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Shingon Buddhism

Shingon (真言宗, Shingon-shū, "True Word / Mantra School") is one of the major schools of Buddhism in Japan and one of the few surviving Vajrayana lineages in East Asian Buddhism. It is sometimes also called Japanese Esoteric Buddhism, or Eastern Esotericism (Dōngmì, 東密). The word shingon is the Japanese reading of the Chinese word 真言 (zhēnyán),[1] which is the translation of the Sanskrit word mantra.

Danjō garan of Kongōbu-ji, the head temple of the Kōyasan sect based in Mount Kōya

The Zhēnyán lineage was founded in China (c. 7th–8th centuries) by Indian vajrācāryas (esoteric masters) like Śubhakarasiṃha, Vajrabodhi and Amoghavajra. These esoteric teachings would later flourish in Japan under the auspices of a Buddhist monk named Kūkai (空海, 774–835), who traveled to Tang China and received these esoteric transmissions from a Chinese master named Huiguo (746–805). Kūkai established his tradition at Mount Kōya (in Wakayama Prefecture), which remains the central pilgrimage center of Shingon Buddhism.

The practice of the Shingon school stresses that one is able to attain "buddhahood in this very body" (sokushin jōbutsu) through its practices, especially those which make use of the "three mysteries" (Jp: sanmi 三密) of mudra, mantra and mandala.[2][3] Another influential doctrine introduced by Shingon was the idea that all beings are originally enlightened, a doctrine that was known as hongaku.[4]

The Shingon school's teachings and rituals had an influence on other Japanese traditions, especially those of the Tendai school, as well as Shugendo and Shinto.[5] Its teachings also influenced the ritual repertoire of Japanese Zen, including Soto Zen (through the figure of Keizan).[6] Shingon Buddhism also influenced broader Japanese culture, including medieval Japanese aesthetics, art, and craftsmanship.[7]

History edit

 
Painting of Kūkai from a set of scrolls depicting the first eight patriarchs of the Shingon school. Japan, Kamakura period (13th–14th centuries).

Shingon Buddhism was founded in the Heian period (794–1185) by a Japanese Buddhist monk named Kūkai (774–835 CE) who traveled to China in 804 to study Esoteric Buddhist practices in the city of Xi'an (西安), then called Chang-an, at Azure Dragon Temple (青龍寺) under Huiguo, a student of the Indian esoteric master Amoghavajra.[8] Kūkai returned to Japan with the teachings and scriptures of Chinese Esoteric Buddhism and founded a new tradition of Japanese Buddhism that became immediately influential with the island's elites. Shingon followers usually refer to Kūkai as Kōbō-Daishi (弘法大師, Great Master of the Propagation of Dharma) or Odaishi-sama (お大師様, The Great Master), the posthumous name given to him years after his death by Emperor Daigo.

Kūkai's early days and visit to China edit

Kūkai was born to a family of the aristocratic Saeki clan in Shikoku and received a classical Confucian education at Kyoto's college (daigaku).[8][9] He converted to Buddhism in his 20s and was inspired to practice asceticism in the mountains and wander the countryside as an ascetic hermit (though he also visited cities to study texts).[10] During this time his main meditation was the mantra of bodhisattva Ākāśagarbha found in the Kokūzō-gumonji no hō (Ākāśagarbha Memory-Retention Practice, Taisho no.1145). While he was practicing in the mountains, he had a vision of the bodhisattva flying at him.[11]

During this early period of intense study, prayer and practice, Kūkai sought the highest truth to be found in Buddhism. One day he dreamt of a man telling him to seek out the Mahavairocana Sutra.[12] He was able to obtain a copy in Chinese (and Sanskrit) but large portions of the text were undecipherable to him and thus he decided to go to China to find someone who could explain it to him.[13]

In 804, Kūkai set sail on a fleet of four ships to China. The future Tendai founder Saichō was on the same fleet.[14] When Kūkai first met Huiguo (a student of Amoghavajra) on the fifth month of 805, Huiguo was sixty and on the verge of death. Huiguo exclaimed to Kūkai that he had been waiting for him and immediately initiated him into the esoteric mandalas.[15] In the short space of three months, Huiguo initiated and taught Kūkai everything he knew on the doctrines and practices of esoteric Buddhism. During this time Kūkai also learned Sanskrit from some Indian masters living in China.[16]

Kūkai's return edit

 
Jingo-ji, on Mount Takao, the first major temple in which Kūkai worked on his return to Japan

Kūkai returned to Japan after Huiguo's death in 806. He brought back numerous Buddhist texts, mandalas, ritual items and other books.[16] After returning, Kūkai asked the imperial court for permission to establish a new Buddhist school and waited three years for a response in Kyushu.[17] In 809 Kūkai was allowed to reside at a temple near Kyoto known as Takaosanji (now Jingo-ji). This temple would become his major center of operations near the capital.[18] Kūkai's fortunes rose steadily when Emperor Saga became his patron and Kūkai was appointed as the head of Todai-ji in 810.[19] Kūkai began to give esoteric initiations (abhiseka) at this time, including to elite laymen and to Saicho and his students. He also began to organize a new school of esoteric Buddhism centered around Jingo-ji and wrote some key works which outlined the main teachings of Shingon.[20]

In 818, Kūkai asked emperor Saga to grant him Mount Kōya (高野山 Kōyasan), in present-day Wakayama province, so that he could establish a true monastic center away from the disturbances of the capital and this was soon granted.[21] Kūkai and his disciples soon began to build the new monastic complex, which they imagined and modeled on the two mandalas, the womb and vajra.[22] This mountain center soon became the key center for Shingon study and practice. In his later life, Kūkai continued to actively promote the efficacy of Shingon ritual among the elite even while also working to build Kōyasan into a major center. Kūkai eventually achieved control of Tō-ji for the Shingon school, which was a major temple within the capital. His final request before his death in 832 was to construct a Shingon hall in Imperial palace grounds in order to accommodate the practice of the seven day ritual of chanting the Sutra of Golden Light. His request was eventually granted, a year after his death.[23]

After Kūkai edit

 
Shingon monks at Mount Koya

After Kūkai, the main Shingon temples were taken over by key disciples like Jitsue, Shinzen, Shinzai, Eon and Shōhō. The main leadership after his death was Shinnen (804–891) and already at this time there was some conflict between Tō-ji and Kōyasan.[24] Some Shingon monks also followed in Kūkai's footsteps and visited China to receive more teachings and texts. Likewise, several Tendai monks also visited China and brought back esoteric teachings, making Tendai esotericism a major competitor to Shingon.[25]

Under Kangen (853–925), Tō-ji temple rose to become the head temple of Shingon. Mount Kōya experienced a period of decline afterwards, until it recovered in the 11th century through the support of Fujiwara clan nobles like Fujiwara no Michinaga.[25]

Shingon Buddhism enjoyed immense popularity during the Heian period (平安時代), particularly among the nobility, and contributed greatly to the art and literature of the time, influencing other communities such as the Tendai school.[26]

During the late Heian, Pure Land Buddhism was becoming very popular and Shingon was also influenced by this popular devotional trend. Mount Kōya soon became the center for groups of wandering holy men called Kōya Hijiri, who merged Pure Land practices focused on Amida Buddha with devotion to Kūkai and were also involved in raising funds for the rebuilding of many temples.[27] Kōya-san soon became a major center for pilgrimage for all Japanese.[27]

The Shingon monk Kakuban (1095–1143) was one Shingon scholar who responded to the rise in Pure Land devotionalism. He studied Shingon along with Tendai and also incorporated Pure Land practice into his Shingon system, as well as promoting an esoteric interpretation of nembutsu and Pure Land.[28][29] Unlike other Pure Land schools, Kakuban held that the Pure Land exists in this very world and he also taught that Vairocana is Amida.[29]

Kakuban, and his faction of priests centered at the Denbō-in (伝法院) soon came into conflict with the leadership at Kongōbu-ji, the head temple at Mount Kōya. Through his connections with high-ranking nobles in Kyoto, Kakuban was appointed abbot of Mount Kōya. The leadership at Kongōbu-ji opposed him and after several conflicts (some of which involved the burning down of temples who belonged to Kakuban's faction), Kakuban's group left the mountain for Mount Negoro to the northwest, where they constructed a new temple complex now known as Negoro-ji (根来寺).[29]

After the death of Kakuban in 1143, attempts to make peace were unsuccessful and after further conflicts, the Negoro faction led by Raiyu, founded the new Shingi Shingon School based on Kakuban's teachings. As such, Shingon became divided into two major sub-schools, Kogi Shingon (古義真言宗, Ancient Shingon school), and Shingi Shingon (新義真言宗, Reformed Shingon school).[30] Over time, the two Shingon sub-schools also diverged doctrinally on such issues as the attainment of buddhahood through a single mantra and the theory of how the Dharmakāya teaches the Dharma.[30]

Following in Kakuban's footsteps, the Koyasan monk Dōhan 道範 (1179–1252) has been seen as a key figure in the promotion of what has been called an “esoteric Pure Land culture”, a Shingon variety of Pure Land Buddhism that became very popular during this period and influenced other figures and schools like Eison of Saidaiji's Shingon Risshu. This esoteric pure land culture included esoteric uses and interpretations of the nembutsu along with the popularization and use of the Mantra of Light.[31]

During the Heian period, the adoption of Shinto deities into Buddhism became popular, something that became known as Shinbutsu-shūgō (神仏習合, "syncretism of kami and buddhas"). This movement saw local Japanese deities as manifestations of the Buddhas, for example Amaterasu was seen as an emanation of Vairocana in Shingon. This emanation theory was called honji suijaku by Buddhists. Major Shingon centers participated in this development, with key deities like Hachiman being worshipped at temples like Tō-ji for example.[32]

Also during the Heian period, the syncretic religion of Shugendō started to develop and the influence of Shingon was one major element in its development. Shingon was especially influential on the Tōzan branch of Shugendō. which was centered on Mount Kinbu.[32]

Kamakura to Sengoku period edit

The Kamakura period (1185 to 1333) saw the rise of another new Shingon tradition, the Shingon-risshū school. This new tradition stressed the importance of keeping the monastic Vinaya, along with esoteric practice. It was promoted by figures like Shunjō (1166–1227) and Eison (叡尊 1201–1290) and centered around Saidai-ji.[33] Ninshō carried on the work of this tradition, which was known for its many public works projects, including building hospitals, hostels for the poor and animal sanctuaries.[34]

Also during this period, many followers of the Ji sect founded by Ippen (1234–1289) made Kōya-san their home, joining with the Kōya hiriji groups, and many halls for Amida centered Pure Land practice were built on the mountain.[35]

During the Muromachi period (1336 to 1573), the Shingon schools continued to develop, some under the support of elite families or even emperors, like Go-Uda (1267–1324), who entered the priesthood at Tō-ji and helped revitalize the temple as well as Daikaku-ji.[36] Meanwhile, on Kōyasan, Yūkai (1345–1416) was responsible for revitalizing Shingon doctrinal study and also for driving away all of the nembutsu hiriji (now mostly following the Ji sect) who had been living on the mountain.[37] He also purged the tradition of all traces of the heterodox Tachikawa school (even burning their texts). The Tachikawa school was known for teaching a mixed form of esotericism which made use of Daoist and sexual practices.[38]

During the war torn Sengoku period (1467 to 1615), all the Shingon temples in or near the capital were destroyed or stripped of all lands, while the Shingon centers in the mountains like Kōya and Negoro were forced to raise militaries for self defense, though sometimes they used these forces to attempt to expand the lands holdings of their temples.[39] Mount Negoro, the center of Shingi Shingon, was sacked by the daimyō Toyotomi Hideyoshi (豊臣秀吉) in 1585. After this show of force, Kōyasan, the last major Shingon temple left standing at this time, submitted to Hideyoshi, and was spared destruction.[39]

Edo period edit

 
Office of Hase-dera in spring

During the Edo period (1603–1868), the Shingi Shingon monks from Mount Negoro had escaped and took their lineages elsewere, eventually founding new schools at Hase-dera (the Buzan school) and at Chishaku (the Chisan-ha school).[40] In the Edo period, the Tokugawa Shogunate implemented new religious control measures for the Buddhist community. Tokugawa Ieyasu issued regulations for the Shingon school in 1615, incorporating it into its administrative temple system.[40] Under this new peace, Shingon study was revived in the various temples. Hase-dera became a major center for the broad study of all of Buddhism and also of secular topics. Meanwhile in Kōyasan, the Ji sect hiriji were allowed to return and were incorporated into the Shingon school, though this would lead to conflict later on.[41]

During this period, monks like Jōgen and Onkō (1718–1804) focused on studying and promoting Buddhist precepts and monastic discipline. This renewed interest in precepts study was likely a response to Confucian critiques of Buddhism at the time. Onkō was also a well known scholar of Sanskrit.[42]

Meiji period edit

After the Meiji Restoration (1868), the state forced a separation of Shinto and Buddhism (shinbutsu bunri) and abolished the Chokusai Hōe (Imperial Rituals). The Shingon school was significantly affected by these changes (since it was closely connected with many Shinto shrines), as well as by the Meiji era anti-buddhist persecutions known as haibutsu kishaku (abolish Buddhism and destroy Shākyamuni).[43] Some Shingon temples that were affiliated with Shintō shrines were converted into shrines. Some Shinto monks left the Buddhist priesthood to become Shintō priests, or they returned to secular life. The government enforced the confiscation of temple land and this led to the closure of many Shingon temples. Those who survived had to turn to the regular population for support.[44]

During the Meiji period, the government also adopted the "one sect, one leader" rule which forced all Shingon schools to merge under a single leader which was called a "Chōja" (Superintendent). This led to some internal political conflict among the various sub-schools of Shingon, some of which attempted to form their own separate official sects. Some of these eventually succeeded in attaining independence and eventually the unified Shingon sect split into various sub-sects again.

20th century and post-war period edit

 
Qinglong Temple (青龍寺; Qīnglóng Sì; lit. 'Green Dragon Temple') in Xi'an. It is the temple where Huigo transmitted Shingon to Kukai. It has recently seen a revival of Chinese esotericism, based partly on Japanese Shingon.
 
Entrance to the Shingon Mission in Honolulu

In March 1941, under the government's religious policy, Shingon schools were forcibly merged to form the 'Dai-Shingon' sect. During the second world war, prayers for the surrender of enemy nations were frequently held at various temples. After the war, both Ko-Gyō and Shin-Gyō schools continued to separate, and some established their own unique doctrines and traditions. There are now around eighteen major Shingon schools with their own headquarter temples (honzan) in Japan. Yamasaki estimated the number of Shingon followers at ten million and the number of priests at sixteen thousand in around eleven thousand temples (in his 1988 book).[45] In Japan, there are also several new Shingon influenced groups classified as 'New Religions'. Some of these new movements include Shinnyo-en, Agon-shu and Gedatsu-kai.[46]

Another recent modern development is the phenomenon of Chinese students reviving Chinese Esoteric Buddhism through studying Japanese Shingon.[47] This “tantric revival movement” (mijiao fuxing yundong 密教復興運動) was mainly propagated by Chinese Buddhists who traveled to Japan to be trained, initiated, and receive dharma transmission as acharyas in the Shingon tradition and who then return home to establish the tradition.[47] Some important figures of this revival include Wang Hongyuan 王弘願 (1876–1937), and Guru Wuguang (悟光上師 (1918–2000), both trained in Shingon and went on to spread Shingon teachings in the Chinese speaking world.[48][49]

Some of these Chinese acharyas have chosen to officially remain under the oversight of Kōyasan Shingon-shū or Shingon-shu Buzan-ha and minister as Chinese branches of Japanese Shingon, but others have chosen to create independent and distinct schools.[50][51] Today, these revivalist lineages exist in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Malaysia. Though they draw mainly from Shingon teachings, they have also adopted some Tibetan Buddhist elements.[52]

A similar phenomenon has occurred in South Korea, where two recent esoteric schools have been founded, the Chinŏn (眞言) and the Jingak Order (眞 覺), both of which are largely based on Shingon teachings.[53]

During the 20th century, Shingon Buddhism also spread to the West, especially to the United States (a move led by the Japanese Diaspora). There are now various temples on the West Coast and Hawaii like Hawaii Shingon Mission (built 1915–1918) and Koyasan Beikoku Betsuin (Los Angeles, founded 1912).

