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Shinran

Shinran (親鸞, May 21, 1173 – January 16, 1263)[1][2] was a Japanese Buddhist monk, who was born in Hino (now a part of Fushimi, Kyoto) at the turbulent close of the Heian Period and lived during the Kamakura Period. Shinran was a pupil of Hōnen and the founder of what ultimately became the Jōdo Shinshū sect of Japanese Buddhism.

Shinran (親鸞)
TitleFounder of Jōdo Shinshū Buddhism
Personal
Born
Matsuwakamaro

May 21, 1173
DiedJanuary 16, 1263(1263-01-16) (aged 89)
Heian-kyō, Yamashiro Province
ReligionBuddhism
SpouseEshinni
ChildrenKakushinnhi, Zenran, others
SchoolJōdo Shinshū Buddhism
Senior posting
TeacherHōnen

Names edit

Shinran's birthname was Matsuwakamaro. In accordance with Japanese customs, he has also gone by other names, including Hanen, Shakku and Zenshin, and then finally Shinran, which was derived by combining the names of Seshin (Vasubandhu in Japanese) and Donran (Tanluan’s name in Japanese). His posthumous title was Kenshin Daishi.[3] For a while, Shinran also went by the name Fujii Yoshizane.[4] After he was disrobed, he called himself Gutoku Shinran, in a self-deprecating manner which means "stubble-haired foolish one," to denote his status as "neither a monk, nor a layperson".[citation needed]

Biography edit

 
Statue of Shinran Shonin in Kyoto.

According to traditional biographies, Shinran was born on May 21, 1173, to Lord and Lady Arinori, from a branch of the Fujiwara clan, and was given the name Matsuwakamaro. Early in Shinran's life his parents both died. In 1181, desperate to know what happens after dying, he entered the Shōren-in temple near present-day Maruyama Park in Kyoto at age nine. Modern historians contest the identity and date of death of Shinran's parents, suggesting he ordained alongside his father due to instability from the Genpei War.[5] He wrote this poem on entering: "Like the cherry blossom, the heart planning on tomorrow is ephemeral indeed—what sudden storm may not arise in the middle of the night". Acutely aware of his own impermanence, he was desperate to find a solution. He then practiced at Mt. Hiei for the next 20 years of his life. Letters between his wife and daughter indicate that he was a Tendai dōsō (堂僧, "hall monk").[6] According to his own account to his wife Eshinni (whose letters are preserved at the Hongan-ji), in frustration at his own failures as a monk and at obtaining enlightenment, he took a retreat at the temple of Rokkaku-dō. There, while engaged in intense practice, he experienced a vision in which Avalokitesvara appeared to him as Prince Shōtoku, directing Shinran to another disillusioned Tendai monk named Hōnen.[7] In 1201, Shinran met Hōnen and became his disciple. During his first year under Hōnen's guidance, at the age of 29, Shinran attained salvation through Amida's Vow. Though the two only knew each other for a few years, Hōnen entrusted Shinran with a copy of his secret work, the Senchakushū. However his precise status amongst Hōnen's followers is unclear as in the Seven Article Pledge, signed by Hōnen's followers in 1204, Shinran's signature appears near the middle among less-intimate disciples.[8] During his time as a disciple of Hōnen's, Shinran caused a great stir among society by publicly getting married and eating meat. Both practices were strictly forbidden for monks, but Shinran took these drastic steps to show that Amida's salvation is for all people and not just for monks and priests.

In 1207, the Buddhist establishment in Kyoto persuaded the military to impose a nembutsu ban, after an incident where two of Hōnen's most prominent followers were accused of using nembutsu practice as a coverup for sexual liaisons.[9] These two monks were subsequently executed. Hōnen and Shinran were exiled, with Shinran being defrocked and sent to Echigo Province (contemporary Niigata Prefecture).[10] They never met each other again. Hōnen would die later in Kyoto in 1212.[1]

Although Shinran was critical of the motivations that ultimately led to the exile, and the disruption of Hōnen's practice community, the exile itself proved to be a critical turning point in Shinran's religious life. Having been stripped of his monastic name, he renamed himself Gutoku (愚禿, "Foolish, bald-headed one"), coming to understand himself as neither monk nor layman. In this period, aristocratic exiles were provided land and seed and were required to take up farming, a measure designed to humiliate and humble them, which brought Shinran into the company of many of the lower social classes.[11] While in exile, Shinran sought to continue the work of Hōnen and spread the doctrine of salvation through Amida Buddha's compassion, as expressed through the nembutsu practice, however in time his teachings diverged from Hōnen enough that later followers would use the term Jōdo Shinshū or "True Essence of the Pure Land Sect", as opposed to Jōdo-shū or "Pure Land Sect".

Shinran married his wife, Eshinni, and had seven children with her.

