The Formation of the Bhikṣu Ordination in 19th Century Chosŏn Korea: Focusing on the Ten Wholesome Precepts of the Monk Paekp’a
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Ordination Revival in 19th Century Chosŏn
3. The Revival of the Ordination Tradition: Historical and Geographical Factors
3.1. The Historical
3.2. The Geographical
4. The Revival of the Ordination Tradition and the Establishment of a Lineage
Since the ten precepts that are being received today are the precepts needed when entering monkhood from being a novice, it is none other than the three categories of pure (bodhisattva) precepts 三聚淨戒. In order to become a monk, the full precepts of 250 rules need to be received but here in the Eastern [country of Chosŏn]35 only these ten precepts are needed. The reason that a person can become a monk in this way is because the ten [wholesome] precepts make up the fundamentals of the full precepts.(H 10. 574)
At the central hall, three days of teachings had been given on the rules of conduct: The first day was a teaching on the five precepts for householders, on the second day there was a teaching on ten precepts for novices, and on the third day there was a teaching on the 250 precepts for monastics. However, today in our country, only the precepts for novices are taught and two sets of precepts for the householders and monastics are not taught. Although not giving a teaching on the householder does not matter, not giving a teaching on the precepts for the monastics is gravely wrong. Additionally, it is surely wrong to receive the begging bowl and then having worn the ceremonial robe, to refer to the person as a monk. That is because [even] the novices wear the five precepts robe 縵衣. It is for this reason that the past masters have created a ceremony of repentance for the ten evil acts 十惡懺悔式 and used this as the ten precepts for the monks.(H 10, 577b)
In many regions, original meaning is not known and various nonsensical words are created, and watching such acts of repentance, [they] are like children playing. Therefore, the sutras and commentaries of the Mahayana and Theravada, and Vinaya texts are investigated and compared and corrected. Especially, the system of “karma of confessional ritual” reveals that the precepts for the monastics have been received, which indicates that this cannot be carelessly ignored.(H 10, 574b)
When after the Buddha has entered Nirvana, if a renunciate desires to receive with great effort the bodhisattva precepts, [the renunciate] can on their own receive the precepts by taking a vow in front of the statue of the Buddha or a bodhisattva and must repent for over seven days in front of the statue.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
Abbreviations and Primary Sources
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1 | Takahashi Tōru was one of the first modern Japanese historians of Korean history to write on Korean Buddhism and is often identified as the originator of the degeneration thesis of Chosŏn Buddhism (Takahashi 1971). For a more current in-depth discussion on the effect of this perspective on modern study of Chosŏn Buddhism, see Kim (2013b, pp. 3–7). |
2 | |
3 | See Kim (2020c, pp. 105–15) and Kim (2020b, pp. 214–21) for a detailed discussion of the development of claims of identity based on newly claimed genealogy. |
4 | See Park (2017, pp. 136–37) for a description of the crisis brought on by the Japanese colonization which began in 1910 and ended in 1945. |
5 | The Paragon of Rules for Buddhist Rituals is available from the Dongguk University library internet site, https://kabc.dongguk.edu/ (accessed on 13 September 2020). Within the Han’guk pulgyo chŏnsŏ 韓國佛教全書 (Collected works of Korean Buddhism), it is located in the 10th volume, pages 552 to 609 (Chakpŏp kwigam 作法龜鑑, H. vol. 10, pp. 552–609). |
6 | Paekp’a’s biography was compiled by his disciple Ponggi 奉琪 (1824–1889), titled Sorim t’ongbang chŏng’an 少林通方正眼 (H. vol. 10, pp. 651c–53a). A brief discussion of Paekp’a’s biography in English can be found in Kim (2013a, pp. 41–42). |
7 | In the memorial stele that was raised in 1858 by Kim Jeonghui (金正喜, 1786–1856) for Paekp’a claims that Paekp’a was the only Vinaya master during his time (Yi 2000, p. 668). |
8 | |
