William Johnston (born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, 1925 — died in Tokyo, Japan, 2010) was a Jesuit priest and a Zen meditation advocate. His family was a supporter of Irish Republican Army and suffered terror under the Irish Civil War. He studied in Liverpool University and at the National University of Ireland, then joined the Jesuit Order and in 1951 moved to postwar Japan, where he resided ever since.[1][2]

He held a doctorate in mystical theology from the Sophia University, Tokyo, and had also carried out specific studies on Buddhism. Been heavily influenced by Jesuit priest Hugo Enomiya-Lassalle, Johnston participated actively in the dialogue between Zen Buddhism and Christianity.[3] Johnston practiced Zen under the guidance of Yamada Koun Roshi, but Johnston insisted on continuing to recite the Jesus Prayer despite Yamada's contrary instructions. They stopped the master-disciple link.[1]

His reflections on his background in Northern Ireland, his transition to Japan and the practice of Zen, are about how the relationship of Catholicism and Zazen meditation can transform Ireland, Japan, Zen Buddhism, and Christian mysticism. Toward the end of his life, influenced by the Japanese experience of bombing of civilian populations, and his undestanding of Buddha and Jesus teachings, Johnston embraced the active promotion of nonviolence initiatives.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 From the Falls Road to Zen: The Mystical Journey of William Johnston, S.J. Leo Lefebure. Buddhist-Christian Studies (Vol. 39), 2019. University of Hawaii Press
  2. William Johnston. Editorial Herder México
  3. Shusaku Endo in conversation with William Johnston. Where Buddhism meets Christianity. The text was translated from Japanese by Johnston and appeared in volume 172 of America Magazine, published by the National Catholic Review.
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