
VI
THE BUDDHIST STATUES AND PICTURES IN A ZEN MONASTERY
Visitors to a Zen monastery in Japan will be greeted by various Buddhist
figures enshrined in the different parts of the institution. This section is
devoted to the description of such figures.
I.
THE BUDDHA
Each Buddhist sect in Japan has its own Honzon, i.e. "the chief
honoured one" as its main object of worship: for instance, the Jodo and
the Shin have Amida Nyorai; the Shingon, Dainichi Nyorai (Mahavairocana); the
Nichiren and the Zen, Shaka Nyorai (Sakyamuni). But this tradition Is not
uniformly observed by the Zen sect and much latitude has been allowed to the
founder of each temple or monastery.
The Buddha Sakyamuni is the proper one no doubt for all Zen institutions,
for Zen claims to transmit the Buddha-heart--the first transmission taking
place between Sakyamuni and Mahakashyapa. Sakyamuni thus occupies the main
seat of honour on the Zen altar. But frequently we find there a statue of
Kwannon (Avalokitesvara), or Yakushi (Bhaishajyaguru), or Jizo (Kshitigarbha),
or Miroku (Maitreya), or even a trinity of Amida, Shaka, and Miroku. In this
latter case Amida is the Buddha of the past, Shaka of the present, and Miroku
of the future.
When the Honzon is Sakyamuni he is sometimes attended by a pair of
Bodhisattvas and another of Arhats. The Bodhisattvas are Monju (Manjusri) and
Fugen (Samantabhadra), and the Arhats are Kasho (Mahakashyapa) and Anan
(Ananda). Sakyamuni is here both historical and "metaphysical", so
to speak. Seeing him attended by his two chief disciples, he is a historical
figure, but with Monju and Fugen who represent or symbolize wisdom and love,
the two ruling attributes of the highest Reality, Sakyamuni is Vairocana
standing above the world of transmigration s. Here we see the philosophy of
the Avatamsaka or Gandavyuha incorporated into Zen. In fact, our
religious life has two aspects--the experience itself and its philosophy.
This is represented in Buddhism by the historical trinity of Sakyamuni,
Kashyapa, and Ananda, and by the metaphysical one of Vairocana, Manjusri, and
Samantabhadra. Ananda stands for learning, intellection, and philosophizing;
Kashyapa for life, experience, and realization; and Sakyamuni naturally for
the unifying body in which experience and intellection find their field of
harmonious co-operation. That religion needs philosophy is sometimes
forgotten, and one of the great merits achieved by Buddhism is that it has
never ignored this truth, and wherever it is propagated it helps the native
genius of that land to develop its philosophy or to supply an intellectual
background to its already-existing beliefs.
Perhaps it is only in the Zen monastery that the birth of the Buddha, his
Enlightenment, and his Nirvana are commemorated. Mahayana Buddhism is much
given up to the idealistic or metaphysical or transcendental interpretation of
the historical facts so called in the life of the Buddha, and the evolution of
the Bodhisattva-ideal has pushed the historical personages to the background.
Vairocana or Amitabha has thus come to take the place of Sakyamuni Buddha, and
a host of Bodhisattvas has completely displaced the Arhats.
But Zen has not forgotten the historical side of the Buddha's life. While
Zen is not apparently concerned with earthly affairs, the fact that it has
been nurtured in China where history plays an important rôle in the cultural
life of the people, points to its connection again with the earth. So the
three most significant events in the development of Buddhism are properly
remembered and elaborate rituals are annually performed at all the main Zen
monasteries in Japan for the Buddha's birth-day, his attainment of
Enlightenment, and his entrance into Nirvana.[1]
[1. Respectively: April 8, December 8, and February 15.]
The Buddha's birth as represented by Zen followers laces him in the most
remarkable contrast to that of Christ. The baby Buddha is made to stand
straight up with his right hand pointing at heaven and with his left at the
earth, and he exclaims: "Above the heavens and below the heavens, I alone
am the honoured one!" The voice reaches the furthest ends of the
chiliocosm, and all the living being--even matter is not dead in
Buddhism-share in the joy of the Buddha's birth, realizing that they too are
destined to be Buddhas.
On April 8 this baby Buddha standing in a bronze basin is taken out of the
shrine, and the ceremony of baptizing the baby with sweet tea made of some
vegetable leaves is performed; the tea thus used is afterwards given away to
children. Recently, the celebration of this day takes place on a grand scale
in all the larger cities of Japan, not only by Zen followers but by all
Buddhists including monks, priests, laymen, laywomen, and children.
Sakyamuni as the Enlightened One sits on the lotus throne enshrined in the
main hall of the Zen monastery. He is generally in the meditation posture.
The Nirvana scene is generally represented pictorially, except perhaps the
one at the Nirvana Hall of Myoshinji, Kyoto, which is a bronze-slab. The most
noted Nirvana picture is by Chodensu, of Tofukuji, the whole length of which
is about sixteen yards.
