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This is a book of essays by a Zen Buddhist Abbot who visited the United States in 1905-6, translated by another figure who was instrumental in introducing Buddhism to the West, Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki.
Originally titled Sermons of a Buddhist Abbot, it has been reprinted in numerous editions as Zen for Americans and is currently in print under that title.

The book includes a translation of The Sutra of Forty-Two Chapters, which was the first Buddhist document translated into Chinese, and which had a huge influence on the development of Zen.
Many of the essays are introductions to various Buddhist topics for Christians, and all of them are ideal for a general audience.
The two essays which close out the book which discuss the Buddhist attitude towards war and peace, and are of historical interest because they were referenced by Leo Tolstoy in his anti-war declaration.

Title Page

Translator's Preface

Contents

The Sutra of Forty-Two Chapters

The God-Conception of Buddhism

Assertions and Denials

Immortality

Buddhist Faith

Buddhist Ethics

What is Buddhism?

The Middle Way

The Wheel of the Good Law

The Phenomenal And The Supraphenomenal

Reply to a Christian Critic

Ignorance and Enlightenment

Spiritual Enlightenment

Practice of Dhyana

Kwannon Bosatz

Buddhism and Oriental Culture

The Story of Deer Park

The Story of the Gem-Hunting

The Sacrifice for a Stanza

Buddhist View of War

At The Battle of Nan-Shan Hill

An Address Delivered at a Service Held in Memory of Those Who Died in The Russo-Japanese War
rig veda sama veda yajur veda| rig veda sama veda yajur veda
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