Catholic Zen teachers and the ever-present peril of heresy — whatever do you do with dogma?
I overheard part of a recent conversation about Celtic spirituality and transubstantiation. It led me down this dark path: Original Sin vs. Original Blessing.
This is an abbreviated story of a rather well-known and certainly much-admired Canadian nun, Sister Elaine McInnes. Sister Elaine was a member of a small religious community based in Toronto, Our Lady’s Missionaries. She was also a fully authorized Zen Master. Her Zen teacher was Yamada Koun Roshi of the Sanbo Zen school. Yamada also trained several Jesuits, Father Hugo Enomiya-Lassalle, Father Wm Johnson, Father Ama Samy, and Ruben Habito, who was a Jesuit when he began his study with Yamada. Father Wiligas Jager, an Austrian Benedictine monk, also worked with him. In other words, most of the teachers in what has become a Zen practice aimed at Catholics and other Christians in the West began their Zen path in Yamada's small zendo in suburban Kyoto.
After her work with Yamada, Sister Elaine was assigned to the Philippines during its 1980s revolution, where she established meditation programs in prisons. Then she went on to lead prison projects in the UK for many years, and finally, she started another prison meditation project when she returned to Canada. She was presented with the Order of Canada. A remarkable woman. One of my teachers, John Tarrant, also in Yamada’s lineage, remembers meeting her. He said, “She was a kind, no-nonsense kind of woman.” Oh, I almost forgot, she had been a professional concert violinist, Juilliard-trained. She played in the Calgary Symphony Orchestra for five years before becoming a nun. She was already well past 80 when I tried to meet with her in Toronto; she had begun the last part of her life in a small, secluded suburban convent. When she died in 2022, she was 98.
I’d read somewhere, perhaps an interview in a parochial newspaper, that when asked what she thought about man’s essentially fallen nature, Sister Elaine responded without a pause, "Oh, you mean Our Original Blessing.” My headline: “Canadian nun, accomplished musician, Zen roshi, walks unafraid into dangerous prisons to teach meditation, and takes on Saint Augustine with a chuckle.” What was her faith in humankind that allowed her to cross that line? An act of will, hopeful idealism, blind courage, or real experience? This is what I wanted to talk to her about.
I can find no consistency in human nature. I cannot say if men and women are originally blessed, intrinsically fallen, beset by demons, or have a latent tendency to anger and destruction that erupts from time to time. Is a belief in “Original Blessing” foolhardy, or what it takes to do heroic works of compassion? The experience of post-war Japan and Hippo in the fourth century, attacked by the Visigoths, might have some similarities, but how could followers of Jesus hold such opposing views? The weight of our tradition comes down on the sin side. It puzzles me.
Pope Benedict, when he still went by the name Joseph Ratzinger, did a 7-day Zen retreat with another Jesuit from Sophia University in Tokyo, Father Kakichi Kadowaki. At the time, Joseph Ratzinger said he found sesshin very inspiring, but later, as Pope Benedict, he condemned another priest, Zen Master Wiligas Jager, and forbade him from publishing or teaching the same practice. I remember asking Father Pat Hawk, another Roshi, a Redemptorist who’d trained with Bob Aitken, about Jager. Pat smiled and said he thought Wiligas was an animist. Ah, again that touch of Celtic spirituality.
My past twelve months have been filled with heresies. First, I revisited Arianism when we celebrated the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea. Then, studying Augustine when Pope Leo was elected, I found myself thinking about the Manichaeans, the light and darkness of gnosticism, and then, for no apparent reason, the heresy of Pythagoras, the duality of body and soul. What do any of these heresies have in common? Not much, really. But then, when Celtic spirituality came up in the conversation, it triggered something. Each heresy begins by believing but then exaggerating, or extending blanket assumptions about how the world works based on observation, not Revelation. There may be difficulties with the observation, but I think we can assume that the heretics thought they were seeing the world as it is: the gnostics saw that darkness follows light; Pythagoras observed that the sun seemed to revolve around the earth; Arius tried to reconcile the idea that Jesus was divine yet had a human body. Something earthy got mixed in with the transcendent, and then, when the official institution did its referee shtick, it always favored the transcendent. But what gets lost in the referee’s call is the observation, as well as the joy, that rocks and clouds remain parts of the wonder of our world. They are. It’s that simple.
Then along comes a priest who reminds us that our Celtic fathers and mothers were Christians who dug their fingers into the dirt and grew potatoes. What is true is comforting, and connects us with something beyond theologians' “filioque” and transubstantiation. I say “Amen,” but the logician in me does not have to exclude anything. I can say, “Both/and,” and say it loudly. Sister Elaine may lose to Augustine in doctrinal debate, but she wins hands down when the choice is between raising children as a Blessing rather Cursed as sinful by a vengeful god.
Go back to your cushion and wait for the next move. Or set up a meditation in prison project.
- Sr. Elaine MacInnes in April 2016
- Front row from left: Sr. Elaine MacInnes, Yamada Koun Roshi, and Jun Maron
- at a Zendo in Manila, Philippines, in the 1980s.