II
THE BODHISATTVAS
When Sakyamuni is not found in the Main Buddha all, one of the following
Bodhisattvas is enshrined in his ace: Monju (Manjusri), Fugen (Samantabhadra),
Kwan-non (Avalokitesvara), Yakushi (Bhaishajyaguru), Miroku (Maitreya), Jizo
(Kshitigarbha), or sometimes Kokuzo (Akasagarbha).
Monju and Fugen generally go in pairs and are the chief Bodhisattvas in the
Avatamsaka (Kegon) conception of the world. Monju stands for Prajna. Sitting
on a lion he holds a sword which is meant to cut all the intellectual and
affectional entanglements in order to reveal the light of transcendental
Prajna. Fugen is found on an elephant and presents love, Karuna. Karuna is
contrasted with Prajna in that Prajna points to annihilation and to identity
whereas Karuna points to construction and to multiplicity. The one is
intellectual and the other emotional; the one unifies and the her diversifies.
Fugen's ten vows are well known to students of the Kegon.
Kwannon is exclusively the Bodhisattva of compassion. In this respect he
resembles Fugen. A special chapter is devoted to him in the Hokkekyo (Saddharma-pundarika)
and so in the Ryogonkyo (Suramgama). He is one of the most
popular Bosatsus or Bodhisattvas of Mahayana Buddhism. For an English
translation of the Kwannongyo as rendered into Chinese by Kumarajiva
see p. 30 of the present Manual.
Yakushi is the Bodhisattva-doctor. He holds a medicine jar in his hands and
is attended by twelve gods each of whom presents one of his twelve vows. The
main object of his appearance among us is to cure us of ignorance, which is
the most fundamental of all the ills the flesh is heir to.
Jizo is principally or popularly the protector of children nowadays, but
his original vows are to save us from wandering in the six paths of existence.
He thus divides himself into six forms each of which stands as guardian in
each one of the six paths. Hence the six Jizo we often find by the country
roadside. He is generally represented in priestly robe, with a shaven head,
and carries a long walking staff in his hand. In the Kamakura and the Ashikaga
period he was quite a popular object of worship, and we find many fine
artistic sculptures of this Bodhisattva in Kamakura.
Miroku is the future Buddha and at present has his abode in the Tushita
Heaven waiting for his time to appear among us. He is also essentially
compassionate as his name implies. He is sometimes called a Buddha and
sometimes a Bodhisattva. Although he is supposed to be in one of the heavens,
he is frequently encountered on earth.
III
THE ARHATS
The Arhats, generally sixteen in number, are enshrined in the second storey
of the tower gate. They are all registered as dwellers in some remote
mountains, and each is the leader of a large following. Their superficially
grotesque and irregular appearances contrast in a strange way with those of
the Bodhisattvas. They are miracle workers and tamers of the wild beasts. This
characteristic seems to have excited the interest of the Zen monk-artist who
has turned them into one of the favourite objects of his artistic imagination.
In a large Zen monastery the five hundred Arhats are given a special
shelter in the premises.
Bhadrapala is one of the sixteen Arhats and had his satori while
bathing. He is now enshrined in a niche in the bath-room attached to the
Meditation Hall. When the monks take their bath, they pay respect to his
figure.[1] The picture shown below belongs to Engakuji, Kamakura, and is one
of the national treasures of Japan.
[1. The Training of the Zen Monk, p. 40.]
IV
THE PROTECTING GODS
Of the many protecting gods of Buddhism the following may be counted as
belonging more or less exclusively to Zen, and they have each his or her own
special quarter where they perform their several official duties for Buddhism.
The Niwo or "two guardian kings" are found enclosed at either
side of the entrance gate. They represent the Vajra god in two forms; the one
is masculine with the mouth tightly closed, and the other is feminine with an
opened mouth. They guard the holy place from intruders.
The Shitenno or the four guardian gods are enshrined in the Buddha-hall at
the four corners of the altar. Of these gods the most popular one is Tamonten
(Vaisravana), the guardian of the North. This fact comes perhaps from his
being the god of learning and also of wealth.
It is difficult to trace historically how Benzaiten (Sarasvati), who is the
goddess of the River, finds her shrine in a Zen monastery. Some say that
Benzaiten is not Sarasvati but Sridevi. Whoever she may be, a female form is
often found among the audience of a saintly priest, and later she appears in
his dream telling him how she who was formerly an enemy of Buddhism is now
enlightened and will be one of its protectors, and so on. In any event there
is room even in the Zen monastery, where the severest kind of asceticism is
supposed to prevail, for a goddess to enter.
Idaten is a god of the kitchen looking after the provisions of the
Brotherhood. The original Sanskrit term for it seems to be Skanda and not Veda
as may be suggested from i-da or wei-t'o. He is one of the eight
generals belonging to Virudhaka, the guardian god of the Southern quarter. He
is a great runner and wherever there is a trouble he is instantly found there.
