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Mahāsāṃghika

The Mahāsāṃghika (Brahmi: 𑀫𑀳𑀸𑀲𑀸𑀁𑀖𑀺𑀓, "of the Great Sangha", Chinese: 大眾部; pinyin: Dà zhòng bù) was a major division (nikāya) of the early Buddhist schools in India. They were one of the two original communities that emerged from the first schism of the original pre-sectarian Buddhist tradition (the other being the Sthavira nikaya). This schism is traditionally held to have occurred after the Second Buddhist council, which occurred at some point during or after the reign of Kalashoka. The Mahāsāṃghika nikāya developed into numerous sects which spread throughout ancient India.

Some scholars think that the Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya (monastic rule) represents the oldest Buddhist monastic source. While the Mahāsāṃghika tradition is no longer in existence, many scholars look to the Mahāsāṃghika tradition as an early source for some ideas that were later adopted by Mahāyāna Buddhism. Some of these ideas include the view that the Buddha was a fully transcendent being (term "lokottaravada", "transcendentalism"), the idea that there are many contemporaneous Buddhas and bodhisattvas throughout the universe, the doctrine of the inherent purity and luminosity of the mind (Skt: prakṛtiś cittasya prabhāsvarā), the doctrine of reflexive awareness (svasamvedana) and the doctrine of prajñapti-matra (absolute nominalism or pure conceptualism).

History edit

 
Drawing on the entrance to the Great Chaitya Cave at Karli
 
Karli Chaitya section in perspective

Most sources place the origin of the Mahāsāṃghikas to the Second Buddhist council. Traditions regarding the Second Council are confusing and ambiguous, but it is agreed that the overall result was the first schism in the Sangha between the Sthavira nikāya and the Mahāsāṃghika nikāya, although it is not agreed upon by all what the cause of this split was.[1]

According to Jan Nattier and Charles S. Prebish, the best date for the first schism and the creation of the Mahāsāṃghika as a separate community is 116 years after the Buddha's nirvana.[2]

Some Buddhist historical sources mention that the cause for schism was a dispute over vinaya (monastic rule), mainly the desire of certain Sthaviras (elders) to add extra rules to make the vinaya more rigorous.[2] Other sources, especially Sthavira sources like those of the Sarvastivada school, argue that the main cause was a doctrinal issue. They blame a figure named Mahadeva with arguing for five divisive points, four of which see arhatship as a lesser kind of spiritual attainment (which still has ignorance and desire).[2]

Andrew Skilton has suggested that the problems of contradictory accounts about the first schism are solved by the Mahāsāṃghika Śāriputraparipṛcchā, which is the earliest surviving account of the schism.[3] In this account, the council was convened at Pāṭaliputra over matters of vinaya, and it is explained that the schism resulted from the majority (Mahāsaṃgha) refusing to accept the addition of rules to the Vinaya by a smaller group of elders (Sthaviras).[3] The Mahāsāṃghikas therefore saw the Sthaviras as being a breakaway group which was attempting to modify the original Vinaya and to make it more strict.[4]

Scholars have generally agreed that the matter of dispute was indeed a matter of vinaya, and have noted that the account of the Mahāsāṃghikas is bolstered by the vinaya texts themselves, as vinayas associated with the Sthaviras do contain more rules than those of the Mahāsāṃghika vinaya.[3]

Modern scholarship therefore generally agrees that the Mahāsāṃghika vinaya is the oldest.[3] According to Skilton, future historians may determine that a study of the Mahāsāṃghika school will contribute to a better understanding of the early Dhamma-Vinaya than the Theravāda school.[4]

Regarding the issue with Mahadeva's doctrine, this seems to have been a later doctrinal dispute within the Mahāsāṃghika community (which happened after the schism). The followers of Mahadeva seem to have been the precursors of the southern Mahāsāṃghika sects, like the Caitikas.[2]

Geography edit

The original center of the Mahāsāṃghika sects was Magadha, but they also maintained important centers such as in Mathura and Karli.[5] The Kukkuṭikas were situated in eastern India around Vārāṇasī and Pāṭaliputra and the Bahuśrutīya in Kośala, Andhra, and Gandhara.

The Lokottaravāda subschool itself claimed to be of the 'Middle Country', i.e. Ganges Basin region in the north of India. The Mahāsāṃghikas and the Lokottaravāda subschool also had centres in the Gandhara region. The Ekavyāvahārika are not known from later times.[6]

The Caitika branch was based in the Coastal Andhra region and especially at Amarāvati and Nāgārjunakoṇḍā. This Caitika branch included the Pūrvaśailas, Aparaśailas, Rājagirikas, and the Siddhārthikas.

Finally, Madhyadesa was home to the Prajñaptivādins.[7] The ancient Buddhist sites in the lower Krishna Valley, including Amarāvati, Nāgārjunakoṇḍā and Jaggayyapeṭa, "can be traced to at least the third century BCE, if not earlier."[8]

The cave temples at the Ajaṇṭā Caves, the Ellora Caves, and the Karla Caves are associated with the Mahāsāṃghikas.[9]

Appearance and language edit

Appearance edit

 
A Chinese Buddhist monk in a yellow robe. Chinese Buddhist monks often use the same color robes that some Mahāsāṃghika sects used in India.

Between 148 and 170 CE, the Parthian monk An Shigao came to China and translated a work which describes the color of monastic robes (Skt. kāṣāya) utilized in five major Indian Buddhist sects, called Da Biqiu Sanqian Weiyi (Ch. 大比丘三千威儀).[10] Another text translated at a later date, the Śāriputraparipṛcchā, contains a very similar passage corroborating this information.[10] In both sources, the Mahāsāṃghikas are described as wearing yellow robes.[10] The relevant portion of the Śāriputraparipṛcchā reads:[11]

The Mahāsāṃghika school diligently study the collected sūtras and teach the true meaning, because they are the source and the center. They wear yellow robes.

The lower part of the yellow robe was pulled tightly to the left.[12]

According to Dudjom Rinpoche from the tradition of Tibetan Buddhism, the robes of fully ordained Mahāsāṃghika monastics were to be sewn out of more than seven sections, but no more than twenty-three sections.[13] The symbols sewn on the robes were the endless knot (Skt. śrīvatsa) and the conch shell (Skt. śaṅkha), two of the Eight Auspicious Signs in Buddhism.[13]

Language edit

The Tibetan historian Buton Rinchen Drub (1290–1364) wrote that the Mahāsāṃghikas used Prākrit, the Sarvāstivādins Sanskrit, the Sthaviravādins used Paiśācī and the Saṃmitīya used Apabhraṃśa.[14]

Doctrines and teachings edit

 
Depiction of the Buddha's descent from Trāyastriṃśa heaven, second half 3rd century[15]
 
The Buddha flanked by bodhisattvas. Cave 4, Ajaṇṭā Caves, Mahārāṣtra, India.

List of doctrinal tenets edit

An important source for the doctrines of the Mahāsāṃghika is the Samayabhedoparacanacakra (The Cycle of the Formation of the Schismatic Doctrines, Ch: 異部宗輪論) of Vasumitra (a Sarvāstivāda scholar, c. 2nd century CE), which was translated by Xuanzang.[16][17]

According to this source, some of the key doctrines defended by Indian Mahāsāṃghikas include:[18][19]

  1. The Buddhas are supramundane (lokottara), devoid of asravas and the mundane natures.
  2. All words spoken by Tathagatas turn the wheel of Dharma and none of their words are false.
  3. Buddhas teach all dharmas with a single sound.
  4. The material body (rupakaya), supernatural power (prabhava) and lifespan (ayus) of a Buddha is unlimited (ananta).
  5. The Buddha’s heart never tires of converting living beings by awakening faith (sraddha) in them.
  6. The Buddha does not sleep or dream.
  7. The Tathagata answers questions without thinking (or reflecting on things).
  8. Buddhas never say a single word because they are always in samadhi, but beings rejoice, thinking that they utter words.
  9. In a single moment of thought (ekaksanikacitta), Buddhas comprehend all dharmas.
  10. The Buddhas remain in all directions. There are Buddhas everywhere in the four directions.
  11. When the Bodhisattvas enter into a womb (garbha), they possess nothing impure and are entirely provided with organs and members, rather than developing gradually. When they enter a womb, Bodhisattvas also take on the appearance of a white elephant.
  12. Bodhisattvas, because they want to help beings become perfect, make vows to be reborn in bad destinations (durgati).
  13. The different aspects of the four noble truths are known in a single moment (ekaksanika).
  14. The five sensory (indriya) faculties consist of balls of flesh, therefore only consciousness (vijñana) sees forms, hears sounds, etc.
  15. There are no indeterminate (avyakrta) things (dharma), that is, there are no dharmas that are neither good nor bad.
  16. When one enters certainty [to become a Buddha] (samyaktvaniyama) one has abandoned all the fetters (samyojana).
  17. "Stream enterers" (srotapanna) can commit all misdeeds, except for the irremediable crimes (anantarya).
  18. All sutras uttered by Buddha are nītārtha ("of plain or clear meaning").
  19. Since they do not know everything (sabba), there are Arhats who lack knowledge (ajñana), who have doubts (kariksa), who are saved by others.
  20. The self-presence of mind is bright. It is soiled (i.e. darkened) by adventitious secondary defilement.
  21. The tendencies (anusaya) are neither consciousnesses (citta) nor mental factors (caitta), and are devoid of object (analambana).
  22. The past and the future have no substantial existence (dravya).
  23. There is no intermediate state (antarabhava).
  24. Virtue (sila) is not mental (acetasika) and it is not consecutive to thought (cittanuparivatti).
  25. Tendencies (anusaya) are indeterminate (abyakata), not-caused (ahetuka) and disjointed from thought (cittavippayutta).
  26. There is a root-consciousness (mūlavijñāna) which serves as the support (dsraya) for eye-perception and the other sensory perceptions, like the root of the tree is the principle of the leaves, etc.
  27. The current consciousnesses (pavattiviññāna) can be simultaneous (sahabhu) and do not carry karmic seeds (bija).
  28. The path (marga) and the defilements (kleśa) appear together.
  29. The act (karman) and its maturation (vipaka) evolve at the same time.
  30. Material things last a long time and so go through transformation (as milk turns into curds), but mental factors and consciousnesses do not because they have a swift production and cessation.
  31. Thought (citta) penetrates the whole body (kaya) and, depending on the object (visaya) and the support (asraya), it can contract or expand.

Buddhas and bodhisattvas edit

 
Depiction of the bodhisattva Padmapani, Ajaṇṭā Caves, cave number 1.

The Mahāsāṃghikas advocated the transcendental and supramundane nature of the buddhas and bodhisattvas, and the fallibility of arhats.[20] Xing also notes that the Acchariyābbhūtasutta of the Majjhimanikāya along with its Chinese Madhyamāgama parallel version is the most prominent evidence for the ancient source of the Mahāsāṃghika view of the Buddha. The sutra mentions various miracles performed by the Buddha before his birth and after. While the Pāli sutta uses the term bodhisattva for the Buddha before his birth, the Chinese version calls him Bhagavan. This points to the idea that the Buddha was already awakened before descending down to earth.[21]

Similarly, the idea that the lifespan of a Buddha is limitless is also based on very ancient ideas. The Mahāparinirvānasūtra states that the Buddha's lifespan is as long as an eon (kalpa) and that he voluntarily chose to give up his life.[21] Another early source for the Mahāsāṃghika view that a Buddha was a transcendent being is the idea of the thirty-two major marks of a Buddha's body.[21] Furthermore, the Simpsapa sutta states that the Buddha had way more knowledge than what he taught to his disciples. The Mahāsāṃghikas took this further and argued that the Buddha knew the dharmas of innumerable other Buddhas of the ten directions.[21]

 
Cave 1, Ajaṇṭā Caves, Mahārāṣtra, India. The Buddha statue is flanked by bodhisattvas Padmapani (left) and Manjushri (right).