Doctrines edit

Sources edit

The teachings of Shingon are based on Mahayana texts, and early Buddhist tantras. The key esoteric sources are the Mahāvairocana Sūtra (大日経, Dainichi-kyō), the Vajraśekhara Sūtra (金剛頂経, Kongōchō-kyō), and the Susiddhikara Sūtra (蘇悉地経, Soshitsuji-kyō).[54] Important Mahayana sutras in Shingon include the Lotus Sutra, the Brahmajāla Sūtra and Heart Sutra. Kūkai wrote commentaries on all three.[55]

Shingon derives form the early period of Indian Vajrayana (then known as Mantrayana, the Vehicle of Mantras).[56] Unlike Tibetan Buddhism, which focuses on the Anuttarayoga Tantras, which are tantras that arose at a later date of Indian Buddhism, Shingon bases itself on earlier works like the Mahavairocana which generally lack the antinomian uses of sexual yoga, taboo substances and charnel ground imagery found in the later tantras.[57] Nevertheless, the concept of "great bliss" (tairaku) and the transformation of desire (and other defilements) into wisdom is found in Shingon.[57]

Another important sutra in Shingon is the Prajñāpāramitānaya-sūtra (Jp. Hannyarishukyō, Taishō vol. 8, no. 243). This is a late "tantric" Prajñaparamita sutra in 150 lines which was translated by Amoghavajra and which contains various verses and seed syllables which encapsulate the Prajñaparamita teaching.[58][59] The Hannyarishukyō is used extensively in Shingon as part of daily recitation and ritual practice.[59] The full Sanskrit title is Mahāsukhavajra-amoghasamaya-sūtra (Ch. Dale jingang bukong zhenshi sanmohe jing, Sutra of the Vow of Fulfilling the Great Perpetual Enjoyment and Benefiting All Sentient Beings Without Exception).[60]

Another important source for the Shingon school is the Awakening of Faith and a commentary on it called the On the Interpretation of Mahāyāna (Shi Moheyan lun 釈摩訶衍論, Japanese: Shakumakaen-ron, Taisho no. 1668), which was traditionally attributed to Nagarjuna (though it is likely an East Asian composition).[61][62]

Finally, the works of Kūkai are key sources in Shingon Buddhism, including his various commentaries on the key esoteric texts of Shingon as well as original works like his magnum opus, the ten volume Jūjū shinron (Treatise on Ten Levels of Mind) and the shorter summary Hizō hōyaku (Precious Key to the Secret Treasury).[63]

The Dharmakaya Mahāvairocana edit

 
12th century painting of Mahāvairocana, Heian period, Nezu Museum

In Shingon, the Buddha Mahāvairocana (Sanskrit for "Great Illuminator"), also known as Dainichi Nyorai (大日如来, "Great Sun Tathagata") is the universal primordial (honji-shin) Buddha that is the basis of all phenomena. Śubhakarasiṃha's Darijing shu (大日經疏‎, J. Dainichikyōsho) states that Mahāvairocana is “the original ground dharmakāya.” (薄伽梵即毘盧遮那本地法身, at Taisho no. 1796:39.580). According to Hakeda, Kūkai identified the Dharmakaya with "the eternal Dharma, the uncreated, imperishable, beginningless, and endless Truth".[64]

This ultimate reality does not exist independently of all things, but is immanent in them. Dainichi is worshipped as the supreme Buddha and also appears as the central figure of the Five Wisdom Buddhas.[65][66] Hakeda also writes that in Shingon, Dainichi is "at the center of a multitude of Buddhas, bodhisattvas, and powers; He is the source of enlightenment and the unity underlying all variety. To attain enlightenment means to realize Mahāvairocana, the implication being that Mahāvairocana is originally within man."[64]

According to Kūkai, the Buddha's light illuminates and pervades all, like the light of the sun (hence his name). The immanent presence also means that every being already has "original enlightenment" (hongaku) within. This is also known as the "enligthened mind" (bodhicitta) and the Buddha nature.[64] As Kūkai writes: "where is the Dharmakaya? It is not far away; it is in our body. The source of wisdom? In our mind; indeed, it is close to us!".[64]

Because of this, there is the possibility of "becoming Buddha in this very embodied existence" (sokushin jōbutsu), even for the most depraved persons.[67][64] All beings thus have the potential to become Buddhas through their own effort and through the power / grace (adhisthana) of the Buddha. Kūkai thus rejected the idea we lived in an age of Dharma decline and that therefore one had to be reborn in the pure land to attain enlightenment. This also informs his positive view of the natural world, as well as of the arts, all of which he saw as manifestation of the Buddha.[68]

Activities and forms of the Dharmakaya edit

 
Dainichi-nyorai (Vairocana) image in Kume-dera

Dainichi is the ultimate source of all Buddhas and bodhisattvas, and of the entire cosmos. The centrality of Dainichi is seen in the fact that he appears at the centre of both the Diamond Realm and the Womb Realm mandalas.[69] According to Kūkai, Mahāvairocana is also the Universal Principle which underlies all Buddhist teachings. Thus, other Buddhist deities can be thought of as manifestations of Dainichi, each with their own attributes. As Kūkai writes, "the great Self is one, yet can be many".[70]

Like in the Huayan (Kegon) school, Shingon sees Dainichi's body as being equal to the entire universe. As Dharmakaya (Jpn: hosshin, Dharma body), Vairocana also constantly teaches the Dharma in inconceivable ways throughout the universe, including through the secret mysteries of Shingon esotericism. The Dharmakaya is embodied absolute reality and truth and is mostly ineffable but can be experienced through esoteric practices such as mudras and mantras. Ultimately, the whole phenomenal world itself and all the sounds and movements in it are also considered to be the teaching of Vairocana Buddha, which is identical with the cosmic body of the Buddha.[67] Thus, for Kūkai, the entire universe, together with all actions, persons and Buddhas in it, are all part of Vairocana's cosmic sermon to its manifestations. In Shingon, this idea that all phenomena in the universe are constantly revealing the presence of the Dharmakaya Buddha, is part of the doctrine of "the dharmakaya's expounding of the Dharma" (hosshin seppō).[67][71] Furthermore, according to the syncretic doctrine of honji suijaku, the Shinto sun goddess Amaterasu was considered a manifestation of Dainichi Nyorai along with other Shinto deities.[72][66]

Kūkai explains the Dharmakaya as having four main bodies (shishu hosshin):[73]

  • Absolute Dharmakaya (jishō hosshin) – the ultimate wisdom body of all the Buddhas out which the entire cosmos manifests
  • The Dharmakaya in Bliss / Participation (juyō hosshin) – it has two aspects: the bliss aspect, a state of absolute samadhi, and the participation aspect, which is how the Dharmakaya appears to the most advanced bodhisattvas as Buddha forms.
  • Transformation Dharmakaya (henge hosshin) – how the Buddha appears to lower level bodhisattvas, sravakas and ordinary people. This includes the historical Buddha Shakyamuni.
  • Emanation Dharmakaya (tōru hosshin) – bodies emanating from the Dharmakaya in many forms, including nonhuman beings and hell beings.

Although portrayed through the use of anthropomorphic metaphors, Shingon does not see the Dharmakaya Buddha as a separate or individual personal entity or a God standing apart from the universe. Instead, the Buddha is the universe properly understood.[74]

The wisdom body of the Dharmakaya edit

 
Statues of the Five Tathāgatas at Renge-in Tanjō-ji

Another important feature of the Dharmakaya in Kūkai's buddhology is his analysis of Vairocana's body of wisdom (chishin). According to this teaching, the Dharmakaya has five wisdoms, each one is associated with a Buddha and four of them are associated with a type of mundane consciousness (drawn from the Yogacara system of eight consciousnesses):[75]

  1. The Wisdom that Perceives the Essential Nature of the World of Dharma (hokkai taishō chi): the eternal Source of knowledge and light at the center of all things. It is represented by Mahāvairocana Buddha in the Vajradhatu Mandala.
  2. Mirrorlike Wisdom (daienkyō): the wisdom which reflects things as they are without any distortion. It is represented by Aksobhya Buddha and is associated with the alaya-vijñana (storehouse consciousness).
  3. Wisdom of Equality (byōdōshō chi): the wisdom which sees the identity and sameness of all phenomena and beings. It is represented by Ratnasambhava Buddha and is associated with the ego consciousness (manas).
  4. Wisdom of Observation (myōkanzatchi) – the wisdom which is free of discrimination and sees all objects of mind without discrimination / conceptualization. It is represented by Amitabha and is associated with the mental consciousness (manovijñana).
  5. Wisdom of Action (jōsosa chi): the wisdom manifested as actions that help all sentient beings and guide them to Buddhahood. It is represented Amoghasiddhi and is associated with the five sense consciousnesses.

In the Vajrasekhara, the illumination of the Buddha's body of wisdom is symbolized as a vajra, Indra's indestructible adamantine weapon, and it represents the dynamic function of penetrating insight.[76] In the Mahavairocana sutra meanwhile, the Buddha's Body of Principle (Jp: ri, Chinese: li) is symbolized by a lotus and stands for "compassion, potentiality, growth and creativity" according to Hakeda.[76] For Kūkai, both of these bodies are non-dual. Kūkai writes:

That which realizes is Wisdom and that which is to be realized in Principle. The names differ but they are one in their essential nature.[76]

The six great elements, the four mandalas and the three mysteries edit

 
Garbhadhātu (Womb Realm) maṇḍala with Mahāvairocana located at the center of the circle

According to Kūkai, the Dharmakaya can further be explained terms of the "Body of Six Great Elements" (rokudaishin). This means that for Kūkai, the Dharmakaya consists of the six great elements which "are interfused and are in a state of eternal harmony".[77] The great elements (mahābhūtani) are earth, water, fire, wind, space, and consciousness, and they are the universal elements out of which all beings and matter are made. These great elements are all in a state of perfect interfusion (yuanrong, 圓融, i.e. they are all harmoniously interconnected), a teaching which was first articulated in the Huayan school by patriarchs like Fazang.[78][79] Like Fazang, Kūkai uses the metaphor of Indra's Net to describe the infinite interrelation of all existence, meaning that the Dharmakaya Mahāvairocana and every sentient being in the universe "are not identical but are nevertheless identical; they are not different but are nevertheless different."[80]

For Kūkai, the consequence of this doctrine is a complete non-duality between seemingly different phenomena like mind and matter, humanity and nature, sentient and insentient, and so on. Thus, Kūkai writes: "matter is no other than mind; mind is no other than matter. Without any obstruction, they are interrelated."[81] This interrelation is one of macrocosmic harmony, an eternal natural order (hōni no dōri) which is identical with the yoga and samadhi of the Dharmakaya. Sentient beings, as microcosmic manifestations of the Dharmakaya, can tune in to that harmony through practicing samadhi.[82]

Another perspective with which to understand the Dharmakaya is through the four mandalas (circles, ranges, spheres) which stand for the cosmic Buddha Vairocana's extension, intention, communication and action:[83]

  • Mahāmandala – the entire physical universe as the body of the Dharmakaya Buddha
  • Samayamandala – the ultimate intention of the Dharmakaya Buddha which is omnipresent throughout the universe and is universal compassion
  • Dharmamandala – the universal sphere in which the Dharmakaya Buddha's preaching and revelation of the Dharma is taking place
  • Karmamandala – the universal activities of the Dharmakaya Buddha, i.e. all the movements of the universe

These four mandalas are all said to be deeply interconnected or as Kūkai writes "inseparably related to one another".[84]

The constant preaching of the Dharmakaya Buddha throughout the cosmos is described in Shingon as the "three mysteries" (sanmi 三密). Hakeda describes these three as "the suprarational activities or functions of the Body, Speech, and Mind of Mahāvairocana."[84] The three mysteries are found throughout the entire universe as the movements of natural phenomena, natural sounds and as all experiences. Kūkai compares it to a sacred book "being painted by brushes of mountains, by ink of oceans", which have heaven and earth as the bindings.[84]

The non-dual nature of all mandalas and the interpenetration of all phenomena embodied as Mahavairocana's body and functions is a key Shingon view which also underlies its understanding of the practice of the three secrets. As such, Kūkai explains how Shingon practice enacts the unity of all actions and things in the following important passage:[85]

The six symbolic elements interpenetrate without obstruction and are in eternal union.

They are not apart from any of the Four Mandalas.

Through practice of three-secrets empowerment, they manifest immediately.

The universal web is what we call this body.

All things are naturally endowed with bodhisattva wisdom transcending the essential mind, the subsidiary minds [limited aspects of mind], and the objects of the senses.

Each of the Five Wisdoms is endowed with unlimited wisdom.

Since it is the power of the perfect mirror, this is true enlightened wisdom.

As such, through the Shingon "three secrets yoga" (sanmitsu yuga), a practitioner unifies his body, speech and mind with those of the Buddha's Dharmakaya. Kūkai states that "the three secrets bring about the response of empowerment [kaji] and he quickly attains great enlightenment".[85]

Buddha's power and self-power edit

The three mysteries are also interpreted as tapping into the energy, grace or sustaining power (Skt. adhiṣṭhāna, Jp: kaji) of the Buddha, which according to Kūkai "indicates great compassion on the part of the Tathagata and faith (Skt. citta-prasāda, Jp. shinjin) on the part of sentient beings." Kūkai compares this process to rays of sun (the Buddha's power) shining on water (sentient beings) and the water's ability to retain the heat of the rays.[80] Kūkai also holds that faith comes through the power of the Buddha, it is not something acquired by someone. Indeed, for Kūkai, the three mysteries are innate in all beings, and the fact that these are united with the macrocosmic three mysteries of the Dharmakaya is what makes faith possible.[80]

However, in Shingon, it is not only through the Buddha's power that one accumulates merit and attains enlightenment, rather, it is through a conjunction of "the three powers" (sanriki): the power of Buddha's blessing or grace (nyorai kaji-riki, which is "other power," tariki), one's power of self-merit (ga kudoku-riki, i.e. "self-power", tariki) and the power of the Dharma realm (hokkai riki), the interfused self-nature in which self and Buddha are non-dual.[86] As such, in Shingon, self-power and other-power are not two separate powers but are non-dual.[86]

Kūkai describes this as "the Buddha entering the self and the self entering the Buddha" (nyūga ga'nyū, literally "entering-self and self-entering") in his Dainichi-kyo Kaidai (Interpretation of the Mahavairocana Sutra). Yamasaki calls this "a subtle process the self, the deity, and the universe" in which "in striving "upward", the individual perceives an energy flowing "downward" as if to aid his striving."[87]

Buddhahood edit

 
An illustration of the Diamond Realm Mandala

According to Shingon doctrine, Buddhahood is not a distant, foreign reality that can take aeons to approach but it is a real possibility within this very life. This is because the buddha-nature / original enlightenment is present within all beings.[88] Kūkai describes this immanent reality within all beings as "the glorious mind, the most secret and sacred".[89]

According to Kūkai, the core teaching on enlightenment in the Mahāvairocana sutra is found in the following passages:

The enlightened mind [bodhicitta] is the cause, great compassion [mahakaruna] is the root, and skillful means [upaya] is the ultimate...enlightenment is to know your own mind as it really is...Seek in your own mind enlightenment and all-embracing wisdom. Why? Because it is originally pure and bright.[90]

This means that Buddhahood can be attained because all beings already have enlightenment and "all embracing wisdom" within which is "originally pure and bright" according to Kūkai.[90] With the help of a genuine teacher and through proper training, one can reclaim and liberate this enlightened capacity for the benefit of oneself and others. When cultivated, the luminous enlightened mind manifests as awakened wisdom.

Kūkai systematized and categorized all Buddhist teachings into ten stages of spiritual realization, from the lowest type of worldly mind to the highest mind of exoteric Buddhism (the view of Huayan/Kegon) to the supreme mind attained through Shingon.

The nature of esoteric Buddhism edit

Kūkai wrote at length on the difference between exoteric, that is to say, mainstream (non-tantric) Mahayana Buddhism and esoteric Mantrayana (or Vajrayana) Buddhism. For him, the differences between exoteric and esoteric can be summarised as follows:[91]

  1. Esoteric teachings are preached by the Dharmakaya Buddha, Vairocana and is "secret, profound, and contains the final truth". Exoteric teachings are preached by nirmanakaya (emanation) Buddhas, like Shakyamuni or by other Buddhas, and are "simplified" skillful means. It should be noted however that "exoteric" Mahayana sutras also contain hidden esoteric meanings which Kūkai discusses in his works. For example, the title of the Lotus Sutra is considered a mantra by Kūkai.
  2. Kūkai held that exoteric doctrines were upāyas ("skillful means"), teachings adapted to the needs of beings according to their capacities and time. The esoteric doctrines, in comparison, are the truth itself and are a direct communication of the innermost secrets of the Dharmakaya and his timeless eternally present samadhi.
  3. Exoteric teachings are gradual (and may take aeons), esoteric methods are the "sudden approach", or at the very least, they provide a much faster way to enlightenment. Even the most depraved of beings, the icchantikas, can attain awakening through the simplest esoteric method, the recitation of a mantra.
  4. Esoteric Buddhism contains within it all the teachings of Exoteric Buddhism and more. Exoteric Buddhist schools lack the special methods of Esoteric Buddhism, which is the highest expression of Buddhism. These esoteric rituals which involve the use of mantras, mudras, and mandalas are the direct communication of the Dharmakaya and provide direct access to the ultimate truth.
  5. Esoteric Buddhism has the highest view of the ultimate truth, which sees the mind of Mahāvairocana as united with the mind of all beings, and the body of Mahāvairocana as being the body of the universe (which contains all sentient beings).

Practice edit

 
Shingon altar with Vairocana Buddha and Acala at Enmyō-in
Video showing prayer service at Kōshō-ji in Nagoya. A monk is rhythmically beating a drum while chanting sutras.

