Dabei Chan

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The Dabei Chan (Chinese: 大ę²ęŗ; lit. 'Great Compassion Repentance') is a Chinese Buddhist repentance rite typically performed in order to cleanse one's negative karma, purify the mind and generate merits. The ritual was first composed by the eminent Song dynasty (960-1279) Tiantai Patriarch Siming Zhili (åęē„禮, 960ā1028) and is based around the NÄ«lakaį¹į¹ha DhÄraį¹Ä«, a mantra that is closely associated with the esoteric thousand-armed and thousand-eyed form of the Bodhisattva Guanyin known as Qianshou Qianyan Guanyin (åęåē¼č§é³, lit: "Thousand-Armed and Thousand-Eyed Guanyin"). The ritual liturgy received further edits and addendums in later periods, most notably by the Vinaya master Jianyue Duti (č¦ęč®é«, 1601ā1679) during the Qing dynasty.[1]
In modern times, this rite remains one of the most popular rites in the Chinese Buddhist ritual field, being performed at least once a month or more in most Chinese Buddhist temples, both on its own and as part of larger events such as the Shuilu Fahui ceremony.[2][3]
History
[edit]Han dynasty (3rd century BCE-3rd century CE)
[edit]Antecedents of repentance rites
[edit]Repentance rites originated from confession rituals, known as Uposatha, in Indian Buddhism.[4] According to the Pali Canon, this consisted of confessing one's offenses and reciting the PÄį¹imokkha on the Uposatha days (full and new-moon days).[4] The purpose of the Uposatha, which were only to be held with at least four bhikkhus with no lay followers allowed, is to prevent the decline of the sangha communities.[4] The full ritual proceedings of the Uposatha consists of the preparation and the recitation of the PÄį¹imokkha to be performed by an experienced and competent (or most senior) bhikkhu while the rest of the sangha members listen.[4]
Transmission to China
[edit]As early as the first century BCE before Buddhism was transmitted to China, several repentance scriptures in Sanskrit were already in circulation in India, with a key example being the Triskandhadharma SÅ«tra (äøåęéē¶), which was later translated to Chinese by the eminent monk Dharmarakį¹£a and constitutes a chapter in the MahÄratnakÅ«į¹a SÅ«tra.[4] Two of the earliest repentance scriptures translated into Chinese approximately in the middle of the second century CE are the Foshuo Asheshiwang Jing (ä½čŖŖéæéäøēē¶, lit: "The Buddha Speaks of King AjÄtaÅatru SÅ«tra") and the Foshuo Shelifu Huiguo Jing (ä½čŖŖčå©å¼ęéē¶, lit: "The Buddha Speaks of ÅÄripÅ«tra Repentance SÅ«tra").[4] Consequently, over the next four centuries, a total of sixty-one repentance scriptures were translated into Chinese.[4]
Northern and Southern dynasties to Tang dynasty (5th century-10th century)
[edit]Popularity of repentance rites in China
[edit]By the time of the Northern and Southern dynasties (420ā598), various repentance liturgies were in circulation in China. A few examples are the Zhong Jing Chanhui Miezui Fangfa Sanjuan (ē¾ē¶ęŗęę» ē½Ŗę¹ę³äøå·, lit: "Methods on Eradicating Transgression by Repentance from Various SÅ«tra in three fascicles"), which was compiled in 517 by the Liang dynasty monk Baochang (寶å±), the Foshuo Foming Jing (ä½čŖŖä½åē¶, lit: "SÅ«tra of the Buddha Names"), which was compiled in 524 by the Northern Wei dynasty monk Bodhiruci (č©ęęµęÆ), and the Fahua Sanmei Chanyi (ę³čÆäøę§ęŗå, lit: "Lotus Samadhi Repentance Ritual"), which was compiled by the eminent monk and founder of the Tiantai tradition, Zhiyi. The Fahua Sanmei Chanyi (Japanese: Hokke Zanmai Sengi) is still practiced in modern times by contemporary Chinese Tiantai monastics as well as Japanese Tendai monastics. Another prominent example of a repentance rite that was composed during this period is the Liang Huang Bao Chan (ę¢ē寶ęŗ, lit: "Repentance Ritual of the Emperor of Liang"). This extensive ritual, which was originally composed by the eminent Chan Buddhist master Baozhi (寶åæ, traditionally regarded as an emanation of Shiyimian Guanyin) on behalf of Emperor Wu of Liang, has remained highly popular in modern Chinese Buddhist practice and is frequently referred to as the "king of repentance rites" (ęŗę³ä¹ē) among practitioners. It is typically performed on an annual or even more frequent basis in most Chinese Buddhist temples, sometimes as part of a larger event like the Shuilu Fahui ceremony.