Of the 48 special theses attributed by the Samayabhedoparacanacakra to the Mahāsāṃghikas (Ekavyāvahārika, Lokottaravāda, and Kukkuṭika), twenty concern the supramundane nature of buddhas and bodhisattvas.[22] According to the Samayabhedoparacanacakra, these four groups held that the Buddha is able to know all dharmas in a single moment of the mind.[23] Yao Zhihua writes:[23]

In their view, the Buddha is equipped with the following supernatural qualities: transcendence (lokottara), lack of defilements, all of his utterances preaching his teaching, expounding all his teachings in a single utterance, all of his sayings being true, his physical body being limitless, his power (prabhāva) being limitless, the length of his life being limitless, never tiring of enlightening sentient beings and awakening pure faith in them, having no sleep or dreams, no pause in answering a question, and always in meditation (samādhi).

A doctrine ascribed to the Mahāsāṃghikas is, "The power of the tathāgatas is unlimited, and the life of the buddhas is unlimited."[24] According to Guang Xing, two main aspects of the Buddha can be seen in Mahāsāṃghika teachings: the true Buddha who is omniscient and omnipotent, and the manifested forms through which he liberates sentient beings through his skillful means (Skt. upāya).[25] For the Mahāsāṃghikas, the historical Gautama Buddha was merely one of these transformation bodies (Skt. nirmāṇakāya), while the essential real Buddha was equated with the Dharmakāya.[26]

 
Sketch of the interior of Ajanta cave no. 19 by James Fergusson (1808–1886)

The Mahāsāṃghika Lokānuvartanā sūtra makes numerous supramundane claims about the Buddha, including that:

  • He was not produced through union of father and mother, but magically produced.
  • His feet never touch the ground or get dirty, his footprints are only a show.
  • His body and mouth does not get dirty, he only makes a show of cleaning himself.
  • He did not really suffer and struggle to attain enlightenment for six years, this was just a show.
  • He never gets hungry, he only manifests this in order to allow others to gain merit by giving.
  • He does not really produce human waste, this is only a show.
  • His body does not grow tired, ill or old, and is not affected by cold or heat, it only appears to have these qualities.[27]

Like the Mahāyāna traditions, the Mahāsāṃghikas held the doctrine of the existence of many contemporaneous buddhas throughout the ten directions.[28] In the Mahāsāṃghika Lokānuvartana Sūtra, it is stated, "The Buddha knows all the dharmas of the countless buddhas of the ten directions."[28] It is also stated, "All buddhas have one body, the body of the Dharma."[28]

In the view of Mahāsāṃghikas, advanced bodhisattvas have severed the bonds of karma, and are born out of their own free will into lower states of existence (Skt. durgati) in order to help liberate other sentient beings. As described by Akira Hirakawa:[29]

The Sarvāstivādin also taught that the Bodhisattva was subject to the law of karma. If one attained arhathood, he was free of the karmic law; and once the arhat died, he entered nirvāṇa never to return to the world of saṃsāra. But living in the cycle of saṃsāra, the Bodhisattva was bound to the law of karma. In contrast to this school the Mahāsāṃghika held that the Bodhisattva has already sundered karmic bondage and, therefore, is born in durgati out of his own free will, his deep vow (praṇidhāna) of salvation.

The concept of many bodhisattvas simultaneously working toward buddhahood is also found among the Mahāsāṃghika tradition, and further evidence of this is given in the Samayabhedoparacanacakra, which describes the doctrines of the Mahāsāṃghikas.[30] These two concepts of contemporaneous bodhisattvas and contemporaneous buddhas were linked in some traditions, and texts such as the Mahāprajñāpāramitāupadeśa use the principle of contemporaneous bodhisattvas to demonstrate the necessity of contemporaneous buddhas throughout the ten directions.[31] It is thought that the doctrine of contemporaneous buddhas was already old and well established by the time of early Mahāyāna texts such as the Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra, due to the clear presumptions of this doctrine.[30]

Mundane and supramundane edit

The Mahāsāṃghikas held that the teachings of the Buddha were to be understood as having two principal levels of truth: a relative or conventional (Skt. saṃvṛti) truth, and the absolute or ultimate (Skt. paramārtha) truth.[20] For the Mahāsāṃghika branch of Buddhism, the final and ultimate meaning of the Buddha's teachings was "beyond words," and words were merely the conventional exposition of the Dharma.[32] K. Venkata Ramanan writes:[33]

The credit of having kept alive the emphasis on the ultimacy of the unconditioned reality by drawing attention to the non-substantiality of the basic elements of existence (dharma-śūnyatā) belongs to the Mahāsāṃghikas. Every branch of these clearly drew the distinction between the mundane and the ultimate, came to emphasize the non-ultimacy of the mundane and thus facilitated the fixing of attention on the ultimate.

Self-Awareness and the Mind edit

Some Mahāsāṃghikas held a theory of self-awareness or self-cognition (svasaṃvedana) which held that a moment of consciousness (citta) can be aware of itself as well as its intentional object. This doctrine arose out of their understanding of the Buddha's enlightenment which held that in a single moment of mind the Buddha knew all things.[34]

The Mahāvibhāṣa Śāstra explains the doctrine of self-reflexive awareness as follows:

Some allege that the mind (citta) and mental activities (caitta) can apprehend themselves (svabhāva). Schools like Mahāsāṃghika hold the following view: It is the nature of awareness (jñāna) and so forth to apprehend, thus awareness can apprehend itself as well as others. This is like a lamp that can illuminate itself and others owing to its nature (svabhāva) of luminosity.[35]

Some Mahāsāṃghikas also held that the mind's nature (cittasvabhāva) is fundamentally pure (mulavisuddha), but it can be contaminated by adventitious defilements.[36] Vasumitra's Nikayabheda-dharmamati-chakra-sastra also discusses this theory, and cites the sutra passage which the Mahāsāṃghikas drew on to defend it.[37] The passage is quoted by Vasumitra as:

The self-nature of the mind (cittasvabhāva) is luminous (prabhāsvara). It is the adventitious impurities (āgantukopakleśa) that defile it. The self substance of the mind is eternally pure.[38]

The commentary to Vasumitra by Kuiji adds the following: "It is because afflictions (kleśa) are produced which soil it that it is said to be defiled. But these defilements, not being of the original nature of the mind, are called adventitious."[38] The Kathāvatthu (III, 3) also cites this idea as a thesis of the Andhakas.[38]

Unconditioned realities edit

According to Vasumitra, the Mahāsāṃghikas held that there were nine dharmas (phenomena, realities) which were unconditioned or unconstructed (asaṃskṛta):[19]

  1. Cessation obtained through discriminative cognition (pratisaṃkhyānirodha)
  2. Cesation due to absence of a productive cause (apratisaṃkhyānirodha)
  3. Space (ākāśā)
  4. The sphere of unlimited space (ākāśānantyāyatana)
  5. The sphere of unlimited consciousness (vijñānānantyāyatana)
  6. The sphere of emptiness (ākiñcanyāyatana)
  7. The sphere of neither identification nor nonidentification (naivasaṃjñānāsaṃjñāyatana)
  8. The own-nature of the members of dependent origination (pratītyasamutpādāṅgasvabhāva)
  9. The own-nature of the members of the holy path (ārya-mārgāṅgasvabhāva)

Texts edit

 
The Great Chaitya Hall at the Karla Caves in Maharashtra

According to Bart Dessein, the Mohe sengzhi lu (Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya) provides some insight into the format of this school's textual canon. They appear to have had a Vinaya in five parts, an Abhidharmapiṭaka, and a Sutrapiṭaka:

Of these texts, their Vinaya was translated into Chinese by Buddhabhadra and Faxian between 416 and 418 CE in the Daochang Monastery in Nanjing, capital of the Eastern Jin Dynasty. In this text, their Abhidharma is defined as "the sūtrānta in nine parts" (navāṅga). This suggests that the early Mahāsāṃghikas rejected the abhidharmic developments that occurred within Sarvāstivāda circles. As is the case with their Vinayapiṭaka, also their Sutrapiṭaka seems to have consisted of five parts (āgama): *Dīrghāgama,*Madhyamāgama,*Saṃyuktāgama, *Ekottarāgama and *Kṣudrakāgama.

Dessein also mentions that the school probably also had a Bodhisattvapiṭaka, which included material that "in all likelihood consisted of texts that formed part of the early development of the bodhisattva path as an alternative career to that of the arhant, perhaps serving as a foundation for the later developments of the bodhisattva doctrine".[39]

Vinaya texts edit

According to Zhihua Yao, the following Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya texts are extant in Chinese: Mahāsāṃghika bhiksuni-vinaya, Pratimoksa-sutra, Sphutartha Srighanacarasamgrahatika, Abhisamacarika-Dharma and the Mahavastu.[40]

Zhan Ru also notes that the Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya (Chinse: Mohe Sengqi Lü) translated by Faxian (337–422 CE) contains proto-Mahayana elements and "reflects the nascent formation of the Mahāyāna Dharma teachings."[41]

The Mahāvastu (Sanskrit for "Great Event" or "Great Story") is the most well known of the Lokottaravāda branch of the Mahāsāṃghika school. It is a preface to their Vinaya Pitaka and contains numerous Jātaka and Avadāna tales, stories of past lives of the Buddha and other bodhisattvas.[42] It is considered a primary source for the notion of a transcendent (''lokottara'') Buddha, who across his countless past lives developed various abilities such as omniscience (sarvajñana), the lack of any need for sleep or food and being born painlessly without the need for intercourse.[43] The text shows strong parallels with the Pali Mahakhandhaka.

