Pure Land Buddhism - Dialogues With Ancient Masters
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About this ebook
Introduction
The Pure Land School
Zen, T'ien T'ai and Pure Land are among the best known schools of Buddhism in East Asia. Pure Land, in particular, has the widest appeal.1 However, unlike Zen and the Tantric School, which have many exponents in the West, Pure Land is little known to Westerners, except, perhaps, in scholarly circles.
This book presents the teachings and major tenets of Pure Land, as seen from the perspective of two major sister schools: Zen and T'ien T'ai (Lotus School).2 Further insights, from the viewpoint of a contemporary Pure Land Master, are included in the Appendix. The principal teachings of the Pure Land School are summarized below, for the benefit of readers.
The goal espoused by all Buddhist schools is for the practitioner to achieve Buddhahood, i.e., to become an 'Enlightened Being." Thus, to practice Buddhism is to cultivate enlightenment, to attain Wisdom.
Although there are many paths to reach this goal, they all involve severing greed, anger and delusion, thus perfecting the qualities of the Mind ("paramitas"). Traditionally, Buddhist sutras enumerate six or ten paramitas, but they may be reduced to three: Discipline,
> 2 < Pure Land Buddhism
Concentration and Wisdom (the second, fifth and sixth paramitas, respectively)3.
Pure Land, or Buddha Recitation, is a Mahayana approach that employs, inter alia, the techniques of meditation/visualization (of the Pure Land, Amitabha Buddha ...) and of oral recitation of the Buddha's name, to realize these paramitas.4
That is, when a practitioner is busy visualizing the Buddha5 or reciting the Buddha's name, he cannot
.commit transgressions or violate the Buddhist precepts. Therefore, he has effectively fulfilled the paramita of Discipline. Likewise, reciting the Buddha's name with a completely focussed Mind is nothing less than fulfilling the paramita of Concentration. Once Concentration is achieved, the practitioner's Mind becomes empty and still, leading to the emergence of his innate wisdom - the Wisdom of the Buddhas.6
Thus, a Buddha Recitation practitioner, by dint of his own effort, effectively attains Buddhahood. This is a simple, straightforward alternative7 to strict monastic ascetism (Theravada School),8 deep and extensive study of the Buddhist Canon (Sutra Studies School), esoteric yogic ractices, ceremonies and services (Tantric School) or intensive meditation under the J'ersonal instruction of highly competent mentors (Zen).1
According to Pure Land doctrine, however, most practitioners in this Degenerate Age11 find the "self-power," self-help approach too difficult and arduous; therefore, in their Pure Land teachings, the Buddhas and Sages compassionately emphasized the additional element of "other-power."12 This involves reliance on the Vows of Amitabha Buddha, made countless eons ago, to welcome and escort all sentient beings to his Land of Ultimate Bliss13 -- an ideal training
Introduction > 3 <
ground, an ideal environment.14 Once this "Land" is reached and training completed, the practitioner will naturally discover that "training is no training" and that the training ground, the Pure Land, is Mind-Only. Rebirth at the time of death is rebirth within our own Mind.15
Thus, to the Pure Land advocate, this approach, grounded in wisdom and faith, is profound yet simple, and can be practiced at any time, anywhere, under any circumstances, with no special training or guidance. It is, therefore, infinitely adaptable to practitioners at all levels of intellectual and spiritual development.16
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Pure Land Buddhism - Dialogues With Ancient Masters - Patriarch Chih I & Master T'ienJu
Pure Land Buddhism
Dialogues with Ancient Masters
Table of Contents
Title Page
Pure Land Buddhism - Dialogues With Ancient Masters
Question 1
Question 3
Question 4
Question 5
Question 7
Question 8
Question 9
Question 10
Doubts and Questions about Pure Land
Question 1
Question 2
Question 3
Question 5
Question 6
Question 7
Question 9
Question 10
Question 13
Question 14
Question 15
Question 16
Question 17
Question 18
Question 19
Question 22
Question 23
Question 24
Question 25
Question 26
Editors' Notes
Patriarch Chih I & Master T'ienJu translated with annotations by Master Th{ch Thi'en Tam
Sutra Translation Committee of The United States and Canada New York - 1992
This book is a translation of two Chinese commentaries from the Tripitaka, a compilation of all major texts of the Buddhist Canon. The Chinese titles are Ching-t'u Shih-i-Lun and Ching-t'u Huo-wen. The Vietnamese version, which includes both texts, is entitled Tjnh-DQ Thq,p-Nghi Luq,n.