As the popularity and number of repentance rites continued to grow, eminent Sui (581ā618) and Tang dynasty (618ā907) Buddhist masters and patriarchs such as Zhiyi, Daoxuan and Huineng started to proposed several different schemes of classifying the different rites.[4][5] In general, these schemes can generally be classified into three types of repentance rituals depending on the severity of the offenses and purposes:
- Communal repentance (ä½ę³ęŗę): Solely for Buddhist monks and nuns who have violated any of their precepts, except the four parajika offenses which entail expulsion from the sangha.[4][5] Usually held on the days of new and full moon or Uposatha, the precepts are recited according to the seven categories.[4][5] At the end of each category, the Buddhist monks and nuns are expected to confess if they have violated any of the precepts; otherwise, they remain silent.[4][5]
- Visionary or auspicious sign repentance (č§ēøęŗę): Can be practiced by both monastics and lay people, especially when lay people want to undergo ordination with the bodhisattva precepts of the BrahmajÄla SÅ«tra.[4][5] For monastics, the bodhisattva precepts are transmitted last as part of their ordination.[4][5] This type of repentance is usually performed in order to receive the bodhisattva precepts or for purification purposes if a monastic or lay person has violated any of their precepts, except the five grave offenses.[4][5]
- Unborn or markless repentance (ē”ēęŗę or ē”ēøęŗę): Cultivation of this form of repentance mostly entails giving rise to bodhicitta, having compassion for all sentient beings, and deeply examining the source of transgression to see that all dharms, including the nature of one's transgression or offense, is itself empty and has no one to cling to.[4][5] According to both Zhiyi and Huineng, this form of repentance could eradicate innumerable eons of past major transgressions.[4][5]
Translation and popularization of the NÄ«lakaį¹į¹ha DhÄraį¹Ä« (Dabei zhou)
[edit]
During the Tang dynasty (618ā907), Zhenyan Buddhism grew in prominence, and various eminent tantric masters like Vajrabodhi and Amoghavajra were patronized by the Tang imperial court. At the same time, more esoteric and tantric scriptures began to be translated from Sanskrit to Chinese. A key sÅ«tra that was translated in this milieu was a dharani sÅ«tra devoted to the tantric form of the Bodhisattva Guanyin known as Qianshou Qianyan Guanyin (åęåē¼č§é³, lit: "Thousand-Armed and Thousand-Eyed Guanyin"), often shortened to just Qianshou Guanyin. The sÅ«tra introduced a mantra associated with Qianshou Guanyin called the NÄ«lakaį¹į¹ha DhÄraį¹Ä«, which is popularly known in Chinese as the Dabei zhou (大ę²å, lit: "Great Compassionate Mantra"). This dharani has remained in popular usage in East Asian Buddhism in contemporary times. Various different translations of the sÅ«tra (and the mantra within) exists, including versions by Vajrabodhi, Amoghavajra and DhyÄnabhadra. The version of the mantra currently considered to be the standard in most of East Asia is the shorter version found in the Qianshou Qianyan Guanshiyin Pusa Guangda Yuanman Wu'ai Dabeixin Tuoluoni Jing (åęåē¼č§äøé³č©č©å»£å¤§å滿ē”ē¤å¤§ę²åæéē¾ å°¼ē¶, lit: "SÅ«tra of the Vast, Perfect, Unimpeded Great-Compassionate Heart of the Thousand-Handed Thousand-Eyed Bodhisattva Avalokitasvara's DhÄraį¹Ä«") translated by a monk from western India named Bhagavaddharma (伽梵éę©) between 650 and 660 CE.[6]

From the Tang dynasty (618ā907) through to the Song dynasty (960ā1279), usage of the Dabei zhou grew in popularity among both monastics and laypeople as a result of its efficacy in exorcising spirits and healing the sick.[7] For instance, various dharani pillars inscribed with the began to be erected, with the earliest known example being one that was built in Wolong Temple in the Tang capital of Chang'an in 871.[7] Historical records also mention the dharani's usage by monastics in ritual contexts. For instance, the Song Gaoseng Zhuan (å®é«å§å³, lit: "Biographies of Eminent Monks of the Song dynasty") by the scholar monk Zanning (č“寧) includes the biographies of several monks who were noted for having used the dharani extensively to accomplish tasks such as curing diseases and exorcising evil spirits.[7] Extant manuscripts from sites like Dunhuang show that the sÅ«tra and its dharani was disseminated widely among monastics and laity alike by the end of the Tang dynasty, with copies being made either as pious offerings or commissioned by the faithful for religious merit.[7] The mantra also began appearing in numerous records and collections of short tales. For instance, the Tang dynasty Guangyi Ji (廣ē°čØ, lit: "Record of Marvelous Tales") by Dai Fu has several stories featuring Guanyin, including one where the protagonist used the Dabei zhou to exorcise demons causing malaria and frighten off beings who were tormenting his sister.