The Mahayana
is more of an umbrella body for a great variety of schools,
from the Tantra school (the secret teaching of Yoga) well
represented in Tibet and Nepal to the Pure Land sect, whose
essential teaching is that salvation can be attained only
through absolute trust in the saving power of Amitabha, longing
to be reborn in his paradise through his grace, which are
found in China, Korea and Japan. Ch'an and Zen Buddhism, of
China and Japan, are meditation schools.
It is
generally accepted, that what we know today as the Mahayana
arose from the Mahasanghikas sect who were the earliest seceders,
and the forerunners of the Mahayana. They took up the cause
of their new sect with zeal and enthusiasm and in a few decades
grew remarkably in power and popularity. They adapted the
existing monastic rules and thus revolutionised the Buddhist
Order of Monks. Moreover, they made alterations in the arrangements
and interpretation of the Sutra (Discourses) and the Vinaya
(Rules) texts. And they rejected certain portions of the canon,
which had been accepted in the First Council.
According
to it, the Buddhas are lokottara (supramundane) and
are connected only externally with the worldly life. This
conception of the Buddha contributed much to the growth of
the Mahayana philosophy. The ideal of the Mahayana school
is that of the Bodhisattva, a person who delays his or her
own enlightenment in order to compassionately assist all other
beings and ultimately attains to the highest Bodhi.
Mahayana Lineages Imported
from India
Chinese
Buddhism
Madhyamika (San Lun, Ch.)
Based on the Chinese translation of Nagarjuna's (second century)
Madhyamika Karika and two other works of uncertain
authorship, this lineage emphasized the notion of shunyata
(emptiness) and wu (nonbeing). So rigorous was the
teaching of this lineage, that it declared that the elements
constituting perceived objects, when examined, are really
no more than mental phenonena and have no true existence.
Yogacara
Founded in the third century by Maitreyanatha and
made famous by Asanga and Vasubandhu in the fourth or fifth
century, this school held that the source of all ideas is
vijñana ("consciousness"), which is
seen as the fundamental basis of existence. Ultimate Reality
is therefore only perceived but has not real existence.
Indigenous
Mahayana Lineages
T'ien T'ai
Named after the mountains on which the founder Zhi Yi (d.
597 C.E.) resided, this lineage is based on a scheme of classification
intended to integrate and harmonize the vast array of Buddhist
scriptures and doctrines. This scheme of classification is
based on the Buddhist doctrine of upaya ("skilful
means"). The most important form of Buddhism for this
lineage is the Mahayana devotionalism found in the Lotus
Sutra.
Avatamsaka (Hua Yen, Ch.)
This lineage takes its name from the Avatamsaka Sutra,
its central sacred text, and like the T'ien T'ai school is
oriented towards a classification of sutras. Basic to this
lineage is the assertion that all particulars are merely manifestations
of the absolute mind and are therefore fundamentally the same.
Pure Land:
(Amitabha) Based on the Sukhavati Vyuha ("Pure
Land Sutra"), this lineage was founded in 402 C.E. by
Hui Yuan. The Pure Land lineage held that the spiritual quality
of the world has been in decline since its height during the
lifetime of the Buddha and taught followers to cultivate through
prayer and devotion a sincere intent to be reborn in the heavenly
paradise of the Buddha Amitabha.
Ch'an
Its name is derived from the Sanskrit term dhyana
(meditation), this lineage emphasises meditation as the only
means to a spiritual awakening beyond words or thought, dispensing
almost entirely with the teachings and practices of traditional
Buddhism. Ch'an is thought to have been brought to China by
the enigmatic South Indian monk Bodhidharma in about the year
500 C.E.
Bodhidharma: Father
of Ch'an and Zen Buddhism.