Third Edition: 1992
Sutra Translation Committee of the United States and Canada
Dharma Master Lok To, Director
2611 Davidson Ave.
Bronx, N.Y. 10468 (USA) Tel. (212) 584-0621
––––––––
Reprinted and donated for free distnbution by
The Corporate Body of the Buddha Educational Foundation 11F.,55HangChowSouthRoadSec 1, Taipei, Tai\¼lll,RO.C. Tel: 886-2-23951198,Fax: 886-2-23913415
11m bookis strict for free distribution, itis not to be sold
Other books in the Pure Land series:
––––––––
- Buddhism of Wisdom and Faith:
Pw-e Land Principles and Practice
- Pure-Land Zen, Zen Pure-Land:
Letters of a Pure Land Patriarch
SUTRA TRANSLATION COMMITTEE OF THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
BUDDHIST ASSOCIATION OF CANADA CHAM SHAN TEMPLE
7245 BAYVIEW AVENUE THORNHILL, ONTARIO, CANADA L3T2R6
BUDDHIST ASSOCIATION OF SAN FRANCISCO 5230 FULTON STREET
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 94121
YOUNG MEN'S BUDDHIST ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA 2611 DAVIDSON AVENUE
BRONX, NEW YORK 10468
The supreme and endless blessings of Samantabhadra 's deeds,
I now universally trans[er.
May every living being, drowning and adrift,
Soon return to the Land of Limitless Light!
The Vows of Samantabhadra
Avatamsaka Sutra, Chap. 40
About the Authors
Chih I (Patriarch) Also known as T'ien T'ai, Chih K'ai or Chih Che. The Patriarch Chih I (538-597) was one of China's greatest Buddhist thinkers and the founder of the T'ien T'ai or Lotus Sutra School. The Master's name and title are taken from Mount T'ien T'ai (Che Chiang Province), where he lived and preached. His life coincided with the beginning of what is known as the Golden Age of Pure Land doctrinal development (6th to 9th centuries).
Chih I has been described by D.T. Suzuki as one of the greatest Buddhist philosophers of all times, on a par with the Sixth Patriarch of Zen: Hui-Neng's accomplishment in the way of Zen intuition equals, indeed, its its cultural value that of Chih-i and Fa-tsang [Third Patriarch of the Avatamsaka School], both of whom are minds of the highest order, not only in China but in the whole world.
In addition to his commentaries on the T'ien T'ai doctrine, Master Chih I authored at least four treatises on Pure Land, as recorded in the Tripitaka, _the best known of which is translated herewith under the title Ten
Doubts about Pure Land. Thus, the close parallels and fundamental identity between T'ien T'ai and Pure Land were firmly established—broadening the philosophical base of Pure Land in East Asia.
T'ien Ju A well-known Zen Master of the 14th century. He was a disciple of National Master Chung Feng (the highest ranking Zen Master of his day) and lived and preached in the fertile Yangtze Valley of Central China. Master T'ien Ju was the author of a commentary on the Surangama Sutra, a key text followed by monks and nuns, especially Zen practitioners. The Master had many followers during the Yuan and Ming dynasties. His treatise Doubts and Questions about Pure Land, translated herewith, underscores the similarities and basic unity of Pure Land and Zen.
––––––––
Thich Thi'en Tam. Also known as Lien Du. Dharma Master Thich Thien Tam (contemporary) specializes in both the Pure Land and Esoteric traditions. His best known treatise, Nifm PhQ,t ThQ,p Yiu, is available in English under the title Buddhism of Wisdom and Faith.
