Seeing the Mountain is a contemplative work that explores how the disciplined clarity of Zen practice can illuminate, enrich, and deepen a committed Catholic life. Rather than presenting Zen and Catholicism as competing worldviews, the book demonstrates how the attentiveness, interior stillness, and direct experiential insight cultivated in Zen can strengthen one's capacity to live the Christian faith with greater sincerity, presence, and integrity. Through a series of reflections grounded in both traditions, the book shows how learning to "see the Mountain" - to perceive reality without distortion - supports a more authentic encounter with God, self, and neighbor.
At the center of the book is the Mountain itself, a metaphor for the unchanging ground of awareness that remains steady beneath the shifting movements of thought, emotion, and circumstance. Zen provides the tools to recognize this ground directly, while Catholicism provides the theological, sacramental, and moral framework within which that recognition becomes a lived response to grace. The text emphasizes that Zen does not replace Catholic doctrine or practice; instead, it sharpens the capacity to receive them. Silence becomes prayer. Attention becomes devotion. Presence becomes charity.
Written in clear, accessible language, Seeing the Mountain bridges classical contemplative wisdom with the lived experience of a modern Catholic practitioner. It invites readers to examine how perception is shaped, how suffering arises, and how freedom becomes possible when one learns to see without clinging to mental constructs. The tone is measured and reflective, offering guidance without dogmatism and insight without abstraction.
This book is intended for readers interested in contemplative spirituality, Catholics seeking a deeper interior life, practitioners of meditation, and anyone drawn to the question of how ancient practices can support a life of faith today. Ultimately, Seeing the Mountain affirms that Zen and Catholicism, when held with discernment and humility, can work together to cultivate a heart that is attentive, grounded, and open to God's presence in all things.