[7] As a protagonist was not a monk, the story showed that even ordinary people knew the power of the dharani and knew how to recite it.[7] Another example is the Song dynasty Yijian Zhi (夷å åæ, lit: "Record of Yijian") by Hong Mai, which contained forty-nine stories about chanting spells and twelve about chanting the names of deities.[7] Of these, the Dabei zhou was recited eleven times, and Guanyin's name seven times, with the spell being used seven times to vanquish evil ghosts and twice to heal while the name is used five times to heal.[7] In addition, out of these sixty-one cases of religious activities, over thirty-four involved laymen and twenty-five involved religious specialists such as monks, priests and shamans.[7] Hence, by the Song dynasty, knowledge about the power of the Dabei zhou to subdue demons and cure diseases was already widespread among both monastics and lay-followers, who were chanting it on a regular basis.[7]
Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period to Song dynasty (10th century-13th century)
[edit]Usage of the Dabei zhou for repentance
[edit]The first historical reference to the Dabei zhou being used during a repentance service was found in the record of the daily religious practice of the eminent Chan Buddhist master Yongming Yanshou (ę°øę延壽), who is the Third Patriarch of the Fayan Chan tradition and the Sixth Patriarch of the Chinese Pure Land tradition as well as widely regarded as an emanation of the Buddha AmitÄbha in Chinese Buddhist tradition.[7] In the Zhijue Chanshi Zixing Lu (ęŗč¦ŗē¦Ŗåø«čŖč”é, lit: "Record of Self-cultivation of Chan Master Zhijue") compiled by his disciple Wen Chong (ęę²), Yongming was noted to have recited the "Great Compassion Dharani of the Thousand-handed and Thousand-eyed Kuan-yin six times every day, in order to repent for the sins of all sentient beings in the Dharma Realm, which they commit with their six senses.ā[7] In addition, during evenings, Yongming would ālight incense for all sentient beings of the ten directions and recite the Prajna Dharani [the dharani in the Heart SÅ«tra] and the Great Compassion Dharani. Pray for them to understand their own minds to be as perfect and clear as Prajna.ā[7]
Composition of the Dabei Chan
[edit]The usage of the Dabei zhou for repentance was finally formally codified into a ritual structure via the composition of the Dabei Chan by the eminent monk and Twenty-Eighth Patriarch of the Chinese Tiantai tradition, Siming Zhili (åęē„禮, 960-1028). Zhili is regarded by Chinese Buddhist tradition as an incarnation of ÅÄkyamuni Buddha's son, RÄhula, due to an event detailed in some records relating to his birth where his mother only became pregnant with him after his father prayed to the Buddha for an heir and, in response, received a dream where an Indian monk presented him with a son while saying, āThis is Lo-hou-lo [Rahula], the son of the Buddha.ā[7] Zhili was a great devotee of Tiantai rites of penitence, having been known to practice a wide range of repentance rituals many times during his lifetime, in some cases performing them continuously over multiple years.[7] He was also known for composing various other repentance rites besides the Dabei Chan, such as the Jinguangming Zuisheng Chanyi (éå ęęåęŗå, lit: "Most Victorious Golden Light Repentance Rite") which was based on the Golden Light SÅ«tra and is also still performed in contemporary Chinese Buddhist practice.[7] His decision to base the Dabei Chan on an esoteric sÅ«tra may have been influenced by the influx of new translations of tantric scriptures such as the KÄraį¹įøavyÅ«ha SÅ«tra by the monk Tianxizai (天ęÆē½) under the sponsorship of the Song court at the time.[7] The version of the sÅ«tra he used was the translation by Bhagavaddharma.[2]
The ritual manual penned by Zhili's for the Dabei Chan was titled the Qianshouyan Dabeixin Zhou Xingfa (åęē¼å¤§ę²åæåŖč”ę³, lit: "Method of the Great Compassionate Heart Mantra of a Thousand Arms and Eyes").[1] According to his preface to the ritual manual, Zhili states that although he could recite the Dabei zhou by heart by the time he was a child, he did not know the method of upholding it.[7][8] Later, after he began to practice Tiantai meditation, when he examined the sÅ«tra in which the Dabei zhou was introduced, he discovered that it could help one to attain wisdom through contemplation and as well as satisfy the requirement of phenomenal ritual performance.[7][8] According to his instructions, the ritual was to be carried out in twenty-one days, and structurally consists of ten sections: (1) sanctify the place of practice; (2) purify the three activities [of mouth, body and mind]; (3) establishing the ritual space; (4) make offerings; (5) invite the Triple Gem and various gods; (6) praise and prayer; (7) prostrations; (8) making vows and chanting the Dabei zhou; (9) confession and repentance; and (10) practicing discernment.[7][8] The structure of the ritual programme as outlined above is highly similar to Zhiyi's earlier Fahua Sanmei Chanyi, with the main differences being section (3) "establishing the boundary" and section (8) "making vows and chanting the Dabei zhou" which replace the "circumambulation" and "chanting the Lotus SÅ«tra" sections of the Fahua Sanmei Chanyi respectively.[8]
