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Pure land

Pure Land is the concept of a celestial realm of a buddha or bodhisattva in Mahayana Buddhism where many Buddhists aspire to be reborn in.

Japanese copy of the Pure Land Taima Mandala, which depicts Sukhavati, the most popular Pure Land destination in East Asian Buddhism, hanging scroll from 1750.

The term "Pure Land" is particular to East Asian Buddhism (Chinese: 淨土; pinyin: Jìngtǔ) and related traditions. In Sanskrit Buddhist sources, the equivalent concept is called a buddha-field (Sanskrit: buddhakṣetra) or more technically a pure buddha-field (viśuddhabuddhakṣetra).

The various traditions that focus on attaining rebirth in a Pure Land have been termed Pure Land Buddhism. Pure Lands are also evident in the literature and traditions of Taoism and Bon.

In Indian sources Edit

 
Tibetan painting of Amitabha in Sukhavati, c. 1700[1]

The Mahavastu defines a buddha-field as a realm where "a tathagata, a holy one, fully and perfectly enlightened, is to be found, lives, exists and teaches the Dharma, for the benefit and happiness of the great body of beings, men and gods."[2]

The Indian Mahayana sutras describe many buddha-fields.[3][4][5][6] Mahayana sources hold that there are an infinite number of buddhas, each with their own buddha-field where they teach the Dharma and where sentient beings can be reborn into (due to their good karmic acts).[7][8] A buddha-field is a place where bodhisattvas can more easily progress spiritually on the bodhisattva path.[7] Jan Nattier has argued that this idea became popular because the traditional understanding of the extreme length of the bodhisattva path seemed very difficult and training under a buddha in a buddha-field (especially prepared to train bodhisattvas) was seen as a faster way to buddhahood.[8]

Sentient beings who are reborn in these pure buddha-fields due to their good karma also contribute to the development of a Buddha-field, as can bodhisattvas who are able to travel there. These buddha-fields are therefore powerful places which are very advantageous to spiritual progress.[7]

According to Indian sources, the bodhisattva path, by ending all defilements, culminates in the arising of a purified buddha-field, which is the manifestation and reflection of a Buddha's activity.[2] Mahayana sources state that bodhisattvas like Avalokiteśvara and Manjushri will obtain their own buddha-fields after they attain full buddhahood.[9] In the Lotus Sutra, Buddha's close followers, such as Śāriputra, Mahākāśyapa, Subhuti, Maudgalyāyana and Buddha's son Rāhula are also predicted to attain their own Pure Lands. The relative time-flow in the Pure Lands may be different,[10] with a day in one Pure Land being equivalent to years in another.

Purity of buddha-fields Edit

Mahayana sources speak of three kinds of buddha-fields: pure, impure, and mixed.[2] An example of an "impure" field is often this world (called Sahā – “the world to be endured"), Sakyamuni's field. Purified fields include Amitabha's buddha-field of Sukhavati.[11] Some sutras say that Sakyamuni chose to come to an impure world due to his vast compassion.[12]

However, not all Mahayana texts agree that Sakyamuni's world is impure. Numerous Mahayana sutras, such as the Pañcaviṃśatisāhasrikā prajñāpāramitā, Lankavatara, Vimalakirti, and Lotus Sutras, also state that this dualism between purity and impurity is illusory and instead state that even this world is a pure buddha-field.[2]

Thus, according to the Vimalakirti, this seemingly impure world is actually pure. It only appears impure because the deluded and impure minds of sentient beings perceive it like that. As Paul Williams explains: "The impurity that we see is the result of impure awareness, and also the Buddha's compassion in creating a world within which impure beings can grow. Thus the real way to attain a Pure Land is to purify one's own mind. Put another way, we are already in the Pure Land if we but knew it. Whatever the realm, if it is inhabited by people with enlightened pure minds then it is a Pure Land."[12]

Numerous Mahayana sources also connect the concept of a purified buddhafield (pariśuddha-buddhakṣetra) with the purity of one's own mind. Hence, the Vimalakirti sutra states: "the bodhisattva who wishes to purify his buddhakṣetra should, first of all, skillfully adorn his own mind. And why? Because to the extent that the mind of a bodhisattva is pure is his buddhakṣetra purified."[2]

Iconography Edit

Nakamura (1980, 1987: p. 207) establishes the Indian background of the padma imagery of the field which is evident iconographically, as well as in motif and metaphor:

The descriptions of Pure Land in Pure Land sutras were greatly influenced by Brahmin and Hindu ideas and the topological situation in India. There was a process of the development of lotus (padma)-symbolism in Pure Land Buddhism. The final outcome of the thought was as follows: the aspirants of faith and assiduity are born transformed (anupapāduka) in the lotus flowers. But those with doubts are born into the lotus-buds. They stay in the calyx of a lotus (garbhāvāsa) for five hundred years without seeing or hearing the Three Treasures. Within the closed lotus-flowers they enjoy pleasures as though they were playing in a garden or palace.

