Shenxiu: Difference between revisions

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|StudentOf=Hongren
|StudentOf=Hongren
|TeacherOf=Yifu; Puji;  Xiangmo Zang
|TeacherOf=Yifu; Puji;  Xiangmo Zang
|BnwShortPersonBio=Shenxiu. (J. Jinshū; K. Sinsu # ^ ) (606?-706). Chinese
C han master of the Tang dynasty and putative founder of the
“Northern school” (Bei z o n g ) of early Chan Buddhism.
Shenxiu was a native of Kaifeng in present-day Henan province.
As an extraordinarily tall man with well-defined features,
Shenxiu is said to have had a commanding presence. In 625,
Shenxiu was ordained at the monastery of Tiangongsi in Luoyang, but little is known of his activities in the first two decades
following his ordination. In 651, Shenxiu became a disciple of
H o ngren (601-674), cofounder of the East Mountain Teachings (D ongsh an famen) and the monk later recognized as the
fifth patriarch of the Chan school; indeed, by many early
accounts, such as the C huan fabao ji and L engqie shizi ji,
Shenxiu became Hongren’s legitimate successor. According to
the famous story in the Liuzu tanjing (“Platform Sütra of the
Sixth Patriarch”), however, Shenxiu lost a verse-writing contest
to the unlettered H uineng (638-713), whom Hongren then in
secret sanctioned as the sixth patriarch. However, it is unclear
how long Shenxiu studied with Hongren. One source States that
it was for a period of six years, in which case he would have left
Hongren’s monastery long before Huineng’s arrival, making the
famous poetry contest impossible. Regardless of the date of his departure, Shenxiu eventually left Hongren’s monastery for
Mt. Dangyang in Jingzhou (present-day Hubei province),
where he remained for over twenty years and attracted many
disciples. Shenxiu and his disciples were the subjects of a polemical attack by H eze S henhui (684-758), who disparaged
Shenxiu as representing a mere collateral branch of
Bodhidharma’s lineage and for promoting what Shenhui called
a “gradual” (jian) approach to enlightenment. Shenhui instead
promoted a “sudden teaching” (dunjiao), which he claimed
derived from a so-called “Southern school” (N an zo n g)
founded by Huineng, another (and relatively obscure) disciple
of Hongren, whom Shenhui claimed was Hongren’s authentic
successor and the true sixth patriarch (liuzu). Later Chan historians such as G uifeng Z ongm i (780-841) began to use the
designation “Northern school” (Bei zong) to describe the lineage of Shenxiu and his disciples Yifu (661-736), Puji
(651-739), and X iangmo Z ang (d.U.). While Shenhui’s characterization of Shenxiu and his supposed “gradualism” is now
known to be misleading, subsequent histories of the Chan tradition (see CHUANDENG lu) more or less adopted Shenhui’s
vision of early Chan; thus Huineng, rather than Shenxiu, comes
to be considered the bearer of the orthodox Chan transmission.
As one mark of Shenxiu’s high Standing within the Chan tradition of his time, in 700, Shenxiu was invited to the imperial
palace by Empress Wu Z etian, where the empress prostrated
herseif before the nonagenarian monk. She was so impressed
with the aged Chan master that she decided to build him a new
monastery on Mt. Dangyang named Dumensi. She also gave
him the title of state preceptor (guoshi). Upon his death, he was
given a state funeral. He is one of only three Buddhist monks
whose biography is included in the Tang shi (“Tang Annals’ ).
This is clearly not the profile of an imposter within the Chan
lineage. Shenxiu’s teachings are known to have focused on
the transcendence of thoughts (linian) and the five expedient
means (fangbian; S. upäya); these teachings appear in “Northern
school” treatises discovered at Dunhuang, such as the
Y uanming l u n, Guanxin lun, and D asheng w usheng fangbian
m en. Shenxiu was an expert on the L ankävatArasütra, a text
favored by Hongren and the early Chan tradition, and is also
thought to have written a substantial commentary on the
Avatamsakasütra. Despite the uncomplimentary portrayal of
the “Northern school” in mainstream Chan materials, it is now
recognized that Shenxiu and his disciples actually played a much
niore important role in the early growth and development of the
Chan school than the mature tradition acknowledged.
|IsInGyatsa=No
|IsInGyatsa=No
}}
}}

