Shinran
Appearance
Shinran (親鸞, May 21, 1173 – January 16, 1263) was a Buddhist monk of the Kamakura Period and founder of Jōdo Shinshū.
Quotes
[edit]- True faith necessarily entails Amida's name, but Amida's name does not necessarily entail faith, [which is derived] from the power of [Amida's] vow.
- Dobbins, James C. (1989). "Chapter 2: Shinran and His Teachings". Jodo Shinshu: Shin Buddhism in Medieval Japan. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253331862.
- The compassion in the Path of Pure Land is to quickly attain Buddhahood, saying the nembutsu, and with the true heart of compassion and love save all beings completely as we desire.
- Red Lotus Sangha. The Tannisho Chapters I to X
Quotes about Shinran
[edit]- "If you meet a Buddha, kill him. If you meet a patriarch of the law, kill him."
This is a well-known Zen motto. If Buddhism is divided generally into the sects that believe in salvation by faith and those that believe in salvation by one's own efforts, then of course there must be such violent utterances in Zen, which insists upon salvation by one's own efforts. On the other side, the side of salvation by faith, Shinran, the founder of the Shin sect, once said: "The good shall be reborn in paradise, and how much more shall it be so with the bad." This view of things has something in common with Ikkyu's world of the Buddha and world of the devil, and yet at heart the two have their different inclinations. Shinran also said: "I shall not take a single disciple."
"If you meet a Buddha, kill him. If you meet a patriarch of the law, kill him." "I shall not take a single disciple." In these two statements, perhaps, is the rigorous fate of art.- Yasunari Kawabata. Japan, the Beautiful and Myself (1969)
External links
[edit]- The Collected Works of Shinran, 1997.
- Red Lotus Sangha, 1997.
Categories:
- 1173 births
- 1263 deaths
- 12th-century Buddhists
- 13th-century Buddhists
- Buddhist writers
- Founders of Buddhist sects
- Buddhists from Japan
- Jōdo Shinshū
- Kamakura period Buddhist clergy
- People from Fushimi, Kyoto
- People from Kyoto
- People related to Jōdo Shinshū
- Pure Land Buddhists
- Recipients of Japanese royal pardons
- 13th-century Japanese philosophers
- Pure Land Buddhism