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Huayan

The Huayan school of Buddhism (traditional Chinese: 華嚴; ; pinyin: Huáyán, Wade–Giles: Hua-Yen, "Flower Garland," from the Sanskrit "Avataṃsaka") is Mahayana Buddhist tradition that developed in China during the Tang dynasty (618-907).[1] The Huayan worldview is based primarily on the Buddhāvataṃsaka Sūtra (Chinese: 華嚴經; pinyin: Huáyán jīng, Flower Garland Sutra) as well as on the works of Huayan patriarchs, like Zhiyan (602–668), Fazang (643–712), Chengguan (738–839), Zongmi (780–841) and Li Tongxuan (635–730).[2][1]

Huayan
The Three Worthies of Huayan (Manjushri (left), Vairocana (center), and Samantabhadra (right)), a triad venerated in Huayan – Dazu Rock Carvings, Chongqing, China
Chinese name
Chinese华严宗
Traditional Chinese華嚴宗
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHuáyán zōng
Wade–GilesHua-yen tsung
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingFa4-yim4 zung1
Southern Min
Tâi-lôHua-ngiam tsong
Vietnamese name
Vietnamese alphabetHoa Nghiêm tông
Chữ Hán華嚴宗
Korean name
Hangul화엄종
Hanja華嚴宗
Transcriptions
McCune–ReischauerHwa-eom jong
Japanese name
Kanji華厳宗
Kanaけごん しゅう
Transcriptions
RomanizationKegon-shū
Sanskrit name
SanskritAvataṃsaka

Another common name for this tradition is the Xianshou school (Xianshou being another name for patriarch Fazang).[3] The Huayan School is known as Hwaeom in Korea, Kegon in Japan and Hoa Nghiêm in Vietnam.

The Huayan tradition considers the Flower Garland Sutra to be the ultimate teaching of the Buddha.[1] It also draws on other sources, like the Mahayana Awakening of Faith, and the Madhyamaka and Yogacara philosophies.[4] Huayan teachings, especially its doctrines of universal interpenetration, nature-origination (which sees all phenomena as arising from a single ontological source), and the omnipresence of Buddhahood, were very influential on Chinese Buddhism and also on the rest of East Asian Buddhism.[5][4] Huayan thought was especially influential on Chan (Zen) Buddhism, and some scholars even see Huayan as the main Buddhist philosophy behind Zen.[6][2]

History Edit

 
Aerial view of Huayan Temple, Datong, built during the Jin dynasty (1115–1234).

Origins of the Chinese Avataṃsaka tradition Edit

The Buddhāvataṃsaka Sūtra (The Garland of Buddhas Sutra, or The Multitude of Buddhas Sutra) is a compilation of sutras of various length, some of which originally circulated as independent works before being combined into the "full" Avataṃsaka.[7] One of the earliest of these texts, the Ten Stages Sutra (Daśabhūmika), may date from the first century CE.[8] These various sutras were probably joined shortly before its translation into Chinese, at the beginning of the 5th century CE.[8][9]

There are various versions of the Chinese Avataṃsaka (Chinese: Huāyán Jīng 華嚴經, "Splendid Flower Adornment Sutra"). The full sutra was translated into Chinese three times (in versions of 40, 60, and 80 fascicles or "scrolls", 卷).[10] The earliest Chinese texts associated with the Avataṃsaka are the Dousha jing (Taisho 280), produced by Lokaksema (fl. 147–189) in the latter part of the second century CE, and the Pusa benye jing (Book of the Original Acts that Adorn the Bodhisattva, T. 281), translated by Zhi Qian (fl. ca. 220–257 CE) in the early to mid third century. There is evidence that these smaller or partial Avataṃsaka sutras circulated on their own as individual scriptures.[11]

As soon as the large Huāyán Sūtra appeared in China, an exegetical tradition grew up around the text in order to explain it.[3] The first translation of the larger Huāyán Sūtra (in 60 fascicles) is often dated to the Southern Dynasties era (c. 420–589), when a translation team led by Gandharan master Buddhabhadra produced a full Chinese translation of the text.[12] There is also evidence of a Huāyán Sūtra tradition in the Northern Dynasties (386-581) era. The Avataṃsaka teachings are associated with figures like Xuangao (402-444) who led a community with Daorong at Binglingsi cave, and Zhidan (c. 429–490), who argued that only the Huāyán Sūtra teaches the "sudden teaching" (while other Mahayana texts teach the gradual teaching).[12]

Xuangao, a disciple of Buddhabhadra, was associated with the teaching of the "Huāyán Samadhi" which is said to have been passed on to him by Buddhabhadra.[13] According to Hamar, Xuangao's tradition is a precursor to the Huayan school and may have even composed the apocryphal Brahma's Net Sūtra (Fanwang Jing T1484).[14] Xuangao's tradition is also associated with Chinese meditation cave grottoes such as the Yungang Grottoes, Maijishan Grottoes and the Bingling Temple Grottoes.[15]

The origins of some of the teachings of the Huāyán school proper can also be traced back to the Dilun school, which was based on the Shidijing lun (十地經論), Vasubandhu's commentary to the Daśabhūmikā-sutra (which is part of the Avataṃsaka Sūtra) translated by Bodhiruci and Ratnamati.[16] Dilun figures like Ratnamati's disciple Huiguang (468–537) emphasized the study of the entire Avataṃsaka and Dilun masters likely had their own commentaries on the text (but none have survived in full). Only a few extracts remain, such as parts of Huiguang's commentary and parts of Lingyu's (518–605).[16]

Lingbian (靈辨, 477–522) was another early figure who studied and commented on the Avataṃsaka.[16] He is referred to by Fazang as a great devotee of Manjushri, and 12 fascicles of Lingbian's commentary to the Avataṃsaka survive, being the earliest significant Chinese commentary on the Avataṃsaka which is extant.[16]

Tang dynasty patriarchs Edit

 
13th century Japanese print of Fazang, Todaiji, Nara, Japan.

The founding of the Huayan school proper is traditionally attributed to a series of five patriarchs who were instrumental in developing the school's doctrines during the Tang dynasty (618 to 907). These Huayan "patriarchs" (though they did not call themselves as such) were erudite scholar-practitioner who created a unique tradition of exegesis, study and practice through their writings and oral teachings.[17] They were particularly influenced by the works of the Dilun and Shelun schools of Chinese Yogacara.[16]

These five patriarchs are:[18][19][4]

  1. Dushun (Chinese: 杜順; Wade–Giles: Tu-Shun, c. 557–640), a monk who was known as a meditator master and who was devoted to the Huayan sutra. He wrote several works, including the Discernments of the Huayan Dharmadhātu (Huayan fajie guanmen).
  2. Zhiyan (Chinese: 智儼; Wade–Giles: Chih-yen, c. 602–668), was a student of Dushun who is considered to have established most of the main doctrines of Huayan thought and is thus a crucial figure in the foundation of Huayan.[20] Zhiyan also studied with various masters from the Dilun and Shelun schools, which were branches of Chinese Yogacara.[21]
  3. Fazang (Chinese: 法藏; Wade–Giles: Fa-tsang, c. 643–712), who was the Buddhist teacher of the Empress Wu Zetian (684–705) and is often considered the real founder of the school.[22][21] He wrote numerous works on Huayan thought and practice including several commentaries on the Avatamsaka.[23] He also worked on a new translation of the Avatamsaka Sutra (in collaboration with various figures, including Śikṣānanda) in 80 fascicles.
  4. Chengguan (Chinese: 澄觀; Wade–Giles: Ch'eng-kuan, c. 738–839), though he was not a direct student of Fazang (who died 25 years before Chengguan's birth), Chengguan further developed the Huayan teachings in innovative directions in his various commentaries and treatises.[3][24] He was a student of Fashen (718–778), who was a student of Fazang's student Huiyuan. Chengguan's voluminous commentary to the new 80 fascicle Avatamsaka (the Da fang-guang fo huayan jing shu, 大方廣佛華嚴經疏, T. 1735), along with his sub-commentary to it (T. 1736), soon became the authoritative commentaries to the sutra in East Asia.[16]
  5. Guifeng Zongmi (Chinese: 圭峰宗密; Wade–Giles: Kuei-feng Tsung-mi, c. 780–841), who is also known for also being a patriarch of Chinese Chán and for also writing on Daoism and Confucianism.[25] His writings include works on Chan (such as the influential Chan Prolegomenon) and various Huayan commentaries.[26] He was particularly fond of the Sutra of Perfect Enlightenment, writing a commentary and sub-commentary to it.[27]

While the above list is the most common one, other Huayan patriarchal lists add different figures, such as Nagarjuna, Asvaghosa, Vasubandhu, and the lay master Li Tongxuan (Chinese: 李通玄, 635?-730), the author of the Xin Huayan Jing Lun (新華嚴經論, Treatise on the new translation of the Avatamsaka Sutra), a popular and lengthy commentary on the Avatamsaka.[3][28] Li Tongxuan's writings on the Huayan sutra were particularly influential on later Chan Buddhists, who often preferred his interpretations.[29]

Another important Huayan figure of the Tang era was Fazang's main disciple Huiyuan (慧苑, 673–743) who also wrote a commentary on the Avatamsaka Sutra.[28] Because Huiyuan modified some of Fazang's interpretations, he was retroactively sidelined from the Huayan lineage of patriarchs by later figures like Chengguan who criticized some of his doctrinal positions.[16] According to Imre Hamar, Huiyuan compared the Daoist teachings on the origination of the world to the Huayan teaching on the dependent arising of the tathagatagarbha. Huiyuan also incorporated Daoism and Confucianism into his panjiao (doctrinal classification) system. Chengguan disagreed with this.[30]

Liao and Xia developments Edit

After the time of Zongmi and Li Tongxuan, Chinese Huayan generally stagnated in terms of new developments, and then eventually began to decline. The school, which had been dependent upon the support it received from the government, suffered severely during the Great Buddhist Persecution of the Huichang era (841–845), initiated by Emperor Wuzong of Tang.[25] The school stagnated even further in the conflicts and confusion of the late Tang dynasty and the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms (907-979) era.

After the fall of the Tang dynasty several Huayan commentaries were lost. However, during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms era, Huayan remained influential, being part of the "Huayan-Chan" lineages influenced by Zongmi which were very popular in the north, especially in the Khitan Liao Empire (916-1125) and the Tangut kingdom (1038-1227) of the Western Xia.[31] Various masters from these non-Chinese kingdoms are known, such as Xianyan (1048-1118) from Kailong temple in Khitan Upper capital, Hengce (1049-1098), Tongli dashi from Yanjing, Daoshen (1056?-1114?), Xianmi Yuantong, from Liao Wutaishan, Zhifu (fl. during the reign of Liao Daozong, 1055–1101).[32]

The Liao and Xia Huayan traditions were more syncretic, adopting elements of Zongmi's Heze Chan influenced Huayan, as well as Chinese Esoteric Buddhism (zhenyan), Hongzhou Chan, and even Tibetan Buddhism in some cases.[33] Several texts from the Liao Huayan tradition have survived, such as master Daochen's (道㲀) Chan influenced Account of Mirroring Mind (Jingxin lu, 鏡心錄) and his esoteric influenced Collection of Essentials for Realization of Buddhahood in the Perfect Penetration of the Exoteric and Secret Teachings (Xianmi Yuantong chengfo xinyao, 顯密圓通成佛心要 T no. 1955).[32][34] Another Liao Tangut work which survives from this period is The Meaning of the Luminous One-Mind of the Ultimate One Vehicle (Jiujing yicheng yuan-ming xinyao 究竟一乘圓明心要) by Tongli Hengce (通理恆策, 1048–1098).[33] The works of the Liao tradition are important because they served as one of the sources of the later Huayan revival during the Song.[33]

Song revival Edit

 
The Wanbu Huayanjing Pagoda, likely built during the Emperor Daozong of Liao (1055–1110).

After the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms, the Huayan lineage experienced a revival in the following Song dynasty (960-1279). Tang era Huayan commentaries which had been dispersed were returned in 1085 by the Goryeo monk Uicheon. Uicheon (義天, 1055–1101) was thus an important figure of this revival period.[35] The chief Chinese Huayan figures of the Song dynasty revival were Changshui Zixuan (子璇, 965–1038), Jinshui Jingyuan (靜源, 1011–1088), and Yihe (義和, c. early twelfth century).[36][29]

Jingyuan is known for his sub-commentary to Chengguan's Huayan sutra commentary, while Zixuan is famed for his twenty-fascicle Notes on the Meaning of the Śūraṅgama Sūtra (首楞嚴義疏注經).[29][27] While the Huayan school is generally seen as having been weaker than Chan or Tiantai during the Song, it still enjoyed considerable support from Chinese elites and from Buddhist monastics.[37] Another important figure in the Song revival of Huayan was Guangzhi Bensong (廣智本嵩, fl. 1040), a master from the from Kaifeng. He is well known for his Thirty gāthās on the Contemplation of the Dharma-realm and Seven syllables of the title of the Huayan (Huayan qizi jing ti fajie guan sanshi men song 華嚴 七字經題法界觀三十門頌, Taisho no. 1885). Some of his other works have survived in Tangut.[33]

New Huayan practice and ritual manuals were also written during the Song, such as Jinshui Jingyuan's "Rites on Practicing the Vows of Samantabhadra" (Chinese: 華嚴普賢行願修證儀; Pinyin: Huáyán Pǔxián Xíngyuàn Xiūzhèng Yí, Taisho Supplement no. X1473).[38] These rites were influenced by Tiantai school ritual manuals, as well as by earlier Huayan materials.[35][38] Song era Huayan monks also developed distinctly Huayan forms of "concentration and contemplation" (zhi guan), inspired by Tiantai methods as well as the Avatamsaka sutra and Huayan thought.[35]

Jinshui Jingyuan also helped organize some state recognized Huayan public monasteries, like Huiyin temple.[3][38] Jingyuan is nown for his association with Mount Wutai, which has been a key center for Huayan Buddhism since the Song dynasty.[3]

In the later Song, there were also four great Huayan masters: Daoting, Shihui (1102-1166), Guanfu, and Xidi.[27] During the Yuan dynasty, the Huayan master Purui also wrote various Huayan works.[27]

Ming and Qing dynasties Edit

During the Ming dynasty, Huayan remained influential. One important event during the early Ming was when the eminent Huayan monk Huijin (1355-1436) was invited by the Xuande Emperor (1399-1435) to the imperial palace to preside over the copying of ornate manuscripts of the Buddhāvataṃsaka, Prajñāpāramitā, Mahāratnakūṭa, and Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtras.[39]

 
A European illustration of the Bao'en monastery and the Porcelain Tower of Nanjing, which was a center of Huayan studies during the late Ming.[40]

During the sixteenth century, Beijing was the center of Chinese Buddhist doctrinal study.[40] During the late Ming, Kongyin Zhencheng (1547–1617), Lu'an (or Lushan) Putai (fl. 1511) of Beijing's Da Xinglong monastery and Yu’an Zhengui (born 1558) were some of the most influential scholars of Huayan thought.[41][40] Huayan philosophy was also influential on some of the most eminent monks of the Ming era, including Zhibo Zhenke and Yunqi Zhuhong (1535–1615), both of whom studied and drew on Huayan thought and promoted the unity of practice (Chan and Pure Land) and study.[42][43] Zhuhong himself was a student of Wuji Mingxin (1512-1574) of Bao'en monastery, who in turn was a disciple of Lu'an Putai.[40] Another influential student of Wuji was Xuelang Hong'en (1545-1608), who became the most famous teacher in Jiangnan and lead revival of Huayan studies during this time.[40] His main students include Yiyu Tongrun (1565-1624), Cangxue Duche (1588-1656), Tairu Minghe (1588-1640) and Gaoyuan Mingyu (fl. 1612).[40]

During the Qing dynasty (1636-1912), Huayan philosophy continued to develop and exert a strong influence on Chinese Buddhism and its other traditions, including Chan and Pure Land. During the Qing, the most influential Huayan figures were Baiting Xufa (1641-1728) and Datian Tongli (1701-1782).[40] Xufa wrote various works on nianfo, including: Short Commentary on the Amitabhasutra, and Straightforward Commentary on the Amitāyurdhyāna Sūtra”. Another influential figure was the lay scholar Peng Shaosheng (彭紹升, 1740–1796).[44]

Baiting Xufa and Peng Shaosheng were known for their synthesis of Huayan thought with Pure Land practice which is termed "Huayan-Nianfo".[44] For the scholar monk Xufa, the practice of nianfo (contemplation of the Buddha) was a universal method suitable for everyone which was taught in the Avatamsaka Sutra and could lead to an insight into the Huayan teachings of interpenetration.[44] Xufa generally defended the mind-only Pure land view which saw the Pure land and Amitabha Buddha as reflections of the “one true mind” (yixin 一心, zhenxin 真心) or the "one true dharmadhatu."[44] Similarly, for Peng Shaosheng, Amitabha was synonymous with the Vairocana Buddha of the Avatamsaka sutra, and the pure land was part of Vairocana's Lotus Treasury World. As such, the practice of nianfo and of the methods of the Avatamsaka would lead to rebirth in the Pure land (which is non-dual with all worlds in the universe) and see Buddha Amitabha (which is equal to seeing all Buddhas).[44]

Korean Hwaôm Edit

 
Hwaeomsa Temple, Jirisan National Park

In the 7th century, the Huayan school was transmitted into Silla Korea, where it is known as Hwaôm (Hangul: 화엄).[45] This tradition was transmitted by the monk Uisang (의상대사, 625–702), who had been a student of Zhiyan together with Fazang.[46] After Uisang returned to Korea in 671, established the school and wrote various Hwaôm works, including a popular poem called the Beopseongge, also known as the Diagram of the Realm of Reality, which encapsulated the Huayan teaching.[47][48] In this effort, he was greatly aided by the powerful influences of his friend Wonhyo, who also studied and drew on Huayan thought and is considered a key figure of Korean Hwaôm.[49] Wonhyo wrote a partial commentary on the Avataṃsaka Sūtra (the Hwaŏm-gyŏng so).[50] Another important Hwaôm figure was Chajang (d. between 650 and 655).[51]

After the passing of these two early monks, the Hwaôm school eventually became the most influential tradition in the Silla Kingdom until the end of the kingdom.[52] Royal support allowed various Hwaôm monasteries to be constructed on all five of Korea's sacred mountains, and the tradition became the main force behind the unification of various Korean Buddhist cults, such as those of Manjushri, Maitreya and Amitabha.[52] Important figures include the Silla monk Pŏmsu who introduced the work of Chengguan to Korea in 799, and Sŭngjŏn, a disciple of Uisang.[53] Another important figure associated with Hwaôm was the literatus Ch’oe Ch’iwŏn. He is known for his biographies of Fazang and Uisang, along with other Huayan writings.[54] Towards of the end of Silla, Gwanhye of Hwaeomsa and Master Heuirang (875-927 CE) were the two most important figures. During this period Hwaeomsa and Haeinsa Temples formed two sub-sects of Hwaeom who disputed with each other on matters of doctrine.