Five years after being exiled in Echigo, in 1211, the nembutsu ban was lifted and Shinran was pardoned though he chose not to return to Kyoto at that time. Instead, Shinran left for an area known as Inada, a small area in Kantō just north of Tokyo. In 1224 Shinran authored his most significant text, Kyogyoshinsho, which is a series of selections and commentaries on Buddhist sutras supporting the new Pure Land Buddhist movement, and establishing a doctrinal lineage with Buddhist thinkers in India and China. In 1234 Shinran left the Kantō area and returned to Kyoto, with his daughter Kakushinni. On returning to Kyoto, Shinran discovered that his eldest son, Zenran (善鸞 1217?–1286?), who remained in Hitachi and Shimotsuke provinces was telling people he received special teachings from Shinran and was otherwise leading people astray.[7] Shinran wrote stern letters to Zenran (frequently addressed by his Buddhist name Jishin-bō (慈信房)) instructing him to cease his activities, but when Zenran refused, Shinran disowned him:[12]

Hence, from now on there shall no longer exist parental relations with you; I cease to consider you my son. I declare this resolutely to the three treasures and the gods. It is a sorrowful thing. It rends my heart to hear that you have devoted yourself to misleading all the people of the nembutsu in Hitachi, saying that [what they have been taught] is not my true teaching. Rumors have reached as far as Kamakura that I have instructed you to denounce the people in Hitachi who say the nembutsu. It is deeply deplorable.

Shinran died in Kyoto the year 1263 at the age of 90.[1] Kakushinni was instrumental in maintaining the mausoleum, and passing on his teachings, with her descendants ultimately becoming the Monshu, or head of the Honganji Temples built around the Mausoleum.

Timeline edit

  • 1173: Shinran is born
  • 1175: Hōnen founds the Jōdo-shū sect
  • 1181: Shinran becomes a monk
  • 1201: Shinran becomes a disciple of Hōnen and leaves Mt. Hiei
  • 1207: The nembutsu ban and Shinran's exile
  • 1211: Shinran is pardoned
  • 1212: Hōnen passes away in Kyoto & Shinran goes to Kantō
  • 1224(?): Shinran authors Kyogyoshinsho
  • 1234(?): Shinran goes back to Kyoto
  • 1256: Shinran disowns his son Zenran
  • 1263: Shinran dies in Kyoto
  • Doctrine edit

    Shinran considered himself a lifelong disciple of Hōnen, in spite of their separation. According to a letter composed by his wife, Eshinni:[13]

    People would say all types of things about where the master [Hōnen] might go. They would even say that he was headed for an evil rebirth (akudō). Whenever people spoke such things, [Shinran] would reply, "I am one who believes that I would even go [with him], since from realm to realm and from rebirth to rebirth I am lost already."

    Hōnen's disciples were said to have been largely divided by questions arising from the need for a single invocation (nenbutsu) of Amitabha's name versus many-callings, and thereby emphasis on faith versus practice. Shinran, like Hōnen's disciple Kōsai, leaned more toward faith over practice, however he did not advocate the single-recitation teaching.[14]

    While Shinran's teachings and beliefs were generally consistent with the Pure Land Buddhist movement at the time, he also had idiosyncrasies as well:

    Primacy of faith edit

     

    In any case Shinran, like others in Hōnen's community, felt that in the age of Dharma Decline, it was no longer possible to achieve enlightenment through traditional monastic practices, and thus one could only rely on the vows of Amitabha Buddha, particular the 18th or "Primal Vow" and seek rebirth in the Pure Land. In a passage from his magnum opus, the Kyōgyōshinshō, he writes of himself:[13]

    Therefore, reverencing the expositions of the treatise masters and relying on the exhortations of the religious teachers, I, the Bald-Headed Fool Shinran, abandoned forever the provisional path of manifold practices and good work, and separated myself once and for all from birth in the forest of the twin śāla trees. I turned to the true path, the basis of virtue and good, and gave rise to the aspiration for birth [in the Pure Land] that is difficult to comprehend. But now I have utterly abandoned the expediency of the true path, and have converted to the ocean-like vow singled out [by Amitabha Buddha]. I have separated myself straightaway from the aspiration for birth that is difficult to comprehend, and I long to attain birth that is difficult to fathom....

    In this passage, Shinran explains that he not only gave up traditional monastic practices to focus on rebirth in the Pure Land, but that in time he eventually gave up on practices related to rebirth in the Pure Land, instead relying solely on faith in the vow of Amitabha Buddha.

    In the Kyōgyōshinshō, third fascicle, Shinran explores the nature of shinjitsu no shinjin (真実の信心, "true faith"), by describing it as something bestowed by Amitabha Buddha, not arising from the believer.[13] Through this endowment, faith is awakened in a person, and the recitation of the Buddha's name or nembutsu because an expression of praise or gratitude. However, this cannot occur until the believer fully entrusts themselves to Amitabha Buddha, even for a moment. Once this state of faith is bestowed, one is assured of rebirth in the Pure Land, and ultimately enlightenment. Shinran cautions though:[13]

    True faith necessarily entails Amida's name, but Amida's name does not necessarily entail faith, [which is derived] from the power of [Amida's] vow.

