Pure Land Buddhism and Honen
According to one tradition, the Buddha, the historical personage Shakyamuni
Gautuma and founder of the Buddhism, was born (several centuries before
Christ) in India in 483 B.C., and died at the age of eighty. He contemplated
the preciousness of human life and a remedy for the suffering of humanity,
after seeing a sick man, an old man and a dead body, and realizing that
sickness, death and old age were inescapable for everyone. He preached
about how men should live. That was the start of Buddhism.
The Buddha did not leave his teachings as writings. So after his death,
disciples' opinions about the interpretation of his teachings were different.
The teachings of the Buddha were brought to Japan in the form of Mahayana
Buddhism.
Mahayana Buddhism sharply contrasts with Hinayana Buddhism in stating that
it is only through helping others that one can attain benefit to oneself.
It also insists that everyone is capable of becoming a Buddha.
Beginning in or about first century B.C. in India, the Pure Land teachings
were born from Mahayana Buddhism. After that, Pure Land Buddhism was transmitted
to China, and was completed by Chinese Pure Land master Shan-tao (613-681)
during the Tang Dynasty. Pure Land Buddhism is based on the idea that after
dying people are born into the Pure Land in the West where people listen
to the teachings of Amida Buddha in order to become Buddhas.
However, there were two different ways to be born into the Pure Land: one
was the way of emphasizing religious exercises concentrated on the image
of the figure of Amida Buddha and of suggesting strongly to perfrom ascetic
practices by oneself; the other was that if people would place their trust
in the power of the eighteenth vow made by Amida Buddha, to save all who
recite his name, they would be reborn into the Pure Land, achieve enlightenment
and become Buddhas.
In Japan, the teachings of Shan-tao were transmitted to Honen (1133-1212)
in the Kamakura period (1192-1333). In his forty-third year, in 1175, Honen
came across a passage in the Commentary on the Meditation on the Buddha
of Infinite Life Sutra (Kan-muryoju-kyo-sho) written by Shan-tao which
ran as follows: "Only repeat the name of Amida Buddha with all your
heart, whether walking or standing, sitting or lying; never cease the practice
of it for a moment. This is the practice which unfailingly results in salvation,
for it is in accordance with the original vow of Amida Buddha that assures
common people of deliverance from the painful mundane world by the simple
act of reciting Amida Buddha's name." It struck Honen that this was
the teaching he had sought for a long time. He soon started to disseminate
the teaching of the exclusive practice of the Nembutsu to the common people.
The year 1175 is said to be the commemorative year in which Honen became
the founder of the Jodo sect.
From Honen to Shoku
It was in 1103, about seventy years before Honen's establishment of the
Jodo sect, that Eikan wrote Ojojuin in which he proclaimed the importance
of the Nembutsu and gave ten reasons why chanting the Nembutsu would lead
sentient beings to be reborn into the Pure Land. Honen's writings suggest
he was greatly impressed by Ojojuin. This shows how important a person
Eikan was for the Jodo sect. He laid the groundwork for Honen (Fig. 1,
Honen Shonin) who would use his thinking as the sole basis for new sects
of his own.
It has already been mentioned that Honen was regarded as the eleventh nominal
chief priest of Eikando. Why and how did Honen become the eleventh chief
priest of Eikando?
Johen hailed Honen as the nominal eleventh chief priest of Eikando. At
first Johen, as a famous monk of the Shingon sect, started to read Passages
on the Selection of the Nembutsu in the Original Vow as a way to criticize
Honen for his incorrect views, but, contrary to Johen's expectations, the
writing impressed him with the importance of the teaching of the Jodo sect.
Johen revered Honen so deeply that he could not but designate Honen as
the eleventh nominal chief priest. In the end, he converted to the Jodo
sect. From then until now, Eikando has been revered as the main temple
of the Jodo sect.
Shoku (1177-1247; Fig. 2, Shoku Shonin), one of the greatest disciples
of Honen, succeeded Johen. Although Shoku was born into a distinguished
noble court family in Kyoto, he insisted on becoming a priest and on studying
for the priesthood under Honen when he was fourteen years old. His parents
objected, but his resolution was firm. His mother was at a loss what to
do, so she stood at the foot of Ichijo Bridge to have his fortune told,
because people of that time had their fortune told by standing at the foot
of the bridge to listen to the words of the person who was coming across
the bridge. As she was standing there, a priest approached while chanting
The Lotus Sutra, one of the most important sutras of Buddhism. She felt
that Shoku must be deeply related to Buddhism, so she permitted him to
become a priest.
Shoku was remarkably intelligent, so that he could understand anything,
even if he heard only once. His excellence of mind was recognized by his
master, and he was given charge of checking quotations in Passages on the
Selection of the Nembutsu in the Original Vow. He repeated the Nembutsu
60,000 times as a matter of routine, as Eikan had, and practiced asceticism,
called fudan-nembutsu (chanting the Nembutsu continuously) for a limited
time. He traveled from Kanto, to Tohoku, encouraging the erection of temples,
and spread the teachings of the Nembutsu. He is also known to have produced
many copies of the Taima Mandala (Fig. 3) which was circulated
from the Kamakura period onwards.
The practice of Shoku are called "Shiraki no Nembutsu" demonstrating
that sentient beings can never achieve enlightenment on their own, so they
should rely entirely on Amida Buddha, reciting the Nembutsu with the pure
heart.
Put plainly, the Shiraki no Nembutsu is a fundamental practice of the Jodo
sect.
The Taima Mandala
The Taima Mandala offers a visual interpretation of the teachings of the
priest Shan-tao. This mandala provides intricately geometric depictions
of the Western Paradise. It represents the expected vision of the next
world, which appealed to the hearts of the court nobles in the Heian period
(794-1185). It shows how earnestly they desired to be reborn into the Paradise.
Shiraki no Nembutsu
This phrase was coined by Shoku to describe his belief, after a very through
study of the sutras, that a simple, plain and pure recitation of the Nembutsu,
placing all faith in Amida would lead a believer to the Western Paradais.
(Copyright by Gin No Saji Sha, 2005)
To top of the page