Yuan dynasty to Ming dynasty (13th century-17th century)
[edit]Codification in monastic rules
[edit]The Dabei Chan continued to be performed as part of regular monastic practice under the succeeding Yuan dynasty (1279ā1368).[1] For instance, the Zengxiu Jiaoyuan Qinggui (å¢äæ®ęčęø č¦, lit: "Revised Rules of Purity for Jiao temples"), a set of monastic codes for temples under the Jiao classification (ę, encompassing various Buddhist traditions based heavily on scriptures such as Tiantai and Huayan) published in 1347 by the Tiantai monk Ziqing (čŖę ¶) specifically lists the Dabei Chan as a practice for the monastic community to perform on the 20th of the fourth month.[1] In addition, Ziqing also drew diagrams detailing the ritual layout for repentance rites.[1] According to the Zengxiu Jiaoyuan Qinggui, a performance of the Dabei Chan should proceed as follows: The day before the 20th of the fourth month, an attendant of the overseer or precentor (ē¶é£) informs the congregation of monks about the ritual by hanging up a plaque giving notice for the repentance rite.[1] Monks are instructed to lay out prayer cushions, while the overseer's attendant prepares hand warmers, candlesticks, and scattered flowers, placing them on a small table before the main practitioner.[1] On the morning of the initiation, the hall bell is rung, and the congregation stands in their positions according to the prescribed order provided in Ziqing's diagram in order of seniority.[1] The diagram also lists the necessary and ritual implements, such as bells, clappers, wooden fish, mallets, chimes, cymbals, and drums.[1]
Promotion by the imperial court
[edit]In the succeeding Ming dynasty (1368ā1644), the Dabei zhou and its corresponding sÅ«tra was promoted by the imperial court, who frequently held ceremonies to pray for the salvation of those who had died in wartime.[1] For instance, the Yongle Emperor authored a preface for the sÅ«tra titled the Yuzhi Dabei Zongchi Jingzhou Xu (徔製大ę²ēø½ęē¶ååŗ, lit: "Imperial Preface for the Great Compassionate Dharani SÅ«tra and Mantra").[1] This preface was later presented to the Oriental scholar Samuel Beal by the monks of Hoi Tong Monastery on Henan Island in the 19th century, who translated it into English.[9][10] Part of the preface reads as follows:
It is reported by Kwan Tseu Tsai Bodhisattva, prompted by her great compassionate heart has engaged herself by a great oath to enter into every one of the innumerable worlds, and bring deliverance to all creatures who inhabit them. For this purpose she has enunciated the Divine sentences which follow, if properly recited, will render all creatures exempt from the causes of sorrow, and by removing them, render them capable of attaining Supreme Reason.[9]
Qing dynasty to Present (17th century-21th century)
[edit]Variant liturgies and standardization
[edit]
By the late Ming period, the practice of the Dabei Chan had become so popular and widespread that various regional liturgical variants were circulating at the same time.[1] This was criticized by the eminent monk Ouyi Zhixu, who was a Patriarch of both the Chinese Pure Land and Tiantai traditions.[1] The ritual liturgy would only become standardized from the early years of the succeeding Qing dynasty (1644ā1912) onwards due to the efforts of the eminent monk Jianyue Duti (č¦ęč®é«, 1601ā1679), who was a Vinaya specialist from Yunnan.[1] In his youth, he was inspired to join the Buddhist monkhood after reading the Avataį¹saka SÅ«tra and eventually received ordination under the Vinaya master Sanmei Jiguang (äøę§åÆå ), an eminent monk who was recognized as a national preceptor by both the Ming and Qing imperial courts and who served as the abbot of Longchang Temple on Mount Baohua, a prestigious monastic center that was famed for their Vinaya studies during the Qing dynasty.[1] During the late Ming to early Qing dynasty period, monastic discipline was seen as being on a decline. In response, Duti promoted Vinaya studies, rectified many monastery malpractices, and, due to his strict self-discipline, was a respected Vinaya master who was seen as a reformer and revitalizer of monastic ethics and precepts.