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1. 1 Chan (Zen) Buddhism Jeffrey L. Richey, Ph.D.
REL 260
Buddhism
Berea College
Spring 2004
2. 2 BUDDHISM COMES TO EAST ASIA “Silk Road” merchants and missionaries transmit Buddhism to China by 65 CE
As Han ? dynasty (202 BCE-220 CE) declines, Chinese elites turn away from Confucianism to Daoism and Buddhism, often combining elements of each in syncretistic mix
By Tang ? dynasty (618-907 CE), Buddhism reaches zenith of its popularity in China
From China, Buddhism spreads to Vietnam, Korea, and Japan
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4. 4 CHALLENGES TO BUDDHISM IN CHINA Geographic: difficulty of India-China travel
Linguistic: translation of foreign texts and concepts
Political: conflicts between rulers and sangha; separation between north and south during “Period of Disunity”
Religious: competition with and/or dilution by Confucianism and Daoism
Social: traditional Chinese distaste for foreign ways (e.g., celibacy, monasticism, Sanskrit terminology, karma theory)
5. 5 ROOTS OF EAST ASIAN BUDDHISM Buddhists in Tang China develop theory of “Last Days of the Dharma” (Chinese mofa, Japanese mappo ??) – view of present as degenerate era in which former methods of teaching do not suffice for enlightenment
“Desperate times call for desperate measures” – tendency to focus solely on one text or practice Chan ? = Sanskrit dhyana (“meditation” – Japanese: Zen)
Chan goal: Chinese jianxing, Japanese kensho ?? (seeing one’s true nature) – sudden enlightenment
Based on Theravada concept of individual effort (Chinese zili, Japanese jiriki??) and Tantric meditation techniques
Enlightenment verified by “mind-to-mind” transmission from master to disciple, beginning with Bodhidharma (Indian, 400s CE?)
6. 6 SOURCES OF JAPANESE BUDDHISM Buddhism (Tantric, Chan, Pure Land) introduced during 500s CE by Korean immigrants, missionaries, and diplomats
Functions of Buddhism in early Japan:
Instrument of diplomacy
Vehicle of civilization
Symbol of political power
Shintô-Buddhist syncretism:
theory of honji suijaku ???? (original reality, manifest traces)
Buddhas and bodhisattvas are honji, kami are suijaku
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8. 8 DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHAN/ZEN TRADITION Degeneration of dharma justifies rejection of devotion and scriptures in favor of meditation as sole or primary method of attaining enlightenment
Reality must be seen as it is (nondualistic, spontaneous, “empty”)
Two major sects:
Chinese Linji, Japanese Rinzai ?? – uses riddles (Chinese gong’an, Japanese koan ??), verbal abuse and meditation
Chinese Caotong, Japanese Soto ?? -- uses meditation only
9. 9 LEGACIES OF THE CHAN/ZEN TRADITION Cements syncretism of indigenous and imported elements (Buddhism/Daoism, Buddhism/Shintô) in East Asian Buddhism
Hugely influential on East Asian cultures:
Calligraphy
Cuisine (e.g., tea)
Drama (especially in Japan)
Martial arts (e.g., fencing)
Painting
Philosophy
Poetry
Ritual (e.g., tea ceremony)
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