- Sutra of Forty-two Chapters
The "Sutra of Forty-two Chapters" (also called the "Sutra of Forty-two Sections", Chinese: 四十二章經) is the earliest surviving Buddhist
sutra translated into Chinese. It was translated by two ordainedYuezhi monks,Kasyapa-Matanga (迦葉摩騰) and Dharmaraksha (also called Gobharana, 竺法蘭), in 67 CE. Because of its early date, it is regarded as "the First Sutra" and is accorded a very significant status. [Kuan, 12.]tory of translation
In the
Book of Later Han history,Emperor Ming of Han was said to have dreamed of a "golden man," which his advisors connected with the Buddha. Because of his dream and a thousand-year-old prediction from theBook of Zhou , the emperor ordered a delegation to go west looking for the Buddha's teachings, which encountered Kasyapa-Matanga and Dharmaraksha, who they brought back to China as well as many sutras and relics from the Buddha, reportedly on the back of a white horse. When they reached the Chinese capital ofLuoyang , the emperor had theWhite Horse Temple built for them.They translated six texts, the "Sutra of Dharmic-Sea Repertory" (法海藏經), "Sutra of the Buddha's Deeds in His Reincarnations" (佛本行經), "Sutra of Terminating Knots in the Ten Holy Terras" (十地斷結經), "Sutra of the Buddha's Reincarnated Manifestations" (佛本生經), "Compilation of the Divergent Versions of the Two Hundred and Sixty Precepts" (二百六十戒合異), and the "Sutra of Forty-two Chapters". Only the last one has survived. [Kuan, 19-24.]
tructure and comparison with other works
The "Sutra of Forty-two Chapters" consists of a brief prologue and 42 short chapters (mostly under 100
Chinese character s), composed largely of quotations from the Buddha. Most chapters begin "The Buddha said..." (佛言...), but several provide the context of a situation or a question asked of the Buddha.It is unclear whether the sutra existed in
Sanskrit in this form, or was a compilation of a series of passages extracted from other canonical works in the manner of theAnalects ofConfucius . This latter hypothesis also explains the similarity of the repeated "The Buddha said..." and "The Master said," familiar from Confucian texts, and may have been the most natural inclination of the Buddhist translators in the Confucian environment, and more likely to be accepted than a lengthy treatise. [cite web|url=http://www.sacred-texts.com/bud/zfa/zfa03.htm|title=The Sutra of Forty Chapters|accessed=2007-03-21|work=Zen for Americans|author=Soyen Shaku, in footnotes] Among those who consider it based on a corresponding Sanskrit work, it is in style considered to be older than otherMahayana Sutras , because of its simplicity of style and naturalness of method. [cite web|url=http://www.sacred-texts.com/journals/jras/os19-14.htm|title=The Sutra of Forty-two Sections|work=Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society|year=1862|author=Reverend S. Beal|access=2007-03-21]The similarity of the Buddha described in the text with the
Eight Immortals of Chinese legend, in terms of longevity and supernatural abilities, is perhaps to make the religion more familiar to Taoists. [cite web|title=Early Buddhism and Taoism in China (A.D. 65-420)|author=Jiahe Liu and Dongfang Shao|url=http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0882-0945(1992)12%3C35%3AEBATIC%3E2.0.CO%3B2-J|access=2007-03-21|date=1992|work=Buddhist-Christian Studies, Vol. 12|pages=35-41]Notes
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* Cheng Kuan, tr. and annotater. " [http://www.abtemple.org/cgi-bin/abtemple.org/en_ebook/ephoto.cgi#4 The Sutra of Forty-two Chapters] Divulged by the Buddha: An Annotated Edition". Taipei and Howell, MI: Vairocana Publishing Co., 2005.
External links
* [http://www.buddhistinformation.com/ida_b_wells_memorial_sutra_library/sutra_of_forty-two_chapters.htm English text of the "Sutra of Forty-two Chapters] , translated by D.T. Suzuki
* [http://www.tianyabook.com/gudian/42.htm Chinese text of the "Sutra of Forty-two Chapters"] zh icon
* [http://online.sfsu.edu/~rone/Buddhism/BTTStexts/S42%20Introductory%20Sections.htm Introductory comments to the Sutra] , from lectures by Hsuan Hua
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