[11][12] Duti would eventually succeed Jiguang as the abbot of Longchang Temple.[13][14] Around 1645 to 1665, Duti compiled a revised and abridged version of the ritual liturgical text for the Dabei Chan titled the Dabei Chanyi (大ę²ęŗå, lit: "Great Compassion Repentance Ritual").[1] Because of his reputation for virtuous conduct, his version was quickly accepted and became the standard version used in Qing dynasty temples.[1] In 1819, the monk Juche Jixian (å·Øå¾¹åÆę¹) consulted various other liturgical variants and re-edited Duti's version of the text.[1] This version of the text condenses Zhili's original composition (which had ten sections) to five sections: (1) make offerings; (2) praise and prayer; (3) prostrations; (4) making vows and chanting the Dabei zhou; (5) confession and repentance.[1] The liturgical text would receive some more minor additional modifications in later periods, including an expansion of section (3) "prostrations" to include making prostrations to ÅrÄvakas and Zhili (in addition to the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas that were already present in the text), as well as more prostrations to the Triple Gem on behalf of devas and worldly spirits such as the Four Heavenly Kings and the Eight Legions of Devas and NÄgas.[15] This would be the last revision of the ritual liturgy, which is still used in all modern contemporary performances of the ritual throughout China, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia and other overseas Chinese communities.[1]
Ritual Outline
[edit]
According to Zhili's instructions, the ritual should be performed before an image of Qianshou Qianyan Guanyin (which has a thousand arms and eyes) that faces the east.[16] If an image of Qianshou Qianyan Guanyin isn't available, then a six-armed, four-armed or any Guanyin figure will also be acceptable as a substitute.[16] If no Guanyin images are available, then either an image of ÅÄkyamuni Buddha or MahÄsthÄmaprapta can be used instead.[16]
In contemporary practice, the ritual is typically led by a monastic who takes on the role of the lead cantor, known as the weina (ē¶é£), who gives instructions throughout the ritual and delivers some of the prose sections in the liturgy through a style of Chinese Buddhist chanting called fanbai. The entire ritual is typically structurally divided into five main sections:
- Making offerings (äæ®ä¾é¤)
- Offering sincere praises (č®ęä¼øčŖ )
- Making postrations (ä½ē¦®)
- Making vows and upholding the mantra (ē¼é”ęå)
- Confession and repentance (ęŗę)
Making offerings
[edit]
This section begins with a recitation of a hymn by participants called the Yangzhi jingshui zan (ę„ęę·Øę°“č®, lit: "Praise of the Willow Branch and Pure Water"):
ę„ęę·Øę°“ļ¼
éēäøåć
ę§ē©ŗå «å¾·å©äŗŗå¤©ļ¼
ē¦å£½å»£å¢å»¶ć
ę» ē½Ŗę¶ęļ¼
ē«ē°åē“ č®ć
Willow branch and pure water,
Sprinkling across the three thousand realms.
Benefiting humans and devas with its nature of Emptiness and Eight Virtues,
Broadly bestowing fortune and extending longevity.
Extinguishing sins and absolving transgression,
A blazing fire blooms into a crimson lotus.
The willow branch and vase of pure water are common iconographic traits associated with Guanyin. They originated from various Esoteric Buddhist scriptures, where they were used to perform ritual functions such as healing, exorcising ghosts, and dispelling evil spirits.[17] Eminent Buddhist figures such as the Tiantai masters Zhiyi and Zunshi later wrote commentaries explaining their symbolic significance and included them in ritual manuals of practices centered around Guanyin, which solidified the link between them and Guanyin in the religious consciousness of Chinese Buddhism.[17]
The participants then chants "Namo Dabei Guanshiyin Pusa" (åē”大ę²č§äøé³č©č©), meaning "I take refuge in Guanshiyin Bodhisattva of Great Compassion", up to three times.[16] The participants then sincerely make one full prostration to the constantly abiding Triple Gems of the ten directions before kneeling down and holding up an offering plate filled with flowers, incense and rice to make the offering.[16] During this time, the participants chant verses expressing their wish that the fragrant flowers will decorate all immeasurable sacred Buddha Lands in the ten directions, and that they will accomplish the Bodhisattva path to the complete level of a TathÄgata.[16] The weina delivers a short prose section describing the participants' bodies pervading unobstructed throughout the ten directions and making offerings before the Triple Gem in all ten directions, as well as praying that the fragrance of the offerings reaches all sentient beings in the DharmadhÄtu and that, having received the fragrance, they give rise to bodhicitta.