Di uPhi.mg
Minh Thanh, MA, MBA
P.D. Leigh, BA, MS
Contents
––––––––
* Preface
1 Introduction: Pure Land School
5 Note on the Text
Translations:
7 Part I: T'ien T'ai Patriarch Chih I
Ten Doubts about Pure Land
37 Part II: Elder Zen Master T'ien Ju
Doubts and Questions about Pure Land
111 Part III. Appendix: Master T.Thi n Tam
Acknowledgements (Third edition)
We acknowledge our debts to numerous good spiritual advisors without whom this book could not have been completed. Heading the list are Dharma Master Lok To of the Sutra Translation Committee of the United States and Canada (Bronx, N.Y.) and Dharma Master Thfch Due Ni¢m of the International Buddhist Monastic Institute (Sepulveda, California). Their encouragement, exhortations, review of the text and clarification of important points of doctrine were crucial to this translation. Upasaka Larsen Raleigh, Duong Dinh Hy, Dimitri, Le Quang Thong and Upasika Lien Smith went through all or part of the text and provided salient comments and feedback.
Our thanks also go to Upasaka Lee Tsu-ku, whose cheerful assistance in the reprinting of the first work in this series encouraged us to complete this second book swiftly. The late Mrs. Fong-ying Cheung, too, is remembered for her moral support. Finally, Upasaka Bruce Kou and Joseph Levine, along with Upasika Barbara Levine, took time out to help at a crucial stage in the production of this book. The assistance they freely r.ave to a stranger adds particular significance to the word 'kalyanamitra"—virtuous friends!
For this second edition, we gratefully acknowledge the help of Upasaka Duong Dinh Hy for comparing the translated text against the Chinese original, Dr. Fang Wong and the artist C.S. Leung for providing the calligraphy, as well as the assistance, in alphabetical order, of Cheng Chien Bhikshu, Upasaka Collin Clarke, Upasaka Thomas Leung and Rev. Kenryu T. Tsuji. To all of them we say Thank you ... O-kage-sama!
On their path to Buddhahood, within
and ''beyond" this wasteland of birth and death, may they, together with all sentient beings, be reborn in Sukhavati—in that far land beyond, in their own pure Minds ...
Preface to the Third Edition
––––––––
Buddhism, as a major religion and a way of life, is the subject of numerous books and commentaries. Yet the kernel of its teachings can be expressed in two major concepts: purity of Mind and practice.
Traditional Pure Land teachings emphasize the three elements of Faith, Vows and Practice (Buddha Recitation) as the essential conditions for rebirth in the Pure Land—in the Pure Mind. This approach is presented as the easiest, most expedient path for the majority of people in this day and age.
These teachings are in harmony with other Pure Land traditions, such as Jodo Shinshu, in which shinjin, Faith, is ultimately defined as Mind—the True Mind, encompassing Vows and Practice (Sanshin Jsshin).
Pure Land is also in line with Zen, which sees all teachings as expedients, fingers pointing to the moon
- the moon being the True Mind, the Mind of Thusness, always bright, pure and unchanging.
In the same vein, the Dhammapada Sutra, a key text of the Theravada School, summarizes the teachings of the Buddha with the words: "Do not what is evil. Do what is good. Keep your Mind pure.
Yet, purity of Mind cannot be achieved by study and verbalization alone. It can be attained only through determined practice.
There is a story concerning the famous Chinese official and poet Po Chu-i which illustrates this point. One day, the official, passing along the road, saw a Zen monk seated on the branch of a tree preaching the Dharma. The following dialogue ensued:
Official: Old man, what are you doing in that tree, in such a precarious position? One misstep, and you will fall to your death!
Monk: I dare say, Your Lordship, that your own position is even more precarious. If I make a misstep, I alone may be killed; if you make a misstep, it can cost the lives of thousands.