— Nakamura Hajime (Nakamura 1980, p. 207)

Pure Lands Edit

 
Frontispiece of the 1718 Rules for Repenting and Rebirth in the Pure Land (Wangsheng Jingtu Chanyuan Yikuei) with Amitabha (Omituo) Flanked by Two Bodhisattvas (Pusa) and Reborn Souls on Lotus Blossoms.
 
Vietnamese depiction of Ksitigarbha in Pure Land.
 
Amida welcomes Chûjô-hime to the Western Paradise, Taima Temple in Japan, from a Muromachi period scroll.

Pure Lands of the Five Tathagatas Edit

The five Pure Lands of the five Tathagatas are:[13][14]

Abhirati Edit

Abhirati of Akshobhya in the east is suggested by some scholars to be the earliest Pure Land mentioned in Mahayana sutras.[15]

Sukhavati Edit

Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche, in discussing the Mind Stream of Lokeśvararāja that in fulfillment has come to be known as Amitābha:

According to the sutra known as the Rolling of Drums, countless eons ago there was a joyous kingdom whose sovereign had great devotion for the buddha of that time, Lokesvararaja. The king renounced his kingdom, became a monk, and vowed to reach enlightenment. He expressed his bodhicitta intention through forty-eight vows, and promised to refuse buddhahood if any of these vows were not fulfilled. With these words, the earth trembled and flowers rained down from the skies. Praises resounded and with them the prophecy that this monk would surely become a buddha. And so he did, as the Buddha Amitabha.


In his lifetime as this bodhisattva monk, Amitabha saw that countless pure realms existed for realized ones who had been victorious over the mind's delusions, but no such realm was accessible to those still struggling on the path. Among his forty-eight vows was the aspiration to create a pure realm for all those who heard his name, wished to attain that realm, established the roots of virtue, and dedicated their merit in order to be reborn there. So powerful was his intention that he swore to refuse buddhahood if it did not enable him to manifest such a realm.[16]

Sukhāvatī is by far the most popular among Pure Land Buddhists. There are many old and recent Buddhist texts reporting the condition of its dying believers. Some Buddhists and followers of other religions claimed they went there and came back, and they were viewed as cults.[17][18][19]

Some controversial teachings said the successors of Amitabha in Sukhāvatī would be Avalokiteśvara and Mahāsthāmaprāpta.[20][21][22]

Śākyamuni's Pure Land Edit

The Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra states that Śākyamuni Buddha has his own Pure Land which is far away and is called "Unsurpassable" (Chinese: Wúshèng 無勝). The Buddha manifests from his Pure Land into our world in order to teach the Dharma.[23]

Vairocana's universal Pure Land Edit

 
Ming era statue of Vairocana Buddha on a thousand petaled lotus.

According to the Buddhāvataṃsaka Sūtra, the whole universe is a vast pure buddha-field which has been purified by Vairocana Buddha. This is the view of Pure Land which is found in the Chinese Huayan tradition.[24] According to this view, our world is just one small part of this universal Pure Land which is named: "Ocean of worlds, whose surface and inside are decorated with an arrangement of flowers" (Sanskrit: Kusumatalagarbha-vyūhālamkāra-lokadhātusamudra).[25] It is also called the "Lotus Treasury World" (Chinese: 華蔵世界, Skt. Padmagarbha-lokadhātu), since it is an array of billions of worlds in a lotus shape.[26]

Other identified Pure Lands Edit

 
Maitreya in Tushita Heaven, over the entrance of Maya Cave, Kizil, Xinjiang, China.

There are some Pure Land worlds in controversial sutras and folk religion texts.[54][55][56][57][58]

In East Asian Buddhism Edit

 
"Qing dynasty painting by Ding Guanpeng titled 'Illustration of the Splendid Pure Land,' currently housed in the National Palace Museum, Taipei.