The Hwaôm school remained the predominant doctrinal school in the Goryeo Dynasty (918–1392).[55] An important figure of this time was Gyunyeo (923–973).[56][57] He is known for his commentary on Uisang's Diagram of the Realm of Reality.[58] He also unified the southern and northern factions of Hwaeomsa and Haeinsa. Korean Buddhism declined severely under the Confucian Joseon Dynasty (1392–1910). All schools were forced to merge into one single school, which was dominated by the Seon (Korean Zen) tradition. Within the Seon school, Hwaôm thought would continue to play a strong role until modern times and various Hwaôm commentaries were written in the Joseon era.[58]

Japanese Kegon Edit

 
Daibutsuden at Tōdai-ji, Nara

Kegon (Japanese: 華厳宗) is the Japanese transmission of Huayan.[59] Huayan studies were founded in Japan in 736 when the scholar-priest Rōben (689–773), originally a monk of the East Asian Yogācāra tradition, invited the Korean monk Shinjō (traditional Chinese: 審祥; ; pinyin: Shenxiang; Korean pronunciation: Simsang) to give lectures on the Avatamsaka Sutra at Kinshōsen Temple (金鐘山寺, also 金鐘寺 Konshu-ji or Kinshō-ji), the origin of later Tōdai-ji. When the construction of the Tōdai-ji was completed, Rōben became the head of the new Kegon school in Japan and received the support of emperor Shōmu.[60] Kegon would become known as one of the Nanto Rikushū (南都六宗) or "Six Buddhist Sects of Nanto". Rōben's disciple Jitchū continued administration of Tōdai-ji and expanded its prestige through the introduction of imported rituals.

 
Zenmyō confesses her love to Gishō (Uisang), a painting from the Kegon Engi Emaki (Illuminated scrolls from the founders of the Kegon Sect).

Kegon thought would later be further popularized by Myōe (1173–1232), abbot and founder of Kōzan-ji Kegon temple, who combined the Kegon lineage Tendai and Shingon esoteric lineages.[61][62][63] He was a prolific scholar monk who composed over 50 works.[64] Myōe promoted the practice of the mantra of light (kōmyō shingon) as simple efficacious practice that was available to all, lay and monastic. He also promoted the idea that this mantra could lead to rebirth in Amitabha's pure land, thus providing a Kegon alternative to popular Japanese Pure Land methods.[65]

Over time, Kegon incorporated esoteric rituals from Shingon, with which it shared a cordial relationship. Its practice continues to this day, and includes a few temples overseas.

Another important Kegon figure was Gyōnen (1240–1321), who was a great scholar (who studied numerous schools including Madhyamaka, Shingon, and Risshu Vinaya) and led a revival of the Kegon school in the late Kamakura era.[66] He was also known as a great historian of Japanese Buddhism and as a great Pure Land thinker.[66] His Pure Land thought is most systematically expressed in his Jōdo hōmon genrushō (淨土法門源流章, T 2687:84) and it was influenced by various figures of his day, such as the Jodo monk Chōsai, and the Sanron figure Shinkū Shōnin, as well as by his understanding of Huayan thought.[66]

In the Tokugawa period, another Kegon scholarly revival occurred under the Kegon monk Hōtan (1657-1738. a.k.a. Sōshun, Genko Dōjin) and his disciple Fujaku (1707-1781).[66]

Modern Era Edit

 
Photo of the Buddha Hall of Upper Huayan Temple (between 1937 and 1945 ), Datong, Shanxi, China.

During the Republican Period (1912–1949), various monks were known for their focus on Huayan teaching and practice. Key Huayan figures of this era include Cizhou (1877–1958), Zhiguang (1889–1963), Changxing, Yingci, Yang Wenhui, Yuexia, Shouye, and Kefa. Some of these figures were part of a network of Huayan study and practice.[3]

In 1914, Huayan University, the first modern Buddhist monastic school, was founded in Shanghai to further systematize Huayan teaching and teach monastics. It helped to expand the Huayan tradition into the rest of into East Asia, Taiwan, and the West. The university managed to foster a network of educated monks who focused on Huayan Buddhism during the 20th century. Through this network, the lineage of the Huayan tradition was transmitted to many monks, which helped to preserve the lineage down to the modern day via new Huayan-centred organizations that these monks would later found.[67]

Several new Huayan Buddhist organizations have been established since the latter half of the 20th century. In contemporary times, the largest and oldest of the Huayan-centered organizations in Taiwan is the Huayan Lotus Society (Huayan Lianshe 華嚴蓮社), which was founded in 1952 by the monk Zhiguang and his disciple Nanting, who were both part of the network fostered by the Huayan University. Since its founding, the Huayan Lotus Society has been centered on the study and practice of the Huayan Sutra. It hosts a full recitation of the sutra twice each year, during the third and tenth months of the lunar calendar. Each year during the eleventh lunar month, the society also hosts a seven-day Huayan Buddha retreat (Huayan foqi 華嚴佛七), during which participants chant the names of the buddhas and bodhisattvas in the text. The society emphasizes the study of the Huayan Sutra by hosting regular lectures on it. In recent decades, these lectures have occurred on a weekly basis.[67]

Like other Taiwanese Buddhist organization's, the Society has also diversified its propagation and educational activities over the years. It produces its own periodical and runs its own press. It also now runs a variety of educational programs, including a kindergarten, a vocational college, and short-term courses in Buddhism for college and primary-school students, and offers scholarships. One example is their founding of the Huayan Buddhist College (Huayan Zhuanzong Xueyuan 華嚴專宗學院) in 1975. They have also established branch temples overseas, most notably in California's San Francisco Bay Area. In 1989, they expanded their outreach to the United States of America by formally establishing the Huayan Lotus Society of the United States (Meiguo Huayan Lianshe 美國華嚴蓮社). Like the parent organization in Taiwan, this branch holds weekly lectures on the Huayan Sutra and several annual Huayan Dharma Assemblies where it is chanted. It also holds monthly memorial services for the society's spiritual forebears.[67]

In Mainland China, Huayan teachings began to be more widely re-propagated after the end of the Cultural Revolution. Various monks from the network of monks fostered by the original Huayan University, such as Zhenchan (真禪) and Mengcan (夢參), were the driving factors behind the re-propagation as they travelled widely throughout China as well as other countries such as the United States and lectured on Huayan teachings. In 1996, one of Mengcan's tonsured disciples, the monk Jimeng (繼夢), also known as Haiyun (海雲), founded the Huayan Studies Association (Huayan Xuehui 華嚴學會) in Taipei, which was followed in 1999 by the founding of the larger Caotangshan Great Huayan Temple (Caotangshan Da Huayansi 草堂山大華嚴寺). This temple hosts many Huayan-related activities, including a weekly Huayan Assembly. Since 2000, the association has grown internationally, with branches in Australia, Canada, and the United States.[67]

Influence Edit

The doctrines of the Huayan school ended up having profound impact on the philosophical attitudes of East Asian Buddhism. According to Wei Daoru their theory of perfect interfusion was "gradually accepted by all Buddhist traditions and it eventually permeated all aspects of Chinese Buddhism."[5] Huayan even is seen by some scholars as the main philosophy behind Chan Buddhism.[6]

Huayan thought had a noticeable impact on East Asian Esoteric Buddhism. Kukai (774-835) was deeply knowledgeable of Huayan thought and he saw Huayan as the highest exoteric view.[68] Some of Kukai's ideas, such as his view of Buddhahood in this body, was also influenced by Huayan ideas.[69]

During the post-Tang era, Huayan (along with Chan) thought also influenced the Tiantai school.[70] Tiantai school figures who were influenced by Huayan and Chan were called the "off mountain" (shanwai) faction, and a debate ensued between them and the "home mountain" (shanjia) faction.[70]

Huayan thought was also an important source for the Pure Land doctrine of the Yuzu Nembutsu sect of Ryōnin (1072–1132).[71] Likewise, Huayan thought was important to some Chinese Pure Land thinkers, such as the Ming exegete Yunqi Zuhong (1535–1615) and the modern lay scholar Yang Wenhui (1837–1911).[72]

On Chan Edit

Chinese Chán was profoundly influenced by Huayan, though Chán also defined itself by distinguishing itself from Huayan.[73] Guifeng Zongmi, the Fifth Patriarch of the Huayan school, occupies a prominent position in the history of Chán. Mazu Daoyi, the founder of the influential Hongzhou school of Chan, was influenced by Huayan teachings, like the identity of principle and phenomena.[74] He also sometimes quoted from Huayan sources in his sermons, like Dushun's Fajie guanmen (Contemplation of the Realm of Reality).[75] Mazu's student Baizhang Huaihai also draws on Huayan metaphysics in his writings.[76]

Dongshan Liangjie (806–869), the founder of the Caodong lineage, formulated his theory of the Five Ranks based on Huayan's Fourfold Dharmadhatu teaching.[77] The influential Caodong text called Sandokai, attributed to Shitou, also draws on Huayan themes.[76] In a similar fashion, Linji, the founder of the Linji school, also drew on Huayan texts and commentaries, such as Li Tongxuan's Xin Huayan Jing Lun (新華嚴經論, Treatise on the new translation of the Avatamsaka Sutra).[78][79] This influence can also be seen in Linji's schema of the "four propositions".[76] According to Thomas Cleary, similar Huayan influences can be found in the works of other Tang dynasty Chan masters like Yunmen Wenyan (d. 949) and Fayen Wenyi (885-958).[76]

During the Song dynasty, Huayan metaphysics were further assimilated by the various Chan lineages.[80] Cleary names Touzi Yiqing (1032-1083) and Dahui Zonggao (1089–1163) as two Song era Chan figures which drew on Huayan teachings.[81] The Ming era Chan master Hanshan Deqing (1546-1623) is known for promoting the study of Huayan and for his work on a new edition of Chengguan's commentary on the Huayan sutra.[82]

A similar syncretism with Zen occurred in Korea, where the Korean Huayan tradition influenced and was eventually merged with Seon (Korean Zen). The influence of Huayan teachings can be found in the works of the seminal Seon figure Jinul.[83] Jinul was especially influenced by the writings of Li Tongxuan.[61]

Huayan thought has also been influential on the worldview of Thich Nhat Hanh, particularly his understanding of emptiness as "Interbeing".[84]

Texts Edit

 
Huayan Sutra frontispiece in gold and silver text on indigo blue paper, mid 14th century.

Huayan sutra Edit

The Huayan school's central text is the Avataṃsaka Sūtra (Flower Garland Sutra, Ch. Huāyán Jīng), which is considered the supreme Buddhist revelation in this tradition. There are three different translations of the work in Chinese and other related sutras as well. According to Paul Williams, the Avataṃsaka Sūtra is not a systematic philosophical work, though it does contain various Mahayana teachings reminiscent of Madhyamaka and Yogacara, as well as mentioning a pure untainted awareness or consciousness (amalacitta).[85][2]

The sutra is filled with mystical and visionary imagery, focusing on figures like the bodhisattvas Samantabhadra and Manjushri, and the Buddhas Shakyamuni, and Vairocana. Vairocana is the universal Buddha, whose body is the entire universe and who is said to pervade every atom in the universe with his light, wisdom, teachings, and magical emanations.[86]

According to the Huayan sutra:

The realm of the Buddhas is inconceivable, no sentient being can fathom it....The Buddha constantly emits great beams of light, in each light beam are innumerable Buddhas....The Buddha-body is pure and always tranquil, the radiance of its light extends throughout the world....The Buddha's freedom cannot be measured— It fills the cosmos and all space....With various techniques it teaches the living, sound like thunder, showering the rain of truth....All virtuous activities in the world come from the Buddha's light....In all atoms of all lands Buddha enters, each and every one, producing miracle displays for sentient beings: Such is the way of Vairocana....In each atom are many oceans of worlds, their locations each different all beautifully pure. Thus does infinity enter into one, yet each unit's distinct, with no overlap....In each atom are innumerable lights pervading the lands of the ten directions, all showing the Buddhas’ enlightenment practices. The same in all oceans of worlds. In each atom the Buddhas of all times appear, according to inclinations; While their essential nature neither comes nor goes, by their own power they pervade the worlds.[87]

All these awakened activities and skillful techniques (upaya) are said to lead all living beings through the bodhisattva stages and eventually to Buddhahood. These various stages of spiritual attainment are discussed in various parts of the sutra (book 15, book 26).[88]

 
Huayan Sutra illustration from the Goryeo Dynasty.

An important doctrine that the Huayan school drew from this sutra is the idea that all levels of reality are interrelated, interpenetrated and interfused, and so "inside everything is everything else". As the Huayan sutra states:

They . . . perceive that the fields full of assemblies, the beings and aeons which are as many as all the dust particles, are all present in every particle of dust. They perceive that the many fields and assemblies and the beings and the aeons are all reflected in each particle of dust.[86]

According to Dumoulin, the Huayan vision of "unity in totality allows every individual entity of the phenomenal world its uniqueness without attributing an inherent nature to anything".[89] According to Williams, this interfused vision of the cosmos is the total realm of all phenomena, the "Dharma realm" (Dharmadhatu) as seen from the point of view of a Buddha. The focus of the Huayan sutra is thus how to attain this contemplative universal vision of ultimate reality, as well as the miraculous powers of Buddhas and bodhisattvas with which they communicate their vision of the ultimate truth.[86]

Furthermore, because all things are interconnected and interfused, the Buddha (and his cosmic body and universal light) is present everywhere and so is his wisdom, which is said to be all pervasive. As chapter 32 of the sutra states: "in the class of living beings there is no place where the wisdom of Tathagata is not present."[90]

Other key scriptures Edit

The Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana (Dasheng Qixin Lun, 大乘起信論) was another key scriptural source for Huayan masters like Fazang and Zongmi, both of whom wrote commentaries on this treatise.[91] The Lotus sutra was also seen as an important scripture in Huayan. Various Huayan masters saw the Lotus sutra as a sutra of definitive (ultimate) meaning alongside the Avatamsaka.[92] Fazang also considered the Lankavatara sutra to be a definitive sutra, and he wrote a commentary on it.[93][94] The Sutra of Perfect Enlightenment was also particularly important for the Huayan patriarch Zongmi.

Commentaries and treatises Edit

The Huayen patriarchs wrote numerous other commentaries and original treatises. Fazang for example, wrote commentaries on the Avatamsaka, the Lankavatara Sutra, the Awakening of Faith, the Brahmajāla Sūtra (Taisho no. 40, no. 1813) and the Ghanavyūha Sūtra (no. X368 in the supplement to the Taisho canon, Xu zang jing 續藏經 vol. 34).[95][96][97]

Perhaps the most important commentaries for the Chinese Huayan school are Fazang's commentary on the Avatamsaka Sutra, the Huayan jing tanxuan ji (華嚴經探玄記, Record of Investigating the Mystery of the Avatamsaka sutra) in 60 fascicles and Chengguan's Extensive Commentary on the Buddhāvataṃsaka sutra (Da fang-guang fo huayan jing shu, 大方廣佛華嚴經疏, T. 1735), and his sub-commentary (T. 1736).[16][98] Other Huayan figures like Zhiyan, and Li Tongxuan also wrote influential commentaries on the Huayan sutra.

Fazang wrote a number of other original Huayan treatises, such as Treatise on the Golden Lion, which is said to have been written to explain Huayan's view of interpenetration to Empress Wu.[99] Another key Huayen treatise is On the Meditation of the Dharmadhātu attributed to the first patriarch Dushun.[100]

Peter N. Gregory notes that the Huayan commentarial tradition was: "not primarily concerned with a careful exegesis of the original meaning of the scripture." Instead it was concerned with specific doctrines, ideas and metaphors (such as nature origination, the dependent arising of the dharmadhatu, interfusion, and the six characteristics of all dharmas) which was inspired by scripture.[101]

Doctrine Edit

Huayan thought seeks to explain the nature of the Dharmadhatu (法界, fajie, the realm of phenomena, the Dharma realm), which is the world as it is ultimately, from the point of view of a fully awakened being. In East Asian Buddhism, the Dharmadhatu is the whole of reality, the totality of all things. Thus, Huayan seeks to provide a holistic metaphysics that explains all of reality.[102]

Huayan philosophy is influenced by the Huayan sutra, other Mahayana scriptures like the Awakening of Faith and the Lotus Sutra, as well as by the various Chinese Buddhist traditions like Chinese Yogacara, the buddha-nature schools like Shelun and Dilun, and Madhyamaka (Sanlun). Huayan patriarchs were also influenced by non-buddhist Chinese philosophy.[103]

Some key elements of Huayan philosophy are: the interpenetration and interfusion (yuanrong) of all phenomena (dharmas), "nature origination," (xingqi) - how phenomena arise out of an ultimate principle, which is buddha-nature, or the "One Mind", how the ultimate principle (li) and all phenomena (shi) are mutually interpenetrated, the relation between parts and the whole (understood through the six characteristics), a unique Huayan interpretation of the Yogacara framework of the three natures (sanxing) and a unique view of Vairocana Buddha as an all pervasive cosmic being.[104][105][106]

Interpenetration Edit

 
A 3D rendering of Indra's net.