The Śariputraparipṛcchā (Shelifu Wen Jing, 舍利弗問經, Taisho 1465, p. 900b), translated into Chinese between 317 and 420, is a Mahasamghika Vinaya work which also provides a history of early Buddhism and its schisms.[44]

Sutras edit

Some scholars such as Yao and Tse Fu Kuan consider the Ekottara Āgama (Taishō Tripiṭaka 125) to belong to the Mahāsāṃghika school, though this is still up for debate.[40][45]

The Lokānuvartanā sūtra (Chinese: 佛説内藏百寶經, pinyin: fóshuō nèi zàng bǎi bǎo jīng, Taishō Tripiṭaka , Volume 17, text No. 807) is a text preserved in some Sanskrit fragments as well as in Tibetan and Chinese translation.[27]

Abhidharma treatises and commentaries edit

According to some sources, abhidharma was not accepted as canonical by the Mahāsāṃghika school.[46] The Theravādin Dīpavaṃsa, for example, records that the Mahāsāṃghikas had no abhidharma.[47]

However, other sources indicate that there were such collections of abhidharma. During the early 5th century, the Chinese pilgrim Faxian is said to have found a Mahāsāṃghika abhidharma at a monastery in Pāṭaliputra.[47] Furthermore, when Xuanzang visited Dhānyakaṭaka, he met two Mahāsāṃghika bhikṣus and studied Mahāsāṃghika abhidharma with them for several months.[47][48] On the basis of textual evidence as well as inscriptions at Nāgārjunakoṇḍā, Joseph Walser concludes that at least some Mahāsāṃghika sects probably had an abhidharma collection, and that it likely contained five or six books.[49]

The Tattvasiddhi-Śāstra ("the treatise that accomplishes reality"; C: 成實論, Chengshilun), is an Abhidharma work by a figure known as Harivarman (250–350). Some scholars including A.K. Warder, attribute the work to the Mahāsāṃghika-Bahusrutiyas, however others disagree and see it as a Sautrantika work.[50][51] Chinese sources mention that he was initially a Sautrantika teacher who later lived with the Mahāsāṃghikas.[51]

The Chinese canon also includes a sutra commentary called the Fen-bie-gong-de-lun. (分別功徳論) in the 25th volume of the Taisho Tripitaka Series (No. 1507, pp. 30–52).[40]

Manuscript Collections edit

The Chinese Buddhist monk Xuanzang visited a Mahāsāṃghika-Lokottaravāda monastery in the 7th century at Bamyan, Afghanistan, and this monastery site has since been rediscovered by archaeologists.[52] Birch bark manuscripts and palm-leaf manuscripts of texts in this monastery's collection, including Mahayana sutras, have been discovered at the site, and these are now located in the Schøyen Collection. Some manuscripts are in the Gāndhārī language and Kharoṣṭhī script, while others are in Sanskrit and written in forms of the Gupta script.

Manuscripts and fragments that have survived from this monastery's collection include the following source texts:[52]

Bodhisattva collection edit

Within the Mahāsāṃghika branch, the Bahuśrutīyas are said to have included a Bodhisattva Piṭaka in their canon, and Paramārtha wrote that the Bahuśrutīyas accepted both the Hīnayāna and Mahāyāna teachings.[20] In the 6th century CE, Bhāvaviveka speaks of the Siddhārthikas using a Vidyādhāra Piṭaka, and the Pūrvaśailas and Aparaśailas both using a Bodhisattva Piṭaka, all implying collections of Mahāyāna texts within the Mahāsāṃghika schools.[53] During the same period, Avalokitavrata speaks of the Mahāsāṃghikas using a "Great Āgama Piṭaka," which is then associated with Mahāyāna sūtras such as the Prajñāparamitā and the Daśabhūmika Sūtra.[53]

Relationship to Mahāyāna edit

 
Sculpture of the Buddha from Mathura. 5th or 6th century CE.

Acceptance of Mahāyāna edit

In the 6th century CE, Paramārtha, a Buddhist monk from Ujjain in central India, wrote about a special affiliation of the Mahāsāṃghika school with the Mahāyāna tradition. He associates the initial composition and acceptance of Mahāyāna sūtras with the Mahāsāṃghika branch of Buddhism.[54] He states that 200 years after the parinirvāṇa of the Buddha, much of the Mahāsāṃghika school moved north of Rājagṛha, and were divided over whether the Mahāyāna teachings should be incorporated formally into their Tripiṭaka. According to this account, they split into three groups based upon the relative manner and degree to which they accepted the authority of these Mahāyāna texts.[55]

Paramārtha states that the Kukkuṭika sect did not accept the Mahāyāna sūtras as buddhavacana ("word of the Buddha"), while the Lokottaravāda sect and the Ekavyāvahārika sect did accept the Mahāyāna sūtras as buddhavacana.[56] Paramartha's report states:

In this school, there were some who believed these sutras and some who did not. Those who did not believe them ... said that such sutras are made by man and are not proclaimed by the Buddha, ... that the disciples of the Lesser Vehicle only believe in the Tripitaka, because they did not personally hear the Buddha proclaim the Greater Vehicle. Among those who believed these sutras, there were some who did so because they had personally heard the Buddha proclaim the Greater Vehicle and therefore believed these sutras; others believed them, because it can be known through logical analysis that there is this principle [of the Greater Vehicle]; and some believed them because they believed their masters. Those who did not believe [them] did so because these sutras were self-made and because they were not included in the five Agamas.[57]

Paramārtha also wrote about the origins of the Bahuśrutīya sect in connection with acceptance of Mahāyāna teachings. According to his account, the founder of the Bahuśrutīya sect was named Yājñavalkya.[58] In Paramārtha's account, Yājñavalkya is said to have lived during the time of the Buddha, and to have heard his discourses, but was in a profound state of samādhi during the time of the Buddha's parinirvāṇa.[58] After Yājñavalkya emerged from this samādhi 200 years later, he discovered that the Mahāsāṃghikas were teaching only the superficial meaning of the sūtras, and therefore founded the Bahuśrutīya sect in order to expound the full meaning.[58]

According to Paramārtha, the Bahuśrutīya school was formed in order to fully embrace both "conventional truth" and "ultimate truth."[59] Bart Dessein links the Bahuśrutīya understanding of this full exposition to the Mahāyāna teachings.[60] In his writings, Paramārtha also indicated as much:[61]

In the Mahāsāṃghika school this Arhat recited completely the superficial sense and the profound sense. In the latter, there was the sense of the Mahāyāna. Some did not believe it. Those who believed it recited and retained it. There were in the Mahāsāṃghika school those who propagated these teachings, and others who did not propagate them. The former formed a separate school called "Those who have heard much" (Bahuśrutīya). [...] It is from this school that there has come the Satyasiddhiśāstra. That is why there is a mixture of ideas from the Mahāyāna found there.

Royal patronage edit

Some early Mahāyāna sūtras reference wealthy female donors and provide evidence that they were developed in the Āndhra region, where the Mahāsāṃghika Caitika groups were predominant. The Mahāyāna Mahāmegha Sūtra, for example, gives a prophecy about a royal princess of the Śatavāhana dynasty who will live in Āndhra, along the Kṛṣṇa River, in Dhānyakaṭaka, seven hundred years after the parinirvāṇa of the Buddha.[62]

Several scholars such as Étienne Lamotte, and Alex and Hideko Wayman, associate the Āndra Ikṣvāku dynasty with patronage of Mahāyāna sūtras.[62] Epigraphic evidence at Nāgārjunikoṇḍa also provides abundant evidence of royal and wealthy female donors.[62]

Prajñāpāramitā edit

A number of scholars have proposed that the Mahāyāna Prajñāpāramitā teachings were first developed by the Caitika subsect of the Mahāsāṃghikas. They believe that the Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra originated amongst the southern Mahāsāṃghika schools of the Āndhra region, along the Kṛṣṇa River.[30] Guang Xing states, "several scholars have suggested that the Prajñāpāramitā probably developed among the Mahāsāṃghikas in southern India, in the Āndhra country, on the Kṛṣṇa River."[31] These Mahāsāṃghikas had two famous monasteries near Amarāvati and the Dhānyakaṭaka, which gave their names to the schools of the Pūrvaśailas and the Aparaśailas.[30] Each of these schools had a copy of the Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra in Prakrit.[30] Guang Xing also assesses the view of the Buddha given in the Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra as being that of the Mahāsāṃghikas.[30] Edward Conze estimates that this sūtra originated around 100 BCE.[30]

Buddha-nature doctrine edit

 
Cave complex associated with the Mahāsāṃghika sect. Karla Caves, Mahārāṣtra, India.

Brian Edward Brown, a specialist in Tathāgatagarbha doctrines, writes that it has been determined that the composition of the Śrīmālādevī Siṃhanāda Sūtra occurred during the Īkṣvāku Dynasty in the 3rd century as a product of the Mahāsāṃghikas of the Āndhra region (i.e. the Caitika schools).[63] Wayman has outlined eleven points of complete agreement between the Mahāsāṃghikas and the Śrīmālā, along with four major arguments for this association.[57] Anthony Barber also associates the earlier development of the Tathāgatagarbha Sūtra with the Mahāsāṃghikas, and concludes that the Mahāsāṃghikas of the Āndhra region were responsible for the inception of the Tathāgatagarbha doctrine.[64]

According to Stephen Hodge, internal textual evidence in the Aṅgulimālīya Sūtra, Mahābherihāraka Parivarta Sūtra, and the Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra, indicates that these texts were first circulated in South India and then gradually propagated up to the northwest, with Kashmir being the other major center. The Aṅgulimālīya Sūtra gives a more detailed account by mentioning the points of distribution as including South India, the Vindhya Range, Bharuch, and Kashmir.[65]

The language used in the Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra and related texts, seems to indicate a region in southern India during the time of the Śātavāhana Dynasty. The Śātavāhana rulers gave rich patronage to Buddhism, and were involved with the development of the cave temples at Karla and Ajaṇṭā, and also with the Great Stūpa at Amarāvati. During this time, the Śātavāhana Dynasty also maintained extensive links with the Kuṣāṇa Empire.[65]

Using textual evidence in the Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra and related texts, Stephen Hodge estimates a compilation period between 100 CE and 220 CE for the Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra. Hodge summarizes his findings as follows:[65]

[T]here are strong grounds based on textual evidence that the MPNS (Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra), or a major portion of it, together with related texts were compiled in the Deccan during the second half of the 2nd century CE, in a Mahāsāṃghika environment, probably in one of their centres along the western coastal region such as Karli, or perhaps, though less likely, the Amaravatī-Dhanyakaṭaka region.

In the 6th century CE, Paramārtha wrote that the Mahāsāṃghikas revere the sūtras which teach the Tathāgatagarbha.[65]

Views of scholars edit

Since at least the Meiji period in Japan, some scholars of Buddhism have looked to the Mahāsāṃghika as the originators of Mahāyāna Buddhism.[66] According to Akira Hirakawa, modern scholars often look to the Mahāsāṃghikas as the originators of Mahāyāna Buddhism.[67]

According to A.K. Warder, it is "clearly" the case that the Mahāyāna teachings originally came from the Mahāsāṃghika branch of Buddhism.[68] Warder holds that "the Mahāyāna originated in the south of India and almost certainly in the Āndhra country."[69] Anthony Barber and Sree Padma note that "historians of Buddhist thought have been aware for quite some time that such pivotally important Mahayana Buddhist thinkers as Nāgārjuna, Dignaga, Candrakīrti, Āryadeva, and Bhavaviveka, among many others, formulated their theories while living in Buddhist communities in Āndhra."[70]

André Bareau has stated that there can be found Mahāyāna ontology prefigured in the Mahāsāṃghika schools, and has offered an array of evidence to support this conclusion.[71] Bareau traces the origin of the Mahāyāna tradition to the older Mahāsāṃghika schools in regions such as Odisha, Kosala, Koñkana, and so on. He then cites the Bahuśrutīyas and Prajñaptivādins as sub-sects of the Mahāsāṃghika that may have played an important role in bridging the flow of Mahāyāna teachings between the northern and southern Mahāsāṃghika traditions.[71]

André Bareau also mentions that according to Xuanzang and Yijing in the 7th century CE, the Mahāsāṃghika schools had essentially disappeared, and instead these travelers found what they described as "Mahāyāna." The region occupied by the Mahāsāṃghika was then an important center for Mahāyāna Buddhism.[71] Bareau has proposed that Mahāyāna grew out of the Mahāsāṃghika schools, and the members of the Mahāsāṃghika schools also accepted the teachings of the Mahāyāna.[71] Additionally, the extant Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya was originally procured by Faxian in the early 5th century CE at what he describes as a "Mahāyāna" monastery in Pāṭaliputra.[72]

Vinaya Recension edit

 
Cave temple associated with the Mahāsāṃghikas. Ellora Caves.

