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Kangiten

Kangiten or Kankiten (Japanese: 歓喜天, "god of bliss";[1] Sanskrit (IAST): Nandikeśvara), also known as Binayaka (毘那夜迦; Skt. Vināyaka), Ganabachi (誐那鉢底, alternatively Ganahachi or Ganahattei; Skt. Gaṇapati), or more commonly, Shōten or Shōden (聖天, lit. "sacred god"[2] or "noble god"[3]), is a deva (ten) venerated mainly in the Shingon and Tendai schools of Japanese Buddhism who is the Buddhist equivalent of the Hindu god Ganesha.[2][4][5][6]

Kangiten
(Nandikeshvara)
  • God of obstacles, bliss and success
Dual-bodied (Sōshin) Kangiten
Other namesShōten / Shōden (聖天)

Shōten- / Shōden-sama (聖天様 / 聖天さま)
Daishō Kangiten (大聖歓喜天)
Kangi Jizaiten (歓喜自在天)
Daishō Kangi Daijizaiten (大聖歓喜大自在天)
Daishō Kangi Sōshin Tennō (大聖歓喜双身天王)
Nandai Jizaiten (難提自在天)
Zōbiten (象鼻天)
Binayaka / Binayakya (毘那夜迦)
Ganabachi / Ganahachi / Ganahattei (誐那缽底)

Tenson (天尊)
Japanese歓喜天 (shinjitai)
歡喜天 (kyūjitai)
AffiliationDeva
Vairochana Buddha
Eleven-Headed Avalokiteshvara
Amritakundalin
Sanbō Kōjin
AbodeMount Kailash (Keira-sen)
MantraOṃ hrīḥ gaḥ huṃ svāhā
(On kiri(ku) gyaku un sowaka)
Weaponaxe, trident
Symbolskangidan (modak), daikon, kinchaku
GenderMale
Personal information
Parents
SiblingsSenayaka (brother, later reincarnated as wife; incarnation of Avalokiteshvara)
Skanda (brother)
Kigeiten (sister)
ConsortSenayaka
Hinduism equivalentGanesha

Although Kangiten (Shōten) and Ganesha share a common origin and a number of traits, there are also some marked differences between the two. For instance, the Buddhist Vinayaka was (at least at first) negatively portrayed as the creator of obstacles and the leader of a class of malignant demons who obstructed Buddhist practice called vinayakas, though later tradition made an attempt to distinguish between the vinayakas and their lord, who became seen as a manifestation of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara (Kannon in Japanese) and/or the buddha Vairochana.

Kangiten enjoys both a positive and negative reception in Japan. On the one hand, he is popularly revered as an extremely efficacious god who grants whatever is asked of him without fail, including impossible wishes. He is also said to watch over those who have a karmic connection with him from the moment of their conception, serving as their invisible companion throughout their lives. On the other hand, he is considered to be still bound by base passions and desires (kleshas) and thus is sometimes also regarded as a rather volatile, demanding god who is quick to punish those who have offended him.

Unlike his Hindu counterpart, whose image is prominently displayed in public, Kangiten is considered too sacred to be seen: images of the deity in temples are kept hidden from view, rituals centered on him are performed by qualified monks out of public sight, and lay devotees are discouraged from venerating iconographic depictions of the god at home.

While he is sometimes depicted as an elephant-headed single male deity like Ganesha, he is more commonly portrayed as a male-female couple (both with elephant heads) standing in an embrace in an iconographic depiction known as the Dual(-bodied) Kangiten (双身歓喜天, Sōshin Kangiten) or the Embracing Kangiten.

Names

Kangiten inherited many names and characteristics from the Hindu god Ganesha (with whom he shares a common origin), though the name 'Ganesha' (IAST: Ganeśa) itself was never applied to the Buddhist deity, who was generally referred to by the earlier names 'Ganapati' (Gaṇapati) or 'Vinayaka' (Vināyaka).[5][7] 'Vinayaka' was transcribed into Chinese characters as 毘那夜迦 (pinyin: Pínàyèjiā; Japanese (rōmaji): Binayaka / Binayakya), 頻那夜迦 (pinyin: Pínnàyèjiā), and 毘那怛迦 (pinyin: Pínàdájiā), respectively, while 'Ganapati' was transcribed as 誐那鉢底 (pinyin: Énàbōdǐ; Japanese: Ganabachi / Ganahachi / Ganahattei) or 伽那鉢底 / 迦那鉢底 (Jiānàbōdǐ).[5] The term vinayaka was also used to refer to a class of beings to which Vinayaka and/or his cohorts belong.[5][8]

In Japan, the deity is commonly known as 'Shōten' / 'Shōden' (聖天, "sacred / noble god"; Skt. Āryadeva) or 'Kangiten' (歓喜天, "god of bliss"; Skt. Nandin or Nandikeśvara[1][5][9][10]). The former epithet indicates his association with good luck and fortune and may be an allusion to the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara (Kannon), who is also known as 'Aryavalokiteshvara' (Āryāvalokiteśvara; Japanese: 聖観音, Shō-Kannon), one of the figures that constitute the dual-bodied (双身, sōshin) Kangiten,[11][12] while the latter is especially associated with this dual form, who is venerated as a giver of joy and prosperity.[13][14] Among devotees, he is also sometimes simply referred to by the honorific 'Tenson' (天尊, "venerable deity").[10][15]

In this article, the names 'Vinayaka', 'Ganapati', 'Shōten' and 'Kangiten' are used interchangeably for the Buddhist deity, with 'Kangiten' specifically denoting the deity's dual form.

Historical development and literature

As demon and deity

 
The Hindu Ganesha, Gupta Period (4th-6th century CE), Art of Mathura.

Several theories have been advanced regarding the origins of the Hindu deity Ganesha, who first undisputably appears in the historical record in his classic form around the early 4th to 5th centuries CE. One theory is that Ganesha gradually came to prominence in connection with the Vinayakas, a group of four troublesome demons mentioned in the Manava-Grihyasutra (a text belonging to the Manava school of the Black (Krishna) Yajurveda) and the Mahabharata.[5][16][17]

Whereas in Hinduism Ganesha was regarded mainly as a remover of obstacles, Buddhists originally emphasized his destructive side as the creator of obstacles and his function as a demon king. Early instances of the name 'Vinayaka' in Buddhist texts for instance have a negative connotation, denoting a malignant being (or beings) who is both the cause and the symbolic representation of obstacles or impediments.[18] A note in the Mahamayuri Vidyarajni Sutra[a] by the Tang period monk Yijing defines Vinayaka as an "obstructive deity" (障礙神, pinyin: zhàng'àishén; Japanese: shōgeshin) and notes his widespread worship in the west (i.e. India). The Mahavairochana Tantra (also known as the Vairochanabhisambodhi Sutra) meanwhile speaks of demonic entities such as vinayakas and rakshasas being dispersed through the power of mantra.[19] The monk Yi Xing, in his commentary on this text,[b] describes vinayakas as obstructions produced from a deluded mind (從妄想心生).[5] In esoteric Buddhist literature, Vinayaka is portrayed as the enemy of the ritual practitioner who is to be either expelled with mantras or soothed with ritual offerings, which are then consumed by the practitioner to increase his strength; once duly propitiated he turns into the practitioner's ally, a protecting deity who removes all impediments.[21] Vinayaka - also known under the name 'Vighnaraja' (Vighnarāja), "Lord of Obstacles" - is sometimes also shown being trampled on by wrathful deities like Mahakala or Achala in Tibetan and East Asian Buddhist art.[22][23]

The emergence of Esoteric (Tantric) Buddhism and its spread to Nepal, Tibet, and eventually to East Asia saw Vinayaka acquire a more positive role as a subjugator of demons. In Tibet, the deity was worshiped for the removal of obstacles and the granting of wealth and was at times portrayed as a wrathful, multiarmed deity wielding weapons. A Nepalese text provides a list of spells invoking Ganapati to not only bestow wealth but also to cause harm to enemies.[24] Vinayaka is also depicted in a wall painting in Mogao Cave 285 in Dunhuang as a protector of Buddhism with the gods Maheshvara (Shiva) and Skanda.[25][26]

Introduction to Japan

 
The deities Ishana (Ishanaten), his consort Ishani, Mahakala (Makakara / Daikokuten) and Vinayaka (Binayaka) as depicted in the northeast (upper left) corner of the Womb Realm (Garbhakoshadhatu) Mandala

The two primary mandalas of East Asian esoteric Buddhism (Tangmi) also feature Vinayaka(s). In the Womb Realm (Garbhakoshadhatu) Mandala (based on the Mahavairochana Tantra), Vinayaka is found among the retinue of the directional deity Ishana with the god Mahakala (both of whom are derived from the Hindu Shiva),[27][28][29] while the outer sections of the Vajra Realm (Vajradhatu) Mandala (based on the Vajrashekhara Sutra) contains four groups of five deities distributed along the four directions, each group containing one vinayaka - here interpreted as emanations of the buddha Vairochana who expressly adopt the form of vinayakas in order to subjugate the obstacle-causing demons.[30] Vinayaka's inclusion in these mandalas - brought to Japan by Kūkai (774–835), the founder of Shingon Buddhism - facilitated his introduction to Japan, where he (like most other Hindu deities assimilated in Buddhism) was first considered a minor guardian of the two mandalas. By the Heian period (794–1185), Vinayaka emerged as a besson (別尊, lit. "separate/distinct worthy"), a deity with an individualized cult centered around him.[3][31] The deity's cult was developed within the Shingon school by the monk Kakuban (1095–1143), while in Tendai, it was systematized by Annen (841–889?).[12]

Emergence of Dual Vinayaka (Kangiten)

 
Dual-bodied Shōten (Kangiten), from the Butsuzōzui (1690)

The late Heian period saw the rise in popularity of the Dual-bodied Kangiten (Sōshin / Sōjin Kangiten) image, in which Vinayaka (heretofore depicted as a single figure, often with two arms but sometimes also four or six[32]) is shown as an embracing male-female couple.[2]

The origins of this imagery, unique to East Asia, have perplexed scholars for years; there is no concrete evidence about the inception of this form. It has been compared with the sexual yab-yum iconography found in Nepal and Tibet,[2] although it is markedly different from them in that both figures have animal heads (yab-yum representations are restricted to fully humanoid deities; the zoocephalic Vinayaka-Ganapati was thus not portrayed in this form, though erotic depictions of him do exist) and are shown fully clothed.[33][34] Lode Rosseels suggests that the Dual Vinayaka form may have originated from an iconographic type attested in Xinjiang (Chinese Turkestan) and Dunhuang in the 8th century showing Ganapati with four legs (representing the deity's union with his shakti in a non-sexual fashion),[35] which was "reinterpreted by the Chinese in accordance with popular Taoist ideals ... which probably resulted in the restoration of the four-legged and four-armed form to two almost identical elephant-headed deities in a nonsexual embrace."[36]

The form is first attested in 7th-8th century Chinese esoteric Buddhist texts. The Dharani-samuchchaya Sutra (Taishō Tripitaka 901),[c][37] translated into Chinese by a monk named Atigupta (or Atikuta) in 653-654 CE describes a ritual to worship the Dual Vinayaka, which was replicated by Amoghavajra (705-774) in his ritual text Rite of the Dual-bodied Vinayaka, the Great Saintly Deva of Bliss (T. 1266).[d][38][39] The text gives instructions for the fashioning of both the dual-bodied and the six-armed single Vinayaka images and specifies the types of offerings one should give to the deity.[39][40]

 
Mahakala (lower right) and Vinayaka (upper left)

Two texts attributed to Bodhiruchi (trad. 672–727), the Sutra of the Mantras and Rituals of the Gana (T. 1267),[e][41] and the Larger Sutra of the Mantras and Rituals of the Gana (T. 1268),[f][42] contain the same guidelines for rituals and depictions of the Dual-bodied Vinayaka. In the former text, Vinayaka teaches a multitude of deities and demons who have congregated at Mount Kailash a one-syllable mantra, followed by a description of a ritual dedicated to the Dual Vinayaka similar to that found in Amoghavajra's text. Vinayaka's demon followers promise the deity to grant the wishes of whoever repeats the one-syllable mantra. The Larger Gana Sutra meanwhile contains additional rituals to propitiate the Dual Vinayaka as well as the four-armed form of the deity. It also has rituals aimed at attracting love, gaining wisdom, or destroying enemies.[43][44]

A ritual manual by Shubhakarasimha (637-736) titled Ritual of the Mantras and Offerings that Converted the Great Saintly Deva of Bliss King Vinayaka, the Dual-Bodied Maheshvara (T. 1270)[g][45] mentions new myths regarding the Dual-bodied Vinayaka not found in Indian sources and is the first text that explicitly associates the deity with the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara (Guanyin / Kannon). It also prohibits placing his images in Buddhist altar rooms.[5][40][46][47]

Other esoteric texts on Vinayaka

 
Vairochana Buddha
(Dainichi Nyorai)
 
Eleven-Headed Avalokiteshvara
(Jūichimen Kannon)
Kangiten is identified as the manifestation of both the primordial buddha Vairochana and the Eleven-Headed (Ekadashamukha) form of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara

The Sutra of the Divine Incantations of the Eleven-Headed [Avalokiteshvara] (T. 1071),[h][48] translated by the monk Xuanzang in 656 CE, expounds the rite of bathing an image of Vinayaka with perfumed water.[21]

A short text attributed to Amoghavajra titled Tantra on the Practice of the Secret Ritual of the Dual-bodied Bodhisattva Great Saintly Deva of Bliss, the Samaya-Body Copenetrated by Meditation and Wisdom of the Tathagata Mahavairochana (T. 1271)[i][49] describes the Dual Vinayaka ritual as a procedure to gain four kinds of benefits or siddhis (protection, gain, love and subjugation) which come in three grades: the highest grade confers kingship; the second grade provides wealth; the third grade provides sufficient food and clothing. In parallel to the material results, the tantra classifies ritual practitioners into three categories: the highest class of adept are allowed to learn the rite's inner secrets, the middle are permitted to read the text, while the lowest may not conduct the ritual on their own but should let a more developed practitioner do it for them. The text notably prescribes alcoholic beverages (considered taboo in exoteric Buddhism), dubbed the "water of bliss" (歡喜水, pinyin: huānxǐshuǐ, Japanese: kangisui), as an offering to the deity, which is then consumed as a medicine to remove evil.[40][50][51]

 
Kangidan (歓喜団, lit. "bliss bun"), a fried sweet derived from the Indian modak

Amoghavajra's disciple Hanguang (含光) composed a text in 747 called Secret Essence of the Yoga-siddhi of the Vinayaka Ganapati (T.1273)[j][52] in which he continued his master's work. He writes that every ritual should be preceded by an invocation to Vinayaka-Ganapati, the god of beginnings. This text identifies both Vinayaka and Avalokiteshvara as manifestations of the all-pervading body of the buddha Vairochana, with the pair being taken to symbolize both Vairochana's material and spiritual aspects.[53][54]

A ritual manual attributed to Bodhiruci with the title The Rite of the Nine-Eyed Deva, the Provisional Manifestation of the Golden Ganapati[k] describes a wrathful manifestation of Vinayaka with four arms and three heads (each with three eyes) apparently based on Tibetan forms of the deity. The manual gives instructions for the fashioning of the image, which should then be kept hidden from view at all times and offered radishes, cakes, sweets, and honey.[55][56] A sutra translated by Vajrabodhi known as The Dharani Sutra of the Golden Ganapati (T. 1269)[l][57] gives instructions on how to depict a six-armed Ganapati, which should also be concealed and offered sweets such as modak (歡喜團, pinyin: huānxǐtuán; Japanese: kangidan, lit. "bliss buns"), honey, and fruits.[56]

 
Vinayaka (holding a radish) and his boar-headed consort (holding a modak), from Dunhuang (Pelliot chinois 4518 (8))

An apocryphal sutra dating from the early 11th century, The Attainment Rites of Vinayaka taught by Vajrasattva (T. 1272)[m],[58] contains black magic spells invoking vinayakas aimed at the destruction of one's enemies. This text was deemed so gruesome that Emperor Zhenzong (reigned 997-1022) banned its circulation in China in 1017.[5][59]