Official: Not a bad reply. I'll tell you what. If you can explain the essence of Buddhism to me in one sentence, I'll become your disciple. Otherwise, we will go our separate ways, never to meet again.
Monk: What an easy question! Listen! The essence of Buddhism is to do no evil, do what is good, and keep your Mind pure.
Official: ls that all there is to it? Even a child of eight realizes that!
Monk: True, a child of eight may realize it, but, even a man of eighty cannot practice it!
Buddhism is Mind, Buddhism is practice —it is
praxis.•
Introduction
The Pure Land School
Zen, T'ien T'ai and Pure Land are among the best known schools of Buddhism in East Asia. Pure Land, in particular, has the widest appeal.1 However, unlike Zen and the Tantric School, which have many exponents in the West, Pure Land is little known to Westerners, except, perhaps, in scholarly circles.
This book presents the teachings and major tenets of Pure Land, as seen from the perspective of two major sister schools: Zen and T'ien T'ai (Lotus School).2 Further insights, from the viewpoint of a contemporary Pure Land Master, are included in the Appendix. The principal teachings of the Pure Land School are summarized below, for the benefit of readers.
The goal espoused by all Buddhist schools is for the r,ractitioner to achieve Buddhahood, i.e., to become an 'Enlightened Being." Thus, to practice Buddhism is to cultivate enlightenment, to attain Wisdom.
Although there are many paths to reach this goal, they all involve severing greed, anger and delusion, thus perfecting the qualities of the Mind (paramitas
). Traditionally, Buddhist sutras enumerate six or ten paramitas, but they may be reduced to three: Discipline,
> 2 < Pwe Land Buddhism
––––––––
Concentration and Wisdom (the second, fifth and sixth paramitas, respectively)3.
Pure Land, or Buddha Recitation, is a Mahayana approach that employs, inter alia, the techniques of meditation/visualization (of the Pure Land, Amitabha Buddha ...) and of oral recitation of the Buddha's name, to realize these paramitas.4
That is, when a practitioner is busy visualizing the Buddha5 or reciting the Buddha's name, he cannot
.commit transgressions or violate the Buddhist precepts. Therefore, he has effectively fulfilled the paramita of Discipline. Likewise, reciting the Buddha's name with a completely focussed Mind is nothing less than fulfilling the paramita of Concentration. Once Concentration is achieved, the practitioner's Mind becomes empty and still, leading to the emergence of his innate wisdom - the Wisdom of the Buddhas.6
Thus, a Buddha Recitation practitioner, by dint of his own effort, effectively attains Buddhahood. This is a simple, straightforward alternative7 to strict monastic ascetism (Theravada School),8 deep and extensive study of the Buddhist Canon (Sutra Studies School), esoteric yogic ractices, ceremonies and services (Tantric School) or intensive meditation under the J'ersonal instruction of highly competent mentors (Zen).1
According to Pure Land doctrine, however, most practitioners in this Degenerate Age11 find the self-power,
self-help appproach too difficult and arduous; therefore, in their Pure Land teachings, the Buddhas and Sages compassionately emphasized the additional element of other-power.
12 This involves reliance on the Vows of Amitabha Buddha, made countless eons ago, to welcome and escort all sentient beings to his Land of Ultimate Bliss13—an ideal training
Introduction > 3 <
––––––––
ground, an ideal environment.14 Once this Land
is reached and training completed, the practitioner will naturally discover that training is no training
and that the training ground, the Pure Land, is Mind-Only. Rebirth at the time of death is rebirth within our own Mind.15
Thus, to the Pure Land advocate, this approach, grounded in wisdom and faith, is profound yet simple, and can be practiced at any time, anywhere, under any circumstances, with no special training or guidance. It is, therefore, infinitely adaptable to practitioners at all levels of intellectual and spiritual development.16
When earlier drafts of this manuscript were circulated for comments, the editor was asked a number of pointed questions. The answers gleaned from the book are summarized below.
