Ryōnin
Ryōnin was a Tendai Buddhist monk in the late Heian period and the founder of the Yuzu Nembutsu sect.
Ryōnin was born the son of Tomita no Shō, the feudal lord of Owari Province. When he was young, he was called Yoshihito. At the age of 12, he left home and began studying Buddhism near Mount Hiei. After his education, he worked in the Jitsuhōbō as a temple priest, who continuously practiced nembutsu in the Jōgyō-Sanmaidō Hall, where Amida Buddha is the main object of worship.
In later years, Yoshihito retired to Ōhara on the outskirts of Kyoto, called himself Ryōnin, and began a life in which he recited a portion of the Lotus Sutra and the nembutsu 60,000 times a day as a priest and practiced it as a method of incantation in the morning, at noon, and at sunset. According to the illustrated text scroll "Yūzū−Nembutsu Engi Emaki", which was produced in 1314 during the Kamakura period, when the idea of the Yūzū−Nembutsu was completed and spread, Ryōnin was immersed in Amida Buddha at the age of 46 and taught Nembutsu to the people. He realized that the Nembutsu led the common people to reach enlightenment more quickly.
At the request of the retired emperor Toba, Ryōnin built the Dainenbutsu-ji temple in 1127. Ryōnin is also known for reciting the "Tendai Shōmyō", the musical tradition of the Tendai school of Buddhism, as a sutra and for reviving and systematizing it as "Ōhara Shōmyō". He died in 1132 in the Ōhararaigō-in temple at the age of 61.
In this tradition, from the 14th century onwards, Yūzū-Nembutsu teachings became important, which emphasized the power of the Nembutsu of people and not the power of vows to Amida Buddha. In 1773, Ryōnin was posthumously named Shōō Daishi.