The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (1040 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
6.04Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ummash
(Heb., ‘five’, = Gk., ‘Pentateuch’). First five books of the Hebrew
Bible
.
Hun
.
Constituent element in Chinese anthropology, one of two non-corporeal elements to make up the living human being (the other being
p’o
). The two must interact harmoniously for life to continue; when they separate, death ensues.
For their destiny after death, see
SHEN
.
Hung-chih Cheng-chüeh
(Jap., Wanshi Sh
gaku
;
1091–1157).
Chinese Ch’an/Zen master of the
S
t
school who clarified the distinction from
Rinzai
Zen, in argument with his contemporary, Ta-hui Tsung-kao. Where Ta-hui advocated the way of
k
an
, Hung-chih valued more highly the way of silent illumination (
mo-chao ch’an
; Jap., mokush
zen), and responded to Ta-hui in a brilliant work of only 288 characters,
Mo-chao ming/Mokushomei
, (The Seal of Silent Illumination). Ta-hui attacked this as false Zen (
jazen
). Hung-chih rejected Ta-hui's method as k
an-gazing Zen,
k’an-hua ch’an/kanna zen
, and the terms
mokush
zen
and
kanna zen
now designate the sides in this division; but the division is not absolute, and remains one of emphasis and of different understanding of the status of k
an and of
satori
(enlightenment).

Other books

War in Heaven by David Zindell
Out for Blood by Kristen Painter
Clay's Hope by Melissa Haag
The Hollywood Trilogy by Don Carpenter
Bacacay by Witold Gombrowicz, Bill Johnston
The Truth Club by Grace Wynne-Jones
Elsewhere by Gabrielle Zevin
Girlfriend Material by Melissa Kantor