National
festivals–Festivals in honour of celestial beings–In honour of the
Buddhas and Bodhisattwas–In honour of characters in Chinese Buddhist
history–Supplemental anniversaries–Singhalese Buddhists keep a different
day for Buddha's birthday–In the T‘ang dynasty Hindoo astronomers
reformed the calendar–Gaudamsiddha–The week of India and Babylon known
to the Chinese–Word mit for Sunday–Peacock Sutra–The Hindoo Rahu and
Ketu.
ONE of the most
instructive illustrations of a religion is its calendar. Not only do
the fasts and festivals kept by a people point out in succession who are
the personages held by them in the highest honour; they also contain an
epitome of the history and doctrines of the religion they believe, and
especially aid in opening to observation the popular religious life.
The work called
Ts‘ing-kwei, "Regulations of the Priesthood," contains instructions for
the observance of all fasts and festivals through the year. From it are
extracted the following details of anniversaries:–
1. NATIONAL.
Emperor's
birthday.–The ceremonial for this anniversary lasts a week, embracing
three days before and three after the day in question. It is called
Sheng-tsie, "Sacred festival."
Empress's
birthday.
Day of
receiving an imperial message at the monastery.–Six persons are sent out
"five li" (nearly two miles) to
p. 206
meet it. On its
approach, the monks, headed by their chief, issue from the monastery,
and bow their foreheads to the ground three times.
Four monthly
feasts.–These are at the new and full moons, and on the 8th and 23d of
the month. They are called Kin-ming sï-chai, "The four feasts
illustriously decreed." The last two words refer to a decree of an
emperor of the Sui dynasty in A.D. 584, requiring the special observance
of the monthly feasts in the 1st, 5th, and 9th months; because then the
great Southern continent was prayed for, in which China is included.
Anniversaries
of emperors’ deaths.–Those of the present dynasty only are included.
2. CELESTIAL
BEINGS
Day of
worshipping the Devas (Kung-T‘ien).–All the chief personages, whether
Devas, spirits, demons, Asuras, Rakshas, &c., of the Hindoo older
mythology, are worshipped on this occasion. This observance rests for
its authority on the Kin-kwang-ming-king, "The Bright Sutra of Golden
Light."
Eclipses of the
Sun and Moon.–In the services for these days, the sun and moon are
addressed as "Bodhisattwas" (P‘u-sa), and the power of Buddha is invoked
to deliver them. Hence the name of the service, Hu-jï, Hu-yue,
"Delivering the sun and moon." The prayers offered for them are
considered as gratitude for their light.
Sacrifice to
the Moon, 8th month, 15th day.–The ground for this observance is that
this day is, according to national tradition, the moon's birthday. As in
the service for eclipses, Namo, "Honour to," the introductory formula
of worship, is used in addressing the moon. She is called in full
Yue-kung-t‘ai-yin-tsun-t‘ien-p‘u-sa, "The moon in her mansion, luminary
of night, honoured Deva and Bodhisattwa."
Prayer for fine
weather.–Prayer to various Buddhas, and other divinities.
p. 207
Prayer for
rain.–Worship is performed towards the East, and prayers offered to the
Dragon king, the various Buddhas, &c.
Prayer for
snow.–Ditto.
Prayer against
locusts.–To various Devas and spirits.
Prayer to
Wei-to (Veda).–The Deva Wei-to is the protector of the Buddhist
religion. When the supplies of the monastery fail, he is prayed to, to
replenish them. He is chief general of the army of the four Mahadevas.
Birthday of
Wei-to, 6th month, 3d day; according to some the 13th day.–Wei-to is a
deity of Hindoo mythology, who protects three of the four continents
into which the world is divided. (See Remusat's Notes to Foĕ kouĕ ki.)
Birthdays of
the divine protectors of the monasteries.–They are three:–(1.)
Hwa-kwang, 9th month, 28th day; (2.) Lung-wang, or Naga-raja, the
"Dragon King;" (3.) Kwan-ti, the "God of war," 5th month, 13th day,
according to the common account; but according to his biography in the
national annals, 6th month, 24th day. These three personages take the
place of eighteen worshipped in India. One of them is the well-known
hero of the "Three Kingdoms." They receive the same honours that are
awarded to Wei-to.
Birthday of the
Kitchen god, 6th month, 24th day, 8th month, 3d day, and 12th month,
24th day.–The Buddhists say, to excuse themselves for adopting a Tauist
superstition, that the Kitchen god they worship is not the Tsau-ki徂n
venerated commonly by the people, but a king of the "Kinnaras" (a
fabulous race of celestial beings), who became a Chinese priest in the
T‘ang dynasty, and was appointed at death to preside over the vegetarian
diet of the monks. This is a lame defence of what is evidently a
self-interested accommodation to popular notions.