The goal of Shingon is the realization that one's true nature is identical with the universal Mahāvairocana Buddha, a goal that is achieved through esoteric initiation, and mantrayana ritual practices. Shingon practice thus depends on receiving secret doctrines, methods and instructions, from the school's ordained masters.[92] The "Three Mysteries" of body, speech, and mind participate simultaneously in the subsequent process of revealing one's nature: the body through devotional gestures (mudra) and the use of ritual instruments, speech through sacred formulas (mantra), and mind through meditation.[67] These methods allow a Shingon contemplative to realize that his body-mind is none other than the body-mind of Mahāvairocana.[93]

The Three Mysteries and consecration edit

 
A painting of the Mantra of Light (Japanese: kōmyō shingon, 光明眞言) mandala, Edo Period, approximately 17th–18th century. This is a popular mantra in Shingon.

The essence of Shingon practice is to experience the Dharmakaya, the ultimate reality, by emulating the inner realization of the Dharmakaya through the synchronized meditative ritual use of mantras, mudras (hand gestures) and visualization of mandalas. These are known as the "three modes of action" and are the central methods of Shingon esoteric practice.[94] These three "ritual technologies" are equivalent to the concept of the "three mysteries", the secrets of body, speech and mind (of the Buddha Vairocana) and these are introduced in the ritual of abhisheka (consecration) where tantric vows (samaya) are undertaken by initiates.[95] As the Indian Shingon patriarch Śubhākarasiṃha states: "the three modes of action are simply the three secrets, and the three secrets are simply the three modes of action. The three [Buddha] bodies are simply the wisdom of tathāgata Mahavairocana."[96]

The abhisheka includes entering a prepared ritual space with a mandala while blindfolded and throwing a flower into the mandala, which lands on a specific deity depicted in the mandala.[97] After the consecration, the esoteric initiate is taught how to visualize the deities and mandalas, along with the secret mudras and mantras of his deity, and these secrets are revealed to be none other than the expression of the body-speech-mind of the Buddha. Through the consecration and use of these three mysteries, the initiate is said to ritually replicate the body, speech, and mind of the Buddha, achieving buddhahood in this very existence.[98]

Mandala edit

Visualizing a mandala corresponds to the mental activity of the Buddha. The most important Shingon mandalas are known as the Mandala of the Two Realms which are: The Womb Realm (Sanskrit: Garbhadhātu; Japanese: 胎蔵界曼荼羅, romanizedTaizōkai) mandala based on the Mahavairocana Sutra and the Diamond Realm (Sanskrit: Vajradhātu; Japanese: 金剛界曼荼羅, romanizedKongōkai) mandala based on the Vajrasekhara Sutra.[99] These two mandalas are considered to be a compact expression of the entirety of Buddhahood as well as a representation of the totality of existence.[100]

According to Yamasaki, the "Great Compassion Womb Repository Birth Mandala": "represents the enlightened universe from the viewpoint of compassion". It is also associated with skillful means and the lotus is its key symbol.[101] Regarding the Vajra Realm mandala, Yamasaki writes that it "embodies the vajra-wisdom that illuminates the universe". This is the Buddha's wisdom body which is indestructible like the mythic adamantine weapon (vajra).[102] Yamasaki also adds that while the womb realm generally represents the five material elements, the vajra realm represents the mind and consciousness elements.[103] However, both mandalas are not a duality, but are ultimately seen as non-dual. As such, "the two mandalas together thus signify the indissoluble unity of Truth and Wisdom, the inseparability of Matter and Mind, the resolution of mystical paradox."[104]

Mantra edit

 
Vaṃ – the seed syllable mantra of Mahavairocana in the Vajradhātu Mandala

Mantras are another key element of Shingon praxis (corresponding to the speech of the Dharmakaya Buddha). Kūkai understood mantras as the most concentrated form of the teachings of the Dharmakaya Buddha. According to Kūkai, Shingon mantras contain the entire meaning of all the scriptures and indeed the entire universe (which is itself the preaching of the Dharmakaya).[71] Kūkai argues that mantras are effective because: "a mantra is suprarational; It eliminates ignorance when meditated upon and recited. A single word contains a thousand truths; One can realize Suchness here and now."[105]

Furthermore, Kūkai also states:

By reciting the voiced syllables with clear understanding, one manifests the truth. What is called "the truth of the voiced syllable" is the three secrets in which all things and the Buddha are equal. This is the original essence of all beings. For this reason, Dainichi Nyorai's teaching of the true meaning of the voiced syllable will startle into awakening those long sleeping.[106]

As such, mantras are also not mere incantations, but manifest the power and blessings of the Buddha, being full embodiments of the Buddha. According to the Commentary to the Mahavairocana Sutra (Da Rijing shu 大日經疏, T. 1796) of Yi Xing:

The reason that only the Mantra Gate fulfills the secret is that [ritual is performed] by empowerment with the truth. If mantras are recited only in one's mouth, without contemplation of their meaning, then only their worldly effect can be accomplished – but the adamantine body-nature cannot.[107]

Mantras (and bijas – seed syllable mantras) are generally associated with a Buddhist deity. For example, the seed syllable of Mahavairocana in the Garbhadhātu Mandala is "A", while a key mantra of Mahavairocana is "a vi ra hūṃ kha". Some deities have multiple seed mantras as well along with different mantras.[108]

In Shingon, mantras (as well as dharanis, vidyas etc) are recorded in Sanskrit, using the Siddhaṃ alphabet (Jp: shittan 悉曇, or bonji 梵字). However, the pronunciation of mantras is in a Sino-Japanese style, not any Indian style of Sanskrit pronunciation.

Mudra edit

 
A statue of a Buddha performing the Dharma Realm Samadhi mudra, which embodies how "the space between the thumbtips encompasses the universe where Buddha and self interpenetrate without obstruction" (Yamasaki)[109]
 
A statue of Dainichi Nyorai performing the Wisdom Fist mudra (chiken-in), which embodies the non-duality of living beings and Buddha wisdom[109]

Mudras ("seals") are hand gestures which represent the secret of the Buddha's body and as such, symbolizes and enacts Buddha activity.[110] There are numerous mudras used in the various Shingon practices. According to Yamasaki, mudras "symbolically identify the individual with the universe. In this way, the human body functions as a living symbol of the macrocosm."[111] The term mudra can have multiple meanings as well, in some cases, it is a very general term referring to the Buddha's Dharmakaya (in this case, it is called the great mudra, "mahamudra").[112] As such, the Commentary on the Mahavairocana sutra states: "Mudra is none other than a symbol of the Dharma Realm. Using mudra, one points to the body of the Dharma Realm."[112]

The hand gestures themselves are either termed samaya mudra (when it refers to a deity's attribute, like a sword, lotus, etc) or karma mudra (when it symbolizes their activity).[112] Each hand and finger have various symbolic associations in Shingon. For example, the right hand generally represents the Buddha, while the left hand symbolizes ordinary beings, including the yogin themselves. Other associations include: Right Hand: Wisdom, Buddha-Realm, Sun, Vajra Realm mandala; Left Hand: Truth, Phenomenal Realm, Moon, Womb Realm Mandala.[113] Regarding the fingers, they may represent the five senses, the five elements and

A key mudra is the añjali mudrā (Jp: gasshō) which symbolizes the unity of the Buddha realm with the world of phenomena and sentient beings. There are actually various forms of the gasshō apart from the standard palm to palm version, including the lotus gasshō and the vajra gasshō.[113] Another important mudra in Shingon (also used in other traditions like Zen) is the Dharmadhatu Samadhi mudra (hokkai jō-in) which symbolizes the union of self and Buddha, the phenomenal world with the Buddha Realm.[109] The Wisdom Fist mudra (chiken-in) mudra also enacts the unity of Buddha and living beings. In this mudra, the breath of life (symbolized by the index finger on the left hand, which stands for the air element) touches the all encompassing emptiness (symbolized by the thumb tucked within the right fist which stands for the space element), which also symbolizes the Buddha's wisdom (which is inseparable from emptiness and is all pervasive).[109]

Ajikan and other contemplative methods edit

 
The siddhaṃ letter a

Another important meditative practice of Shingon is Ajikan (阿字觀) "meditating on the letter A" (Nagari: , Siddham: 𑖀) written using the Siddhaṃ alphabet.[114] The letter A is an important symbol in Mahayana and in esoteric Buddhism, which signifies the Dharmakaya, the Buddha Mahavairocana, emptiness, Prajñaparamita, and non-arising (anutpada).[115] While the writings of Kukai do discuss the letter A and how it is important for esoteric practice, it does not provide step by step meditation instructions. The earliest source for the details of this practice is Jitsue's (実恵, 786–849) Record of Oral Instruction on the Ajikan (Ajikan yōjin kuketsu, 阿字觀用心口決, Taisho no. 2423). It details the contemplation of a letter A inside of a white moon disk which sits on a lotus flower. The moon represents the awakened mind (bodhicitta) and the lotus represents the heart (hrdaya). Since then, over a hundred Ajikan manuals have been written and Ajikan has become a central practice in the Shingon school.[116]

There are other forms of Shingon practice. For example, in Gachirinkan (月輪觀, "Full Moon visualization"), an image of the moon (an important symbol of the enlightened mind) is used for visualization. In Gojigonjingan (五字嚴身觀, "Visualization of the Five Elements arrayed in The Body," from the Mahavairocana Tantra), the focus is on the five elements (mahābhūtani) as manifestations of the Buddha Vairocana.

Shingon Buddhist temples also perform liturgical rites which include the chanting of sutras and other liturgy. This may be accompanied by instruments like the taiko drum. A popular style of Buddhist chanting in Shingon is called shōmyō (声明), a style influenced by Traditional Japanese music.[117]

Shingon practice may also include the practice of nembutsu or other methods associated with Amitabha and his Pure Land. In Shingon, this practice is understood through the lens of esoteric Buddhism, which sees the Buddha Amitabha (who is equated with Mahavairocana) as being immanent in our heart-mind and the pure land of Sukhavati as being non-dual with this world. "Esoteric Pure Land" practice was taught by Shingon figures like Kakuban (1095–1143) and Dōhan (1179–1252).[118]

Various Chinese masters also taught dharanis related to Amitabha. For example, Amoghavajra who translated the popular Amitabha Pure Land Rebirth Dharani along with numerous other texts that teach methods for rebirth in Sukhavati.[119]

Ethical precepts edit

Another important element of Shingon practice is the keeping of Buddhist ethical precepts (kai). For Kūkai, keeping Buddhist precepts is essential for meditation and for living in harmony with one's true nature.[120] Kūkai writes: "If we aspire to go far, unless we depend on our feet, we cannot advance; if we wish to walk the Way of Buddha, unless we observe the precepts, we cannot reach the goal."[120] He even goes so far as to say that we should not break the precepts even to save our lives, and that those who do break them are not disciples of the Buddha and he [Kūkai] will not be their teacher.[121]

Shingon ethical teachings rely on the basic Buddhist precepts, Mahayana bodhisattva precepts (from the Brahmajala Sutra) along with special mantrayana esoteric samayas (vows). According to Kūkai, "all of these precepts have their foundation in the Ten Precepts", i.e. the ten wholesome dharma paths (daśa-kuśala-karmapatha).[120] Furthermore, the very essence of all the precepts can be reduced to the fact that "the essential nature of our mind is not distinct from that of the Buddha."[120]

Regarding the esoteric vows (samayas), there are four main samayas in Shingon:[122][123]

  1. Never abandoning the True Dharma. One should master all the teachings of the Buddha without forsaking a single teaching.
  2. Never giving up bodhicitta, which is understood as both the intention to become a Buddha for the sake of all beings and the originally enlightened mind itself (respectively, they are the subjective and objective aspects of bodhicitta, they are understood as being non-dual). This is the most important samaya for Kūkai.
  3. Never withholding or being "tight fisted" regarding the teaching of Dharma to others. One must always share Dharma.
  4. Never avoid benefiting sentient beings (and never harm them), especially through the "four embracing acts" (i.e. the "four ways of attracting", Skt. catuhsamgrahavastu; generosity, loving words, beneficial acts, adapting oneself to other's needs).

Esoteric transmission edit

Apart from basic meditations, prayers, and the reading and recitation of Mahayana sutras, there are mantras and ritualistic meditative techniques that are available for laypersons to practice on their own under the supervision of an Shingon teacher (ajari 阿闍梨, from Sanskrit: ācārya). However, many esoteric practices require the student to undergo an abhiṣeka initiation (kanjō 灌頂) into each of these practices under the guidance of a qualified ācārya before they may begin to learn and practice them. As with all schools of Esoteric Buddhism, great emphasis is placed on initiation and oral transmission of teachings from teacher to student.

As such, all Shingon followers who desire to practice the esoteric methods must gradually develop a teacher-student relationship, formal or informal, whereby a teacher permitted to transmit the abhiseka (i.e. a mahācārya, Jp: dai-ajari) learns the disposition of the student and teaches esoteric practices accordingly. For lay practitioners, there is no initiation ceremony beyond the Kechien Kanjō (結縁灌頂), which aims to help create the bond between the follower and Mahavairocana Buddha.

Training for ācāryas edit

 
A priest from the Chuin-ryu lineage at Shigisan Chosonshi Temple (朝護孫子寺)

In the case of disciples wishing to train to become a Shingon ācārya (esoteric master), it requires a period of academic study and religious discipline, or formal training in a temple for a longer period of time, after having already received novice ordination and monastic precepts, and full completion of the rigorous four-fold preliminary training and retreat known as shido kegyō (四度加行) which must be completed under the guidance of a qualified master.[92] The training involves esoteric rites focused on invoking specific buddhas or bodhisattvas (the honzon or “principal deity”) and also include pilgrimages to holy sites.[92] According to Robert Sharf:

All Shingon rituals and ceremonies are organized as a sequence of smaller liturgical procedures that typically consist of an incantation (a mantra, dharani, hymn, etc.) accompanied by a hand gesture (mudra) and a guided contemplation (kanso). The four initiations that comprise the Shidokegyo—namely the Juhachido (eighteen methods), Kongokai (vajra-realm practice), Taizokai (matrix-realm practice), and Goma (fire ceremony)—consist of hundreds of such segments of varying duration and complexity.[92]

These complex rites are taught through oral transmission (kuden) between a master and a student, a process aided by numerous ritual manuals and texts.[92] Depending on the lines of transmission (ryu), the specific details of each rite may differ.[92]

An ācārya in Shingon is a committed and experienced teacher who is authorized to guide and teach practitioners. In the Kōyasan tradition, one must be an ācārya for a number of years at least before one can request to be tested at Mount Kōya for the possibility to qualify as a mahācārya or "great teacher" (dento dai-ajari 傳燈大阿闍梨), the highest rank of Shingon practice.

However, other Shingon schools outside the Kōyasan tradition may use different terminology, and for them, the term dai-ajari may have no special meaning like in the Kōyasan tradition. It is also possible that the creation of the specialized dai-ajari rank at Kōyasan may have been a tradition which developed after Kūkai.[124]

Goma fire ritual edit

 
A goma ritual performed Jofuku Temple (常福寺)

The goma (護摩) fire ritual is an important and recognizable ritual in Shingon. Goma has roots in the Vedic homa ritual and this was acknowledged by traditional authors like Yi Xing (8th century).[92] According to Yi Xing, “Buddha created this teaching out of his desire to convert non-Buddhists and allow them to distinguish the true from the false. Thus he taught them the true Goma.... The Buddha himself taught the very foundation of the Vedas, and in that way manifested the correct principles and method of the true Goma. This is the "Buddha Veda".[92] Thus, while the Goma resembles Vedic rituals, if properly understood, it communicates the true inner intent of the Buddha.[92] According to the Commentary on the Mahavairocana Sutra:

The meaning of goma is to burn the firewood of delusion with the wisdom flame, comsuming it completely.[125]

Goma is performed by qualified priests and acharyas for the benefit of individuals, the state or all sentient beings in general. The consecrated fire is believed to have a powerful cleansing effect since esoteric Buddhist sources like Yi Xing consider the Goma fire to be the purifying wisdom of the Buddha.[92]

The central deity invoked in this ritual is usually Acala (Fudō Myōō 不動明王). The ritual is performed for the purpose of destroying detrimental thoughts and desires, and for the making of secular requests and blessings. The ritual is performed in most major Shingon temples. Larger scale ceremonies often include the constant beating of taiko drums and mass chanting of the mantra of Acala by priests and lay practitioners.

 
Map of the 88 temples along the Shikoku Pilgrimage

Adopting the practice from Shingon Buddhism, adherents the syncretic Japanese religion of Shugendō (修験道) also practice the goma ritual, of which two types are prominent: the saido dai goma and hashiramoto goma rituals.[126] The goma ritual was also adopted by other schools of Japanese Buddhism, and it is still practiced in some Zen temples.

Pilgrimage edit

The practice of making pilgrimage to holy sites, especially to mountains which were seen as the homes of deities, developed throughout the history of Shingon and many pilgrimage routes remain a key part of Shingon practice today.[127] One such pilgrimage route is the Shikoku pilgrimage which is associated with devotion to Kūkai and includes a total of 88 locales.[127]

Pantheon edit

 
A Kamakura era statue of Dainichi Nyorai by Unkei at Enjō-ji.
 