In Chinese Buddhism, the Pure Land was commonly seen as a transcendent realm beyond the three realms (the desire realm, form realm and formless realm) into which one can be reborn after death.[59] This view of the Pure Land as a place was defended by masters of Pure Land Buddhism like Shandao. However, another interpretation of a Pure Land is that it is non-dual with our world. The Vimalakīrti Sutra was widely cited by exponents of this non-dual view of the Pure Land, often called "mind-only" Pure Land (wéixīn jìngtǔ 唯心淨土). This was most commonly defended by masters of the Chan / Zen school.[60] In the Platform Sutra for example, Huineng states that only the deluded hope to be born in a faraway land in the west, while the wise who know their nature is empty seek the Pure Land by purifying their minds.[61] These two views of the Pure Land led to many debates in Chinese Buddhism.[62]

In a similar fashion, according to the Huayan school patriarch Fazang, the ultimate view of the Buddha's Pure Land (derived from the Avatamsaka sutra) is that it is interfused with all worlds in the multiverse and indeed with all phenomena (dharmas).[63] This view of the Buddha's Pure Land is inconceivable and all pervasive. Since for Fazang, the entire Dharma realm is visible within each particle in the universe, the Pure Land is therefore contained in every phenomena and is non-dual with our world.[63]

Later Chinese thinkers similarly attempted to synthesize the two ideas. Yúnqī Zhūhóng (1535–1615) saw the Pure Land as an actual place which is a useful upaya (skill means) created by the Buddha. Once beings reach this realm, they realize that it is just mind. Real sages can see that both ideas are interconnected and thus can affirm both without any conflict.[64]

Similarly, Hānshān Déqīng (c. 1546–1623) taught a synthesis of these various ideas ideas.[65] According to Hanshan, there are three kinds of Pure Lands (associated with the trikaya, the three bodies of the buddha):[65]

  • the Eternal Land of Calm Illumination, also known as the Pure Land of mere-mind. This is the land where the Buddhas and bodhisattvas live.
  • the Majestic Land of True Reward, which refers to the Huayan view of a Pure Land that pervades the entire universe and is interfused with every particle and phenomenon in existence.
  • the Incomplete Land of Expediency, which is the 'Western paradise" of Sukhavati taught in the Amitabha sutras, and is only one of a myriad of such skillfully manifested Pure Lands in existence. This land is associated with the nirmanakaya.

In Tibetan Buddhism Edit

 
Buddha Amitabha in His Pure Land of Suvakti with the eight great bodhisattvas. Central Tibet, 18th century.

Pure Lands have been documented as arising due to the intention and aspiration of a bodhisattva such as the case of Amitābha, but other discourse has codified that they are entwined with the theory of the saṃbhogakāya and are understood to manifest effortlessly and spontaneously due to other activities of a Buddha and the pure qualities and the mysteries of the trikaya. The five features of Buddhahood – the attributes of the Sambhogakāya – play a role: perfect teacher, teaching, retinue, place and time. (Dudjom Jigdral Yeshe Dorje 2012, p. 1991)

Source Edit

Very important to all pure abodes is the 'Source' (Tibetan: ཆོས་འབྱུང, Wylie: chos 'byung; Sanskrit: dharmodaya) from which they dwell and which supports them, the 'Wellspring' of myriad fonts as emergent. It may be understood as an interface, portal or epiphany between the Dharmakaya and the Sambhogakaya. It is seminal in the establishment of mandalas governing the outer, inner or secret dimensions. It is the opening and consecration of the sacred space which enfolds and supports the expanse of the pure abode. In iconography it is represented by the six-pointed star, the two interlocking offset equilateral triangles that form a symmetry. This is the 'sanctum sanctorum' (Sanskrit: garbha gṛha). It later developed into the primordial purity of the lotus which supports the mandala, thangka or the murti of the deity. In temple siting it is the power place or 'spirit of place' that was augured or divined in the sacred geometry of 'geodesy' (Sanskrit: vāstu śāstra). In yoga asana, the 'source' is Vajrasana, the 'seat of enlightenment' the ancient name of Bodh Gaya and an alternate name for mahamudra or padmasana.[66]

"Source of phenomena or qualities (chos 'byung, dharmodaya). Pundarika defines dharmodaya as that from which phenomena devoid of intrinsic nature originate. "Phenomena devoid of intrinsic nature" refers to the ten powers, the four fearlessnesses, and the other 84,000 aspects of the teachings. Their source, dharmodaya, is the pure realm, the abode of all buddhas and bodhisattvas, the place of bliss, the place of birth; it is not the place that discharges blood, urine, and regenerative fluids, i.e., the vagina. Source: Stainless Light, Toh. 1347, vol. Da, f237a3-5".[67]

Field of Merit Edit

The Field of Merit (Wylie: tshogs zhing) is a pictorial representation in tree form of the triratna and the guru, employed in Tibetan Buddhism as an object of veneration when taking refuge. It is visualized internally as a part of the commencement phase of each sadhana.

The Field of Merit is a Pure Land. Each school or sect has its own distinctive form of the tree in which the numerous lineage-holders or vidyadhara and dharma protectors or dharmapala are represented.

