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Encyclopedia of Buddhism Volume One A -L Robert E. Buswell

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H O NEN<br />

McRae, John. “Encounter Dialogue and the Transformation <strong>of</strong><br />

the Spiritual Path in Chinese Ch’an.” In Paths to Liberation:<br />

The Marga and Its Transformations in Buddhist Thought, ed.<br />

<strong>Robert</strong> E. <strong>Buswell</strong>, Jr., and <strong>Robert</strong> M. Gimello. Honolulu:<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Hawaii Press, 1992.<br />

Nattier, Jan. Once upon A Future Time: Studies in a Buddhist<br />

Prophecy <strong>of</strong> Decline. Berkeley, CA: Asian Humanities Press,<br />

1991.<br />

Nishitani Keiji. Religion and Nothingness. Berkeley: University<br />

<strong>of</strong> California Press, 1982.<br />

Perera, L. S. “The Pali Chronicle <strong>of</strong> Ceylon.” In Historians <strong>of</strong> India,<br />

Pakistan, and Ceylon, ed. C. H. Philips. London: Oxford<br />

University Press, 1961.<br />

Schmidt-Glintzer, Helwig. Die Identität der buddhistischen<br />

Schulen und die Kompilation buddhistischer Universalgeschichten<br />

in China. Wiesbaden, Germany: Franz Steiner,<br />

1982.<br />

Soga Ryojin. “Shinran’s View <strong>of</strong> Buddhist History,” tr. Jan Van<br />

Bragt, with an introduction by Yasutomi Shin’ya. Eastern<br />

Buddhist 32, no. 1 (2000): 106–129.<br />

Sørensen, Per K. Tibetan Buddhist Historiography: The Mirror<br />

Illuminating the Royal Genealogies. Wiesbaden, Germany:<br />

Harrassowitz, 1994.<br />

Tominaga Nakamoto. Emerging from Meditation, tr. Michael<br />

Pye. Honolulu: University <strong>of</strong> Hawaii Press, 1990.<br />

Warder, A. K. An Introduction to Indian Historiography. Bombay:<br />

Popular Prakashan, 1972.<br />

HO NEN<br />

JOHN C. MARALDO<br />

Honen (Genku, 1133–1212) was a renowned master <strong>of</strong><br />

PURE LAND BUDDHISM in medieval Japan. He is best<br />

known for his advocacy <strong>of</strong> the verbal nenbutsu as the<br />

exclusive practice for birth in the Pure Land paradise<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Buddha Amida. Honen is recognized as the<br />

founder <strong>of</strong> an independent Pure Land movement in<br />

Japan and <strong>of</strong> the Jodoshu, or Pure Land school.<br />

Honen was born in Mimasaka province (presentday<br />

Okayama prefecture) and entered the priesthood<br />

as a boy in 1141. In 1145 or 1147 he was sent to train<br />

at the Enryakuji, the preeminent Tendai monastic<br />

complex on Mount Hiei near Kyoto. There he studied<br />

a variety <strong>of</strong> Tendai traditions, but gravitated to its Pure<br />

Land teachings and practices. In 1150 he took up residence<br />

at the Kurodani hermitage on Mount Hiei,<br />

which was headed by the Tendai master Eiku (d. 1179)<br />

and devoted primarily to Pure Land practices. Honen<br />

explored widely other forms <strong>of</strong> <strong>Buddhism</strong>, and visited<br />

major temples in Nara and Kyoto. But the main influence<br />

on him came from the writings <strong>of</strong> the Chinese<br />

Pure Land master Shandao (613–681).<br />

In 1175 Honen left Mount Hiei in order to spread<br />

the Pure Land teachings in Kyoto; he resided for many<br />

<strong>of</strong> his remaining years at O tani on the east side <strong>of</strong> the<br />

city. Over time he became a Pure Land teacher <strong>of</strong> great<br />

renown, attracting aristocrats, samurai, and clerics, as<br />

well as lowly members <strong>of</strong> society. His primary message,<br />

based largely on his interpretation <strong>of</strong> Shandao’s teachings,<br />

was that invoking or chanting AMITABHA (Amida)<br />

Buddha’s name is the one and only practice assuring<br />

birth in the Pure Land, where Buddhist enlightenment<br />

would be certain. This teaching came to be known as<br />

the “exclusive nenbutsu” (senju nenbutsu). It is the message<br />

Honen articulated in his foremost doctrinal treatise,<br />

Senchaku hongan nenbutsu shu (Passages on the<br />

Selection <strong>of</strong> the Nenbutsu in the Original Vow), composed<br />

in 1198.<br />

The established monasteries, Enryakuji on Mount<br />

Hiei and K<strong>of</strong>ukuji in Nara, raised objections to Honen’s<br />

movement in 1204 and 1205, and called for its ban. In<br />

1207 the court executed four <strong>of</strong> his followers, and banished<br />

Honen and several disciples from the capital.<br />

Though Honen was revolutionary in his exclusive nenbutsu<br />

teaching, he was always an upstanding priest, observant<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Buddhist precepts, and he even<br />

administered the precepts to others. He also continued<br />

to practice Pure Land meditative visualizations<br />

throughout his life. Honen was allowed to return to<br />

Kyoto in 1211, and died at O tani in 1212. Many followers<br />

considered him a wordly incarnation <strong>of</strong><br />

Amida’s companion bodhisattva Seishi, or even <strong>of</strong><br />

Amida Buddha himself.<br />

See also: Nenbutsu (Chinese, Nianfo; Korean, Yŏmbul);<br />

Pure Land Schools<br />

Bibliography<br />

Andrews, Allan A. “The Senchakushu in Japanese Religious History:<br />

The Founding <strong>of</strong> a Pure Land School.” Journal <strong>of</strong> the<br />

American Academy <strong>of</strong> Religion 55, no. 3 (1987): 473–499.<br />

Coates, Harper Havelock, and Ishizuka, Ryugaku, trans. Ho nen,<br />

the Buddhist Saint: His Life and Teaching (1925), 5 vols.<br />

Reprint, Kyoto: Society for the Publication <strong>of</strong> Sacred Books<br />

<strong>of</strong> the World, 1949.<br />

Kleine, Christoph. Ho nens <strong>Buddhism</strong>us des Reinen Lande: Reform,<br />

Reformation oder Häresie. Frankfurt, Germany: Peter<br />

Lang, 1996.<br />

336 E NCYCLOPEDIA OF B UDDHISM

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