Shingon Buddhism

Shingon Buddhism

Shingon Buddhism (眞言, 真言 " ") is a major school of Japanese Buddhism, and is the other branch of Vajrayana Buddhism besides Tibetan Buddhism. It is often called "Japanese Esoteric Buddhism". The word "shingon" is the Japanese reading of the kanji for the Chinese word "zhen yan", literally meaning "true words", which in turn is the Chinese translation of the Sanskrit word "mantra".

History

Shingon Buddhism arose in Japan's Heian period (794-1185) when the monk Kūkai went to China in 804 and studied tantric practices in the city of Xian and returned with many texts and art works. In time, he developed his own synthesis of esoteric practice and doctrine, centered on the universal Buddha Vairocana (or, more accurately, Mahavairocana Tathagata). In time, he established a monastery on Mount Koya, which became the head of the Shingon sect of Buddhism.

Shingon enjoyed immense popularity during the Heian Period, particularly among the Heian nobility, and contributed greatly to the art and literature of the time, as well as influencing other communities, such as the Tendai sect on Mt. Hiei. [cite book | last = Caiger | first = Mason | title = A History of Japan, Revised Ed. | pages=106-107]

Also, Shingon's emphasis on ritual found support in the Kyoto nobility, particularly the Fujiwara clan. This favor allotted Shingon several politically powerful temples in the capital, where rituals for the imperial family and nation were regularly performed. Many of these temples such as Toji, Ninnaji and Daigoji to the south of Kyoto became ritual centers establishing their own particular ritual lineages.

Schism

Like the Tendai School that branched into the Jōdo, Zen and Nichiren Schools in the Kamakura period, Shingon also divided into two major branches; Kogi Shingon, or "old Shingon," and Shingi Shingon, or "New Shingon." This division primarily arose out of a political dispute between Kakuban and his faction of priests centered at the Denbōe and the leadership at Kongōbuji, the head of Mt. Kōya. Kakuban, who was originally ordained at Ninnaji in Kyoto, studied at several temple-centers (including the Tendai temple complex at Onjiyōji) before going to Mt. Kōya. Through his connections, he managed to gain the favor of high ranking nobles in Kyoto, which helped him to be appointed abbot of Mt. Kōya. The leadership at Kongōbuji, however, opposed the appointment on the premise that Kakuban had not originally been ordained on Mt. Kōya. After several conflicts Kakuban and his faction of priests left the mountain for Mt. Negoro to the northwest, where they constructed a new temple complex, now known as Negoroji. After the death of Kakuban in 1143, the Negoro faction returned to Mt. Kōya. However in 1288, the conflict between Kongōbuji and the Denbōe came to a head once again. Led by Raiyu, the Denbōe priests once again left Mt. Kōya, this time establishing their headquarters on Mt. Negoro. This exodus marked the beginning of the Shingi Shingon School at Mt. Negoro, which was the center of Shingi Shingon until sacked by Hideyoshi Toyotomi in 1585.

During the initial stages of his predication in Japan, the Catholic missionary Francis Xavier was welcomed by the Shingon monks since he used the word "Dainichi" for the Christian God. As Xavier learned more about the religious nuances of the word, he changed to "Deusu" from the Latin and Portuguese "Deus". The monks also realized by that point that Xavier was preaching a rival religion.

Teachings

The teachings of Shingon are based on esoteric Vajrayana texts, the Mahavairocana Sutra and the Vajrasekhara Sutra (Diamond Crown Sutra). These two mystical teachings are shown in the main two mandalas of Shingon, namely, the Womb Realm (Taizokai) mandala and the Diamond Realm (Kongo Kai) mandala. Vajrayana Buddhism is concerned with the ritual and meditative practices leading to enlightenment. According to Shingon, enlightenment is not a distant, foreign reality that can take aeons to approach but a real possibility within this very life, based on the spiritual potential of every living being, known generally as Buddha-nature. If cultivated, this luminous nature manifests as innate wisdom. With the help of a genuine teacher and through properly training the body, speech, and mind, we can reclaim and liberate this enlightened capacity for the benefit of ourselves and others.