Fudō Myōō (Acala), the wrathful manifestation of Mahavairocana, and the principal deity invoked during the goma fire ritual.

The Shingon pantheon includes numerous Buddhist deities. Many of these deities have vital roles as they are regularly invoked by the practitioner for various rituals like the homa fire ritual and in liturgical services.

In Shingon, divine beings are grouped into six main classes: Buddhas (Butsu ), Bodhisattvas (Bosatsu 菩薩), Wisdom Kings (Vidyaraja, Myōō 明王), Devas (Ten ), Buddha emanations (Sanskrit: nirmāṇakāya, Keshin 化身) and Patriarchs (Soshi 祖師).

The Thirteen Buddhas edit

 
Silk painting of the Thirteen Deities, Nambokucho-Muromachi period.

The most important set of deities in Shingon is called the Thirteen Buddhas (十三仏, Jūsanbutsu), which is actually a grouping of Buddhas, bodhisattvas and Wisdom Kings which are found in the womb-realm and vajra-realm mandalas.[128][129]

They are widely invoked in several liturgies and rituals, including the popular Thirteen Buddha Rites (jūsan butsuji 十三仏事) that are associated with the deceased and with merit making. Each figure also has their own mantra and seed syllable in Shingon which are used in these rituals.[130] Thirteen Buddha Rites became popular throughout Japanese Buddhism during the Edo Period and .[130]

The thirteen buddhas (more accurately "thirteen deities") along with their mantras and seed syllables (bīja) are:[128][129][131][130][132]

  • Wisdom King Acala (Fudō Myōō 不動明王), Bīja: Hāṃ; Sanskrit mantra: namaḥ samanta vajrāṇāṃ caṇḍa mahāroṣaṇa sphoṭaya hūṃ traṭ hāṃ māṃ (Shingon transliteration: nōmaku samanda bazaratan senda makaroshada sowataya untarata kanman)
  • Gautama Buddha (Shaka-Nyorai 釈迦如来), Bīja: Bhaḥ; Mantra: namaḥ samanta buddhānāṃ bhaḥ (nōmaku sanmanda bodanan baku)
  • Mañjuśrī Bodhisattva (Monju-Bosatsu 文殊菩薩), Bīja: Maṃ; Mantra: oṃ a ra pa ca na (on arahashanō)
  • Samantabhadra Bodhisattva (Fugen-Bosatsu 普賢菩薩), Bīja: Aṃ; Mantra: oṃ samayas tvaṃ (on sanmaya satoban)
  • Kṣitigarbha Bodhisattva (Jizō-Bosatsu 地蔵菩薩), Bīja: Ha; Mantra: oṃ ha ha ha vismaye svāhā (on kakaka bisanmaei sowaka)
  • Maitreya Bodhisattva (Miroku-Bosatsu 弥勒菩薩), Bīja: Yu; Mantra: oṃ maitreya svāhā (on maitareiya sowaka)
  • Bhaiṣajyaguru Buddha (Yakushi-Nyorai 薬師如來), Bīja: Bhai; Mantra: oṃ huru huru caṇḍāli mātangi svāhā (on korokoro sendari matōgi sowaka)
  • Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva (Kannon-Bosatsu 観音菩薩), Bīja: Sa; Mantra: oṃ ārolik svāhā (on arorikya sowaka)
  • Mahāsthāmaprāpta Bodhisattva (Seishi-Bosatsu 勢至菩薩), Bīja: Saḥ; Mantra: oṃ saṃ jaṃ jaṃ saḥ svāhā (on san zan saku sowaka)
  • Amitābha Buddha (Amida-Nyorai 阿弥陀如来), Bīja: Trāḥ; Mantra: oṃ amṛta teje hara hūṃ (on amirita teisei kara un)
  • Akṣobhya Buddha (Ashuku-Nyorai 阿閦如来), Bīja: Hūṃ; Mantra: oṃ akṣobhya hūṃ (on akishubiya un)
  • Mahavairocana Buddha (Dainichi-Nyorai 大日如来), Bīja: A; Mantra: oṃ a vi ra hūṃ khaṃ vajradhātu vaṃ (on abiraunken basara datoban)
  • Ākāśagarbha Bodhisattva (Kokūzō-Bosatsu 虚空蔵菩薩), Bīja: Trāḥ; Mantra: namo ākāśagarbhāya oṃ ārya kāmāri mauli svāhā (nōbō akyasha kyarabaya on ari kyamari bori sowaka)

Other deities edit

The "Five Great Wisdom Kings" (Godai Myō-ō, 五大明王) are wrathful manifestations of the Five Buddhas:[133][134][135]

There are numerous Indian Buddhist deities found in the Shingon pantheon and in Shingon mandalas. They include figures like Indra (Taishakuten 帝釈天), Prthivi (Jiten 地天, Goddess of the Earth), Maheshvara (Daijizaiten 大自在天 or Ishanaten 伊舎那天), Marici (Marishi-Ten 摩里支天), Mahakala (Daikokuten 大黒天 Patron deity of Wealth) and Saraswati (Benzaiten 弁財天 Patron deity of Knowledge, Art and Music).

Apart from Indian Buddhist deities, there are also many Shinto deities which were assimilated into Shingon Buddhism, like Hachiman, Inari Ōkami and the sun goddess Amaterasu.[136][32][137]

Lineage edit

 
Painting of Hui Kuo, from a series of artworks entitled Shingon Hassozō (The Eight Patriarchs of Shingon). Japan, Kamakura Period, 13th–14th century.
 
Amoghavajra, from the Shingon Hassozō

The Shingon lineage is an ancient transmission of esoteric Buddhist doctrine that began in India and then spread to China and Japan. Shingon or Orthodox Esoteric Buddhism maintains that the expounder of the doctrine was originally the Universal Buddha Vairocana, but the first human to receive the doctrine was Nagarjuna in India. Like all major East Asian Buddhist tradition, the Shingon tradition developed a list of "patriarchs" which were considered to be the key figures in the transmission of their lineage. Shingon recognizes two groups of eight great patriarchs – one group of lineage holders and one group of great expounders of the doctrine.

The Eight Great Doctrine-Expounding Patriarchs (Fuho-Hasso 付法八祖)
  • Vairocana (Dainichi-Nyorai 大日如来)
  • Vajrasattva (Kongō-Satta 金剛薩埵)
  • Nagarjuna (Ryūju-Bosatsu 龍樹菩薩) – received the Mahavairocana Tantra from Vajrasattva inside an Iron Stupa in Southern India
  • Nagabodhi (Ryūchi-Bosatsu 龍智菩薩)
  • Vajrabodhi (Kongōchi-Sanzō 金剛智三蔵)
  • Amoghavajra (Fukūkongō-Sanzō 不空金剛三蔵)
  • Huiguo (Keika-Ajari 恵果阿闍梨)
  • Kūkai (Kōbō-Daishi 弘法大師)
The Eight Great Lineage Patriarchs (Denji-Hasso 伝持八祖)
  • Nagarjuna (Ryūju-Bosatsu 龍樹菩薩)
  • Nagabodhi (Ryūchi-Bosatsu 龍智菩薩)
  • Vajrabodhi (Kongōchi-Sanzō 金剛智三蔵)
  • Amoghavajra (Fukūkongō-Sanzō 不空金剛三蔵)
  • Śubhakarasiṃha (Zenmui-Sanzō 善無畏三蔵)
  • Yi Xing (Ichigyō-Zenji 一行禅師)
  • Huiguo (Keika-Ajari 恵果阿闍梨)
  • Kūkai (Kōbō-Daishi 弘法大師)

Branches edit

 
Located in Kyoto, Japan, Daigo-ji is the head temple of the Daigo-ha branch of Shingon Buddhism.
 
Chishaku-in is the head temple of Shingon-shū Chizan-ha.
 
Hasedera in Sakurai, Nara is the head temple of Shingon-shū Buzan-ha.
  • The Orthodox (Kogi) Shingon School (古義真言宗)
    • Kōyasan (高野山真言宗)
      • Chuin-Ryu Lineage (中院流, decided after World War II[clarification needed])
      • Nishinoin-Ryu Nozen-Gata Kōya-Sojo Lineage (西院流能禅方高野相承, already extinct)
      • Nishinoin-Ryu Genyu-Gata Kōya-Sojo Lineage (西院流元瑜方高野相承, already extinct)
      • Nishinoin-Ryu Enyu-Gata Kōya-Sojo Lineage (西院流円祐方高野相承, already extinct)
      • Samboin-Ryu Kenjin-Gata Kōya-Sojo Lineage (三宝院流憲深方高野相承, almost extinct)
      • Samboin-Ryu Ikyo-Gata Kōya-Sojo Lineage (三宝院流意教方, almost extinct)
      • Samboin-Ryu Shingen-Gata Kōya-Sojo Lineage (三宝院流真源相承, almost extinct)
      • Anshoji-Ryu Lineage (安祥寺流, almost extinct)
      • Chuinhon-Ryu Lineage (中院本流, almost extinct)
      • Jimyoin-Ryu Lineage (持明院流, almost extinct)
    • Reiunji-ha (真言宗霊雲寺派)
      • Shinanshoji-Ryu Lineage (新安祥寺流, established by Jogon (浄厳, 1639–1702))
    • Zentsūji-ha (真言宗善通寺派)
      • Jizoin-Ryu Lineage (地蔵院流, already extinct)
      • Zuishinin-Ryu Lineage (随心院流, since Meiji era)
    • Daigo-ha (真言宗醍醐派)
      • Samboin-Ryu Jozei-Gata Lineage (三宝院流定済方)
      • Samboin-Ryu Kenjin-Gata Lineage (三宝院流憲深方, already extinct)
      • Rishoin-Ryu Lineage (理性院流, already extinct)
      • Kongoouin-Ryu Lineage (金剛王院流, already extinct)
      • Jizoin-Ryu Lineage (地蔵院流, already extinct)
    • Omuro-ha (真言宗御室派)
      • Nishinoin-Ryu Enyu-Gata Lineage (西院流円祐方)
    • Shingon-Ritsu (真言律宗)
      • Saidaiji-Ryu Lineage (already extinct) (西大寺流)
      • Chuin-Ryu Lineage (中院流, same as Kōyasan)
    • Daikakuji-ha (真言宗大覚寺派)
      • Samboin-Ryu Kenjin-Gata Lineage (三宝院流憲深方, already extinct)
      • Hojuin-Ryu Lineage (保寿院流, since Heisei era)
    • Sennyūji-ha (真言宗泉涌寺派)
      • Zuishinin-Ryu Lineage (随心院流)
    • Yamashina-ha (真言宗山階派)
      • Kanshuji-Ryu Lineage (観修寺流)
    • Shigisan (信貴山真言宗)
      • Chuin-Ryu Lineage (中院流, same as Kōyasan)
    • Nakayamadera-ha (真言宗中山寺派)
      • Chuin-Ryu Lineage (中院流, same as Kōyasan)
    • Sanbōshū (真言三宝宗)
      • Chuin-Ryu Lineage (中院流, same as Kōyasan)
    • Sumadera-ha (真言宗須磨寺派)
      • Chuin-Ryu Lineage (中院流, same as Kōyasan)
    • Tōji-ha (真言宗東寺派)
      • Nishinoin-Ryu Nozen-Gata Lineage (西院流能禅方)
  • The Reformed (Shingi) Shingon School (新義真言宗)
    • Shingon-shu Negoroji (根来寺)
      • Chushoin-Ryu Lineage (中性院流)
    • Chizan-ha (真言宗智山派)
      • Chushoin-Ryu Lineage (中性院流)
      • Samboin-Ryu Nisshu-Sojo (三宝院流日秀相承)
    • Buzan-ha (真言宗豊山派)
      • Samboin-Ryu Kenjin-Gata Lineage (三宝院流憲深方, already extinct)
      • Chushoin-Ryu Lineage (中性院流)
      • Daidenboin-Ryu Lineage (大伝法院流, since Meiji era)
    • Kokubunji-ha (真言宗国分寺派)
    • Inunaki-ha (真言宗犬鳴派)

See also edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

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  • Miyata, Taisen (1998). A Study of the Ritual Mudras in the Shingon Tradition and Their Symbolism.
  • Maeda, Shuwa (2019). The Ritual Books of Four Preliminary Practices: Sambo-in Lineage Kenjin School, Japan.
  • Orzech, Charles D; Sorensen, Henrik Hjort; Payne, Richard Karl (2011). Esoteric Buddhism and the tantras in East Asia. Leiden; Boston: Brill. doi:10.1163/ej.9789004184916.i-1200. ISBN 978-90-04-20401-0. OCLC 731667667.
  • Yamasaki, Taiko (1988). Shingon: Japanese Esoteric Buddhism, Boston/London: Shambala Publications.

External links edit

  • Koyasan Shingon Sect Main Temple Kongobu-ji
  • Ninna-ji Temple
  • Daigo-ji Temple
  • Chishakuin Temple
  • Negoro-ji Temple
  • Daikaku-ji Temple
  • Chogosonshi-ji Temple
  • Gokoku-ji Temple

