Going Native: The History
of Buddhism in China
Buddhistdoor Buddhistdoor
Global | 2018-01-22 |
It is never easy to provide
an introductory overview of what we call Buddhism in China.
Afterall, the term “Chinese Buddhism” does not have geographical
boundaries and is not restricted to Sinophone communities. Chinese
Buddhist communities also exist outside of the People’s Republic,
complicating what it means to be a Chinese
Buddhist.
Nor does “Buddhism in
China” capture specifically the Mahayana schools that came to shape
the philosophy, culture, and interior being of the Chinese people
(and not just the ethnic Han majority). There also are flourishing
Vajrayana and Theravada communities across the country, but their
story is for another day.
Here we will focus on what
would become the Chinese expression of Mahayana Buddhism: an
expression that would irrevocably influence Mahayana Buddhism
across East Asia.
The
Classical Age: Teachings Trickling East
Mahayana Buddhism as a
spiritual movement cannot be divorced from its greater historical
context. It was the expansionist reign of Emperor Wu (156–87 BCE)
that pushed the borders of the Han empire into Central Asia,
enabling contact with the Eurasian steppe cultures and peoples
living between the civilizations of India, Persia, and
China.
The mystic magnetism of the
“West” has fascinated Chinese rulers for millennia. It inspired
King Mu of Zhou’s journey to see the mysterious Queen Mother of the
West, before giving way to a hardheaded desire to seize the
corridors of Central Asia. No longer were the borderlands of China
a blurry barrier between the known world and the magical sphere of
the Kunlun Mountains. Instead, through the Silk Road, the Chinese
started interacting with people like the Sogdians, Indians, and
Parthians. These cultures had, to some extent, contact with the
dispensation of a chieftain’s son-turned-wanderer—the Buddha. This
traceless man, through apparently a charismatic personality and
compelling teacher, set a world religion into motion some 500 years
before his teachings reached China.
The Kushans, in particular,
were instrumental in transmitting the Buddhist teachings and memory
into Luoyang, the capital of classical China. Their emissaries were
camel-riding merchants and caravan traders accompanied by monks,
such as Lokashema (b. 147 CE), An Shigao (fl. c. 148–80 CE), and
many more. Our story therefore begins not with a booming revelation
from above, but with a hesitant trickle of teachers and translators
from China’s west.
Buddhism was known among
the Chinese imperial court by the Han dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE), but
did not find a stable ideological foothold until the dynasty
collapsed into three kingdoms—the states of Shu, Wu, and
Wei—engaged in a cutthroat civil war—otherwise known as the Three
Kingdoms period (184/220–280 CE). For the intellectual class, the
state ideology of Confucianism had failed. Intellectuals, artists,
and poets looked elsewhere for guidance on how to stabilize society
and cultivate the individual, including the native alternative of
Daoism and the foreign message of Buddhism.
One major appeal of
Buddhism was that it had a detailed and comprehensive schema of
salvation after death, as opposed to Confucianism’s intricate rules
and guidelines for living a moral life. We know that Ze Rong (d.
195), a minor warlord who skirmished with the infamous but
legendary Han chancellor and king of Wei, Cao Cao (155–220),
claimed to be a follower of Buddhism. Therefore, we know that by
this time Buddhism was known among statesmen and
warlords.
Various schools of Buddhist
thought, originating from the Pure Land on Mount Lu with early Pure
Land propagator Huiyuan (334–416), started to take shape and take
root in the empire, along with the originally Kharosthi Vinaya of
the Dharmaguptaka sect. The Dharmaguptaka Vinaya became the
Buddhist law code accepted by all Chinese temples and monasteries,
and, as a result, the Chinese bhikkhuni sangha did not suffer an
institutional break like in the Theravada Vinaya in the 11th
century.
In hindsight, this gave
Chinese Mahayana Buddhism in a significant advantage over the
Theravada and Vajrayana vehicles when it came to ordaining women.
While the movement to ordain women in the Theravada tradition began
in the 20th century, Vinaya conservatives argued that the lineage
had died out and that the best they could hope for was dual
ordination under a Dharmaguptaka-aligned institution: very often, a
Chinese or Korean temple.
If any social or spiritual
force proved that China was open to foreign influence, it was
Buddhism. The Northern Wei (386–535) even declared themselves to be
the rightful monarchs of China, in 460, because they were
representatives of the Buddha. Many historians credit the
consolidation of Buddhist influence in the Chinese polity to
them.