Kūkai also systematized and categorised the teachings he inherited into ten stages or levels of spiritual realisation. He wrote at length on the difference between exoteric (both mainstream Buddhism and Mahayana) and esoteric (Vajrayana) Buddhism. The differences between exoteric and esoteric can be summarised as:

#Esoteric teachings are preached by the Dharmakaya Buddha ("hosshin seppo") which Kūkai identifies with Mahavairocana. Exoteric teachings are preached by the Nirmanakaya Buddha, also known as Gautama Buddha, or one of the Sambhoghakaya Buddhas.
#Exoteric Buddhism holds that the ultimate state of Buddhahood is ineffable, and that nothing can be said of it. Esoteric Buddhism holds that while nothing can be said of it verbally, it is readily communicated via esoteric rituals which involve the use of mantras, mudras, and mandalas.
#Kūkai held that exoteric doctrines were merely provisional, skillful means (upaya) on the part of the Buddhas to help beings according to their capacity to understand the Truth. The esoteric doctrines by comparison are the Truth itself, and are a direct communication of the "inner experience of the Dharmakaya's enlightenment".
#Some exoteric schools in late Nara and early Heian Japan held (or were portrayed by Shingon adherents as holding) that attaining Buddhahood is possible but requires a huge amount of time (three incalculable aeons) of practice to achieve, whereas esoteric Buddhism teaches that Buddhahood can be attained in this lifetime by anyone.

Kūkai held, along with the Huayan (Jp. Kegon) school that all phenomena could be expressed as 'letters' in a 'World-text'. Mantra, mudra, and mandala are special because they constitute the 'language' through which the Dharmakaya (i.e. Reality itself) communicates. Although portrayed through the use of anthropomorphic metaphors, Shingon does not see the Dharmakaya Buddha as a god, or creator. The Dharmakaya is in fact a symbol for the true nature of things which is impermanent and empty of any essence. The teachings were passed from Mahavairocana.

Mahavairocana Tathagata

In Shingon, Mahavairocana Tathagata is the universal or primordial Buddha that is the basis of all phenomena, present in each and all of them, and not existing independently or externally to them. The goal of Shingon is the realization that one's nature is identical with Mahavairocana, a goal that is achieved through initiation (for ordained followers), meditation and esoteric ritual practices. This realization depends on receiving the secret doctrine of Shingon, transmitted orally to initiates by the school's masters. Body, speech, and mind participate simultaneously in the subsequent process of revealing one's nature: the body through devotional gestures (mudra) and the use of ritual instruments, speech through sacred formulas (mantra), and mind through meditation.

Shingon places special emphasis on the Thirteen Buddhascite web | last= | first= | title=Jusan Butsu - The Thirteen Buddhas of the Shingon School | url=http://www.shingon.org/deities/jusanbutsu/jusanbutsu.html | accessmonthday=5 July | accessyear=2007] , a grouping of various Buddhas and boddhisattvas:

* Acala Vidyaraja (Fudō-Myōō)
* Akasagarbha Bodhisattva
* Akshobhya Buddha (Ashuku Nyorai)
* Amitabha Buddha (Amida Nyorai)
* Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva (Kannon)
* Bhaisajyaguru Buddha (Yakushirurikō Nyorai)
* Kṣitigarbha Bodhisattva (Jizo)
* Mahasthamaprapta Bodhisattva (Seishi)
* Manjusri Bodhisattva (Monju)
* Maitreya Bodhisattva (Miroku)
* Samantabhadra Bodhisattva (Fugen)
* Shakyamuni Buddha (Shaka Nyorai)

Mahavairocana is the Universal Principle which underlies all Buddhist teachings, according to Shingon Buddhism, so other Buddhist figures can be thought of as manifestations with certain roles and attributes. Each Buddhist figure is symbolized by its own Sanskrit "seed" letter as well.

Practices and features

One feature that Shingon shares in common with the other surviving school of Esoteric Buddhism (Tendai) is the use of "seed-syllables" or "bija" ("bīja") along with anthropomorphic and symbolic representations, to express Buddhist deities in their mandalas. There are four types of mandalas: "mahā-maṇḍala" (大曼荼羅, anthropomorphic representation), the seed-syllable mandala or "dharma-maṇḍala" (法曼荼羅), the "samaya-maṇḍala" (三昧耶曼荼羅, representations of the vows of the deities in the form of articles they hold or their mudras), and the "karma-maṇḍala" (羯磨曼荼羅 ) representing the activities of the deities in the three-dimensional form of statues, etc. An ancient Indian Sanskrit syllabary script known as "siddham" (Jap. "shittan" 悉曇 or "bonji" 梵字) is used to write mantras. A core meditative practice of Shingon is "ajikan" (阿字觀), "Meditating on the Letter 'A'", which uses the siddham letter representing that sound as a. Other Shingon meditations are "Gachirinkan" (月輪觀, "full moon" visualization), "Gojigonjingan" (五字嚴身觀, "visualization of the five elements arrayed in the body" from the "Mahāvairocanābhisaṃbodhi-sūtra") and "Gosōjōjingan" (五相成身觀, "pañcābhisaṃbodhi" "series of five meditations to attain Buddhahood" from the "Sarvatathāgatatattvasaṃgraha").