A minor astrological or divinatory text apocryphally attributed to Prajnachakra, another disciple of Amoghavajra who became the master of the Tendai monk Enchin (814-891), known as The Rules for the Diviner's Board of the Great Saintly Bliss Deva (T. 1275)[n][60] describes the outline of an esoteric divination board (式盤, Ch. shìpán; Jp. shikiban), which consisted of two parts linked by an axis: the cylindrical or conical upper part called the "heavenly board" (天盤, Ch. tiānpán; Jp. tenban), was cylindrical or conical, and the square lower part called the "earthly board" (地盤, Ch. dìpán; Jp. chiban). The practitioner is to visualize four vinayakas (all manifestations of Vinayaka-Ganapati) at each of the cardinal directions on the tenban, while the guardian deities of the eight directions (dikpala) and the Twenty-Eight Mansions of Chinese astronomy are to be visualized on the chiban. The text then lists a number of possible combinations obtained by rotating the tenban over the chiban (linking any one of the four "heavenly" vinayakas with one of the eight "earthly" directional devas), each of which produced different material benefits such as obtaining a high position, attaining marital union, making a person fall ill, or returning a curse to its sender.[61][62][63]

Kūkai, who brought Shubhakarasimha's, Vajrabodhi's, and Amoghavajra's ritual manuals with him to Japan, is also said to have himself authored a text on Vinayaka titled the Shōten Procedural (聖天次第, Shōten shidai). The Tendai monk Ennin, too, lists the Rite of the Dual-bodied Vinayaka, the Great Saintly Deva of Bliss among the texts he obtained in China.[12]

From the medieval period onwards

 
Benzaiten (left), Kangiten (center) and Tamonten (right) in Daishō-in temple (Itsukushima, Hiroshima Prefecture)

Since the Heian period, Vinayaka (Shōten / Kangiten) featured in state-sponsored official rites. These ceremonies were originally a prerogative of the imperial court: an edict dating from 785 prohibited the private performance of rites focused on a number of deities, Shōten being one of them. However, he was at times also invoked against the imperial house: in The Tale of Hōgen, the nobleman Fujiwara no Yorinaga (1120-1156) requests the performance of rituals centered on Shōten, Uchchhushma (Ususama Myōō) and Vajrakumara (金剛童子, Kongō Dōji) against Emperor Go-Shirakawa.[64]

Shōten was commonly invoked in rites of subjugation. Legend relates that the Tendai monk Son'i (尊意, 866-940) invoked Shōten to pacify the vengeful spirit of statesman Sugawara no Michizane (later deified as Tenjin, the kami of learning), who was himself claimed to be a devotee of the god.[65][66][67][68] Another story claims that when Son'i was performing a rite centered on the deity Achala (Fudō Myōō) for the end of the rebellion of Taira no Masakado in 940, a statue of Kangiten on a side altar flew eastward with the sound of a flying arrow, followed by an apparition of Masakado's head falling on the main altar, signifying his defeat.[65][69] In 1329, Emperor Go-Daigo performed a subjugation ritual invoking the god against the Kamakura shogunate; after the shogunate's regent (shikken) Hōjō Takatoki committed suicide during the Siege of Kamakura in 1333, the emperor ordered Ashikaga Takauji to establish a memorial sanctuary in Hōkai-ji, a temple in Kamakura notable for being a cultic center of Kangiten, to placate Takatoki's spirit. After the Kenmu Restoration (1333-1336), this particular Kangiten became an object of worship of the Ashikaga shogunate and the remnants of the Hōjō clan.[70][71] In 1433, the monks of Mount Hiei conducted a Shōten rite against the sixth Ashikaga shōgun Yoshinori.[64]

 
Daikon offered to Kangiten made available to devotees (お下がり, o-sagari; cf. the Hindu prasāda) at Matsuchiyama Honryū-in (Matsuchiyama Shōden), Asakusa, Taitō City, Tokyo

Historical figures known to have been devoted to Shōten (and whose successes were sometimes credited to him) include the famous warlords Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa Ieyasu, the Edo period merchants Kinokuniya Bunzaemon and Takadaya Kahei, the daimyō and political reformer Matsudaira Sadanobu, and wealthy business families such as the Mitsui, the Sumitomo, and the Kōnoike.[68][72] The 15th century Noh playwright Konparu Zenchiku was also devoted to the god since his youth; during a twenty-one day retreat at Fushimi Inari Shrine with his wife (a daughter of his master Zeami) in 1467, the 63-year old Zenchiku consumed a talisman of the deity while praying for the "harmonious union of yin and yang, husband and wife." Upon being told by a priest that his prayer was not answered because he had no karmic connection with Shōten, Zenchiku repented of his negligence and renewed his vow, eventually receiving a dream that deepened his faith.[73]

Little is known regarding premodern devotion to Shōten outside of the ruling classes other than that it spread during the Edo period, all the while still remaining relatively arcane.[74] A certain legend claims that Ieyasu attempted to stake a claim on the deity by promoting rumors of Shōten being a fearsome god whose efficacy is counterbalanced by his fickleness and quick temper, thus keeping the cult's growth among the general populace in check. This, the story claims, is the reason why he is not as popular in the Kantō region (the Tokugawa seat of power) as he is in western Japan, where he is widely worshiped even today.[68]

Perhaps in reaction against the deity's reputation among the public as one who grants any and all material desires, various sources emphasize the ineffectiveness and even danger of performing rituals on one's own, without the aid of a qualified priest. The Tendai monk Kōkei (977-1049) warned that while the benefits brought by the god are very real, he is swift to curse negligent practitioners; it is thus better for people in this Final Age not to worship him.[74] The 18th-century tradesman and kokugaku scholar Tsumura Sōan writes the following regarding Kangiten:

Kangiten is an Indian god, and because he brings many benefits, many are those who perform his rite by themselves. But even if one's spirit of faith is deep, it is better not to perform by oneself, by chanting dhāraṇīs and the like. Whatever their spirit of faith, ordinary people, when they practice without sufficient respect, commit a severe offence. One must ask a monk to recite prayers. ... Kangiten is the lord of the world of desire. As he made a vow to help even evil people abandoned by the Worthies and the Buddhas, when evil people address their prayers to him, even if they are about to be beheaded, he can save them. Because he is the lord of the world of desire, he fulfills all prayers, even those made with a thought of desire. (But because there are in his retinue unruly gods that are easily offended by lack of respect, he must be approached with caution.) Even among Ritsu monks who perform the ritual of Kangiten, many fall into sexual desire. Generally speaking, in India, this is a rite performed by profanes.[74]

A notable modern-day Shōten devotee is the entrepreneur and Buddhist scholar Hayashiya Tomojirō (林屋友次郎, 1886-1953[75]), who authored A Guide to Shōten Devotion (聖天信仰の手引き, Shōten shinkō no tebiki), a manual instructing lay worshipers (specifically new devotees) the proper manner of worshiping the deity.[72][76]

Mythology

 
Maheshvara (Daijizaiten)

A number of texts relate different stories regarding the origin and meaning of the Dual Vinayaka image.

According to the story found in Shubhakarasimha's ritual manual, Maheshvara's wife Uma (Parvati) gave birth to three thousand children: from her left side was born 1,500 evil deities headed by King Vinayaka (毘那夜迦王), while from her right side came 1,500 benevolent deities led by King Senayaka (扇那夜迦王; Pali: Senāyaka;[77] Sanskrit: Senanāyaka,[78][79] "commander" or "lord of the army"), who was actually the incarnation of Avalokiteshvara. In order to subdue Vinayaka's evil deeds, Senayaka "took simultaneous birth with Vinayaka so that they would be younger and elder brother, husband and wife." Reborn as his wife, Senayaka embraced Vinayaka, thereby calming his rage and turning him into a force for good.[11][47][80][81]

In another legend recorded in a medieval Japanese iconographic compendium known as the Kakuzenshō (覚禅鈔),[82] Vinayaka was originally the king of a country called Marakeira, who only ate beef and radishes. When these became rare, he started feasting on human corpses; when these too became scarce, he began to eat living people. His subjects eventually revolted and were about to kill the king when he transformed himself into "the great demon king Vinayaka." The kingdom was then struck by an epidemic (implied to have been caused by the demon), at which the people prayed to the Eleven-Headed (Ekadashamukha) Avalokiteshvara, who took the form of a female vinayaka and seduced the demon king, filling him with joy (歓喜, kangi) and pacifying him. Thus, he, in union with her, became the Dual Kangiten.[83][84][51]

A third tale somewhat similar to the above found in another Japanese text portrays Vinayaka (Kangi) as the head of a vast army of vinayaka demons who lived in a mountain called Mount Vinayaka, also known as "Elephant-headed Mountain" (象頭山, Zōzu-sen) or "Mountain of Obstacles" (障礙山, Shōge-san), who received a command from Maheshvara (who at the time had not yet converted to Buddhism) to cause trouble to humans and steal their vital essence. To tame him, Avalokiteshvara manifested himself as a female vinayaka and came before the demon king. Upon seeing the demoness, Kangi immediately fell in love with her, but she agreed to become his consort only if he abandoned his evil ways and embraced Buddhism. After Kangi assented, the demoness took him in her arms, leading the king to achieve great bliss (kangi).[85][86] A variant of this story portrays Shōten (here identified as female) as a daughter of Maheshvara who was exiled to Mount Vinayaka because of her ugliness and her violent nature. In the mountain, she meets a god who courts her. She replies that she is already wed to another deity named Gundari (Amritakundalin) but agrees to marry him if he reforms himself. (Still other versions in which Vinayaka is male portray Gundari as a goddess.)[87]

Yet another story relates that Vinayaka was originally a courtier in an Indian kingdom nicknamed the "Long-Nosed Minister" (鼻長大臣, Bichō Daijin) who had an intimate liaison with the queen. After discovering their affair, the king poisons Bichō Daijin by making him eat elephant meat. The queen tells her lover to run away to Mount Keira (Mount Kailash) and cure himself by bathing in oil and eating radishes. After recovering, Bichō Daijin swore vengeance against the king and transformed into a fearsome elephant-headed "great god of obstacles" (大障礙神, dai-shōgeshin) named Vinayaka. Storming into the palace with his army of demons, Vinayaka confessed to the queen his lust for her. In reply, the queen bade him repent of his evil ways and embraced him, "her body [becoming] as his in form." Thus Vinayaka was freed from his base desires and attained great bliss.[88][34][89]

Association with other deities

 
Sanbō Kōjin ("fierce god (kōjin) of the Three Jewels"), the Japanese Buddhist god of the hearth

Kangiten is commonly identified as an "assimilation / emanation body" (等流身, tōrujin; Sanskrit: niṣyanda-kāya[90]) of Vairochana,[14] with the female half of the embracing pair being also identified as a manifestation of the Eleven-Headed Avalokiteshvara.[91][92] In addition to these two, he was also connected or identified with other deities such as Maheshvara-Daijizaiten, the wrathful hearth god Sanbō Kōjin, the snake god Ugajin, Enma (Yama), Benzaiten (Sarasvati), the fox goddess Dakiniten, and the wisdom king Aizen Myōō (Ragaraja).[93]

Whereas some sources identify Shōten as Maheshvara's son - which reflects Shiva's and Ganesha's relationship in Hindu mythology - others also identify him as Maheshvara's incarnation. The Shingon monk Kakuban for instance wrote:

"[In the dual form] the male deva is a transformation body of Maheshvara. He drives off both celestial and earthly demons and distributes profit in this world and the next. The female figure is a transformation of Avalokiteshvara's eleven-faced form, the most potent of her thirty-three forms. These two standing in conjugal embrace represent the union of yin and yang. That they have elephant heads and human bodies is to show the interpenetration of all ten realms."[81]

In another text, 'Daijizaiten' is one of the various names for the deity:

"Because he is perfectly free in the six supranormal powers and secret dharmas, he is called Shōten. Because he is perfectly free in wisdom, he is called Daijizaiten. Because he achieves love, he is called the dual-bodied Vinayaka king. Because he produces the five cereals, he is called the six-armed deva."[94]

This identification of Shōten with Daijizaiten was however criticized in the hagiography of Shingon Ritsu monk Tankai (1629-1721), the founder of Hōzan-ji (Ikoma Shōten), which relates that Tankai, after having doubts about Shōten's true nature, had a dream in which the god explained that he is neither Daijizaiten nor a mere vinayaka demon but an avatar of Vairochana; although he is called 'Vinayaka' because the vinayakas are members of his retinue, he, unlike them, is not a malignant demon of obstacles. Tankai's doubts were eventually resolved after finding a copy of the Kakuzenshō, which claimed that identifying Shōten with Maheshvara-Daijizaiten is "a great error" and that "this divinity's special characteristic is that of lord of siddhis, thus he is called 'Jizaiten'. He ought not to be confused with any other jizaiten."[14][95][96]

A tradition of the Jimon Tendai temple of Mii-dera meanwhile associates Shōten with the demon king Mara, also known as Takejizaiten (他化自在天; Skt. Paranirmitavaśavartin), the lord of the sixth and highest heaven in the world of desire who once tried to hinder Gautama Buddha's quest for enlightenment (though he is also said to have eventually converted to Buddhism).[97][98][99][100][101] Indeed, the Mii-dera tradition employs Takejizaiten's mantra in Shōten rituals rather than Daijizaiten's.[97]

 
Dakiniten Mandala (Muromachi period, 15th century), portraying the combined Dakiniten (central figure), Benzaiten (left head), and Shōten (right head)

Shōten was also equated with Sanbō Kōjin, in that the latter was also considered to be a violent deity (kōjin) of obstacles. According to a work attributed to the Tendai monk Annen called the Ritual of Vinayaka in Four Sections (Shibu Binayaka-hō, 四部毘那夜迦法), when the construction of Jetavana Monastery suffered a series of delays due to obstructive evil spirits, their leader, a fierce-looking eight-headed deity, appeared before the Buddha's disciple Shariputra, calling himself Nagyōtosajin (那行都佐神), the "Raging King of the Three Jewels" (三宝荒王, Sanbō Kōō). He then demanded that Shariputra create an image of him and make offerings to it, warning that all kinds of calamities will befall those who do not pay him homage. A gloss in the text explains: "It is Kōjin, or Vinayaka." The story is repeated in the Sannō Shinto text Shintō Zatsuzatsushū (神道雑々集): here, the god identifies himself explicitly as 'Sanbō Kōjin Binayaka' (三宝荒神毘那夜迦).[102][103][104][105] Like Kangiten, Kōjin (Nagyōtosajin) was interpreted as being either a single deity or a pair of deities named respectively Nagyō (那行) and Tosa (都佐).[104] (In a similar vein, some representations of Kangiten split the god's name into two, naming the male half of the pair as 'Bina' and his female consort as 'Yaka'.[14]) In addition, Kōjin was also sometimes identified with Maheshvara-Daijizaiten[106] and was associated with one of Vinayaka's symbols (三昧耶形, sa(n)maya-gyō; Skt. samaya), the parasol (傘蓋, sangai).[107]

In an apocryphal sutra titled Dharani Sutra of the Buddha's Teaching for the Greatest Protection of the Country by Ugaya's Sudden Attainment Wish-Fulfilling Jewel,[o][108] Ugajin (who is closely associated with Benzaiten) is said to manifest himself as the deities Dakiniten, Daishōten (Vinayaka), and Aizen Myōō. Another text identifies Vinayaka with the goddess of Itsukushima Shrine, who was also identified with Benzaiten.[73]

During the medieval period, Benzaiten, Dakiniten, and Shōten were also combined into a single figure which served as the main focus of an esoteric imperial accession rite in which the three deities were worshiped as one known as the Joint Ritual of the Three Devas (三天合行法, santen gogyōhō). The union of these three divinities was associated with a series of triads such as the three jewels (Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha), the three poisons (greed, ignorance, and hatred), the three mysteries (body, speech, and mind), and the three shrines that comprise Fushimi Inari Shrine (due to her association with foxes, Dakiniten was identified with the native god Inari).[109] Portrayals of the three devas as a single figure, which became popular during the Nanboku-chō and Muromachi periods and were still being produced as late as the Edo period, depict the composite deity as a three-headed figure riding a fox. The middle head is usually that of Dakiniten, though some show Shōten as occupying the central position.[110]

Shōten was also identified with various Japanese gods such as Susanoo, Amaterasu, Sarutahiko and his wife Ame-no-Uzume (an identification which may have partly stemmed from Sarutahiko's long nose calling to mind Shōten's elephant trunk), or the crossroad deities known as Dōsojin (which are sometimes represented as a human couple).[111]

 
12th century Tibetan (Kadampa school) painting of Achala stepping on Vighnaraja

Apart from Avalokiteshvara, various wrathful deities such as Jinja Daishō (深沙大将, lit. "General Deep Sands"; a fierce avatar of Vaishravana), Uchchhushma (Ususama), Achala (Fudō), or Amritakundalin (Gundari Myōō) are also believed to subjugate Vinayaka (when interpreted as the cause of obstacles) and his vinayaka underlings and keep them under control.[91] Indeed, Amritakundalin is said to be particularly effective against the vinayakas; their leader Shōten himself is also said to belong to his retinue.[112][113]

Gonrui and jitsurui

Medieval Japanese thought classified Buddhist devas and native kami into two types: gonsha (権者) or gonrui (権類), deities who are "provisional" manifestations (gongen) of enlightened buddhas and bodhisattvas, and jissha (実者) or jitsurui (実類), "real" or "material" lesser divinities who have the same passions and desires as humans do. In this latter category are also included deified lower entities such as animal spirits or spirits of the dead.[114][115][116] Jitsurui deities, due to their nature, are approached with caution, with some sources even recommending that they are best avoided.[117]

Esoteric texts distinguish three kinds of Kangiten rituals, each of which classified Vinayaka and his consort differently:

  • The first one considers the male as a jitsurui deity and the female as a provisional incarnation. The honzon or focus of worship in this rite is thus called "provisional and real devas" (権実の天, gonjitsu no ten).
  • In the second, both deities are considered jitsurui; the honzon in this case is called "devas both real" (倶実の天, kujitsu no ten). This type of ritual is considered the most effective but also the most dangerous.
  • The third one visualizes both deities as gonrui; its honzon is therefore known as "devas both provisional" (倶権の天, kugon no ten). Although its effects are not as quick or apparent, it is considered the safest of the three types.