    Further, once a follower has awakened to this deep faith, one should live life as an expression of gratitude, follow moral conduct and fulfill one's social obligations.[14] As one's faith in Amida deepens, Shinran articulated ten spiritual benefits that develop: Protected by unseen divine beings (myoshu goji), Possessed of the supreme virtue (shitoku gusoku), Having evil turned into good (tenaku jyozen), Protected by all Buddhas (shobutsu gonen), Praised by all Buddhas (shobutsu shyosan), Protected by the Buddha's spiritual light (shinko jogo), Having much joy in mind (shinta kangi), Acknowledging His benevolence and repaying it (chion hotoku), Always practicing the Great Compassion (jyogyo daihi), Entering the Rightly-Established Group (shojyoju ni iru).[15]

    Amitabha Buddha and the Pure Land edit

    The last three fascicles of the Kyōgyōshinshō delve into the nature of Amitabha Buddha and the Pure Land. The Pure Land is treated as a temporary refuge whereby one can attain enlightenment, and then return to this world to lead and teach others as a bodhisattva. Elsewhere, Shinran is quoted in the Tannishō (歎異抄, "Lamentation of Divergences") as saying:[16][17]

    浄土の慈悲といふは、念仏して、いそぎ仏になりて、大慈大悲心をもて、おもふがごとく衆生を利益するをいふべきなり。

    Jōdo no jihi to iu wa, nenbutsu shite, isogi hotoke ni narite, daiji-daihi-shin wo mote, omou ga gotoku shujō wo riyaku suru wo iu beki nari.

    The compassion in the Path of Pure Land is to quickly attain Buddhahood, saying the nembutsu, and with the true heart of compassion and love save all beings completely as we desire.

    On the nature of Amitabha Buddha, Shinran stated that in their true form, both the Buddha and the Pure Land are beyond comprehension, but due to people's ignorance and attachments they can only perceive Amitabha in terms of his physical form described in the sutras, as well as the layout of the Pure Land.[13] If one attains true faith, then upon rebirth in the Pure Land, one can perceive their true form. However, if one's faith is incomplete, or they continue to rely on their own efforts, then they will be reborn in the outer regions of the Pure Land, and will still perceive Amitabha Buddha through physical forms until eventually attaining true faith and proceeding further.

    Shinran's definition of Amitabha Buddha as the absolute, equating the Pure Land with Nirvana itself, therefore differed somewhat from traditional interpretations of the Pure Land in Buddhist scripture.[13]

    Age of Dharma decline edit

    Shinran's interpretation of the final age of the Dharma, was consistent with other Buddhist thinkers of the time. In particular, he drew inspiration from a Chinese Buddhist master named Tao-cho who centuries earlier taught that in the latter age of the Dharma the Pure Land teachings were the most suitable for the capacities of the people of the time.[13]

    Shinran felt that this decline was inevitable, that Japan was already 600 years into age of Dharma Decline, and that people were no longer capable of maintaining Buddhist practice, let alone enlightenment. Thus, only the vow of Amitabha Buddha to save all beings could be relied upon.

    Other religious practices edit

    Shinran acknowledged the religious practices of Japan outside the Buddhist tradition, including Shinto kami, spirits, divination, astrology, etc., he believed that they were irrelevant in comparison to the power of Amitabha Buddha.[13] He developed a Japanese Buddhist heresiology that constructed other forms of religious practice as equivalent to demon-worship; his followers would later use this equivocation both to enforce proper interpretations of Shinran's thought and to criticize "heretical" sects of Buddhism such as the Tachikawa-ryu.[18] To this day, omamori, ofuda and other charms are not found in Jodo Shinshu temples.

    Cultural legacy edit

     
    Statue of Shinran Shonin, Riverside Drive, New York. A survivor of the bombing at Hiroshima, the statue was brought to New York in 1955

    A statue of Shinran Shonin stands in Upper West Side Manhattan, in New York City on Riverside Drive between 105th and 106th Streets, in front of the New York Buddhist Church. The statue depicts Shinran in a peasant hat and sandals, holding a wooden staff, as he peers down at the sidewalk.

    Although this kind of statue is very common and often found at Jōdo Shinshū temples, this particular statue is notable because it survived the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, standing a little more than a mile from ground zero. It was brought to New York in 1955. The plaque calls the statue "a testimonial to the atomic bomb devastation and a symbol of lasting hope for world peace."[19]

    Shinran's life was the subject of the 1987 film Shinran: Path to Purity, directed by Rentarō Mikuni (in his directorial debut, based on his own novel)[20] and starring Junkyu Moriyama as Shinran. The film won the Jury Prize at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival.[21]

    On March 14, 2008, what are assumed to be some of the ash remains of Shinran were found in a small wooden statue at the Jōrakuji temple in Shimogyō-ku, Kyōto. The temple was created by Zonkaku (1290–1373), the son of Kakunyo (1270–1351), one of Shinran's great grandchildren. Records indicate that Zonkaku inherited the remains of Shinran from Kakunyo. The 24.2 cm wooden statue is identified as being from the middle of the Edo period. The remains were wrapped in paper.[22]

    In March 2011, manga artist Takehiko Inoue created large ink paintings on twelve folding screens, displayed at the East Hongan Temple in Kyoto. The illustrations on the panels include Shinran and Hōnen leading a group of Heian era commoners on one set of screens and Shinran seated with a bird on the other set.[23]