The essence of Shingon Mantrayana practice is to experience Reality by emulating the inner realization of the Dharmakaya through the meditative ritual use of mantra, mudra and visualization of mandala (ie. the three mysteries). All Shingon followers gradually develop a teacher-student relationship, whereby a teacher learns the disposition of the student and teaches practices accordingly. For lay practitioners, there is no initiation ceremony beyond the "Kechien Kanjō" (結縁潅頂), which is normally offered only at Mt. Koya, but is not required. In the case of disciples wishing to ordain as priests, the process is more complex and requires initiations in various mandalas, rituals and so on. In either case, the stress is on finding a qualified and willing mentor who will guide you through Shingon practice at a gradual pace.

Esoteric Buddhism is also practiced, in the Japanese Tendai School founded at around the same time as the Shingon School in the early 9th century (Heian period). The term used there is Mikkyo.

Branches of Shingon

*Kōyasan (高野山)
*Chisan-ha (智山派)
*Buzan-ha (豊山派)
*Daikakuji-ha (大覚寺派)
*Daigo-ha (醍醐派)
*Shingi
*Zentsuji-ha
*Omuro-ha
*Yamashina-ha
*Sennyūji-ha
*Sumadera-ha
*Kokubunji-ha
*Sanbōshū
*Nakayadera-ha
*Shigisan
*Inunaki-ha
*Tōji

Notes

External links

* [http://www.shingon.org/ The International Shingon Institute]
* [http://perso.club-internet.fr/thmodin/ Komyo-In Temple France]
* [http://mandala.hr/ Mandala Society in Croatia]
* [http://mandalavermont.org/ Mandala Vermont, US]
* [http://www.naritasan.or.jp/ Naritasan Shinshoji Temple, Japan]
* [http://www.shingonbuddhisttemple.com/ Shingon Buddhist Temple, UK]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Buddhism — Buddhist, n., adj. Buddhistic, Buddhistical, adj. Buddhistically, adv. /booh diz euhm, bood iz /, n. a religion, originated in India by Buddha (Gautama) and later spreading to China, Burma, Japan, Tibet, and parts of southeast Asia, holding that… …   Universalium

  • Buddhism in Japan — Japanese Buddhism …   Wikipedia

  • Shingon-shū Chizan-ha — Chizan ha (智山派?) or Chizan is a Japanese grouping of Shingon Buddhism. Among the other groupings of Shingon Buddhism is Buzan ha. It is headquartered in Chishaku in Temple in Kyoto. [1] Naritasan Shinshōji Temple in Narita is also an important… …   Wikipedia

  • Buddhism and Hinduism — are two closely related religions that are in some ways parallel each other and in other ways are divergent in theory and practice.The Vedic, Buddhist, and Jain religions share a common regional culture situated near and around north eastern… …   Wikipedia

  • Buddhism in Brazil — has practitioners of various Buddhist schools, as well as a fair number of somewhat Buddhist inspired cults and New Age movements.Many Japanese schools have a strong presence mainly as a result of World War II, which encouraged emigration of… …   Wikipedia

  • Buddhism — Buddh redirects here, for the Race Circuit, see Buddh International Circuit Standing Buddha. One of the earliest known representations of the Buddha, 1st 2nd century CE, Gandhara …   Wikipedia

  • Shingon — /shin gon, sheen /, n. Buddhism. a Japanese form of syncretistic Buddhism founded in the 9th century by Kukai (A.D. 774 835) and stressing the oral transmission of mystic formulas from master to disciple. [1895 1900; < Japn < MChin, equiv. to… …   Universalium

  • Buddhism in China — Chinese Buddhism (zh ts|t=漢傳佛教|s=汉传佛教; Pinyin: fójiào) refers collectively to the various schools of Buddhism that have flourished in China proper since ancient times. These schools integrated the ideas of Confucianism, Taoism and other… …   Wikipedia

  • Shingon —    One of the two major schools of esoteric Buddhism in Japan (the other is Tendai) introduced from India via China by the Japanese monk Kukai (774 835) a Buddhist master and culture hero better known by his posthumous name of Kobo Daishi.… …   A Popular Dictionary of Shinto

  • Buddhism and Christianity — The French artist Paul Ranson s Christ et Buddha (1880) juxtaposes the two figures There is speculation concerning a possible connection between both the Buddha BC 623 BC 543 and the Christ, and between Buddhism and Christianity. Buddhism… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”