These distinctions merely reflect the perspective of the practitioner; the image used in these rituals does not change.[118][119]

Iconography

Single and dual forms

 
Single-bodied (単身, tanshin) Shōten holding an axe and a radish

Shōten (Kangiten) is mainly depicted either alone or, more commonly, embracing his consort. When shown by himself, he is represented with either two, four, six, eight or even twelve arms, holding various attributes such as a vajra, an axe, a noose, a club, a trident, a wheel, a broken tusk or a radish (which may have itself developed from the tusk attribute).[4][120][121] He notably does not have the Hindu Ganesha's characteristic huge belly nor the latter's animal mount (vāhana), the mouse.[122] Some depictions portray him with one tusk similar to Ganesha, although others show both his tusks intact.[123]

 
Depiction of the dual-bodied Kangiten with both figures facing forward

Among the various representations of the deity, the single-bodied Shōten image is considered the most difficult and even dangerous to own and maintain due to the god's wild nature; an image of the Eleven-Headed Avalokiteshvara (Jūichimen Kannon) is thus also installed in temples that enshrine the single-bodied Shōten in the belief that this pacifies the deity. Images of this type are employed in an esoteric rite known as the Kangiten Water Ritual (水歓喜天供, Sui Kangiten-ku), in which water that had been used to bathe the statue of Avalokiteshvara is poured over the image, which is then taken by ritual practitioners and devotees for their use. Bathing in this consecrated water is believed to cleanse impurities and remove all impediments.[123]

The Dual-bodied Kangiten image usually features both the male and female figures with elephant heads, though a few examples show the female figure as boar-headed.[119][124] The genders of the pair are not explicit but hinted in the iconography.[4][2][125] The female is often shown wearing a crown and resting her feet over that of the male, who rests his head on her shoulder. Some variants may show the male and female gazing at each other, looking over each other's shoulders, wearing a single shared garment, or standing side by side.[126][127] A few images of the deity classified as gonjitsu depictions may depict the female alone stepping on the male's foot (symbolizing the jitsurui deity Vinayaka being subjugated by Avalokiteshvara's provisional incarnation), while kugon depictions - where both the male and female are interpreted as incarnations of bodhisattvas - may show both the two figures stepping on the other's foot.[128] This symbolizes the unity and non-duality of contrasting genders and opposites.[126][127]

Although Amoghavajra's Rite of the Dual-bodied Vinayaka recommends that Vinayaka's image be made of pewter, brass, or wood and be about five or seven sun (approximately 17-20 centimeters) high,[129] most sculptures of Kangiten venerated in Japanese temples are much smaller, measuring around one to two sun (3-6 centimeters) on average. Because they are periodically ritually bathed in oil, many are made of metals such as gold, silver, bronze, or iron; wooden images (木天, mokuten) are comparatively rare.[130]

Vajra vinayakas

 
Six-armed Shōten

The twenty deities depicted in the outer sections of the Diamond Realm mandala include Vinayaka (shown holding a radish and a modak), a boar-headed deity known as Vajramukha (金剛面天, Kongōmenten; sometimes identified with either the goddess Chamunda - depicted in Buddhist art with a boar's head - or Vinayaka's consort), and four vinayakas distributed along the four directions:[30][131][132][133]

  1. Vajravikirana / Vajrachinna (金剛摧天, Kongō-zaiten; Skt. Vajracinna, "destroying vajra deva"): The vinayaka of the east, shown holding an umbrella. His name reflects his role as the destroyer of obstacles caused by malevolent vinayakas. Also known as Sangaiten (傘蓋天, "parasol deva") or Sangai Binayaka (傘蓋毘那夜迦, "parasol vinayaka").[30][131][102]
  2. Vajrabhakshana (金剛食天, Kongō-jikiten / 金剛飲食天, Kongō-onjikiten; Skt. Vajrabhakṣana, "vajra deva of drink and food"): Situated in the south, this vinayaka holds a garland of flowers in his right hand and sometimes a noose in his left hand. Also called Keman Binayaka (華鬘毘那夜迦, "flower garland vinayaka").[30][131][102]
  3. Vajravasin (金剛衣天, Kongō-eten / 金剛衣服天, Kongō-ebukuten; Skt. Vajravāsin, "vajra deva of clothing"): The vinayaka of the west, depicted holding a bow and arrow. Also called Kōkyūsen Binayaka (拘弓箭毘那夜迦, "bow-and-arrow-wielding vinayaka").[30][131][102]
  4. Vajrajaya (金剛調伏天, Kongō-chōbukuten / 調伏天, Chōbukuten; "subduing [vajra] deva"): Situated in the north, shown holding a sword or a staff or club in his right hand and a jewel in his left. Also known as Kōtō Binayaka (拘刀毘那夜迦, "sword-wielding vinayaka") or Konjiki Ganahattei (金色迦那鉢底, "golden Ganapati"). Although all four are depicted with elephant heads in the Diamond Realm mandala, the Kakuzenshō portrays three of the four vinayakas as human figures, with Vajrajaya being the only one shown as elephant-headed.[30][131][102]

Other depictions

 
Kangi Dōji (歓喜童子), a depiction of Kangiten as a young boy (童子, dōji)

A mandala centered on Kangiten shows the dual-bodied form of the deity at the center of a four-petaled lotus arm-in-arm as if dancing, surrounded by the four directional vinayakas and the guardian devas of the eight directions. Two six-armed vinayakas are sometimes also depicted at the mandala's bottom part.[134]

A depiction commonly found in hanging scrolls and talismans (ofuda) known as Kangi Dōji (歓喜童子) shows Shōten as a sitting human youth (童子, dōji) with one or two elephant heads on his headgear. He has four (or rarely eight) arms holding an axe or a halberd, a jeweled staff, a modak, and a radish. This image was popularized by the 17th century Shingon monk Ikū (以空, 1637-1719), who is said to have seen Shōten in this manner after praying that the god show himself in a form that can be displayed in public (unlike his elephant-headed forms).[135][136][137]

Worship

Bīja and mantra

 
गः (gaḥ), Shōten's seed syllable (bīja) in Siddham script
 
Doubled gaḥ

The bīja or seed syllable used to represent Shōten is gaḥ (Devanagari: गः; Japanese pronunciation: gyaku), written in Siddham script. It is usually written double (गःगः), symbolizing his dual form.[138][139]

The mantra considered to be the standard in Japanese Buddhism, identified in Amoghavajra's Rite of the Dual-bodied Vinayaka as Vinayaka's "heart mantra" (心呪),[129] is as follows:

Sanskrit (romanized) Devanagari Japanese (romanized) Hiragana
Oṃ hrīḥ gaḥ huṃ svāhā[129] ॐ ह्रीः गः हुं स्वाहा On kiri(ku) gyaku un sowaka[139][140] おん きり(く) ぎゃく うん そわか

The mantra is traditionally interpreted as Vinayaka's seed syllable flanked by those of Avalokiteshvara (  / ह्रीः, hrīḥ) and Amritakundalin (  / हुं, huṃ), the two figures who subjugated him.[139][141]

Rituals

Shōten is ritually worshiped via a number of rites:

Oil Bath (Yokuyu-ku)

 
Hōzan-ji (Ikoma Shōten) in Ikoma, Nara Prefecture

The Oil Bath Ritual (浴油供, Yokuyu-ku) involves placing a statue of Kangiten on a brass basin and pouring (abhisheka) consecrated warm oil on it using a ladle 108 times, a process that is repeated for seven days.[142][143] Perfumed pure sesame oil is commonly used for the rite, though tradition claims that it originally employed ghee mixed with honey (蘇蜜油, somitsu-yu).[144][145][146] It is considered the most sacred and potent of the deity's rituals but also the most arcane: it is restricted to monks who have received proper initiation into the rite (performance by unqualified individuals is strictly forbidden) and is conducted outside of the public gaze.[147]

The ritual is symbolically interpreted as representing Vinayaka's conversion and initiation (abhisheka) into the Buddhist path, during which the former demon king's evil nature and mental defilements (kleshas) are washed away, thereby revealing his true nature as a manifestation of Vairochana Buddha. Likewise, it is believed to purify the practitioner and devotees as well.[148][149][150]

Flower-Water Offering (Kesui-ku)

The Flower-Water Ritual (華水供, Kesui-ku) involves offering water scented with flowers, incense, and/or shikimi (Illicium anisatum) leaves to Buddhist divinities in lieu of food and drink.[151][152] The practice is thought to have derived from the precept that forbade those who have taken monastic vows (which includes the Buddhist devas) from eating anything after noon.[152][153]

In practice, however, the Kesui-ku performed in many Shōten temples denotes a ceremony mostly similar in structure to the Oil Bath rite but without the bathing of the deity's image in oil. In this case, Shōten is offered not just flowers and water, but also other types of foodstuffs.[152]

Other rites

In some temples, rituals such as the Daihannya Tendoku (大般若転読), in which a group of monks symbolically 'read' the 600-fascicle Mahaprajnaparamita Sutra (大般若経, Daihannya-kyō) by flipping through (転読, tendoku, lit. "rolling reading") copies of portions of the text,[154] and Hyakumi Kuyō (百味供養, lit. "Offering of One Hundred Foods"), in which an extravagant amount of fruits, vegetables, and other delicacies are offered to Shōten, are performed upon request as thanksgiving for prayers answered.[155][156]

Offerings

 
Kangiten's symbols depicted on the steps of Matsuchiyama Honryū-in: the forked daikon (二股大根, futamata daikon), symbolizing fertility and marital union, and the money bag (巾着, kinchaku), representing wealth

Like his Hindu counterpart Ganesha, Shōten is held to be partial to sweets.[157] Common offerings to Shōten include rice wine (sake), radishes (daikon), and sweets filled with red bean paste (anko) such as kangidan (歓喜団, "bliss buns"), a deep-fried confection stuffed with spiced anko based on the Indian modak, Ganesha's favorite food.[1][157][158] Conversely, offering him sour citrus fruits, pears, mushrooms, lotus root (renkon), and dishes which go against the Buddhist vegetarian diet (i.e. those containing meat, fish, or pungent vegetables such as garlic or scallions) is considered taboo.[157][159]

Daikon radishes are interpreted as representing the three poisons (specifically dvesha or hatred); offering the vegetable to the deity is thus held to be a meritorious purificatory act. At the same time, because radishes are also popularly believed to aid digestion,[160] they also symbolize Shōten's action of removing the three poisons.[161]

Reputation

Shōten is popularly regarded as a powerful, efficacious deity who readily grants whatever is asked of him, including impossible or even immoral wishes.[9][162] He is sometimes called "Vairochana's final expedient incarnation" (大日如来最後の方便身, Dainichi Nyorai saigo no hōbenshin) because he is believed to be the last resort of those who have no other recourse.[162][163] At the same time, his reputation has sometimes also caused him to be characterized negatively as highly demanding and temperamental, requiring constant attention from his devotees and harassing or punishing those who have either become lax in their devotion or quit worshiping him altogether.[164]

An oft-repeated urban legend claims that worshiping Shōten is a double-edged sword as it uses up seven generations' worth of good karma at once; in other words, it confers immediate gratification to the worshiper but also eventually brings about their downfall. However, in his A Guide to Shōten Devotion, Hayashiya Tomojirō criticized this as a "baseless, superstitious legend" that should be ignored.[165][166]

 
Daifukuden-ji (Kuwana Shōten) in Kuwana, Mie Prefecture

In the past, Shōten's cult was widespread among gamblers, actors, geisha, and people in the pleasure quarters.[4] During the Edo period, he was also widely venerated by merchants, especially vegetable-oil sellers.[2] Even today, he is mainly worshiped for success in love, relationships, and business.[167][72] Devotion to Shōten is particularly prevalent in the Kansai area (especially in Osaka), where it rivals that of the god Ebisu (another deity worshiped for commercial success) in popularity.[72]

Perhaps to curb abuses and superstitious ideas that could stem from the popular image of Shōten as a god who grants each and every wish, various authors such as Hayashiya have stressed the importance of deepening one's devotion beyond simply asking for worldly benefits.[165][166] Tendai monk Haneda Shukai for instance writes that the god's true gift to his worshipers is non-attachment (naiṣkramya; 出離, shutsuri) to material desires and that faith in Shōten (or any other Buddhist deity) should awaken in the devotee a desire to learn and follow Buddhist teachings.[168]

Shōten and impurity

Shōten is also considered to abhor impurity (kegare). For instance, ritually impure persons (e.g. those who had recently come in contact with death or menstruating women) are discouraged from visiting him in temples for a set period of time.[166][169] (Similar taboos exist in Shinto, which also lays great emphasis on purity, but is otherwise rare in Japanese Buddhism, which was closely associated with death and the afterlife due to its having a near-monopoly on funerary practices.[170]) Temples dedicated to Shōten also do not have a cemetery (a common fixture in many Japanese temples) within their precincts, nor do monks who perform Shōten rites conduct funerals.[169] Temples also forbid devotees from placing ofuda of the deity in 'unclean' rooms (e.g. bedrooms or kitchens) or in altars (butsudan) where deceased family members are venerated.[159][171]

As hidden god

 
The principal image (honzon) of Kangi-in (Menuma Shōden-zan) in Kumagaya, Saitama Prefecture: the finial of a monastic staff (khakkhara, shakujō) depicting the dual Kangiten and two attendants. The central image of Kangiten is normally wrapped in red cloth and is only uncovered at irregular intervals, the most recent of which was during the temple's 840th anniversary in 2016.