Offering sincere praises
[edit]The participants then rise and chant verses in praise of Guanyin:
åē”éå»ę£ę³ęå¦ä¾ļ¼ē¾åč§äøé³č©č©ļ¼
ęå¦åå¾·ļ¼å ·å¤§ę ę²ļ¼
ę¼äøčŗ«åæļ¼ē¾åęē¼ļ¼
ē §č¦ę³ēļ¼č·ęē¾ēļ¼
令ē¼å»£å¤§éåæļ¼ęęå滿ē„åļ¼
ę°øé¢ę”éļ¼å¾ēä½åļ¼
ē”ééęļ¼ēŗčŗ«ę”ē¾ļ¼
č«č½ęęæļ¼ę使ę¶é¤ļ¼
äøę§č¾Æęļ¼ē¾ēę±é”ļ¼
ē令ęéļ¼ę±ŗå®ē”ēļ¼
č½ä½æéē²äøä¹ļ¼ę©ē»ä½å°ļ¼
åØē„ä¹åļ¼ęč«č½ēŖ®ļ¼
ę ęäøåæęøå½é 禮ć
I take refuge in Zhengfaming TathÄgata of the past, who is Guanshiyin Bodhisattva of the present!
Accomplished in wondrous merits, great in compassion.
With one body and mind, manifesting a thousand arms and eyes,
Illuminating the DharmadhÄtu, protecting sentient beings.
Leading all to attain the vast mind of the Way, teaching all to uphold the divine spell of perfect completion,
And so causing all to leave the evil paths forever, attaining rebirth before the Buddha.
Limitless grave transgressions, malignant plagues that blight one's body,
Even without hope of salvation, You cause them all to be extinguished.
Samadhi, eloquence and the wishes in this life,
All will be granted, without any doubt.
Able to lead all to swiftly attain the Three Vehicles and ascend to Buddhahood,
Your majestic powers can never be exhausted.
Thus, with one mind, do I take refuge and prostrate before You.
Making prostrations
[edit]In this section, participants make a series of prostrations to enlightened Buddhist figures. The list includes: ÅÄkyamuni Buddha (é迦ēå°¼äøå°), AmitÄbha Buddha (éæå½éäøå°), Qianguang Wang Jingzhu Buddha (åå ēéä½äøå°), all Buddhas of the past who number as many as ninety-nine kotis of sand in the Ganges River, Zhengfaming Buddha (ę£ę³ęäøå°), all Buddhas of the ten directions, the thousand Buddhas of the worthy kalpa and all Buddhas of the three periods, the Dabei zhou, all dhÄraį¹Ä«s of Guanyin as well as all dharmas that exist throughout the ten directions and three periods, Qianshou Qianyan Guanyin (åęåē¼å¤§ę 大ę²č§äøé³čŖåØč©č©), MahÄsthÄmaprÄpta (大å¢č³č©č©), Dharaniraja Bodhisattva (ēø½ęēč©č©), SÅ«ryaprabha (ę„å č©č©), Candraprabha (ęå č©č©), Ratnaraja Bodhisattva (寶ēč©č©), Bhaiį¹£ajyarÄja (č„ēč©č©), Bhaiį¹£ajyasamudgata (č„äøč©č©), Avataį¹saka Bodhisattva (čÆå“č©č©), MahÄvyÅ«ha Bodhisattva (大čå“č©č©), Ratnagarbha Bodhisattva (寶čč©č©), Guį¹agarbha Bodhisattva (å¾·čč©č©), Vajragarbha Bodhisattva (éåčč©č©), ÄkÄÅagarbha (č空čč©č©), Maitreya (å½åč©č©) Samantabhadra (ę®č³¢č©č©), MaƱjuÅrÄ« (ęę®åø«å©), all Bodhisattva MahÄsattvas of the ten directions and three periods, MahÄkÄÅyapa (ę©čØ¶čæ¦č), the innumerable ÅrÄvakas and Siming Zhili.[2] This is followed by more prostrations to the Triple Gem on behalf of devas and worldly spirits such as the Four Heavenly Kings and the Eight Legions of Devas and NÄgas.[15]
Making vows and upholding the mantra
[edit]
The weina then leads the participants in a recitation of the first ten vows made by Guanyin in the sūtra the which introduced the Dabei zhou, with the participants chanting one instance of "Namo Dabei Guanshiyin Pusa" between each vow:[16]
- I vow to swiftly learn all dharmas.
