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The Religion In The Heian Period Essay (стр. 2 из 2)

were deeply influenced, taking over its images and ceremonial. For most of the Heian

period the two sects were intermingled.

Despite this, Tendai always retained a distinctive bias towards scholarship and an

intellectual, rather than emotional, approach; it also continued to have somewhat closer

links than Shingon with the court as an administrative body. Moreover, in judging the

relative spiritual progress of people who were not monks, Tendai relied on the existing

class structure. Those born in fortunate circumstances were reaping the rewards of special

merit in previous lives and could look forward to even greater blessings in lives to come.

In short, though all beings were destined to be saved eventually, aristocrats were superior

to the common people in religion as in everything else. It is easy to see that such teaching

would flourish in Heian Japan, which was a predominantly aristocratic society.

As religions of the aristocracy and this government, the two sects were thought of

protectors of court and State. They performed special rituals at times of political

uncertainty arising from such things as the accession of a new emperor, provincial

rebellion or natural disaster. Buddhism had had this protective role since Nara times, but

the Heian sects? links with the court led them to full participation in society and

government quite apart from abnormal occasions.

For Buddhists as well as everybody else, direct contact with china dwindled

though it never lapsed. This was an extraordinary change from the time when Japanese

Buddhism had been little more than a branch of mainland mature, and took on a

distinctively Japanese or national character. Religion, like politics and literature, was

increasingly domesticated.

This meant that Heian Buddhism conformed to the prevailing pattern of group

privilege and local independence within a broad framework of national unity. The sects

were deeply involved in the development of Shoen, and, as elements in the metropolitan

elite; they ranked with the great aristocratic families. Like the latter, they remained

separate and to some extent competing units, deriving their ultimate authority from close

association with the court. At the same time, they gained greatly from the weakening of

centralized government, which enabled them to amass huge incomes from shiki rights, and

to enjoy a large measure of political independence.

However, Buddhism did not just passively accommodate itself to prevailing

secular trends; it was a positive influence in its own right. Japanese politics under the

Fujiwara and cloistered emperors were remarkably free from bloodshed and cruelty, and

this was at least partly due to Buddhist emphasis on the sanctity of life. During the Heian

period Buddhism also ceased to be an exclusively aristocratic religion. Spreading among

the common people, it carried with it – as always – arts, crafts and opportunities for

learning. So, in the long run, Heian Buddhism helped enormously to close the great

technological and cultural gap that had divided the provinces from the court since the days

of the Taika Reform.

Buddhism in any form had always been a missionary religion. Mahayana

Buddhism was not only anxiously to make converts, but was eager to absorb local

religions. In Heian times, Shinto shrines throughout the country were taken over by

Buddhist priests. The deities for whom the shrines had originally been built were now

esteemed as minor manifestations of the cosmic Buddha, and time-honored village

festivals and other community rites continued under Buddhist sponsorship. This

amalgamation of Buddhism and Shinto was the dominant form of religion in Japan from

the eleventh century to the mid-nineteenth century. Even after the forcible separation of

the two faiths for political reasons in the 1870s, the amalgam has lived on among the

people.

52a

Morton, W. Scott. JAPAN, Its History and Culture. New York:

McGraw-Hill, 1984

Morton, W. Scott. CHINA, Its History and Culture. United States:

McGraw-Hill, 1980

Varley, H. Paul. Japanese Culture. Honolulu, University of Hawai?i Press,

2000

http://perso.club-internet.fr/thmodin/English/boddhisattva3.html

http://www.koyasan.org/nckoyasan/introduction.html

http://www.compsoc.net/~gemini/simons/historyweb/tendai.html