The Religion of the Samurai eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 299 pages of information about The Religion of the Samurai.

The Religion of the Samurai eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 299 pages of information about The Religion of the Samurai.
received by the public.  He seems to have behaved in a way quite opposite to that in which a modern pastor treats his flock.  We imagine him to have been a religious teacher entirely different in every point from a popular Christian missionary of our age.  The latter would smile or try to smile at every face he happens to see and would talk sociably; while the former would not smile at any face, but would stare at it with the large glaring eyes that penetrated to the innermost soul.  The latter would keep himself scrupulously clean, shaving, combing, brushing, polishing, oiling, perfuming, while the former would be entirely indifferent to his apparel, being always clad in a faded yellow robe.  The latter would compose his sermon with a great care, making use of rhetorical art, and speak with force and elegance; while the former would sit as absolutely silent as the bear, and kick one off, if one should approach him with idle questions.

[FN#23] Buddhist historians differ in opinion respecting the date of Bodhidharma’s appearance in China.  Compare Chwen Fah Chan Tsung Lun (Den bo sho ju ron) and Hwui Yuen (E-gen).

3.  Bodhidharma and the Emperor Wu.

No sooner had Bodhidharma landed at Kwang Cheu in Southern China than he was invited by the Emperor[FN#24] Wu, who was an enthusiastic Buddhist and good scholar, to proceed to his capital of Chin Liang.  When he was received in audience, His Majesty asked him:  “We have built temples, copied holy scriptures, ordered monks and nuns to be converted.  Is there any merit, Reverend Sir, in our conduct?” The royal host, in all probability, expected a smooth, flattering answer from the lips of his new guest, extolling his virtues, and promising him heavenly rewards, but the Blue-eyed Brahmin bluntly answered:  “No merit at all.”  This unexpected reply must have put the Emperor to shame and doubt in no small degree, who was informed simply of the doctrines of the orthodox Buddhist sects.  ‘Why not,’ he might have thought within himself, ’why all this is futile?  By what authority does he declare all this meritless?  What holy text can be quoted to justify his assertion?  What is his view in reference to the different doctrines taught by Shakya Muni?  What does he hold as the first principle of Buddhism?’ Thus thinking, he inquired:  “What is the holy truth, or the first principle?” The answer was no less astonishing:  “That principle transcends all.  There is nothing holy.”

[FN#24] The Emperor Wu (Bu-Tei) of the Liang dynasty, whose reign was A.D. 502-549.]

The crowned creature was completely at a loss to see what the teacher meant.  Perhaps he might have thought:  ’Why is nothing holy?  Are there not holy men, Holy Truths, Holy Paths stated in the scriptures?  Is he himself not one of the holy men?’ “Then who is that confronts us?” asked the monarch again.  “I know not, your majesty,” was the laconic reply of Bodhidharma, who now saw that his new faith was beyond the understanding of the Emperor.

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The Religion of the Samurai from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.