A notable characteristic of Shōten is the air of secrecy surrounding him. Unlike Ganesha, whose image is prominently worshiped in many temples and homes, most images of Shōten are kept hidden inside miniature shrines (厨子, zushi) and are never shown to the public, only being taken out during the performance of rites (which are themselves conducted in private) such as the Oil Bath Ritual.[1][4][172] A notable exception to the rule is the honzon of Kangi-in (Menuma Shōden-zan) in Kumagaya, Saitama Prefecture, which is intermittently put on public display (御開帳, go-kaichō) since the Edo period.[173][174] As they require a high level of maintenance, modern-day lay devotees are discouraged from owning or venerating idols of Shōten in their homes; instead, they are advised to venerate him via consecrated paper or wooden ofuda distributed by temples.[166][171] Such ofuda are usually aniconic, bearing no visual representation of the god (who may be simply represented by his seed syllable),[p] though a few examples contain a depiction of the youthful Kangi Dōji or of Kangiten as an anthropomorphic male-female couple.[175]

Popular belief holds that encountering Shōten (i.e. learning about him or getting an opportunity to venerate him) is only possible if one has a karmic connection (縁, en / enishi) with him, which itself is considered to be a precious and rare blessing.[176] This sentiment is expressed in a liturgical text penned by the monk Kakuban, which states:

"Birth as a human being is hard to attain and yet I have unexpectedly attained it; Shōten's dharma is difficult to encounter and yet I am fortunate to have encountered it. Having arrived at this opportune moment [to worship him], I cannot hold back my tears."[q][177]

Shōten is also described in medieval texts as a "placenta god" (胞衣神, enagami or 胞衣荒神, ena kōjin), a deity who guards individuals since the moment of their conception (just as the placenta covers and protects the fetus) and subsequently follows them throughout their life "like a shadow."[178]

Lay devotion

Vows and abstinence

Some people as part of their devotion may observe vows (願掛け, gankake; cf. the Hindu vrata), in which they would promise to carry out certain pious acts in return for specific favors, or abstain from alcohol, tobacco, or certain types of food. From an orthodox perspective, however, any promises made to Shōten cannot be revoked; such devotional practices are thus not to be performed casually, with some authorities even recommending to avoid them altogether lest one risk committing a grave offense against the god. A set of guidelines for devotees published by Honryū-in (also known as Matsuchiyama Shōden, a sub-temple of Sensō-ji in Asakusa, Tokyo dedicated to Kangiten) for instance advises the reader that "[since] abstinence (断ち物, tachimono) requires a strong resolve, it is better not to practice it."[179]

Opinions differ regarding the place of abstinence in Shōten worship. On the one hand, Hayashiya claimed that "although Shōten does not necessarily reject one's wishes if one does not practice abstinence, it is true that they are granted faster if one does."[164] Haneda, on the other hand, criticized it as well as the taking of extreme vows (especially when made with materialistic goals in mind) as harmful practices that only attract vinayaka demons (in effect making them a kind of Faustian bargain), asserting that they do not represent authentic devotion to Shōten.[180]

Temples

 
Matsuchiyama Honryū-in (Matsuchiyama Shōden) in Asakusa, Tokyo
 
The main hall (honden) of Menuma Kangi-in (Menuma Shōden), as seen from the rear

Shōten is worshiped in many Shingon and Tendai Buddhist temples throughout Japan. The following are two of the most important places of worship dedicated to the deity in Japan, traditionally reckoned as the "Three Greatest Shōten [Temples]" (日本三大聖天, Nihon Sandai Shōten)[r]:

One of the sub-temples of Sensō-ji, the oldest and most famous Buddhist temple in Tokyo; also known as Matsuchiyama Shōden (待乳山聖天). Legend claims that the hillock the temple stands on miraculously emerged out of the earth in the year 595. The temple itself was supposedly founded six years later (601), after the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara appeared in the form of Kangiten and put an end to the severe drought that affected the area.[181][182]
Also known as Ikoma Shōten (生駒聖天), located on the summit of Mount Ikoma in Nara Prefecture. Claimed to have originally been founded as a temple to the deity Achala (Fudō Myōō) by the ascetic En no Gyōja in the year 664, it was reestablished in 1678 by the monk Tankai, who designated Kangiten as the guardian (鎮守, chinju) of the temple complex.[183][184] While Achala is still officially the temple's main deity (honzon), Hōzan-ji is more famous as a cult center of Shōten, with business people and other worshipers coming to worship him at his sanctuary (聖天堂, Shōten-dō) in the precincts.[1][153][184][185]

Other notable temples to Shōten include:

Founded in 1179 by military commander Saitō Sanemori. The temple's honzon - donated to it in 1197 by Sanemori's nephew Miyaji no Kunihira - takes the form of a monastic staff (khakkhara, shakujō) head with an image of the dual Kangiten flanked by two attendants.[186][187]
  • Shinjō-in (心城院) / Yushima Shōden (湯島聖天) (Bunkyō, Tokyo) - Tendai
  • Daifukushō-ji (大福生寺) / Ōi Shōten (大井聖天) (Higashi-Ōi, Shinagawa, Tokyo) - Tendai[188]
  • Fukushō-in (福生院) / Fukuromachi O-Shōten (袋町お聖天) (Naka-ku, Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture) - Shingon (Chisan-ha)
  • Daifukuden-ji (大福田寺) / Kuwana Shōten (桑名聖天) (Higashikata, Kuwana, Mie Prefecture) - Kōyasan Shingon-shū
  • Sōrin-in (双林院) / Yamashina Shōten (山科聖天) (Yamashina-ku, Kyoto) - Tendai
  • Uhō-in (雨宝院) / Nishijin Shōten-gū (西陣聖天宮) (Kamigyō-ku, Kyoto) - Shingon (Sennyū-ji-ha)
  • Ryōtoku-in (了徳院) / Urae Shōten (浦江聖天) (Fukushima-ku, Osaka) - Tō-ji Shingon-shū
  • Shōen-ji (正圓寺) (Abeno-ku, Osaka) - Shingon (independent)
  • Hōan-ji (法案寺) / Nipponbashi Shōten (日本橋聖天) (Chūō-ku, Osaka) - Kōyasan Shingon-shū
  • Saikō-ji (西江寺) (Minoh, Osaka) - Kōyasan Shingon-shū

See also

Notes

  1. ^ 大孔雀咒王經, pinyin: Dàkǒngquè zhòuwáng jīng; Japanese: Daikujaku juō kyō.
  2. ^ 大日經疏, pinyin: Dàrì jīng shū; Japanese: Dainichi kyō shō.[20]
  3. ^ 陀羅尼集經, pinyin: Tuóluóní-jí jīng; Japanese: Darani-shū kyō.
  4. ^ 大聖歡喜雙身毘那夜迦法, pinyin: Dàshèngtiān huānxǐ shuāngshēn Pínàyèjiā fǎ; Japanese: Daishōten kangi sōshin Binayaka hō.
  5. ^ 使咒法經, pinyin: Shǐzhòufǎ jīng; Japanese: Shi juhō kyō.
  6. ^ 大使咒法經, pinyin: Dàshǐzhòufǎ jīng; Japanese: Daishijuhō kyō.
  7. ^ 大聖歡喜雙身大自在天毘那夜迦王歸依念誦供養法, pinyin: Dàshèng Huānxǐ shuāngshēn Dàzìzàitiān Pínàyèjiā-wáng guīyī niànsòng gòngyǎng fǎ; Japanese: Daishō Kangi sōshin Daijizaiten Binayaka-ō kie nenju kuyō hō.
  8. ^ 十一面神咒心經, pinyin: Shíyīmiàn shénzhòu xīnjīng; Japanese: Jūichimen shinju shingyō.
  9. ^ 摩訶毘盧遮那如來定惠均等入三昧耶身雙身大聖歡喜天菩薩修行祕密法儀軌, pinyin: Móhēpílúzhēnà Rúlái dìnghuì jūnděng rù sānmèiyé-shēn shuāngshēn Dàshèng Huānxǐtiān púsà xiūxíng mìmì fǎ yíguǐ; Japanese: Makabirushana Nyorai jōei kintō nyū samaya-shin sōshin Daishō Kangiten Bosatsu shugyō himitsu hō giki.
  10. ^ 毘那夜迦誐那鉢底瑜伽悉地品祕要, pinyin: Pínàyèjiā énàbōdǐ yújiā xīde pǐn mìyào; Japanese: Binayaka Ganahattei yuga shicchi bon hiyō.
  11. ^ 現金色迦那婆底九目天法, pinyin: Quánxiàn jīnsè Jiānàpódǐ Jiǔmùtiān fǎ; Japanese: Gongen konjiki Ganabachi Kumokuten hō.
  12. ^ 金色迦那鉢底陀羅尼經, pinyin: Jīnsè Jiānàbōdǐ tuóluóní jīng; Japanese: Konjiki Ganahachi darani kyō.
  13. ^ 金剛薩埵說頻那夜迦天成就儀軌經, pinyin: Jīngāngsàduǒ-shuō Pínnàyèjiātiān chéngjiù yíguǐ jīng; Japanese: Kongōsatta-setsu Binayakaten jōju giki kyō.
  14. ^ 聖歡喜天式法, pinyin: Shèng Huānxǐtiān shìfǎ; Japanese: Shō Kangiten shikihō.
  15. ^ 仏説最勝護国宇賀耶頓得如意宝珠陀羅尼経; Japanese: Bussetsu saishō gokoku Ugaya tontoku nyōihōju darani-kyō.
  16. ^ Two examples: ofuda issued by Shinjō-in (Yushima Shōden) in Tokyo ([1]) and those distributed by Zentsū-ji in Kagawa Prefecture ([2]).
  17. ^ 「適々難受受人界之生、幸難逢逢聖天之法。機縁之至感涙難禁。」
  18. ^ This number is purely symbolic; in reality, many temples claim to be one of these three.

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  • Miya, Tsugio (1976). "歓喜天霊験記私考 (Kangiten Reigenki shikō)" (PDF). The Journal of Art Studies (in Japanese). National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, Tokyo. 305: 1–19.
  • Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research, ed. (2005). The Vairocanābhisaṃbodhi Sūtra (PDF). Translated by Giebel, Rolf W. Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research.
  • Rosseels, Lode (2015–2016). Gaṇeśa's Underbelly: From Hindu Goblin God to Japanese Tantric Twosome (Master's thesis). Ghent University.
  • Sanford, James H. (1991). "Literary Aspects of Japan's Ganesha Cult". In Brown, Robert (ed.). Ganesh: Studies of an Asian God. Albany: State University of New York. ISBN 0-7914-0657-1.
  • Thapan, Anita Raina (1997). Understanding Gaṇapati: Insights into the Dynamics of a Cult. New Delhi: Manohar Publishers. ISBN 81-7304-195-4.
  • Yamamoto, Hiroko (2018). 変成譜 中世神仏習合の世界 (Henjōfu: Chūsei shinbutsu shūgō no sekai). Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-0651-2461-1.

External links

  • Ikoma Shōten (Hōzan-ji) Official Website (in Japanese)
  • Matsuchiyama Shōden (Matsuchiyama Honryū-in) Official Website (in Japanese)
  • Menuma Shōden (Shōden-zan Kangi-in) Official Website
  • Nishijin Shōten (Hokkō-zan Uhō-in) Official Website (in Japanese)
  • Nishinomiya Shōten-ji Official Website (in Japanese)
  • Yushima Shōden (Ryusei-dō Shinjō-in) (in Japanese)