shingon, buddhism, shingon, 真言宗, shingon, shū, true, word, mantra, school, major, schools, buddhism, japan, surviving, vajrayana, lineages, east, asian, buddhism, sometimes, also, called, japanese, esoteric, buddhism, eastern, esotericism, dōngmì, 東密, word, sh. Shingon 真言宗 Shingon shu True Word Mantra School is one of the major schools of Buddhism in Japan and one of the few surviving Vajrayana lineages in East Asian Buddhism It is sometimes also called Japanese Esoteric Buddhism or Eastern Esotericism Dōngmi 東密 The word shingon is the Japanese reading of the Chinese word 真言 zhenyan 1 which is the translation of the Sanskrit word mantra Danjō garan of Kongōbu ji the head temple of the Kōyasan sect based in Mount Kōya The Zhenyan lineage was founded in China c 7th 8th centuries by Indian vajracaryas esoteric masters like Subhakarasiṃha Vajrabodhi and Amoghavajra These esoteric teachings would later flourish in Japan under the auspices of a Buddhist monk named Kukai 空海 774 835 who traveled to Tang China and received these esoteric transmissions from a Chinese master named Huiguo 746 805 Kukai established his tradition at Mount Kōya in Wakayama Prefecture which remains the central pilgrimage center of Shingon Buddhism The practice of the Shingon school stresses that one is able to attain buddhahood in this very body sokushin jōbutsu through its practices especially those which make use of the three mysteries Jp sanmi 三密 of mudra mantra and mandala 2 3 Another influential doctrine introduced by Shingon was the idea that all beings are originally enlightened a doctrine that was known as hongaku 4 The Shingon school s teachings and rituals had an influence on other Japanese traditions especially those of the Tendai school as well as Shugendo and Shinto 5 Its teachings also influenced the ritual repertoire of Japanese Zen including Soto Zen through the figure of Keizan 6 Shingon Buddhism also influenced broader Japanese culture including medieval Japanese aesthetics art and craftsmanship 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Kukai s early days and visit to China 1 2 Kukai s return 1 3 After Kukai 1 4 Kamakura to Sengoku period 1 5 Edo period 1 6 Meiji period 1 7 20th century and post war period 2 Doctrines 2 1 Sources 2 2 The Dharmakaya Mahavairocana 2 3 Activities and forms of the Dharmakaya 2 4 The wisdom body of the Dharmakaya 2 5 The six great elements the four mandalas and the three mysteries 2 6 Buddha s power and self power 2 7 Buddhahood 2 8 The nature of esoteric Buddhism 3 Practice 3 1 The Three Mysteries and consecration 3 1 1 Mandala 3 1 2 Mantra 3 1 3 Mudra 3 2 Ajikan and other contemplative methods 3 3 Ethical precepts 3 4 Esoteric transmission 3 5 Training for acaryas 3 6 Goma fire ritual 3 7 Pilgrimage 4 Pantheon 4 1 The Thirteen Buddhas 4 2 Other deities 5 Lineage 6 Branches 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp Painting of Kukai from a set of scrolls depicting the first eight patriarchs of the Shingon school Japan Kamakura period 13th 14th centuries Shingon Buddhism was founded in the Heian period 794 1185 by a Japanese Buddhist monk named Kukai 774 835 CE who traveled to China in 804 to study Esoteric Buddhist practices in the city of Xi an 西安 then called Chang an at Azure Dragon Temple 青龍寺 under Huiguo a student of the Indian esoteric master Amoghavajra 8 Kukai returned to Japan with the teachings and scriptures of Chinese Esoteric Buddhism and founded a new tradition of Japanese Buddhism that became immediately influential with the island s elites Shingon followers usually refer to Kukai as Kōbō Daishi 弘法大師 Great Master of the Propagation of Dharma or Odaishi sama お大師様 The Great Master the posthumous name given to him years after his death by Emperor Daigo Kukai s early days and visit to China edit Kukai was born to a family of the aristocratic Saeki clan in Shikoku and received a classical Confucian education at Kyoto s college daigaku 8 9 He converted to Buddhism in his 20s and was inspired to practice asceticism in the mountains and wander the countryside as an ascetic hermit though he also visited cities to study texts 10 During this time his main meditation was the mantra of bodhisattva Akasagarbha found in the Kokuzō gumonji no hō Akasagarbha Memory Retention Practice Taisho no 1145 While he was practicing in the mountains he had a vision of the bodhisattva flying at him 11 During this early period of intense study prayer and practice Kukai sought the highest truth to be found in Buddhism One day he dreamt of a man telling him to seek out the Mahavairocana Sutra 12 He was able to obtain a copy in Chinese and Sanskrit but large portions of the text were undecipherable to him and thus he decided to go to China to find someone who could explain it to him 13 In 804 Kukai set sail on a fleet of four ships to China The future Tendai founder Saichō was on the same fleet 14 When Kukai first met Huiguo a student of Amoghavajra on the fifth month of 805 Huiguo was sixty and on the verge of death Huiguo exclaimed to Kukai that he had been waiting for him and immediately initiated him into the esoteric mandalas 15 In the short space of three months Huiguo initiated and taught Kukai everything he knew on the doctrines and practices of esoteric Buddhism During this time Kukai also learned Sanskrit from some Indian masters living in China 16 Kukai s return edit nbsp Jingo ji on Mount Takao the first major temple in which Kukai worked on his return to Japan Kukai returned to Japan after Huiguo s death in 806 He brought back numerous Buddhist texts mandalas ritual items and other books 16 After returning Kukai asked the imperial court for permission to establish a new Buddhist school and waited three years for a response in Kyushu 17 In 809 Kukai was allowed to reside at a temple near Kyoto known as Takaosanji now Jingo ji This temple would become his major center of operations near the capital 18 Kukai s fortunes rose steadily when Emperor Saga became his patron and Kukai was appointed as the head of Todai ji in 810 19 Kukai began to give esoteric initiations abhiseka at this time including to elite laymen and to Saicho and his students He also began to organize a new school of esoteric Buddhism centered around Jingo ji and wrote some key works which outlined the main teachings of Shingon 20 In 818 Kukai asked emperor Saga to grant him Mount Kōya 高野山 Kōyasan in present day Wakayama province so that he could establish a true monastic center away from the disturbances of the capital and this was soon granted 21 Kukai and his disciples soon began to build the new monastic complex which they imagined and modeled on the two mandalas the womb and vajra 22 This mountain center soon became the key center for Shingon study and practice In his later life Kukai continued to actively promote the efficacy of Shingon ritual among the elite even while also working to build Kōyasan into a major center Kukai eventually achieved control of Tō ji for the Shingon school which was a major temple within the capital His final request before his death in 832 was to construct a Shingon hall in Imperial palace grounds in order to accommodate the practice of the seven day ritual of chanting the Sutra of Golden Light His request was eventually granted a year after his death 23 After Kukai edit nbsp Shingon monks at Mount Koya After Kukai the main Shingon temples were taken over by key disciples like Jitsue Shinzen Shinzai Eon and Shōhō The main leadership after his death was Shinnen 804 891 and already at this time there was some conflict between Tō ji and Kōyasan 24 Some Shingon monks also followed in Kukai s footsteps and visited China to receive more teachings and texts Likewise several Tendai monks also visited China and brought back esoteric teachings making Tendai esotericism a major competitor to Shingon 25 Under Kangen 853 925 Tō ji temple rose to become the head temple of Shingon Mount Kōya experienced a period of decline afterwards until it recovered in the 11th century through the support of Fujiwara clan nobles like Fujiwara no Michinaga 25 Shingon Buddhism enjoyed immense popularity during the Heian period 平安時代 particularly among the nobility and contributed greatly to the art and literature of the time influencing other communities such as the Tendai school 26 During the late Heian Pure Land Buddhism was becoming very popular and Shingon was also influenced by this popular devotional trend Mount Kōya soon became the center for groups of wandering holy men called Kōya Hijiri who merged Pure Land practices focused on Amida Buddha with devotion to Kukai and were also involved in raising funds for the rebuilding of many temples 27 Kōya san soon became a major center for pilgrimage for all Japanese 27 The Shingon monk Kakuban 1095 1143 was one Shingon scholar who responded to the rise in Pure Land devotionalism He studied Shingon along with Tendai and also incorporated Pure Land practice into his Shingon system as well as promoting an esoteric interpretation of nembutsu and Pure Land 28 29 Unlike other Pure Land schools Kakuban held that the Pure Land exists in this very world and he also taught that Vairocana is Amida 29 Kakuban and his faction of priests centered at the Denbō in 伝法院 soon came into conflict with the leadership at Kongōbu ji the head temple at Mount Kōya Through his connections with high ranking nobles in Kyoto Kakuban was appointed abbot of Mount Kōya The leadership at Kongōbu ji opposed him and after several conflicts some of which involved the burning down of temples who belonged to Kakuban s faction Kakuban s group left the mountain for Mount Negoro to the northwest where they constructed a new temple complex now known as Negoro ji 根来寺 29 After the death of Kakuban in 1143 attempts to make peace were unsuccessful and after further conflicts the Negoro faction led by Raiyu founded the new Shingi Shingon School based on Kakuban s teachings As such Shingon became divided into two major sub schools Kogi Shingon 古義真言宗 Ancient Shingon school and Shingi Shingon 新義真言宗 Reformed Shingon school 30 Over time the two Shingon sub schools also diverged doctrinally on such issues as the attainment of buddhahood through a single mantra and the theory of how the Dharmakaya teaches the Dharma 30 Following in Kakuban s footsteps the Koyasan monk Dōhan 道範 1179 1252 has been seen as a key figure in the promotion of what has been called an esoteric Pure Land culture a Shingon variety of Pure Land Buddhism that became very popular during this period and influenced other figures and schools like Eison of Saidaiji s Shingon Risshu This esoteric pure land culture included esoteric uses and interpretations of the nembutsu along with the popularization and use of the Mantra of Light 31 During the Heian period the adoption of Shinto deities into Buddhism became popular something that became known as Shinbutsu shugō 神仏習合 syncretism of kami and buddhas This movement saw local Japanese deities as manifestations of the Buddhas for example Amaterasu was seen as an emanation of Vairocana in Shingon This emanation theory was called honji suijaku by Buddhists Major Shingon centers participated in this development with key deities like Hachiman being worshipped at temples like Tō ji for example 32 Also during the Heian period the syncretic religion of Shugendō started to develop and the influence of Shingon was one major element in its development Shingon was especially influential on the Tōzan branch of Shugendō which was centered on Mount Kinbu 32 Kamakura to Sengoku period edit The Kamakura period 1185 to 1333 saw the rise of another new Shingon tradition the Shingon risshu school This new tradition stressed the importance of keeping the monastic Vinaya along with esoteric practice It was promoted by figures like Shunjō 1166 1227 and Eison 叡尊 1201 1290 and centered around Saidai ji 33 Ninshō carried on the work of this tradition which was known for its many public works projects including building hospitals hostels for the poor and animal sanctuaries 34 Also during this period many followers of the Ji sect founded by Ippen 1234 1289 made Kōya san their home joining with the Kōya hiriji groups and many halls for Amida centered Pure Land practice were built on the mountain 35 During the Muromachi period 1336 to 1573 the Shingon schools continued to develop some under the support of elite families or even emperors like Go Uda 1267 1324 who entered the priesthood at Tō ji and helped revitalize the temple as well as Daikaku ji 36 Meanwhile on Kōyasan Yukai 1345 1416 was responsible for revitalizing Shingon doctrinal study and also for driving away all of the nembutsu hiriji now mostly following the Ji sect who had been living on the mountain 37 He also purged the tradition of all traces of the heterodox Tachikawa school even burning their texts The Tachikawa school was known for teaching a mixed form of esotericism which made use of Daoist and sexual practices 38 During the war torn Sengoku period 1467 to 1615 all the Shingon temples in or near the capital were destroyed or stripped of all lands while the Shingon centers in the mountains like Kōya and Negoro were forced to raise militaries for self defense though sometimes they used these forces to attempt to expand the lands holdings of their temples 39 Mount Negoro the center of Shingi Shingon was sacked by the daimyō Toyotomi Hideyoshi 豊臣秀吉 in 1585 After this show of force Kōyasan the last major Shingon temple left standing at this time submitted to Hideyoshi and was spared destruction 39 Edo period edit nbsp Office of Hase dera in spring During the Edo period 1603 1868 the Shingi Shingon monks from Mount Negoro had escaped and took their lineages elsewere eventually founding new schools at Hase dera the Buzan school and at Chishaku the Chisan ha school 40 In the Edo period the Tokugawa Shogunate implemented new religious control measures for the Buddhist community Tokugawa Ieyasu issued regulations for the Shingon school in 1615 incorporating it into its administrative temple system 40 Under this new peace Shingon study was revived in the various temples Hase dera became a major center for the broad study of all of Buddhism and also of secular topics Meanwhile in Kōyasan the Ji sect hiriji were allowed to return and were incorporated into the Shingon school though this would lead to conflict later on 41 During this period monks like Jōgen and Onkō 1718 1804 focused on studying and promoting Buddhist precepts and monastic discipline This renewed interest in precepts study was likely a response to Confucian critiques of Buddhism at the time Onkō was also a well known scholar of Sanskrit 42 Meiji period edit After the Meiji Restoration 1868 the state forced a separation of Shinto and Buddhism shinbutsu bunri and abolished the Chokusai Hōe Imperial Rituals The Shingon school was significantly affected by these changes since it was closely connected with many Shinto shrines as well as by the Meiji era anti buddhist persecutions known as haibutsu kishaku abolish Buddhism and destroy Shakyamuni 43 Some Shingon temples that were affiliated with Shintō shrines were converted into shrines Some Shinto monks left the Buddhist priesthood to become Shintō priests or they returned to secular life The government enforced the confiscation of temple land and this led to the closure of many Shingon temples Those who survived had to turn to the regular population for support 44 During the Meiji period the government also adopted the one sect one leader rule which forced all Shingon schools to merge under a single leader which was called a Chōja Superintendent This led to some internal political conflict among the various sub schools of Shingon some of which attempted to form their own separate official sects Some of these eventually succeeded in attaining independence and eventually the unified Shingon sect split into various sub sects again 20th century and post war period edit nbsp Qinglong Temple 青龍寺 Qinglong Si lit Green Dragon Temple in Xi an It is the temple where Huigo transmitted Shingon to Kukai It has recently seen a revival of Chinese esotericism based partly on Japanese Shingon nbsp Entrance to the Shingon Mission in Honolulu In March 1941 under the government s religious policy Shingon schools were forcibly merged to form the Dai Shingon sect During the second world war prayers for the surrender of enemy nations were frequently held at various temples After the war both Ko Gyō and Shin Gyō schools continued to separate and some established their own unique doctrines and traditions There are now around eighteen major Shingon schools with their own headquarter temples honzan in Japan Yamasaki estimated the number of Shingon followers at ten million and the number of priests at sixteen thousand in around eleven thousand temples in his 1988 book 45 In Japan there are also several new Shingon influenced groups classified as New Religions Some of these new movements include Shinnyo en Agon shu and Gedatsu kai 46 Another recent modern development is the phenomenon of Chinese students reviving Chinese Esoteric Buddhism through studying Japanese Shingon 47 This tantric revival movement mijiao fuxing yundong 密教復興運動 was mainly propagated by Chinese Buddhists who traveled to Japan to be trained initiated and receive dharma transmission as acharyas in the Shingon tradition and who then return home to establish the tradition 47 Some important figures of this revival include Wang Hongyuan 王弘願 1876 1937 and Guru Wuguang 悟光上師 1918 2000 both trained in Shingon and went on to spread Shingon teachings in the Chinese speaking world 48 49 Some of these Chinese acharyas have chosen to officially remain under the oversight of Kōyasan Shingon shu or Shingon shu Buzan ha and minister as Chinese branches of Japanese Shingon but others have chosen to create independent and distinct schools 50 51 Today these revivalist lineages exist in Hong Kong Taiwan and Malaysia Though they draw mainly from Shingon teachings they have also adopted some Tibetan Buddhist elements 52 A similar phenomenon has occurred in South Korea where two recent esoteric schools have been founded the Chinŏn 眞言 and the Jingak Order 眞 覺 both of which are largely based on Shingon teachings 53 During the 20th century Shingon Buddhism also spread to the West especially to the United States a move led by the Japanese Diaspora There are now various temples on the West Coast and Hawaii like Hawaii Shingon Mission built 1915 1918 and Koyasan Beikoku Betsuin Los Angeles founded 1912 Doctrines editSources edit The