In discussing the visualisation of the Merit Field, Namkha'i links the Three Jewels of Buddha, Dharma and Sangha with the Three Roots of Guru, Deva and Dakini:

The merit field (tshogs zhing), that is the source of all the accumulation of merit, designates the manifestation of the Three Jewels (Buddha, Dharma, Sangha) and of the Three Roots (Guru, Deva, Dakini) visualised by the practitioner.[68]

Mandala Edit

Mandalas, especially sand mandalas, are 'Pure Lands' and may be understood as Nirmāṇakāya, as are all murti, thangka and sacred tools that have consecrated, dedicated and the 'deity' (yidam) invoked and requested to reside.[clarification needed] Some namkha are Pure Lands. According to Nirmāṇakāya (as tulku) theory, nirmanakaya spontaneously arise due to the intention, aspiration, faith and devotion of the sangha.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

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  67. ^ Jamgön Kongtrul Lodrö Tayé (author, compiler); Elio Guarisco (translator); Ingrid McLeon (translator, editor) (2005). The treasury of knowledge: book six, part four: Systems of Buddhist Tantra. Ithaca, New York, USA: Snow Lion Publications. p. 399. ISBN 978-1-55939-210-5.
  68. ^ Norbu, Namkhai (2001). The Precious Vase: Instructions on the Base of Santi Maha Sangha. Shang Shung Edizioni. Second revised edition, p. 103. (Translated from the Tibetan, edited and annotated by Adriano Clemente with the help of the author. Translated from Italian into English by Andy Lukianowicz.)

Bibliography Edit

  • Charles B. Jones (18 May 2021). Pure Land: History, Tradition, and Practice. Shambhala Publications. ISBN 9781611808902.
  • Jones, Charles B. (2019) Chinese Pure Land Buddhism, Understanding a Tradition of Practice. University of Hawai‘i Press / Honolulu.
  • Dudjom Jigdral Yeshe Dorje (23 July 2012). The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism: Its Fundamentals and History. Wisdom Publications. ISBN 978-0-86171-734-7.
  • Nakamura, Hajime (1980). Indian Buddhism: A Survey with Bibliographical Notes. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-0272-8.
  • Gomez, Louis, O. (2004). "Pure Lands", in Buswell, Robert E., ed. Encyclopedia of Buddhism. Macmillan Reference USA. pp. 703–706. ISBN 0-02-865718-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Galen, Amstutz; Blum, Mark L. (2006). . Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 33 (2), 217-221
  • Halkias, Georgios (2013). Luminous Bliss: a Religious History of Pure Land Literature in Tibet. With an Annotated Translation and Critical Analysis of the Orgyen-ling golden short Sukhāvatīvyūha-sūtra. University of Hawai‘i Press, 335 pages.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Pure land at Wikimedia Commons
  • What is the Pure Land? on Tricycle's Buddhism for Beginners Series