- I vow to swiftly attain the eye of wisdom.
- I vow to swiftly liberate all sentient being.
- I vow to swiftly attain good upaya.
- I vow to swiftly board the boat of prajƱÄ.
- I vow to swiftly cross over the sea of suffering.
- I vow to swiftly attain precepts, samadhi and the Way.
- I vow to swiftly climb the mountain of Nirvana.
- I vow to swiftly abide in the abode of the unconditioned.
- I vow to swiftly become one with the dharma-nature body.
After this, participants recite the last six vows Guanyin made in the sūtra in succession without chanting "Namo Dabei Guanshiyin Pusa" in between:[16]
- If I were to approach a mountain of blades, the mountain of blades will collapse and break by itself.
- If I were to approach a pool of fire, the fiery pool will dry up by itself.
- If I were to approach hell, hell will extinguish itself.
- If I were to approach hungry ghosts, the hungry ghosts will become full by themselves.
- If I were to approach asuras, their evil hearts will become subdued by themselves.
- If I were to approach animals, they will attain great wisdom by themselves.
Next, the participants chant "Namo Guanshiyin Pusa" and "Namo Amituofo" ten times each.[16] The participants then begin to recite the short introduction to the Dabei zhou in the sūtra where Guanyin makes several vows to not attain Buddhahood if beings who recite the Dabei zhou fall into the three lower realms of rebirth, are not born into Buddha lands or do not obtain unlimited samadhi and eloquence.[16] The participants then start reciting the Dabei zhou. up a total of twenty-one times or fourteen times in succession.[16] At the end of the recitation of the Dabei zhou, a short closing section from the sūtra describing the dharani shaking the earth, making heavenly rain and precious flowers fall, delighting the Buddhas of the ten directions, frightening heretics and evil-doers and inducing the audience to attain different levels of enlightenment is recited.[16]
Repentance
[edit]In this section, the participants perform more prostrations and chant a short verse vowing to cut off the three obstructions and reform their behaviour for the sake of all sentient beings.[16] The liturgy also includes a subsection allowing participants to reflect on the negative karma that they have accumulated since time immemorial while vowing to believe sincerely in cause and effect, repent of any wrongdoing or transgression and commit oneself to doing only wholesome deeds and dedicate oneself towards the liberation of all sentient beings from samsara.[16] After this, the repentance is concluded with the recitation of a repentance text affirming the Buddhist teachings regarding the buddha-nature inherent in all beings in the DharmadhÄtu, listing the various means by which one has committed grave transgressions in either this life or past lives, affirming the power of the Dabei zhou in eliminating the obstacles caused by such unskillful actions, confessing and repenting for all of one's offenses, affirming Guanyin's spiritual support in aiding one on the path to enlightenment, vowing to seek rebirth in AmitÄbha's Pure Land of SukhÄvatÄ« as well as to commit oneself to be complete in all dharanis and liberate all sentient beings in samsara.[16]
Next, the assembly reaffirms their refuge in the Buddhas of the ten directions, the Dharma of the ten directions, the Sangha of the ten directions, ÅÄkyamuni, AmitÄbha, Qianguang Wang Jingzhu Buddha, the Dabei zhou, Qianshou Qianyan Guanyin, MahÄsthÄmaprÄpta and Dharaniraja Bodhisattva.[16] After this, the assembly reiterates their refuge in the Triple Gem once again along with additional vows regarding the salvation of sentient beings in samsara.[16] The assembly then chants "Namo Dabei Guanshiyin Pusa" three more times.[16] The ritual then closes with the dedication of merits from the performance of the ritual to all sentient beings.[16]
Ritual manual
[edit]- Full digitalized texts of the ritual manual
-
Ritual manual published in 1937 by the World Buddhist Lay Association, which has since changed its name to the Shanghai Buddhist Lay Association in contemporary times.
-
Qing dynasty (1644ā1912) era ritual manual, written with gold ink and featuring illustrations.