Early features edit

The Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya recension is essentially very similar to the other recensions, as they all are to each other. The Mahāsāṃghika recension differs most from the other recensions in structure, but the rules are generally identical in meaning, if the Vibhangas (explanations) are compared. The features of the Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya recension which suggest that it might be an older redaction are, in brief, these:

The Bhiksu-prakirnaka and Bhiksuni-prakirnaka and the Bhiksu-abhisamacarika-dharma sections of the Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya are generally equivalent to the Khandhakas/ Skandhakas of the Sthavira derived schools. However, their structure is simpler, and according to recent research by Clarke, the structure follows a matika (Matrix) which is also found embedded in the Vinayas of several of the Sthavira schools, suggesting that it is presectarian. The sub-sections of the Prakirnaka sections are also titled pratisamyukta rather than Skandhaka / Khandhaka. Pratisamyukta / Patisamyutta means a section or chapter in a collection organised by subject; the 'samyukta-principle', like the Samyutta-Nikaya / Samyukta-agama. Scholars such as Master Yin Shun, Choong Moon Keat, and Bhikkhu Sujato have argued that the Samyutta / Samyukta represents the earliest collection among the Nikayas / Agamas, and this may well imply that it is also the oldest organising principle too. (N.B. this does not necessarily say anything about the age of the contents).

There are also fewer stories in general in the Vinaya of the subsidiary school, the Mahāsāṃghika-Lokottaravāda, and many of them give the appearance of badly connected obvious interpolations, whereas in the structure of the Sthavira recensions the stories are integrated into the whole scheme. In the formulations of some of the pratimoksha rules also, the phrasing (though generally identical in meaning to the other recensions) often appears to represent a clearer but less streamlined version, which suggests it might be older. This is particularly noticeable in the Bhiksuni-Vinaya, which has not been as well preserved as the Bhiksu-Vinaya in general in all the recensions. Yet the formulation of certain rules which seem very confused in the other recensions (e.g. Bhikkhuni Sanghadisesa three = six in the Ma-L) seems to better represent what would be expected of a root formulation which could lead to the variety of confused formulations we see (presumably later) in the other recensions. The formulation of this rule (as an example) also reflects a semi-parallel formulation to a closely related rule for Bhiksus which is found in a more similar form in all the Vinayas (Pc64 in Pali).

Depiction of Devadatta edit

According to Reginald Ray, the Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya mentions the figure of Devadatta, but in a way that is different from the vinayas of the Sthavira branch. According to this study, the earliest vinaya material common to all sects simply depicts Devadatta as a Buddhist saint who wishes for the monks to live a rigorous lifestyle.[73] This has led Ray to regard the story of Devadatta as a legend produced by the Sthavira group.[74] However, upon examining the same vinaya materials, Bhikkhu Sujato has written that the portrayals of Devadatta are largely consistent between the Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya and the other vinayas, and that the supposed discrepancy is simply due to the minimalist literary style of the Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya. He also points to other parts of the Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya that clearly portray Devadatta as a villain, as well as similar portrayals that exist in the Lokottaravādin Mahāvastu.[75]

Chinese translation edit

The Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya is extant in the Chinese Buddhist Canon as Mohesengzhi Lü (摩訶僧祗律; Taishō Tripiṭaka 1425). The vinaya was originally procured by Faxian in the early 5th century CE at a Mahāyāna monastery in Pāṭaliputra.[72] This vinaya was then translated into Chinese as a joint effort between Faxian and Buddhabhadra in 416 CE, and the completed translation is 40 fascicles in length.[76] According to Faxian, in Northern India, the vinaya teachings were typically only passed down by tradition through word of mouth and memorization. For this reason, it was difficult for him to procure manuscripts of the vinayas that were used in India. The Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya was reputed to be the original vinaya from the lifetime of the Buddha, and "the most correct and complete."[77]

Legacy edit

Although Faxian procured the Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya in India and had this translated into Chinese, the tradition of Chinese Buddhism eventually settled on the Dharmaguptaka Vinaya instead. At the time of Faxian, the Sarvāstivāda Vinaya was the most common vinaya tradition in China.

In the 7th century, Yijing wrote that in eastern China, most people followed the Dharmaguptaka Vinaya, while the Mahāsāṃghika Vinaya was used in earlier times in Guanzhong (the region around Chang'an), and that the Sarvāstivāda Vinaya was prominent in the Yangzi region and further south.[78] In the 7th century, the existence of multiple Vinaya lineages throughout China was criticized by prominent Vinaya masters such as Yijing and Dao'an (654–717). In the early 8th century, Dao'an gained the support of Emperor Zhongzong of Tang, and an imperial edict was issued that the saṃgha in China should use only the Dharmaguptaka Vinaya for ordination.[79]

Atiśa was ordained in the Mahāsāṃghika lineage. However, because the Tibetan Emperor Ralpacan had decreed that only the Mūlasarvāstivāda order would be permitted in Tibet, he did not ordain anyone.

See also edit

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Bibliography edit

  • "Arya-Mahasamghika-Lokuttaravadin Bhiksuni-Vinaya"; edited by Gustav Roth, 1970.
  • Mahasamghika and Mahasamghika-Lokuttaravadin Vinayas in Chinese translation; CBETA Taisho digital edition.[full citation needed]
  • "The Earliest Vinaya and the Beginnings of Buddhist Literature"; Frauwallner, Serie Orientale Roma, 8. Rome: Istituto Italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente.
  • "Vinaya-Matrka — Mother of the Monastic Codes, or Just Another Set of Lists? A Response to Frauwallner's Handling of the Mahasamghika Vinaya"; Shayne Clarke. Indo-Iranian Journal 47: 77-120, 2004.
  • "A Survey of Vinaya Literature"; Charles Prebish. Originally, Volume I of The Dharma Lamp Series. Taipei, Taiwan: Jin Luen Publishing House, 1994, 157 pages. Now published by Curzon Press.
  • "The Fundamental Teachings of Early Buddhism: a comparative study based on the Sūtrāṅga portion of the Pali Saṃyutta-Nikāya and the Chinese Saṃyuktāgama", Choong Mun-Keat, Wiesbaden : Harrassowitz, 2000. (Contains an account of Master Yin-Shun's theory that the Samyukt'Agama is the oldest collection, by a student of Prof. Rod Bucknell.)
  • "History of Mindfulness"; Bhikkhu Sujato, Taipei, Taiwan: the Corporate Body of the Buddha Educational Foundation, 2006. (Gives further evidence for the Anga-theory of Master Yin-Shun and the theory that the Samyukta-/ Samyutta- is the oldest organising principle.)
  • "Buddhist Monastic Discipline: The Sanskrit Pratimoksa Sutras of the Mahasamghikas and Mulasarvastivadins"; Charles Prebish. Volume I of the Institute for Advanced Studies of World Religions Series. University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1975, 156 pages. First Indian Edition, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1996. (This is only a translation of a small part of the Vinayas, on its own it is nearly useless.)
  • Charles Prebish and Janice J. Nattier, "Mahasamghika Origins: The Beginnings of Buddhist Sectarianism"; History of Religions, 16, 3 (February, 1977), 237–272.
  • "The Pratimoksa Puzzle: Fact Versus Fantasy"; Charles Prebish. Journal of the American Oriental Society, 94, 2 (April–June, 1974), 168–176.
  • "A Review of Scholarship on the Buddhist Councils"; Charles Prebish. Journal of Asian Studies, XXXIII, 2 (February, 1974), 239–254.
  • "Theories Concerning the Skandhaka: An Appraisal"; Charles Prebish Journal of Asian Studies, XXXII, 4 (August, 1973), 669–678.
  • "Saiksa-dharmas Revisited: Further Considerations of Mahasamghika Origins"; Charles Prebish. History of Religions, 35, 3 (February, 1996), 258–270.

External links edit

  • J. J. Jones (1949). The Mahavastu (English translation), including footnotes and glossary
  • Abhisamacarikadharma of the Mahasamghika-Lokottaravadins (input by Abhisamacarika-Dharma Study Group, Taisho University); GRETIL Archive