pure, land, buddhafield, redirects, here, american, cult, buddhafield, cult, pure, abodes, buddhist, cosmology, pure, abodes, pure, land, concept, celestial, realm, buddha, bodhisattva, mahayana, buddhism, where, many, buddhists, aspire, reborn, japanese, copy. Buddhafield redirects here For the American cult see Buddhafield cult For pure abodes in Buddhist cosmology see Pure Abodes Pure Land is the concept of a celestial realm of a buddha or bodhisattva in Mahayana Buddhism where many Buddhists aspire to be reborn in Japanese copy of the Pure Land Taima Mandala which depicts Sukhavati the most popular Pure Land destination in East Asian Buddhism hanging scroll from 1750 The term Pure Land is particular to East Asian Buddhism Chinese 淨土 pinyin Jingtǔ and related traditions In Sanskrit Buddhist sources the equivalent concept is called a buddha field Sanskrit buddhakṣetra or more technically a pure buddha field visuddhabuddhakṣetra The various traditions that focus on attaining rebirth in a Pure Land have been termed Pure Land Buddhism Pure Lands are also evident in the literature and traditions of Taoism and Bon Contents 1 In Indian sources 1 1 Purity of buddha fields 1 2 Iconography 2 Pure Lands 2 1 Pure Lands of the Five Tathagatas 2 1 1 Abhirati 2 1 2 Sukhavati 2 2 Sakyamuni s Pure Land 2 3 Vairocana s universal Pure Land 2 4 Other identified Pure Lands 3 In East Asian Buddhism 4 In Tibetan Buddhism 4 1 Source 4 2 Field of Merit 4 3 Mandala 5 See also 6 Notes 6 1 Bibliography 7 External linksIn Indian sources Edit nbsp Tibetan painting of Amitabha in Sukhavati c 1700 1 The Mahavastu defines a buddha field as a realm where a tathagata a holy one fully and perfectly enlightened is to be found lives exists and teaches the Dharma for the benefit and happiness of the great body of beings men and gods 2 The Indian Mahayana sutras describe many buddha fields 3 4 5 6 Mahayana sources hold that there are an infinite number of buddhas each with their own buddha field where they teach the Dharma and where sentient beings can be reborn into due to their good karmic acts 7 8 A buddha field is a place where bodhisattvas can more easily progress spiritually on the bodhisattva path 7 Jan Nattier has argued that this idea became popular because the traditional understanding of the extreme length of the bodhisattva path seemed very difficult and training under a buddha in a buddha field especially prepared to train bodhisattvas was seen as a faster way to buddhahood 8 Sentient beings who are reborn in these pure buddha fields due to their good karma also contribute to the development of a Buddha field as can bodhisattvas who are able to travel there These buddha fields are therefore powerful places which are very advantageous to spiritual progress 7 According to Indian sources the bodhisattva path by ending all defilements culminates in the arising of a purified buddha field which is the manifestation and reflection of a Buddha s activity 2 Mahayana sources state that bodhisattvas like Avalokitesvara and Manjushri will obtain their own buddha fields after they attain full buddhahood 9 In the Lotus Sutra Buddha s close followers such as Sariputra Mahakasyapa Subhuti Maudgalyayana and Buddha s son Rahula are also predicted to attain their own Pure Lands The relative time flow in the Pure Lands may be different 10 with a day in one Pure Land being equivalent to years in another Purity of buddha fields Edit Mahayana sources speak of three kinds of buddha fields pure impure and mixed 2 An example of an impure field is often this world called Saha the world to be endured Sakyamuni s field Purified fields include Amitabha s buddha field of Sukhavati 11 Some sutras say that Sakyamuni chose to come to an impure world due to his vast compassion 12 However not all Mahayana texts agree that Sakyamuni s world is impure Numerous Mahayana sutras such as the Pancaviṃsatisahasrika prajnaparamita Lankavatara Vimalakirti and Lotus Sutras also state that this dualism between purity and impurity is illusory and instead state that even this world is a pure buddha field 2 Thus according to the Vimalakirti this seemingly impure world is actually pure It only appears impure because the deluded and impure minds of sentient beings perceive it like that As Paul Williams explains The impurity that we see is the result of impure awareness and also the Buddha s compassion in creating a world within which impure beings can grow Thus the real way to attain a Pure Land is to purify one s own mind Put another way we are already in the Pure Land if we but knew it Whatever the realm if it is inhabited by people with enlightened pure minds then it is a Pure Land 12 Numerous Mahayana sources also connect the concept of a purified buddhafield parisuddha buddhakṣetra with the purity of one s own mind Hence the Vimalakirti sutra states the bodhisattva who wishes to purify his buddhakṣetra should first of all skillfully adorn his own mind And why Because to the extent that the mind of a bodhisattva is pure is his buddhakṣetra purified 2 Iconography Edit Nakamura 1980 1987 p 207 establishes the Indian background of the padma imagery of the field which is evident iconographically as well as in motif and metaphor The descriptions of Pure Land in Pure Land sutras were greatly influenced by Brahmin and Hindu ideas and the topological situation in India There was a process of the development of lotus padma symbolism in Pure Land Buddhism The