A key doctrine of Huayan is the mutual containment and interpenetration (xiangru) of all phenomena (dharmas), also known as "perfect interfusion" (yuanrong, 圓融). This is associated with what is termed "dharmadhatu pratityasamutpada" (法界緣起, fajie yuanqi, the dependent arising of the whole realm of phenomena), which is Huayan's unique interpretation of dependent arising.[107][104] This doctrine is described by Wei Daoru as the idea that "countless dharmas (all phenomena in the world) are representations of the wisdom of Buddha without exception" and that "they exist in a state of mutual dependence, interfusion and balance without any contradiction or conflict."[5] According to the doctrine of interpenetration, any phenomenon exists only as part of the total nexus of reality, its existence depends on the total network of all other things, which are all equally connected to each other and contained in each other.[5]

According to Fazang, since the sum of all things determines any individual thing, “one is many, many is one” (yi ji duo, duo ji yi). Furthermore, according to Fazang “one in many, many in one” (yi zhong duo, duo zhong yi), because any dharma penetrates and is penetrated by the totality of all things.[106] Thomas Cleary explains this Buddhist holism as one which sees the universe "as one single nexus of conditions in which everything simultaneously depends on, and is depended on by, everything else. Seen in this light, then, everything affects and is affected by, more or less immediately or remotely, everything else; just as this is true of every system of relationships, so is it true of the totality of existence."[108] In this worldview, all dharmas are so interconnected that they are fused together without any obstructions in a perfectly harmonious whole (which is the entire universe, the Dharmadhatu).[107]

In the Huayan school, the teaching of interpenetration is depicted through various metaphors, such as Indra's net, a teaching which may have been influenced by the Gandhavyuha chapter's climax scene in Vairocana's Tower.[109] Indra's net is an infinite cosmic net that contains a multifaceted jewel at each vertex, with each jewel being reflected in all of the other jewels, ad infinitum. Thus, each jewel contains the entire net of jewels reflected within.[109]

Other Huayan metaphors included a hall of mirrors, the rafter and the building, and the world text.[110][111] The rafter-building metaphor can be found in Fazang's famous “Rafter Dialogue”.[107] Fazang argues that any rafter (any part) is essential to the existence of its building (standing in for the universe, the dharmadhatu). Likewise, the identity and existence of any rafter is also dependent on it being part of a building (otherwise it would not be a rafter).[112][111] Therefore, any phenomenon is necessarily dependent upon all phenomena in the universe, and because of this, all phenomena lack any metaphysical independence or essential nature (svabhava).[113]

The six characteristics Edit

One framework which is used by the Huayan tradition to further explain the doctrine of interpenetration is the "perfect interfusion of the six characteristics" (liuxiang yuanrong 六相圓融).[114] Each element of the six characteristics refers to a specific kind of mereological relation.[113][106] The six characteristics are:[113][106]

  1. Wholeness / universality (zongxiang): each dharma (like a rafter) is characterized by wholeness, because it takes part in creating a whole (like a building), and each dharma is indispensable in creating the whole.
  2. Particularity / distinctness (biexiang): a dharma is characterized by particularity (e.g. any specific rafter) as far as it is a numerically distinct particular that is different from the whole.
  3. Identity / sameness (tongxiang): each dharma is characterized by a certain identity with all other parts of the whole, since they all mutually form the whole without conflict.
  4. Difference (yixiang): each dharma is different, since they have distinct functions and appearance, even while being part of a single whole.
  5. Integration (chengxiang): each dharma is integrated together with other dharmas in forming each other and in forming the whole, and each dharma does not interfere with every other dharma.
  6. Non-integration / disintegration (huaixiang): the fact that each part maintains its unique activity and retains its individuality while making up the whole.

Implications of interpenetration Edit

The Buddhist doctrine of interpenetration also has several further implications in Huayan thought:[115][4]

  • Truth is understood as encompassing and interpenetrating falsehood (or illusion), and vice versa (see also: two truths)
  • Purity (Śuddha) and goodness is understood as interpenetrating impurity and evil
  • Practicing any single Buddhist teaching entails the practicing of all other teachings
  • Ending one mental defilement (klesha) is ending all of them
  • The past contains the future and vice versa, all, three times are interfused
  • Practicing in one bodhisattva stage (bhumi) entails practicing in all bodhisattva stages

Furthermore, according to the lay Huayan master Li Tongxuan, all things are just the one true dharma-realm (Ch. yi zhen fajie), and as such, there is no ontological difference between sacred and secular, awakening and ignorance, or even between Buddhahood and living beings.[4] Because of the unity of ordinary human life and enlightenment, Li also held that Chinese sages like Confucius and Laozi also taught the bodhisattva path in their own way.[4]

The Huayan doctrines of interfusion and non-duality also leads to several seemingly paradoxical views. Some examples include: (1) since any phenomenon X is empty, this implies X is also not X; (2) any particular phenomenon is an expression of and contains the absolute and yet it retains its particularity; (3) since each phenomenon contains all other phenomena, the conventional order of space and time is violated.[116]

The ultimate principle and nature-origination Edit

Another important metaphysical framework used by Huayan patriarchs is that of principle (理, li, or the ultimate pattern) and phenomena (shi).[110][113] 'Principle' is the ultimate reality, which is ultimate reality (paramārtha-satya) which is endless and without limits, while phenomena (shi) refers to the impermanent and relative dharmas.[110]

In Fazang's influential Essay on the Golden Lion (Taishō no. 1881), Fazang uses the statue of a golden Chinese lion as a metaphor for reality. The gold itself stands in for the ultimate principle, which the appearance and relative shape of the lion statue is the relative and dependent phenomena as they are perceived by living beings.[113] Because the ultimate principle is boundless, empty and ceaseless, it is like gold in that it can be transformed into many forms and shapes.[117] Also, even though phenomena appear as particular things, they lack any independent existence, since they all depend on the ultimate principle.[113]

Furthermore, Huayan sees the ultimate principle and the relative phenomena as interdependent, unified and interfused, that is to say, they are non-dual.[118] According to Paul Williams:

First, noumenon and phenomena mutually interpenetrate and are (in a sense) identical. There is no opposition between the two. The one does not cancel out the other. Second, Fazang explains elsewhere that since all things arise interdependently (following Madhyamika), and since the links of interdependence expand throughout the entire universe and at all time (past, present, and future depend upon each other, which is to say the total dharmadhatu arises simultaneously), so in the totality of interdependence, the dharmadhatu, all phenomena are mutually interpenetrating and identical.[118]

The ultimate principle is associated with various Mahayana terms referring to ultimate reality, such as the "One Mind" of the Awakening of Faith, Suchness, the tathagatagarbha (the womb of tathagatas), buddha-nature, or just "nature". This nature is the ontological source and ground of all phenomena.[112] This is a key idea in Huayan thought which is called "nature-origination" (xingqi). The term derives from chapter 32 of the Avatamsaka Sutra, titled Nature Origination of the Jewel King Tathagata (Baowang rulai xingqi pin, Skt. Tathâgata-utpatti-sambhava-nirdesa-sûtra).[106][90]

Nature origination refers to the manifestation of the ultimate nature in the phenomenal world and its interfusion with it.[90] That is to say, the ultimate pure nature is interdependent on and interpenetrates the entire phenomenal universe, while also being its source. For Huayan patriarchs like Fazang, the ultimate nature is thus seen as non-dual with all relative phenomena.[112] Because the ultimate source of all things is also interdependent and interconnected with them, it remains a ground which is empty of self-existence (svabhava) and thus it is not an independent essence, like a monotheistic God.[112] [106][119]

The Cosmic Buddha Vairocana Edit

In the cosmology of the Avatamsaka sutra, our world is just one of the immeasurable number of worlds in a multiverse called "Ocean of worlds, whose surface and inside are decorated with an arrangement of flowers" (Kusumatalagarbha-vyuhalamkara-lokadhatu-samudra).[120] The Avatamsaka states that this entire cosmos has been purified by the Buddha Vairocana through his bodhisattva practices for countless aeons, after having met countless Buddhas. The sutra also states that our world is in Vairocana's buddhafield.[121] Vairocana is closely associated with Shakyamuni Buddha, in some cases he is even identified with him in the Avatamsaka Sutra.[122] Huayan generally sees Shakyamuni as an emanation body (nirmanakaya) from the ultimate Buddha Vairocana ("The Illuminator").[123]

 
A painting of Vairocana at Hwaeomsa

Furthermore, Huayan thought sees the entire universe as being the very body of Vairocana, who is seen as a supreme cosmic Buddha. Vairocana is infinite, his influence and light is limitless, pervading the entire universe.[105] Furthermore, Vairocana is really the ultimate principle (li), the Dharmakaya, Suchness and "the substance underlying phenomenal reality".[124] However, while Vairocana as ultimate principle is eternal, it also transforms and changes according to the needs and conditions of sentient beings. Furthermore, Vairocana is empty, interdependent and interfused with all phenomena in the universe.[124] Thus, Vairocana is both immanent (due to its dependent and interfused character) and transcendent (as the immutable basis of all things).[125]

According to Fazang, while the nirmanakaya Shakyamuni taught the other Mahayana sutras, Vairocana teaches the Avatamsaka Sutra through his ten bodies which are: the All-Beings Body, the Lands Body, the Karma Body, the Śrāvakas Body, the Pratyekabuddha Body, the Bodhisattvas Body, the Tathāgatas Body, the Wisdom Body, the Dharma Body, and the Space Body.[126] Fazang sees these ten bodies as encompassing all phenomena (animate and inanimate) in the "three realms", i.e. the entire universe.[127][90]

Classification of Buddhist teachings Edit

 
The Tongdosa Temple Hwaeumtang, a Joseon era tanka painting depicting the Huayan assemblies. It is a national treasure of South Korea.

In order to understand the vast number of texts and teachings they had received from India, Chinese Buddhist schools developed schematic classifications of these various teachings (called panjiao),[91] such as the Five Periods and Eight Teachings of the Tiantai school.

The Huayan school patriarch Zhiyan developed a five tiered doctrinal classification of the Buddha's teaching which was expanded on by later figures such as Fazang. The five tiers are:[128][129][130][4]

  1. The Hinayana teachings found in the Agamas and Abhidharma which is grounded in not-self (anatman). Fazang calls this "the teaching of the existence of dharmas and the non-existence of the self".[128]
  2. The Mahayana teachings which focus on emptiness, non-arising and lack of form, and include the Prajñaparamita sutras, Yogacara teachings on consciousness, and Madhyamaka sources like the Mulamadhyamakakarika.
  3. The "Final" Mahayana teaching which according to Fazang teach the "eternal nature of the tathagatagarbha". Fazang writes that this teaching is based on buddha-nature sources like the Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra, the Awakening of Faith, the Lankavatara, Srimaladevi sutra, Ratnagotravibhaga, and Dilun shastra.[128]
  4. The Sudden Teaching, which is non-verbal and non-conceptual.[129] This was associated with Vimalakirti's silence in the Vimalakirti sutra by Fazang. Chengguan also associated this with the "sudden enlightenment" teachings of the Chan school.
  5. The Complete or Perfect (Ch: yuan, lit. "Round") Teaching of the Avatamsaka sutra and Huayan which teach both the interpenetration of principle (or buddha-nature) and phenomena as well as the interpenetration of all phenomena with each other.

Huayan and Chan had doctrinal arguments regarding which would be the correct concept of sudden awakening. The teachings of the Chan school were regarded as inferior by Huayan masters, a characterization which was rejected by Chan masters.[73]

Practice Edit

 
Depiction of a Huayan ritual in the Daibutsu Engi Emaki (1536), Tōdai-ji, Nara, Japan
 
Huayen Puja at Yongmin Temple, Taipei

The Huayan school developed numerous practices as part of their conception of the bodhisattva path. These include devotional practices, studying, chanting and copying of the Avatamsaka sutra, repentance rituals, recitation of dharanis, and meditation.[3][38][131] These various elements might also be combined in ritual manuals such as The Practice of Samantabhadra's Huayan Dharma Realm Aspiration and Realization (華嚴普賢行願修證儀, Taisho Supplement, No. X1473) by Jinshui Jingyuan (靜源) which are still practiced together by Huayan communities during day long events.[132]

Textual practices Edit

According to Paul Williams, one of the central practices for the Huayan tradition was the recitation of the Avatamsaka sutra.[133] The chanting, studying and copying of the sutra was often done in "Huayan assemblies" (Huayanhui), who would meet regularly to chant the sutra. Chanting the entire sutra could take anywhere from a few weeks to several months.[3] Regular chanting of important passages from the sutra is also common, particularly the Bhadracaryāpraṇidhāna (The Aspiration Prayer for Good Conduct), sometimes called the "Vows of Samantabhadra".[134][135] Solo chanting practice was also common, and another common element of reciting the sutra was bowing to the sutra during the chanting.[3] Since this practice is time-consuming, it was also often done in solitary retreats called biguan, which could last years.[3]

Copying the entire sutra (or passages from the sutra) by hand was also another key practice in this tradition and some sutra copyists were known for their excellent calligraphy. This practice was also sometimes combined with chanting and bowing as well.[3] Another element that was sometimes added to this practice was to use one's own blood in the process of sutra copying (sometimes just blood mixed with the ink).[3] This blood writing was rare, but it was done by a few celebrated figures, like Hanshan Deqing (1546-1623) and the Republican Period monk Shouye.[3]

Contemplation of Buddhas and bodhisattvas Edit

 
A Mandala inside Huayan Temple with Maitreya Buddha at its center

Another practice which is often highlighted in the Avatamsaka sutra is that of buddhānusmṛti (Ch. nianfo), contemplation of the Buddha.[136]

In Chinese Buddhism, one popular method of contemplating the Buddha is to recite the Buddha's name. The practice of reciting the names of the Buddhas was also seen as a way to achieve rebirth in Vairocana's Pure Land, the Lotus Treasury World (Skt. Padmagarbha-lokadhātu; Ch. Lianhuazang shijie 蓮花藏世界).[137][138] This Pure Land contains the entire universe, including our world, and it is identical with the entire Dharmadhatu.[138] As such, for Huayan, our own world (known as the "Sahā world") is also the Lotus Storehouse Pure Land.[139] Huayan also saw Vairocana's Pure land as non-dual and interfused with Amitabha's Pure Land of Sukhavati.[140]

The practice of Buddha contemplation was promoted by various figures, such as the Huayan patriarchs Chengguan, Zongmi, the Goryeo monk Gyunyeo (923–973) and Peng Shaosheng, a householder scholar of the Qing dynasty.[137][139][140][44]

The patriarch Guīfēng Zōngmì taught four types of buddhānusmṛti (nianfo), a schema that was also adopted by later Chinese figures:[140] These four types of nianfo are the following:[141][140]

  • “Contemplation of the name” (chēngmíng niàn 稱名念), modeled on The Perfection of Wisdom Sutra preached by Mañjuśrī (Taisho. 232). One selects Buddha, faces their direction, and then one mentally "holds" (chēngmíng 稱名) the sound of the name until one has a vision of all buddhas.
  • “Contemplating an image” (guānxiàng niàn 觀像念), based on the Great Jewel Collection Sutra (大寶積經, Dà bǎojī jīng , T.310), which entails contemplating the form of a Buddha by using a Buddha image.
  • “Contemplating the visualization” (guānxiǎng niàn 觀想念), this entails contemplating a Buddha's body without the aid of a physical image, and is based on sutras like Sutra on the samadhi-ocean of the contemplation of the Buddha (T.643) and Sutra on the samadhi of seated meditation (T.614).
  • “Contemplating the true mark” (shíxiàng niàn 實相念), which entails the contemplation of the Dharmakaya, the true nature of all dharmas, Dharmata. This is "the true nature of the Buddha" according to The Perfection of Wisdom Sutra Preached by Mañjuśrī, which is "unproduced and unextinguished, neither going nor coming, without name and without feature".[142]

Another leading figure in the teaching of Huayan Nianfo was the 12th century Song monk Yihe (義和) who combined the method of nianfo with Huayan meditation teachings and the practice of the ten vows of Samantabhadra and saw this practice as a method of realizing the Huayan vision of ultimate reality.[44] During the Qing, Baiting Xufa (1641-1728) and the lay scholar Peng Shaosheng (1740–1796) further promoted Huayan-Nianfo methods.[44]

Huayan Pure Land practice also sometimes included devotion to bodhisattvas like Avalokiteshvara. This promoted by figures like the Korean monks Ŭisang and Ch'ewŏn. This devotion included the practice of chanting the names of bodhisattvas and visualizing them in meditation.[139][138]

Meditation and the fourfold Dharmadhatu Edit

Various Huayan texts provide different frameworks for the practice of meditation and the development of samadhi. Huayan sources mentions two key samadhis, the ocean-seal samadhi (Ch. haiyin sanmei) and the huayan samadhi (huayan sanmei).[143] Some key Huayan sources which discuss meditation include Dushun's Contemplation of the Realm of Reality (Fajie guanmen) and The Ending of Delusion and the Return to the Source (Wangjin huanyuan) attributed to Fazang.[47] Another key text is the "Cessation and Contemplation in the Five Teachings of Huayan" (Huayan wujiao zhiguan 華嚴五教止觀).[103]

Dushun's meditative framework was based on three main stages of contemplation: (1) understanding emptiness as the true nature of all dharmas, (2) understanding that all dharmas are harmonious with the truth, and (3) understanding that all dharmas do not obstruct each other and that each dharma contains all other dharmas.[47]

The theory of the "fourfold Dharmadhatu" (sifajie, 四法界) eventually became the central meditative framework for the Huayan tradition. This doctrinal and meditative framework is explained in Chengguan's meditation manual titled "Meditative Perspectives on the Huayan Dharmadhatu" (Huayan Fajie Guanmen, 華嚴法界觀門) and its commentaries.[103] The Dharmadhatu is the goal of the bodhisattva's practice, the ultimate nature of reality which must be known or entered into. According to Fox, the Fourfold Dharmadhatu is "four cognitive approaches to the world, four ways of apprehending reality".[103]

These four ways of seeing reality are:[103][144]

  1. All dharmas are seen as particular separate events or phenomena (shi 事). This is the mundane way of seeing and is not a contemplation or meditation, but the pre-meditative perspective.
  2. All events are an expression of li (理, the ultimate principle), which is associated with the concepts of "true emptiness", “One Mind” (yi xin 一心) and Buddha nature. This is the first level of Huayan meditation.
  3. This is the “non-obstruction of principle and phenomena” (lishi wuai 理事無礙), i.e. their interpenetration and interfusion.
  4. All events / phenomena interpenetrate (shishi wuai 事事無礙), which refers to how "all distinct phenomenal dharmas interfuse and penetrate in all ways" (Zongmi). This is also described as “universal pervasion and complete accommodation.”[103]

According to Fox, "these dharmadhatus are not separate worlds – they are actually increasingly more holographic perspectives on a single phenomenological manifold...they more properly represent four types or orders of perspectives on experience."[103] Furthermore, for Huayan, this contemplation is the solution to the problem of suffering which lies in the "fixation or attachment to a particular perspective. What we think are the essences of objects are really therefore nothing but mere names, mere functional designations, and none of these contextual definitions need necessarily interfere with any of the others."[103]

Regarding the practical application of this teaching, Baiting Xufa correlated the practice of nianfo with the fourfold Dharmadhatu as follows:[44]

  1. Nianfo on the level of the realm of phenomena refers to reciting the name of the Buddha as if the Buddha was external to oneself.
  2. Nianfo on the level of the ultimate principle refers to reciting nianfo while knowing it as mind-only (cittamatra).
  3. Nianfo practice on the level of “non-obstruction of principle and phenomena” refers to a nianfo practice which has transcended notions like "buddha", "mind" and "name of the buddha".
  4. Nianfo on the level of the interpenetration of all dharmas refers to the realization that the name of Buddha and the mind is all pervasive throughout the one true dharmadhatu.

