Thursday, 8 March 2018

Look everyone! Layman Pang once needed a bit of help, but only a wild fox spirit appeared...

By tradition after the Sixth Ancestor Huineng, Pangyun is the earliest master of the Zen way to be acknowledged while a layman. Huineng went on to ordain as a monk and became the source of all contemporary Zen lineages, but Pang remained in the lay life. In fact he’s best known with the title Layman Pang. He married and had children, all of whom according to tradition achieved awakening. Here’s one story about an encounter with his daughter.

The Layman was once selling bamboo baskets. Coming down off a bridge he stumbled and fell. When Ling-chao saw this she ran to her father’s side and threw herself down. "What are you doing!" cried the Layman. "I saw Papa fall to the ground, so I’m helping," replied Ling-chao. "Luckily no one was looking," remarked the Layman.

The Recorded Sayings of Layman P’ang: A Ninth-Century Zen Classic [New York, Weatherhill, 1971: p.75]

Translated by Ruth Fuller Sasaki, Yoshitaka Iriya & Dana R. Fraser

Source: patheos.com/blogs/monkeymind/2006/09/layman-pang-his-daughter.


Wandering Ronin commentary: Perhaps Layman Pang knew something that we've somehow missed to this very day... What exactly did Ling-chao do to help her father, and could anything be done about a wild fox spirit?



Submitted March 09, 2018 at 12:34AM by WanderingRonin77 http://ift.tt/2HhaOUp

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