final outcome of the thought was as follows the aspirants of faith and assiduity are born transformed anupapaduka in the lotus flowers But those with doubts are born into the lotus buds They stay in the calyx of a lotus garbhavasa for five hundred years without seeing or hearing the Three Treasures Within the closed lotus flowers they enjoy pleasures as though they were playing in a garden or palace Nakamura Hajime Nakamura 1980 p 207 Pure Lands Edit nbsp Frontispiece of the 1718 Rules for Repenting and Rebirth in the Pure Land Wangsheng Jingtu Chanyuan Yikuei with Amitabha Omituo Flanked by Two Bodhisattvas Pusa and Reborn Souls on Lotus Blossoms nbsp Vietnamese depiction of Ksitigarbha in Pure Land nbsp Amida welcomes Chujo hime to the Western Paradise Taima Temple in Japan from a Muromachi period scroll Pure Lands of the Five Tathagatas Edit Further information Five Tathagatas The five Pure Lands of the five Tathagatas are 13 14 In the center Akaniṣṭha Ghanavyuha hosted by Vairocana Buddha In the East Abhirati hosted by Akṣobhya Buddha In the South Srimat hosted by Ratnasaṃbhava Buddha In the West Sukhavati hosted by Amitabha Buddha In the North Karmaprasiddhi or Prakuṭa hosted by Amoghasiddhi BuddhaAbhirati Edit Main article Abhirati Abhirati of Akshobhya in the east is suggested by some scholars to be the earliest Pure Land mentioned in Mahayana sutras 15 Sukhavati Edit Main article Sukhavati Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche in discussing the Mind Stream of Lokesvararaja that in fulfillment has come to be known as Amitabha According to the sutra known as the Rolling of Drums countless eons ago there was a joyous kingdom whose sovereign had great devotion for the buddha of that time Lokesvararaja The king renounced his kingdom became a monk and vowed to reach enlightenment He expressed his bodhicitta intention through forty eight vows and promised to refuse buddhahood if any of these vows were not fulfilled With these words the earth trembled and flowers rained down from the skies Praises resounded and with them the prophecy that this monk would surely become a buddha And so he did as the Buddha Amitabha In his lifetime as this bodhisattva monk Amitabha saw that countless pure realms existed for realized ones who had been victorious over the mind s delusions but no such realm was accessible to those still struggling on the path Among his forty eight vows was the aspiration to create a pure realm for all those who heard his name wished to attain that realm established the roots of virtue and dedicated their merit in order to be reborn there So powerful was his intention that he swore to refuse buddhahood if it did not enable him to manifest such a realm 16 Sukhavati is by far the most popular among Pure Land Buddhists There are many old and recent Buddhist texts reporting the condition of its dying believers Some Buddhists and followers of other religions claimed they went there and came back and they were viewed as cults 17 18 19 Some controversial teachings said the successors of Amitabha in Sukhavati would be Avalokitesvara and Mahasthamaprapta 20 21 22 Sakyamuni s Pure Land Edit The Mahayana Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutra states that Sakyamuni Buddha has his own Pure Land which is far away and is called Unsurpassable Chinese Wusheng 無勝 The Buddha manifests from his Pure Land into our world in order to teach the Dharma 23 Vairocana s universal Pure Land Edit nbsp Ming era statue of Vairocana Buddha on a thousand petaled lotus According to the Buddhavataṃsaka Sutra the whole universe is a vast pure buddha field which has been purified by Vairocana Buddha This is the view of Pure Land which is found in the Chinese Huayan tradition 24 According to this view our world is just one small part of this universal Pure Land which is named Ocean of worlds whose surface and inside are decorated with an arrangement of flowers Sanskrit Kusumatalagarbha vyuhalamkara lokadhatusamudra 25 It is also called the Lotus Treasury World Chinese 華蔵世界 Skt Padmagarbha lokadhatu since it is an array of billions of worlds in a lotus shape 26 Other identified Pure Lands Edit nbsp Maitreya in Tushita Heaven over the entrance of Maya Cave Kizil Xinjiang China Ghanavyuha Densely Arrayed which is the buddhafield of Vairocana in several Mahayana sutras like the Ghanavyuha Sutra In Tibetan Buddhism Ghanavyuha Akaniṣṭha is the supreme Saṃbhogakaya buddhafield of Vajradhara out of which emanate all Nirmaṇakaya Buddhas and Buddhafields such as Sukhavati 27 28 Vajradhatu and Garbhadhatu the dual buddhafields of Mahavairocana Buddha in Shingon Buddhism Vulture Peak 靈鷲山釋迦淨土 While Zhiyi was chanting the Lotus Sutra he saw the meeting of Gautama Buddha and bodhisattvas there Nanyue Huisi 慧思大師 said Only you can know that only I can prove you 29 Inner Court of Tushita 兜率內院 30 31 Some Buddhist scriptures have noted that Maitreya is currently teaching at the Inner Court of Tushita with some Buddhist Masters such as Xuanzang expressing a wish to go there 32 33 Other Buddhist monks such as Xuyun have also been known to have dreamt of going to the Inner Court of Tushita 34 35 Some Yiguandao followers claimed to have traveled there 36 37 38 The Inner Court of Tushita was historically a popular place for Buddhists to wish to be reborn in 39 40 41 42 however the vast majority of Pure Land Buddhists today hope to be reborn in Sukhavati 39 43 44 Vaiduryanirbhasa 東方淨琉璃世界 of Bhaisajyaguru