Medieval
Monks and Monarchs: Consolidation and
Sinicization
Once it was introduced,
Buddhism would never leave China, not even during periods when the
Chinese writers and poets themselves feared that Buddhism was under
fatal pressure. From the growth of Buddhist schools during the Tang
dynasty (618–907) to periods of disunity or splintering such as
during the Northern and Southern dynasties (420–589), we can see
schools of Buddhist flourishing and experimenting with local
culture—essentially, a slow but sure process of the Sinicization of
Buddhism.
It is true that Emperor
Wuzong’s Great Anti-Buddhist Persecution in 845 marked a low point
in Buddhist fortunes. Yet while some schools lost their
institutional power, most notably and sadly the Huayan school, the
common stereotype that all the schools lost their influence save
the Chan and Pure Land factions is a misconception. Even the idea
that Buddhism did not offer much intellectual vigor or
philosophical innovation during the Song (960–1279), Yuan
(1271–1368), and Ming (1368–1644) is a long-standing
misapprehension. During each of these dynasties, Buddhist
philosophy interacted with shifting social trends, other
intellectual traditions like Neo-Confucianism, and foreign and
native political forces to endure and flourish in the Chinese
cultural, religious, and social landscape.
It is these historical
misconceptions (along with many more contemporary and philosophical
stereotypes of Chinese Buddhism) that we will be questioning
throughout this project. We will aim to propose thoughtful,
inquisitive, but most of all interesting narratives that help us
look at Buddhism in China with fresh eyes.
From the
early modern period to contemporary times: upheaval and
adaptation
There are many problems
with the idea that Buddhism was “asleep” during the Qing era
(1644–1911). There was plenty of Buddhist activity during that
time, both at the local level as well as in the imperial court.
Still, it is fair to say that the issues that plagued the dynasty
from the 1840s onward reflected the growing sense of urgency for
Buddhism to “modernize,” particularly in response to the growing
number of Christian missionaries in the coastal treaty ports and
growing cities of China.
The goal of these reformers
was not only to rejuvenate Buddhism, but also for Buddhism to play
some part in invigorating the Chinese nation. The names of these
reformists are now renowned among Chinese Buddhists, each
representing an original way of approaching Buddhist thinking. With
the onset of the printing press and modern, politically engaged
journalism, Yang Wenhui (1837–1911) was one of the first
householders (lay believers of Buddhism, jushi 居士)
to open Buddhist publishing houses (most famous among them the
Jinling Sutra Publishing House) that circulated Buddhist sutras and
reading materials to a wider audience. Sometimes called the father
of the Buddhist “renaissance” in China, he imported more than 300
Buddhist texts lost to China with the help of Japanese priest Nanjo
Bunyu (1849–1927). Among such texts were the writings of Master
Shandao, the de facto founder of Pure Land Buddhism.
Master Taixu (1890–1947),
one of Yang Wenhui’s most important protégés, believed that
ritualistic obsessions were corseting intellectual development and
laid the foundations of Humanistic Buddhism, a movement that would
prove immensely influential in the Sinophone world. Another student
of Yang’s, the revolutionary Zhang Binglin (1868–1936), was
immersed in the dialectic of Yogacara Buddhism, and saw history as
an unconscious process of drives that reflected the
store-consciousness (alaya-vijnana). Later Chinese academics drew
on Zhang’s Yogacara dialectic to provide a theoretical framework
for the failures of capitalism as well as Chinese philosophy
itself.
Social and political reform
turned to revolution with the establishment of the Republic of
China, the Second Sino-Japanese War and World War II, and finally
the Communist victory. Buddhist development was not totally halted
but significantly hindered by the Cultural Revolution, which
impacted all religious traditions adversely. From the wreckage
emerged new generations of Buddhist thinkers as well as members of
the old guard, like the jushi Zhao Puchu (1907–2000), who served as
president of the Buddhist Association of China from 1980 until his
death in 2000, and was one of the most successful advocates of
Sino-Japanese friendship via Buddhist ties.
Today, Buddhism faces new
challenges and opportunities in a globalized world and a Chinese
nation-state that has an unprecedented stake in the world as the
second-largest economy. We’ve hastily stormed through two millennia
of Buddhism’s history in this country, but it is not our intention
to close the book on this rich and varied story so soon. Rather, we
invite you to stay a while longer as we delve deeper into what are
defining hallmarks of Chinese Buddhism.