mahāsāṃghika, brahmi, 𑀫𑀳, 𑀲, 𑀖, 𑀓, great, sangha, chinese, 大眾部, pinyin, zhòng, major, division, nikāya, early, buddhist, schools, india, they, were, original, communities, that, emerged, from, first, schism, original, sectarian, buddhist, tradition, other, bei. The Mahasaṃghika Brahmi 𑀫𑀳 𑀲 𑀖 𑀓 of the Great Sangha Chinese 大眾部 pinyin Da zhong bu was a major division nikaya of the early Buddhist schools in India They were one of the two original communities that emerged from the first schism of the original pre sectarian Buddhist tradition the other being the Sthavira nikaya This schism is traditionally held to have occurred after the Second Buddhist council which occurred at some point during or after the reign of Kalashoka The Mahasaṃghika nikaya developed into numerous sects which spread throughout ancient India Some scholars think that the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya monastic rule represents the oldest Buddhist monastic source While the Mahasaṃghika tradition is no longer in existence many scholars look to the Mahasaṃghika tradition as an early source for some ideas that were later adopted by Mahayana Buddhism Some of these ideas include the view that the Buddha was a fully transcendent being term lokottaravada transcendentalism the idea that there are many contemporaneous Buddhas and bodhisattvas throughout the universe the doctrine of the inherent purity and luminosity of the mind Skt prakṛtis cittasya prabhasvara the doctrine of reflexive awareness svasamvedana and the doctrine of prajnapti matra absolute nominalism or pure conceptualism Contents 1 History 1 1 Geography 2 Appearance and language 2 1 Appearance 2 2 Language 3 Doctrines and teachings 3 1 List of doctrinal tenets 3 2 Buddhas and bodhisattvas 3 3 Mundane and supramundane 3 4 Self Awareness and the Mind 3 5 Unconditioned realities 4 Texts 4 1 Vinaya texts 4 2 Sutras 4 3 Abhidharma treatises and commentaries 4 4 Manuscript Collections 4 5 Bodhisattva collection 5 Relationship to Mahayana 5 1 Acceptance of Mahayana 5 2 Royal patronage 5 3 Prajnaparamita 5 4 Buddha nature doctrine 5 5 Views of scholars 6 Vinaya Recension 6 1 Early features 6 2 Depiction of Devadatta 6 3 Chinese translation 6 4 Legacy 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp Drawing on the entrance to the Great Chaitya Cave at Karli nbsp Karli Chaitya section in perspective Most sources place the origin of the Mahasaṃghikas to the Second Buddhist council Traditions regarding the Second Council are confusing and ambiguous but it is agreed that the overall result was the first schism in the Sangha between the Sthavira nikaya and the Mahasaṃghika nikaya although it is not agreed upon by all what the cause of this split was 1 According to Jan Nattier and Charles S Prebish the best date for the first schism and the creation of the Mahasaṃghika as a separate community is 116 years after the Buddha s nirvana 2 Some Buddhist historical sources mention that the cause for schism was a dispute over vinaya monastic rule mainly the desire of certain Sthaviras elders to add extra rules to make the vinaya more rigorous 2 Other sources especially Sthavira sources like those of the Sarvastivada school argue that the main cause was a doctrinal issue They blame a figure named Mahadeva with arguing for five divisive points four of which see arhatship as a lesser kind of spiritual attainment which still has ignorance and desire 2 Andrew Skilton has suggested that the problems of contradictory accounts about the first schism are solved by the Mahasaṃghika Sariputraparipṛccha which is the earliest surviving account of the schism 3 In this account the council was convened at Paṭaliputra over matters of vinaya and it is explained that the schism resulted from the majority Mahasaṃgha refusing to accept the addition of rules to the Vinaya by a smaller group of elders Sthaviras 3 The Mahasaṃghikas therefore saw the Sthaviras as being a breakaway group which was attempting to modify the original Vinaya and to make it more strict 4 Scholars have generally agreed that the matter of dispute was indeed a matter of vinaya and have noted that the account of the Mahasaṃghikas is bolstered by the vinaya texts themselves as vinayas associated with the Sthaviras do contain more rules than those of the Mahasaṃghika vinaya 3 Modern scholarship therefore generally agrees that the Mahasaṃghika vinaya is the oldest 3 According to Skilton future historians may determine that a study of the Mahasaṃghika school will contribute to a better understanding of the early Dhamma Vinaya than the Theravada school 4 Regarding the issue with Mahadeva s doctrine this seems to have been a later doctrinal dispute within the Mahasaṃghika community which happened after the schism The followers of Mahadeva seem to have been the precursors of the southern Mahasaṃghika sects like the Caitikas 2 Geography edit The original center of the Mahasaṃghika sects was Magadha but they also maintained important centers such as in Mathura and Karli 5 The Kukkuṭikas were situated in eastern India around Varaṇasi and Paṭaliputra and the Bahusrutiya in Kosala Andhra and Gandhara The Lokottaravada subschool itself claimed to be of the Middle Country i e Ganges Basin region in the north of India The Mahasaṃghikas and the Lokottaravada subschool also had centres in the Gandhara region The Ekavyavaharika are not known from later times 6 The Caitika branch was based in the Coastal Andhra region and especially at Amaravati and Nagarjunakoṇḍa This Caitika branch included the Purvasailas Aparasailas Rajagirikas and the Siddharthikas Finally Madhyadesa was home to the Prajnaptivadins 7 The ancient Buddhist sites in the lower Krishna Valley including Amaravati Nagarjunakoṇḍa and Jaggayyapeṭa can be traced to at least the third century BCE if not earlier 8 The cave temples at the Ajaṇṭa Caves the Ellora Caves and the Karla Caves are associated with the Mahasaṃghikas 9 Appearance and language editAppearance edit nbsp A Chinese Buddhist monk in a yellow robe Chinese Buddhist monks often use the same color robes that some Mahasaṃghika sects used in India Between 148 and 170 CE the Parthian monk An Shigao came to China and translated a work which describes the color of monastic robes Skt kaṣaya utilized in five major Indian Buddhist sects called Da Biqiu Sanqian Weiyi Ch 大比丘三千威儀 10 Another text translated at a later date the Sariputraparipṛccha contains a very similar passage corroborating this information 10 In both sources the Mahasaṃghikas are described as wearing yellow robes 10 The relevant portion of the Sariputraparipṛccha reads 11 The Mahasaṃghika school diligently study the collected sutras and teach the true meaning because they are the source and the center They wear yellow robes The lower part of the yellow robe was pulled tightly to the left 12 According to Dudjom Rinpoche from the tradition of Tibetan Buddhism the robes of fully ordained Mahasaṃghika monastics were to be sewn out of more than seven sections but no more than twenty three sections 13 The symbols sewn on the robes were the endless knot Skt srivatsa and the conch shell Skt saṅkha two of the Eight Auspicious Signs in Buddhism 13 Language edit The Tibetan historian Buton Rinchen Drub 1290 1364 wrote that the Mahasaṃghikas used Prakrit the Sarvastivadins Sanskrit the Sthaviravadins used Paisaci and the Saṃmitiya used Apabhraṃsa 14 Doctrines and teachings edit nbsp Depiction of the Buddha s descent from Trayastriṃsa heaven second half 3rd century 15 nbsp The Buddha flanked by bodhisattvas Cave 4 Ajaṇṭa Caves Maharaṣtra India List of doctrinal tenets edit An important source for the doctrines of the Mahasaṃghika is the Samayabhedoparacanacakra The Cycle of the Formation of the Schismatic Doctrines Ch 異部宗輪論 of Vasumitra a Sarvastivada scholar c 2nd century CE which was translated by Xuanzang 16 17 According to this source some of the key doctrines defended by Indian Mahasaṃghikas include 18 19 The Buddhas are supramundane lokottara devoid of asravas and the mundane natures All words spoken by Tathagatas turn the wheel of Dharma and none of their words are false Buddhas teach all dharmas with a single sound The material body rupakaya supernatural power prabhava and lifespan ayus of a Buddha is unlimited ananta The Buddha s heart never tires of converting living beings by awakening faith sraddha in them The Buddha does not sleep or dream The Tathagata answers questions without thinking or reflecting on things Buddhas never say a single word because they are always in samadhi but beings rejoice thinking that they utter words In a single moment of thought ekaksanikacitta Buddhas comprehend all dharmas The Buddhas remain in all directions There are Buddhas everywhere in the four directions When the Bodhisattvas enter into a womb garbha they possess nothing impure and are entirely provided with organs and members rather than developing gradually When they enter a womb Bodhisattvas also take on the appearance of a white elephant Bodhisattvas because they want to help beings become perfect make vows to be reborn in bad destinations durgati The different aspects of the four noble truths are known in a single moment ekaksanika The five sensory indriya faculties consist of balls of flesh therefore only consciousness vijnana sees forms hears sounds etc There are no indeterminate avyakrta things dharma that is there are no dharmas that are neither good nor bad When one enters certainty to become a Buddha samyaktvaniyama one has abandoned all the fetters samyojana Stream enterers srotapanna can commit all misdeeds except for the irremediable crimes anantarya All sutras uttered by Buddha are nitartha of plain or clear meaning Since they do not know everything sabba there are Arhats who lack knowledge ajnana who have doubts kariksa who are saved by others The self presence of mind is bright It is soiled i e darkened by adventitious secondary defilement The tendencies anusaya are neither consciousnesses citta nor mental factors caitta and are devoid of object analambana The past and the future have no substantial existence dravya There is no intermediate state antarabhava Virtue sila is not mental acetasika and it is not consecutive to thought cittanuparivatti Tendencies anusaya are indeterminate abyakata not caused ahetuka and disjointed from thought cittavippayutta There is a root consciousness mulavijnana which serves as the support dsraya for eye perception and the other sensory perceptions like the root of the tree is the principle of the leaves etc The current consciousnesses pavattivinnana can be simultaneous sahabhu and do not carry karmic seeds bija The path marga and the defilements klesa appear together The act karman and its maturation vipaka evolve at the same time Material things last a long time and so go through transformation as milk turns into curds but mental factors and consciousnesses do not because they have a swift production and cessation Thought citta penetrates the whole body kaya and depending on the object visaya and the support asraya it can contract or expand Buddhas and bodhisattvas edit nbsp Depiction of the bodhisattva Padmapani Ajaṇṭa Caves cave number 1 The Mahasaṃghikas advocated the transcendental and supramundane nature of the buddhas and bodhisattvas and the fallibility of arhats 20 Xing also notes that the Acchariyabbhutasutta of the Majjhimanikaya along with its Chinese Madhyamagama parallel version is the most prominent evidence for the ancient source of the Mahasaṃghika view of the Buddha The sutra mentions various miracles performed by the Buddha before his birth and after While the Pali sutta uses the term bodhisattva for the Buddha before his birth the Chinese version calls him Bhagavan This points to the idea that the Buddha was already awakened before descending down to earth 21 Similarly the idea that the lifespan of a Buddha is limitless is also based on very ancient ideas The Mahaparinirvanasutra states that the Buddha s lifespan is as long as an eon kalpa and that he voluntarily chose to give up his life 21 Another early source for the Mahasaṃghika view that a Buddha was a transcendent being is the idea of the thirty two major marks of a Buddha s body 21 Furthermore the Simpsapa sutta states that the Buddha had way more knowledge than what he taught to his disciples The Mahasaṃghikas took this further and argued that the Buddha knew the dharmas of innumerable other Buddhas of the ten directions 21 nbsp Cave 1 Ajaṇṭa Caves Maharaṣtra India The Buddha statue is flanked by bodhisattvas Padmapani left and Manjushri right Of the 48 special theses attributed by the Samayabhedoparacanacakra to the Mahasaṃghikas Ekavyavaharika Lokottaravada and Kukkuṭika twenty concern the supramundane nature of buddhas and bodhisattvas 22 According to the Samayabhedoparacanacakra these four groups held that the Buddha is able to know all dharmas in a single moment of the mind 23 Yao Zhihua writes 