in the east is compared by some Pure Land buddhists to Amitabha s Pure Land in the west 45 Bhaisajyaguru is also said to have avatars in six other Pure Lands 46 The city Ketumati is described as Maitreya s Pure Land 47 48 Zangdok Palri the Copper coloured Mountain of Padmasambhava is in the earth Dudjom Rinpoche said it was prophesied that all who had taken refuge in Padmasambhava or anyone who had any sort of connection with him would be reborn in Zangdok Palri 49 50 Shambhala in the Buddhist Kalachakra teachings Dhagpa Khadro of Vajrayogini 51 Changle 長樂淨土 of Qinghuadadi Taiyi Jiuku Tianzun 青華大帝太乙救苦天尊 52 is a Taoist Pure Land Taiyi Jiuku Tianzun also have Avatars in the taoist Pure Lands in ten directions eight directions up down 53 There are some Pure Land worlds in controversial sutras and folk religion texts 54 55 56 57 58 In East Asian Buddhism Edit nbsp Qing dynasty painting by Ding Guanpeng titled Illustration of the Splendid Pure Land currently housed in the National Palace Museum Taipei In Chinese Buddhism the Pure Land was commonly seen as a transcendent realm beyond the three realms the desire realm form realm and formless realm into which one can be reborn after death 59 This view of the Pure Land as a place was defended by masters of Pure Land Buddhism like Shandao However another interpretation of a Pure Land is that it is non dual with our world The Vimalakirti Sutra was widely cited by exponents of this non dual view of the Pure Land often called mind only Pure Land weixin jingtǔ 唯心淨土 This was most commonly defended by masters of the Chan Zen school 60 In the Platform Sutra for example Huineng states that only the deluded hope to be born in a faraway land in the west while the wise who know their nature is empty seek the Pure Land by purifying their minds 61 These two views of the Pure Land led to many debates in Chinese Buddhism 62 In a similar fashion according to the Huayan school patriarch Fazang the ultimate view of the Buddha s Pure Land derived from the Avatamsaka sutra is that it is interfused with all worlds in the multiverse and indeed with all phenomena dharmas 63 This view of the Buddha s Pure Land is inconceivable and all pervasive Since for Fazang the entire Dharma realm is visible within each particle in the universe the Pure Land is therefore contained in every phenomena and is non dual with our world 63 Later Chinese thinkers similarly attempted to synthesize the two ideas Yunqi Zhuhong 1535 1615 saw the Pure Land as an actual place which is a useful upaya skill means created by the Buddha Once beings reach this realm they realize that it is just mind Real sages can see that both ideas are interconnected and thus can affirm both without any conflict 64 Similarly Hanshan Deqing c 1546 1623 taught a synthesis of these various ideas ideas 65 According to Hanshan there are three kinds of Pure Lands associated with the trikaya the three bodies of the buddha 65 the Eternal Land of Calm Illumination also known as the Pure Land of mere mind This is the land where the Buddhas and bodhisattvas live the Majestic Land of True Reward which refers to the Huayan view of a Pure Land that pervades the entire universe and is interfused with every particle and phenomenon in existence the Incomplete Land of Expediency which is the Western paradise of Sukhavati taught in the Amitabha sutras and is only one of a myriad of such skillfully manifested Pure Lands in existence This land is associated with the nirmanakaya In Tibetan Buddhism Edit nbsp Buddha Amitabha in His Pure Land of Suvakti with the eight great bodhisattvas Central Tibet 18th century Pure Lands have been documented as arising due to the intention and aspiration of a bodhisattva such as the case of Amitabha but other discourse has codified that they are entwined with the theory of the saṃbhogakaya and are understood to manifest effortlessly and spontaneously due to other activities of a Buddha and the pure qualities and the mysteries of the trikaya The five features of Buddhahood the attributes of the Sambhogakaya play a role perfect teacher teaching retinue place and time Dudjom Jigdral Yeshe Dorje 2012 p 1991 Source Edit Very important to all pure abodes is the Source Tibetan ཆ ས འབ ང Wylie chos byung Sanskrit dharmodaya from which they dwell and which supports them the Wellspring of myriad fonts as emergent It may be understood as an interface portal or epiphany between the Dharmakaya and the Sambhogakaya It is seminal in the establishment of mandalas governing the outer inner or secret dimensions It is the opening and consecration of the sacred space which enfolds and supports the expanse of the pure abode In iconography it is represented by the six pointed star the two interlocking offset equilateral triangles that form a symmetry This is the sanctum sanctorum Sanskrit garbha gṛha It later developed into the primordial purity of the lotus which supports the mandala thangka or the murti of the deity In temple siting it is the power place or spirit of place that was augured or divined in the sacred geometry of geodesy Sanskrit vastu sastra In yoga asana the source is Vajrasana the seat of enlightenment the ancient name of Bodh Gaya and an alternate name for mahamudra or padmasana 66 Source of phenomena or qualities chos byung dharmodaya Pundarika defines dharmodaya as that from which phenomena devoid of intrinsic nature originate Phenomena devoid of intrinsic nature refers to the ten powers the