3. THE BUDDHAS
AND BODHISATTWAS.
Birthday of
Shakyamuni, 4th month, 8th day.–He is also called Buddha, "Tathâgata" or
Julai, and Gautama,
p. 208
and is revered
as Pun-shï, the "Teacher of the world during the present kalpa."
Anniversary of
Shakyamuni's elevation to the rank of Buddha, 12th month, 8th day.–The
phrase in use is Ch‘eng-tau, "Attained the summit of knowledge and
virtue."
Anniversary of
Buddha's entrance into the Nirvâna, 2d month, 15th day.
Birthday of
Yo-shï Fo (The Buddha who instructs in healing, Bhaishajyaguru Buddha),
9th month, 30th day.–The world governed by this Buddha is in the East.
Birthday of
O-mi-to Fo or "Amida" (Amitabha) Buddha, 11th month, 17th day.–The
Buddha who rules in the universe to the west of that governed by Shakya,
and grants the request of all those who pray to him to admit them to
the Western heaven.
Birthday of
Mi-li Fo (Maitreya Buddha), 1st month, 1st day.–The Buddha who is to
succeed Shakyamuni in the government of the world. Maitreya was visited
in one of the paradises by Shakyamuni, and foretold his destiny.
Birthday of the
female Buddha, Chun-ti, 3d month, 6th day.–Great powers of sorcery are
attributed to this personage.
Birthday of
"Wen-shu p‘u-sa" (Manjusiri Bodhisattwa), 4th month, 4th day.–One of the
Bodhisattwas of Northern Buddhism.
Birthday of
"P‘u-hien p‘u-sa" (Samantabhadra), 2d month, 21st day.–A fictitious
Bodhisattwa of Northern Buddhism.
Birthday of
"Kwan-shï-yin p‘u-sa" (Avalôkit岢shwara), 2d month, 19th day.–This
fabulous Bodhisattwa has in China been usually represented with female
attributes. In the Fa-hwa-king, Kwan-yin is described as being able to
assume any form at pleasure, whether that of Buddhas, Devas, men, or
others, and as being guided in such voluntary metamorphoses by a
constant desire to proclaim the Buddhist doctrine to those who need it,
in the form most likely to effect the object. Kwan-yin is thus able to
save
p. 209
any of the
inhabitants of the Saha (or Saba) world, i.e., the present race of
mankind. When Kwan-yin is translated, not inappropriately, "Goddess of
mercy," it should be remembered that female attributes are only
temporarily assumed by the Bodhisattwa in question. (See the "Kwan-yin"
section, near the end of the Fa-hwa-king.)
Birthday of
Ta-shï-chï p‘u-sa, 7th month, 13th day.–The position of this Bodhisattwa
is to the right of Amitabha Buddha, while Kwan-yin takes the left. They
are styled together, "the Three Sages of the West" (Si-fang-san-sheng).
Birthday of
Ti-tsang p‘u-sa, 7th month, 30th day.
4. CHARACTERS
IN CHINESE BUDDHIST HISTORY.
Anniversary of
the death of "Bodhidharma" (Ta-mo), 10th month, 5th day.–The first of
the six patriarchs.
Death of
Pe-Chang, 1st month, 19th day.–He was a teacher of Bodhidharma's system
in the T‘ang dynasty. He wrote the work Ts‘ing-kwei from which these
notices of fasts and festivals are taken.
Death of
Chï-k‘ai, 11th month, 24th day.–The founder of the T‘ien-t‘ai school.
Death of
Hien-sheu, 11th month, 14th day.–A founder of a school bearing his name,
and advocating the "Great Development" system (Ta-ch‘eng).
Death of
Tau-siuen, 10th month, 3d day.–A founder of the Discipline school.
Death of
Hwei-yuen, 8th month, 6th day.–A founder of the Tsing-tu school.
Death of the
founder of the monastery,–also of a priest's own religious instructor,
of the priests who admitted him to the vows, and of his parents.
5.
SUPPLEMENTARY ANNIVERSARIES.
Commencement of
summer (Li-hia), 4th month, 16th day.–This anniversary is traced to the
usage of the earliest Hindoo Buddhists, who, when summer arrived, came
together
p. 210
and remained
associated under strict monastic rule during the hot months. This period
over, they began their begging excursions afresh.
"Y徂-lan-p‘en"
(U-lam) ceremony, for feeding hungry ghosts, 7th month, 15th day.–The
authority for this festival is the Y徂-lan-p‘en Sutra, translated into
Chinese about A.D. 270. It terminates the summer, as the preceding began
it.
