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

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J APAN<br />

Throughout the eighth century, the court sought to<br />

bring <strong>Buddhism</strong> under civil control through the promulgation<br />

<strong>of</strong> regulations (so niryo ) governing the ordination,<br />

<strong>of</strong>fices, and activities <strong>of</strong> monks and nuns.<br />

Court ambitions for a national <strong>Buddhism</strong> administered<br />

from the capital reached its apogee during the<br />

middle <strong>of</strong> the century, with the government’s dedication<br />

<strong>of</strong> the great bronze buddha image <strong>of</strong> Todaiji in<br />

Nara and the founding <strong>of</strong> national monasteries<br />

(kokubunji) in the provinces. What came to be known<br />

as the Nara schools <strong>of</strong> <strong>Buddhism</strong> represent simply the<br />

curriculum <strong>of</strong> the scholar monks <strong>of</strong> Todaiji and other<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficially recognized institutions in the capital, a curriculum<br />

<strong>of</strong> particular Buddhist texts for the study <strong>of</strong><br />

which the government came to sponsor an annual allotment<br />

<strong>of</strong> ordination rights (nenbun dosha).<br />

Though the court would continue to claim authority<br />

to regulate the religion, the vision <strong>of</strong> a national<br />

<strong>Buddhism</strong> did not survive the Nara period.<br />

Already in this period, it is clear from government efforts<br />

to restrict it that <strong>Buddhism</strong> was taking on an<br />

independent life <strong>of</strong> its own, in the proliferation <strong>of</strong> un<strong>of</strong>ficial<br />

monasteries sponsored by the laity (chikishiji),<br />

the development <strong>of</strong> independent centers <strong>of</strong> Buddhist<br />

practice, <strong>of</strong>ten associated with sacred mountains, and<br />

the unauthorized activities <strong>of</strong> popular preachers,<br />

healers, wonder-workers, and the like. These trends<br />

toward an independent <strong>Buddhism</strong> would only increase<br />

as the religion spread throughout the country<br />

and into all levels <strong>of</strong> society during the succeeding<br />

Heian period.<br />

The growing autonomy <strong>of</strong> <strong>Buddhism</strong> in the Heian<br />

period was occasioned not only by the diffusion <strong>of</strong> the<br />

religion to the populace but by the consolidation <strong>of</strong><br />

power in the monastic centers. Just as the major aristocratic<br />

families came increasingly to dominate the<br />

court through the independent means provided by<br />

their private land holdings, so too certain monasteries<br />

acquired extensive property rights that made them significant<br />

socioeconomic institutions. As such, they were<br />

players in Heian politics, supported by, and in turn<br />

supporting, one or another faction at court; as a result,<br />

their elite clergy interacted with, and was itself <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

drawn from the scions <strong>of</strong>, the aristocracy. This development<br />

produced what is <strong>of</strong>ten referred to as Heian<br />

“aristocratic <strong>Buddhism</strong>,” with its ornate art and architecture,<br />

its elegant literary expression, and its elaborate<br />

ritual performance.<br />

The new style <strong>of</strong> autonomous Buddhist institution<br />

is well represented by Todaiji, with its historic status<br />

as a national shrine, and the great K<strong>of</strong>ukuji and Kasuga<br />

Shrine complex, with its links to the powerful Fujiwara<br />

clan. But the Nara monasteries were challenged<br />

and <strong>of</strong>ten superseded by institutions in and around the<br />

new capital <strong>of</strong> Heian (modern Kyoto), <strong>of</strong> which the<br />

most historically influential became Enryakuji, on<br />

Mount Hiei, and (to a somewhat lesser extent) Toji.<br />

The former was the seat <strong>of</strong> the Tendai school; the latter<br />

was the metropolitan base <strong>of</strong> the Shingon (which<br />

had established itself on isolated Mount Koya). Like<br />

Todaiji, K<strong>of</strong>ukuji, and other major monasteries, these<br />

institutions not only held significant land rights but<br />

developed networks <strong>of</strong> subsidiary temples that made<br />

them, in effect, the headquarters <strong>of</strong> extended organizations.<br />

The identity <strong>of</strong> the Tendai and Shingon organizations<br />

was ritually reinforced by the adoption <strong>of</strong><br />

new, private rites <strong>of</strong> ordination (tokudo) and initiation<br />

(kanjo ) that supplemented and in some cases even replaced<br />

the standard rituals <strong>of</strong> Buddhist clerical practice.<br />

Thus, the first steps were taken toward a division<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Buddhist community into ritually distinct and<br />

institutionally separate ecclesiastic bodies.<br />

It is sometimes suggested that these great Buddhist<br />

institutions went into decline at the end <strong>of</strong> the Heian,<br />

to be replaced by the new <strong>Buddhism</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Kamakura<br />

period. In fact, such was their power and prestige that<br />

they continued to exercise great influence well into<br />

medieval times, as what is sometimes called by historians<br />

the exoteric-esoteric establishment (Kenmitsu<br />

taisei). Just as the rise <strong>of</strong> the provincial warriors in the<br />

Kamakura did not displace the old court aristocracy<br />

but rather added new layers <strong>of</strong> power, so too the development<br />

<strong>of</strong> new Buddhist movements did not replace<br />

the establishment but introduced additional<br />

options <strong>of</strong> religious belief, practice, and organization.<br />

While some <strong>of</strong> these options were resisted by members<br />

<strong>of</strong> the establishment, others were welcomed and, indeed,<br />

incorporated into the catholic <strong>Buddhism</strong> <strong>of</strong> the<br />

great monasteries.<br />

The decision to resist or accept rested heavily on the<br />

degree to which spokesmen for the new movements<br />

aggressively sought patronage in order to establish separate<br />

institutions. Thus, to cite the two most conspicuous<br />

examples <strong>of</strong> the time, while many within the<br />

Nara-Heian establishment saw both the Pure Land<br />

preachers’ call to faith in AMITABHA (Amida) and the<br />

Zen masters’ emphasis on meditation as legitimate<br />

forms <strong>of</strong> Buddhist teaching, they opposed those versions<br />

<strong>of</strong> the teachings that sought to convert the laity<br />

to the new movements as alternatives to other forms<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Buddhism</strong>. In this issue, we see not simply a famil-<br />

388 E NCYCLOPEDIA OF B UDDHISM

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