four fearlessnesses and the other 84 000 aspects of the teachings Their source dharmodaya is the pure realm the abode of all buddhas and bodhisattvas the place of bliss the place of birth it is not the place that discharges blood urine and regenerative fluids i e the vagina Source Stainless Light Toh 1347 vol Da f237a3 5 67 Field of Merit Edit The Field of Merit Wylie tshogs zhing is a pictorial representation in tree form of the triratna and the guru employed in Tibetan Buddhism as an object of veneration when taking refuge It is visualized internally as a part of the commencement phase of each sadhana The Field of Merit is a Pure Land Each school or sect has its own distinctive form of the tree in which the numerous lineage holders or vidyadhara and dharma protectors or dharmapala are represented In discussing the visualisation of the Merit Field Namkha i links the Three Jewels of Buddha Dharma and Sangha with the Three Roots of Guru Deva and Dakini The merit field tshogs zhing that is the source of all the accumulation of merit designates the manifestation of the Three Jewels Buddha Dharma Sangha and of the Three Roots Guru Deva Dakini visualised by the practitioner 68 Mandala Edit Mandalas especially sand mandalas are Pure Lands and may be understood as Nirmaṇakaya as are all murti thangka and sacred tools that have consecrated dedicated and the deity yidam invoked and requested to reside clarification needed Some namkha are Pure Lands According to Nirmaṇakaya as tulku theory nirmanakaya spontaneously arise due to the intention aspiration faith and devotion of the sangha See also EditTarwan in MandaeismNotes Edit Amitabha the Buddha of the Western Pure Land Sukhavati Central Tibet The Metropolitan Museum of Art Archived from the original on 2023 04 11 Retrieved 2023 04 11 a b c d e Sharf Robert H On Pure Land 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from the original on 2012 02 27 Retrieved 2011 12 31 用户名 密码 验证码 匿名 CheckLogin 发表评论 道教净土概论 Lhsdj org Archived from the original on 2011 09 26 Retrieved 2011 12 31 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 蓮生活佛講真實佛法息災賜福經 Tbsn org 1988 12 17 Archived from the original on 2012 02 23 Retrieved 2011 12 31 佛說北斗七星延命經 Cbeta org Archived from the original on 2012 02 22 Retrieved 2011 12 31 佛說八陽神咒經 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2012 12 07 北斗古佛消災延壽妙經 Archived from the original on 2013 09 30 Retrieved 2012 12 07 悲華經 Cbeta org 2008 08 30 Archived from the original on 2012 02 22 Retrieved 2011 12 31 Jones 2019 p 48 Jones 2019 pp 42 50 107 Jones 2019 p 51 Jones 2019 pp 43 49 50 a b Sato Kaion 佐藤海音 The Theory of Pure Land in Fazang s Huayan wujiao zhang 華厳五教章 に於ける浄土論 Indogaku Bukkyōgaku Kenkyu 印度學佛教學研究 Journal of Indian and Buddhist Studies v 66 n 2 n 144 2018 03 20 pp 520 523 Jones 2019 p 52 a b Hsu Sung Peng 1979 A Buddhist Leader in Ming China The Life and Thought of Han shan Te Ch ing p 114 University Park and London The Pennsylvania State University Press Though in modern parlance Vajrasana Mahamudra and Padmasana may denote different asanas and indeed other esoteric positions and doctrines it is understood that they are also synonymous for the meditative seal or lock Sanskrit mudra bandha of crossed legs with ankles on highs asana which commands the flame of kundalini to rise and unfold Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Taye author compiler Elio Guarisco translator Ingrid McLeon translator editor 2005 The treasury of knowledge book six part four Systems of Buddhist Tantra Ithaca New York USA Snow Lion Publications p 399 ISBN 978 1 55939 210 5 Norbu Namkhai 2001 The Precious Vase Instructions on the Base of Santi Maha Sangha Shang Shung Edizioni Second revised edition p 103 Translated from the Tibetan edited and annotated by Adriano Clemente with the help of the author Translated from Italian into English by Andy Lukianowicz Bibliography Edit Charles B Jones 18 May 2021 Pure Land History Tradition and Practice Shambhala Publications ISBN 9781611808902 Jones Charles B 2019 Chinese Pure Land Buddhism Understanding a Tradition of Practice University of Hawai i Press Honolulu Dudjom Jigdral Yeshe Dorje 23 July 2012 The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism Its Fundamentals and History Wisdom Publications ISBN 978 0 86171 734 7 Nakamura Hajime 1980 Indian Buddhism A Survey with Bibliographical Notes Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0272 8 Gomez Louis O 2004 Pure Lands in Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism Macmillan Reference USA pp 703 706 ISBN 0 02 865718 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Galen Amstutz Blum Mark L 2006 Editors Introduction Pure Lands in Japanese Religion Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 33 2 217 221 Halkias Georgios 2013 Luminous Bliss a Religious History of Pure Land Literature in Tibet With an Annotated Translation and Critical Analysis of the Orgyen ling golden short Sukhavativyuha sutra University of Hawai i Press 335 pages External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Pure land nbsp Look up pure land in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Media related to Pure land at Wikimedia Commons What is the Pure Land on Tricycle s Buddhism for Beginners Series Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pure land amp oldid 1178772966, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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