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Liberation Through the Gate of Emptiness | There Is No Suffering


On the way to full liberation the first gate is to truly experience emptiness-the ultimate and basic condition of all dharmas (physical and mental forms and phenomena). Buddhadharma holds that all things arise and disappear because of an ever-moving, ever-changing nexus of causes and temporal/spatial conditions. The Buddha said that ‘this’ arises because ‘that’ has arisen, and ‘that’ disappears because ‘this’ has disappeared. As such, nothing has genuine existence. The moment a phenomenon arises, it already begins to disintegrate. There is never an instant of permanence. Every moment that makes up our life is a mere process of experiencing. The apparent reality we experience is really an illusion. Emptiness is groundless because neither the one who experiences, nor that which is experienced, nor the act of experiencing, exists independently.

Any experience is the coming together of three conditions: subject, object, and the interaction between the two. For example, I(subject) am talking (interaction) to you (object); or, you (subject) are listening (interaction) to me (object). Essentially, each of these three conditions is empty. Furthermore, if even one of the three conditions is perceived to be empty, then the other two are also automatically perceived as empty. You cannot attach to or contemplate one without the presence of the other two.

Contemplating and deeply penetrating this principle of causes and conditions leads to the experience of emptiness. A dry intellectual understanding of the interdependent nature of dharmas and the workings of conditionality, however, is vastly different from a direct experience. If they were the same, most of us would have already experienced prajna, and we would already be liberated.

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Venerable Sheng Yen is a well-known Buddhist monk, Buddhist scholar, and educator. In 1969, he went to Japan for further studies and obtained a doctoral degree from Rissho University in 1975, becoming the first ordained monk in Chinese Buddhism to pursue and successfully complete a Ph.D. in Japan.
Sheng Yen taught in the United States starting in 1975, and established Chan Meditation Center in Queens, New York, and its retreat center, Dharma Drum Retreat Center at Pine Bush, New York in 1997. He also visited many countries in Europe, as well as continuing his teaching in several Asian countries, in particular Taiwan.
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