experience (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and 

Winston, 1964), pp. 86-88. 

2. William Johnston, “Zen and Christian Mysticism,” The Japanese Missionary 

Bulletin XX (1966): 612-13. 

3. D. T. Suzuki, An Introduction to Zen Buddhism (London: Rider, 1969), pp. 54­

55. 

4. Ibid., pp. 52-53. 



68  

God, Emptiness, and the True Self by Abe Masao 

 

Features in  



 

The Buddha Eye: An Anthology of the Kyoto School and its 

Contemporaries 

copyright 2004 World Wisdom, inc 

Edited by Frederick Franck, Foreword by Joan Stambaugh 

All Rights Reserved. For Personal Usage Only 



www.worldwisdom.com

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