In the Chinese monastery he occupies an important seat in the hall of the four
guardian gods, but in the Japanese he is in the little shrine attached to the
monks' dining-room.[1]
Ususama Myowo is a god of the lavatory. Ucchushma in Sanskrit means
"to dry", "to parch", that is, to clean up filth by
burning, by fire, for fire is a great purifying agency. Myowo is Vidyaraja, a
special class of the gods who assume a form of wrath.[2]
Sambo Kojin seems to be a Japanese mountain god in the form of an Indian
god. He is found outside the temple buildings. As the monasteries are
generally located in the mountains this god who is supposed to preside over
such districts, is invited to have his residence in the grounds so that he
would be a good protector of the Brotherhood against the inimical influence of
evil spirits.
Daikokuten whose Indian prototype is sometimes regarded as Mahakala is at
present a purely Japanese god. He carries a large bag over his shoulder and
stands on rice bales. Though his phallic origin is suspected, he has nothing,
as he is, to do with it. He is a god of material wealth and like Idaten looks
after the physical welfare of the Brotherhood. He is not such a universal
object of respect in the Zen monastery.
Wherever the Prajnaparamita is preached or copied or recited, the sixteen
"good gods" stand about the place and guard the devoted spirits
against their being lured away by the enemy. As Zen is connected with the
philosophy of Prajna they are also the gods of Zen. The picture below shows
more than sixteen figures. Of the extra four personages standing in the
foreground the two on the left are the Jotai Bosatsu (Sadaprarudita) and
Jinsha Daio while the two on the right are Hsuan-Chuang with a kind of
carrying-case on his back and Hoyu Bosatsu (Dharmodgata). Jotai and Hoyu are
the principal characters in the Prajnaparamita as told in the second
series of my Essays in Zen Buddhism. Hsuan-chuang is the translator of the Mahaprajnaparamita
Sutra in six hundred fascicles and also that of Nagarjuna's commentary on
the sutra in one hundred fascicles. While he was travelling through the
desert, he was accosted by Jinsha, the god of the wilderness, who was
responsible for the unsuccessful trips repeatedly attempted by the devoted
Chinese pilgrims to India prior to Hsuan-chuang. The god was carrying six of
the skulls of such victims about his neck. Listening to the Prajnaparamita
as recited by Hsuan-chuang, he was converted and became a most devoted
protector of the holy text. Hence his presence here.
NOTES:
1. See also my Training of the Zen Monk, p. 106.
2. Ibid., p. 44.
V
SOME OF THE HISTORICAL FIGURES
Besides these mythical personages the Zen monastery gives shelter to some
other historical characters deeply connected not only with Zen but with
Buddhism as a whole. Bodhidharma as founder of Zen Buddhism naturally occupies
a chief seat of honour beside the Buddha Sakyamuni. With Japanese Zen
followers, however, the founder of a given temple is more highly honoured, and
in each of the principal Zen institutions in Japan there is a special hall
dedicated to the founder of that particular monastery, where an oil-lamp is
kept burning all day and night. Bodhidharma is a unique figure and may be
identified wherever he is. He is one of the favourite subjects for the Zen
masters to try their amateurish brush. Kwannon is perhaps another such
subject.
Fudaishi (Fu Ta-shih), also known as Zenne Daishi (Shan-hui), 493-564, was
a contemporary of Bodhidharma. Although he does not belong to the orthodox
lineage of Zen transmission, his life and sermons as recorded in the Transmission
of the Lamp (Ch'uan-teng Lu)[1] are full of Zen flavour, so to
speak. His famous gatha is well known to all Zen students.[2] Tradition makes
him the inventor of what is known as Rinzo (luntsang), which is a
system of revolving shelves for keeping the Chinese Tripitaka. For this reason
he, together with his two sons, is set up in the Buddhist library as a kind of
god of literature.
The Zen monastery harbours many old eccentric characters of whom the most
noted of a Chinese origin are Kanzan (Han-shan) and Jittoku (Shih-te).[3] They
are vagabond poet-ascetics. Another belonging to this group of characters is
Hotei (Pu-tai).[4] That Hotei plays quite a different rôle in Japanese
Buddhism from what he does in Chine, I have explained in my article in the Eastern
Buddhist, VI, 4, "Impressions of Chinese Buddhism".
Shotoku Taishi (574-622) was really one of the most remarkable figures in
the cultural history of Japan, and it is no wonder that the Japanese Buddhists
pay special monastery buildings. One of the legendary stories circulating in
Japan with regard to Bodhidharma is that he came to Japan after he had
finished his work in China and was found in the form of a miserable beggar at
Kataoka Yama, near Nara. Shotoku Taishi met him there and it is said that they
exchanged poems.
NOTES:
1. Fas. XXVII.
2. Introduction to Zen Buddhism, p. 58.
3. Zen Essays, III, Plates XIV and XV, with their accompanying
explanations.
4. Ibid. Plates X and XVI, and also Second Series.
posted May 27, 2002