WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Buddhism and Buddhists in China cover

Buddhism and Buddhists in China

Chapter 14: APPENDIX I HINTS FOR THE PRELIMINARY STUDY OF BUDDHISM IN CHINA
Open in WeRead

About This Book

The work traces Buddhism's arrival and adaptation in China, surveying its institutional growth, integration with ancestor worship, and interactions with Taoist and Confucian ideas. It examines monastic influence on rural life, family practices including devotion to Kuan Yin and funerary rituals, social expressions such as vegetarian sects and pilgrimages, and doctrines about purgatory, heaven, and nirvana. Chapters analyze spiritual values and paths to salvation for different social strata, recent developments in monastic reconstruction and lay organizations, and the stance of Tibetan lamas. A concluding section outlines how Christians might engage with Buddhists, followed by study aids and a brief bibliography.

APPENDIX I
HINTS FOR THE PRELIMINARY STUDY OF BUDDHISM IN CHINA

The student should read and inwardly digest the booklet of K. J. Saunders.

He should follow the directions given in Appendix One of that book, This procedure is important because the Hînayâna Buddhism and the life of Buddha are the background of Buddhism in China.

Then he may take Hackmann’s Buddhism as a Religion (No. 15). This will give a general orientation. This may be followed with R. F. Johnston’s Buddhist China (No. 20). Along with this he may read Suzuki’s Awakening of Faith (No. 32), and also his Outlines of Mahâyanâ Buddhism (No. 33). McGovern’s Introduction to Mahâyanâ Buddhism (No. 23) will illuminate the philosophical background of Buddhism, and Eliot’s Hinduism and Buddhism (No. 13) will add historical perspective.

The translation of Mahdydna Sutras by Beal and in the Sacred Books of the East will give him some of the sources for the doctrines held in China. He may begin as the Buddhist missionaries did with the sutra of the Forty-two sections and then take up the Diamond Sutra, and then completing the sutras in Vol. 59 and the Catena of Buddhist Scriptures.

For the study of the ethical side he will find De Groot’s Le Code du Mahâyâna en Chine very helpful. For the study of the sects Eliot, Vol. III, pp. 303-320 Northern Buddhism (No. 14) will be helpful.

In all his study he will find Eitel’s Handbook of Chinese Buddhism (No. 12) indispensable. He must, however, make a Chinese index in order to be able to use the book.

Contact with monks will be helpful and is quite necessary in order to appreciate the human problems of the work.