9 | Son (2020, pp. 20–21) gives a brief explanation on the anti-Buddhist actions that some early Chosŏn kings adopted. The ordinance on licensed monks was reinstated in 1550 into the National Code of Administration but was again rescinded permanently in 1566. |
10 | Signs of the decline of the tradition of official precepts’ platform surfaced from the late-Koryŏ period (986–1392) (Han 1998, p. 362). |
11 | Based on these two reference materials, the trend in the number of ordained monks increases in the latter half of Chosŏn period. The movement to revive the ordination tradition which emerged in early 19th century would most likely have added to this increase of ordination. |
12 | Traditional ordination method is referring to the method as prescribed in the Vinaya of the Four Categories, namely, receiving 250 and 348 precepts for a bhikṣu and a bhikṣuṇī, respectively, with the participation of three masters and seven witnesses. See Lee (2014, pp. 180–87). |
13 | H. vol. 10, p. 1015c. |
14 | |
15 | Vinaya of the Four Categories (T. vol. 22, pp. 846a4–a5). |
16 | In Korea, early ordination platform was prepared at T’ongdosa Temple by a 7th-century monk, Chajang 慈藏 (590–658), wherein ordination was performed in the form of Platform Ordination (登壇受戒) up to the early Koryŏ period. This was the acceptance of the 250 precepts accompanied by three masters and seven witnesses, according to the Vinaya of the Four Categories (Han 1998, p. 353). |
17 | The three compilations are Pyŏgam Kaksŏng’s 碧巖覺性 (1575–1660) Sŏngmun sangŭich’o 釋門喪儀抄, Naam Chinil’s 懶庵眞一(fl. early 16th cen.) Sŏngmun garyech’o 釋門家禮抄, and Hŏbaek Myŏngjo’s 虛白明照 (1593–1661) Sŭngga yeŭimun 僧家礼儀文. |
18 | H. vol. 8, p. 277c. |
19 | Paragon of Rules (H. vol. 10, pp. 573b–80a). |
20 | H. vol. 10, pp. 573b–75a. From the perspective of the traditional ordination, the newly formed ten wholesome precepts abrogates the traditional requirements. The ten wholesome precepts was originally a notion from early Buddhism referred to as the ten forms of wholesome behavior (sipsŏn ŏpto 十善業道, Skt. daśa-kuśala-karma-patha) judged simply on the criteria of what is wholesome or unwholesome (Okimoto 1981, pp. 187–95). |
21 | There is a famous example of a Japanese monk Saichō 最澄 (767~822) who attempted to establish the Mahayana precept platform based on the Brahmāʼs Net Sutra. However, there is evidence that Saichō at an earlier time may have espoused an ordination method not based on the Brahmāʼs Net Sutra but ordination through the ten wholesome precepts (Chodo 2014, pp. 98–102). |
22 | All of the genealogical records of ordination from the late Koryŏ period to the modern times have been translated into Korean and are available in Kasan (2005). The genealogical record of ordination of Haeinsa Temple that is being currently discussed is translated into modern Korean in Kasan (2005, pp. 149–54). |
23 | One unit of li 里 is equivalent to about 500 m. |
24 | “若千里内無能授戒師 得佛菩薩形像前受戒而要見好相” (T. vol. 24, p. 1006c14–15). |
25 | Yi Nŭnghwa explains that in the late 19th century, there were several Chosŏn monks other than Manha who traveled to China in order to receive the full precepts (Yi 1968, vol. 2, p. 80). |
26 | On further discussion on Sino-centric orthodoxy, see Kim (2020c, pp. 111–15). |
27 | At present, the lineal descendants of Manha have been active in the area around the traditional temple T’ongdosa and other surrounding temples, whereas Taeŭn’s lineal descendants have been active in the traditional temples such as Haeinsa and Songgwangsa. |
28 | It is claimed that the Chinese Linji line was transmitted from China to Korea by T’aego Pou 太古普愚 (1301–1382) by obtaining the dharma lineage from the eighth Linji patriarch Shiwu Qinggong 石屋淸珙 (1272–1352) and returning to Korea (Kim 2020b, pp. 214–18). |
29 | |
30 | This is the area currently known as Chŏlla-do province located in the south-west region of Korea. |
31 | The Yŏngnam region indicates the area south of Choryŏng 鳥嶺, or currently known as the Kyŏngsan-do province located in the south-east region of Korea. |
32 | H. vol. 10, p. 1030b. |
33 | The Commentary to the Code of the Bodhisattva Precept is a text of Mahayana precepts that was composed by a Sui Dynasty monk, Zhiyi 智顗 (538–597) and a Tang Dynasty monk, Guanding 灌頂 (561–632), as commentaries. The Sifen jieben rushi, on the other hand, is the exegesis on the Vinaya of the Four Categories by a Ming Dynasty monk, Hongzan 弘贊 (1610–1685). |