The contemplation of the buddhalight Edit

The lay scholar-practitioner Li Tongxuan (635-730) developed a unique meditative practice based on the 9th chapter of the Avatamsaka sutra. The practice, named "the contemplation of Buddhalight" (foguang guan), focused on tracing the universal light which is radiated by the Buddha in one's mind and expanding one's contemplation further and further outwards until it fills the entire universe.[145] This contemplation of the Buddha's light leads to a state of joyful tranquility which leads to insight into emptiness.[146]

The meditative teachings of Li Tongxuan were especially influential on the Japanese Kegon monk Myōe, who promoted a similar practiced that he termed "the Samadhi of Contemplating the Buddha's Radiance" (Japanese: bukkō zanmaikan, 佛光三昧觀).[147][61]

Esoteric practices Edit

 
A Dharani Pillar from the Liao Dynasty

Fazang promoted the practice of several dharanis, such as the Xuanzang's version of the Dhāraṇī of Avalokiteśvara-ekadaśamukha.[148]

The synthesis of Huayan with Chinese Esoteric Buddhist practices was a feature of the Buddhism of the Khitan Liao Dynasty.[149] Jueyuan, a Huayan monk from Yuanfu Temple during the Liao Dynasty and author of the Dari jing yishi yanmi chao, practiced esoteric rituals like Homa and Abhiseka based on the Vairocanābhisaṃbodhi Sūtra and the tradition of Yixing.[150] Furthermore, according to Sorensen, the iconography of the Huayan Vairocana Buddha and the Esoteric Mahavairocana also became fused during the post-Tang period.[151]

Important esoteric texts used in this tradition included the: Cundī-dhāraṇī, the Usṇīsavijayā-dhāranī, the Nīlakaṇthaka-dhāranī and the Sutra on the Great Dharma Torch Dhāraṇī ( 大法炬陀羅尼 經, Da faju tuoluoni jing) among others.[150] In the Liao, stupas, pagodas and statues were often empowered with dharanis and mantras. These structures would often be filled or inscribed with dharanis, sutras, or mantras like the Six syllable mantra of Avalokiteshvara. Pillars inscribed with dhāraṇīs and mantras were also common.[152]

The synthesis of Esoteric Buddhist practice with Huayan Buddhism remained popular during the Jin dynasty (1115–1234), where Usṇīsavijayā and Cundī practices were some of the most popular.[153] A similar synthesis of Huayan-Chan Buddhism (derived from Zongmi) with esoteric Buddhist teachings and practices from Tibetan Buddhism (mainly Sakya and Kagyu) also occurred in Buddhism of the Western Xia (1038–1227) dynasty.[154]

Dharanis like the Cundī-dhāraṇī, the Usṇīsavijayā-dhāranī, and the Nīlakaṇthaka-dhāranī remain important in modern Huayan Buddhism and are chanted in modern Dharma assemblies. Another dharani / esoteric practice in modern Huayan is the contemplation of the 42 Avatamsaka syllables (a version of the arapacana alphabet, which is a contemplation found in various Mahayana sources).[155][156]

The Japanese Kegon school was known for adopting many esoteric mantras and practices from the Shingon school. The Kegon monk Myōe was known for his widespread promotion of the popular Mantra of Light (kōmyō shingon, 光明眞言).[157] Due to influence from the Shingon school, today's Kegon school retains numerous esoteric Buddhist elements.

The path and sudden awakening Edit

 
Illustration of Sudhana's Pilgrimage in the Gandhavyuha sutra, from the Heian period, Nara National Museum, Japan.

The Huayan school defended a sudden awakening view. This is because the buddha-nature is already present in all sentient beings, and also because their theory of universal interpenetration entails that Buddhahood is interfused with the very first stage of a bodhisattva's path.[158][159] Thus, according to patriarch Fazang, “when one first arouses the thought of enlightenment [bodhicitta] one also becomes perfectly enlightened”.[159]

Similarly, Huayan master Li Tongxuan writes:

The first access of faith in the mind of the practitioner is in itself the culmination of the entire path, the very realization of final Buddhahood.... ‘Faith’ or confidence in the possibility of enlightenment is nothing but enlightenment itself, in an anticipatory and causative modality.[160]

This interpenetration of all elements of the path to awakening is also a consequence of the Huayan view of time, which sees all moments as interfused (including a sentient being's present practice and their eventual future Buddhahood aeons from now). Since time itself is empty, all moments (past, present, and future) are interfused with each other.[159][161] As Fazang writes, "beginning and end Interpenetrate. On each [bodhisattva] stage, one is thus both a Bodhisattva and a Buddha."[161] As such, Huayan does not understand a bodhisattva's progress through the bodhisattva stages (bhumis) as being linear.[159] Instead, as soon as one reaches the earlier stages of "perfection of faith" (which is part of Huayan's 52 bhumi model), one has also acquired all the stages, as well as Buddhahood.[161] This doctrine of "enlightenment at the stage of faith" (信滿成佛, xinman cheng fo) was a unique feature of Huayan and was first introduced by Fazang.[162]

In Huayan, Buddhahood transcends all concepts, times and stages. Because practice cannot create something that is not immanent, Huayan sees the bodhisattva path as simply revealing what is already there (buddha-nature, which is buddhahood itself concealed within sentient beings). In spite of this doctrine, Huayan patriarchs also argued that the gradual practices of the bodhisattva stages are still necessary. This is because all stages retain their particularity even while being wholly interfused and only through the practice of the bodhisattva path does the immanent Buddhahood manifest.[162][163][164]

Thus, according to Li Tongxuan "there is no other enlightenment" than simply following the bodhisattva path, and furthermore:

Primordial wisdom is made manifest through meditation; cultivation does not create it or bring it into being. If one simply follows the Bodhisattva Path and learns the bodhisattva practices, primordial wisdom will shine forth of itself....[164]

Similarly, patriarch Zongmi held that Buddhahood is reached through "sudden awakening followed by gradual cultivation" and he also held that "sudden and gradual are not only not contradictory, but are actually complementary".[103]

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Sources Edit

  • Buswell, Robert E. (1991), The "Short-cut" Approach of K'an-hua Meditation: The Evolution of a Practical Subitism in Chinese Ch'an Buddhism. In: Peter N. Gregory (editor)(1991), Sudden and Gradual. Approaches to Enlightenment in Chinese Thought, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited
  • Buswell, Robert E (1993), Ch'an Hermeneutics: A Korean View. In: Donald S. Lopez, Jr. (ed.)(1993), Buddhist Hermeneutics, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass
  • Chang, Garma C.C. (1992), The Buddhist teaching of Totality. The Philosophy of Hwa Yen Buddhism, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers
  • Cleary, Thomas, trans. (1993). The Flower Ornament Scripture: A Translation of the Avatamsaka Sūtra. ISBN 0-87773-940-4
  • Cook, Francis H (1977), Hua-Yen Buddhism: The Jewel Net of Indra, Penn State Press, ISBN 0-271-02190-X
  • Dumoulin, Heinrich (2005), Zen Buddhism: A History. Volume 1: India and China, World Wisdom Books, ISBN 978-0-941532-89-1
  • Garfield, Jay L.; Edelglass, William (2011), The Oxford Handbook of World Philosophy, Oup USA, ISBN 9780195328998
  • Gimello, Robert; Girard, Frédéric; Hamar, Imre (2012). Avataṃsaka Buddhism in East Asia: Huayan, Kegon, Flower Ornament Buddhism ; origins and adaptation of a visual culture, Asiatische Forschungen: Monographienreihe zur Geschichte, Kultur und Sprache der Völker Ost- u. Zentralasiens, Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, ISBN 978-3-447-06678-5.
  • Hamar, Imre (2007), Reflecting Mirrors: Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism (Asiatische Forschungen Vol. 151), Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, ISBN 978-3447055093
  • Lai, Whalen (2003), (PDF), New York: Routledge, archived from the original (PDF) on November 12, 2014
  • Wright, Dale S. (1982), , archived from the original on April 12, 2014

Further reading Edit

  • Cleary, Thomas (1995). Entry Into the Inconceivable: An Introduction to Hua-Yen Buddhism, University of Hawaii Press; Reprint edition. ISBN 0824816978 (Essays by Tang Dynasty Huayen masters)
  • Fa Zang (2014). "Rafter Dialogue" and "Essay on the Golden Lion," in Justin Tiwald and Bryan W. Van Norden, eds., Readings in Later Chinese Philosophy. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing. ISBN 978-1624661907
  • Gregory, Peter N. (1983). The place of the Sudden Teaching within the Hua-Yen tradition:an investigation of the process of doctrinal change, Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 6 (1), 31 - 60
  • Haiyun Jimeng (2006). The Dawn of Enlightenment - The Opening Passage of Avatamsaka Sutra with a Commentary, Kongting Publishing. ISBN 986748410X
  • Hamar, Imre (2007), (PDF), Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, ISBN 978-3447055093, archived from the original (PDF) on April 12, 2014
  • Prince, Tony (2020), Universal Enlightenment - An introduction to the Teachings and Practices of Huayen Buddhism (2nd edn.). ISBN 986-7484-83-5

External links Edit

  • Chang Chung-Yuan, The World of Shih & Li of Tung-Shan
  • Flower Adornment Sutra - Hua Yan Jing - Avatamsaka Original Text