kangiten, kankiten, japanese, 歓喜天, bliss, sanskrit, iast, nandikeśvara, also, known, binayaka, 毘那夜迦, vināyaka, ganabachi, 誐那鉢底, alternatively, ganahachi, ganahattei, gaṇapati, more, commonly, shōten, shōden, 聖天, sacred, noble, deva, venerated, mainly, shingon,. Kangiten or Kankiten Japanese 歓喜天 god of bliss 1 Sanskrit IAST Nandikesvara also known as Binayaka 毘那夜迦 Skt Vinayaka Ganabachi 誐那鉢底 alternatively Ganahachi or Ganahattei Skt Gaṇapati or more commonly Shōten or Shōden 聖天 lit sacred god 2 or noble god 3 is a deva ten venerated mainly in the Shingon and Tendai schools of Japanese Buddhism who is the Buddhist equivalent of the Hindu god Ganesha 2 4 5 6 Kangiten Nandikeshvara God of obstacles bliss and successDual bodied Sōshin KangitenOther namesShōten Shōden 聖天 Shōten Shōden sama 聖天様 聖天さま Daishō Kangiten 大聖歓喜天 Kangi Jizaiten 歓喜自在天 Daishō Kangi Daijizaiten 大聖歓喜大自在天 Daishō Kangi Sōshin Tennō 大聖歓喜双身天王 Nandai Jizaiten 難提自在天 Zōbiten 象鼻天 Binayaka Binayakya 毘那夜迦 Ganabachi Ganahachi Ganahattei 誐那缽底 Tenson 天尊 Japanese歓喜天 shinjitai 歡喜天 kyujitai AffiliationDevaVairochana BuddhaEleven Headed AvalokiteshvaraAmritakundalinSanbō KōjinAbodeMount Kailash Keira sen MantraOṃ hriḥ gaḥ huṃ svaha On kiri ku gyaku un sowaka Weaponaxe tridentSymbolskangidan modak daikon kinchakuGenderMalePersonal informationParentsMaheshvara father Uma mother SiblingsSenayaka brother later reincarnated as wife incarnation of Avalokiteshvara Skanda brother Kigeiten sister ConsortSenayakaHinduism equivalentGaneshaAlthough Kangiten Shōten and Ganesha share a common origin and a number of traits there are also some marked differences between the two For instance the Buddhist Vinayaka was at least at first negatively portrayed as the creator of obstacles and the leader of a class of malignant demons who obstructed Buddhist practice called vinayakas though later tradition made an attempt to distinguish between the vinayakas and their lord who became seen as a manifestation of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara Kannon in Japanese and or the buddha Vairochana Kangiten enjoys both a positive and negative reception in Japan On the one hand he is popularly revered as an extremely efficacious god who grants whatever is asked of him without fail including impossible wishes He is also said to watch over those who have a karmic connection with him from the moment of their conception serving as their invisible companion throughout their lives On the other hand he is considered to be still bound by base passions and desires kleshas and thus is sometimes also regarded as a rather volatile demanding god who is quick to punish those who have offended him Unlike his Hindu counterpart whose image is prominently displayed in public Kangiten is considered too sacred to be seen images of the deity in temples are kept hidden from view rituals centered on him are performed by qualified monks out of public sight and lay devotees are discouraged from venerating iconographic depictions of the god at home While he is sometimes depicted as an elephant headed single male deity like Ganesha he is more commonly portrayed as a male female couple both with elephant heads standing in an embrace in an iconographic depiction known as the Dual bodied Kangiten 双身歓喜天 Sōshin Kangiten or the Embracing Kangiten Contents 1 Names 2 Historical development and literature 2 1 As demon and deity 2 2 Introduction to Japan 2 3 Emergence of Dual Vinayaka Kangiten 2 4 Other esoteric texts on Vinayaka 2 5 From the medieval period onwards 3 Mythology 4 Association with other deities 4 1 Gonrui and jitsurui 5 Iconography 5 1 Single and dual forms 5 2 Vajra vinayakas 5 3 Other depictions 6 Worship 6 1 Bija and mantra 6 2 Rituals 6 2 1 Oil Bath Yokuyu ku 6 2 2 Flower Water Offering Kesui ku 6 2 3 Other rites 6 3 Offerings 6 4 Reputation 6 4 1 Shōten and impurity 6 4 2 As hidden god 6 5 Lay devotion 6 5 1 Vows and abstinence 7 Temples 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Works cited 11 External linksNames EditKangiten inherited many names and characteristics from the Hindu god Ganesha with whom he shares a common origin though the name Ganesha IAST Ganesa itself was never applied to the Buddhist deity who was generally referred to by the earlier names Ganapati Gaṇapati or Vinayaka Vinayaka 5 7 Vinayaka was transcribed into Chinese characters as 毘那夜迦 pinyin Pinayejia Japanese rōmaji Binayaka Binayakya 頻那夜迦 pinyin Pinnayejia and 毘那怛迦 pinyin Pinadajia respectively while Ganapati was transcribed as 誐那鉢底 pinyin Enabōdǐ Japanese Ganabachi Ganahachi Ganahattei or 伽那鉢底 迦那鉢底 Jianabōdǐ 5 The term vinayaka was also used to refer to a class of beings to which Vinayaka and or his cohorts belong 5 8 In Japan the deity is commonly known as Shōten Shōden 聖天 sacred noble god Skt Aryadeva or Kangiten 歓喜天 god of bliss Skt Nandin or Nandikesvara 1 5 9 10 The former epithet indicates his association with good luck and fortune and may be an allusion to the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara Kannon who is also known as Aryavalokiteshvara Aryavalokitesvara Japanese 聖観音 Shō Kannon one of the figures that constitute the dual bodied 双身 sōshin Kangiten 11 12 while the latter is especially associated with this dual form who is venerated as a giver of joy and prosperity 13 14 Among devotees he is also sometimes simply referred to by the honorific Tenson 天尊 venerable deity 10 15 In this article the names Vinayaka Ganapati Shōten and Kangiten are used interchangeably for the Buddhist deity with Kangiten specifically denoting the deity s dual form Historical development and literature EditSee also Ganesha Rise to prominence and Vinayakas As demon and deity Edit The Hindu Ganesha Gupta Period 4th 6th century CE Art of Mathura Several theories have been advanced regarding the origins of the Hindu deity Ganesha who first undisputably appears in the historical record in his classic form around the early 4th to 5th centuries CE One theory is that Ganesha gradually came to prominence in connection with the Vinayakas a group of four troublesome demons mentioned in the Manava Grihyasutra a text belonging to the Manava school of the Black Krishna Yajurveda and the Mahabharata 5 16 17 Whereas in Hinduism Ganesha was regarded mainly as a remover of obstacles Buddhists originally emphasized his destructive side as the creator of obstacles and his function as a demon king Early instances of the name Vinayaka in Buddhist texts for instance have a negative connotation denoting a malignant being or beings who is both the cause and the symbolic representation of obstacles or impediments 18 A note in the Mahamayuri Vidyarajni Sutra a by the Tang period monk Yijing defines Vinayaka as an obstructive deity 障礙神 pinyin zhang aishen Japanese shōgeshin and notes his widespread worship in the west i e India The Mahavairochana Tantra also known as the Vairochanabhisambodhi Sutra meanwhile speaks of demonic entities such as vinayakas and rakshasas being dispersed through the power of mantra 19 The monk Yi Xing in his commentary on this text b describes vinayakas as obstructions produced from a deluded mind 從妄想心生 5 In esoteric Buddhist literature Vinayaka is portrayed as the enemy of the ritual practitioner who is to be either expelled with mantras or soothed with ritual offerings which are then consumed by the practitioner to increase his strength once duly propitiated he turns into the practitioner s ally a protecting deity who removes all impediments 21 Vinayaka also known under the name Vighnaraja Vighnaraja Lord of Obstacles is sometimes also shown being trampled on by wrathful deities like Mahakala or Achala in Tibetan and East Asian Buddhist art 22 23 The emergence of Esoteric Tantric Buddhism and its spread to Nepal Tibet and eventually to East Asia saw Vinayaka acquire a more positive role as a subjugator of demons In Tibet the deity was worshiped for the removal of obstacles and the granting of wealth and was at times portrayed as a wrathful multiarmed deity wielding weapons A Nepalese text provides a list of spells invoking Ganapati to not only bestow wealth but also to cause harm to enemies 24 Vinayaka is also depicted in a wall painting in Mogao Cave 285 in Dunhuang as a protector of Buddhism with the gods Maheshvara Shiva and Skanda 25 26 Introduction to Japan Edit The deities Ishana Ishanaten his consort Ishani Mahakala Makakara Daikokuten and Vinayaka Binayaka as depicted in the northeast upper left corner of the Womb Realm Garbhakoshadhatu Mandala The two primary mandalas of East Asian esoteric Buddhism Tangmi also feature Vinayaka s In the Womb Realm Garbhakoshadhatu Mandala based on the Mahavairochana Tantra Vinayaka is found among the retinue of the directional deity Ishana with the god Mahakala both of whom are derived from the Hindu Shiva 27 28 29 while the outer sections of the Vajra Realm Vajradhatu Mandala based on the Vajrashekhara Sutra contains four groups of five deities distributed along the four directions each group containing one vinayaka here interpreted as emanations of the buddha Vairochana who expressly adopt the form of vinayakas in order to subjugate the obstacle causing demons 30 Vinayaka s inclusion in these mandalas brought to Japan by Kukai 774 835 the founder of Shingon Buddhism facilitated his introduction to Japan where he like most other Hindu deities assimilated in Buddhism was first considered a minor guardian of the two mandalas By the Heian period 794 1185 Vinayaka emerged as a besson 別尊 lit separate distinct worthy a deity with an individualized cult centered around him 3 31 The deity s cult was developed within the Shingon school by the monk Kakuban 1095 1143 while in Tendai it was systematized by Annen 841 889 12 Emergence of Dual Vinayaka Kangiten Edit Dual bodied Shōten Kangiten from the Butsuzōzui 1690 The late Heian period saw the rise in popularity of the Dual bodied Kangiten Sōshin Sōjin Kangiten image in which Vinayaka heretofore depicted as a single figure often with two arms but sometimes also four or six 32 is shown as an embracing male female couple 2 The origins of this imagery unique to East Asia have perplexed scholars for years there is no concrete evidence about the inception of this form It has been compared with the sexual yab yum iconography found in Nepal and Tibet 2 although it is markedly different from them in that both figures have animal heads yab yum representations are restricted to fully humanoid deities the zoocephalic Vinayaka Ganapati was thus not portrayed in this form though erotic depictions of him do exist and are shown fully clothed 33 34 Lode Rosseels suggests that the Dual Vinayaka form may have originated from an iconographic type attested in Xinjiang Chinese Turkestan and Dunhuang in the 8th century showing Ganapati with four legs representing the deity s union with his shakti in a non sexual fashion 35 which was reinterpreted by the Chinese in accordance with popular Taoist ideals which probably resulted in the restoration of the four legged and four armed form to two almost identical elephant headed deities in a nonsexual embrace 36 The form is first attested in 7th 8th century Chinese esoteric Buddhist texts The Dharani samuchchaya Sutra Taishō Tripitaka 901 c 37 translated into Chinese by a monk named Atigupta or Atikuta in 653 654 CE describes a ritual to worship the Dual Vinayaka which was replicated by Amoghavajra 705 774 in his ritual text Rite of the Dual bodied Vinayaka the Great Saintly Deva of Bliss T 1266 d 38 39 The text gives instructions for the fashioning of both the dual bodied and the six armed single Vinayaka images and specifies the types of offerings one should give to the deity 39 40 Mahakala lower right and Vinayaka upper left Two texts attributed to Bodhiruchi trad 672 727 the Sutra of the Mantras and Rituals of the Gana T 1267 e 41 and the Larger Sutra of the Mantras and Rituals of the Gana T 1268 f 42 contain the same guidelines for rituals and depictions of the Dual bodied Vinayaka In the former text Vinayaka teaches a multitude of deities and demons who have congregated at Mount Kailash a one syllable mantra followed by a description of a ritual dedicated to the Dual Vinayaka similar to that found in Amoghavajra s text Vinayaka s demon followers promise the deity to grant the wishes of whoever repeats the one syllable mantra The Larger Gana Sutra meanwhile contains additional rituals to propitiate the Dual Vinayaka as well as the four armed form of the deity It also has rituals aimed at attracting love gaining wisdom or destroying enemies 43 44 A ritual manual by Shubhakarasimha 637 736 titled Ritual of the Mantras and Offerings that Converted the Great Saintly Deva of Bliss King Vinayaka the Dual Bodied Maheshvara T 1270 g 45 mentions new myths regarding the Dual bodied Vinayaka not found in Indian sources and is the first text that explicitly associates the deity with the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara Guanyin Kannon It also prohibits placing his images in Buddhist altar rooms 5 40 46 47 Other esoteric texts on Vinayaka Edit Vairochana Buddha Dainichi Nyorai Eleven Headed Avalokiteshvara Juichimen Kannon Kangiten is identified as the manifestation of both the primordial buddha Vairochana and the Eleven Headed Ekadashamukha form of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara The Sutra of the Divine Incantations of the Eleven Headed Avalokiteshvara T 1071 h 48 translated by the monk Xuanzang in 656 CE expounds the rite of bathing an image of Vinayaka with perfumed water 21 A short text attributed to Amoghavajra titled Tantra on the Practice of the Secret Ritual of the Dual bodied Bodhisattva Great Saintly Deva of Bliss the Samaya Body Copenetrated by Meditation and Wisdom of the Tathagata Mahavairochana T 1271 i 49 describes the Dual Vinayaka ritual as a procedure to gain four kinds of benefits or siddhis protection gain love and subjugation which come in three grades the highest grade confers kingship the second grade provides wealth the third grade provides sufficient food and clothing In parallel to the material results the tantra classifies ritual practitioners into three categories the highest class of adept are allowed to learn the rite s inner secrets the middle are permitted to read the text while the lowest may not conduct the ritual on their own but should let a more developed practitioner do it for them The text notably prescribes alcoholic beverages considered taboo in exoteric Buddhism dubbed the water of bliss 歡喜水 pinyin huanxǐshuǐ Japanese kangisui as an offering to the deity which is then consumed as a medicine to remove evil 40 50 51 Kangidan 歓喜団 lit bliss bun a fried sweet derived from the Indian modak Amoghavajra s disciple Hanguang 含光 composed a text in 747 called Secret Essence of the Yoga siddhi of the Vinayaka Ganapati T 1273 j 52 in which he continued his master s work He writes that every ritual should be preceded by an invocation to Vinayaka Ganapati the god of beginnings This text identifies both Vinayaka and Avalokiteshvara as manifestations of the all pervading body of the buddha Vairochana with the pair being taken to symbolize both Vairochana s material and spiritual aspects 53 54 A ritual manual attributed to Bodhiruci with the title The Rite of the Nine Eyed Deva the Provisional Manifestation of the Golden Ganapati k describes a wrathful manifestation of Vinayaka with four arms and three heads each with three eyes apparently based on Tibetan forms of the deity The manual gives instructions for the fashioning of the image which should then be kept hidden from view at all times and offered radishes cakes sweets and honey 55 56 A sutra translated by Vajrabodhi known as The Dharani Sutra of the Golden Ganapati T 1269 l 57 gives instructions on how to depict a six armed Ganapati which should also be concealed and offered sweets such as modak 歡喜團 pinyin huanxǐtuan Japanese kangidan lit bliss buns honey and fruits 56 Vinayaka holding a radish and his boar headed consort holding a modak from Dunhuang Pelliot chinois 4518 8 An apocryphal sutra dating from the early 11th century The Attainment Rites of Vinayaka taught by Vajrasattva T 1272 m 58 contains black magic spells invoking vinayakas aimed at the destruction of one s enemies This text was deemed so gruesome that Emperor Zhenzong reigned 997 1022 banned its circulation in China in 1017 5 59 A minor astrological or divinatory text apocryphally attributed to Prajnachakra another disciple of Amoghavajra who became the master of the Tendai monk Enchin 814 891 known as The Rules for the Diviner s Board of the Great Saintly Bliss Deva T 1275 n 60 describes the outline of an esoteric divination board 式盤 Ch shipan Jp shikiban which consisted of two parts linked by an axis the cylindrical or conical upper part called the heavenly board 天盤 Ch tianpan Jp tenban was cylindrical or conical and the square lower part called the earthly board 地盤 Ch dipan Jp chiban The practitioner is to visualize four vinayakas all manifestations of Vinayaka Ganapati at each of the cardinal directions on the tenban while the guardian deities of the eight directions dikpala and the Twenty Eight Mansions of Chinese astronomy are to be visualized on the chiban The text then lists a number of possible combinations obtained by rotating the tenban over the chiban linking any one of the