Revision as of 12:18, 4 September 2020

PersonType Category:Classical Chinese Authors
MainNamePhon Shenxiu
MainNameChi 神秀
YearBirth 606?
YearDeath 706
BornIn Kaifeng in present-day Henan province
ReligiousAffiliation Chan
StudentOf Hongren
TeacherOf Yifu  ·  Puji  ·  Xiangmo Zang
IsInGyatsa No
BnwShortPersonBio Shenxiu. (J. Jinshū; K. Sinsu # ^ ) (606?-706). Chinese

C han master of the Tang dynasty and putative founder of the “Northern school” (Bei z o n g ) of early Chan Buddhism. Shenxiu was a native of Kaifeng in present-day Henan province. As an extraordinarily tall man with well-defined features, Shenxiu is said to have had a commanding presence. In 625, Shenxiu was ordained at the monastery of Tiangongsi in Luoyang, but little is known of his activities in the first two decades following his ordination. In 651, Shenxiu became a disciple of H o ngren (601-674), cofounder of the East Mountain Teachings (D ongsh an famen) and the monk later recognized as the fifth patriarch of the Chan school; indeed, by many early accounts, such as the C huan fabao ji and L engqie shizi ji, Shenxiu became Hongren’s legitimate successor. According to the famous story in the Liuzu tanjing (“Platform Sütra of the Sixth Patriarch”), however, Shenxiu lost a verse-writing contest to the unlettered H uineng (638-713), whom Hongren then in secret sanctioned as the sixth patriarch. However, it is unclear how long Shenxiu studied with Hongren. One source States that it was for a period of six years, in which case he would have left Hongren’s monastery long before Huineng’s arrival, making the famous poetry contest impossible. Regardless of the date of his departure, Shenxiu eventually left Hongren’s monastery for Mt. Dangyang in Jingzhou (present-day Hubei province), where he remained for over twenty years and attracted many disciples. Shenxiu and his disciples were the subjects of a polemical attack by H eze S henhui (684-758), who disparaged Shenxiu as representing a mere collateral branch of Bodhidharma’s lineage and for promoting what Shenhui called a “gradual” (jian) approach to enlightenment. Shenhui instead promoted a “sudden teaching” (dunjiao), which he claimed derived from a so-called “Southern school” (N an zo n g) founded by Huineng, another (and relatively obscure) disciple of Hongren, whom Shenhui claimed was Hongren’s authentic successor and the true sixth patriarch (liuzu). Later Chan historians such as G uifeng Z ongm i (780-841) began to use the designation “Northern school” (Bei zong) to describe the lineage of Shenxiu and his disciples Yifu (661-736), Puji (651-739), and X iangmo Z ang (d.U.). While Shenhui’s characterization of Shenxiu and his supposed “gradualism” is now known to be misleading, subsequent histories of the Chan tradition (see CHUANDENG lu) more or less adopted Shenhui’s vision of early Chan; thus Huineng, rather than Shenxiu, comes to be considered the bearer of the orthodox Chan transmission. As one mark of Shenxiu’s high Standing within the Chan tradition of his time, in 700, Shenxiu was invited to the imperial palace by Empress Wu Z etian, where the empress prostrated herseif before the nonagenarian monk. She was so impressed with the aged Chan master that she decided to build him a new monastery on Mt. Dangyang named Dumensi. She also gave him the title of state preceptor (guoshi). Upon his death, he was given a state funeral. He is one of only three Buddhist monks whose biography is included in the Tang shi (“Tang Annals’ ). This is clearly not the profile of an imposter within the Chan lineage. Shenxiu’s teachings are known to have focused on the transcendence of thoughts (linian) and the five expedient means (fangbian; S. upäya); these teachings appear in “Northern school” treatises discovered at Dunhuang, such as the Y uanming l u n, Guanxin lun, and D asheng w usheng fangbian m en. Shenxiu was an expert on the L ankävatArasütra, a text favored by Hongren and the early Chan tradition, and is also thought to have written a substantial commentary on the Avatamsakasütra. Despite the uncomplimentary portrayal of the “Northern school” in mainstream Chan materials, it is now recognized that Shenxiu and his disciples actually played a much niore important role in the early growth and development of the Chan school than the mature tradition acknowledged.

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