23 In their view the Buddha is equipped with the following supernatural qualities transcendence lokottara lack of defilements all of his utterances preaching his teaching expounding all his teachings in a single utterance all of his sayings being true his physical body being limitless his power prabhava being limitless the length of his life being limitless never tiring of enlightening sentient beings and awakening pure faith in them having no sleep or dreams no pause in answering a question and always in meditation samadhi A doctrine ascribed to the Mahasaṃghikas is The power of the tathagatas is unlimited and the life of the buddhas is unlimited 24 According to Guang Xing two main aspects of the Buddha can be seen in Mahasaṃghika teachings the true Buddha who is omniscient and omnipotent and the manifested forms through which he liberates sentient beings through his skillful means Skt upaya 25 For the Mahasaṃghikas the historical Gautama Buddha was merely one of these transformation bodies Skt nirmaṇakaya while the essential real Buddha was equated with the Dharmakaya 26 nbsp Sketch of the interior of Ajanta cave no 19 by James Fergusson 1808 1886 The Mahasaṃghika Lokanuvartana sutra makes numerous supramundane claims about the Buddha including that He was not produced through union of father and mother but magically produced His feet never touch the ground or get dirty his footprints are only a show His body and mouth does not get dirty he only makes a show of cleaning himself He did not really suffer and struggle to attain enlightenment for six years this was just a show He never gets hungry he only manifests this in order to allow others to gain merit by giving He does not really produce human waste this is only a show His body does not grow tired ill or old and is not affected by cold or heat it only appears to have these qualities 27 Like the Mahayana traditions the Mahasaṃghikas held the doctrine of the existence of many contemporaneous buddhas throughout the ten directions 28 In the Mahasaṃghika Lokanuvartana Sutra it is stated The Buddha knows all the dharmas of the countless buddhas of the ten directions 28 It is also stated All buddhas have one body the body of the Dharma 28 In the view of Mahasaṃghikas advanced bodhisattvas have severed the bonds of karma and are born out of their own free will into lower states of existence Skt durgati in order to help liberate other sentient beings As described by Akira Hirakawa 29 The Sarvastivadin also taught that the Bodhisattva was subject to the law of karma If one attained arhathood he was free of the karmic law and once the arhat died he entered nirvaṇa never to return to the world of saṃsara But living in the cycle of saṃsara the Bodhisattva was bound to the law of karma In contrast to this school the Mahasaṃghika held that the Bodhisattva has already sundered karmic bondage and therefore is born in durgati out of his own free will his deep vow praṇidhana of salvation The concept of many bodhisattvas simultaneously working toward buddhahood is also found among the Mahasaṃghika tradition and further evidence of this is given in the Samayabhedoparacanacakra which describes the doctrines of the Mahasaṃghikas 30 These two concepts of contemporaneous bodhisattvas and contemporaneous buddhas were linked in some traditions and texts such as the Mahaprajnaparamitaupadesa use the principle of contemporaneous bodhisattvas to demonstrate the necessity of contemporaneous buddhas throughout the ten directions 31 It is thought that the doctrine of contemporaneous buddhas was already old and well established by the time of early Mahayana texts such as the Aṣṭasahasrika Prajnaparamita Sutra due to the clear presumptions of this doctrine 30 Mundane and supramundane edit The Mahasaṃghikas held that the teachings of the Buddha were to be understood as having two principal levels of truth a relative or conventional Skt saṃvṛti truth and the absolute or ultimate Skt paramartha truth 20 For the Mahasaṃghika branch of Buddhism the final and ultimate meaning of the Buddha s teachings was beyond words and words were merely the conventional exposition of the Dharma 32 K Venkata Ramanan writes 33 The credit of having kept alive the emphasis on the ultimacy of the unconditioned reality by drawing attention to the non substantiality of the basic elements of existence dharma sunyata belongs to the Mahasaṃghikas Every branch of these clearly drew the distinction between the mundane and the ultimate came to emphasize the non ultimacy of the mundane and thus facilitated the fixing of attention on the ultimate Self Awareness and the Mind edit Some Mahasaṃghikas held a theory of self awareness or self cognition svasaṃvedana which held that a moment of consciousness citta can be aware of itself as well as its intentional object This doctrine arose out of their understanding of the Buddha s enlightenment which held that in a single moment of mind the Buddha knew all things 34 The Mahavibhaṣa Sastra explains the doctrine of self reflexive awareness as follows Some allege that the mind citta and mental activities caitta can apprehend themselves svabhava Schools like Mahasaṃghika hold the following view It is the nature of awareness jnana and so forth to apprehend thus awareness can apprehend itself as well as others This is like a lamp that can illuminate itself and others owing to its nature svabhava of luminosity 35 Some Mahasaṃghikas also held that the mind s nature cittasvabhava is fundamentally pure mulavisuddha but it can be contaminated by adventitious defilements 36 Vasumitra s Nikayabheda dharmamati chakra sastra also discusses this theory and cites the sutra passage which the Mahasaṃghikas drew on to defend it 37 The passage is quoted by Vasumitra as The self nature of the mind cittasvabhava is luminous prabhasvara It is the adventitious impurities agantukopaklesa that defile it The self substance of the mind is eternally pure 38 The commentary to Vasumitra by Kuiji adds the following It is because afflictions klesa are produced which soil it that it is said to be defiled But these defilements not being of the original nature of the mind are called adventitious 38 The Kathavatthu III 3 also cites this idea as a thesis of the Andhakas 38 Unconditioned realities edit According to Vasumitra the Mahasaṃghikas held that there were nine dharmas phenomena realities which were unconditioned or unconstructed asaṃskṛta 19 Cessation obtained through discriminative cognition pratisaṃkhyanirodha Cesation due to absence of a productive cause apratisaṃkhyanirodha Space akasa The sphere of unlimited space akasanantyayatana The sphere of unlimited consciousness vijnananantyayatana The sphere of emptiness akincanyayatana The sphere of neither identification nor nonidentification naivasaṃjnanasaṃjnayatana The own nature of the members of dependent origination pratityasamutpadaṅgasvabhava The own nature of the members of the holy path arya margaṅgasvabhava Texts edit nbsp The Great Chaitya Hall at the Karla Caves in MaharashtraAccording to Bart Dessein the Mohe sengzhi lu Mahasaṃghika Vinaya provides some insight into the format of this school s textual canon They appear to have had a Vinaya in five parts an Abhidharmapiṭaka and a Sutrapiṭaka Of these texts their Vinaya was translated into Chinese by Buddhabhadra and Faxian between 416 and 418 CE in the Daochang Monastery in Nanjing capital of the Eastern Jin Dynasty In this text their Abhidharma is defined as the sutranta in nine parts navaṅga This suggests that the early Mahasaṃghikas rejected the abhidharmic developments that occurred within Sarvastivada circles As is the case with their Vinayapiṭaka also their Sutrapiṭaka seems to have consisted of five parts agama Dirghagama Madhyamagama Saṃyuktagama Ekottaragama and Kṣudrakagama Dessein also mentions that the school probably also had a Bodhisattvapiṭaka which included material that in all likelihood consisted of texts that formed part of the early development of the bodhisattva path as an alternative career to that of the arhant perhaps serving as a foundation for the later developments of the bodhisattva doctrine 39 Vinaya texts edit According to Zhihua Yao the following Mahasaṃghika Vinaya texts are extant in Chinese Mahasaṃghika bhiksuni vinaya Pratimoksa sutra Sphutartha Srighanacarasamgrahatika Abhisamacarika Dharma and the Mahavastu 40 Zhan Ru also notes that the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya Chinse Mohe Sengqi Lu translated by Faxian 337 422 CE contains proto Mahayana elements and reflects the nascent formation of the Mahayana Dharma teachings 41 The Mahavastu Sanskrit for Great Event or Great Story is the most well known of the Lokottaravada branch of the Mahasaṃghika school It is a preface to their Vinaya Pitaka and contains numerous Jataka and Avadana tales stories of past lives of the Buddha and other bodhisattvas 42 It is considered a primary source for the notion of a transcendent lokottara Buddha who across his countless past lives developed various abilities such as omniscience sarvajnana the lack of any need for sleep or food and being born painlessly without the need for intercourse 43 The text shows strong parallels with the Pali Mahakhandhaka The Sariputraparipṛccha Shelifu Wen Jing 舍利弗問經 Taisho 1465 p 900b translated into Chinese between 317 and 420 is a Mahasamghika Vinaya work which also provides a history of early Buddhism and its schisms 44 Sutras edit Some scholars such as Yao and Tse Fu Kuan consider the Ekottara Agama Taishō Tripiṭaka 125 to belong to the Mahasaṃghika school though this is still up for debate 40 45 The Lokanuvartana sutra Chinese 佛説内藏百寶經 pinyin foshuō nei zang bǎi bǎo jing Taishō Tripiṭaka Volume 17 text No 807 is a text preserved in some Sanskrit fragments as well as in Tibetan and Chinese translation 27 Abhidharma treatises and commentaries edit According to some sources abhidharma was not accepted as canonical by the Mahasaṃghika school 46 The Theravadin Dipavaṃsa for example records that the Mahasaṃghikas had no abhidharma 47 However other sources indicate that there were such collections of abhidharma During the early 5th century the Chinese pilgrim Faxian is said to have found a Mahasaṃghika abhidharma at a monastery in Paṭaliputra 47 Furthermore when Xuanzang visited Dhanyakaṭaka he met two Mahasaṃghika bhikṣus and studied Mahasaṃghika abhidharma with them for several months 47 48 On the basis of textual evidence as well as inscriptions at Nagarjunakoṇḍa Joseph Walser concludes that at least some Mahasaṃghika sects probably had an abhidharma collection and that it likely contained five or six books 49 The Tattvasiddhi Sastra the treatise that accomplishes reality C 成實論 Chengshilun is an Abhidharma work by a figure known as Harivarman 250 350 Some scholars including A K Warder attribute the work to the Mahasaṃghika Bahusrutiyas however others disagree and see it as a Sautrantika work 50 51 Chinese sources mention that he was initially a Sautrantika teacher who later lived with the Mahasaṃghikas 51 The Chinese canon also includes a sutra commentary called the Fen bie gong de lun 分別功徳論 in the 25th volume of the Taisho Tripitaka Series No 1507 pp 30 52 40 Manuscript Collections edit The Chinese Buddhist monk Xuanzang visited a Mahasaṃghika Lokottaravada monastery in the 7th century at Bamyan Afghanistan and this monastery site has since been rediscovered by archaeologists 52 Birch bark manuscripts and palm leaf manuscripts of texts in this monastery s collection including Mahayana sutras have been discovered at the site and these are now located in the Schoyen Collection Some manuscripts are in the Gandhari language and Kharoṣṭhi script while others are in Sanskrit and written in forms of the Gupta script Manuscripts and fragments that have survived from this monastery s collection include the following source texts 52 Pratimokṣa Vibhaṅga of the Mahasaṃghika Lokottaravada MS 2382 269 Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutra a sutra from the Agamas MS 2179 44 Caṃgi Sutra a sutra from the Agamas MS 2376 Diamond Sutra a Mahayana sutra MS 2385 Bhaiṣajyaguru Sutra a Mahayana sutra MS 2385 Srimaladevi Siṃhanada Sutra a Mahayana sutra MS 2378 Pravaraṇa Sutra a Mahayana sutra MS 2378 Sarvadharmapravṛttinirdesa Sutra a Mahayana sutra MS 2378 Ajatasatrukaukṛtyavinodana Sutra a Mahayana sutra MS 2378 Sariputrabhidharma MS 2375 08 Bodhisattva collection edit Within the Mahasaṃghika branch the Bahusrutiyas are said to have included a Bodhisattva Piṭaka in their canon and Paramartha wrote that the Bahusrutiyas accepted both the Hinayana and Mahayana teachings 20 In the 6th century CE Bhavaviveka speaks of the Siddharthikas using a Vidyadhara Piṭaka and the Purvasailas and Aparasailas both using a Bodhisattva Piṭaka all implying collections of Mahayana texts within the Mahasaṃghika schools 53 During the same period Avalokitavrata speaks of the Mahasaṃghikas using a