huayan, other, uses, disambiguation, school, buddhism, traditional, chinese, 華嚴, pinyin, huáyán, wade, giles, flower, garland, from, sanskrit, avataṃsaka, mahayana, buddhist, tradition, that, developed, china, during, tang, dynasty, worldview, based, primarily. For other uses see Huayan disambiguation The Huayan school of Buddhism traditional Chinese 華嚴 pinyin Huayan Wade Giles Hua Yen Flower Garland from the Sanskrit Avataṃsaka is Mahayana Buddhist tradition that developed in China during the Tang dynasty 618 907 1 The Huayan worldview is based primarily on the Buddhavataṃsaka Sutra Chinese 華嚴經 pinyin Huayan jing Flower Garland Sutra as well as on the works of Huayan patriarchs like Zhiyan 602 668 Fazang 643 712 Chengguan 738 839 Zongmi 780 841 and Li Tongxuan 635 730 2 1 HuayanThe Three Worthies of Huayan Manjushri left Vairocana center and Samantabhadra right a triad venerated in Huayan Dazu Rock Carvings Chongqing ChinaChinese nameChinese华严宗Traditional Chinese華嚴宗TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHuayan zōngWade GilesHua yen tsungYue CantoneseJyutpingFa4 yim4 zung1Southern MinTai loHua ngiam tsongVietnamese nameVietnamese alphabetHoa Nghiem tongChữ Han華嚴宗Korean nameHangul화엄종Hanja華嚴宗TranscriptionsMcCune ReischauerHwa eom jongJapanese nameKanji華厳宗Kanaけごん しゅうTranscriptionsRomanizationKegon shuSanskrit nameSanskritAvataṃsakaAnother common name for this tradition is the Xianshou school Xianshou being another name for patriarch Fazang 3 The Huayan School is known as Hwaeom in Korea Kegon in Japan and Hoa Nghiem in Vietnam The Huayan tradition considers the Flower Garland Sutra to be the ultimate teaching of the Buddha 1 It also draws on other sources like the Mahayana Awakening of Faith and the Madhyamaka and Yogacara philosophies 4 Huayan teachings especially its doctrines of universal interpenetration nature origination which sees all phenomena as arising from a single ontological source and the omnipresence of Buddhahood were very influential on Chinese Buddhism and also on the rest of East Asian Buddhism 5 4 Huayan thought was especially influential on Chan Zen Buddhism and some scholars even see Huayan as the main Buddhist philosophy behind Zen 6 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins of the Chinese Avataṃsaka tradition 1 2 Tang dynasty patriarchs 1 3 Liao and Xia developments 1 4 Song revival 1 5 Ming and Qing dynasties 1 6 Korean Hwaom 1 7 Japanese Kegon 1 8 Modern Era 1 9 Influence 1 9 1 On Chan 2 Texts 2 1 Huayan sutra 2 2 Other key scriptures 2 3 Commentaries and treatises 3 Doctrine 3 1 Interpenetration 3 2 The six characteristics 3 3 Implications of interpenetration 3 4 The ultimate principle and nature origination 3 5 The Cosmic Buddha Vairocana 3 6 Classification of Buddhist teachings 4 Practice 4 1 Textual practices 4 2 Contemplation of Buddhas and bodhisattvas 4 3 Meditation and the fourfold Dharmadhatu 4 4 The contemplation of the buddhalight 4 5 Esoteric practices 4 6 The path and sudden awakening 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Aerial view of Huayan Temple Datong built during the Jin dynasty 1115 1234 Origins of the Chinese Avataṃsaka tradition Edit The Buddhavataṃsaka Sutra The Garland of Buddhas Sutra or The Multitude of Buddhas Sutra is a compilation of sutras of various length some of which originally circulated as independent works before being combined into the full Avataṃsaka 7 One of the earliest of these texts the Ten Stages Sutra Dasabhumika may date from the first century CE 8 These various sutras were probably joined shortly before its translation into Chinese at the beginning of the 5th century CE 8 9 There are various versions of the Chinese Avataṃsaka Chinese Huayan Jing 華嚴經 Splendid Flower Adornment Sutra The full sutra was translated into Chinese three times in versions of 40 60 and 80 fascicles or scrolls 卷 10 The earliest Chinese texts associated with the Avataṃsaka are the Dousha jing Taisho 280 produced by Lokaksema fl 147 189 in the latter part of the second century CE and the Pusa benye jing Book of the Original Acts that Adorn the Bodhisattva T 281 translated by Zhi Qian fl ca 220 257 CE in the early to mid third century There is evidence that these smaller or partial Avataṃsaka sutras circulated on their own as individual scriptures 11 As soon as the large Huayan Sutra appeared in China an exegetical tradition grew up around the text in order to explain it 3 The first translation of the larger Huayan Sutra in 60 fascicles is often dated to the Southern Dynasties era c 420 589 when a translation team led by Gandharan master Buddhabhadra produced a full Chinese translation of the text 12 There is also evidence of a Huayan Sutra tradition in the Northern Dynasties 386 581 era The Avataṃsaka teachings are associated with figures like Xuangao 402 444 who led a community with Daorong at Binglingsi cave and Zhidan c 429 490 who argued that only the Huayan Sutra teaches the sudden teaching while other Mahayana texts teach the gradual teaching 12 Xuangao a disciple of Buddhabhadra was associated with the teaching of the Huayan Samadhi which is said to have been passed on to him by Buddhabhadra 13 According to Hamar Xuangao s tradition is a precursor to the Huayan school and may have even composed the apocryphal Brahma s Net Sutra Fanwang Jing T1484 14 Xuangao s tradition is also associated with Chinese meditation cave grottoes such as the Yungang Grottoes Maijishan Grottoes and the Bingling Temple Grottoes 15 The origins of some of the teachings of the Huayan school proper can also be traced back to the Dilun school which was based on the Shidijing lun 十地經論 Vasubandhu s commentary to the Dasabhumika sutra which is part of the Avataṃsaka Sutra translated by Bodhiruci and Ratnamati 16 Dilun figures like Ratnamati s disciple Huiguang 468 537 emphasized the study of the entire Avataṃsaka and Dilun masters likely had their own commentaries on the text but none have survived in full Only a few extracts remain such as parts of Huiguang s commentary and parts of Lingyu s 518 605 16 Lingbian 靈辨 477 522 was another early figure who studied and commented on the Avataṃsaka 16 He is referred to by Fazang as a great devotee of Manjushri and 12 fascicles of Lingbian s commentary to the Avataṃsaka survive being the earliest significant Chinese commentary on the Avataṃsaka which is extant 16 Tang dynasty patriarchs Edit nbsp 13th century Japanese print of Fazang Todaiji Nara Japan The founding of the Huayan school proper is traditionally attributed to a series of five patriarchs who were instrumental in developing the school s doctrines during the Tang dynasty 618 to 907 These Huayan patriarchs though they did not call themselves as such were erudite scholar practitioner who created a unique tradition of exegesis study and practice through their writings and oral teachings 17 They were particularly influenced by the works of the Dilun and Shelun schools of Chinese Yogacara 16 These five patriarchs are 18 19 4 Dushun Chinese 杜順 Wade Giles Tu Shun c 557 640 a monk who was known as a meditator master and who was devoted to the Huayan sutra He wrote several works including the Discernments of the Huayan Dharmadhatu Huayan fajie guanmen Zhiyan Chinese 智儼 Wade Giles Chih yen c 602 668 was a student of Dushun who is considered to have established most of the main doctrines of Huayan thought and is thus a crucial figure in the foundation of Huayan 20 Zhiyan also studied with various masters from the Dilun and Shelun schools which were branches of Chinese Yogacara 21 Fazang Chinese 法藏 Wade Giles Fa tsang c 643 712 who was the Buddhist teacher of the Empress Wu Zetian 684 705 and is often considered the real founder of the school 22 21 He wrote numerous works on Huayan thought and practice including several commentaries on the Avatamsaka 23 He also worked on a new translation of the Avatamsaka Sutra in collaboration with various figures including Sikṣananda in 80 fascicles Chengguan Chinese 澄觀 Wade Giles Ch eng kuan c 738 839 though he was not a direct student of Fazang who died 25 years before Chengguan s birth Chengguan further developed the Huayan teachings in innovative directions in his various commentaries and treatises 3 24 He was a student of Fashen 718 778 who was a student of Fazang s student Huiyuan Chengguan s voluminous commentary to the new 80 fascicle Avatamsaka the Da fang guang fo huayan jing shu 大方廣佛華嚴經疏 T 1735 along with his sub commentary to it T 1736 soon became the authoritative commentaries to the sutra in East Asia 16 Guifeng Zongmi Chinese 圭峰宗密 Wade Giles Kuei feng Tsung mi c 780 841 who is also known for also being a patriarch of Chinese Chan and for also writing on Daoism and Confucianism 25 His writings include works on Chan such as the influential Chan Prolegomenon and various Huayan commentaries 26 He was particularly fond of the Sutra of Perfect Enlightenment writing a commentary and sub commentary to it 27 While the above list is the most common one other Huayan patriarchal lists add different figures such as Nagarjuna Asvaghosa Vasubandhu and the lay master Li Tongxuan Chinese 李通玄 635 730 the author of the Xin Huayan Jing Lun 新華嚴經論 Treatise on the new translation of the Avatamsaka Sutra a popular and lengthy commentary on the Avatamsaka 3 28 Li Tongxuan s writings on the Huayan sutra were particularly influential on later Chan Buddhists who often preferred his interpretations 29 Another important Huayan figure of the Tang era was Fazang s main disciple Huiyuan 慧苑 673 743 who also wrote a commentary on the Avatamsaka Sutra 28 Because Huiyuan modified some of Fazang s interpretations he was retroactively sidelined from the Huayan lineage of patriarchs by later figures like Chengguan who criticized some of his doctrinal positions 16 According to Imre Hamar Huiyuan compared the Daoist teachings on the origination of the world to the Huayan teaching on the dependent arising of the tathagatagarbha Huiyuan also incorporated Daoism and Confucianism into his panjiao doctrinal classification system Chengguan disagreed with this 30 Liao and Xia developments Edit After the time of Zongmi and Li Tongxuan Chinese Huayan generally stagnated in terms of new developments and then eventually began to decline The school which had been dependent upon the support it received from the government suffered severely during the Great Buddhist Persecution of the Huichang era 841 845 initiated by Emperor Wuzong of Tang 25 The school stagnated even further in the conflicts and confusion of the late Tang dynasty and the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms 907 979 era After the fall of the Tang dynasty several Huayan commentaries were lost However during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms era Huayan remained influential being part of the Huayan Chan lineages influenced by Zongmi which were very popular in the north especially in the Khitan Liao Empire 916 1125 and the Tangut kingdom 1038 1227 of the Western Xia 31 Various masters from these non Chinese kingdoms are known such as Xianyan 1048 1118 from Kailong temple in Khitan Upper capital Hengce 1049 1098 Tongli dashi from Yanjing Daoshen 1056 1114 Xianmi Yuantong from Liao Wutaishan Zhifu fl during the reign of Liao Daozong 1055 1101 32 The Liao and Xia Huayan traditions were more syncretic adopting elements of Zongmi s Heze Chan influenced Huayan as well as Chinese Esoteric Buddhism zhenyan Hongzhou Chan and even Tibetan Buddhism in some cases 33 Several texts from the Liao Huayan tradition have survived such as master Daochen s 道㲀 Chan influenced Account of Mirroring Mind Jingxin lu 鏡心錄 and his esoteric influenced Collection of Essentials for Realization of Buddhahood in the Perfect Penetration of the Exoteric and Secret Teachings Xianmi Yuantong chengfo xinyao 顯密圓通成佛心要 T no 1955 32 34 Another Liao Tangut work which survives from this period is The Meaning of the Luminous One Mind of the Ultimate One Vehicle Jiujing yicheng yuan ming xinyao 究竟一乘圓明心要 by Tongli Hengce 通理恆策 1048 1098 33 The works of the Liao tradition are important because they served as one of the sources of the later Huayan revival during the Song 33 Song revival Edit nbsp The Wanbu Huayanjing Pagoda likely built during the Emperor Daozong of Liao 1055 1110 After the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms the Huayan lineage experienced a revival in the following Song dynasty 960 1279 Tang era Huayan commentaries which had been dispersed were returned in 1085 by the Goryeo monk Uicheon Uicheon 義天 1055 1101 was thus an important figure of this revival period 35 The chief Chinese Huayan figures of the Song dynasty revival were Changshui Zixuan 子璇 965 1038 Jinshui Jingyuan 靜源 1011 1088 and Yihe 義和 c early twelfth century 36 29 Jingyuan is known for his sub commentary to Chengguan s Huayan sutra commentary while Zixuan is famed for his twenty fascicle Notes on the Meaning of the Suraṅgama Sutra 首楞嚴義疏注經 29 27 While the Huayan school is generally seen as having been weaker than Chan or Tiantai during the Song it still enjoyed considerable support from Chinese elites and from Buddhist monastics 37 Another important figure in the Song revival of Huayan was Guangzhi Bensong 廣智本嵩 fl 1040 a master from the from Kaifeng He is well known for his Thirty gathas on the Contemplation of the Dharma realm and Seven syllables of the title of the Huayan Huayan qizi jing ti fajie guan sanshi men song 華嚴 七字經題法界觀三十門頌 Taisho no 1885 Some of his other works have survived in Tangut 33 New Huayan practice and ritual manuals were also written during the Song such as Jinshui Jingyuan s Rites on Practicing the Vows of Samantabhadra Chinese 華嚴普賢行願修證儀 Pinyin Huayan Pǔxian Xingyuan Xiuzheng Yi Taisho Supplement no X1473 38 These rites were influenced by Tiantai school ritual manuals as well as by earlier Huayan materials 35 38 Song era Huayan monks also developed distinctly Huayan forms of concentration and contemplation zhi guan inspired by Tiantai methods as well as the Avatamsaka sutra and Huayan thought 35 Jinshui Jingyuan also helped organize some state recognized Huayan public monasteries like Huiyin temple 3 38 Jingyuan is nown for his association with Mount Wutai which has been a key center for Huayan Buddhism since the Song dynasty 3 In the later Song there were also four great Huayan masters Daoting Shihui 1102 1166 Guanfu and Xidi 27 During the Yuan dynasty the Huayan master Purui also wrote various Huayan works 27 Ming and Qing dynasties Edit During the Ming dynasty Huayan remained influential One important event during the early Ming was when the eminent Huayan monk Huijin 1355 1436 was invited by the Xuande Emperor 1399 1435 to the imperial palace to preside over the copying of ornate manuscripts of the Buddhavataṃsaka Prajnaparamita Maharatnakuṭa and Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutras 39 nbsp A European illustration of the Bao en monastery and the Porcelain Tower of Nanjing which was a center of Huayan studies during the late Ming 40 During the sixteenth century Beijing was the center of Chinese Buddhist doctrinal study 40 During the late Ming Kongyin Zhencheng 1547 1617 Lu an or Lushan Putai fl 1511 of Beijing s Da Xinglong monastery and Yu an Zhengui born 1558 were some of the most influential scholars of Huayan thought 41 40 Huayan philosophy was also influential on some of the most eminent monks of the Ming era including Zhibo Zhenke and Yunqi Zhuhong 1535 1615 both of whom studied and drew on Huayan thought and promoted the unity of practice Chan and Pure Land and study 42 43 Zhuhong himself was a student of Wuji Mingxin 1512 1574 of Bao en monastery who in turn was a disciple of Lu an Putai 40 Another influential student of Wuji was Xuelang Hong en 1545 1608 who became the most famous teacher in Jiangnan and lead revival of Huayan studies during this time 40 His main students include Yiyu Tongrun 1565 1624 Cangxue Duche 1588 1656 Tairu Minghe 1588 1640 and Gaoyuan Mingyu fl 1612 40 During the Qing dynasty 1636 1912 Huayan philosophy continued to develop and exert a strong influence on Chinese Buddhism and its other traditions including Chan and Pure Land During the Qing the most influential Huayan figures were Baiting Xufa 1641 1728 and Datian Tongli 1701 1782 40 Xufa wrote various works on nianfo including Short Commentary on the Amitabhasutra and Straightforward Commentary on the Amitayurdhyana Sutra Another influential figure was the lay scholar Peng Shaosheng 彭紹升 1740 1796 44 Baiting Xufa and Peng Shaosheng were known for their synthesis of Huayan thought with Pure Land practice which is termed Huayan Nianfo 44 For the scholar monk Xufa the practice of nianfo contemplation of the Buddha was a universal method suitable for everyone which was taught in the Avatamsaka Sutra and could lead to an insight into the Huayan teachings of interpenetration 44 Xufa generally defended the mind only Pure land view which saw the Pure land and Amitabha Buddha as reflections of the one true mind yixin 一心 zhenxin 真心 or the one true dharmadhatu 44 Similarly for Peng Shaosheng Amitabha was synonymous with the Vairocana Buddha of the Avatamsaka sutra and the pure land was part of Vairocana s Lotus Treasury World As such the practice of nianfo and of the methods of the Avatamsaka would lead to rebirth in the Pure land which is non dual with all worlds in the universe and see Buddha Amitabha which is equal to seeing all Buddhas 44 Korean Hwaom Edit nbsp Hwaeomsa Temple Jirisan National ParkIn the 7th century the Huayan school was transmitted into Silla Korea where it is known as Hwaom Hangul 화엄 45 This tradition was transmitted by the monk Uisang 의상대사 625 702 who had been a student of Zhiyan together with Fazang 46 After Uisang returned to Korea in 671 established the school and wrote various Hwaom works including a popular poem called the Beopseongge also known as the Diagram of the Realm of Reality which encapsulated the Huayan teaching 47 48 In this effort he was greatly aided by the powerful influences of his friend Wonhyo who also studied and drew on Huayan thought and is considered a key figure of Korean Hwaom 49 Wonhyo wrote a partial commentary on the Avataṃsaka Sutra the Hwaŏm gyŏng so 50 Another important Hwaom figure was Chajang d between 650 and 655 51 After the passing of these two early monks the Hwaom school eventually became the most influential tradition in the Silla Kingdom until the end of the kingdom 52 Royal support allowed various Hwaom monasteries to be constructed on all five of Korea s sacred mountains and the tradition became the main force behind the unification of various Korean Buddhist cults such as those of Manjushri Maitreya and Amitabha 52 Important figures include the Silla monk Pŏmsu who introduced the work of Chengguan to Korea in 799 and Sŭngjŏn a disciple of Uisang 53 Another important figure associated with Hwaom was the literatus Ch oe Ch iwŏn He is known for his biographies of Fazang and Uisang along with other Huayan writings 54 Towards of the end of Silla Gwanhye of Hwaeomsa and Master Heuirang 875 927 CE were the two most important figures During this period Hwaeomsa and Haeinsa Temples formed two sub sects of Hwaeom who disputed with each other on matters of doctrine The Hwaom school remained the predominant doctrinal school in the Goryeo Dynasty 918 1392 55 An important figure of this time was Gyunyeo 923 973 56 57 He is known for his commentary on Uisang s Diagram of the Realm of Reality 58 He also unified the southern and northern factions of Hwaeomsa and Haeinsa Korean Buddhism declined severely under the Confucian Joseon Dynasty 1392 1910 All schools were forced to merge into one single school which was dominated by the Seon Korean Zen tradition Within the Seon school Hwaom thought would continue to play a strong role until modern times and various Hwaom commentaries were written in the Joseon era 58 Japanese Kegon Edit nbsp Daibutsuden at Tōdai ji NaraKegon Japanese 華厳宗 is the Japanese transmission of Huayan 59 Huayan studies were founded in Japan in 736 when the scholar priest Rōben 689 773 originally a monk of the East Asian Yogacara tradition invited the Korean monk Shinjō traditional Chinese 審祥 pinyin Shenxiang Korean pronunciation Simsang to give lectures on the Avatamsaka Sutra at Kinshōsen Temple 金鐘山寺 also 金鐘寺 Konshu ji or Kinshō ji the origin of later Tōdai ji When the construction of the Tōdai ji was completed Rōben became the head of the new Kegon school in Japan and received the support of emperor Shōmu 60 Kegon would become known as one of the Nanto Rikushu 南都六宗 or Six Buddhist Sects of Nanto Rōben s disciple Jitchu continued administration of Tōdai ji and expanded its prestige through the introduction of imported rituals nbsp Zenmyō confesses her love to Gishō Uisang a painting from the Kegon Engi Emaki Illuminated scrolls from the founders of the Kegon Sect Kegon thought would later be further popularized by Myōe 1173 1232 abbot and founder of Kōzan ji Kegon temple who combined the Kegon lineage