teachings of Shingon are based on Mahayana texts and early Buddhist tantras The key esoteric sources are the Mahavairocana Sutra 大日経 Dainichi kyō the Vajrasekhara Sutra 金剛頂経 Kongōchō kyō and the Susiddhikara Sutra 蘇悉地経 Soshitsuji kyō 54 Important Mahayana sutras in Shingon include the Lotus Sutra the Brahmajala Sutra and Heart Sutra Kukai wrote commentaries on all three 55 Shingon derives form the early period of Indian Vajrayana then known as Mantrayana the Vehicle of Mantras 56 Unlike Tibetan Buddhism which focuses on the Anuttarayoga Tantras which are tantras that arose at a later date of Indian Buddhism Shingon bases itself on earlier works like the Mahavairocana which generally lack the antinomian uses of sexual yoga taboo substances and charnel ground imagery found in the later tantras 57 Nevertheless the concept of great bliss tairaku and the transformation of desire and other defilements into wisdom is found in Shingon 57 Another important sutra in Shingon is the Prajnaparamitanaya sutra Jp Hannyarishukyō Taishō vol 8 no 243 This is a late tantric Prajnaparamita sutra in 150 lines which was translated by Amoghavajra and which contains various verses and seed syllables which encapsulate the Prajnaparamita teaching 58 59 The Hannyarishukyō is used extensively in Shingon as part of daily recitation and ritual practice 59 The full Sanskrit title is Mahasukhavajra amoghasamaya sutra Ch Dale jingang bukong zhenshi sanmohe jing Sutra of the Vow of Fulfilling the Great Perpetual Enjoyment and Benefiting All Sentient Beings Without Exception 60 Another important source for the Shingon school is the Awakening of Faith and a commentary on it called the On the Interpretation of Mahayana Shi Moheyan lun 釈摩訶衍論 Japanese Shakumakaen ron Taisho no 1668 which was traditionally attributed to Nagarjuna though it is likely an East Asian composition 61 62 Finally the works of Kukai are key sources in Shingon Buddhism including his various commentaries on the key esoteric texts of Shingon as well as original works like his magnum opus the ten volume Juju shinron Treatise on Ten Levels of Mind and the shorter summary Hizō hōyaku Precious Key to the Secret Treasury 63 The Dharmakaya Mahavairocana edit nbsp 12th century painting of Mahavairocana Heian period Nezu Museum In Shingon the Buddha Mahavairocana Sanskrit for Great Illuminator also known as Dainichi Nyorai 大日如来 Great Sun Tathagata is the universal primordial honji shin Buddha that is the basis of all phenomena Subhakarasiṃha s Darijing shu 大日經疏 J Dainichikyōsho states that Mahavairocana is the original ground dharmakaya 薄伽梵即毘盧遮那本地法身 at Taisho no 1796 39 580 According to Hakeda Kukai identified the Dharmakaya with the eternal Dharma the uncreated imperishable beginningless and endless Truth 64 This ultimate reality does not exist independently of all things but is immanent in them Dainichi is worshipped as the supreme Buddha and also appears as the central figure of the Five Wisdom Buddhas 65 66 Hakeda also writes that in Shingon Dainichi is at the center of a multitude of Buddhas bodhisattvas and powers He is the source of enlightenment and the unity underlying all variety To attain enlightenment means to realize Mahavairocana the implication being that Mahavairocana is originally within man 64 According to Kukai the Buddha s light illuminates and pervades all like the light of the sun hence his name The immanent presence also means that every being already has original enlightenment hongaku within This is also known as the enligthened mind bodhicitta and the Buddha nature 64 As Kukai writes where is the Dharmakaya It is not far away it is in our body The source of wisdom In our mind indeed it is close to us 64 Because of this there is the possibility of becoming Buddha in this very embodied existence sokushin jōbutsu even for the most depraved persons 67 64 All beings thus have the potential to become Buddhas through their own effort and through the power grace adhisthana of the Buddha Kukai thus rejected the idea we lived in an age of Dharma decline and that therefore one had to be reborn in the pure land to attain enlightenment This also informs his positive view of the natural world as well as of the arts all of which he saw as manifestation of the Buddha 68 Activities and forms of the Dharmakaya edit nbsp Dainichi nyorai Vairocana image in Kume dera Dainichi is the ultimate source of all Buddhas and bodhisattvas and of the entire cosmos The centrality of Dainichi is seen in the fact that he appears at the centre of both the Diamond Realm and the Womb Realm mandalas 69 According to Kukai Mahavairocana is also the Universal Principle which underlies all Buddhist teachings Thus other Buddhist deities can be thought of as manifestations of Dainichi each with their own attributes As Kukai writes the great Self is one yet can be many 70 Like in the Huayan Kegon school Shingon sees Dainichi s body as being equal to the entire universe As Dharmakaya Jpn hosshin Dharma body Vairocana also constantly teaches the Dharma in inconceivable ways throughout the universe including through the secret mysteries of Shingon esotericism The Dharmakaya is embodied absolute reality and truth and is mostly ineffable but can be experienced through esoteric practices such as mudras and mantras Ultimately the whole phenomenal world itself and all the sounds and movements in it are also considered to be the teaching of Vairocana Buddha which is identical with the cosmic body of the Buddha 67 Thus for Kukai the entire universe together with all actions persons and Buddhas in it are all part of Vairocana s cosmic sermon to its manifestations In Shingon this idea that all phenomena in the universe are constantly revealing the presence of the Dharmakaya Buddha is part of the doctrine of the dharmakaya s expounding of the Dharma hosshin seppō 67 71 Furthermore according to the syncretic doctrine of honji suijaku the Shinto sun goddess Amaterasu was considered a manifestation of Dainichi Nyorai along with other Shinto deities 72 66 Kukai explains the Dharmakaya as having four main bodies shishu hosshin 73 Absolute Dharmakaya jishō hosshin the ultimate wisdom body of all the Buddhas out which the entire cosmos manifests The Dharmakaya in Bliss Participation juyō hosshin it has two aspects the bliss aspect a state of absolute samadhi and the participation aspect which is how the Dharmakaya appears to the most advanced bodhisattvas as Buddha forms Transformation Dharmakaya henge hosshin how the Buddha appears to lower level bodhisattvas sravakas and ordinary people This includes the historical Buddha Shakyamuni Emanation Dharmakaya tōru hosshin bodies emanating from the Dharmakaya in many forms including nonhuman beings and hell beings Although portrayed through the use of anthropomorphic metaphors Shingon does not see the Dharmakaya Buddha as a separate or individual personal entity or a God standing apart from the universe Instead the Buddha is the universe properly understood 74 The wisdom body of the Dharmakaya edit nbsp Statues of the Five Tathagatas at Renge in Tanjō ji Another important feature of the Dharmakaya in Kukai s buddhology is his analysis of Vairocana s body of wisdom chishin According to this teaching the Dharmakaya has five wisdoms each one is associated with a Buddha and four of them are associated with a type of mundane consciousness drawn from the Yogacara system of eight consciousnesses 75 The Wisdom that Perceives the Essential Nature of the World of Dharma hokkai taishō chi the eternal Source of knowledge and light at the center of all things It is represented by Mahavairocana Buddha in the Vajradhatu Mandala Mirrorlike Wisdom daienkyō the wisdom which reflects things as they are without any distortion It is represented by Aksobhya Buddha and is associated with the alaya vijnana storehouse consciousness Wisdom of Equality byōdōshō chi the wisdom which sees the identity and sameness of all phenomena and beings It is represented by Ratnasambhava Buddha and is associated with the ego consciousness manas Wisdom of Observation myōkanzatchi the wisdom which is free of discrimination and sees all objects of mind without discrimination conceptualization It is represented by Amitabha and is associated with the mental consciousness manovijnana Wisdom of Action jōsosa chi the wisdom manifested as actions that help all sentient beings and guide them to Buddhahood It is represented Amoghasiddhi and is associated with the five sense consciousnesses In the Vajrasekhara the illumination of the Buddha s body of wisdom is symbolized as a vajra Indra s indestructible adamantine weapon and it represents the dynamic function of penetrating insight 76 In the Mahavairocana sutra meanwhile the Buddha s Body of Principle Jp ri Chinese li is symbolized by a lotus and stands for compassion potentiality growth and creativity according to Hakeda 76 For Kukai both of these bodies are non dual Kukai writes That which realizes is Wisdom and that which is to be realized in Principle The names differ but they are one in their essential nature 76 The six great elements the four mandalas and the three mysteries edit nbsp Garbhadhatu Womb Realm maṇḍala with Mahavairocana located at the center of the circle According to Kukai the Dharmakaya can further be explained terms of the Body of Six Great Elements rokudaishin This means that for Kukai the Dharmakaya consists of the six great elements which are interfused and are in a state of eternal harmony 77 The great elements mahabhutani are earth water fire wind space and consciousness and they are the universal elements out of which all beings and matter are made These great elements are all in a state of perfect interfusion yuanrong 圓融 i e they are all harmoniously interconnected a teaching which was first articulated in the Huayan school by patriarchs like Fazang 78 79 Like Fazang Kukai uses the metaphor of Indra s Net to describe the infinite interrelation of all existence meaning that the Dharmakaya Mahavairocana and every sentient being in the universe are not identical but are nevertheless identical they are not different but are nevertheless different 80 For Kukai the consequence of this doctrine is a complete non duality between seemingly different phenomena like mind and matter humanity and nature sentient and insentient and so on Thus Kukai writes matter is no other than mind mind is no other than matter Without any obstruction they are interrelated 81 This interrelation is one of macrocosmic harmony an eternal natural order hōni no dōri which is identical with the yoga and samadhi of the Dharmakaya Sentient beings as microcosmic manifestations of the Dharmakaya can tune in to that harmony through practicing samadhi 82 Another perspective with which to understand the Dharmakaya is through the four mandalas circles ranges spheres which stand for the cosmic Buddha Vairocana s extension intention communication and action 83 Mahamandala the entire physical universe as the body of the Dharmakaya Buddha Samayamandala the ultimate intention of the Dharmakaya Buddha which is omnipresent throughout the universe and is universal compassion Dharmamandala the universal sphere in which the Dharmakaya Buddha s preaching and revelation of the Dharma is taking place Karmamandala the universal activities of the Dharmakaya Buddha i e all the movements of the universe These four mandalas are all said to be deeply interconnected or as Kukai writes inseparably related to one another 84 The constant preaching of the Dharmakaya Buddha throughout the cosmos is described in Shingon as the three mysteries sanmi 三密 Hakeda describes these three as the suprarational activities or functions of the Body Speech and Mind of Mahavairocana 84 The three mysteries are found throughout the entire universe as the movements of natural phenomena natural sounds and as all experiences Kukai compares it to a sacred book being painted by brushes of mountains by ink of oceans which have heaven and earth as the bindings 84 The non dual nature of all mandalas and the interpenetration of all phenomena embodied as Mahavairocana s body and functions is a key Shingon view which also underlies its understanding of the practice of the three secrets As such Kukai explains how Shingon practice enacts the unity of all actions and things in the following important passage 85 The six symbolic elements interpenetrate without obstruction and are in eternal union They are not apart from any of the Four Mandalas Through practice of three secrets empowerment they manifest immediately The universal web is what we call this body All things are naturally endowed with bodhisattva wisdom transcending the essential mind the subsidiary minds limited aspects of mind and the objects of the senses Each of the Five Wisdoms is endowed with unlimited wisdom Since it is the power of the perfect mirror this is true enlightened wisdom As such through the Shingon three secrets yoga sanmitsu yuga a practitioner unifies his body speech and mind with those of the Buddha s Dharmakaya Kukai states that the three secrets bring about the response of empowerment kaji and he quickly attains great enlightenment 85 Buddha s power and self power edit The three mysteries are also interpreted as tapping into the energy grace or sustaining power Skt adhiṣṭhana Jp kaji of the Buddha which according to Kukai indicates great compassion on the part of the Tathagata and faith Skt citta prasada Jp shinjin on the part of sentient beings Kukai compares this process to rays of sun the Buddha s power shining on water sentient beings and the water s ability to retain the heat of the rays 80 Kukai also holds that faith comes through the power of the Buddha it is not something acquired by someone Indeed for Kukai the three mysteries are innate in all beings and the fact that these are united with the macrocosmic three mysteries of the Dharmakaya is what makes faith possible 80 However in Shingon it is not only through the Buddha s power that one accumulates merit and attains enlightenment rather it is through a conjunction of the three powers sanriki the power of Buddha s blessing or grace nyorai kaji riki which is other power tariki one s power of self merit ga kudoku riki i e self power tariki and the power of the Dharma realm hokkai riki the interfused self nature in which self and Buddha are non dual 86 As such in Shingon self power and other power are not two separate powers but are non dual 86 Kukai describes this as the Buddha entering the self and the self entering the Buddha nyuga ga nyu literally entering self and self entering in his Dainichi kyo Kaidai Interpretation of the Mahavairocana Sutra Yamasaki calls this a subtle process the self the deity and the universe in which in striving upward the individual perceives an energy flowing downward as if to aid his striving 87 Buddhahood edit nbsp An illustration of the Diamond Realm Mandala According to Shingon doctrine Buddhahood is not a distant foreign reality that can take aeons to approach but it is a real possibility within this very life This is because the buddha nature original enlightenment is present within all beings 88 Kukai describes this immanent reality within all beings as the glorious mind the most secret and sacred 89 According to Kukai the core teaching on enlightenment in the Mahavairocana sutra is found in the following passages The enlightened mind bodhicitta is the cause great compassion mahakaruna is the root and skillful means upaya is the ultimate enlightenment is to know your own mind as it really is Seek in your own mind enlightenment and all embracing wisdom Why Because it is originally pure and bright 90 This means that Buddhahood can be attained because all beings already have enlightenment and all embracing wisdom within which is originally pure and bright according to Kukai 90 With the help of a genuine teacher and through proper training one can reclaim and liberate this enlightened capacity for the benefit of oneself and others When cultivated the luminous enlightened mind manifests as awakened wisdom Kukai systematized and categorized all Buddhist teachings into ten stages of spiritual realization from the lowest type of worldly mind to the highest mind of exoteric Buddhism the view of Huayan Kegon to the supreme mind attained through Shingon The nature of esoteric Buddhism edit Kukai wrote at length on the difference between exoteric that is to say mainstream non tantric Mahayana Buddhism and esoteric Mantrayana or Vajrayana Buddhism For him the differences between exoteric and esoteric can be summarised as follows 91 Esoteric teachings are preached by the Dharmakaya Buddha Vairocana and is secret profound and contains the final truth Exoteric teachings are preached by nirmanakaya emanation Buddhas like Shakyamuni or by other Buddhas and are simplified skillful means It should be noted however that exoteric Mahayana sutras also contain hidden esoteric meanings which Kukai discusses in his works For example the title of the Lotus Sutra is considered a mantra by Kukai Kukai held that exoteric doctrines were upayas skillful means teachings adapted to the needs of beings according to their capacities and time The esoteric doctrines in comparison are the truth itself and are a direct communication of the innermost secrets of the Dharmakaya and his timeless eternally present samadhi Exoteric teachings are gradual and may take aeons esoteric methods are the sudden approach or at the very least they provide a much faster way to enlightenment Even the most depraved of beings the icchantikas can attain awakening through the simplest esoteric method the recitation of a mantra Esoteric Buddhism contains within it all the teachings of Exoteric Buddhism and more Exoteric Buddhist schools lack the special methods of Esoteric Buddhism which is the highest expression of Buddhism These esoteric rituals which involve the use of mantras mudras and mandalas are the direct communication of the Dharmakaya and provide direct access to the ultimate truth Esoteric Buddhism has the highest view of the ultimate truth which sees the mind of Mahavairocana as united with the mind of all beings and the body of Mahavairocana as being the body of the universe which contains all sentient beings Practice edit nbsp Shingon altar with Vairocana Buddha and Acala at Enmyō in source source source source source source Video showing prayer service at Kōshō ji in Nagoya A monk is rhythmically beating a drum while chanting sutras The goal of Shingon is the realization that one s true nature is