Shenhui

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Heze Shenhui
HezeShenhuiDrawing.jpg
TitleChán master
Personal
Born684
Xiangyang, China
Died758 (aged 74)
ReligionBuddhism
NationalityChinese (Tang Dynasty)
SchoolChán
Senior posting
TeacherDajian Huineng
PredecessorDajian Huineng

Heze Shenhui (Chinese:菏泽神會/神会; Wade–Giles: Shen-hui; Japanese: Kataku Jinne, 684-758) was a Chinese Buddhist monk of the so-called "Southern School" of Zen, who "claimed to have studied under Huineng."[1][2]

Shenhui is notable for his strident attacks on Yuquan Shenxiu and the associated "Northern School", which was the most prominent branch of Chan Buddhism in China at the time. He accused them of propagating gradual teachings, as opposed to his own sudden teachings.[3]

Shenhui's own lineage, called the Heze lineage (菏泽宗), probably died out around the time of the Great Anti-Buddhist Persecution in 845, with Guifeng Zongmi being the only notable monk in the lineage.[4]:37

Biography[]

Shenhui was born in Xiangyang with the surname Gao (高).[3] He learned The Five Classics of Confucius and the philosophy of Laozi and Zhuangzi at a young age.[5]

At the age of 14 he became a monk under Huineng, a disciple of Hongren and the founder of the Southern School of Zen. For a time Shenhui served as his attendant.

Several extant stories relate encounters between Huineng and Shenhui. In one, Huineng said to his students,

I have something which has no head or tail. It is nameless and can't be described. It has no back and no front. Do any of you know what this is?"

Shenhui then said, "It is the source of all things. It is the Buddha Nature of Shenhui".
Huineng responds, "I said it has no name and no description. How can you say it is the source of Buddha Nature?"
Shenhui then bowed and returned to his seat, but Huineng then proclaimed, "In the future if this youngster heads a monastery, it will certainly bring forth fully realized disciples of our school."

Shenhui later went to Changan to receive ordination.[3]

In his writings and lectures Shenhui attacked what he called the "Northern School" of Zen. Despite his attacks on the Northern School, Shenhui traveled north to live amongst his ideological enemies in the capital city of Luoyang. While in the city he spoke publicly against the teachings of the Northern School.[3]

Shenhui was a highly successful fundraiser for the government despite his criticism of Shenxiu for having governmental ties. During the An Lushan Rebellion, monks were asked to lecture, and sell certificates to the public in order to raise money for the counteroffensive. Shenhui was active in this endeavor in Luoyang, and reportedly very effective.[4]:36[6]:107 Despite this, he was eventually banished from the city for stirring up trouble.

Shenhui was said to have died while meditating in 760. His burial stupa is located at Longmen Grottoes.[3] One of his extant writings is Xianzongji (显宗记).

Attack on Shenxiu and the "Northern School"[]

Shenhui's attack[]

At the Great Dharma Assembly in Henan Province in 732 he coined this term[6]:240 in order to deride Shenxiu's school. Here he claimed that Shenxiu tried to usurp the title of Sixth Patriarch from Huineng. He supported his claims by stating that Huineng possessed the robe of Bodhidharma, the First Patriarch of Zen.

Another attack was staged at the Great Cloud Temple in Huatai in 734. He delivered a talk titled the Exposition on Right and Wrong in regards to Bodhidharma's Southern School.[7] It was presented in the form of a discussion between him and a monk named Chongyuan, who took the side of Shenxiu's Northern School. Shenhui used the opportunity to question Shenxiu's legitimacy as Hongren's successor.

Most memorably, however, he accused the Northern School of advocating "gradual" and not "sudden" enlightenment.[8]:111[a]

The Record of the Zen Discourses of the Monk Shenhui quotes Shenhui:

[Northern School teachings] are the methods of the ignorant. Zen master Huineng's practice is found apart from the two methods of 'subduing' or 'not subduing' the mind. This is why it says in the sutra, 'mind does not abide within, nor is it external'. It is in quiet sitting. When one sits in this manner, one realizes buddhahood. In the six generations that have come before, not a single person performed the practices of Shenxiu. They are entirely different.[3]