Is not Pure Land teaching too close to traditional Western beliefs in a personal God, saints, sinners and Paradise? Answer. A person asleep and dreaming finds the scenes in his dreams very real; these scenes exist for him. Likewise, the Pure Land, saints, sinners, everything exists
at the mundane level, albeit in an illusory, dream-like way.17 At the absolute level, however, everything, including the Pure Land and Amitabha Buddha, is Mind-Only, a product of our Mind.18 This key Mahayana teaching is reflected in the paradox True Fmptiness Wonderful Existence!
19
Is not Pure Land teaching contrary to the fundamental principle of Buddhism, the Law of Karma? Answer. The Law of Cause and Effect underlies all of our actions and thoughts. However, in Mahayana thinking, cause, effect, karma ..., all phenomena are intrinsically empty and devoid of true nature.20
> 4 < Pure Land Buddhism
––––––––
Therefore, they are infinitely subject to change. Just as a small flame can destroy a pile of wood as high as a mountain, a perfect thought of Buddha Recitation can destroy eons of bad karma, resulting in the practitioner's rebirth in the Pure Land.
Pure Land is practiced with a grasping Mind, unlike Zen or cultivation of the paramitas. Answer. When Buddha Recitation is practiced with one-pointedness of Mind, at that moment, there is no practitioner, no Buddha, no practice.
21 It is therefore identical to Zen or the practice of the paramitas.22
Pure Land is so boring! Answer. The Buddha taught 84,000 Dharma Doors.23 Each of them is a medicine for a given sickness at a given time, and each, as a first signpost of success, provides the practitioner with a sense of well-being and joy ...24 Pure Land is obviously not for you. You might try Theravada or Zen!
Through the teachings of Pure Land, the words of the Buddha may become more relevant to an even wider spectrum of Western society, particularly the average man in the street.25 The latter, while not averse to the intellectual-self-power dimension26 of Zen and other meditational approaches, may also long for the comfort of such quasi-establishment
beliefs as Amitabha Buddha—not as creator God, but as benevolent teacher,27 or the Pure Land—not as Paradise, but as a steppingstone toward Ultimate Enlightenment. Thus, in the words of Elder Zen Master T'ien Ju, There are no dharmas outside Mind, no Mind outside of dharmas. You should make no mistake about this!
28
Note on the Text
Some people misunderstand the Pure Land method, believing it to be entirely focussed on practice and devoid of philosophical teaching. That is, in the Pure Land sutras, Sakyamuni Buddha simply describes and explains the Western Pure Land and exhorts everyone to recite the Buddha's name, seeking rebirth in that Land—without reference to theoretical issues.
In truth, however, theory leads to practice, within practice is hidden the element of theory. Moreover, although the Buddha's teachings are classified under different headings, such as the Door of Emptiness [Zen, etc.], the Door of Existence [Pure Land, etc.] , the Open
Teaching, the Secret
[Tantric, etc.] Teaching, they all lean toward, rely on and clarify one another.
Thus, there is the Zen School, in which a single meditation riddle (kung an) contains innumerable Dharma teachings. the same is true of Pure Land: the words Amitabha Buddha
encompass the teachings of Zen, the Sutra Studies School, the Discipline School and the Esoteric School.• Therefore, the ancients have determined that the Pure Land method is a Sudden Teaching.
Elder Master Ou I, a T'ien T'ai Master in the direct lineage of the Patriarchs, has said in this regard:
A single recitation of the Buddha's name, if done correctly, contains the three thousand auspicious bearings and the eighty thousand subtle conducts. All the various Zen riddles and the most expeditious principles of the Sutra Studies method, are also included.
> 6 < Pwe land Buddhism
––––––––
To demonstrate that Buddha Recitation does indeed encompass wonderful, subtle principles and to clear up the doubts of those who seek to understand and follow Pure Land, this writer is taking the liberty to translate two ancient commentaries, by the Patriarch Chih I and Zen Master T'ien Ju, under the title Pure Land Buddhism: Dialogues with Ancient Masters.
This combined text deals, in general, with questions and doubts