Great Agama Piṭaka which is then associated with Mahayana sutras such as the Prajnaparamita and the Dasabhumika Sutra 53 Relationship to Mahayana edit nbsp Sculpture of the Buddha from Mathura 5th or 6th century CE Acceptance of Mahayana edit In the 6th century CE Paramartha a Buddhist monk from Ujjain in central India wrote about a special affiliation of the Mahasaṃghika school with the Mahayana tradition He associates the initial composition and acceptance of Mahayana sutras with the Mahasaṃghika branch of Buddhism 54 He states that 200 years after the parinirvaṇa of the Buddha much of the Mahasaṃghika school moved north of Rajagṛha and were divided over whether the Mahayana teachings should be incorporated formally into their Tripiṭaka According to this account they split into three groups based upon the relative manner and degree to which they accepted the authority of these Mahayana texts 55 Paramartha states that the Kukkuṭika sect did not accept the Mahayana sutras as buddhavacana word of the Buddha while the Lokottaravada sect and the Ekavyavaharika sect did accept the Mahayana sutras as buddhavacana 56 Paramartha s report states In this school there were some who believed these sutras and some who did not Those who did not believe them said that such sutras are made by man and are not proclaimed by the Buddha that the disciples of the Lesser Vehicle only believe in the Tripitaka because they did not personally hear the Buddha proclaim the Greater Vehicle Among those who believed these sutras there were some who did so because they had personally heard the Buddha proclaim the Greater Vehicle and therefore believed these sutras others believed them because it can be known through logical analysis that there is this principle of the Greater Vehicle and some believed them because they believed their masters Those who did not believe them did so because these sutras were self made and because they were not included in the five Agamas 57 Paramartha also wrote about the origins of the Bahusrutiya sect in connection with acceptance of Mahayana teachings According to his account the founder of the Bahusrutiya sect was named Yajnavalkya 58 In Paramartha s account Yajnavalkya is said to have lived during the time of the Buddha and to have heard his discourses but was in a profound state of samadhi during the time of the Buddha s parinirvaṇa 58 After Yajnavalkya emerged from this samadhi 200 years later he discovered that the Mahasaṃghikas were teaching only the superficial meaning of the sutras and therefore founded the Bahusrutiya sect in order to expound the full meaning 58 According to Paramartha the Bahusrutiya school was formed in order to fully embrace both conventional truth and ultimate truth 59 Bart Dessein links the Bahusrutiya understanding of this full exposition to the Mahayana teachings 60 In his writings Paramartha also indicated as much 61 In the Mahasaṃghika school this Arhat recited completely the superficial sense and the profound sense In the latter there was the sense of the Mahayana Some did not believe it Those who believed it recited and retained it There were in the Mahasaṃghika school those who propagated these teachings and others who did not propagate them The former formed a separate school called Those who have heard much Bahusrutiya It is from this school that there has come the Satyasiddhisastra That is why there is a mixture of ideas from the Mahayana found there Royal patronage edit Some early Mahayana sutras reference wealthy female donors and provide evidence that they were developed in the Andhra region where the Mahasaṃghika Caitika groups were predominant The Mahayana Mahamegha Sutra for example gives a prophecy about a royal princess of the Satavahana dynasty who will live in Andhra along the Kṛṣṇa River in Dhanyakaṭaka seven hundred years after the parinirvaṇa of the Buddha 62 Several scholars such as Etienne Lamotte and Alex and Hideko Wayman associate the Andra Ikṣvaku dynasty with patronage of Mahayana sutras 62 Epigraphic evidence at Nagarjunikoṇḍa also provides abundant evidence of royal and wealthy female donors 62 Prajnaparamita edit A number of scholars have proposed that the Mahayana Prajnaparamita teachings were first developed by the Caitika subsect of the Mahasaṃghikas They believe that the Aṣṭasahasrika Prajnaparamita Sutra originated amongst the southern Mahasaṃghika schools of the Andhra region along the Kṛṣṇa River 30 Guang Xing states several scholars have suggested that the Prajnaparamita probably developed among the Mahasaṃghikas in southern India in the Andhra country on the Kṛṣṇa River 31 These Mahasaṃghikas had two famous monasteries near Amaravati and the Dhanyakaṭaka which gave their names to the schools of the Purvasailas and the Aparasailas 30 Each of these schools had a copy of the Aṣṭasahasrika Prajnaparamita Sutra in Prakrit 30 Guang Xing also assesses the view of the Buddha given in the Aṣṭasahasrika Prajnaparamita Sutra as being that of the Mahasaṃghikas 30 Edward Conze estimates that this sutra originated around 100 BCE 30 Buddha nature doctrine edit nbsp Cave complex associated with the Mahasaṃghika sect Karla Caves Maharaṣtra India Brian Edward Brown a specialist in Tathagatagarbha doctrines writes that it has been determined that the composition of the Srimaladevi Siṃhanada Sutra occurred during the ikṣvaku Dynasty in the 3rd century as a product of the Mahasaṃghikas of the Andhra region i e the Caitika schools 63 Wayman has outlined eleven points of complete agreement between the Mahasaṃghikas and the Srimala along with four major arguments for this association 57 Anthony Barber also associates the earlier development of the Tathagatagarbha Sutra with the Mahasaṃghikas and concludes that the Mahasaṃghikas of the Andhra region were responsible for the inception of the Tathagatagarbha doctrine 64 According to Stephen Hodge internal textual evidence in the Aṅgulimaliya Sutra Mahabheriharaka Parivarta Sutra and the Mahayana Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutra indicates that these texts were first circulated in South India and then gradually propagated up to the northwest with Kashmir being the other major center The Aṅgulimaliya Sutra gives a more detailed account by mentioning the points of distribution as including South India the Vindhya Range Bharuch and Kashmir 65 The language used in the Mahayana Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutra and related texts seems to indicate a region in southern India during the time of the Satavahana Dynasty The Satavahana rulers gave rich patronage to Buddhism and were involved with the development of the cave temples at Karla and Ajaṇṭa and also with the Great Stupa at Amaravati During this time the Satavahana Dynasty also maintained extensive links with the Kuṣaṇa Empire 65 Using textual evidence in the Mahayana Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutra and related texts Stephen Hodge estimates a compilation period between 100 CE and 220 CE for the Mahayana Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutra Hodge summarizes his findings as follows 65 T here are strong grounds based on textual evidence that the MPNS Mahayana Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutra or a major portion of it together with related texts were compiled in the Deccan during the second half of the 2nd century CE in a Mahasaṃghika environment probably in one of their centres along the western coastal region such as Karli or perhaps though less likely the Amaravati Dhanyakaṭaka region In the 6th century CE Paramartha wrote that the Mahasaṃghikas revere the sutras which teach the Tathagatagarbha 65 Views of scholars edit Since at least the Meiji period in Japan some scholars of Buddhism have looked to the Mahasaṃghika as the originators of Mahayana Buddhism 66 According to Akira Hirakawa modern scholars often look to the Mahasaṃghikas as the originators of Mahayana Buddhism 67 According to A K Warder it is clearly the case that the Mahayana teachings originally came from the Mahasaṃghika branch of Buddhism 68 Warder holds that the Mahayana originated in the south of India and almost certainly in the Andhra country 69 Anthony Barber and Sree Padma note that historians of Buddhist thought have been aware for quite some time that such pivotally important Mahayana Buddhist thinkers as Nagarjuna Dignaga Candrakirti Aryadeva and Bhavaviveka among many others formulated their theories while living in Buddhist communities in Andhra 70 Andre Bareau has stated that there can be found Mahayana ontology prefigured in the Mahasaṃghika schools and has offered an array of evidence to support this conclusion 71 Bareau traces the origin of the Mahayana tradition to the older Mahasaṃghika schools in regions such as Odisha Kosala Konkana and so on He then cites the Bahusrutiyas and Prajnaptivadins as sub sects of the Mahasaṃghika that may have played an important role in bridging the flow of Mahayana teachings between the northern and southern Mahasaṃghika traditions 71 Andre Bareau also mentions that according to Xuanzang and Yijing in the 7th century CE the Mahasaṃghika schools had essentially disappeared and instead these travelers found what they described as Mahayana The region occupied by the Mahasaṃghika was then an important center for Mahayana Buddhism 71 Bareau has proposed that Mahayana grew out of the Mahasaṃghika schools and the members of the Mahasaṃghika schools also accepted the teachings of the Mahayana 71 Additionally the extant Mahasaṃghika Vinaya was originally procured by Faxian in the early 5th century CE at what he describes as a Mahayana monastery in Paṭaliputra 72 Vinaya Recension edit nbsp Cave temple associated with the Mahasaṃghikas Ellora Caves Early features edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message The Mahasaṃghika Vinaya recension is essentially very similar to the other recensions as they all are to each other The Mahasaṃghika recension differs most from the other recensions in structure but the rules are generally identical in meaning if the Vibhangas explanations are compared The features of the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya recension which suggest that it might be an older redaction are in brief these The Bhiksu prakirnaka andBhiksuni prakirnaka and the Bhiksu abhisamacarika dharma sections of the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya are generally equivalent to the Khandhakas Skandhakas of the Sthavira derived schools However their structure is simpler and according to recent research by Clarke the structure follows a matika Matrix which is also found embedded in the Vinayas of several of the Sthavira schools suggesting that it is presectarian The sub sections of the Prakirnaka sections are also titled pratisamyukta rather than Skandhaka Khandhaka Pratisamyukta Patisamyutta means a section or chapter in a collection organised by subject the samyukta principle like the Samyutta Nikaya Samyukta agama Scholars such as Master Yin Shun Choong Moon Keat and Bhikkhu Sujato have argued that the Samyutta Samyukta represents the earliest collection among the Nikayas Agamas and this may well imply that it is also the oldest organising principle too N B this does not necessarily say anything about the age of the contents There are also fewer stories in general in the Vinaya of the subsidiary school the Mahasaṃghika Lokottaravada and many of them give the appearance of badly connected obvious interpolations whereas in the structure of the Sthavira recensions the stories are integrated into the whole scheme In the formulations of some of the pratimoksha rules also the phrasing though generally identical in meaning to the other recensions often appears to represent a clearer but less streamlined version which suggests it might be older This is particularly noticeable in the Bhiksuni Vinaya which has not been as well preserved as the Bhiksu Vinaya in general in all the recensions Yet the formulation of certain rules which seem very confused in the other recensions e g Bhikkhuni Sanghadisesa three six in the Ma L seems to better represent what would be expected of a root formulation which could lead to the variety of confused formulations we see presumably later in the other recensions The formulation of this rule as an example also reflects a semi parallel formulation to a closely related rule for Bhiksus which is found in a more similar form in all the Vinayas Pc64 in Pali Depiction of Devadatta edit According to Reginald Ray the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya mentions the figure of Devadatta but in a way that is different from the vinayas of the Sthavira branch According to this study the earliest vinaya material common to all sects simply depicts Devadatta as a Buddhist saint who wishes for the monks to live a rigorous lifestyle 73 This has led Ray to regard the story of Devadatta as a legend produced by the