The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (513 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
4.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Cetasika
(quality of mental experience)
:
see
CITTA
.
Cetiya
(earth-mound)
:
see
CAITYA
.
Ch.
May be spelt C; check at appropriate place (e.g. chela/cela; chaitya/caitya).
Chaddor
(veil)
:
see
IJ
B
.
Chad
or cha-no-yu
(Jap., ‘tea-way’). Zen Buddhist way to overcome ordinary consciousness, in which entities are differentiated, in themselves, or in subject-object distinctions. The translation ‘tea-ceremony’ is thus misleading if it implies a ritual involving tea, although its actions and context are highly formalized. Like other forms of Zen practice in the aesthetic domain (e.g. flower-way—not flower-arranging,
kado
,
ikebana
), it is a means of mind-realization of the single buddha-nature (
buddhat
) of all appearance. The preparation and drinking of tea (religiously) began in China, apparently for medicinal purposes (reviewed by Lu Yü in
Ch’a Ching
). Sen no Riky
(1521–91) organized tea-drinking practices into a single system, and also instructed Hideyoshi, who became the great master of cha-no-yu.

Other books

The Dark Country by Dennis Etchison
Purrfect Protector by SA Welsh
Applewhites at Wit's End by Stephanie S. Tolan
Remembrance Day by Simon Kewin
At First Sight by Catherine Hapka
A Life Transparent by Todd Keisling
Hot Ice by Nora Roberts