Thursday, January 30, 2025

Via The Tricycle Community \\ Three Teachings: The Middle Way

 


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January 30, 2025

Striking a Balance
 
In his first sermon at Deer Park, the Buddha described the eightfold path, his path to enlightenment, as the middle way between the extremes of asceticism and indulgence. The middle way later turns up as a way to think about other Buddhist concepts, such as not-self. Releasing attachment to a fixed self is the middle way between eternalism and nihilism.

In the Mulamadhyamakakarika (“Root Verses on the Middle Way”), third-century Indian monk and philosopher Nargarjuna described emptiness, or shunyata, as the middle way between being and not-being. Emptiness doesn’t mean a void or lack of existence; it means that things don’t exist independently. 

The middle way continues to serve as a reference point or framework in modern conversations like politics and addiction, but, crucially, it isn’t the path of least resistance. It's an embrace of what is.


This week’s Three Teachings shares three interpretations of this foundational Buddhist approach and outlook. 
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Nagarjuna’s Wisdom: The Middle Way
With Barry Kerzin

In this four-part Dharma Talk, Dr. Barry Kerzin, a monk and the Dalai Lama’s personal physician, discusses the teachings of Nagarjuna, one of the most influential thinkers of Mahayana Buddhism.
Watch now »

Soyen Shaku’s Classic Sermon on the Middle Way
By Soyen Shaku


In this teaching by the first Zen master to teach in the United States, Soyen Shaku discusses the balance between discipline and intuition.
Read more »

Walking Zen’s Tightrope
By Taiun Michael Elliston


In this brief teaching, author and Atlanta Soto Zen Center founder Taiun Michael Elliston drills down on what the middle way actually is and isn’t. 
Read more »

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