Tendai and Shingon esoteric lineages 61 62 63 He was a prolific scholar monk who composed over 50 works 64 Myōe promoted the practice of the mantra of light kōmyō shingon as simple efficacious practice that was available to all lay and monastic He also promoted the idea that this mantra could lead to rebirth in Amitabha s pure land thus providing a Kegon alternative to popular Japanese Pure Land methods 65 Over time Kegon incorporated esoteric rituals from Shingon with which it shared a cordial relationship Its practice continues to this day and includes a few temples overseas Another important Kegon figure was Gyōnen 1240 1321 who was a great scholar who studied numerous schools including Madhyamaka Shingon and Risshu Vinaya and led a revival of the Kegon school in the late Kamakura era 66 He was also known as a great historian of Japanese Buddhism and as a great Pure Land thinker 66 His Pure Land thought is most systematically expressed in his Jōdo hōmon genrushō 淨土法門源流章 T 2687 84 and it was influenced by various figures of his day such as the Jodo monk Chōsai and the Sanron figure Shinku Shōnin as well as by his understanding of Huayan thought 66 In the Tokugawa period another Kegon scholarly revival occurred under the Kegon monk Hōtan 1657 1738 a k a Sōshun Genko Dōjin and his disciple Fujaku 1707 1781 66 Modern Era Edit nbsp Photo of the Buddha Hall of Upper Huayan Temple between 1937 and 1945 Datong Shanxi China During the Republican Period 1912 1949 various monks were known for their focus on Huayan teaching and practice Key Huayan figures of this era include Cizhou 1877 1958 Zhiguang 1889 1963 Changxing Yingci Yang Wenhui Yuexia Shouye and Kefa Some of these figures were part of a network of Huayan study and practice 3 In 1914 Huayan University the first modern Buddhist monastic school was founded in Shanghai to further systematize Huayan teaching and teach monastics It helped to expand the Huayan tradition into the rest of into East Asia Taiwan and the West The university managed to foster a network of educated monks who focused on Huayan Buddhism during the 20th century Through this network the lineage of the Huayan tradition was transmitted to many monks which helped to preserve the lineage down to the modern day via new Huayan centred organizations that these monks would later found 67 Several new Huayan Buddhist organizations have been established since the latter half of the 20th century In contemporary times the largest and oldest of the Huayan centered organizations in Taiwan is the Huayan Lotus Society Huayan Lianshe 華嚴蓮社 which was founded in 1952 by the monk Zhiguang and his disciple Nanting who were both part of the network fostered by the Huayan University Since its founding the Huayan Lotus Society has been centered on the study and practice of the Huayan Sutra It hosts a full recitation of the sutra twice each year during the third and tenth months of the lunar calendar Each year during the eleventh lunar month the society also hosts a seven day Huayan Buddha retreat Huayan foqi 華嚴佛七 during which participants chant the names of the buddhas and bodhisattvas in the text The society emphasizes the study of the Huayan Sutra by hosting regular lectures on it In recent decades these lectures have occurred on a weekly basis 67 Like other Taiwanese Buddhist organization s the Society has also diversified its propagation and educational activities over the years It produces its own periodical and runs its own press It also now runs a variety of educational programs including a kindergarten a vocational college and short term courses in Buddhism for college and primary school students and offers scholarships One example is their founding of the Huayan Buddhist College Huayan Zhuanzong Xueyuan 華嚴專宗學院 in 1975 They have also established branch temples overseas most notably in California s San Francisco Bay Area In 1989 they expanded their outreach to the United States of America by formally establishing the Huayan Lotus Society of the United States Meiguo Huayan Lianshe 美國華嚴蓮社 Like the parent organization in Taiwan this branch holds weekly lectures on the Huayan Sutra and several annual Huayan Dharma Assemblies where it is chanted It also holds monthly memorial services for the society s spiritual forebears 67 In Mainland China Huayan teachings began to be more widely re propagated after the end of the Cultural Revolution Various monks from the network of monks fostered by the original Huayan University such as Zhenchan 真禪 and Mengcan 夢參 were the driving factors behind the re propagation as they travelled widely throughout China as well as other countries such as the United States and lectured on Huayan teachings In 1996 one of Mengcan s tonsured disciples the monk Jimeng 繼夢 also known as Haiyun 海雲 founded the Huayan Studies Association Huayan Xuehui 華嚴學會 in Taipei which was followed in 1999 by the founding of the larger Caotangshan Great Huayan Temple Caotangshan Da Huayansi 草堂山大華嚴寺 This temple hosts many Huayan related activities including a weekly Huayan Assembly Since 2000 the association has grown internationally with branches in Australia Canada and the United States 67 Influence Edit The doctrines of the Huayan school ended up having profound impact on the philosophical attitudes of East Asian Buddhism According to Wei Daoru their theory of perfect interfusion was gradually accepted by all Buddhist traditions and it eventually permeated all aspects of Chinese Buddhism 5 Huayan even is seen by some scholars as the main philosophy behind Chan Buddhism 6 Huayan thought had a noticeable impact on East Asian Esoteric Buddhism Kukai 774 835 was deeply knowledgeable of Huayan thought and he saw Huayan as the highest exoteric view 68 Some of Kukai s ideas such as his view of Buddhahood in this body was also influenced by Huayan ideas 69 During the post Tang era Huayan along with Chan thought also influenced the Tiantai school 70 Tiantai school figures who were influenced by Huayan and Chan were called the off mountain shanwai faction and a debate ensued between them and the home mountain shanjia faction 70 Huayan thought was also an important source for the Pure Land doctrine of the Yuzu Nembutsu sect of Ryōnin 1072 1132 71 Likewise Huayan thought was important to some Chinese Pure Land thinkers such as the Ming exegete Yunqi Zuhong 1535 1615 and the modern lay scholar Yang Wenhui 1837 1911 72 On Chan Edit Chinese Chan was profoundly influenced by Huayan though Chan also defined itself by distinguishing itself from Huayan 73 Guifeng Zongmi the Fifth Patriarch of the Huayan school occupies a prominent position in the history of Chan Mazu Daoyi the founder of the influential Hongzhou school of Chan was influenced by Huayan teachings like the identity of principle and phenomena 74 He also sometimes quoted from Huayan sources in his sermons like Dushun s Fajie guanmen Contemplation of the Realm of Reality 75 Mazu s student Baizhang Huaihai also draws on Huayan metaphysics in his writings 76 Dongshan Liangjie 806 869 the founder of the Caodong lineage formulated his theory of the Five Ranks based on Huayan s Fourfold Dharmadhatu teaching 77 The influential Caodong text called Sandokai attributed to Shitou also draws on Huayan themes 76 In a similar fashion Linji the founder of the Linji school also drew on Huayan texts and commentaries such as Li Tongxuan s Xin Huayan Jing Lun 新華嚴經論 Treatise on the new translation of the Avatamsaka Sutra 78 79 This influence can also be seen in Linji s schema of the four propositions 76 According to Thomas Cleary similar Huayan influences can be found in the works of other Tang dynasty Chan masters like Yunmen Wenyan d 949 and Fayen Wenyi 885 958 76 During the Song dynasty Huayan metaphysics were further assimilated by the various Chan lineages 80 Cleary names Touzi Yiqing 1032 1083 and Dahui Zonggao 1089 1163 as two Song era Chan figures which drew on Huayan teachings 81 The Ming era Chan master Hanshan Deqing 1546 1623 is known for promoting the study of Huayan and for his work on a new edition of Chengguan s commentary on the Huayan sutra 82 A similar syncretism with Zen occurred in Korea where the Korean Huayan tradition influenced and was eventually merged with Seon Korean Zen The influence of Huayan teachings can be found in the works of the seminal Seon figure Jinul 83 Jinul was especially influenced by the writings of Li Tongxuan 61 Huayan thought has also been influential on the worldview of Thich Nhat Hanh particularly his understanding of emptiness as Interbeing 84 Texts Edit nbsp Huayan Sutra frontispiece in gold and silver text on indigo blue paper mid 14th century Huayan sutra Edit The Huayan school s central text is the Avataṃsaka Sutra Flower Garland Sutra Ch Huayan Jing which is considered the supreme Buddhist revelation in this tradition There are three different translations of the work in Chinese and other related sutras as well According to Paul Williams the Avataṃsaka Sutra is not a systematic philosophical work though it does contain various Mahayana teachings reminiscent of Madhyamaka and Yogacara as well as mentioning a pure untainted awareness or consciousness amalacitta 85 2 The sutra is filled with mystical and visionary imagery focusing on figures like the bodhisattvas Samantabhadra and Manjushri and the Buddhas Shakyamuni and Vairocana Vairocana is the universal Buddha whose body is the entire universe and who is said to pervade every atom in the universe with his light wisdom teachings and magical emanations 86 According to the Huayan sutra The realm of the Buddhas is inconceivable no sentient being can fathom it The Buddha constantly emits great beams of light in each light beam are innumerable Buddhas The Buddha body is pure and always tranquil the radiance of its light extends throughout the world The Buddha s freedom cannot be measured It fills the cosmos and all space With various techniques it teaches the living sound like thunder showering the rain of truth All virtuous activities in the world come from the Buddha s light In all atoms of all lands Buddha enters each and every one producing miracle displays for sentient beings Such is the way of Vairocana In each atom are many oceans of worlds their locations each different all beautifully pure Thus does infinity enter into one yet each unit s distinct with no overlap In each atom are innumerable lights pervading the lands of the ten directions all showing the Buddhas enlightenment practices The same in all oceans of worlds In each atom the Buddhas of all times appear according to inclinations While their essential nature neither comes nor goes by their own power they pervade the worlds 87 All these awakened activities and skillful techniques upaya are said to lead all living beings through the bodhisattva stages and eventually to Buddhahood These various stages of spiritual attainment are discussed in various parts of the sutra book 15 book 26 88 nbsp Huayan Sutra illustration from the Goryeo Dynasty An important doctrine that the Huayan school drew from this sutra is the idea that all levels of reality are interrelated interpenetrated and interfused and so inside everything is everything else As the Huayan sutra states They perceive that the fields full of assemblies the beings and aeons which are as many as all the dust particles are all present in every particle of dust They perceive that the many fields and assemblies and the beings and the aeons are all reflected in each particle of dust 86 According to Dumoulin the Huayan vision of unity in totality allows every individual entity of the phenomenal world its uniqueness without attributing an inherent nature to anything 89 According to Williams this interfused vision of the cosmos is the total realm of all phenomena the Dharma realm Dharmadhatu as seen from the point of view of a Buddha The focus of the Huayan sutra is thus how to attain this contemplative universal vision of ultimate reality as well as the miraculous powers of Buddhas and bodhisattvas with which they communicate their vision of the ultimate truth 86 Furthermore because all things are interconnected and interfused the Buddha and his cosmic body and universal light is present everywhere and so is his wisdom which is said to be all pervasive As chapter 32 of the sutra states in the class of living beings there is no place where the wisdom of Tathagata is not present 90 Other key scriptures Edit The Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana Dasheng Qixin Lun 大乘起信論 was another key scriptural source for Huayan masters like Fazang and Zongmi both of whom wrote commentaries on this treatise 91 The Lotus sutra was also seen as an important scripture in Huayan Various Huayan masters saw the Lotus sutra as a sutra of definitive ultimate meaning alongside the Avatamsaka 92 Fazang also considered the Lankavatara sutra to be a definitive sutra and he wrote a commentary on it 93 94 The Sutra of Perfect Enlightenment was also particularly important for the Huayan patriarch Zongmi Commentaries and treatises Edit The Huayen patriarchs wrote numerous other commentaries and original treatises Fazang for example wrote commentaries on the Avatamsaka the Lankavatara Sutra the Awakening of Faith the Brahmajala Sutra Taisho no 40 no 1813 and the Ghanavyuha Sutra no X368 in the supplement to the Taisho canon Xu zang jing 續藏經 vol 34 95 96 97 Perhaps the most important commentaries for the Chinese Huayan school are Fazang s commentary on the Avatamsaka Sutra the Huayan jing tanxuan ji 華嚴經探玄記 Record of Investigating the Mystery of the Avatamsaka sutra in 60 fascicles and Chengguan s Extensive Commentary on the Buddhavataṃsaka sutra Da fang guang fo huayan jing shu 大方廣佛華嚴經疏 T 1735 and his sub commentary T 1736 16 98 Other Huayan figures like Zhiyan and Li Tongxuan also wrote influential commentaries on the Huayan sutra Fazang wrote a number of other original Huayan treatises such as Treatise on the Golden Lion which is said to have been written to explain Huayan s view of interpenetration to Empress Wu 99 Another key Huayen treatise is On the Meditation of the Dharmadhatu attributed to the first patriarch Dushun 100 Peter N Gregory notes that the Huayan commentarial tradition was not primarily concerned with a careful exegesis of the original meaning of the scripture Instead it was concerned with specific doctrines ideas and metaphors such as nature origination the dependent arising of the dharmadhatu interfusion and the six characteristics of all dharmas which was inspired by scripture 101 Doctrine EditHuayan thought seeks to explain the nature of the Dharmadhatu 法界 fajie the realm of phenomena the Dharma realm which is the world as it is ultimately from the point of view of a fully awakened being In East Asian Buddhism the Dharmadhatu is the whole of reality the totality of all things Thus Huayan seeks to provide a holistic metaphysics that explains all of reality 102 Huayan philosophy is influenced by the Huayan sutra other Mahayana scriptures like the Awakening of Faith and the Lotus Sutra as well as by the various Chinese Buddhist traditions like Chinese Yogacara the buddha nature schools like Shelun and Dilun and Madhyamaka Sanlun Huayan patriarchs were also influenced by non buddhist Chinese philosophy 103 Some key elements of Huayan philosophy are the interpenetration and interfusion yuanrong of all phenomena dharmas nature origination xingqi how phenomena arise out of an ultimate principle which is buddha nature or the One Mind how the ultimate principle li and all phenomena shi are mutually interpenetrated the relation between parts and the whole understood through the six characteristics a unique Huayan interpretation of the Yogacara framework of the three natures sanxing and a unique view of Vairocana Buddha as an all pervasive cosmic being 104 105 106 Interpenetration Edit nbsp A 3D rendering of Indra s net A key doctrine of Huayan is the mutual containment and interpenetration xiangru of all phenomena dharmas also known as perfect interfusion yuanrong 圓融 This is associated with what is termed dharmadhatu pratityasamutpada 法界緣起 fajie yuanqi the dependent arising of the whole realm of phenomena which is Huayan s unique interpretation of dependent arising 107 104 This doctrine is described by Wei Daoru as the idea that countless dharmas all phenomena in the world are representations of the wisdom of Buddha without exception and that they exist in a state of mutual dependence interfusion and balance without any contradiction or conflict 5 According to the doctrine of interpenetration any phenomenon exists only as part of the total nexus of reality its existence depends on the total network of all other things which are all equally connected to each other and contained in each other 5 According to Fazang since the sum of all things determines any individual thing one is many many is one yi ji duo duo ji yi Furthermore according to Fazang one in many many in one yi zhong duo duo zhong yi because any dharma penetrates and is penetrated by the totality of all things 106 Thomas Cleary explains this Buddhist holism as one which sees the universe as one single nexus of conditions in which everything simultaneously depends on and is depended on by everything else Seen in this light then everything affects and is affected by more or less immediately or remotely everything else just as this is true of every system of relationships so is it true of the totality of existence 108 In this worldview all dharmas are so interconnected that they are fused together without any obstructions in a perfectly harmonious whole which is the entire universe the Dharmadhatu 107 In the Huayan school the teaching of interpenetration is depicted through various metaphors such as Indra s net a teaching which may have been influenced by the Gandhavyuha chapter s climax scene in Vairocana s Tower 109 Indra s net is an infinite cosmic net that contains a multifaceted jewel at each vertex with each jewel being reflected in all of the other jewels ad infinitum Thus each jewel contains the entire net of jewels reflected within 109 Other Huayan metaphors included a hall of mirrors the rafter and the building and the world text 110 111 The rafter building metaphor can be found in Fazang s famous Rafter Dialogue 107 Fazang argues that any rafter any part is essential to the existence of its building standing in for the universe the dharmadhatu Likewise the identity and existence of any rafter is also dependent on it being part of a building otherwise it would not be a rafter 112 111 Therefore any phenomenon is necessarily dependent upon all phenomena in the universe and because of this all phenomena lack any metaphysical independence or essential nature svabhava 113 The six characteristics Edit One framework which is used by the Huayan tradition to further explain the doctrine of interpenetration is the perfect interfusion of the six characteristics liuxiang yuanrong 六相圓融 114 Each element of the six characteristics refers to a specific kind of mereological relation 113 106 The six characteristics are 113 106 Wholeness universality zongxiang each dharma like a rafter is characterized by wholeness because it takes part in creating a whole like a building and each dharma is indispensable in creating the whole Particularity distinctness biexiang a dharma is characterized by particularity e g any specific rafter as far as it is a numerically distinct particular that is different from the whole Identity sameness tongxiang each dharma is characterized by a certain identity with all other parts of the whole since they all mutually form the whole without conflict Difference yixiang each dharma is different since they have distinct functions and appearance even while being part of a single whole Integration chengxiang each dharma is integrated together with other dharmas in forming each other and in forming the whole and each dharma does not interfere with every other dharma Non integration disintegration huaixiang the fact that each part maintains its unique activity and retains its individuality while making up the whole Implications of interpenetration Edit The Buddhist doctrine of interpenetration also has several further implications in Huayan thought 115 4 Truth is understood as encompassing and interpenetrating falsehood or illusion and vice versa see also two truths Purity Suddha and goodness is understood as interpenetrating impurity and evil Practicing any single Buddhist teaching entails the practicing of all other teachings Ending one mental defilement klesha is ending all of them The past contains the future and vice versa all three times are interfused Practicing in one bodhisattva stage bhumi entails practicing in all bodhisattva stagesFurthermore according to the lay Huayan master Li Tongxuan all things are just the one true dharma realm Ch yi zhen fajie and as such there is no ontological difference between sacred and secular awakening and ignorance or even between Buddhahood and