Encyclopedia of Buddhism

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a Linji lineage, Rinzai and China’s Linji had diverged
over the centuries, so when the monks arrived in the
1650s, the Japanese objected to the Obaku (Chinese,
Huangbo) use of nianfo(Japanese, nenbutsu; recollec-
tion of the Buddha’s name) in Chan. Many Japanese
were, however, fascinated by the new import, and
Obaku long retained its Chinese style in food, lan-
guage, architecture, ritual, and dress. Abbots of Man-
pukuji, Obaku’s monastic headquarters, were always
to be Chinese, but the last Chinese abbot died in 1784,
and was succeeded by a Japanese abbot. Obaku took
over some monasteries in the Myoshinji lineage, so
there was intense rivalry between them. Obaku di-
rected more attention to study of the sutras and
discourse records (goroku), and away from decontex-
tualized koanas in the Hekigan roku(Chinese, Biyan
lu; Blue Cliff Record). They invented their own koan,
thinking the Japanese use of koancourses that en-
couraged rote memorization a form of “lettered Zen”
of set poetic replies and textbook manuals.


In 1872 the government permitted monks to marry,
and so the majority of Zen priests after World War II
were married, resulting in the inheritance by sons of
small temples from their Zen priest fathers. To main-
tain the temple, they spend most of their time at fu-
neral services or chanting sutras.


Vietnam (Thiên).Chan probably gained a minor fol- lowing among the ethnic Vietnamese elites beginning in the ninth century, although tradition asserts it ar- rived in 580 C.E. with Vintaruci (d. 594), an Indian monk who allegedly studied under Sengcan (d. 606). Another tradition maintains that Chan arrived in 820 with Wuyan Tong (d. 826), a supposed pupil of Huai- hai. During the Ly ́dynasty (1009–1225), Confucian- ism came to dominate, so court elites, such as the monk Thông Bien (d. 1134), fabricated lineages back to China. The Mongol invasions inspired the Traˆn-
dynasty (1225–1407) emperor Nhân-Tông (r. 1279–
1293), who defeated the invaders, to become a monk
and found the short-lived Trúc Lâm lineage. The Ming
conquest (1413–1428) and Lê dynasty (1414–1788) im-
posed a Confucian anti-Buddhist policy, and so Chi-
nese Linji monks who fled the Manchu conquest in the
1660s, headed for the mid-coast of Vietnam, where the
Nguyê ̃n warlords held sway. This Linji (Vietnamese,
Lâm Tê), combined Chan and Pure Land practice. The
stronghold of Thieˆn Buddhism, as the Chan tradition became known, remained in the cities of central Viet- nam, and the san ̇gha was nominally Lâm Tê. Thieˆn had
a following only among the intellectual, urban elites,


and since the unification of Buddhism in 1963, Thieˆ`n
has been subsumed into a syncretic Buddhism.

Conclusion
Chan is the most Confucian form of Buddhism, and it
has been in constant rivalry with neo-Confucianism.
It is also elitist, given the strict requirements for prac-
tice and the requirements to read literary Chinese, even
though some popularizers, writing in the colloquial
vernacular, contributed to the development of national
languages. However, there was often a gap between
ideal and practice, for the tradition also had to meet
the needs of clients, who wanted easier practices, fu-
neral rites, and the transfer of merit. This was a con-
stant tension, as was the need for the confirmation of
enlightenment, which led to many genealogical dis-
putes and inventions.

See also:China; Confucianism and Buddhism; Japan;
Korea; Lineage; Poetry and Buddhism; Syncretic
Sects: Three Teachings; Vietnam; Zen, Popular Con-
ceptions of

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