Shinran's Kyogyoshinsho

Shinran's Kyogyoshinsho
Title Shinran's Kyogyoshinsho PDF eBook
Author Shinran
Publisher Oxford University Press
Pages 338
Release 2012-10-25
Genre Religion
ISBN 0199863105

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This annotated translation by Daisetz Suzuki (1870-1966) comprises the first four of six chapters of the Kyogyoshinsho, the definitive doctrinal work of Shinran (1173-1262). Shinran founded the Jodo Shin sect of Pure Land Buddhism, now the largest religious organization in Japan. Writing in Classical Chinese, Shinran began this, his magnum opus, while in exile and spent the better part of thirty years after his return to Kyoto revising the text. Although unfinished, Suzuki's translation conveys the text's core religious message, showing how Shinran offered a new understanding of faith through studying teachings before engaging in praxis, rather than the more common and far more limited view of faith in Buddhism as relevant to one just beginning their pursuit of Buddhist truth. Although Suzuki is best known for his scholarship on Zen Buddhism, he took a lifelong interest in Pure Land Buddhism. Suzuki's own religious perspective is evident in his translation of gyo as ''True Living'' rather than the expected ''Practice,'' and of sho as ''True Realizing of the Pure Land'' rather than the expected ''Enlightenment'' or ''Confirmation.'' This book contains the second edition of Suzuki's translation. It includes a number of corrections to the original 1973 edition, long out of print, as well as Suzuki's unfinished preface in its original form for the first time.

The Kyōgyōshinshō

The Kyōgyōshinshō
Title The Kyōgyōshinshō PDF eBook
Author Shinran
Publisher
Pages 552
Release 1975
Genre Kyōgyōshinshō
ISBN

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Kyogyoshinsho

Kyogyoshinsho
Title Kyogyoshinsho PDF eBook
Author Shinran Shonin
Publisher
Pages 452
Release 2003-05-01
Genre
ISBN 9781886139169

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The Kyogyoshinsho is the magnum opus of Shinran Shonin (1173ż1262), founder of the Jodo Shinshu school of Pure Land Buddhism. This work is a collection of three hundred and seventy-six passages from sixty-two sutras, discourses, and commentaries, with Shinranżs own notes and commentary, organized into a coherent and comprehensive explication of the Pure Land teaching.

The Essential Shinran

The Essential Shinran
Title The Essential Shinran PDF eBook
Author Shinran
Publisher World Wisdom, Inc
Pages 274
Release 2007
Genre Religion
ISBN 1933316217

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Shinran (1173-1262) is the founder of the Jodo Shinshu Pure Land Buddhist tradition in Japan during the Kamakura period. This movement, once set in motion, eventually became the largest Buddhist sect in Japan and spread to the West at the end of the nineteenth century. Renowned scholar of Shin Buddhism, Alfred Bloom, presents the life and spiritual legacy of Shinran Shonin, the influential religious reformer and founder of Pure Land Buddhism, the most popular school of Buddhism in Japan today. Bloom presents a wide selection of Shinran's essential writings on the key Shin Buddhist idea of true entrusting (shinjin) to the Other-Power of Amida Buddha through His Vow to save all sentient beings. The Essential Teachings of Shinran, also, includes a foreword by Shin Buddhist scholar, Rueben Habito, a detailed glossary of foreign terms, and a select bibliography for further reading.

Letters of the Nun Eshinni

Letters of the Nun Eshinni
Title Letters of the Nun Eshinni PDF eBook
Author James C. Dobbins
Publisher
Pages 284
Release 2004-09-30
Genre History
ISBN

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Eshinni (1182–1268?), a Buddhist nun and the wife of Shinran (1173–1262), the celebrated founder of the True Pure Land, or Shin, school of Buddhism, was largely unknown until the discovery of a collection of her letters in 1921. In this study, James C. Dobbins, a leading scholar of Pure Land Buddhism, has made creative use of these letters to shed new light on life and religion in medieval Japan. He provides a complete translation of the letters and an explication of them that reveals the character and flavor of early Shin Buddhism. Readers will come away with a new perspective on Pure Land scholarship and a vivid image of Eshinni and the world in which she lived. After situating the ideas and practices of Pure Land Buddhism in the context of the actual living conditions of thirteenth-century Japan, Dobbins examines the portrayal of women in Pure Land Buddhism, the great range of lifestyles found among medieval women and nuns, and how they constructed a meaningful religious life amid negative stereotypes. He goes on to analyze aspects of medieval religion that have been omitted in our modern-day account of Pure Land and tries to reconstruct the religious assumptions of Eshinni and Shinran in their own day. A prevailing theme that runs throughout the book is the need to look beyond idealized images of Buddhism found in doctrine to discover the religion as it was lived and practiced. Scholars and students of Buddhism, Japanese history, women’s studies, and religious studies will find much in this engaging work that is thought-provoking and insightful.

The Shin Buddhist Classical Tradition

The Shin Buddhist Classical Tradition
Title The Shin Buddhist Classical Tradition PDF eBook
Author Alfred Bloom
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2013
Genre Shin (Sect)
ISBN 9781936597277

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2500 Years of Buddhism

2500 Years of Buddhism
Title 2500 Years of Buddhism PDF eBook
Author P.V. Bapat
Publisher Publications Division Ministry of Information & Broadcasting
Pages 416
Release
Genre
ISBN 8123023049

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About the life of Buddha