living beings 4 Because of the unity of ordinary human life and enlightenment Li also held that Chinese sages like Confucius and Laozi also taught the bodhisattva path in their own way 4 The Huayan doctrines of interfusion and non duality also leads to several seemingly paradoxical views Some examples include 1 since any phenomenon X is empty this implies X is also not X 2 any particular phenomenon is an expression of and contains the absolute and yet it retains its particularity 3 since each phenomenon contains all other phenomena the conventional order of space and time is violated 116 The ultimate principle and nature origination Edit Another important metaphysical framework used by Huayan patriarchs is that of principle 理 li or the ultimate pattern and phenomena shi 110 113 Principle is the ultimate reality which is ultimate reality paramartha satya which is endless and without limits while phenomena shi refers to the impermanent and relative dharmas 110 In Fazang s influential Essay on the Golden Lion Taishō no 1881 Fazang uses the statue of a golden Chinese lion as a metaphor for reality The gold itself stands in for the ultimate principle which the appearance and relative shape of the lion statue is the relative and dependent phenomena as they are perceived by living beings 113 Because the ultimate principle is boundless empty and ceaseless it is like gold in that it can be transformed into many forms and shapes 117 Also even though phenomena appear as particular things they lack any independent existence since they all depend on the ultimate principle 113 Furthermore Huayan sees the ultimate principle and the relative phenomena as interdependent unified and interfused that is to say they are non dual 118 According to Paul Williams First noumenon and phenomena mutually interpenetrate and are in a sense identical There is no opposition between the two The one does not cancel out the other Second Fazang explains elsewhere that since all things arise interdependently following Madhyamika and since the links of interdependence expand throughout the entire universe and at all time past present and future depend upon each other which is to say the total dharmadhatu arises simultaneously so in the totality of interdependence the dharmadhatu all phenomena are mutually interpenetrating and identical 118 The ultimate principle is associated with various Mahayana terms referring to ultimate reality such as the One Mind of the Awakening of Faith Suchness the tathagatagarbha the womb of tathagatas buddha nature or just nature This nature is the ontological source and ground of all phenomena 112 This is a key idea in Huayan thought which is called nature origination xingqi The term derives from chapter 32 of the Avatamsaka Sutra titled Nature Origination of the Jewel King Tathagata Baowang rulai xingqi pin Skt Tathagata utpatti sambhava nirdesa sutra 106 90 Nature origination refers to the manifestation of the ultimate nature in the phenomenal world and its interfusion with it 90 That is to say the ultimate pure nature is interdependent on and interpenetrates the entire phenomenal universe while also being its source For Huayan patriarchs like Fazang the ultimate nature is thus seen as non dual with all relative phenomena 112 Because the ultimate source of all things is also interdependent and interconnected with them it remains a ground which is empty of self existence svabhava and thus it is not an independent essence like a monotheistic God 112 106 119 The Cosmic Buddha Vairocana EditIn the cosmology of the Avatamsaka sutra our world is just one of the immeasurable number of worlds in a multiverse called Ocean of worlds whose surface and inside are decorated with an arrangement of flowers Kusumatalagarbha vyuhalamkara lokadhatu samudra 120 The Avatamsaka states that this entire cosmos has been purified by the Buddha Vairocana through his bodhisattva practices for countless aeons after having met countless Buddhas The sutra also states that our world is in Vairocana s buddhafield 121 Vairocana is closely associated with Shakyamuni Buddha in some cases he is even identified with him in the Avatamsaka Sutra 122 Huayan generally sees Shakyamuni as an emanation body nirmanakaya from the ultimate Buddha Vairocana The Illuminator 123 nbsp A painting of Vairocana at HwaeomsaFurthermore Huayan thought sees the entire universe as being the very body of Vairocana who is seen as a supreme cosmic Buddha Vairocana is infinite his influence and light is limitless pervading the entire universe 105 Furthermore Vairocana is really the ultimate principle li the Dharmakaya Suchness and the substance underlying phenomenal reality 124 However while Vairocana as ultimate principle is eternal it also transforms and changes according to the needs and conditions of sentient beings Furthermore Vairocana is empty interdependent and interfused with all phenomena in the universe 124 Thus Vairocana is both immanent due to its dependent and interfused character and transcendent as the immutable basis of all things 125 According to Fazang while the nirmanakaya Shakyamuni taught the other Mahayana sutras Vairocana teaches the Avatamsaka Sutra through his ten bodies which are the All Beings Body the Lands Body the Karma Body the Sravakas Body the Pratyekabuddha Body the Bodhisattvas Body the Tathagatas Body the Wisdom Body the Dharma Body and the Space Body 126 Fazang sees these ten bodies as encompassing all phenomena animate and inanimate in the three realms i e the entire universe 127 90 Classification of Buddhist teachings Edit nbsp The Tongdosa Temple Hwaeumtang a Joseon era tanka painting depicting the Huayan assemblies It is a national treasure of South Korea In order to understand the vast number of texts and teachings they had received from India Chinese Buddhist schools developed schematic classifications of these various teachings called panjiao 91 such as the Five Periods and Eight Teachings of the Tiantai school The Huayan school patriarch Zhiyan developed a five tiered doctrinal classification of the Buddha s teaching which was expanded on by later figures such as Fazang The five tiers are 128 129 130 4 The Hinayana teachings found in the Agamas and Abhidharma which is grounded in not self anatman Fazang calls this the teaching of the existence of dharmas and the non existence of the self 128 The Mahayana teachings which focus on emptiness non arising and lack of form and include the Prajnaparamita sutras Yogacara teachings on consciousness and Madhyamaka sources like the Mulamadhyamakakarika The Final Mahayana teaching which according to Fazang teach the eternal nature of the tathagatagarbha Fazang writes that this teaching is based on buddha nature sources like the Mahayana Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutra the Awakening of Faith the Lankavatara Srimaladevi sutra Ratnagotravibhaga and Dilun shastra 128 The Sudden Teaching which is non verbal and non conceptual 129 This was associated with Vimalakirti s silence in the Vimalakirti sutra by Fazang Chengguan also associated this with the sudden enlightenment teachings of the Chan school The Complete or Perfect Ch yuan lit Round Teaching of the Avatamsaka sutra and Huayan which teach both the interpenetration of principle or buddha nature and phenomena as well as the interpenetration of all phenomena with each other Huayan and Chan had doctrinal arguments regarding which would be the correct concept of sudden awakening The teachings of the Chan school were regarded as inferior by Huayan masters a characterization which was rejected by Chan masters 73 Practice Edit nbsp Depiction of a Huayan ritual in the Daibutsu Engi Emaki 1536 Tōdai ji Nara Japan nbsp Huayen Puja at Yongmin Temple TaipeiThe Huayan school developed numerous practices as part of their conception of the bodhisattva path These include devotional practices studying chanting and copying of the Avatamsaka sutra repentance rituals recitation of dharanis and meditation 3 38 131 These various elements might also be combined in ritual manuals such as The Practice of Samantabhadra s Huayan Dharma Realm Aspiration and Realization 華嚴普賢行願修證儀 Taisho Supplement No X1473 by Jinshui Jingyuan 靜源 which are still practiced together by Huayan communities during day long events 132 Textual practices Edit According to Paul Williams one of the central practices for the Huayan tradition was the recitation of the Avatamsaka sutra 133 The chanting studying and copying of the sutra was often done in Huayan assemblies Huayanhui who would meet regularly to chant the sutra Chanting the entire sutra could take anywhere from a few weeks to several months 3 Regular chanting of important passages from the sutra is also common particularly the Bhadracaryapraṇidhana The Aspiration Prayer for Good Conduct sometimes called the Vows of Samantabhadra 134 135 Solo chanting practice was also common and another common element of reciting the sutra was bowing to the sutra during the chanting 3 Since this practice is time consuming it was also often done in solitary retreats called biguan which could last years 3 Copying the entire sutra or passages from the sutra by hand was also another key practice in this tradition and some sutra copyists were known for their excellent calligraphy This practice was also sometimes combined with chanting and bowing as well 3 Another element that was sometimes added to this practice was to use one s own blood in the process of sutra copying sometimes just blood mixed with the ink 3 This blood writing was rare but it was done by a few celebrated figures like Hanshan Deqing 1546 1623 and the Republican Period monk Shouye 3 Contemplation of Buddhas and bodhisattvas Edit nbsp A Mandala inside Huayan Temple with Maitreya Buddha at its centerAnother practice which is often highlighted in the Avatamsaka sutra is that of buddhanusmṛti Ch nianfo contemplation of the Buddha 136 In Chinese Buddhism one popular method of contemplating the Buddha is to recite the Buddha s name The practice of reciting the names of the Buddhas was also seen as a way to achieve rebirth in Vairocana s Pure Land the Lotus Treasury World Skt Padmagarbha lokadhatu Ch Lianhuazang shijie 蓮花藏世界 137 138 This Pure Land contains the entire universe including our world and it is identical with the entire Dharmadhatu 138 As such for Huayan our own world known as the Saha world is also the Lotus Storehouse Pure Land 139 Huayan also saw Vairocana s Pure land as non dual and interfused with Amitabha s Pure Land of Sukhavati 140 The practice of Buddha contemplation was promoted by various figures such as the Huayan patriarchs Chengguan Zongmi the Goryeo monk Gyunyeo 923 973 and Peng Shaosheng a householder scholar of the Qing dynasty 137 139 140 44 The patriarch Guifeng Zōngmi taught four types of buddhanusmṛti nianfo a schema that was also adopted by later Chinese figures 140 These four types of nianfo are the following 141 140 Contemplation of the name chengming nian 稱名念 modeled on The Perfection of Wisdom Sutra preached by Manjusri Taisho 232 One selects Buddha faces their direction and then one mentally holds chengming 稱名 the sound of the name until one has a vision of all buddhas Contemplating an image guanxiang nian 觀像念 based on the Great Jewel Collection Sutra 大寶積經 Da bǎoji jing T 310 which entails contemplating the form of a Buddha by using a Buddha image Contemplating the visualization guanxiǎng nian 觀想念 this entails contemplating a Buddha s body without the aid of a physical image and is based on sutras like Sutra on the samadhi ocean of the contemplation of the Buddha T 643 and Sutra on the samadhi of seated meditation T 614 Contemplating the true mark shixiang nian 實相念 which entails the contemplation of the Dharmakaya the true nature of all dharmas Dharmata This is the true nature of the Buddha according to The Perfection of Wisdom Sutra Preached by Manjusri which is unproduced and unextinguished neither going nor coming without name and without feature 142 Another leading figure in the teaching of Huayan Nianfo was the 12th century Song monk Yihe 義和 who combined the method of nianfo with Huayan meditation teachings and the practice of the ten vows of Samantabhadra and saw this practice as a method of realizing the Huayan vision of ultimate reality 44 During the Qing Baiting Xufa 1641 1728 and the lay scholar Peng Shaosheng 1740 1796 further promoted Huayan Nianfo methods 44 Huayan Pure Land practice also sometimes included devotion to bodhisattvas like Avalokiteshvara This promoted by figures like the Korean monks Ŭisang and Ch ewŏn This devotion included the practice of chanting the names of bodhisattvas and visualizing them in meditation 139 138 Meditation and the fourfold Dharmadhatu Edit Various Huayan texts provide different frameworks for the practice of meditation and the development of samadhi Huayan sources mentions two key samadhis the ocean seal samadhi Ch haiyin sanmei and the huayan samadhi huayan sanmei 143 Some key Huayan sources which discuss meditation include Dushun s Contemplation of the Realm of Reality Fajie guanmen and The Ending of Delusion and the Return to the Source Wangjin huanyuan attributed to Fazang 47 Another key text is the Cessation and Contemplation in the Five Teachings of Huayan Huayan wujiao zhiguan 華嚴五教止觀 103 Dushun s meditative framework was based on three main stages of contemplation 1 understanding emptiness as the true nature of all dharmas 2 understanding that all dharmas are harmonious with the truth and 3 understanding that all dharmas do not obstruct each other and that each dharma contains all other dharmas 47 The theory of the fourfold Dharmadhatu sifajie 四法界 eventually became the central meditative framework for the Huayan tradition This doctrinal and meditative framework is explained in Chengguan s meditation manual titled Meditative Perspectives on the Huayan Dharmadhatu Huayan Fajie Guanmen 華嚴法界觀門 and its commentaries 103 The Dharmadhatu is the goal of the bodhisattva s practice the ultimate nature of reality which must be known or entered into According to Fox the Fourfold Dharmadhatu is four cognitive approaches to the world four ways of apprehending reality 103 These four ways of seeing reality are 103 144 All dharmas are seen as particular separate events or phenomena shi 事 This is the mundane way of seeing and is not a contemplation or meditation but the pre meditative perspective All events are an expression of li 理 the ultimate principle which is associated with the concepts of true emptiness One Mind yi xin 一心 and Buddha nature This is the first level of Huayan meditation This is the non obstruction of principle and phenomena lishi wuai 理事無礙 i e their interpenetration and interfusion All events phenomena interpenetrate shishi wuai 事事無礙 which refers to how all distinct phenomenal dharmas interfuse and penetrate in all ways Zongmi This is also described as universal pervasion and complete accommodation 103 According to Fox these dharmadhatus are not separate worlds they are actually increasingly more holographic perspectives on a single phenomenological manifold they more properly represent four types or orders of perspectives on experience 103 Furthermore for Huayan this contemplation is the solution to the problem of suffering which lies in the fixation or attachment to a particular perspective What we think are the essences of objects are really therefore nothing but mere names mere functional designations and none of these contextual definitions need necessarily interfere with any of the others 103 Regarding the practical application of this teaching Baiting Xufa correlated the practice of nianfo with the fourfold Dharmadhatu as follows 44 Nianfo on the level of the realm of phenomena refers to reciting the name of the Buddha as if the Buddha was external to oneself Nianfo on the level of the ultimate principle refers to reciting nianfo while knowing it as mind only cittamatra Nianfo practice on the level of non obstruction of principle and phenomena refers to a nianfo practice which has transcended notions like buddha mind and name of the buddha Nianfo on the level of the interpenetration of all dharmas refers to the realization that the name of Buddha and the mind is all pervasive throughout the one true dharmadhatu The contemplation of the buddhalight Edit The lay scholar practitioner Li Tongxuan 635 730 developed a unique meditative practice based on the 9th chapter of the Avatamsaka sutra The practice named the contemplation of Buddhalight foguang guan focused on tracing the universal light which is radiated by the Buddha in one s mind and expanding one s contemplation further and further outwards until it fills the entire universe 145 This contemplation of the Buddha s light leads to a state of joyful tranquility which leads to insight into emptiness 146 The meditative teachings of Li Tongxuan were especially influential on the Japanese Kegon monk Myōe who promoted a similar practiced that he termed the Samadhi of Contemplating the Buddha s Radiance Japanese bukkō zanmaikan 佛光三昧觀 147 61 Esoteric practices Edit nbsp A Dharani Pillar from the Liao DynastyFazang promoted the practice of several dharanis such as the Xuanzang s version of the Dharaṇi of Avalokitesvara ekadasamukha 148 The synthesis of Huayan with Chinese Esoteric Buddhist practices was a feature of the Buddhism of the Khitan Liao Dynasty 149 Jueyuan a Huayan monk from Yuanfu Temple during the Liao Dynasty and author of the Dari jing yishi yanmi chao practiced esoteric rituals like Homa and Abhiseka based on the Vairocanabhisaṃbodhi Sutra and the tradition of Yixing 150 Furthermore according to Sorensen the iconography of the Huayan Vairocana Buddha and the Esoteric Mahavairocana also became fused during the post Tang period 151 Important esoteric texts used in this tradition included the Cundi dharaṇi the Usṇisavijaya dharani the Nilakaṇthaka dharani and the Sutra on the Great Dharma Torch Dharaṇi 大法炬陀羅尼 經 Da faju tuoluoni jing among others 150 In the Liao stupas pagodas and statues were often empowered with dharanis and mantras These structures would often be filled or inscribed with dharanis sutras or mantras like the Six syllable mantra of Avalokiteshvara Pillars inscribed with dharaṇis and mantras were also common 152 The synthesis of Esoteric Buddhist practice with Huayan Buddhism remained popular during the Jin dynasty 1115 1234 where Usṇisavijaya and Cundi practices were some of the most popular 153 A similar synthesis of Huayan Chan Buddhism derived from Zongmi with esoteric Buddhist teachings and practices from Tibetan Buddhism mainly Sakya and Kagyu also occurred in Buddhism of the Western Xia 1038 1227 dynasty 154 Dharanis like the Cundi dharaṇi the Usṇisavijaya dharani and the Nilakaṇthaka dharani remain important in modern Huayan Buddhism and are chanted in modern Dharma assemblies Another dharani esoteric practice in modern Huayan is the contemplation of the 42 Avatamsaka syllables a version of the arapacana alphabet which is a contemplation found in various Mahayana sources 155 156 The Japanese Kegon school was known for adopting many esoteric mantras and practices from the Shingon school The Kegon monk Myōe was known for his widespread promotion of the popular Mantra of Light kōmyō shingon 光明眞言 157 Due to influence from the Shingon school today s Kegon school retains numerous esoteric Buddhist elements The path and sudden awakening Edit nbsp Illustration of Sudhana s Pilgrimage in the Gandhavyuha sutra from the Heian period Nara National Museum Japan The Huayan school defended a sudden awakening view This is because the buddha nature is already present in all sentient beings and also because their theory of universal interpenetration entails that Buddhahood is interfused with the very first stage of a bodhisattva s path 158 159 Thus according to patriarch Fazang when one first arouses the thought of enlightenment bodhicitta one also becomes perfectly enlightened 159 Similarly Huayan master Li Tongxuan writes The first access of faith in the mind of the practitioner is in itself the culmination of the entire path the very realization of final Buddhahood Faith or confidence in the possibility of enlightenment is nothing but enlightenment itself in an anticipatory and causative modality 160 This interpenetration of all elements of the path to awakening is also a consequence of the Huayan view of time which sees all moments as interfused including a sentient being s present practice and their eventual future Buddhahood aeons from now Since time itself is empty all moments past present and future are interfused with each other 159 161 As Fazang writes beginning and end Interpenetrate On each bodhisattva stage one is thus both a Bodhisattva and a Buddha 161 As such Huayan does not understand a bodhisattva s progress through the bodhisattva stages bhumis as being linear 159 Instead as soon as one reaches the earlier stages of perfection of faith which is part of Huayan s 52 bhumi