identical with the universal Mahavairocana Buddha a goal that is achieved through esoteric initiation and mantrayana ritual practices Shingon practice thus depends on receiving secret doctrines methods and instructions from the school s ordained masters 92 The Three Mysteries of body speech and mind participate simultaneously in the subsequent process of revealing one s nature the body through devotional gestures mudra and the use of ritual instruments speech through sacred formulas mantra and mind through meditation 67 These methods allow a Shingon contemplative to realize that his body mind is none other than the body mind of Mahavairocana 93 The Three Mysteries and consecration edit nbsp A painting of the Mantra of Light Japanese kōmyō shingon 光明眞言 mandala Edo Period approximately 17th 18th century This is a popular mantra in Shingon The essence of Shingon practice is to experience the Dharmakaya the ultimate reality by emulating the inner realization of the Dharmakaya through the synchronized meditative ritual use of mantras mudras hand gestures and visualization of mandalas These are known as the three modes of action and are the central methods of Shingon esoteric practice 94 These three ritual technologies are equivalent to the concept of the three mysteries the secrets of body speech and mind of the Buddha Vairocana and these are introduced in the ritual of abhisheka consecration where tantric vows samaya are undertaken by initiates 95 As the Indian Shingon patriarch Subhakarasiṃha states the three modes of action are simply the three secrets and the three secrets are simply the three modes of action The three Buddha bodies are simply the wisdom of tathagata Mahavairocana 96 The abhisheka includes entering a prepared ritual space with a mandala while blindfolded and throwing a flower into the mandala which lands on a specific deity depicted in the mandala 97 After the consecration the esoteric initiate is taught how to visualize the deities and mandalas along with the secret mudras and mantras of his deity and these secrets are revealed to be none other than the expression of the body speech mind of the Buddha Through the consecration and use of these three mysteries the initiate is said to ritually replicate the body speech and mind of the Buddha achieving buddhahood in this very existence 98 Mandala edit Visualizing a mandala corresponds to the mental activity of the Buddha The most important Shingon mandalas are known as the Mandala of the Two Realms which are The Womb Realm Sanskrit Garbhadhatu Japanese 胎蔵界曼荼羅 romanized Taizōkai mandala based on the Mahavairocana Sutra and the Diamond Realm Sanskrit Vajradhatu Japanese 金剛界曼荼羅 romanized Kongōkai mandala based on the Vajrasekhara Sutra 99 These two mandalas are considered to be a compact expression of the entirety of Buddhahood as well as a representation of the totality of existence 100 According to Yamasaki the Great Compassion Womb Repository Birth Mandala represents the enlightened universe from the viewpoint of compassion It is also associated with skillful means and the lotus is its key symbol 101 Regarding the Vajra Realm mandala Yamasaki writes that it embodies the vajra wisdom that illuminates the universe This is the Buddha s wisdom body which is indestructible like the mythic adamantine weapon vajra 102 Yamasaki also adds that while the womb realm generally represents the five material elements the vajra realm represents the mind and consciousness elements 103 However both mandalas are not a duality but are ultimately seen as non dual As such the two mandalas together thus signify the indissoluble unity of Truth and Wisdom the inseparability of Matter and Mind the resolution of mystical paradox 104 Mantra edit nbsp Vaṃ the seed syllable mantra of Mahavairocana in the Vajradhatu Mandala Mantras are another key element of Shingon praxis corresponding to the speech of the Dharmakaya Buddha Kukai understood mantras as the most concentrated form of the teachings of the Dharmakaya Buddha According to Kukai Shingon mantras contain the entire meaning of all the scriptures and indeed the entire universe which is itself the preaching of the Dharmakaya 71 Kukai argues that mantras are effective because a mantra is suprarational It eliminates ignorance when meditated upon and recited A single word contains a thousand truths One can realize Suchness here and now 105 Furthermore Kukai also states By reciting the voiced syllables with clear understanding one manifests the truth What is called the truth of the voiced syllable is the three secrets in which all things and the Buddha are equal This is the original essence of all beings For this reason Dainichi Nyorai s teaching of the true meaning of the voiced syllable will startle into awakening those long sleeping 106 As such mantras are also not mere incantations but manifest the power and blessings of the Buddha being full embodiments of the Buddha According to the Commentary to the Mahavairocana Sutra Da Rijing shu 大日經疏 T 1796 of Yi Xing The reason that only the Mantra Gate fulfills the secret is that ritual is performed by empowerment with the truth If mantras are recited only in one s mouth without contemplation of their meaning then only their worldly effect can be accomplished but the adamantine body nature cannot 107 Mantras and bijas seed syllable mantras are generally associated with a Buddhist deity For example the seed syllable of Mahavairocana in the Garbhadhatu Mandala is A while a key mantra of Mahavairocana is a vi ra huṃ kha Some deities have multiple seed mantras as well along with different mantras 108 In Shingon mantras as well as dharanis vidyas etc are recorded in Sanskrit using the Siddhaṃ alphabet Jp shittan 悉曇 or bonji 梵字 However the pronunciation of mantras is in a Sino Japanese style not any Indian style of Sanskrit pronunciation Mudra edit nbsp A statue of a Buddha performing the Dharma Realm Samadhi mudra which embodies how the space between the thumbtips encompasses the universe where Buddha and self interpenetrate without obstruction Yamasaki 109 nbsp A statue of Dainichi Nyorai performing the Wisdom Fist mudra chiken in which embodies the non duality of living beings and Buddha wisdom 109 Mudras seals are hand gestures which represent the secret of the Buddha s body and as such symbolizes and enacts Buddha activity 110 There are numerous mudras used in the various Shingon practices According to Yamasaki mudras symbolically identify the individual with the universe In this way the human body functions as a living symbol of the macrocosm 111 The term mudra can have multiple meanings as well in some cases it is a very general term referring to the Buddha s Dharmakaya in this case it is called the great mudra mahamudra 112 As such the Commentary on the Mahavairocana sutra states Mudra is none other than a symbol of the Dharma Realm Using mudra one points to the body of the Dharma Realm 112 The hand gestures themselves are either termed samaya mudra when it refers to a deity s attribute like a sword lotus etc or karma mudra when it symbolizes their activity 112 Each hand and finger have various symbolic associations in Shingon For example the right hand generally represents the Buddha while the left hand symbolizes ordinary beings including the yogin themselves Other associations include Right Hand Wisdom Buddha Realm Sun Vajra Realm mandala Left Hand Truth Phenomenal Realm Moon Womb Realm Mandala 113 Regarding the fingers they may represent the five senses the five elements andA key mudra is the anjali mudra Jp gasshō which symbolizes the unity of the Buddha realm with the world of phenomena and sentient beings There are actually various forms of the gasshō apart from the standard palm to palm version including the lotus gasshō and the vajra gasshō 113 Another important mudra in Shingon also used in other traditions like Zen is the Dharmadhatu Samadhi mudra hokkai jō in which symbolizes the union of self and Buddha the phenomenal world with the Buddha Realm 109 The Wisdom Fist mudra chiken in mudra also enacts the unity of Buddha and living beings In this mudra the breath of life symbolized by the index finger on the left hand which stands for the air element touches the all encompassing emptiness symbolized by the thumb tucked within the right fist which stands for the space element which also symbolizes the Buddha s wisdom which is inseparable from emptiness and is all pervasive 109 Ajikan and other contemplative methods edit nbsp The siddhaṃ letter a Another important meditative practice of Shingon is Ajikan 阿字觀 meditating on the letter A Nagari अ Siddham 𑖀 written using the Siddhaṃ alphabet 114 The letter A is an important symbol in Mahayana and in esoteric Buddhism which signifies the Dharmakaya the Buddha Mahavairocana emptiness Prajnaparamita and non arising anutpada 115 While the writings of Kukai do discuss the letter A and how it is important for esoteric practice it does not provide step by step meditation instructions The earliest source for the details of this practice is Jitsue s 実恵 786 849 Record of Oral Instruction on the Ajikan Ajikan yōjin kuketsu 阿字觀用心口決 Taisho no 2423 It details the contemplation of a letter A inside of a white moon disk which sits on a lotus flower The moon represents the awakened mind bodhicitta and the lotus represents the heart hrdaya Since then over a hundred Ajikan manuals have been written and Ajikan has become a central practice in the Shingon school 116 There are other forms of Shingon practice For example in Gachirinkan 月輪觀 Full Moon visualization an image of the moon an important symbol of the enlightened mind is used for visualization In Gojigonjingan 五字嚴身觀 Visualization of the Five Elements arrayed in The Body from the Mahavairocana Tantra the focus is on the five elements mahabhutani as manifestations of the Buddha Vairocana Shingon Buddhist temples also perform liturgical rites which include the chanting of sutras and other liturgy This may be accompanied by instruments like the taiko drum A popular style of Buddhist chanting in Shingon is called shōmyō 声明 a style influenced by Traditional Japanese music 117 Shingon practice may also include the practice of nembutsu or other methods associated with Amitabha and his Pure Land In Shingon this practice is understood through the lens of esoteric Buddhism which sees the Buddha Amitabha who is equated with Mahavairocana as being immanent in our heart mind and the pure land of Sukhavati as being non dual with this world Esoteric Pure Land practice was taught by Shingon figures like Kakuban 1095 1143 and Dōhan 1179 1252 118 Various Chinese masters also taught dharanis related to Amitabha For example Amoghavajra who translated the popular Amitabha Pure Land Rebirth Dharani along with numerous other texts that teach methods for rebirth in Sukhavati 119 Ethical precepts edit Another important element of Shingon practice is the keeping of Buddhist ethical precepts kai For Kukai keeping Buddhist precepts is essential for meditation and for living in harmony with one s true nature 120 Kukai writes If we aspire to go far unless we depend on our feet we cannot advance if we wish to walk the Way of Buddha unless we observe the precepts we cannot reach the goal 120 He even goes so far as to say that we should not break the precepts even to save our lives and that those who do break them are not disciples of the Buddha and he Kukai will not be their teacher 121 Shingon ethical teachings rely on the basic Buddhist precepts Mahayana bodhisattva precepts from the Brahmajala Sutra along with special mantrayana esoteric samayas vows According to Kukai all of these precepts have their foundation in the Ten Precepts i e the ten wholesome dharma paths dasa kusala karmapatha 120 Furthermore the very essence of all the precepts can be reduced to the fact that the essential nature of our mind is not distinct from that of the Buddha 120 Regarding the esoteric vows samayas there are four main samayas in Shingon 122 123 Never abandoning the True Dharma One should master all the teachings of the Buddha without forsaking a single teaching Never giving up bodhicitta which is understood as both the intention to become a Buddha for the sake of all beings and the originally enlightened mind itself respectively they are the subjective and objective aspects of bodhicitta they are understood as being non dual This is the most important samaya for Kukai Never withholding or being tight fisted regarding the teaching of Dharma to others One must always share Dharma Never avoid benefiting sentient beings and never harm them especially through the four embracing acts i e the four ways of attracting Skt catuhsamgrahavastu generosity loving words beneficial acts adapting oneself to other s needs Esoteric transmission edit Apart from basic meditations prayers and the reading and recitation of Mahayana sutras there are mantras and ritualistic meditative techniques that are available for laypersons to practice on their own under the supervision of an Shingon teacher ajari 阿闍梨 from Sanskrit acarya However many esoteric practices require the student to undergo an abhiṣeka initiation kanjō 灌頂 into each of these practices under the guidance of a qualified acarya before they may begin to learn and practice them As with all schools of Esoteric Buddhism great emphasis is placed on initiation and oral transmission of teachings from teacher to student As such all Shingon followers who desire to practice the esoteric methods must gradually develop a teacher student relationship formal or informal whereby a teacher permitted to transmit the abhiseka i e a mahacarya Jp dai ajari learns the disposition of the student and teaches esoteric practices accordingly For lay practitioners there is no initiation ceremony beyond the Kechien Kanjō 結縁灌頂 which aims to help create the bond between the follower and Mahavairocana Buddha Training for acaryas edit nbsp A priest from the Chuin ryu lineage at Shigisan Chosonshi Temple 朝護孫子寺 In the case of disciples wishing to train to become a Shingon acarya esoteric master it requires a period of academic study and religious discipline or formal training in a temple for a longer period of time after having already received novice ordination and monastic precepts and full completion of the rigorous four fold preliminary training and retreat known as shido kegyō 四度加行 which must be completed under the guidance of a qualified master 92 The training involves esoteric rites focused on invoking specific buddhas or bodhisattvas the honzon or principal deity and also include pilgrimages to holy sites 92 According to Robert Sharf All Shingon rituals and ceremonies are organized as a sequence of smaller liturgical procedures that typically consist of an incantation a mantra dharani hymn etc accompanied by a hand gesture mudra and a guided contemplation kanso The four initiations that comprise the Shidokegyo namely the Juhachido eighteen methods Kongokai vajra realm practice Taizokai matrix realm practice and Goma fire ceremony consist of hundreds of such segments of varying duration and complexity 92 These complex rites are taught through oral transmission kuden between a master and a student a process aided by numerous ritual manuals and texts 92 Depending on the lines of transmission ryu the specific details of each rite may differ 92 An acarya in Shingon is a committed and experienced teacher who is authorized to guide and teach practitioners In the Kōyasan tradition one must be an acarya for a number of years at least before one can request to be tested at Mount Kōya for the possibility to qualify as a mahacarya or great teacher dento dai ajari 傳燈大阿闍梨 the highest rank of Shingon practice However other Shingon schools outside the Kōyasan tradition may use different terminology and for them the term dai ajari may have no special meaning like in the Kōyasan tradition It is also possible that the creation of the specialized dai ajari rank at Kōyasan may have been a tradition which developed after Kukai 124 Goma fire ritual edit nbsp A goma ritual performed Jofuku Temple 常福寺 The goma 護摩 fire ritual is an important and recognizable ritual in Shingon Goma has roots in the Vedic homa ritual and this was acknowledged by traditional authors like Yi Xing 8th century 92 According to Yi Xing Buddha created this teaching out of his desire to convert non Buddhists and allow them to distinguish the true from the false Thus he taught them the true Goma The Buddha himself taught the very foundation of the Vedas and in that way manifested the correct principles and method of the true Goma This is the Buddha Veda 92 Thus while the Goma resembles Vedic rituals if properly understood it communicates the true inner intent of the Buddha 92 According to the Commentary on the Mahavairocana Sutra The meaning of goma is to burn the firewood of delusion with the wisdom flame comsuming it completely 125 Goma is performed by qualified priests and acharyas for the benefit of individuals the state or all sentient beings in general The consecrated fire is believed to have a powerful cleansing effect since esoteric Buddhist sources like Yi Xing consider the Goma fire to be the purifying wisdom of the Buddha 92 The central deity invoked in this ritual is usually Acala Fudō Myōō 不動明王 The ritual is performed for the purpose of destroying detrimental thoughts and desires and for the making of secular requests and blessings The ritual is performed in most major Shingon temples Larger scale ceremonies often include the constant beating of taiko drums and mass chanting of the mantra of Acala by priests and lay practitioners nbsp Map of the 88 temples along the Shikoku Pilgrimage Adopting the practice from Shingon Buddhism adherents the syncretic Japanese religion of Shugendō 修験道 also practice the goma ritual of which two types are prominent the saido dai goma and hashiramoto goma rituals 126 The goma ritual was also adopted by other schools of Japanese Buddhism and it is still practiced in some Zen temples Pilgrimage edit The practice of making pilgrimage to holy sites especially to mountains which were seen as the homes of deities developed throughout the history of Shingon and many pilgrimage routes remain a key part of Shingon practice today 127 One such pilgrimage route is the Shikoku pilgrimage which is associated with devotion to Kukai and includes a total of 88 locales 127 Pantheon edit nbsp A Kamakura era statue of Dainichi Nyorai by Unkei at Enjō ji nbsp Fudō Myōō Acala the wrathful manifestation of Mahavairocana and the principal