    See also edit

    Notes edit

    1. ^ a b c Popular Buddhism in Japan: Shin Buddhist Religion & Culture by Esben Andreasen, pp. 13, 14, 15, 17. University of Hawaiʻi Press 1998, ISBN 0-8248-2028-2
    2. ^
    3. ^ "Shinran | Japanese Buddhist philosopher | Britannica".
    4. ^ Young Man Shinran: A Reappraisal of Shinran's life. Takamichi Takshataka, Wilfrid Laurier Press, page 2
    5. ^ Bloom, Alfred (2006). The Essential Shinran: A Buddhist Path of True Entrusting. World Wisdom. ISBN 978-1933316215.
    6. ^ Bloom, Alfred (1968). (PDF). Numen. 15 (1): 6. doi:10.1163/156852768x00011. Archived from the original on 2011-06-11.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
    7. ^ a b Nishi Honganji Homepage
    8. ^ Dobbins, James C. (1989). Jōdo Shinshū: Shin Buddhism in Medieval Japan. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-33186-2.
    9. ^ Bowring, Richard. Religious Traditions of Japan: 500-1600. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. 247.
    10. ^ Buswell, Robert Jr; Lopez, Donald S. Jr., eds. (2013). Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism(Shinran ). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 807. ISBN 9780691157863.
    11. ^ Takahatake, Takamichi (2006-01-01). Young Man Shinran: A Reappraisal of Shinran's Life. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 9780889205864.
    12. ^ "Uncollected Letters, Collected Works of Shinran". Retrieved 2016-01-12.
    13. ^ a b c d e f g h Dobbins, James C. (1989). "Chapter 2: Shinran and His Teachings". Jodo Shinshu: Shin Buddhism in Medieval Japan. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253331862.
    14. ^ a b Watts, Jonathan; Tomatsu, Yoshiharu (2005). Traversing the Pure Land Path: A Lifetime of Encounters with Hōnen Shonin. Jodo Shu Press. pp. 136–137. ISBN 488363342X.
    15. ^ "ten_benefits". web.mit.edu. Retrieved 2019-08-19.
    16. ^ "The TANNISHO: Chapters I to X". Retrieved 2015-06-30.
    17. ^ "歎異抄の世界" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2015-06-30.
    18. ^ Josephson, Jason (2012). The Invention of Religion in Japan. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 35. ISBN 9780226412351.
    19. ^ "Shinran Statue Manhattan, New York Hiroshima survivor on Riverside Drive". atlasobscura.com. Atlas Obscura. June 24, 2011. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
    20. ^ "親鸞 白い道". Agency for Cultural Affairs 映画情報システム. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
    21. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Shinran: Path to Purity". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-07-19.
    22. ^ . Asahi Shimbun. 14 March 2008. Archived from the original on 2008-03-16. Retrieved 2008-03-15.
    23. ^ Stimson, Eric (November 1, 2015). "Slam Dunk's Takehiko Inoue's Buddhist Folding Screen on Display". animenewsnetwork.com. Anime News Network. Retrieved May 18, 2023.

    Further reading edit

    • Bloom, Alfred: The Essential Shinran: A Buddhist Path of True Entrusting, (World Wisdom) 2007. ISBN 978-1-933316-21-5
    • Ducor, Jerome : Shinran, Un réformateur bouddhiste dans le Japon médiéval (col. Le Maître et le disciple); Gollion, Infolio éditions, 2008 (ISBN 978-2-88474-926-8)
    • Albert Shansky: Shinran and Eshinni: A Tale of Love in Buddhist Medieval Japan, ISBN 1-4241-6301-3 (10), ISBN 978-1-4241-6301-4 (13)
    • Dobbins, James C. (1989). Jodo Shinshu: Shin Buddhism in Medieval Japan. Bloomington, Illinois: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253331861; OCLC 470742039
    • Dobbins, James C. (1990). "The Biography of Shinran: Apotheosis of a Japanese Buddhist Visionary", History of Religions 30 (2), 179–196
    • Kenneth Doo Young Lee: "The Prince and the Monk: Shotoku Worship in Shinran's Buddhism", ISBN 978-0-7914-7022-0
    • Kokubu, Keiji. Pauro to Shinran (Paul and Shinran). Kyoto: Hozokan, 1984. (This comparative study written in Japanese.)
    • Shigaraki, Takamaro: A Life of Awakening: The Heart of the Shin Buddhist Path. Translation by David Matsumoto. Hozokan Publishing, Kyoto, 2005
    • Shinran Shonin, Hisao Inagaki (trans): , Berkeley: Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research, 2003. ISBN 1-886439-16-8
    • Takamori, Kentetsu; Akehashi, Daiji; Ito, Kentaro: "You Were Born for a Reason: The Real Purpose Of Life 2018-08-06 at the Wayback Machine (Ichimannendo Publishing, Inc. 2006) ISBN 978-0-9790471-0-7
    • Takamori, Kentetsu: Unlocking Tannisho: Shinran's Words on the Pure Land Path (Ichimannendo Publishing, Inc 2011) ISBN 978-09790-471-52
    • Ueda, Yoshifumi, and Hirota, Dennis: Shinran: An Introduction to His Thought. With Selections from the Shin Buddhism Translation Series. (Kyoto: Hongwanji International Center, 1989.)
    • S. Yamabe and L. Adams Beck (trans). Buddhist Psalms of Shinran Shonin, London: John Murray 1921 (e-book)
    • Sokusui Murakami (2001). "Joy of Shinran: Rethinking the Traditional Shinshu Views on the Concept of the Stage of Truly Settled", Pacific World Journal, Third Series, Number 3, 5-25. Archived from the