34 | The method of ordination adopted between Paekp’a and Taeŭn are obviously different. It appears logical that depending on the need of the monastic community at the time, different methods may easily be adopted especially since such customs were not standardized. It would be no different from the adoption of different philosophical thought. Before Paekp’a composed the Paragon of Rules in 1811, he expounded on the three types and meanings of different forms of meditation, patriarchal meditation, Tathāgata meditation, and Ŭi-ri Sŏn 義利禪 (benefit meditation), and by doing so, created much debate within the monastic communities where counter arguments came from Taeŭn’s disciples including Ch’oŭi. In such fashion, and perhaps based on such differences, the arrangement of the ordination ceremonies also varied (Mizutani 1994, p. 113). |
35 | The East 東, or the Eastern country 東國 is a common appellation for the Chosŏn state, which is in reference to the middle, the Middle Kingdom, China. |
36 | The Haeinsa Temple record of ordination also warns of the dire reality of the studies of precepts where a person can pass as a fully ordained monk once the ten precepts for a novice was received, shortly after joining the monkhood. |
37 | The current author was unable to find any reference of others, other than Paekp’a, using the ten wholesome precepts at the time, meaning that this was unique to Paekp’a. |
38 | H. vol. 10, p. 552b. |
39 | H. vol. 10, p. 573b. |
40 | Trikāya (The three bodies, Kor. samsin 三身) is a Mahayana concept on the nature of Buddhahood that claims three manifestations of the Buddha body: dharma body (Skt. Dharma-kāya), often referred to as the cosmic body; reward body (Skt. saṃbhoga-kāya), the divine incarnation of the Buddha; and transformation body (Skt. nirmāṇa-kāya), the physical manifestation in response to the needs of the sentient beings. See Digital Dictionary of Buddhism, s.v. 三身. |
41 | H. vol. 10, pp. 573b–75a. |
42 | H. vol. 10, pp. 549a–b. |
43 | H. vol. 10, p. 574a. |
44 | H. vol. 10, p. 574b. |
45 | The three categories of pure (bodhisattva) precepts 三聚淨戒 are also together called Yogâcāra precepts (Kor. Yugagye 瑜伽戒). Together with the Brahma’s Net precepts, the Yogâcāra precepts have been quite influential. |
46 | “若佛子 佛滅度後 欲心好心受菩薩戒時 於佛菩薩形像前自誓受戒 當七日佛前懺悔” (T. vol. 24, pp. 1006c514–157). |
47 | See McBride’s discussion of Chinp’yo’s repentance rituals that were related to the worship of Maitreya (McBride 2008, pp. 47–50). |
48 | When problems in the ordination tradition arose in the Theravāda Sthaviravada Buddhism, they invited monks from neighboring countries with the same ordination tradition or the monks traveled to those countries to be ordained and returned (Gombrich 2006, p. 139; Guṇavardhana 1979; Panabokke 1993). |
49 | Although it seems to have gone unnoticed at the time, but when in 1892 Manha traveled to China and returned five years later having received ordination from a Qing Vinaya master, Changdao Hanbo 昌濤漢波, it was, in fact, the Auspicious Precepts that he had received (Kasan 2005, p. 94). |
50 | This was also the case of T’aego Pou 太古普愚 (1301–1382) who traveled to China to receive transmission of the lineage in order to lay claims to orthodoxy of Linji lineage. It was based on the newly claimed genealogy where the dharma lineage was received from the Chinese Linji master Shiwu Qinggong 石屋淸珙 (1272–1352) by the Korean monk, T’aego (Kim 2020c). |
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Lee, J.-r. The Formation of the Bhikṣu Ordination in 19th Century Chosŏn Korea: Focusing on the Ten Wholesome Precepts of the Monk Paekp’a. Religions 2021, 12, 252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12040252
Lee J-r. The Formation of the Bhikṣu Ordination in 19th Century Chosŏn Korea: Focusing on the Ten Wholesome Precepts of the Monk Paekp’a. Religions. 2021; 12(4):252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12040252
Chicago/Turabian StyleLee, Ja-rang. 2021. "The Formation of the Bhikṣu Ordination in 19th Century Chosŏn Korea: Focusing on the Ten Wholesome Precepts of the Monk Paekp’a" Religions 12, no. 4: 252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12040252
APA StyleLee, J. -r. (2021). The Formation of the Bhikṣu Ordination in 19th Century Chosŏn Korea: Focusing on the Ten Wholesome Precepts of the Monk Paekp’a. Religions, 12(4), 252. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12040252