Interpretation of Zen Buddhism (1). The method of meditation is to keep the mind in one place and eliminate delusion. It also refers to Zen advocated by Buddhism, that is, Zen. Tang Xuanjue's Song of Yongjia Daoism: "I gave up my mind with Zen, and I was born without knowledge." This "Zen Gate" is the method of Zen. (2) Buddhism. Buddhist. Tang Yan Qian's poem "Twenty-four Articles to Chiang Kai-shek" says: "Zen is unintentional, and the world is unfamiliar and wants to face the wall." Qing Niuxuan's "The colder": "Everywhere you go, people always admire you, so everyone in the sea pushes the colder as a Zen master." Yan Fu's "He Gong Jing": "Under the lecture of Zen, the income is flat." (3) Buddhist language. Jungle. A temple where monks gather. Shi's "calm": "Zen gate, another name is jungle." Tang Sunti's "Feng and Cui Sima Tour yunmen temple": "It's a Maqingxi tree, and the Zen gate is full of spring." See "jungle".
Word decomposition
Interpretation of Zen Zen (Zen) × Buddhism refers to meditation: meditation. Zen meditation. Zen mind Zen machine (code words, metaphors and suggestive actions used by Zen to enlighten disciples). Zen. Meditate. Especially Buddhism: Zen master. Zen stick Zen forest. Interpretation of the Emperor's Gate (Zen Gate) in Zen Hall The entrance and exit of a building also refers to the device that can be opened and closed at the entrance and exit: the door. Doors. Cut to the chase. Something that looks or behaves like a door: a switch. Way, trick: door diameter. Doorways It used to refer to a feudal family or a branch of a family, but now it also refers to a general family: family status. Ethical and moral standards maintained by a family/clan from generation to generation