See also
[edit]- Guanyin, the central figure in the rite
- NÄ«lakaį¹į¹ha DhÄraį¹Ä«, the main mantra which the rite utilizes
- Fanbai, style of Chinese Buddhist chanting which is typically used to perform the rite
- Shuilu Fahui, extensive Chinese Buddhist ceremony where the Dabei Chan is sometimes performed
- Yaoshi Bao Chan, a repentance ritual that is dedicated to Bhaisajyaguru
- Yujia Yankou
- Chinese Buddhist liturgy
- Suryukjae
- Monlam Prayer Festival
- Shuni-e
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t éč²ę (2017). åęē„禮ć大ę²åæåŖč”ę³ćä¹ē ē©¶ (thesis thesis) (in Chinese (Taiwan)).
- ^ a b c "The Water -Land Dharma Function Platform ritual and the Great Compassion Repentance ritual - ProQuest". www.proquest.com. ProQuestĀ 304764751. Retrieved 2025-04-08.
- ^ "The Chinese Buddhist Cultus: Common Public Rituals in PRC Monasteries Today". Journal of Chinese Buddhist Studies. 2022-05-05. Retrieved 2025-11-06.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Hong, De (2014). The development of Buddhist repentance in early medieval China (Doctor of Philosophy in Religious Studies thesis). University of the West.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Hong, De (2011). A study and translation of Compassionate Water Repentance Ritual (Master of Arts in Religious Studies thesis). University of the West.
- ^ Chandra (1988): p. 92.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Yü, Chün-fang (2001). Kuan-yin: The Chinese Transformation of Avalokitesvara. Columbia University Press. JSTOR 10.7312/yu--12028.
- ^ a b c d éč²ę (č) (September 2016). "åęē„禮ćåęē¼å¤§ę²åæåč”ę³ćęŗē¾©č©®é". å Øåä½åøč«ęčÆåē¼č”Øęč«ęéļ¼ē¬¬27å±ļ¼ (in Chinese): (B5ā1).
- ^ a b Beal, Samuel. "An Attempt to Translate from the Chinese a Work known as the Confessional Service of the Great Compassionate Kwan Yin, possessing 1000 Hands and 1000 Eyes." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland, 1866, pp. 403-426.
- ^ Chandra (1988): p. 16.
- ^ Bianchi, Ester; Campo, Daniela, eds. (2023). "Take the Vinaya as your master": monastic discipline and practices in modern Chinese Buddhism. Studies on East Asian religions. LeidenĀ ; Boston: Brill. ISBNĀ 978-90-04-53345-5.
- ^ Lepneva, Mariia (2023-01-01). "Refreshed Revival of Chinese Buddhism: The Vinaya Tradition of Baohua Mountain in the Eighteenth Century". Religions and Local Society in the Historical, Comparative, and Theoretical Perspectives: A Festschrift in Honour of Timothy Brook.
- ^ Lepneva, Mariia (2022-09-13). "Who Can Revive Buddhist Ordinations? Explaining the Eminence of Guxin Ruxin in Late Ming China". Religions. 13 (9): 844. doi:10.3390/rel13090844. ISSNĀ 2077-1444.
- ^ Zhou, Zhenru (2022-03-25). "Transcending History: (Re)Building Longchang Monastery of Mount Baohua in the Seventeenth Century". Religions. 13 (4): 285. doi:10.3390/rel13040285. ISSNĀ 2077-1444.
- ^ a b "ē¶ä»£å¤§ę²ęŗä¹ē ē©¶-仄åä½å±±č©ę寺ēŗä¾." PhD diss., 2016. https://nhuir.nhu.edu.tw/retrieve/53619/104NHU00183016-002.pdf
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Hong, Tsai-Hsia (2005). The Water-Land Dharma Function Platform Ritual and the Great Compassion Repentance Ritual (Doctor of Philosophy in Religious Studies thesis). University of the West.
- ^ a b Li, Wei (2025-03-27). "Cleaning and Healing: An Examination of the Ritual of Willow Twigs and Clean Water". Religions. 16 (4): 432. doi:10.3390/rel16040432. ISSNĀ 2077-1444.
External links
[edit]- Dabei Chan by Dharma Drum Mountain
- Dabei Chan at a temple belonging to Fo Guang Shan
- Dabei Chan by the Fo Guang Shan Buddhist Choir, a Buddhist musical group that records traditional fanbai chants affiliated with by Fo Guang Shan
- Dabei Chan at Luminary International Buddhist Society
- Dabei Chan at Kong Meng San Phor Kark See Monastery
- Dabei Chan at Kong Meng San Phor Kark See Monastery
- Dabei Chan at City of Ten Thousand Buddhas