In addition to these claims, Shenhui further alleged that Shenxiu's teachings deviated from Zen in their emphasis on ceremony and sutra study, rather than seated meditation and no-mind. He also accused "Northern School" students of trying to steal Bodhidharma’s robe, to sever the head of Huineng’s mummy, and to rewrite the inscription on Shenxiu’s tomb with the words "Sixth Patriarch".[4]:28–29[9]:113–114

Historical analysis of Shenhui's attack[]

Several scholars consider Shenhui's arguments against the "Northern School" to be fabrications or exaggerations. Heinrich Dumoulin, commenting on Shenhui's accusations, wrote that Shenhui was "unscrupulous", while Ui Hakuju wrote that he had "“traits deserving of moral censure and criticism for intolerance”.[9]:113–114

Scholars such as Philip Yampolsky have suggested that one of his disciples may have written the Platform Sutra, which glorifies Huineng and "sudden" enlightenment while deriding Shenxiu.

Scholars note that both the concept of a "patriarch" and the possession of the robe of Bodhidharma being the indicator of this person probably arose as a result of Shenhui's diatribes. In fact, according to the Platform Sutra, Huineng himself did not pass on the robe, nor did he name a "patriarch" to replace him. Rather, like his teacher Hongren, he had many disciples who went on to teach Zen.

Philip Yampolsky wrote that Shenhui's claim that the Diamond Sutra and not the Lankavatara Sutra was the paramount sutra of Bodhidharma and his disciples was "pure fabrication".[4]:34

Influence[]

In the early 10th century, the founder of the Fayan School commented on Shenhui's lineage:

The record of that time was indeed excellent. Today, if we point to a greatly awakened school, it is the Heze school.[3]

Shenhui's own lineage, called the Heze school, probably died out around the time of the Great Anti-Buddhist Persecution in 845. His best-known descendant in this school was Guifeng Zongmi, who was also the fifth patriarch of the Huayan school. According to Tsung-mi, Shen-hui's approach was officially sanctioned in 796, when "an imperial commission determined that the Southern line of Ch'an represented the orthodox transmission and established Shen-hui as the seventh patriarch, placing an inscription to that effect in the shen-lung temple".[10]

Shenhui's distinction between "gradual" versus "sudden" methods of enlightenment became a hallmark of Chinese Zen. Mazu Daoyi, whose Hongzhou school became the hallmark of Zen, was an early and important adopter of the "sudden" approach.

His speeches were found again in Dunhuang.[11]

Notes[]

  1. ^ although scholars indicate that Shenxiu's extant writings do not support this

References[]

  1. ^ John M. Thompson, Huineng (Hui-neng) (638—713), Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  2. ^ Mcrae 2003, p. 68.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Ferguson, Andrew E. (2000), Zen's Chinese heritage: the masters and their teachings, Wisdom Publications, pp. 57–61, ISBN 978-0-86171-163-5
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Yampolsky, Philip B. (1967), The Platform Sutra of the Sixth Patriarch, New York: Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0-231-08361-4
  5. ^ Zeuschner, Robert B. (1976), "The Hsie Tsung Chi", Journal of Chinese Philosophy, Dordrecht-Holland: Reidel Publishing Company, 3: 253–268, doi:10.1111/j.1540-6253.1976.tb00392.x
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b McRae, John R. (2003), Seeing through Zen: Encounter, Transformation, and Genealogy in Chinese Chan Buddhism, Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-23798-8
  7. ^ 菩提达摩南宗定是非论
  8. ^ Faure, Bernard (1986), "The Concept of One-Practice Samadhi in Early Ch'an in Traditions of Meditation in Chinese Buddhism", in Gregory, Peter (ed.), Studies in East Asian Buddhism, 4, Honolulu: The Kuroda Institute, University of Hawaii Press
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b Dumoulin, Heinrich (1994), Zen Buddhism: A History, India & China, New York: Macmillan Publishing, ISBN 978-0-02-908270-6
  10. ^ Peter N. Gregory (1991), Sudden Enlightenment Followed by Gradual Cultivation: Tsung-mi's Analysis of mind. In: Peter N. Gregory (editor)(1991), Sudden and Gradual. Approaches to Enlightenment in Chinese Thought. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited. Page 279
  11. ^ 早期禅宗的珍贵资料--神会语录--写在《神会和尚禅话录》发行之际

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