Honmon Butsuryū-shū
The Honmon Butsuryū-shū (本門佛立宗) is a branch of Honmon Hokke Shū sect (one of the most ancient sect of Nichiren Buddhism). It was founded by Nagamatsu Nissen (長松 日扇; 1817–1890) and a group of followers the 12th of January 1857 with the name of Honmon Butsuryu Ko.[1] This group was affiliated with Honmon Hokke shu sect until the 15th of March 1947 when it became independent with the name of Honmon Butsuryū-shū. In fact, they shared the same Patriarch until 1947. The last common patriarch was Nichijun Shonin.
HBS is part of the Japan Buddhist Federation[2] and of the World Felloship of Buddhists as a traditional Nichiren school.[3] Initially it was regarded as one of Japan’s new religious movements,[4] but recent studies[5][6][7][8] show that HBS is not a new religious movement but a traditional Nichiren School.
Honmon Butsuryu Shu members practice in the tradition of Nichiren’s disciple Daikoku Ajari Nichiro (1245-1320) and consider Keirin-bo Nichiryu Daishonin (慶林坊日隆, 1385-1464) to be the second greatest leader of their school.[9] Nichiryu Daishonin played an active role in reviving Nichiren Buddhism by transcribing many of Nichiren Shonin’s manuscripts and concluding that his teaching were fundamentally based in the "Honmon" (8 chapters) of the Lotus Sutra.[10]
The head temple of Honmon Butsuryū-shū is the Yūsei-ji located in Kyoto. Even though the majority of its believers are in Japan, there are several congregation and Temples across the world such as in North America, Brazil, Italy, United Kingdom, Taiwan, South Korea etc.
See also
References
- ^ Yunesuko Higashi Ajia Bunka Kenkyū Sentā (1969). East Asian Cultural Studies, Volumes 8-13; Centre for East Asian Cultural Studies, pp. 17-20
- ^ "JBF".
- ^ Hinnels, John R. (1995). A New Dictionary of Religions, Oxford, UK ; Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell, ISBN 0631181393
- ^ Montgomery, Daniel (1991). Fire in the Lotus, The Dynamic Religion of Nichiren, London: Mandala, ISBN 1852740914, page 249-251
- ^ "Buddhism and New religion in Japan".
- ^ "View of religion in Japan".
- ^ "Recent Trends in the Study of Japanese New Religions".
- ^ "Contemporary Japan:Religions".
- ^ Fukuoka, Nisso R. General Guide Line of Honmon Butsuryushu. Butsuryushu Research Institute. pp. 63–65.
- ^ Shinnosuke, YONEZAWA (2012-03-20). "The Difference between the "Two Half and One Whole Chapters" and The "Basic Eight Chapters" in the Lotus Sutra". Journal of Indian and Buddhist studies (60(2)): 649–652.
External links
- HBS Japanese web site (Japanese)
- HBS International (English)
- HBS Brazil (Portuguese)
- HBS Wikipedia Brazil (Portuguese)
- HBS Italian web site (Italian)
- HBS UK web site