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According to Merv Fowler, shikantaza is described best as, "quiet sitting in open awareness, reflecting directly the reality of life."
I have given this some thought, as I used to be part of the Deshimaru sanga (soto-zen), now Im more hindu style.. anyway...
jñāna-yoga is three-fold:
1.śravaṇa (listen) [to vedanta]
2.manana (reflect) [to understand the meaning]
3.nididhyāsana (meditation) [ZEN]
--> ātma-sākṣātkāra (Self-realization) (SATORI)
This is the easy answer... Then elaborating a bit...
Shikantaza (just sitting) should be Hishiryo (beyond thinking) & mushotoku (no goal).
"beyond thinking" means to not form any concepts in the mind... instead let the mind be absorbed in the breath and posture.
"no goal" means not trying to get anything, stay as you are... you already are "buddha-nature", so trying to get it is just a mental concept or an objectification. One should have absolute faith in one's buddha-nature...
The one thing that might be special with Shikantaza is that you dont try to figure out "who am I", since that would be "non-Shikantaza", it happens automatically.
According to Ramana Maharshi, either surrender or inquiry is always the final practice. I think Shikantaza is more in line with surrender. Shikantaza-practitioners might not "surrender" to an external "God" but to the "God" in their heart (buddha-nature). So soto-zen might actually be called bhakti-yoga also... worshiping God in the heart... (dahara-upāsana), merging themselves in that...
Rinzai is a bit different, they reflect on koans and practice kensho (seeing one's nature). Thats more in line with inquiry.
Well just some thoughts... ^^
And as per Maharshi, this also ultimately is surrender that is same as jnana.
Thanks and Regards
Hello Atanu
I also thought Ekanta's post was very helpful.
Would you mind expanding on why both surrender and jñana are the same?
The word Zen is from the Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese word Chán (禪, which in turn is derived from the Sanskrit word dhyāna, which can be approximately translated as "meditation" or "meditative state".