model one has also acquired all the stages as well as Buddhahood 161 This doctrine of enlightenment at the stage of faith 信滿成佛 xinman cheng fo was a unique feature of Huayan and was first introduced by Fazang 162 In Huayan Buddhahood transcends all concepts times and stages Because practice cannot create something that is not immanent Huayan sees the bodhisattva path as simply revealing what is already there buddha nature which is buddhahood itself concealed within sentient beings In spite of this doctrine Huayan patriarchs also argued that the gradual practices of the bodhisattva stages are still necessary This is because all stages retain their particularity even while being wholly interfused and only through the practice of the bodhisattva path does the immanent Buddhahood manifest 162 163 164 Thus according to Li Tongxuan there is no other enlightenment than simply following the bodhisattva path and furthermore Primordial wisdom is made manifest through meditation cultivation does not create it or bring it into being If one simply follows the Bodhisattva Path and learns the bodhisattva practices primordial wisdom will shine forth of itself 164 Similarly patriarch Zongmi held that Buddhahood is reached through sudden awakening followed by gradual cultivation and he also held that sudden and gradual are not only not contradictory but are actually complementary 103 References Edit a b c Yu Chun fang 2020 Chinese Buddhism A Thematic History p 160 University of Hawaii Press a b c Van Norden Bryan Jones Nicholaos 2019 Huayan Buddhism In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Center for the Study of Language and Information a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Hammerstrom Erik J 2020 The Huayan University network the teaching and practice of Avataṃsaka Buddhism in twentieth century China chapter 1 Columbia University Press a b c d e f g Van Norden Bryan and Nicholaos Jones Huayan Buddhism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2019 Edition Edward N Zalta ed a b c d Hamar Imre Editor 2007 Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism Asiatische Forschungen p 189 a b Fox Alan 2013 The Huayan Metaphysics of Totality In A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy S M Emmanuel Ed doi 10 1002 9781118324004 ch11 Williams Paul Mahayana Buddhism The Doctrinal Foundations Routledge 2008 p 132 a b Dumoulin 2005 p 46 Gregory Peter N Tsung Mi and the Sinification of Buddhism University of Hawaii Press 2002 p 9 Yu Chun fang 2020 Chinese Buddhism A Thematic History p 161 University of Hawaii Press Hamar Imre Editor Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism ASIATISCHE FORSCHUNGEN 2007 page 110 a b Hamar 2007 pp 169 170 Hamar 2007 pp 171 Hamar Imre Editor 2007 Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism Asiatische Forschungen p 174 Chen Jinhua Sen Meditation Traditions in Fifth Century Northern China With a Special Note on a Forgotten Kasmiri Meditation Tradition Brought to China by Buddhabhadra 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I The Mainstream Tradition p 5 Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism a b McBride R D I 2008 Domesticating the Dharma Buddhist Cults and the Hwaom Synthesis in Silla Korea p 109 Honolulu University of Hawai i Press McBride R D I 2008 Domesticating the Dharma Buddhist Cults and the Hwaom Synthesis in Silla Korea pp 90 95 Honolulu University of Hawai i Press McBride R D I 2008 Domesticating the Dharma Buddhist Cults and the Hwaom Synthesis in Silla Korea p 101 Honolulu University of Hawai i Press Djun Kil Kim The History of Korea 2nd edition ABC CLIO 2014 ISBN 1610695828 p 9 Pyong jo Chong History of Buddhism Jimoondang 2007 ISBN 8988095243 p 83 Madhusudan Sakya Current Perspectives in Buddhism Buddhism today issues amp global dimensions Cyber Tech Publications 2011 ISBN 8178847337 p 108 a b McBride II Richard D Vermeersch Sem 2012 Hwaom I The Mainstream Tradition p 7 Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism see Gimello Robert Girard Frederic Hamar Imre 2012 Avataṃsaka Buddhism in East Asia Huayan Kegon Flower Ornament Buddhism origins and adaptation of a visual culture Asiatische Forschungen Monographienreihe zur Geschichte Kultur und Sprache der Volker Ost u Zentralasiens Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 447 06678 5 Kegon Oxford Reference a b c Silk Jonathan A ed in chief et al 2019 Brill s Encyclopedia of Buddhism Volume II Lives pp 1071 1075 BRILL Leiden Boston Unno Mark 2004 Shingon Refractions Myoe and the Mantra of Light p 55 Simon and Schuster Mross Michaela Vocalizing the Lament over the Buddha s Passing A Study of Myōe s Shiza kōshiki The Ho Center for Buddhist Studies buddhiststudies stanford edu Retrieved 2023 04 26 Unno Mark 2004 Shingon Refractions Myoe and the Mantra of Light p 14 Simon and Schuster Unno Mark 2004 Shingon Refractions Myoe and the Mantra of Light pp 25 45 Simon and Schuster a b c d Gimello Robert M Ch eng kuan on the Hua yen Trinity 中華佛學學報第 9 期 pp 341 411 民國 85年 臺北 中華佛學研究所 http www chibs edu tw Chung Hwa Buddhist Journal No 9 1996 Taipei Chung Hwa Institute of Buddhist Studies ISSN 1017 7132 a b c d Hammerstrom Erik J 2020 The Huayan University network the teaching and practice of Avataṃsaka Buddhism in twentieth century China New York ISBN 978 0 231 55075 8 OCLC 1154101063 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Makio Takemura Kukai s Esotericism and Avatamsaka Thought in Gimello at al 2012 pp 339 344 Makio Takemura Kukai s Esotericism and Avatamsaka Thought in Gimello at al 2012 pp 353 55 a b Ziporyn Brook 1994 Anti Chan Polemics in Post Tang Tiantai Journal of the international Association of Buddhist Studies 17 1 26 65 Hamar Imre Editor 2007 Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism Asiatische Forschungen p 312 Jakub Zamorski 2020 Rethinking Yang Wenhui s identity as a Chinese Pure Land Buddhist in his polemics against Jōdo Shinshu Studies in Chinese Religions doi 10 1080 23729988 2020 1763684 a b Buswell 1993 Poceski Mario 2015 The Records of Mazu and the Making of Classical Chan Literature p 207 Oxford University Press Poceski Mario 2015 The Records of Mazu and the Making of Classical Chan Literature p 86 Oxford University Press a b c d Cleary Thomas 1993 Entry into the Inconceivable An Introduction to Hua yen Buddhism p 17 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press Payne Richard Karl Leighton Taigen Dan eds 2006 Discourse and Ideology in Medieval Japanese Buddhism Critical Studies in Buddhism Routledge ISBN 978 0415359177 Kirchner Thomas Yuho 2008 The Record of Linji pp 204 205 253 283 University of Hawaii Press Leighton Taigen Dan 2006 Huayan Buddhism and the Phenomenal Universe of the Flower Ornament Sutra Buddhadharma Magazine Article Ancient Dragon Zen Gate Retrieved 2023 04 25 Dumoulin 2005 p 48 Cleary Thomas 1993 Entry into the Inconceivable An Introduction to Hua yen Buddhism pp 17 18 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press Cleary Thomas 1993 Entry into the Inconceivable An Introduction to Hua yen Buddhism p 18 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press Buswell Robert E 2016 Numinous Awareness Is Never Dark The Korean Buddhist Master Chinul s Excerpts on Zen Practice pp 45 178 230 University of Hawaii Press Holst Mirja Annalena To Be is To Inter Be Thich Nhat Hanh on Interdependent Arising Journal of World Philosophies 6 Winter 2021 17 30 e ISSN 2474 1795 http scholarworks iu edu iupjournals index php jwp Williams Paul Mahayana Buddhism The Doctrinal Foundations Routledge 2008 p 133 a b c Williams Paul 2008 Mahayana Buddhism The Doctrinal Foundations p 136 Routledge Yu Chun fang 2020 Chinese Buddhism A Thematic History p 163 University of Hawaii Press Takeuchi Yoshinori editor Buddhist Spirituality Indian Southeast Asian Tibetan and Early Chinese p 161 Dumoulin 2005 p 47 a b c d Hamar Imre The Manifestation of the Absolute in the Phenomenal World Nature Origination in Huayan Exegesis In Bulletin de l Ecole Francaise d Extreme Orient Tome 94 2007 pp 229 250 doi 10 3406 befeo 2007 6070 a b Lai 2003 Van Norden Bryan and Nicholaos Jones Huayan Buddhism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2019 Edition Edward N Zalta ed Nguyen Dac Sy 2012 Buddha nature as Depicted in the Lankavatara sutra Introduction www wisdomlib org Retrieved 2022 12 29 Jorgensen John The Zen Commentary on the Lankavatara Sutra by Kokan Shiren 1278 1346 and its chief antecedent the commentary by the Khotanese monk Zhiyan 禅文化研究所紀要 第32号 平成25年11月 Australian National University Hamar Imre 2014 The Buddhavataṃ saka sutra and Its Chinese Interpretation The Huayan Understanding of the Concepts of Alayavijnana and Tathagatagarbha p 149 Fazang Fa tsang Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2023 04 04 Hamar Imre Editor Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism ASIATISCHE FORSCHUNGEN 2007 page 199 Chen Jinhua 2007 Philosopher Practitioner Politician The many lives of Fazang 643 712 pp 66 325 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 15613 5 Williams Paul Mahayana Buddhism the doctrinal foundations 2nd edition 2009 page 141 Chang 1992 p 207 Gregory Peter N Tsung Mi and the Sinification of Buddhism University of Hawaii Press 2002 p 9 10 Fox Alan 2013 The Huayan Metaphysics of Totality In A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy S M Emmanuel Ed doi 10 1002 9781118324004 ch11 a b c d e f g h i Fox Alan 2015 The Practice of Huayan Buddhism Archived 2017 09 10 at the Wayback Machine a b Hamar Imre Chengguan s Theory of Four Dharma dhatus Imre Hamar Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hung Volume 51 1 2 1 19 1998 a b Cook Francis Harold 1977 Hua yen Buddhism The Jewel Net of Indra pp 90 91 Pennsylvania State University Press a b c d e f Cua Antonio S 2003 Encyclopedia of Chinese philosophy pp 254 257 Routledge a b c Hamar Imre Editor 2007 Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism p 189 Asiatische Forschungen 151 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag Cleary Thomas 1993 Entry into the Inconceivable An Introduction to Hua yen Buddhism p 2 Honolulu University of Hawaii Press a b Yu Chun fang 2020 Chinese Buddhism A Thematic History p 164 University of Hawaii Press a b c Van Norden Bryan and Nicholaos Jones Huayan Buddhism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2019 Edition Edward N Zalta ed a b Fox Alan 2013 The Huayan Metaphysics of Totality In A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy S M Emmanuel Ed doi 10 1002 9781118324004 ch11 a b c d Van Norden Bryan and Nicholaos Jones Huayan Buddhism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2019 Edition Edward N Zalta ed URL https plato stanford edu archives win2019 entries buddhism huayan a b c d e f Tiwald Justin van Norden Bryan 2014 Readings in Later Chinese Philosophy Han to the 20th century Indianapolis Indiana Hackett Publishing pp 80 87 ISBN 978 1624661907 Hamar Imre Editor 2007 Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism p 189 Asiatische Forschungen 191 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag Hamar Imre Editor 2007 Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism Asiatische Forschungen pp 190 93 Wright 1982 Chen Jinhua 2007 Philosopher Practitioner Politician The many lives of Fazang 643 712 p 176 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 15613 5 a b Williams Paul 2009 Mahayana Buddhism the doctrinal foundations 2nd edition p 143 LIN Weiyu 林威宇 UBC Vairocana of the Avataṃsaka Sutra as Interpreted by Fazang 法藏 643 712 A Comparative Reflection on Creator and Creation 法藏 643 712 筆下 華嚴經 中的盧舍那 談佛教中的創世者和創世 Susumu Otake Sakyamuni and Vairocana in Gimello at al 2012 p 37 Susumu Otake Sakyamuni and Vairocana in Gimello at al 2012 p 38 Susumu Otake Sakyamuni and Vairocana in Gimello at al 2012 p 39 Lin Weiyu 2021 Exegesis philosophy interplay introduction to Fazang s 643 712 commentary on the Huayan jing 60 juans Skt Avataṃsaka Sutra Flower garland sutra the Huayan jing tanxuan ji record of investigating the mystery of the Huayan jing p 32 Vancouver University of British Columbia Library a b Cook 1977 pp 93 104 Cook 1977 p 105 Lin Weiyu 2021 Exegesis philosophy interplay introduction to Fazang s 643 712 commentary on the Huayan jing 60 juans Skt Avataṃsaka Sutra Flower garland sutra the Huayan jing tanxuan ji record of investigating the mystery of the Huayan jing p 33 Vancouver University of British Columbia Library Lin Weiyu 2021 Exegesis philosophy interplay introduction to Fazang s 643 712 commentary on the Huayan jing 60 juans Skt Avataṃsaka Sutra Flower garland sutra the Huayan jing tanxuan ji record of investigating the mystery of the Huayan jing p 34 Vancouver University of British Columbia Library a b c Ming Wood L 1981 The P an Chiao System of the Hua Yen School in Chinese Buddhism T oung Pao 67 1 10 47 https doi org 10 1163 156853281X00038 a b Buswell 1993 p 233 Yu Chun fang 2020 Chinese Buddhism A Thematic History pp 160 161 University of Hawaii Press Chen Jinhua 2007 Philosopher Practitioner Politician The many lives of Fazang 643 712 pp 269 270 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 15613 5 ABLS Spring Hua yen Sutra Chanting and Qingming Ancestral Memorial Ceremony Special Report On April 17 2016 稱自家毘盧法界 修本有普賢行海 ABLS 春季華嚴誦經暨清明祭祖法會 特別報導 美國華嚴蓮社 www huayenusa org Retrieved 2023 08 31 Williams Paul Mahayana Buddhism the doctrinal foundations 2nd edition 2009 page 145 Recite the Chapter on Samantabhadra Bodhisattva s Practices and Vows 加拿大靈巖山寺 lymtcanada com 2022 03 23 Retrieved 2023 09 01 文殊清淨心 誦經禮懺行 普賢行願力 獲勝菩提道 ABLS 春季華嚴誦經暨清明祭祖法會 美國華嚴蓮社 www huayenusa org Retrieved 2023 09 02 Hamar Imre Editor Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism ASIATISCHE FORSCHUNGEN 2007 page 224 a b Kim Young jin Huayan Pure Land Theory and the Theory of Dharma body by Peng Shaosheng During the Qing Dynasty 청대 팽소승 彭紹升 의 화엄염불론과 법신설 김영진 Korea Journal of Buddhist Studies 31 December 2012 pp 77 119 a b c Voros Erika Erzsebet 2022 Korean Potalaka Legends about Naksan Temple Examined through Mountain and Sea Worship Religions 13 no 8 691 doi 10 3390 rel13080691 a b c Cheon hak Kim The cult of the Hwaom pure land of the Koryo period as seen through self power and other power Journal of Korean Religions vol 6 no 1 Apr 2015 pp 63 Gale Academic OneFile link gale com apps doc A493448486 AONE u googlescholar amp sid googleScholar amp xid 91a4c878 Accessed 3 May 2023 a b c d McBride R D 2015 Koryŏ Buddhist Paintings and the Cult of Amitabha Visions of a Hwaŏm Inspired Pure Land Journal of Korean Religions 6 1 93 130 JSTOR 24577619 Jones Charles B 2021 Pure Land History Tradition and Practice pp 132 135 Shambhala Publications ISBN 978 1 61180 890 2 Jones Charles B 2021 Pure Land History Tradition and Practice pp 134 Shambhala Publications ISBN 978 1 61180 890 2 Hamar Imre Editor Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism ASIATISCHE FORSCHUNGEN 2007 page 226 227 Garfield amp Edelglass 2011 p 76 Hamar 2007 p 228 伊藤真 Ito Makoto 二人は李通玄の華厳思想に何を求めたのか 宋代中国の張商英と鎌倉時代の明恵 What did Zhang Shangying and Myōe Find in Li Tongxuan s Huayan Thought 印度學佛教學研究 Indogaku Bukkyōgaku Kenkyu Journal of Indian and Buddhist Studies Volume 66 n 1 總號 n 143 2017 12 20 pp 88 93 Unno Mark 2004 Shingon Refractions Myoe and the Mantra of Light p 54 Simon and Schuster Chen Jinhua 2007 Philosopher Practitioner Politician The many lives of Fazang 643 712 p 269 270 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 15613 5 Orzech Charles D Sorensen Henrik Hjort Payne Richard Karl 2011 Esoteric Buddhism and the tantras in East Asia p 459 Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 20401 0 a b Orzech Charles D Sorensen Henrik Hjort Payne Richard Karl 2011 Esoteric Buddhism and the tantras in East Asia pp 460 461 Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 20401 0 Orzech Charles D Sorensen Henrik Hjort Payne Richard Karl 2011 Esoteric Buddhism and the tantras in East Asia p 92 Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 20401 0 Orzech Charles D Sorensen Henrik Hjort Payne Richard Karl 2011 Esoteric Buddhism and the tantras in East Asia pp 462 463 Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 20401 0 Orzech Charles D Sorensen Henrik Hjort Payne Richard Karl 2011 Esoteric Buddhism and the tantras in East Asia pp 482 484 Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 20401 0 Orzech Charles D Sorensen Henrik Hjort Payne Richard Karl 2011 Esoteric Buddhism and the tantras in East Asia pp 466 469 Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 20401 0 果覺因心相符泯 一切智願趣菩提 ABLS 歲末華嚴誦經會 美國華嚴蓮社 www huayenusa org Retrieved 2023 09 01 The 42 syllable Mantra of Avatamsaka Master Hsintao The entire universe is just a manifestation of the mind 2021 07 12 Retrieved 2023 09 01 Unno Mark 2004 Shingon Refractions Myoe and the Mantra of Light Wisdom Press pp 1 26 41 ISBN 0 86171 390 7 Williams Paul Mahayana Buddhism the doctrinal foundations 2nd edition 2009 page 144 a b c d Wright Dale The Thought of Enlightenment In Fa tsang s Hua yen Buddhism The Eastern Buddhist Fall 2001 97 106 Williams Paul Mahayana Buddhism the doctrinal foundations 2nd edition 2009 page 144 45 a b c Cook 1977 pp 112 113 a b Hamar I Faith Practice and Enlightenment in the Avataṃsaka sutra and the Huayan School in Imre Hamar and Takami Inoue eds Faith in Buddhism Budapest Monographs in East Asian Studies 6 Budapest Institute of East Asian Studies Eotvos Lorand University 2016 Cook 1977 pp 113 114 a b Prince Tony 2014 Universal Enlightenment An introduction to the teachings and practices of Huayen Buddhism p 141 Kongting Publishing Company Ltd Taiwan Sources EditBuswell Robert E 1991 The Short cut Approach ofK an hua Meditation The Evolution of a Practical Subitism in Chinese Ch an Buddhism In Peter N Gregory editor 1991 Sudden and Gradual Approaches to Enlightenment in Chinese Thought Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited Buswell Robert E 1993 Ch an Hermeneutics A Korean View In Donald S Lopez Jr ed 1993 Buddhist Hermeneutics Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Chang Garma C C 1992 The Buddhist teaching of Totality The Philosophy of Hwa Yen Buddhism Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Cleary Thomas trans 1993 The Flower Ornament Scripture A Translation of the Avatamsaka Sutra ISBN 0 87773 940 4 Cook Francis H 1977 Hua Yen Buddhism The Jewel Net of Indra Penn State Press ISBN 0 271 02190 X Dumoulin Heinrich 2005 Zen Buddhism A History Volume 1 India and China World Wisdom Books ISBN 978 0 941532 89 1 Garfield Jay L Edelglass William 2011 The Oxford Handbook of World Philosophy Oup USA ISBN 9780195328998 Gimello Robert Girard Frederic Hamar Imre 2012 Avataṃsaka Buddhism in East Asia Huayan Kegon Flower Ornament Buddhism origins and adaptation of a visual culture Asiatische Forschungen Monographienreihe zur Geschichte Kultur und Sprache der Volker Ost u Zentralasiens Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 447 06678 5 Hamar Imre 2007 Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism Asiatische Forschungen Vol 151 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3447055093 Lai Whalen 2003 Buddhism in China A Historical Survey In Antonio S Cua ed Encyclopedia of Chinese Philosophy PDF New York Routledge archived from the original PDF on November 12 2014 Wright Dale S 1982 The Significance of Paradoxical Language in Hua Yen Buddhism In Philosophy East and West 32 3 325 338 archived from the original on April 12 2014Further reading EditCleary Thomas 1995 Entry Into the Inconceivable An Introduction to Hua Yen Buddhism University of Hawaii Press Reprint edition ISBN 0824816978 Essays by Tang Dynasty Huayen masters Fa Zang 2014 Rafter Dialogue and Essay on the Golden Lion in Justin Tiwald and Bryan W Van Norden eds Readings in Later Chinese Philosophy Indianapolis Hackett Publishing ISBN 978 1624661907 Gregory Peter N 1983 The place of the Sudden Teaching within the Hua Yen tradition an investigation of the process of doctrinal change Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 6 1 31 60 Haiyun Jimeng 2006 The Dawn of Enlightenment The Opening Passage of Avatamsaka Sutra with a Commentary Kongting Publishing ISBN 986748410X Hamar Imre 2007 Introduction In Hamar Imre editor Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism Asiatische Forschungen Vol 151 PDF Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3447055093 archived from the original PDF on April 12 2014 Prince Tony 2020 Universal Enlightenment An introduction to the Teachings and Practices of Huayen Buddhism 2nd edn ISBN 986 7484 83 5External links EditBuddhism in a nutshell Hua yen Chang Chung Yuan The World of Shih amp Li of Tung Shan Flower Adornment Sutra Hua Yan Jing Avatamsaka Original Text Articles by Imre Hamar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Huayan amp oldid 1178186505, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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