    External links edit

    • Works by Shinran at Project Gutenberg
    • Works by or about Shinran at Internet Archive
    • Commentary on Shinran's Wasan (Hymns) in Three Volumes
    • Homepage for Jodo Shinshu Hongwanji-ha Hongwanji International Center (in English)

    shinran, 親鸞, 1173, january, 1263, japanese, buddhist, monk, born, hino, part, fushimi, kyoto, turbulent, close, heian, period, lived, during, kamakura, period, pupil, hōnen, founder, what, ultimately, became, jōdo, shinshū, sect, japanese, buddhism, 親鸞, nara, . Shinran 親鸞 May 21 1173 January 16 1263 1 2 was a Japanese Buddhist monk who was born in Hino now a part of Fushimi Kyoto at the turbulent close of the Heian Period and lived during the Kamakura Period Shinran was a pupil of Hōnen and the founder of what ultimately became the Jōdo Shinshu sect of Japanese Buddhism Shinran 親鸞 Shinran ICP Nara National Museum TitleFounder of Jōdo Shinshu BuddhismPersonalBornMatsuwakamaroMay 21 1173Heian kyō Yamashiro Province now Kyoto Japan DiedJanuary 16 1263 1263 01 16 aged 89 Heian kyō Yamashiro ProvinceReligionBuddhismSpouseEshinniChildrenKakushinnhi Zenran othersSchoolJōdo Shinshu BuddhismSenior postingTeacherHōnen Contents 1 Names 2 Biography 3 Timeline 4 Doctrine 4 1 Primacy of faith 4 2 Amitabha Buddha and the Pure Land 4 3 Age of Dharma decline 4 4 Other religious practices 5 Cultural legacy 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Further reading 9 External linksNames editShinran s birthname was Matsuwakamaro In accordance with Japanese customs he has also gone by other names including Hanen Shakku and Zenshin and then finally Shinran which was derived by combining the names of Seshin Vasubandhu in Japanese and Donran Tanluan s name in Japanese His posthumous title was Kenshin Daishi 3 For a while Shinran also went by the name Fujii Yoshizane 4 After he was disrobed he called himself Gutoku Shinran in a self deprecating manner which means stubble haired foolish one to denote his status as neither a monk nor a layperson citation needed Biography edit nbsp Statue of Shinran Shonin in Kyoto According to traditional biographies Shinran was born on May 21 1173 to Lord and Lady Arinori from a branch of the Fujiwara clan and was given the name Matsuwakamaro Early in Shinran s life his parents both died In 1181 desperate to know what happens after dying he entered the Shōren in temple near present day Maruyama Park in Kyoto at age nine Modern historians contest the identity and date of death of Shinran s parents suggesting he ordained alongside his father due to instability from the Genpei War 5 He wrote this poem on entering Like the cherry blossom the heart planning on tomorrow is ephemeral indeed what sudden storm may not arise in the middle of the night Acutely aware of his own impermanence he was desperate to find a solution He then practiced at Mt Hiei for the next 20 years of his life Letters between his wife and daughter indicate that he was a Tendai dōsō 堂僧 hall monk 6 According to his own account to his wife Eshinni whose letters are preserved at the Hongan ji in frustration at his own failures as a monk and at obtaining enlightenment he took a retreat at the temple of Rokkaku dō There while engaged in intense practice he experienced a vision in which Avalokitesvara appeared to him as Prince Shōtoku directing Shinran to another disillusioned Tendai monk named Hōnen 7 In 1201 Shinran met Hōnen and became his disciple During his first year under Hōnen s guidance at the age of 29 Shinran attained salvation through Amida s Vow Though the two only knew each other for a few years Hōnen entrusted Shinran with a copy of his secret work the Senchakushu However his precise status amongst Hōnen s followers is unclear as in the Seven Article Pledge signed by Hōnen s followers in 1204 Shinran s signature appears near the middle among less intimate disciples 8 During his time as a disciple of Hōnen s Shinran caused a great stir among society by publicly getting married and eating meat Both practices were strictly forbidden for monks but Shinran took these drastic steps to show that Amida s salvation is for all people and not just for monks and priests In 1207 the Buddhist establishment in Kyoto persuaded the military to impose a nembutsu ban after an incident where two of Hōnen s most prominent followers were accused of using nembutsu practice as a coverup for sexual liaisons 9 These two monks were subsequently executed Hōnen and Shinran were exiled with Shinran being defrocked and sent to Echigo Province contemporary Niigata Prefecture 10 They never met each other again Hōnen would die later in Kyoto in 1212 1 Although Shinran was critical of the motivations that ultimately led to the exile and the disruption of Hōnen s practice community the exile itself proved to be a critical turning point in Shinran s religious life Having been stripped of his monastic name he renamed himself Gutoku 愚禿 Foolish bald headed one coming to understand himself as neither monk nor layman In this period aristocratic exiles were provided land and seed and were required to take up farming a measure designed to humiliate and humble them which brought Shinran into the company of many of the lower social classes 11 While in exile Shinran sought to continue the work of Hōnen and spread the doctrine of salvation through Amida Buddha s compassion as expressed through the