End of summer,
7th month, 16th day.
Commencement
and end of winter (Li-tung, Kiai-tung), 10th month, 15th day, and 1st
month, 15th day.
First day of
the year.–Special worship.
Birthday of
Shakra, 1st month, 9th day.–Shakra, or Indra, god of the atmosphere, is,
in the modern editions of Pe-chang-ts‘ing-kwei, "Manual of Buddhist
Regulations and Festivals," identified with the well-known Tauist
divinity Y徂-ti. Oriental religions are so mutually complimentary, that
they sometimes adopt each other's divinities without scruple. The
Sanscrit 'Indra Shakra' is rendered in Chinese Ti-shï (formerly shak).
Birthday of
"Yo-wang p‘u-sa" (Bhâishajyarâja), "Medical king and Bodhisattwa," 4th
month, 15th day.
Birthday of the
Bodhisattwa "Lung-shu" (Nagarjuna), or "Dragon-tree," 7th month, 25th
day.–He was the fourteenth patriarch, and author of the "Hundred
Discourses," one of the most noted of the Buddhist Shastras.
Birthday of the
ancient Buddha Jan-teng, "Light lamp" (Dipankara Buddha), 8th month,
22d day.–Shakyamuni in a former kalpa was a disciple of this Buddha.
Winter
solstice.–Special worship.
Birthday of the
Bodhisattwa Hwa-yen, 12th month, 29th day.
The method of
observing these anniversaries, and the prayers to be used, are very
minutely detailed in the book from which these notices are translated.
The dates are
those of the lunar months of the Chinese national almanac.
p. 211
It may be
doubted whether more than a very few of them are identical with the
festivals of the Southern Buddhists, viz., those of Ceylon, Siam, and
Birmah, there being several of the great Bodhisattwas who are not
mentioned in works by foreign authors treating of the Buddhism of those
countries.
In Ceylon the
prevalent legend of Gautama's life states that he was born on the day of
the full moon in the second month of spring. This differs
irreconcilably.
In this popular
calendar, there is no mention of anything astronomical; yet in the
T‘ang dynasty Buddhist calculators from India were invited to undertake
the improvement of the imperial calendar.
Gaudamsiddha,
in the eighth century, published a work called Kieu-chï-li. It is a
translation from a Hindoo original. In it the days of the week are
apportioned among the planets in the following order: Yung-hwo, "Mars;"
Ch‘en-sing, "Mercury;" Sui-sing, "Jupiter;" T‘ai-pe, "Venus;" Chen-sing,
"Saturn." 1
These planets,
with the sun and moon, form the ts‘i-yau, "seven bright celestial
objects." They constitute the mythological week of seven days, which
sprang up in Babylonia, and spread to India, and also to Europe in the
days of the Roman empire.
Some Chinese
almanacs call Sunday the day of Mit, the Persian "Mithras," a name for
the sun. Mit is spoken of as a Hwei-hwei word. This term Hwei-hwei is
one of the names for the Persian language among the Chinese. It is the
word ouighour.
In the
Kung-ch‘io-king, "Peacock Sutra," the days of the week are also given.
This work is a translation by a Chinese priest named Yi-tsing. When Mr.
Wylie was visiting Peking on one occasion, he went with me to a
monastery to consult the "Peacock Sutra" in the library.
p. 212
[paragraph
continues] We were courteously received, and allowed to take it home
with us for a few days.
Many
superstitious beliefs and observances native to India were imported to
China by the Hindoo Buddhists. They taught much that was not at all
purely Buddhist. The education they received embraced a wide range.
Metaphysics, astronomy, medicine, and other subjects were taught in
India in the old times of Buddhist prosperity, probably much as they are
now in the lamaseries of Mongolia.
Thus the
ascending and descending nodes of the moon's orbit were known as two
monsters, called "Rahu" and "Ketu," in modern Chinese, Lo-heu and Ki-tu.
At eclipses, the Chinese story of a wild dog eating the sun and moon is
derived from this piece of Hindoo mythology. In native almanacs these
names are preserved in the nomenclature of astrology, and the conception
is encouraged that the earth's shadow crossing the moon is a dark
heavenly body, and a sort of planet of a dark nature, becoming risible
only at eclipses.
The Indian year
of three seasons is described, but no attempt has been made to
interfere with the Chinese seasons of three months each. The Buddhists
have arranged their calendar of festivals and fasts to suit the Chinese
months.
Footnotes
211:1 See
Chinese Recorder, 1872. Mr. Wylie, "On the Knowledge of a weekly Sabbath
in China," pp. 40-45. But add to Mr. Wylie's very full and interesting
statements, that Mit is "Mithras" here, and in page 8.
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