Yunmen

Yuezhou Qianfeng

Unknown – c. 897

Yuezhou Qianfeng was a Yunmen school master known from the koan literature. In a famous exchange, a monk asked Qianfeng, "The Bhagavat of the ten directions—one road to nirvana. Where is the entrance to this road?" Qianfeng drew a line with his staff and said, "Here." This characteristic Yunmen-style gesture—drawing a line and saying "Here"—points to the immediate present as the only entrance to liberation.

Qianfeng's teaching exemplifies the Yunmen tradition's insistence that the truth is not remote or hidden but is present right where one stands. The monk seeks a path to nirvana, imagining it to be somewhere else. Qianfeng draws a line at the monk's feet: here, right here, is the entrance you seek.

Names

dharma · enYuezhou Qianfeng
alias · enEsshû Kempô
alias · enYuëh-chou Ch'ien-fêng

Teachers

Students

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Teachings

  • koanOne Road Of Kembo

    Mumonkan Case 48

    A Zen pupil asked Kembo: "All Buddhas of the ten parts of the universe enter the one road of Nirvana. Where does that road begin?" Kembo, raising his walking stick and drawing the figure one in the air, said: "Here it is." This pupil went to Ummon and asked the same question. Ummon, who happened to have a fan in his hand, said: "This fan will reach to the thirty-third heaven and hit the nose of the presiding deity there. It is like the Dragon Carp of the Eastern Sea tipping over the rain-cloud with his tail." Mumon’s comment: One teacher enters the deep sea and scratches the earth and raises dust. The other goes to the mountain top and raises waves that almost touch heaven. One holds, the other gives out. Each supports the profound teaching with a single hand. Kembo and Ummon are like two riders neither of whom can surpass the other. It is very difficult to find the perfect man. Frankly, neither of them know where the road starts. Before the first step is taken the goal is reached. Before the tongue is moved the speech is finished. More than brilliant intuition is needed To find the origin of the right road.

    tr. Nyogen Senzaki, Paul Reps, 1934

    Commentator: Wumen Huikai, Speaker: Yuezhou Qianfeng

Master Record Sources