nembutsu practice however in time his teachings diverged from Hōnen enough that later followers would use the term Jōdo Shinshu or True Essence of the Pure Land Sect as opposed to Jōdo shu or Pure Land Sect Shinran married his wife Eshinni and had seven children with her Five years after being exiled in Echigo in 1211 the nembutsu ban was lifted and Shinran was pardoned though he chose not to return to Kyoto at that time Instead Shinran left for an area known as Inada a small area in Kantō just north of Tokyo In 1224 Shinran authored his most significant text Kyogyoshinsho which is a series of selections and commentaries on Buddhist sutras supporting the new Pure Land Buddhist movement and establishing a doctrinal lineage with Buddhist thinkers in India and China In 1234 Shinran left the Kantō area and returned to Kyoto with his daughter Kakushinni On returning to Kyoto Shinran discovered that his eldest son Zenran 善鸞 1217 1286 who remained in Hitachi and Shimotsuke provinces was telling people he received special teachings from Shinran and was otherwise leading people astray 7 Shinran wrote stern letters to Zenran frequently addressed by his Buddhist name Jishin bō 慈信房 instructing him to cease his activities but when Zenran refused Shinran disowned him 12 Hence from now on there shall no longer exist parental relations with you I cease to consider you my son I declare this resolutely to the three treasures and the gods It is a sorrowful thing It rends my heart to hear that you have devoted yourself to misleading all the people of the nembutsu in Hitachi saying that what they have been taught is not my true teaching Rumors have reached as far as Kamakura that I have instructed you to denounce the people in Hitachi who say the nembutsu It is deeply deplorable Shinran died in Kyoto the year 1263 at the age of 90 1 Kakushinni was instrumental in maintaining the mausoleum and passing on his teachings with her descendants ultimately becoming the Monshu or head of the Honganji Temples built around the Mausoleum Timeline edit1173 Shinran is born 1175 Hōnen founds the Jōdo shu sect 1181 Shinran becomes a monk 1201 Shinran becomes a disciple of Hōnen and leaves Mt Hiei 1207 The nembutsu ban and Shinran s exile 1211 Shinran is pardoned 1212 Hōnen passes away in Kyoto amp Shinran goes to Kantō 1224 Shinran authors Kyogyoshinsho 1234 Shinran goes back to Kyoto 1256 Shinran disowns his son Zenran 1263 Shinran dies in KyotoDoctrine editShinran considered himself a lifelong disciple of Hōnen in spite of their separation According to a letter composed by his wife Eshinni 13 People would say all types of things about where the master Hōnen might go They would even say that he was headed for an evil rebirth akudō Whenever people spoke such things Shinran would reply I am one who believes that I would even go with him since from realm to realm and from rebirth to rebirth I am lost already Hōnen s disciples were said to have been largely divided by questions arising from the need for a single invocation nenbutsu of Amitabha s name versus many callings and thereby emphasis on faith versus practice Shinran like Hōnen s disciple Kōsai leaned more toward faith over practice however he did not advocate the single recitation teaching 14 While Shinran s teachings and beliefs were generally consistent with the Pure Land Buddhist movement at the time he also had idiosyncrasies as well Primacy of faith edit nbsp In any case Shinran like others in Hōnen s community felt that in the age of Dharma Decline it was no longer possible to achieve enlightenment through traditional monastic practices and thus one could only rely on the vows of Amitabha Buddha particular the 18th or Primal Vow and seek rebirth in the Pure Land In a passage from his magnum opus the Kyōgyōshinshō he writes of himself 13 Therefore reverencing the expositions of the treatise masters and relying on the exhortations of the religious teachers I the Bald Headed Fool Shinran abandoned forever the provisional path of manifold practices and good work and separated myself once and for all from birth in the forest of the twin sala trees I turned to the true path the basis of virtue and good and gave rise to the aspiration for birth in the Pure Land that is difficult to comprehend But now I have utterly abandoned the expediency of the true path and have converted to the ocean like vow singled out by Amitabha Buddha I have separated myself straightaway from the aspiration for birth that is difficult to comprehend and I long to attain birth that is difficult to fathom In this passage Shinran explains that he not only gave up traditional monastic practices to focus on rebirth in the Pure Land but that in time he eventually gave up on practices related to rebirth in the Pure Land instead relying solely on faith in the vow of Amitabha Buddha In the Kyōgyōshinshō third fascicle Shinran explores the nature of shinjitsu no shinjin 真実の信心 true faith by describing it as something bestowed by Amitabha Buddha not arising from the believer 13 Through this endowment faith is awakened in a person and the recitation of the Buddha s name or nembutsu because an expression of praise or gratitude However this cannot occur until the believer fully entrusts themselves to Amitabha Buddha even for a moment Once this state of faith is bestowed one is assured of rebirth in the Pure Land and ultimately