The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (2121 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
10.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
San-chieh-chiao
(‘
School of Three Stages
’). School of Chinese Buddhism during the Sui and T’ang periods, founded by Hsin-hsing (540–94). It portrayed the process of Buddhism as one of degeneration through three stages:
(i) the period of true
dharma
, which lasted for 500 years after the
Buddha
kyamuni's translation from earth, during which the teaching was observed;
(ii) 1,000 years of corrupted dharma, with many innovations;
(iii) 10,000 years, most yet to come (beginning 550 CE), of increasing disintegration. Against this, Hsin-hsing set a rule of radical observance of
la
,
d
na
, and asceticism, eschewing monasteries, although willing to support them.
San-ch'ing
(Chin., ‘the three pure ones’). The three Taoist heavens (
t'ien
) and those who inhabit them.
1
Yü-ching, the heaven of pure jade, inhabited by Yüan-shih t'ien-tsun, one of the highest deities of religious Taoism (
tao-chiao
). He created heaven and earth, and at the start of each new age, he gives
Ling-pao ching
to subordinates who instruct humans from it in the way of Tao.
2
Shang-ch'ing, the heaven of purity, ruled by Ling-pao t'ien-tsun. He is the guardian of Ling-pao ching, and regulates time and the balance of
yin and yang
.
3
T'ai-ch'ing, the heaven of highest purity, ruled by Tao-te T'ien-tsun, the guardian of
tao
and
te
. He is identified with
Lao-tzu
.
Sañci
(Buddhist centre in Central India):
see
S
ÑCH
.

Other books

Laura Ray (Ray Series) by Brown, Kelley
The Calling of the Grave by Simon Beckett
Pirouette by Robyn Bavati
Broken by David H. Burton
Long Hunt (9781101559208) by Judd, Cameron
Alive by Chandler Baker
Maris by Hill, Grace Livingston;