deity invoked during the goma fire ritual Main article Japanese Buddhist pantheon The Shingon pantheon includes numerous Buddhist deities Many of these deities have vital roles as they are regularly invoked by the practitioner for various rituals like the homa fire ritual and in liturgical services In Shingon divine beings are grouped into six main classes Buddhas Butsu 仏 Bodhisattvas Bosatsu 菩薩 Wisdom Kings Vidyaraja Myōō 明王 Devas Ten 天 Buddha emanations Sanskrit nirmaṇakaya Keshin 化身 and Patriarchs Soshi 祖師 The Thirteen Buddhas edit nbsp Silk painting of the Thirteen Deities Nambokucho Muromachi period The most important set of deities in Shingon is called the Thirteen Buddhas 十三仏 Jusanbutsu which is actually a grouping of Buddhas bodhisattvas and Wisdom Kings which are found in the womb realm and vajra realm mandalas 128 129 They are widely invoked in several liturgies and rituals including the popular Thirteen Buddha Rites jusan butsuji 十三仏事 that are associated with the deceased and with merit making Each figure also has their own mantra and seed syllable in Shingon which are used in these rituals 130 Thirteen Buddha Rites became popular throughout Japanese Buddhism during the Edo Period and 130 The thirteen buddhas more accurately thirteen deities along with their mantras and seed syllables bija are 128 129 131 130 132 Wisdom King Acala Fudō Myōō 不動明王 Bija Haṃ Sanskrit mantra namaḥ samanta vajraṇaṃ caṇḍa maharoṣaṇa sphoṭaya huṃ traṭ haṃ maṃ Shingon transliteration nōmaku samanda bazaratan senda makaroshada sowataya untarata kanman Gautama Buddha Shaka Nyorai 釈迦如来 Bija Bhaḥ Mantra namaḥ samanta buddhanaṃ bhaḥ nōmaku sanmanda bodanan baku Manjusri Bodhisattva Monju Bosatsu 文殊菩薩 Bija Maṃ Mantra oṃ a ra pa ca na on arahashanō Samantabhadra Bodhisattva Fugen Bosatsu 普賢菩薩 Bija Aṃ Mantra oṃ samayas tvaṃ on sanmaya satoban Kṣitigarbha Bodhisattva Jizō Bosatsu 地蔵菩薩 Bija Ha Mantra oṃ ha ha ha vismaye svaha on kakaka bisanmaei sowaka Maitreya Bodhisattva Miroku Bosatsu 弥勒菩薩 Bija Yu Mantra oṃ maitreya svaha on maitareiya sowaka Bhaiṣajyaguru Buddha Yakushi Nyorai 薬師如來 Bija Bhai Mantra oṃ huru huru caṇḍali matangi svaha on korokoro sendari matōgi sowaka Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva Kannon Bosatsu 観音菩薩 Bija Sa Mantra oṃ arolik svaha on arorikya sowaka Mahasthamaprapta Bodhisattva Seishi Bosatsu 勢至菩薩 Bija Saḥ Mantra oṃ saṃ jaṃ jaṃ saḥ svaha on san zan saku sowaka Amitabha Buddha Amida Nyorai 阿弥陀如来 Bija Traḥ Mantra oṃ amṛta teje hara huṃ on amirita teisei kara un Akṣobhya Buddha Ashuku Nyorai 阿閦如来 Bija Huṃ Mantra oṃ akṣobhya huṃ on akishubiya un Mahavairocana Buddha Dainichi Nyorai 大日如来 Bija A Mantra oṃ a vi ra huṃ khaṃ vajradhatu vaṃ on abiraunken basara datoban Akasagarbha Bodhisattva Kokuzō Bosatsu 虚空蔵菩薩 Bija Traḥ Mantra namo akasagarbhaya oṃ arya kamari mauli svaha nōbō akyasha kyarabaya on ari kyamari bori sowaka Other deities edit The Five Great Wisdom Kings Godai Myō ō 五大明王 are wrathful manifestations of the Five Buddhas 133 134 135 Acala or Acalanatha Fudō Myōō 不動明王 The Immovable One Manifestation of Buddha Mahavairocana Amrtakundalin Gundari Myōō 軍荼利明王 The Dispenser of Heavenly Nectar Manifestation of Buddha Ratnasambhava Trailokyavijaya Gōzanze Myōō 降三世明王 The Conqueror of The Three Planes Manifestation of Buddha Akshobhya Yamantaka Daiitoku Myōō 大威徳明王 The Defeater of Death Manifestation of Buddha Amitabha Vajrayaksa Kongō Yasha Myōō 金剛夜叉明王 The Devourer of Demons Manifestation of Buddha Amoghasiddhi There are numerous Indian Buddhist deities found in the Shingon pantheon and in Shingon mandalas They include figures like Indra Taishakuten 帝釈天 Prthivi Jiten 地天 Goddess of the Earth Maheshvara Daijizaiten 大自在天 or Ishanaten 伊舎那天 Marici Marishi Ten 摩里支天 Mahakala Daikokuten 大黒天 Patron deity of Wealth and Saraswati Benzaiten 弁財天 Patron deity of Knowledge Art and Music Apart from Indian Buddhist deities there are also many Shinto deities which were assimilated into Shingon Buddhism like Hachiman Inari Ōkami and the sun goddess Amaterasu 136 32 137 Lineage edit nbsp Painting of Hui Kuo from a series of artworks entitled Shingon Hassozō The Eight Patriarchs of Shingon Japan Kamakura Period 13th 14th century nbsp Amoghavajra from the Shingon Hassozō 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 September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message The Shingon lineage is an ancient transmission of esoteric Buddhist doctrine that began in India and then spread to China and Japan Shingon or Orthodox Esoteric Buddhism maintains that the expounder of the doctrine was originally the Universal Buddha Vairocana but the first human to receive the doctrine was Nagarjuna in India Like all major East Asian Buddhist tradition the Shingon tradition developed a list of patriarchs which were considered to be the key figures in the transmission of their lineage Shingon recognizes two groups of eight great patriarchs one group of lineage holders and one group of great expounders of the doctrine The Eight Great Doctrine Expounding Patriarchs Fuho Hasso 付法八祖 Vairocana Dainichi Nyorai 大日如来 Vajrasattva Kongō Satta 金剛薩埵 Nagarjuna Ryuju Bosatsu 龍樹菩薩 received the Mahavairocana Tantra from Vajrasattva inside an Iron Stupa in Southern India Nagabodhi Ryuchi Bosatsu 龍智菩薩 Vajrabodhi Kongōchi Sanzō 金剛智三蔵 Amoghavajra Fukukongō Sanzō 不空金剛三蔵 Huiguo Keika Ajari 恵果阿闍梨 Kukai Kōbō Daishi 弘法大師 The Eight Great Lineage Patriarchs Denji Hasso 伝持八祖 Nagarjuna Ryuju Bosatsu 龍樹菩薩 Nagabodhi Ryuchi Bosatsu 龍智菩薩 Vajrabodhi Kongōchi Sanzō 金剛智三蔵 Amoghavajra Fukukongō Sanzō 不空金剛三蔵 Subhakarasiṃha Zenmui Sanzō 善無畏三蔵 Yi Xing Ichigyō Zenji 一行禅師 Huiguo Keika Ajari 恵果阿闍梨 Kukai Kōbō Daishi 弘法大師 Branches editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Located in Kyoto Japan Daigo ji is the head temple of the Daigo ha branch of Shingon Buddhism nbsp Chishaku in is the head temple of Shingon shu Chizan ha nbsp Hasedera in Sakurai Nara is the head temple of Shingon shu Buzan ha The Orthodox Kogi Shingon School 古義真言宗 Kōyasan 高野山真言宗 Chuin Ryu Lineage 中院流 decided after World War II clarification needed Nishinoin Ryu Nozen Gata Kōya Sojo Lineage 西院流能禅方高野相承 already extinct Nishinoin Ryu Genyu Gata Kōya Sojo Lineage 西院流元瑜方高野相承 already extinct Nishinoin Ryu Enyu Gata Kōya Sojo Lineage 西院流円祐方高野相承 already extinct Samboin Ryu Kenjin Gata Kōya Sojo Lineage 三宝院流憲深方高野相承 almost extinct Samboin Ryu Ikyo Gata Kōya Sojo Lineage 三宝院流意教方 almost extinct Samboin Ryu Shingen Gata Kōya Sojo Lineage 三宝院流真源相承 almost extinct Anshoji Ryu Lineage 安祥寺流 almost extinct Chuinhon Ryu Lineage 中院本流 almost extinct Jimyoin Ryu Lineage 持明院流 almost extinct Reiunji ha 真言宗霊雲寺派 Shinanshoji Ryu Lineage 新安祥寺流 established by Jogon 浄厳 1639 1702 Zentsuji ha 真言宗善通寺派 Jizoin Ryu Lineage 地蔵院流 already extinct Zuishinin Ryu Lineage 随心院流 since Meiji era Daigo ha 真言宗醍醐派 Samboin Ryu Jozei Gata Lineage 三宝院流定済方 Samboin Ryu Kenjin Gata Lineage 三宝院流憲深方 already extinct Rishoin Ryu Lineage 理性院流 already extinct Kongoouin Ryu Lineage 金剛王院流 already extinct Jizoin Ryu Lineage 地蔵院流 already extinct Omuro ha 真言宗御室派 Nishinoin Ryu Enyu Gata Lineage 西院流円祐方 Shingon Ritsu 真言律宗 Saidaiji Ryu Lineage already extinct 西大寺流 Chuin Ryu Lineage 中院流 same as Kōyasan Daikakuji ha 真言宗大覚寺派 Samboin Ryu Kenjin Gata Lineage 三宝院流憲深方 already extinct Hojuin Ryu Lineage 保寿院流 since Heisei era Sennyuji ha 真言宗泉涌寺派 Zuishinin Ryu Lineage 随心院流 Yamashina ha 真言宗山階派 Kanshuji Ryu Lineage 観修寺流 Shigisan 信貴山真言宗 Chuin Ryu Lineage 中院流 same as Kōyasan Nakayamadera ha 真言宗中山寺派 Chuin Ryu Lineage 中院流 same as Kōyasan Sanbōshu 真言三宝宗 Chuin Ryu Lineage 中院流 same as Kōyasan Sumadera ha 真言宗須磨寺派 Chuin Ryu Lineage 中院流 same as Kōyasan Tōji ha 真言宗東寺派 Nishinoin Ryu Nozen Gata Lineage 西院流能禅方 The Reformed Shingi Shingon School 新義真言宗 Shingon shu Negoroji 根来寺 Chushoin Ryu Lineage 中性院流 Chizan ha 真言宗智山派 Chushoin Ryu Lineage 中性院流 Samboin Ryu Nisshu Sojo 三宝院流日秀相承 Buzan ha 真言宗豊山派 Samboin Ryu Kenjin Gata Lineage 三宝院流憲深方 already extinct Chushoin Ryu Lineage 中性院流 Daidenboin Ryu Lineage 大伝法院流 since Meiji era Kokubunji ha 真言宗国分寺派 Inunaki ha 真言宗犬鳴派 See also editChinese Buddhism Tangmi Religion in Asia Religion in Japan Sokushinbutsu Shinjō Itō Shinnyo en Tachikawa ryu Eastern esotericismReferences edit Zhenyan Cengage via Encyclopedia com Hakeda 1972 p 6 Orzech 2011 p 85 Hakeda 1972 p 6 Hakeda 1972 pp 5 8 Taigen Dan Leighton Shohaku Okumura 1996 Dogen s Pure Standards for the Zen Community A Translation of Eihei Shingi p 23 SUNY Press Hakeda 1972 p 4 5 a b Green Ronald S Kukai in China What He Studied and Brought Back to Japan Education About ASIA Volume 26 Number 3 Winter 2021 Hakeda 1972 pp 14 15 Hakeda 1972 pp 15 22 23 Hakeda 1972 pp 16 20 Hakeda 1972 p 26 Hakeda 1972 p 27 Hakeda 1972 p 29 Hakeda 1972 pp 31 32 a b Hakeda 1972 pp 32 33 Hakeda 1972 p 34 Hakeda 1972 p 38 Hakeda 1972 p 39 Hakeda 1972 pp 44 46 Hakeda 1972 pp 46 47 Hakeda 1972 pp 49 50 Bowring 2005 p 147 Bowring 2005 p 151 a b Bowring 2005 p 152 Caiger Mason A History of Japan Revised Ed pp 106 107 a b Yamasaki 1988 pp 39 40 Stone Jacqueline I By the Power of One s Last Nenbutsu Deathbed Practices in Early Medieval Japan in Richard K Payne amp Kenneth K Tanaka 2004 Approaching the Land of Bliss Religious Praxis in the Cult of Amitabha pp 77 119 a b c Yamasaki 1988 p 41 a b Yamasaki 1988 p 42 Quinter D 2018 Mantras and Materialities Saidaiji Order Kōmyō Shingon Practices Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 45 2 309 340 JSTOR 26854487 a b c Yamasaki 1988 p 52 Yamasaki 1988 p 50 Yamasaki 1988 pp 50 51 Yamasaki 1988 p 40 Yamasaki 1988 p 43 Yamasaki 1988 pp 43 44 Yamasaki 1988 p 44 a b Yamasaki 1988 pp 45 46 a b Yamasaki 1988 p 46 Yamasaki 1988 p 47 Yamasaki 1988 pp 47 48 Yamasaki 1988 p 48 Yamasaki 1988 p 48 Yamasaki 1988 p 49 Deal William E Ruppert Brian 2015 A Cultural History of Japanese Buddhism Chapter 7 John Wiley amp Sons a b Bahir Cody 2021 From China to Japan and Back Again An Energetic Example of Bidirectional Sino Japanese Esoteric Buddhist Transmission Religions 12 9 675 doi 10 3390 rel12090675 Bahir Cody R Replanting the Bodhi Tree Buddhist Sectarianism and Zhenyan Revivalism Pacific World Third Series Number 20 2018 95 129 An Saiping July 2023 The Reception of the Mantra of Light in Republican Period Chinese Buddhism Religions 14 7 818 doi 10 3390 rel14070818 ISSN 2077 1444 Bahir Cody 1 January 2018 Replanting the Bodhi Tree Buddhist Sectarianism and Zhenyan Revivalism PDF Pacific World Third Series 20 95 129 Bahir Cody 31 December 2013 Buddhist Master Wuguang s 1918 2000 Taiwanese Web of the Colonial Exilic and Han The e Journal of East and Central Asian Religions 1 81 93 doi 10 2218 ejecar 2013 1 737 Bahir Cody R 2018 Reformulating the Appropriated and Relinking the Chain Challenges of Lineage and Legitimacy in Zhenyan Revivalism Sorensen Esoteric Buddhism under the Koryŏ in the Light of the Greater East Asian Tradition International Journal of Buddhist Thought amp Culture September 2006 Vol 7 pp 55 94 Yamasaki 1988 p 35 Green Ron English Translations of Kukai Contents of The Complete Works of Kōbō Daishi Kukai with links to English and Chinese texts Williams Paul and Tribe Anthony Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition 2000 p 271 a b Yamasaki 1988 p 72 Conze Edward Tantric Prajnaparamita texts Sino Indian Studies Volume 5 Part 2 1956 a b BDK 2015 p 5 BDK 2015 p 9 Yamasaki 1988 p 24 Kim Jiyun Distribution and Preservation of the Shi Moheyan Lun 釋摩訶衍論 Texts in East Asia Did They Read the Same Text Yamasaki 1988 p 32 a b c d e Hakeda 1972 p 82 Dainichi Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 a b Frederic Louis 1995 Buddhism Flammarion Iconographic Guides Flammarion pp 127 132 ISBN 2080135589 a b c d Krummel John Kukai The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2014 Edition Edward N Zalta ed URL lt http plato stanford edu archives fall2014 entries kukai gt Hakeda 1972 pp 77 78 Ten Grotenhuis Elizabeth 1999 Japanese Mandalas University of Hawaii Press pp 33 95 ISBN 0824820819 Hakeda Yushoto S 1972 Kukai Major Works New York NY Columbia University Press pp 258 ISBN 0 231 03627 2 a b Hakeda 1972 pp 78 79 Hakeda 1972 p 81 Hakeda 1972 p 83 Hakeda Yushito S 1972 Kukai Major Works New York NY Columbia University Press pp 258 ISBN 0 231 03627 2 Hakeda 1972 pp 83 84 a b c Hakeda 1972 p 85 Hakeda 1972 p 88 Hakeda 1972 p 89 Hamar Imre Editor 2007 Reflecting Mirrors Perspectives on Huayan Buddhism p 189 Asiatische Forschungen 151 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag a b c Hakeda 1972 p 92 Hakeda 1972 p 89 Hakeda 1972 p 90 Hakeda 1972 pp 90 91 a b c Hakeda 1972 p 91 a b Yamasaki 1988 p 106 a b Yamasaki 1988 p 110 Yamasaki 1988 pp 106 111 Inagaki Hisao 1972 Kukai s Sokushin Jobutsu Gi Principle of Attaining Buddhahood with the Present Body Asia Major New Series 17 2 190 215 Hakeda 1972 p 77 a b Hakeda 1972 pp 87 Hakeda 1972 pp 61 74 a b c d e f g h i j Sharf Robert H 2003 Thinking through Shingon Ritual Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 26 1 59 62 Hakeda 1972 p 74 Orzech 2011 p 76 Orzech 2011 p 85 Orzech 2011 p 84 Orzech 2011 p 85 Orzech 2011 p 277 Kiyota Minoru 1987 Shingon Mikkyō s Twofold Maṇḍala Paradoxes and Integration Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 10 1 91 92 Archived from the original on 25 January 2014 Yamasaki 1988 pp 123 125 Yamasaki 1988 p 128 Yamasaki 1988 p 138 Yamasaki 1988 p 149 Yamasaki 1988 p 149 Hakeda 1972 p 79 Yamasaki 1988 p 116 Yamasaki 1988 p 77 Yamasaki 1988 p 117 a b c d Yamasaki 1988 p 115 Yamasaki 1988 p 107 113 Yamasaki 1988 p 112 a b c Yamasaki 1988 p 113 a b Yamasaki 1988 p 114 Richard K Payne 1999 The Shingon Ajikan Diagrammatic Analysis of Ritual Syntax 29 3 215 229 doi 10 1006 reli 1998 0179 Ronald S Green The Shingon Ajikan Meditation on the Syllable A An analysis of components and development The Matheson Trust 2017 p 1 33 doi 10 6084 m9 figshare 11859951 Ronald S Green The Shingon Ajikan Meditation on the Syllable A An analysis of components and development The Matheson Trust 2017 p 1 33 doi 10 6084 m9 figshare 11859951 John Whitney Hall 1988 The Cambridge history of Japan Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521223520 Proffitt Aaron P 2023 Esoteric Pure Land Buddhism pp 35 36 University of Hawaii Press Proffitt Aaron P 2023 Esoteric Pure Land Buddhism pp 83 85 University of Hawaii Press a b c d Hakeda 1972 p 94 Hakeda 1972 p 95 Abe Ryuichi 1999 The Weaving of Mantra Kukai and the Construction of Esoteric Buddhist Discourse Columbia University Press pp 43 44 ISBN 0 231 11286 6 Hakeda 1972 pp 95 96 Koda Yuun 1982 Hoju Nimon no Chuin Ryu Journal of esoteric Buddhism 139 pp 27 42 PDF Yamasaki 1988 p 74 Ascetic Practice of Fire Shugendo Retrieved 23 February 2018 a b Yamasaki 1988 p 54 a b Shingon Buddhist International Institute Jusan Butsu The Thirteen Buddhas of the Shingon School Archived from the original on 1 April 2013 Retrieved 5 July 2007 a b Thirteen Deities Of The Shingon Tradition Giclee Print by Pasang Lama www tibetanart com Retrieved 18 October 2023 a b c Hutchins Steven J 2015 Thirteen Buddhas Tracing the Roots of the Thirteen Buddha Rites Introduction Vivlia Limited The 13 Buddhas The Thirteen Buddhas Retrieved 18 October 2023 The Koyasan Shingon shu Lay Practitioner s Daily Service Archived 2 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine Shingon Buddhist International Institute 1999 Vilbar Sinead October 2013 Kings of Brightness in Japanese Esoteric Buddhist Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 1 October 2021 Myōō Buddhist Deities of Wrath and Love Nara Nara National Museum 2000 Vidyaraja Jp Myo o Myoo Wisdom Kings Mantra Kings Protecting Dainichi Nyorai Japanese Buddhism amp Buddha Statues Project www onmarkproductions com Retrieved 18 October 2023 Leaman Oliver 2006 Encyclopedia of Asian Philosophy p 498 Routledge Reader Ian 2008 Simple Guides Shinto Kuperard pp 20 69 ISBN 978 1 85733 433 3 Bibliography editArai Yusei 1997 Koyasan Shingon Buddhism A Handbook for Followers Japan Koyasan Shingon Mission ISBN 4 9900581 1 9 Bowring Richard 2008 The Religious Traditions of Japan 500 1600 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press BDK 2015 Esoteric Texts Bukkyō Dendō Kyōkai America Incorporated Chandra Lokesh 2003 The Esoteric Iconography of Japanese Mandalas International Academy of Indian Culture and Aditya Prakashan New Delhi ISBN 81 86471 93 6 Dreitlein Eijo 2011 Shido Kegyo Shidai Japan Dreitlein Eijo 2011 Beginner s Handbook for the Shido Kegyo of Chuin ryu Japan Giebel Rolf W Todaro Dale A transl 2004 Shingon Texts Berkeley Calif Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research ISBN 1886439249 Giebel Rolf transl 2006 The Vairocanabhisaṃbodhi Sutra Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research Berkeley ISBN 978 1 886439 32 0 Giebel Rolf transl 2006 Two Esoteric Sutras The Adamantine Pinnacle Sutra T 18 no 865 The Susiddhikara Sutra T 18 no 893 Berkeley Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research ISBN 1 886439 15 X Hakeda Yoshito S transl 1972 Kukai Major Works Translated With an Account of His Life and a Study of His Thought New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 03627 2 Matsunaga Daigan and Matsunaga Alicia 1974 Foundation of Japanese Buddhism Vol I The Aristocratic Age Buddhist Books International Los Angeles und Tokio ISBN 0 914910 25 6 Kiyota Minoru 1978 Shingon Buddhism Theory and Practice Los Angeles Tokyo Buddhist Books International Payne Richard K 2004 Ritual Syntax and Cognitive Theory Pacific World Journal Third Series No 6 105 227 Toki Horyu Kawamura Seiichi tr 1899 Si do in dzou gestes de l officiant dans les ceremonies mystiques des sectes Tendai et Singon Paris E Leroux Miyata Taisen 1998 A Study of the Ritual Mudras in the Shingon Tradition and Their Symbolism Maeda Shuwa 2019 The Ritual Books of Four Preliminary Practices Sambo in Lineage Kenjin School Japan Orzech Charles D Sorensen Henrik Hjort Payne Richard Karl 2011 Esoteric Buddhism and the tantras in East Asia Leiden Boston Brill doi 10 1163 ej 9789004184916 i 1200 ISBN 978 90 04 20401 0 OCLC 731667667 Yamasaki Taiko 1988 Shingon Japanese Esoteric Buddhism Boston London Shambala Publications External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shingon Buddhism Koyasan Shingon Sect Main Temple Kongobu ji Ninna ji Temple Daigo ji Temple Chishakuin Temple Negoro ji Temple Daikaku ji Temple Chogosonshi ji Temple Gokoku ji Temple Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shingon Buddhism amp oldid 1220031777, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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