enlightenment Shinran cautions though 13 True faith necessarily entails Amida s name but Amida s name does not necessarily entail faith which is derived from the power of Amida s vow Further once a follower has awakened to this deep faith one should live life as an expression of gratitude follow moral conduct and fulfill one s social obligations 14 As one s faith in Amida deepens Shinran articulated ten spiritual benefits that develop Protected by unseen divine beings myoshu goji Possessed of the supreme virtue shitoku gusoku Having evil turned into good tenaku jyozen Protected by all Buddhas shobutsu gonen Praised by all Buddhas shobutsu shyosan Protected by the Buddha s spiritual light shinko jogo Having much joy in mind shinta kangi Acknowledging His benevolence and repaying it chion hotoku Always practicing the Great Compassion jyogyo daihi Entering the Rightly Established Group shojyoju ni iru 15 Amitabha Buddha and the Pure Land edit The last three fascicles of the Kyōgyōshinshō delve into the nature of Amitabha Buddha and the Pure Land The Pure Land is treated as a temporary refuge whereby one can attain enlightenment and then return to this world to lead and teach others as a bodhisattva Elsewhere Shinran is quoted in the Tannishō 歎異抄 Lamentation of Divergences as saying 16 17 浄土の慈悲といふは 念仏して いそぎ仏になりて 大慈大悲心をもて おもふがごとく衆生を利益するをいふべきなり Jōdo no jihi to iu wa nenbutsu shite isogi hotoke ni narite daiji daihi shin wo mote omou ga gotoku shujō wo riyaku suru wo iu beki nari The compassion in the Path of Pure Land is to quickly attain Buddhahood saying the nembutsu and with the true heart of compassion and love save all beings completely as we desire On the nature of Amitabha Buddha Shinran stated that in their true form both the Buddha and the Pure Land are beyond comprehension but due to people s ignorance and attachments they can only perceive Amitabha in terms of his physical form described in the sutras as well as the layout of the Pure Land 13 If one attains true faith then upon rebirth in the Pure Land one can perceive their true form However if one s faith is incomplete or they continue to rely on their own efforts then they will be reborn in the outer regions of the Pure Land and will still perceive Amitabha Buddha through physical forms until eventually attaining true faith and proceeding further Shinran s definition of Amitabha Buddha as the absolute equating the Pure Land with Nirvana itself therefore differed somewhat from traditional interpretations of the Pure Land in Buddhist scripture 13 Age of Dharma decline edit Shinran s interpretation of the final age of the Dharma was consistent with other Buddhist thinkers of the time In particular he drew inspiration from a Chinese Buddhist master named Tao cho who centuries earlier taught that in the latter age of the Dharma the Pure Land teachings were the most suitable for the capacities of the people of the time 13 Shinran felt that this decline was inevitable that Japan was already 600 years into age of Dharma Decline and that people were no longer capable of maintaining Buddhist practice let alone enlightenment Thus only the vow of Amitabha Buddha to save all beings could be relied upon Other religious practices edit Shinran acknowledged the religious practices of Japan outside the Buddhist tradition including Shinto kami spirits divination astrology etc he believed that they were irrelevant in comparison to the power of Amitabha Buddha 13 He developed a Japanese Buddhist heresiology that constructed other forms of religious practice as equivalent to demon worship his followers would later use this equivocation both to enforce proper interpretations of Shinran s thought and to criticize heretical sects of Buddhism such as the Tachikawa ryu 18 To this day omamori ofuda and other charms are not found in Jodo Shinshu temples Cultural legacy edit nbsp Statue of Shinran Shonin Riverside Drive New York A survivor of the bombing at Hiroshima the statue was brought to New York in 1955 A statue of Shinran Shonin stands in Upper West Side Manhattan in New York City on Riverside Drive between 105th and 106th Streets in front of the New York Buddhist Church The statue depicts Shinran in a peasant hat and sandals holding a wooden staff as he peers down at the sidewalk Although this kind of statue is very common and often found at Jōdo Shinshu temples this particular statue is notable because it survived the atomic bombing of Hiroshima standing a little more than a mile from ground zero It was brought to New York in 1955 The plaque calls the statue a testimonial to the atomic bomb devastation and a symbol of lasting hope for world peace 19 Shinran s life was the subject of the 1987 film Shinran Path to Purity directed by Rentarō Mikuni in his directorial debut based on his own novel 20 and starring Junkyu Moriyama as Shinran The film won the Jury Prize at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival 21 On March 14 2008 what are assumed to be some of the ash remains of Shinran were found in a small wooden statue at the Jōrakuji temple in Shimogyō ku Kyōto The temple was created by Zonkaku 1290 1373 the son of Kakunyo 1270 1351 one of Shinran s great grandchildren Records indicate that Zonkaku inherited the remains of Shinran from Kakunyo The 24 2 cm wooden statue is identified as being from the middle of the Edo period The remains were wrapped in paper 22 In