four heavenly vinayakas with one of the eight earthly directional devas each of which produced different material benefits such as obtaining a high position attaining marital union making a person fall ill or returning a curse to its sender 61 62 63 Kukai who brought Shubhakarasimha s Vajrabodhi s and Amoghavajra s ritual manuals with him to Japan is also said to have himself authored a text on Vinayaka titled the Shōten Procedural 聖天次第 Shōten shidai The Tendai monk Ennin too lists the Rite of the Dual bodied Vinayaka the Great Saintly Deva of Bliss among the texts he obtained in China 12 From the medieval period onwards Edit Benzaiten left Kangiten center and Tamonten right in Daishō in temple Itsukushima Hiroshima Prefecture Since the Heian period Vinayaka Shōten Kangiten featured in state sponsored official rites These ceremonies were originally a prerogative of the imperial court an edict dating from 785 prohibited the private performance of rites focused on a number of deities Shōten being one of them However he was at times also invoked against the imperial house in The Tale of Hōgen the nobleman Fujiwara no Yorinaga 1120 1156 requests the performance of rituals centered on Shōten Uchchhushma Ususama Myōō and Vajrakumara 金剛童子 Kongō Dōji against Emperor Go Shirakawa 64 Shōten was commonly invoked in rites of subjugation Legend relates that the Tendai monk Son i 尊意 866 940 invoked Shōten to pacify the vengeful spirit of statesman Sugawara no Michizane later deified as Tenjin the kami of learning who was himself claimed to be a devotee of the god 65 66 67 68 Another story claims that when Son i was performing a rite centered on the deity Achala Fudō Myōō for the end of the rebellion of Taira no Masakado in 940 a statue of Kangiten on a side altar flew eastward with the sound of a flying arrow followed by an apparition of Masakado s head falling on the main altar signifying his defeat 65 69 In 1329 Emperor Go Daigo performed a subjugation ritual invoking the god against the Kamakura shogunate after the shogunate s regent shikken Hōjō Takatoki committed suicide during the Siege of Kamakura in 1333 the emperor ordered Ashikaga Takauji to establish a memorial sanctuary in Hōkai ji a temple in Kamakura notable for being a cultic center of Kangiten to placate Takatoki s spirit After the Kenmu Restoration 1333 1336 this particular Kangiten became an object of worship of the Ashikaga shogunate and the remnants of the Hōjō clan 70 71 In 1433 the monks of Mount Hiei conducted a Shōten rite against the sixth Ashikaga shōgun Yoshinori 64 Daikon offered to Kangiten made available to devotees お下がり o sagari cf the Hindu prasada at Matsuchiyama Honryu in Matsuchiyama Shōden Asakusa Taitō City Tokyo Historical figures known to have been devoted to Shōten and whose successes were sometimes credited to him include the famous warlords Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa Ieyasu the Edo period merchants Kinokuniya Bunzaemon and Takadaya Kahei the daimyō and political reformer Matsudaira Sadanobu and wealthy business families such as the Mitsui the Sumitomo and the Kōnoike 68 72 The 15th century Noh playwright Konparu Zenchiku was also devoted to the god since his youth during a twenty one day retreat at Fushimi Inari Shrine with his wife a daughter of his master Zeami in 1467 the 63 year old Zenchiku consumed a talisman of the deity while praying for the harmonious union of yin and yang husband and wife Upon being told by a priest that his prayer was not answered because he had no karmic connection with Shōten Zenchiku repented of his negligence and renewed his vow eventually receiving a dream that deepened his faith 73 Little is known regarding premodern devotion to Shōten outside of the ruling classes other than that it spread during the Edo period all the while still remaining relatively arcane 74 A certain legend claims that Ieyasu attempted to stake a claim on the deity by promoting rumors of Shōten being a fearsome god whose efficacy is counterbalanced by his fickleness and quick temper thus keeping the cult s growth among the general populace in check This the story claims is the reason why he is not as popular in the Kantō region the Tokugawa seat of power as he is in western Japan where he is widely worshiped even today 68 Perhaps in reaction against the deity s reputation among the public as one who grants any and all material desires various sources emphasize the ineffectiveness and even danger of performing rituals on one s own without the aid of a qualified priest The Tendai monk Kōkei 977 1049 warned that while the benefits brought by the god are very real he is swift to curse negligent practitioners it is thus better for people in this Final Age not to worship him 74 The 18th century tradesman and kokugaku scholar Tsumura Sōan writes the following regarding Kangiten Kangiten is an Indian god and because he brings many benefits many are those who perform his rite by themselves But even if one s spirit of faith is deep it is better not to perform by oneself by chanting dharaṇis and the like Whatever their spirit of faith ordinary people when they practice without sufficient respect commit a severe offence One must ask a monk to recite prayers Kangiten is the lord of the world of desire As he made a vow to help even evil people abandoned by the Worthies and the Buddhas when evil people address their prayers to him even if they are about to be beheaded he can save them Because he is the lord of the world of desire he fulfills all prayers even those made with a thought of desire But because there are in his retinue unruly gods that are easily offended by lack of respect he must be approached with caution Even among Ritsu monks who perform the ritual of Kangiten many fall into sexual desire Generally speaking in India this is a rite performed by profanes 74 A notable modern day Shōten devotee is the entrepreneur and Buddhist scholar Hayashiya Tomojirō 林屋友次郎 1886 1953 75 who authored A Guide to Shōten Devotion 聖天信仰の手引き Shōten shinkō no tebiki a manual instructing lay worshipers specifically new devotees the proper manner of worshiping the deity 72 76 Mythology Edit Maheshvara Daijizaiten A number of texts relate different stories regarding the origin and meaning of the Dual Vinayaka image According to the story found in Shubhakarasimha s ritual manual Maheshvara s wife Uma Parvati gave birth to three thousand children from her left side was born 1 500 evil deities headed by King Vinayaka 毘那夜迦王 while from her right side came 1 500 benevolent deities led by King Senayaka 扇那夜迦王 Pali Senayaka 77 Sanskrit Senanayaka 78 79 commander or lord of the army who was actually the incarnation of Avalokiteshvara In order to subdue Vinayaka s evil deeds Senayaka took simultaneous birth with Vinayaka so that they would be younger and elder brother husband and wife Reborn as his wife Senayaka embraced Vinayaka thereby calming his rage and turning him into a force for good 11 47 80 81 In another legend recorded in a medieval Japanese iconographic compendium known as the Kakuzenshō 覚禅鈔 82 Vinayaka was originally the king of a country called Marakeira who only ate beef and radishes When these became rare he started feasting on human corpses when these too became scarce he began to eat living people His subjects eventually revolted and were about to kill the king when he transformed himself into the great demon king Vinayaka The kingdom was then struck by an epidemic implied to have been caused by the demon at which the people prayed to the Eleven Headed Ekadashamukha Avalokiteshvara who took the form of a female vinayaka and seduced the demon king filling him with joy 歓喜 kangi and pacifying him Thus he in union with her became the Dual Kangiten 83 84 51 A third tale somewhat similar to the above found in another Japanese text portrays Vinayaka Kangi as the head of a vast army of vinayaka demons who lived in a mountain called Mount Vinayaka also known as Elephant headed Mountain 象頭山 Zōzu sen or Mountain of Obstacles 障礙山 Shōge san who received a command from Maheshvara who at the time had not yet converted to Buddhism to cause trouble to humans and steal their vital essence To tame him Avalokiteshvara manifested himself as a female vinayaka and came before the demon king Upon seeing the demoness Kangi immediately fell in love with her but she agreed to become his consort only if he abandoned his evil ways and embraced Buddhism After Kangi assented the demoness took him in her arms leading the king to achieve great bliss kangi 85 86 A variant of this story portrays Shōten here identified as female as a daughter of Maheshvara who was exiled to Mount Vinayaka because of her ugliness and her violent nature In the mountain she meets a god who courts her She replies that she is already wed to another deity named Gundari Amritakundalin but agrees to marry him if he reforms himself Still other versions in which Vinayaka is male portray Gundari as a goddess 87 Yet another story relates that Vinayaka was originally a courtier in an Indian kingdom nicknamed the Long Nosed Minister 鼻長大臣 Bichō Daijin who had an intimate liaison with the queen After discovering their affair the king poisons Bichō Daijin by making him eat elephant meat The queen tells her lover to run away to Mount Keira Mount Kailash and cure himself by bathing in oil and eating radishes After recovering Bichō Daijin swore vengeance against the king and transformed into a fearsome elephant headed great god of obstacles 大障礙神 dai shōgeshin named Vinayaka Storming into the palace with his army of demons Vinayaka confessed to the queen his lust for her In reply the queen bade him repent of his evil ways and embraced him her body becoming as his in form Thus Vinayaka was freed from his base desires and attained great bliss 88 34 89 Association with other deities Edit Sanbō Kōjin fierce god kōjin of the Three Jewels the Japanese Buddhist god of the hearth Kangiten is commonly identified as an assimilation emanation body 等流身 tōrujin Sanskrit niṣyanda kaya 90 of Vairochana 14 with the female half of the embracing pair being also identified as a manifestation of the Eleven Headed Avalokiteshvara 91 92 In addition to these two he was also connected or identified with other deities such as Maheshvara Daijizaiten the wrathful hearth god Sanbō Kōjin the snake god Ugajin Enma Yama Benzaiten Sarasvati the fox goddess Dakiniten and the wisdom king Aizen Myōō Ragaraja 93 Whereas some sources identify Shōten as Maheshvara s son which reflects Shiva s and Ganesha s relationship in Hindu mythology others also identify him as Maheshvara s incarnation The Shingon monk Kakuban for instance wrote In the dual form the male deva is a transformation body of Maheshvara He drives off both celestial and earthly demons and distributes profit in this world and the next The female figure is a transformation of Avalokiteshvara s eleven faced form the most potent of her thirty three forms These two standing in conjugal embrace represent the union of yin and yang That they have elephant heads and human bodies is to show the interpenetration of all ten realms 81 In another text Daijizaiten is one of the various names for the deity Because he is perfectly free in the six supranormal powers and secret dharmas he is called Shōten Because he is perfectly free in wisdom he is called Daijizaiten Because he achieves love he is called the dual bodied Vinayaka king Because he produces the five cereals he is called the six armed deva 94 This identification of Shōten with Daijizaiten was however criticized in the hagiography of Shingon Ritsu monk Tankai 1629 1721 the founder of Hōzan ji Ikoma Shōten which relates that Tankai after having doubts about Shōten s true nature had a dream in which the god explained that he is neither Daijizaiten nor a mere vinayaka demon but an avatar of Vairochana although he is called Vinayaka because the vinayakas are members of his retinue he unlike them is not a malignant demon of obstacles Tankai s doubts were eventually resolved after finding a copy of the Kakuzenshō which claimed that identifying Shōten with Maheshvara Daijizaiten is a great error and that this divinity s special characteristic is that of lord of siddhis thus he is called Jizaiten He ought not to be confused with any other jizaiten 14 95 96 A tradition of the Jimon Tendai temple of Mii dera meanwhile associates Shōten with the demon king Mara also known as Takejizaiten 他化自在天 Skt Paranirmitavasavartin the lord of the sixth and highest heaven in the world of desire who once tried to hinder Gautama Buddha s quest for enlightenment though he is also said to have eventually converted to Buddhism 97 98 99 100 101 Indeed the Mii dera tradition employs Takejizaiten s mantra in Shōten rituals rather than Daijizaiten s 97 Dakiniten Mandala Muromachi period 15th century portraying the combined Dakiniten central figure Benzaiten left head and Shōten right head Shōten was also equated with Sanbō Kōjin in that the latter was also considered to be a violent deity kōjin of obstacles According to a work attributed to the Tendai monk Annen called the Ritual of Vinayaka in Four Sections Shibu Binayaka hō 四部毘那夜迦法 when the construction of Jetavana Monastery suffered a series of delays due to obstructive evil spirits their leader a fierce looking eight headed deity appeared before the Buddha s disciple Shariputra calling himself Nagyōtosajin 那行都佐神 the Raging King of the Three Jewels 三宝荒王 Sanbō Kōō He then demanded that Shariputra create an image of him and make offerings to it warning that all kinds of calamities will befall those who do not pay him homage A gloss in the text explains It is Kōjin or Vinayaka The story is repeated in the Sannō Shinto text Shintō Zatsuzatsushu 神道雑々集 here the god identifies himself explicitly as Sanbō Kōjin Binayaka 三宝荒神毘那夜迦 102 103 104 105 Like Kangiten Kōjin Nagyōtosajin was interpreted as being either a single deity or a pair of deities named respectively Nagyō 那行 and Tosa 都佐 104 In a similar vein some representations of Kangiten split the god s name into two naming the male half of the pair as Bina and his female consort as Yaka 14 In addition Kōjin was also sometimes identified with Maheshvara Daijizaiten 106 and was associated with one of Vinayaka s symbols 三昧耶形 sa n maya gyō Skt samaya the parasol 傘蓋 sangai 107 In an apocryphal sutra titled Dharani Sutra of the Buddha s Teaching for the Greatest Protection of the Country by Ugaya s Sudden Attainment Wish Fulfilling Jewel o 108 Ugajin who is closely associated with Benzaiten is said to manifest himself as the deities Dakiniten Daishōten Vinayaka and Aizen Myōō Another text identifies Vinayaka with the goddess of Itsukushima Shrine who was also identified with Benzaiten 73 During the medieval period Benzaiten Dakiniten and Shōten were also combined into a single figure which served as the main focus of an esoteric imperial accession rite in which the three deities were worshiped as one known as the Joint Ritual of the Three Devas 三天合行法 santen gogyōhō The union of these three divinities was associated with a series of triads such as the three jewels Buddha Dharma and Sangha the three poisons greed ignorance and hatred the three mysteries body speech and mind and the three shrines that comprise Fushimi Inari Shrine due to her association with foxes Dakiniten was identified with the native god Inari 109 Portrayals of the three devas as a single figure which became popular during the Nanboku chō and Muromachi periods and were still being produced as late as the Edo period depict the composite deity as a three headed figure riding a fox The middle head is usually that of Dakiniten though some show Shōten as occupying the central position 110 Shōten was also identified with various Japanese gods such as Susanoo Amaterasu Sarutahiko and his wife Ame no Uzume an identification which may have partly stemmed from Sarutahiko s long nose calling to mind Shōten s elephant trunk or the crossroad deities known as Dōsojin which are sometimes represented as a human couple 111 12th century Tibetan Kadampa school painting of Achala stepping on VighnarajaApart from Avalokiteshvara various wrathful deities such as Jinja Daishō 深沙大将 lit General Deep Sands a fierce avatar of Vaishravana Uchchhushma Ususama Achala Fudō or Amritakundalin Gundari Myōō are also believed to subjugate Vinayaka when interpreted as the cause of obstacles and his vinayaka underlings and keep them under control 91 Indeed Amritakundalin is said to be particularly effective against the vinayakas their leader Shōten himself is also said to belong to his retinue 112 113 Gonrui and jitsurui Edit Medieval Japanese thought classified Buddhist devas and native kami into two types gonsha 権者 or gonrui 権類 deities who are provisional manifestations gongen of enlightened buddhas and bodhisattvas and jissha 実者 or jitsurui 実類 real or material lesser divinities who have the same passions and desires as humans do In this latter category are also included deified lower entities such as animal spirits or spirits of the dead 114 115 116 Jitsurui deities due to their nature are approached with caution with some sources even recommending that they are best avoided 117 Esoteric texts distinguish three kinds of Kangiten rituals each of which classified Vinayaka and his consort differently The first one