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词条 Gentō Sokuchū
释义

  1. Notes

  2. References

  3. See also

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2012}}{{Infobox religious biography
|name = Gentō Sokuchū
{{linktext|玄|透|即|中}}
|image =
|caption =
|birth name =
|alias =
|dharma name =
|birth_date = 1729
|birth_place = Japan
|death_date = 1807
|death_place =
|nationality =
|religion = Zen Buddhism
|school = Sōtō
|lineage =
|title = Abbot of Eihei-ji
|education =
|occupation =
|teacher = Gangoku Kankei
|reincarnation of =
|predecessor = Gangoku Kankei
|successor =
|students = Kyozan Baizen
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|website =
}}{{ZenBuddhism}}Gentō Sokuchū ({{CJKV|j={{linktext|玄|透|即|中}}}}) was a Sōtō Zen priest and the 50th abbot of Eihei-ji, the school's head temple. He was part of a 17th and 18th century movement within the Sōtō school that sought to bring the school's teachings back in line with those of the 13th century founding teacher, Dōgen.[1] To this end, he edited major editions of works by Dōgen and succeeded in disseminating them widely. He is best remembered for compiling the Eihei Rules of Purity (Eihei Shingi), a collection of writings by Dōgen laying out a strict code of conduct for monks. These rules had been largely unheeded in the school in the preceding several centuries, and Gentō used his high position as abbot of Eihei-ji to reintroduce and enforce them.[1] His work on the Eihei Rules of Purity was completed in 1794 while he was serving as the eleventh abbot of Entsū-ji.[2] The following year he became the 50th abbot of Eihei-ji.[2] He was also involved in editing Dōgen's master work, the Shōbōgenzō.[3]

In addition to his efforts on monastic rules, he also sought to remove what he perceived to be non-Sōtō elements within the school.[1] He de-emphasized the use of koans due to their apparent historical association with the competing Rinzai school.[2] In 1796 he also had the sangha hall (sōdō, 僧堂) at Eihei-ji rebuilt in imitation of the Song Dynasty structures that Dōgen had described.[4] The previous building, dating from only fifty years earlier, was built in a Ming Dynasty style based on temples of the recently introduced Ōbaku school.[4] Gentō's former student at Entsū-ji was the famous wandering monk Ryōkan. The Buddhist scholar Michel Mohr suggests that Gentō's fanaticism for 'purifying' the Sōtō school probably informed Ryōkan's decision to become an itinerant monk without an association to any temple.[2]

Notes

1. ^Foulk, p.56
2. ^Heine, p.245
3. ^Leighton, p.22
4. ^Foulk, p.57

References

  • {{cite book| last =Heine| first =Steven| authorlink =Steven Heine|author2=Wright, Dale S. | year =2000 | title =The Koan: Texts and Contexts in Zen Buddhism| publisher=Oxford University Press| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?qt=worldcat_org_all&q=0195117484| id = | isbn = 0-19-511748-4}}
  • {{cite book| last =Leighton| first =Taigen Dan |author2=Okumura, Shohaku |author3=Dogen | title =Dogen's Pure Standards for the Zen Community a Translation of the Eihei Shingi| publisher=State University of New York Press| year =1996| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/42854986&referer=brief_results| id = | isbn = 0-585-04623-9}}
  • {{citation|last=Foulk|first=T. Griffith|contribution=Ritual in Japanese Zen Buddhism|title=Zen Ritual|editor-first=Steven|editor-last=Heine|editor2-first=Dale S.|editor2-last=Wright|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-530468-8|place=Oxford|year=2008}}

See also

  • Buddhism in Japan
{{Buddhism topics}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Sokuchu, Gento}}{{buddhism-bio-stub}}{{zen-stub}}

6 : Soto Zen Buddhists|Zen Buddhist monks and priests|Japanese Buddhist monks|Japanese Zen Buddhists|1729 births|1807 deaths

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