March 2011 manga artist Takehiko Inoue created large ink paintings on twelve folding screens displayed at the East Hongan Temple in Kyoto The illustrations on the panels include Shinran and Hōnen leading a group of Heian era commoners on one set of screens and Shinran seated with a bird on the other set 23 See also editFaith in Buddhism Jōdo Shinshu Statue of Shinran TokyoNotes edit a b c Popular Buddhism in Japan Shin Buddhist Religion amp Culture by Esben Andreasen pp 13 14 15 17 University of Hawaiʻi Press 1998 ISBN 0 8248 2028 2 The Life and Works of Shinran Shonin Shinran Japanese Buddhist philosopher Britannica Young Man Shinran A Reappraisal of Shinran s life Takamichi Takshataka Wilfrid Laurier Press page 2 Bloom Alfred 2006 The Essential Shinran A Buddhist Path of True Entrusting World Wisdom ISBN 978 1933316215 Bloom Alfred 1968 The Life of Shinran Shonin The Journey to Self Acceptance PDF Numen 15 1 6 doi 10 1163 156852768x00011 Archived from the original on 2011 06 11 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b Shinran s Biography Nishi Honganji Homepage Dobbins James C 1989 Jōdo Shinshu Shin Buddhism in Medieval Japan Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 33186 2 Bowring Richard Religious Traditions of Japan 500 1600 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2005 247 Buswell Robert Jr Lopez Donald S Jr eds 2013 Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism Shinran Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 807 ISBN 9780691157863 Takahatake Takamichi 2006 01 01 Young Man Shinran A Reappraisal of Shinran s Life Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 9780889205864 Uncollected Letters Collected Works of Shinran Retrieved 2016 01 12 a b c d e f g h Dobbins James C 1989 Chapter 2 Shinran and His Teachings Jodo Shinshu Shin Buddhism in Medieval Japan Indiana University Press ISBN 0253331862 a b Watts Jonathan Tomatsu Yoshiharu 2005 Traversing the Pure Land Path A Lifetime of Encounters with Hōnen Shonin Jodo Shu Press pp 136 137 ISBN 488363342X ten benefits web mit edu Retrieved 2019 08 19 The TANNISHO Chapters I to X Retrieved 2015 06 30 歎異抄の世界 in Japanese Retrieved 2015 06 30 Josephson Jason 2012 The Invention of Religion in Japan Chicago University of Chicago Press p 35 ISBN 9780226412351 Shinran Statue Manhattan New York Hiroshima survivor on Riverside Drive atlasobscura com Atlas Obscura June 24 2011 Retrieved May 18 2023 親鸞 白い道 Agency for Cultural Affairs 映画情報システム Retrieved 2 November 2019 Festival de Cannes Shinran Path to Purity festival cannes com Retrieved 2009 07 19 親鸞の遺骨 が木像胎内から 京都 常楽寺 Asahi Shimbun 14 March 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 03 16 Retrieved 2008 03 15 Stimson Eric November 1 2015 Slam Dunk s Takehiko Inoue s Buddhist Folding Screen on Display animenewsnetwork com Anime News Network Retrieved May 18 2023 Further reading editBloom Alfred The Essential Shinran A Buddhist Path of True Entrusting World Wisdom 2007 ISBN 978 1 933316 21 5 Ducor Jerome Shinran Un reformateur bouddhiste dans le Japon medieval col Le Maitre et le disciple Gollion Infolio editions 2008 ISBN 978 2 88474 926 8 Albert Shansky Shinran and Eshinni A Tale of Love in Buddhist Medieval Japan ISBN 1 4241 6301 3 10 ISBN 978 1 4241 6301 4 13 Dobbins James C 1989 Jodo Shinshu Shin Buddhism in Medieval Japan Bloomington Illinois Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253331861 OCLC 470742039 Dobbins James C 1990 The Biography of Shinran Apotheosis of a Japanese Buddhist Visionary History of Religions 30 2 179 196 Kenneth Doo Young Lee The Prince and the Monk Shotoku Worship in Shinran s Buddhism ISBN 978 0 7914 7022 0 Kokubu Keiji Pauro to Shinran Paul and Shinran Kyoto Hozokan 1984 This comparative study written in Japanese Shigaraki Takamaro A Life of Awakening The Heart of the Shin Buddhist Path Translation by David Matsumoto Hozokan Publishing Kyoto 2005 Shinran Shonin Hisao Inagaki trans Kyōgyōshinshō On Teaching Practice Faith and Enlightenment Berkeley Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research 2003 ISBN 1 886439 16 8 Takamori Kentetsu Akehashi Daiji Ito Kentaro You Were Born for a Reason The Real Purpose Of Life Archived 2018 08 06 at the Wayback Machine Ichimannendo Publishing Inc 2006 ISBN 978 0 9790471 0 7 Takamori Kentetsu Unlocking Tannisho Shinran s Words on the Pure Land Path Ichimannendo Publishing Inc 2011 ISBN 978 09790 471 52 Ueda Yoshifumi and Hirota Dennis Shinran An Introduction to His Thought With Selections from the Shin Buddhism Translation Series Kyoto Hongwanji International Center 1989 S Yamabe and L Adams Beck trans Buddhist Psalms of Shinran Shonin London John Murray 1921 e book Sokusui Murakami 2001 Joy of Shinran Rethinking the Traditional Shinshu Views on the Concept of the Stage of Truly Settled Pacific World Journal Third Series Number 3 5 25 Archived from the originalExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shinran Works by Shinran at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Shinran at Internet Archive The Collected Works of Shinran Commentary on Shinran s Wasan Hymns in Three Volumes Homepage for Jodo Shinshu Hongwanji ha Hongwanji International Center in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shinran amp oldid 1194119004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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