considers the male as a jitsurui deity and the female as a provisional incarnation The honzon or focus of worship in this rite is thus called provisional and real devas 権実の天 gonjitsu no ten In the second both deities are considered jitsurui the honzon in this case is called devas both real 倶実の天 kujitsu no ten This type of ritual is considered the most effective but also the most dangerous The third one visualizes both deities as gonrui its honzon is therefore known as devas both provisional 倶権の天 kugon no ten Although its effects are not as quick or apparent it is considered the safest of the three types These distinctions merely reflect the perspective of the practitioner the image used in these rituals does not change 118 119 Iconography EditSee also Ganesha Iconography Single and dual forms Edit Single bodied 単身 tanshin Shōten holding an axe and a radish Shōten Kangiten is mainly depicted either alone or more commonly embracing his consort When shown by himself he is represented with either two four six eight or even twelve arms holding various attributes such as a vajra an axe a noose a club a trident a wheel a broken tusk or a radish which may have itself developed from the tusk attribute 4 120 121 He notably does not have the Hindu Ganesha s characteristic huge belly nor the latter s animal mount vahana the mouse 122 Some depictions portray him with one tusk similar to Ganesha although others show both his tusks intact 123 Depiction of the dual bodied Kangiten with both figures facing forward Among the various representations of the deity the single bodied Shōten image is considered the most difficult and even dangerous to own and maintain due to the god s wild nature an image of the Eleven Headed Avalokiteshvara Juichimen Kannon is thus also installed in temples that enshrine the single bodied Shōten in the belief that this pacifies the deity Images of this type are employed in an esoteric rite known as the Kangiten Water Ritual 水歓喜天供 Sui Kangiten ku in which water that had been used to bathe the statue of Avalokiteshvara is poured over the image which is then taken by ritual practitioners and devotees for their use Bathing in this consecrated water is believed to cleanse impurities and remove all impediments 123 The Dual bodied Kangiten image usually features both the male and female figures with elephant heads though a few examples show the female figure as boar headed 119 124 The genders of the pair are not explicit but hinted in the iconography 4 2 125 The female is often shown wearing a crown and resting her feet over that of the male who rests his head on her shoulder Some variants may show the male and female gazing at each other looking over each other s shoulders wearing a single shared garment or standing side by side 126 127 A few images of the deity classified as gonjitsu depictions may depict the female alone stepping on the male s foot symbolizing the jitsurui deity Vinayaka being subjugated by Avalokiteshvara s provisional incarnation while kugon depictions where both the male and female are interpreted as incarnations of bodhisattvas may show both the two figures stepping on the other s foot 128 This symbolizes the unity and non duality of contrasting genders and opposites 126 127 Although Amoghavajra s Rite of the Dual bodied Vinayaka recommends that Vinayaka s image be made of pewter brass or wood and be about five or seven sun approximately 17 20 centimeters high 129 most sculptures of Kangiten venerated in Japanese temples are much smaller measuring around one to two sun 3 6 centimeters on average Because they are periodically ritually bathed in oil many are made of metals such as gold silver bronze or iron wooden images 木天 mokuten are comparatively rare 130 Vajra vinayakas Edit Six armed Shōten The twenty deities depicted in the outer sections of the Diamond Realm mandala include Vinayaka shown holding a radish and a modak a boar headed deity known as Vajramukha 金剛面天 Kongōmenten sometimes identified with either the goddess Chamunda depicted in Buddhist art with a boar s head or Vinayaka s consort and four vinayakas distributed along the four directions 30 131 132 133 Vajravikirana Vajrachinna 金剛摧天 Kongō zaiten Skt Vajracinna destroying vajra deva The vinayaka of the east shown holding an umbrella His name reflects his role as the destroyer of obstacles caused by malevolent vinayakas Also known as Sangaiten 傘蓋天 parasol deva or Sangai Binayaka 傘蓋毘那夜迦 parasol vinayaka 30 131 102 Vajrabhakshana 金剛食天 Kongō jikiten 金剛飲食天 Kongō onjikiten Skt Vajrabhakṣana vajra deva of drink and food Situated in the south this vinayaka holds a garland of flowers in his right hand and sometimes a noose in his left hand Also called Keman Binayaka 華鬘毘那夜迦 flower garland vinayaka 30 131 102 Vajravasin 金剛衣天 Kongō eten 金剛衣服天 Kongō ebukuten Skt Vajravasin vajra deva of clothing The vinayaka of the west depicted holding a bow and arrow Also called Kōkyusen Binayaka 拘弓箭毘那夜迦 bow and arrow wielding vinayaka 30 131 102 Vajrajaya 金剛調伏天 Kongō chōbukuten 調伏天 Chōbukuten subduing vajra deva Situated in the north shown holding a sword or a staff or club in his right hand and a jewel in his left Also known as Kōtō Binayaka 拘刀毘那夜迦 sword wielding vinayaka or Konjiki Ganahattei 金色迦那鉢底 golden Ganapati Although all four are depicted with elephant heads in the Diamond Realm mandala the Kakuzenshō portrays three of the four vinayakas as human figures with Vajrajaya being the only one shown as elephant headed 30 131 102 Other depictions Edit Kangi Dōji 歓喜童子 a depiction of Kangiten as a young boy 童子 dōji A mandala centered on Kangiten shows the dual bodied form of the deity at the center of a four petaled lotus arm in arm as if dancing surrounded by the four directional vinayakas and the guardian devas of the eight directions Two six armed vinayakas are sometimes also depicted at the mandala s bottom part 134 A depiction commonly found in hanging scrolls and talismans ofuda known as Kangi Dōji 歓喜童子 shows Shōten as a sitting human youth 童子 dōji with one or two elephant heads on his headgear He has four or rarely eight arms holding an axe or a halberd a jeweled staff a modak and a radish This image was popularized by the 17th century Shingon monk Iku 以空 1637 1719 who is said to have seen Shōten in this manner after praying that the god show himself in a form that can be displayed in public unlike his elephant headed forms 135 136 137 Worship EditBija and mantra Edit ग gaḥ Shōten s seed syllable bija in Siddham script Doubled gaḥ The bija or seed syllable used to represent Shōten is gaḥ Devanagari ग Japanese pronunciation gyaku written in Siddham script It is usually written double ग ग symbolizing his dual form 138 139 The mantra considered to be the standard in Japanese Buddhism identified in Amoghavajra s Rite of the Dual bodied Vinayaka as Vinayaka s heart mantra 心呪 129 is as follows Sanskrit romanized Devanagari Japanese romanized HiraganaOṃ hriḥ gaḥ huṃ svaha 129 ॐ ह र ग ह स व ह On kiri ku gyaku un sowaka 139 140 おん きり く ぎゃく うん そわかThe mantra is traditionally interpreted as Vinayaka s seed syllable flanked by those of Avalokiteshvara ह र hriḥ and Amritakundalin ह huṃ the two figures who subjugated him 139 141 Rituals Edit Shōten is ritually worshiped via a number of rites Oil Bath Yokuyu ku Edit Hōzan ji Ikoma Shōten in Ikoma Nara Prefecture The Oil Bath Ritual 浴油供 Yokuyu ku involves placing a statue of Kangiten on a brass basin and pouring abhisheka consecrated warm oil on it using a ladle 108 times a process that is repeated for seven days 142 143 Perfumed pure sesame oil is commonly used for the rite though tradition claims that it originally employed ghee mixed with honey 蘇蜜油 somitsu yu 144 145 146 It is considered the most sacred and potent of the deity s rituals but also the most arcane it is restricted to monks who have received proper initiation into the rite performance by unqualified individuals is strictly forbidden and is conducted outside of the public gaze 147 The ritual is symbolically interpreted as representing Vinayaka s conversion and initiation abhisheka into the Buddhist path during which the former demon king s evil nature and mental defilements kleshas are washed away thereby revealing his true nature as a manifestation of Vairochana Buddha Likewise it is believed to purify the practitioner and devotees as well 148 149 150 Flower Water Offering Kesui ku Edit The Flower Water Ritual 華水供 Kesui ku involves offering water scented with flowers incense and or shikimi Illicium anisatum leaves to Buddhist divinities in lieu of food and drink 151 152 The practice is thought to have derived from the precept that forbade those who have taken monastic vows which includes the Buddhist devas from eating anything after noon 152 153 In practice however the Kesui ku performed in many Shōten temples denotes a ceremony mostly similar in structure to the Oil Bath rite but without the bathing of the deity s image in oil In this case Shōten is offered not just flowers and water but also other types of foodstuffs 152 Other rites Edit In some temples rituals such as the Daihannya Tendoku 大般若転読 in which a group of monks symbolically read the 600 fascicle Mahaprajnaparamita Sutra 大般若経 Daihannya kyō by flipping through 転読 tendoku lit rolling reading copies of portions of the text 154 and Hyakumi Kuyō 百味供養 lit Offering of One Hundred Foods in which an extravagant amount of fruits vegetables and other delicacies are offered to Shōten are performed upon request as thanksgiving for prayers answered 155 156 Offerings Edit Kangiten s symbols depicted on the steps of Matsuchiyama Honryu in the forked daikon 二股大根 futamata daikon symbolizing fertility and marital union and the money bag 巾着 kinchaku representing wealth Like his Hindu counterpart Ganesha Shōten is held to be partial to sweets 157 Common offerings to Shōten include rice wine sake radishes daikon and sweets filled with red bean paste anko such as kangidan 歓喜団 bliss buns a deep fried confection stuffed with spiced anko based on the Indian modak Ganesha s favorite food 1 157 158 Conversely offering him sour citrus fruits pears mushrooms lotus root renkon and dishes which go against the Buddhist vegetarian diet i e those containing meat fish or pungent vegetables such as garlic or scallions is considered taboo 157 159 Daikon radishes are interpreted as representing the three poisons specifically dvesha or hatred offering the vegetable to the deity is thus held to be a meritorious purificatory act At the same time because radishes are also popularly believed to aid digestion 160 they also symbolize Shōten s action of removing the three poisons 161 Reputation Edit Shōten is popularly regarded as a powerful efficacious deity who readily grants whatever is asked of him including impossible or even immoral wishes 9 162 He is sometimes called Vairochana s final expedient incarnation 大日如来最後の方便身 Dainichi Nyorai saigo no hōbenshin because he is believed to be the last resort of those who have no other recourse 162 163 At the same time his reputation has sometimes also caused him to be characterized negatively as highly demanding and temperamental requiring constant attention from his devotees and harassing or punishing those who have either become lax in their devotion or quit worshiping him altogether 164 An oft repeated urban legend claims that worshiping Shōten is a double edged sword as it uses up seven generations worth of good karma at once in other words it confers immediate gratification to the worshiper but also eventually brings about their downfall However in his A Guide to Shōten Devotion Hayashiya Tomojirō criticized this as a baseless superstitious legend that should be ignored 165 166 Daifukuden ji Kuwana Shōten in Kuwana Mie Prefecture In the past Shōten s cult was widespread among gamblers actors geisha and people in the pleasure quarters 4 During the Edo period he was also widely venerated by merchants especially vegetable oil sellers 2 Even today he is mainly worshiped for success in love relationships and business 167 72 Devotion to Shōten is particularly prevalent in the Kansai area especially in Osaka where it rivals that of the god Ebisu another deity worshiped for commercial success in popularity 72 Perhaps to curb abuses and superstitious ideas that could stem from the popular image of Shōten as a god who grants each and every wish various authors such as Hayashiya have stressed the importance of deepening one s devotion beyond simply asking for worldly benefits 165 166 Tendai monk Haneda Shukai for instance writes that the god s true gift to his worshipers is non attachment naiṣkramya 出離 shutsuri to material desires and that faith in Shōten or any other Buddhist deity should awaken in the devotee a desire to learn and follow Buddhist teachings 168 Shōten and impurity Edit Shōten is also considered to abhor impurity kegare For instance ritually impure persons e g those who had recently come in contact with death or menstruating women are discouraged from visiting him in temples for a set period of time 166 169 Similar taboos exist in Shinto which also lays great emphasis on purity but is otherwise rare in Japanese Buddhism which was closely associated with death and the afterlife due to its having a near monopoly on funerary practices 170 Temples dedicated to Shōten also do not have a cemetery a common fixture in many Japanese temples within their precincts nor do monks who perform Shōten rites conduct funerals 169 Temples also forbid devotees from placing ofuda of the deity in unclean rooms e g bedrooms or kitchens or in altars butsudan where deceased family members are venerated 159 171 As hidden god Edit See also Hibutsu The principal image honzon of Kangi in Menuma Shōden zan in Kumagaya Saitama Prefecture the finial of a monastic staff khakkhara shakujō depicting the dual Kangiten and two attendants The central image of Kangiten is normally wrapped in red cloth and is only uncovered at irregular intervals the most recent of which was during the temple s 840th anniversary in 2016 A notable characteristic of Shōten is the air of secrecy surrounding him Unlike Ganesha whose image is prominently worshiped in many temples and homes most images of Shōten are kept hidden inside miniature shrines 厨子 zushi and are never shown to the public only being taken out during the performance of rites which are themselves conducted in private such as the Oil Bath Ritual 1 4 172 A notable exception to the rule is the honzon of Kangi in Menuma Shōden zan in Kumagaya Saitama Prefecture which is intermittently put on public display 御開帳 go kaichō since the Edo period 173 174 As they require a high level of maintenance modern day lay devotees are discouraged from owning or venerating idols of Shōten in their homes instead they are advised to venerate him via consecrated paper or wooden ofuda distributed by temples 166 171 Such ofuda are usually aniconic bearing no visual representation of the god who may be simply represented by his seed syllable p though a few examples contain a depiction of the youthful Kangi Dōji or of Kangiten as an anthropomorphic male female couple 175 Popular belief holds that encountering Shōten i e learning about him or getting an opportunity to venerate him is only possible if one has a karmic connection 縁 en enishi with him which itself is considered to be a precious and rare blessing 176 This sentiment is expressed in a liturgical text penned by the monk Kakuban which states Birth as a human being is hard to attain and yet I have unexpectedly attained it Shōten s dharma is difficult to encounter and yet I am fortunate to have encountered it Having arrived at this opportune moment to worship him I cannot hold back my tears q 177 Shōten is also described in medieval texts as a placenta god 胞衣神 enagami or 胞衣荒神 ena kōjin a deity who guards individuals since the moment of their conception just as the placenta covers and protects the fetus and subsequently follows them throughout their life like a shadow 178 Lay devotion Edit Vows and abstinence Edit Some people as part of their devotion may observe vows 願掛け gankake cf the Hindu vrata in which they would promise to carry out certain pious acts in return for specific favors or abstain from alcohol tobacco or certain types of food From an orthodox perspective however any promises made to Shōten cannot be revoked such devotional practices are thus not to be performed casually with some authorities even recommending to avoid them altogether lest one risk committing a grave offense against the god A set of guidelines for devotees published by Honryu in also known as Matsuchiyama Shōden a sub temple of Sensō ji in Asakusa Tokyo dedicated to Kangiten for instance advises the reader that since abstinence 断ち物 tachimono requires a strong resolve it is better not to practice it 179 Opinions differ regarding the place of abstinence in Shōten worship On the one hand Hayashiya claimed that although Shōten does not necessarily reject one s wishes if one does not practice abstinence it is true that they are granted faster if one does 164 Haneda on the other hand criticized it as well as the taking of extreme vows especially when made with materialistic goals in mind as harmful practices that only attract vinayaka demons in effect making them a kind of Faustian bargain asserting that they do not represent