Zen and the Birds of Appetite
Merton's 1968 Catholic-Zen interreligious essays
Tradition: Catholic monasticism / interreligious dialogue / Zen-Christian
Merton's 1968 Catholic-Zen interreligious essays
Zen and the Birds of Appetite (1968) is Thomas Merton's (1915-1968) most-developed work of Catholic-Buddhist inter-religious dialogue — published the year of his death in Bangkok, where he had travelled to participate in a monastic East-West encounter and where he was accidentally electrocuted in his hotel room (December 10, 1968). The book draws together two strands. The first is a sustained correspondence and exchange with D. T. Suzuki (1870-1966) — the principal twentieth-century interpreter of Zen for Anglophone audiences — on the relation between Christian-mystical apophaticism (Pseudo-Dionysius, Eckhart, John of the Cross) and the Mahāyāna doctrine of emptiness (śūnyatā). Merton and Suzuki had corresponded for years and met in person at Columbia in 1964; their exchange explores whether the via negativa of Christian mysticism and the emptiness-orientation of Zen are pointing toward a common contemplative experience accessible from different traditional-conceptual starting-points. The second is a series of essays on specific Zen-related themes (Daisetz Suzuki, the Zen masters, the koan, the Buddhist 'mind of mercy,' the relation between Marxist humanism and Buddhist humanism) and on the broader question of whether-and-how Christianity should learn from the Asian contemplative traditions. The book is one of the foundational documents of post-Vatican-II Catholic-Buddhist dialogue (alongside the work of Heinrich Dumoulin, William Johnston, Hugo Enomiya-Lassalle), and continues to be widely read in Christian-monastic, contemplative-Buddhist, and inter-religious-studies circles. Merton's Bangkok address — delivered the morning of his death — anticipates further inter-monastic East-West dialogue.
Author
Editions cited
- Zen and the Birds of Appetite (New Directions, New York, 1968)
- Reprint editions by New Directions (multiple from 1968)
- Translations into German, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Japanese, Korean
School Embodiments
Major Catholic-Buddhist interreligious work.
"Catholic-Buddhist dialogue." (Zen and the Birds of Appetite)
Catholic-monastic interreligious work.
"Catholic-monastic interreligious essays." (Zen and the Birds of Appetite)
Major Zen-Christian dialogical work.
"Zen-Christian dialogue." (Zen and the Birds of Appetite)
Catholic-Zen contemplative essays.
"Catholic-Zen contemplative essays." (Zen and the Birds of Appetite)
Roman Catholic tradition.
Christian-mystical tradition.
Internal Tensions
Zen and the Birds of Appetite is foundational to post-Vatican-II Catholic-Buddhist dialogue and one of the most-read twentieth-century Christian engagements with Asian contemplative traditions. Subsequent scholarship (Bernard Faure, Robert Sharf) has been critical of Suzuki's 'Zen-as-universal-mysticism' framing — which Merton largely accepted — but the book's pastoral-contemplative value as a serious Christian opening toward Buddhist practice has been widely sustained.
I. Time
Composed 1960s, published 1968 (year of Merton's death); high-Vatican-II ecumenical-and-interreligious moment.
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II. Space
Gethsemani-Kentucky and Bangkok composition; transnational Catholic-Buddhist dialogue setting; published New York; subsequently read across the global contemplative-inter-religious community.
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III. Matter
Christian apophatic-mystical theology and Mahāyāna emptiness-doctrine; the Suzuki dialogue; the koan; the question of Christianity learning from Asian contemplative traditions.
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IV. Observer
Late Merton in his fullest inter-religious-and-contemplative-engagement phase; about to die in Bangkok at the East-West monastic encounter.
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V. Energy
Inter-religious-dialogical, apophatic-mystical, ecumenical-pastoral energies.
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VI. Information
Essay-and-correspondence collection; includes Suzuki-Merton exchange, Merton essays on Zen masters, koan-meditation, Marxist-Buddhist comparison; aimed at educated Catholic-Christian-and-Buddhist readers.
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The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How Zen and the Birds of Appetite resolves each dilemma
51 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 22 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 6 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
4 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.