Sthavira group 74 However upon examining the same vinaya materials Bhikkhu Sujato has written that the portrayals of Devadatta are largely consistent between the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya and the other vinayas and that the supposed discrepancy is simply due to the minimalist literary style of the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya He also points to other parts of the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya that clearly portray Devadatta as a villain as well as similar portrayals that exist in the Lokottaravadin Mahavastu 75 Chinese translation edit The Mahasaṃghika Vinaya is extant in the Chinese Buddhist Canon as Mohesengzhi Lu 摩訶僧祗律 Taishō Tripiṭaka 1425 The vinaya was originally procured by Faxian in the early 5th century CE at a Mahayana monastery in Paṭaliputra 72 This vinaya was then translated into Chinese as a joint effort between Faxian and Buddhabhadra in 416 CE and the completed translation is 40 fascicles in length 76 According to Faxian in Northern India the vinaya teachings were typically only passed down by tradition through word of mouth and memorization For this reason it was difficult for him to procure manuscripts of the vinayas that were used in India The Mahasaṃghika Vinaya was reputed to be the original vinaya from the lifetime of the Buddha and the most correct and complete 77 Legacy edit Although Faxian procured the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya in India and had this translated into Chinese the tradition of Chinese Buddhism eventually settled on the Dharmaguptaka Vinaya instead At the time of Faxian the Sarvastivada Vinaya was the most common vinaya tradition in China In the 7th century Yijing wrote that in eastern China most people followed the Dharmaguptaka Vinaya while the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya was used in earlier times in Guanzhong the region around Chang an and that the Sarvastivada Vinaya was prominent in the Yangzi region and further south 78 In the 7th century the existence of multiple Vinaya lineages throughout China was criticized by prominent Vinaya masters such as Yijing and Dao an 654 717 In the early 8th century Dao an gained the support of Emperor Zhongzong of Tang and an imperial edict was issued that the saṃgha in China should use only the Dharmaguptaka Vinaya for ordination 79 Atisa was ordained in the Mahasaṃghika lineage However because the Tibetan Emperor Ralpacan had decreed that only the Mulasarvastivada order would be permitted in Tibet he did not ordain anyone See also edit nbsp Religion portal Schools of Buddhism Early Buddhist schools Nikaya BuddhismReferences edit Skilton Andrew A Concise History of Buddhism 2004 p 47 a b c d Nattier Jan Prebish Charles S Mahasaṃghika Origins The Beginnings of Buddhist Sectarianism History of Religions Volume 16 Number 3Feb 1977 a b c d Skilton Andrew A Concise History of Buddhism 2004 p 48 a b Skilton Andrew A Concise History of Buddhism 2004 p 64 Potter Karl Encyclopaedia of Indian Philosophies Vol 8 Buddhist Philosophy 100 350 AD 2002 p 23 Warder A K Indian Buddhism 2000 p 281 82 Elizabeth Cook Light of Liberation A History of Buddhism in India Dharma Publishing 1992 p 242 243 Padma Sree Barber Anthony W Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra SUNY Press 2008 pg 2 Gadkari Jayant Society and Religion From Rgveda to Puranas 1996 p 198 a b c Hino Shoun Three Mountains and Seven Rivers 2004 p 55 Sujato Bhante 2012 Sects amp Sectarianism The Origins of Buddhist Schools Santipada p i ISBN 9781921842085 Baruah Bibhuti Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism 2008 p 47 a b Dudjom Rinpoche Perfect Conduct Ascertaining the Three Vows 1999 p 16 Yao Zhihua The Buddhist Theory of Self Cognition 2012 p 9 https www metmuseum org art collection search 38238 MET museum page Sree Padma Barber Anthony W Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra 2008 p 56 Buswell Robert E Lopez Donald S 2017 07 20 Vasumitra The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism Princeton University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780190681159 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 691 15786 3 retrieved 2024 01 12 Andre Bareau Les sectes bouddhiques du Petit Vehicule Ecole Fransaise d Extreme Orient 1955 Chapitre I Les Mahasanghika pp 55 74 a b Willemen Charles Tsukamoto Keisho 2004 Treatise on the Elucidation of the Knowable The Cycle of the Formation of the Schismatic Doctrines pp 97 101 Bukkyo Dendo Kyokai and Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research a b c Baruah Bibhuti Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism 2008 p 48 a b c d Xing Guang An Enquiry into the Origin of the Mahasamghika Buddhology Authors The Indian International Journal of Buddhist Studies 2004 n 5 p 41 51 Sree Padma Barber Anthony W Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra 2008 p 56 a b Yao Zhihua The Buddhist Theory of Self Cognition 2005 p 11 Tanaka Kenneth The Dawn of Chinese Pure Land Buddhist Doctrine 1990 p 8 Guang Xing The Concept of the Buddha Its Evolution from Early Buddhism to the Trikaya Theory 2004 p 53 Sree Padma Barber Anthony W Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra 2008 pp 59 60 a b Xing Guang The Lokanuvartana Sutra Journal of Buddhist Studies Vol IV 2006 a b c Guang Xing The Concept of the Buddha Its Evolution from Early Buddhism to the Trikaya Theory 2004 p 65 Williams Paul The Origins and Nature of Mahayana Buddhism 2004 p 182 a b c d e f g Guang Xing The Concept of the Buddha Its Evolution from Early Buddhism to the Trikaya Theory 2004 p 66 a b Guang Xing The Concept of the Buddha Its Evolution from Early Buddhism to the Trikaya Theory 2004 pp 65 66 Buescher John Echoes from an Empty Sky The Origins of the Buddhist Doctrine of the Two Truths 2005 p 46 Ramanan K Venkata Nagarjuna s Philosophy 1998 pp 62 63 Yao Zhihua 2005 The Buddhist Theory of Self Cognition pp 10 11 Yao Zhihua 2005 The Buddhist Theory of Self Cognition p 15 Skorupski Tadeusz Consciousness and Luminosity in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism In Buddhist Philosophy and Meditation Practice Academic Papers Presented at the 2nd IABU Conference Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University Main Campus Wang Noi Ayutthaya Thailand 31 May 2 June 2012 Baruah Bibhuti 2000 Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism p 90 Sarup amp Sons a b c Bareau Andre 1955 Buddhist Sects of the Small Vehicle Les Sectes Bouddhiques du Petit Vehicule Translated from the French by Gelongma Migme Chodron 2005 p 56 Dessein Bart 2009 The Mahasaṃghikas and the Origin of Mahayana Buddhism Evidence Provided in the Abhidharmamahavibhaṣasastra The Eastern Buddhist 40 1 2 37 38 JSTOR 26289538 a b c Zhihua Yao 2012 The Buddhist Theory of Self Cognition pp 8 10 Routledge Zhan Ru 湛如 Mahasaṃghika and Mahayana An Analysis of Faxian and the Translation of the Mahasaṃghika Vinaya Chin Mohe Sengqi Lu Peking University doi 10 15239 hijbs 02 01 10 Mahavastu 2008 Williams 1989 2007 pp 18 19 Lamotte Etienne History of Indian Buddhism From the Origins to the Saka Era p 189 Tse fu Kuan 2013 Legends and Transcendence Sectarian Affiliations of the Ekottarika Agama in Chinese Translation Journal of the American Oriental Society 133 4 607 634 doi 10 7817 jameroriesoci 133 4 0607 Abhidhamma Pitaka Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 a b c Walser Joseph Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture 2005 p 213 Baruah Bibhuti Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism 2008 p 437 Walser Joseph Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture 2005 pp 212 213 Warder A K Indian Buddhism page 398 a b Lin Qian Mind in Dispute The Section on Mind in Harivarman s Tattvasiddhi University of Washington a b Schoyen Collection Buddhism Retrieved 23 June 2012 a b Walser Joseph Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture 2005 p 53 Walser Joseph Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture 2005 p 50 Walser Joseph Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture 2005 p 51 Sree Padma Barber Anthony W Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra 2008 p 68 a b Sree Padma Barber Anthony W Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra 2008 pp 153 154 a b c Warder A K Indian Buddhism 2000 p 267 Walser Joseph Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture 2005 p 52 Sree Padma Barber Anthony W Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra 2008 p 61 Walser Joseph Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture 2005 pp 51 52 a b c Osto Douglas Power Wealth and Women in Indian Mahayana Buddhism The Gaṇḍavyuha sutra 2011 pp 114 115 Brown Brian Edward The Buddha Nature A Study of the Tathagatagarbha and Alayavijnana 2010 p 3 Sree Padma Barber Anthony W Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra 2008 pp 155 156 a b c d Hodge Stephen 2006 On the Eschatology of the Mahaparinirvana Sutra and Related Matters PDF lecture delivered at the University of London SOAS Archived from the original PDF on 2013 06 14 Williams Paul The Origins and Nature of Mahayana Buddhism 2004 p 380 Williams Paul The Origins and Nature of Mahayana Buddhism 2004 pp 181 2 Warder A K Indian Buddhism 2000 p 11 Warder A K Indian Buddhism 2000 p 313 Padma Sree Barber Anthony W Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra 2008 p 1 a b c d Ray Reginald Buddhist Saints in India A Study in Buddhist Values and Orientations 1999 p 426 a b Walser Joseph Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture 2005 p 40 Ray Reginald Buddhist Saints in India A Study in Buddhist Values and Orientations 1999 p 168 Ray Reginald Buddhist Saints in India A Study in Buddhist Values and Orientations 1999 pp 169 170 Sujato Bhikkhu Santipada Why Devadatta Was No Saint Archived from the original on 2013 12 16 Rulu Bodhisattva Precepts 2012 p 7 Beal Samuel tr Travels of Fa hian or Fo kwŏ ki 1885 p lxxi Mohr Thea Tsedroen Jampa Dignity and Discipline Reviving Full Ordination for Buddhist Nuns 2010 p 187 Heirman Ann Bumbacher Stephan Peter The Spread of Buddhism 2007 pp 194 195Bibliography edit Arya Mahasamghika Lokuttaravadin Bhiksuni Vinaya edited by Gustav Roth 1970 Mahasamghika and Mahasamghika Lokuttaravadin Vinayas in Chinese translation CBETA Taisho digital edition full citation needed The Earliest Vinaya and the Beginnings of Buddhist Literature Frauwallner Serie Orientale Roma 8 Rome Istituto Italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente Vinaya Matrka Mother of the Monastic Codes or Just Another Set of Lists A Response to Frauwallner s Handling of the Mahasamghika Vinaya Shayne Clarke Indo Iranian Journal 47 77 120 2004 A Survey of Vinaya Literature Charles Prebish Originally Volume I of The Dharma Lamp Series Taipei Taiwan Jin Luen Publishing House 1994 157 pages Now published by Curzon Press The Fundamental Teachings of Early Buddhism a comparative study based on the Sutraṅga portion of the Pali Saṃyutta Nikaya and the Chinese Saṃyuktagama Choong Mun Keat Wiesbaden Harrassowitz 2000 Contains an account of Master Yin Shun s theory that the Samyukt Agama is the oldest collection by a student of Prof Rod Bucknell History of Mindfulness Bhikkhu Sujato Taipei Taiwan the Corporate Body of the Buddha Educational Foundation 2006 Gives further evidence for the Anga theory of Master Yin Shun and the theory that the Samyukta Samyutta is the oldest organising principle Buddhist Monastic Discipline The Sanskrit Pratimoksa Sutras of the Mahasamghikas and Mulasarvastivadins Charles Prebish Volume I of the Institute for Advanced Studies of World Religions Series University Park The Pennsylvania State University Press 1975 156 pages First Indian Edition Delhi Motilal Banarsidass 1996 This is only a translation of a small part of the Vinayas on its own it is nearly useless Charles Prebish and Janice J Nattier Mahasamghika Origins The Beginnings of Buddhist Sectarianism History of Religions 16 3 February 1977 237 272 The Pratimoksa Puzzle Fact Versus Fantasy Charles Prebish Journal of the American Oriental Society 94 2 April June 1974 168 176 A Review of Scholarship on the Buddhist Councils Charles Prebish Journal of Asian Studies XXXIII 2 February 1974 239 254 Theories Concerning the Skandhaka An Appraisal Charles Prebish Journal of Asian Studies XXXII 4 August 1973 669 678 Saiksa dharmas Revisited Further Considerations of Mahasamghika Origins Charles Prebish History of Religions 35 3 February 1996 258 270 External links editJ J Jones 1949 The Mahavastu English translation including footnotes and glossary Abhisamacarikadharma of the Mahasamghika Lokottaravadins input by Abhisamacarika Dharma Study Group Taisho University GRETIL Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mahasaṃghika amp oldid 1222999141, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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