authentic devotion to Shōten 180 Temples Edit Matsuchiyama Honryu in Matsuchiyama Shōden in Asakusa Tokyo The main hall honden of Menuma Kangi in Menuma Shōden as seen from the rear Shōten is worshiped in many Shingon and Tendai Buddhist temples throughout Japan The following are two of the most important places of worship dedicated to the deity in Japan traditionally reckoned as the Three Greatest Shōten Temples 日本三大聖天 Nihon Sandai Shōten r Honryu in 本龍院 Asakusa Taitō Tokyo Shō Kannon shu offshoot of Tendai One of the sub temples of Sensō ji the oldest and most famous Buddhist temple in Tokyo also known as Matsuchiyama Shōden 待乳山聖天 Legend claims that the hillock the temple stands on miraculously emerged out of the earth in the year 595 The temple itself was supposedly founded six years later 601 after the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara appeared in the form of Kangiten and put an end to the severe drought that affected the area 181 182 Hōzan ji 宝山寺 Ikoma Nara Prefecture Shingon RisshuAlso known as Ikoma Shōten 生駒聖天 located on the summit of Mount Ikoma in Nara Prefecture Claimed to have originally been founded as a temple to the deity Achala Fudō Myōō by the ascetic En no Gyōja in the year 664 it was reestablished in 1678 by the monk Tankai who designated Kangiten as the guardian 鎮守 chinju of the temple complex 183 184 While Achala is still officially the temple s main deity honzon Hōzan ji is more famous as a cult center of Shōten with business people and other worshipers coming to worship him at his sanctuary 聖天堂 Shōten dō in the precincts 1 153 184 185 Other notable temples to Shōten include Kangi in 歓喜院 Menuma Shōden zan 妻沼聖天山 Menuma Kumagaya Saitama Prefecture Kōyasan Shingon shuFounded in 1179 by military commander Saitō Sanemori The temple s honzon donated to it in 1197 by Sanemori s nephew Miyaji no Kunihira takes the form of a monastic staff khakkhara shakujō head with an image of the dual Kangiten flanked by two attendants 186 187 Shinjō in 心城院 Yushima Shōden 湯島聖天 Bunkyō Tokyo Tendai Daifukushō ji 大福生寺 Ōi Shōten 大井聖天 Higashi Ōi Shinagawa Tokyo Tendai 188 Fukushō in 福生院 Fukuromachi O Shōten 袋町お聖天 Naka ku Nagoya Aichi Prefecture Shingon Chisan ha Daifukuden ji 大福田寺 Kuwana Shōten 桑名聖天 Higashikata Kuwana Mie Prefecture Kōyasan Shingon shu Sōrin in 双林院 Yamashina Shōten 山科聖天 Yamashina ku Kyoto Tendai Uhō in 雨宝院 Nishijin Shōten gu 西陣聖天宮 Kamigyō ku Kyoto Shingon Sennyu ji ha Ryōtoku in 了徳院 Urae Shōten 浦江聖天 Fukushima ku Osaka Tō ji Shingon shu Shōen ji 正圓寺 Abeno ku Osaka Shingon independent Hōan ji 法案寺 Nipponbashi Shōten 日本橋聖天 Chuō ku Osaka Kōyasan Shingon shu Saikō ji 西江寺 Minoh Osaka Kōyasan Shingon shuSee also EditGanesha in world religions Acala Benzaiten Daikokuten Guanyin Skanda Buddhism ModakNotes Edit 大孔雀咒王經 pinyin Dakǒngque zhouwang jing Japanese Daikujaku juō kyō 大日經疏 pinyin Dari jing shu Japanese Dainichi kyō shō 20 陀羅尼集經 pinyin Tuoluoni ji jing Japanese Darani shu kyō 大聖歡喜雙身毘那夜迦法 pinyin Dashengtian huanxǐ shuangshen Pinayejia fǎ Japanese Daishōten kangi sōshin Binayaka hō 使咒法經 pinyin Shǐzhoufǎ jing Japanese Shi juhō kyō 大使咒法經 pinyin Dashǐzhoufǎ jing Japanese Daishijuhō kyō 大聖歡喜雙身大自在天毘那夜迦王歸依念誦供養法 pinyin Dasheng Huanxǐ shuangshen Dazizaitian Pinayejia wang guiyi niansong gongyǎng fǎ Japanese Daishō Kangi sōshin Daijizaiten Binayaka ō kie nenju kuyō hō 十一面神咒心經 pinyin Shiyimian shenzhou xinjing Japanese Juichimen shinju shingyō 摩訶毘盧遮那如來定惠均等入三昧耶身雙身大聖歡喜天菩薩修行祕密法儀軌 pinyin Mohepiluzhena Rulai dinghui jundeng ru sanmeiye shen shuangshen Dasheng Huanxǐtian pusa xiuxing mimi fǎ yiguǐ Japanese Makabirushana Nyorai jōei kintō nyu samaya shin sōshin Daishō Kangiten Bosatsu shugyō himitsu hō giki 毘那夜迦誐那鉢底瑜伽悉地品祕要 pinyin Pinayejia enabōdǐ yujia xide pǐn miyao Japanese Binayaka Ganahattei yuga shicchi bon hiyō 現金色迦那婆底九目天法 pinyin Quanxian jinse Jianapodǐ Jiǔmutian fǎ Japanese Gongen konjiki Ganabachi Kumokuten hō 金色迦那鉢底陀羅尼經 pinyin Jinse Jianabōdǐ tuoluoni jing Japanese Konjiki Ganahachi darani kyō 金剛薩埵說頻那夜迦天成就儀軌經 pinyin Jingangsaduǒ shuō Pinnayejiatian chengjiu yiguǐ jing Japanese Kongōsatta setsu Binayakaten jōju giki kyō 聖歡喜天式法 pinyin Sheng Huanxǐtian shifǎ Japanese Shō Kangiten shikihō 仏説最勝護国宇賀耶頓得如意宝珠陀羅尼経 Japanese Bussetsu saishō gokoku Ugaya tontoku nyōihōju darani kyō Two examples ofuda issued by Shinjō in Yushima Shōden in Tokyo 1 and those distributed by Zentsu ji in Kagawa Prefecture 2 適々難受受人界之生 幸難逢逢聖天之法 機縁之至感涙難禁 This number is purely symbolic in reality many temples claim to be one of these three References EditCitations Edit a b c d e Buhnemann 2006 pp 19 20 sfnp error no target CITEREFBuhnemann2006 help a b c d e f Hanan 2003 pp 245 6 a b Krishan 1999 p 163 a b c d e Frederic 2002 p 470 sfnp error no target CITEREFFrederic2002 help a b c d e f g h i 歡喜天 Gaṇesa Digital Dictionary of Buddhism Retrieved 2021 06 02 Pandey Rajyashree 22 February 2007 Performing the body in medieval Japanese narratives Izumi Shikibu in Shasekishu Japan Forum 19 1 119 doi 10 1080 09555800601127361 S2CID 143714073 Faure 2015b p 85 Faure 2015b pp 81 82 86 87 a b Faure 2015b p 88 a b 歓喜天 Kangiten コトバンク Kotobank Retrieved 2021 08 01 a b Krishan 1999 p 164 a b c Faure 2015b p 77 Krishan 1999 pp 164 168 a b c d Faure 2015b p 99 Haneda 2017 p 12 Krishan 1999 p vii Thapan 1997 pp 26 28 Rosseels 2015 2016 p 15 Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research 2005 pp 52 217 大日経疏 Dainichikyō shō コトバンク Kotobank Retrieved 2021 08 01 a b Faure 2015b pp 87 88 Achala Buddhist Deity Blue Standing Himalayan Art Retrieved 2020 12 09 Faure 2015b pp 47 94 98 Rosseels 2015 2016 pp 16 17 Rosseels 2015 2016 p 18 Mogao Cave 285 Western Wei 534 556AD Dunhuang Academy Retrieved 2021 08 04 伊舎那天 Ishanaten Kōyasan Reihōkan Museum 高野山霊宝館 in Japanese Retrieved 2021 08 04 Faure 2015b pp 46 47 Schumacher Mark 2017 Daikokuten Iconography in Japan A to Z Photo Dictionary of Japanese Religious Sculpture and Art www onmarkproductions com Retrieved 2021 08 04 a b c d e f Faure 2015b pp 91 92 Sanford 1991 p 287 8 296 7 Faure 2015b p 91 Rosseels amp 2015 2016 pp 16 18 sfnp error no target CITEREFRosseels2015 2016 help a b Faure 2015b p 100 Agrawala Prithvi K 1978 On a Four Legged Icon of Gaṇapati from Ghosai Artibus Asiae Artibus Asiae Publishers 40 4 307 310 doi 10 2307 3249822 JSTOR 3249822 Rosseels 2015 2016 pp 19 20 陀羅尼集經法 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 大聖歡喜雙身毘那夜迦法 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 a b Sanford 1991 pp 291 293 a b c Krishan 1999 pp 167 169 使呪法經 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 大使呪法經 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 Sanford 1991 pp 294 295 Rosseels 2015 2016 p 20 大聖歡喜雙身大自在天毘那夜迦王歸依念誦供養法 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 Sanford 1991 p 295 a b Rosseels 2015 2016 pp 20 21 十一面神呪心經 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 摩訶毘盧遮那如來定惠均等入三昧耶身雙身大聖歡喜天菩薩修行祕密法儀軌 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 Sanford 1991 pp 295 296 a b Rosseels 2015 2016 p 21 摩訶毘盧遮那如來定惠均等入三昧耶身雙身大聖歡喜天菩薩修行祕密法儀軌 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 Sanford 1991 pp 320 Rosseels 2015 2016 pp 21 22 權現金色迦那婆底九目天法 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 a b Rosseels 2015 2016 pp 22 23 佛說金色迦那鉢底陀羅尼經 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 金剛薩埵說頻那夜迦天成就儀軌經 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 Rosseels 2015 2016 p 22 聖歡喜天式法 CBETA Chinese Electronic Tripiṭaka Collection 漢文大藏經 Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 08 08 Sanford 1991 pp 296 Faure 2015b pp 108 109 Rosseels 2015 2016 p 23 a b Faure 2015b pp 75 76 a b Faure 2015b pp 75 76 88 ご本尊 聖天さまについて Shinjō in Yushima Shōden Official Website Retrieved 2021 08 08 Miya 1976 pp 2 3 a b c Nitta Gien 聖天信仰の本義と時代背景を求めて Shōten shinkō to jidai haikei o motomete PDF Hozan ji Ikoma Shōten Official Website in Japanese Retrieved 2021 08 08 Miya 1976 p 4 Faure 2015b pp 76 77 境内のご案内 Hōkai ji Official Website in Japanese Retrieved 2021 08 08 a b c d Haneda 2017 pp 64 65 a b Faure 2015b p 105 a b c Faure 2015b p 103 林屋友次郎 Hayashiya Tomojirō コトバンク Kotobank Retrieved 2021 08 09 林屋友次郎博士について 大聖歓喜天様 聖天様 ご利益まとめサイト in Japanese Retrieved 2021 08 09 巴利语辭典 Pali Dictionary Chinese Buddhist Electronic Text Association CBETA Retrieved 2021 09 01 Singh K S ed 2003 People of India Gujarat Part One Volume XXII Popular Prakashan Pvt Ltd p 1028 ISBN 9788179911044 Singh Vipul 2008 The Pearson Indian History Manual for the UPSC Civil Services Preliminary Examination Second Edition Dorling Kindersley India Pvt Ltd p 97 ISBN 9788131717530 Sanford 1991 p 297 a b Faure 2015b p 101 覚禅抄 Kakuzenshō コトバンク Kotobank in Japanese Retrieved 2021 08 09 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Sanford 1991 pp 297 298 Faure 2015b p 102 Sanford 1991 p 299 Faure 2015b p 87 Faure 2015b p 377 Sanford 1991 pp 298 299 Yamamoto 2018 pp 220 221 McMullen Matthew Don 2016 The Development of Esoteric Buddhist Scholasticism in Early Medieval Japan PDF Thesis University of California Berkeley p 134 a b Faure 2015b p 98 Haneda 2017 pp 37 40 Faure 2015b pp 101 106 Faure 2015b p 89 Sanford 1991 p 305 Chaudhuri 2003 p 100 a b Haneda 2017 pp 210 211 Papiyas The Soka Gakkai Dictionary of Buddhism Soka Gakkai Retrieved 2021 08 23 Hōnen 2011 The Promise of Amida Buddha Hōnen s Path to Bliss Translated by Atone Jōji Hayashi Yōko Wisdom Publications p 450 ISBN 9780861716968 Phra Thepyanmongkol 2011 Samatha Vipassana Meditation in Accordance with the Four Foundations of Mindfulness to Reach Lord Buddha s Dhammakayas and Nirvana Wat Luang Phor Sodh Dhammakayaram pp 185 186 ISBN 9789747560664 Benton Catherine 2006 God of Desire Tales of Kamadeva in Sanskrit Story Literature State University of New York Press pp 167 168 ISBN 9780791465660 a b c d e Rosseels 2015 2016 p 29 Faure 2015b pp 104 105 a b Faure 2006 pp 258 260 Kanemoto 2002 pp 81 92 Haneda 2017 pp 217 Kanemoto 2002 pp 85 86 Ludvik Catherine 2007 Researching Benzaiten Japanese Studies Around the World International Research Center for Japanese Studies 2006 13 32 doi 10 15055 00003743 Faure 2015b pp 236 238 Faure 2015b pp 240 254 Faure 2015b pp 105 112 113 Faure 2015b p 376 Haneda 2017 p 220 神供段 神々への供養 2 Kanazawa Hōsen ji Official Website Retrieved 2021 08 25 Yamakage Motohisa 2010 de Leeuw Paul Rankin Aidan eds The Essence of Shinto Japan s Spiritual Heart Translated by Gillespie Mineko S Gillespie Gerald L Komuro Yoshitsugu Kodansha International p 166 ISBN 9784770050083 権現 Gongen Flying Deity Tobifudo Ryukō zan Shōbō in Official Website Retrieved 2021 08 25 Hardacre Helen 2017 Shinto A History Oxford University Press p 182 Faure 2015b pp 102 103 a b Haneda 2017 p 54 57 Faure 2015b pp 87 89 91 Sanford 1991 p 293 Faure 2015b p 86 a b Haneda 2017 pp 58 59 Faure 2015b pp 83 84 Krishan 1999 p 167 a b Sanford 1991 p 289 a b Rosseels 2015 2016 pp 35 36 Haneda 2017 p 55 a b c Sanford 1991 p 291 Haneda 2017 pp 176 177 a b c d e 諸仏解説 微細会 Mandala Dualism Retrieved 2021 08 26 Krishan 1999 pp 165 166 Haneda 2017 pp 226 227 Faure 2015b p 94 Faure 2015b pp 94 94 113 114 Haneda 2017 pp 59 60 Kodama Giryu 2009 印と梵字ご利益 功徳事典 聖なる象徴に表された諸尊の姿と仏の教え In to bonji goriyaku kudoku jiten sei naru shōchō ni hyōsareta shoson no sugata to hotoke no oshie Gakken Publishing pp 36 37 ISBN 9784054041875 Haneda 2017 p 39 a b c Kitao 2017 pp 107 Haneda 2017 pp 157 158 軍荼利明王を奉祀 Senzō in 泉蔵院 Official Website 2016 04 28 Retrieved 2021 08 28 Sanford 1991 pp 291 292 Haneda 2017 pp 175 176 Haneda 2017 p 178 Ichikawa Chikō 1979 仏さまの履歴書 Hotoke sama no rirekisho Mizushobo p 170 御祈祷 Shinjō in Yushima Shōten Official Website Haneda 2017 pp 175 176 179 Haneda 2017 p 179 山科聖天浴油会 毎年1月 12月 Yamashina Shōten Sōrin in Official Website 18 January 2019 Retrieved 2021 08 29 Hayashiya Tomojiro 聖天信仰の手引き Shoten shinkō no tebiki Daifukushō ji p 160 Ruppert Brian Douglas 2020 Jewel in the Ashes Buddha Relics and Power in Early Medieval Japan Brill p 122 ISBN 9781684173389 a b c Haneda 2017 pp 188 189 a b Sanford 1991 p 323 Daihannya Tendoku e Performed by Karyōbinga Shōmyō Kenkyukai The Ho Center for Buddhist Studies Stanford University Retrieved 2021 08 29 Haneda 2017 pp 190 191 祈祷案内 Matsuchiyama Shōden Official Website Retrieved 2021 08 29 a b c Haneda 2017 p 151 Goldstein Darra ed 2015 The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets Oxford University Press p 82 ISBN 978 0 19 931361 7 a b 祈祷中の心得とお札について Matsuchiyama Shōden Official Website Retrieved 2021 08 30 Daikon The great radish of Japan The Japan Times 2015 12 18 Retrieved 2021 08 27 三大煩悩 PDF いちょう Ichō July 2021 Matsuchiyama Shōden 343 1 a b 大日如来最後の方便身 大聖歓喜天様 聖天様 ご利益まとめサイト Retrieved 2021 08 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link 吉野聖天尊像 Sakuramoto bō 櫻本坊 Official Website Retrieved 2021 08 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b 信仰問答 大聖歓喜天様 聖天様 ご利益まとめサイト Retrieved 2021 08 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b 聖天信仰の心得十二条 大聖歓喜天様 聖天様 ご利益まとめサイト Retrieved 2021 08 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d 聖天信仰の心得 PDF いちょう Ichō April 2018 Matsuchiyama Shōden 304 1 Mohapatra Satyen 2007 02 21 Japan wants to encourage studies of Hindu gods Hindustan Times Archived from the original on 2007 02 23 Retrieved 2021 09 01 Haneda 2017 pp 29 32 136 146 a b Haneda 2017 pp 256 260 Richie Donald 2009 01 25 Buddhism a religion for death The Japan Times Retrieved 2021 08 31 a b Haneda 2017 pp 148 149 Rosseels 2015 2016 pp 36 37 開創840年 御開扉 Menuma Shōden zan Official Website Retrieved 2021 09 05 妻沼聖天山界隈 くまがやねっと情報局 in Japanese Retrieved 2021 09 05 Faure 2015b pp 114 115 Haneda 2017 pp 131 132 Kakuban 1909 歓喜天講式 Kangiten Kōshiki In Kobayashi Shōsei ed 興教大師全集 Kōgyō Daishi Zenshu in Japanese Kaji Sekai Shisha pp 444 445 Faure 2006 pp 260 261 断ち物 PDF いちょう Ichō June 2021 Matsuchiyama Shōden 343 1 Haneda 2017 pp 107 123 聖天様鎮座のいわれ Matsuchiyama Shōden Official Website Retrieved 2021 09 08 待乳山聖天 浅草名所七福神 Retrieved 2021 09 08 寶山寺について Hōzan ji Ikoma Shoten Official Website Retrieved 2021 09 08 a b 宝山寺 役行者霊蹟札所会 Retrieved 2021 09 08 宝山寺 ほうざんじ Kintetsu Railway Retrieved 2021 09 08 Shodenzan Temple PDF Menuma Shōden zan Official Website Retrieved 2021 09 08 聖天山縁起 Menuma Shōden zan Official Website Retrieved 2021 09 08 三宝山神護院 大福生寺 通称 大井聖天 Tendai shu Tokyo Kyōku Retrieved 2021 09 08 Works cited Edit Buhnemann Gudrun 2006 Erotic forms of Ganesa in Hindu and Buddhist Iconography In Koskikallo Petteri Parpola Asko eds Papers of the World Sanskrit Conference held in Helsinki Finland 13 July 2003 Script and Image Papers on Art and Epigraphy Vol 11 Motilal Banarsidass Publishers pp 19 20 ISBN 81 208 2944 1 Chaudhuri Saroj Kumar 2003 Hindu Gods and Goddesses in Japan Vedams eBooks P Ltd ISBN 978 8 1793 6009 5 Faure Bernard 2015b Protectors and Predators Gods of Medieval Japan Volume 2 University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 5772 1 Faure Bernard 2006 The Elephant in the Room The Cult of Secrecy in Japanese Tantrism In Scheid Bernhard Teeuwen Mark eds The Culture of Secrecy in Japanese Religion Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 54689 8 Frederic Louis 2002 originally published in 1996 Kangi ten Japan Encyclopedia Translated by Rothe Kathe Harvard University Press Hanan Patrick ed 2003 Treasures of the Yenching the Seventy fifth Anniversary Exhibit Catalogue of the Harvard Yenching Library Harvard Yenching Library Harvard University ISBN 978 9 6299 6102 2 Haneda Shukai 2017 Anata no negai o kanaeru saikyō no shugoshin Shōden sama あなたの願いを叶える 最強の守護神 聖天さま in Japanese Daihōrinkaku ISBN 978 4 8046 1394 9 Kanemoto Takushi 2002 真言宗における荒神の問題 Shingon shu ni okeru kōjin no mondai PDF 現代密教 Gendai Mikkyō in Japanese Chisan Denbō in 15 81 92 Kitao Ryushin 2017 10 17 諸仏の種字 真言 天部 Shobutsu no shuji shingon 5 Tenbu PDF 大法輪 2017年11月号 Daihōrin November 2017 in Japanese Daihōrinkaku 106 107 Krishan Yuvraj 1999 Gaṇesa Unravelling An Enigma Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publishers ISBN 81 208 1413 4 Miya Tsugio 1976 歓喜天霊験記私考 Kangiten Reigenki shikō PDF The Journal of Art Studies in Japanese National Research Institute for Cultural Properties Tokyo 305 1 19 Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research ed 2005 The Vairocanabhisaṃbodhi Sutra PDF Translated by Giebel Rolf W Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research Rosseels Lode 2015 2016 Gaṇesa s Underbelly From Hindu Goblin God to Japanese Tantric Twosome Master s thesis Ghent University Sanford James H 1991 Literary Aspects of Japan s Ganesha Cult In Brown Robert ed Ganesh Studies of an Asian God Albany State University of New York ISBN 0 7914 0657 1 Thapan Anita Raina 1997 Understanding Gaṇapati Insights into the Dynamics of a Cult New Delhi Manohar Publishers ISBN 81 7304 195 4 Yamamoto Hiroko 2018 変成譜 中世神仏習合の世界 Henjōfu Chusei shinbutsu shugō no sekai Kodansha ISBN 978 4 0651 2461 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kangiten Ikoma Shōten Hōzan ji Official Website in Japanese Matsuchiyama Shōden Matsuchiyama Honryu in Official Website in Japanese Menuma Shōden Shōden zan Kangi in Official Website Nishijin Shōten Hokkō zan Uhō in Official Website in Japanese Nishinomiya Shōten ji Official Website in Japanese Yushima Shōden Ryusei dō Shinjō in in Japanese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kangiten amp oldid 1142051164, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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