Jōdo Shinshū
, also known as Shin Buddhism or True Pure Land Buddhism, is a Japanese tradition of Pure Land Buddhism founded by Shinran. Other names for this tradition include Monto-shū and Ikkō-shū.
Shin Buddhism is the most widely practiced branch of Buddhism in Japan, and its membership is claimed to include 10 percent of all Japanese citizens. The school is based on the Pure Land teachings of Shinran, which are based on those of earlier Pure Land masters Hōnen, Shandao and Tanluan, all of whom emphasized the practice of nembutsu as the primary means to obtain post-mortem birth in the Pure Land of Sukhavati.
Shinran taught that enlightenment cannot be realized through one’s own self-power, whether by moral cultivation, meditation, or ritual practice, but only through the other-power of Amida Buddha’s compassionate Vow. Therefore, in Shin Buddhism, the nembutsu is not a meritorious deed or practice that produces merit and liberation, but an expression of joyful gratitude for the assurance of rebirth in the Pure Land, which has already been granted by Amida’s inconceivable wisdom and compassion. Doctrinally, Jōdo Shinshū is grounded in Shinran’s magnum opus, the Kyōgyōshinshō, which presents a comprehensive exegesis of Pure Land thought based on Indian and Chinese Mahāyāna sources. Shinran’s synthesis reframes the Pure Land path as the culmination of Mahāyāna Buddhism, emphasizing ideas like true faith, other-power, the abandonment of self-power, the nembutsu of gratitude, and the all-embracing compassion of Amida Buddha's Original Vow.
After Shinran's death, his followers organized his teachings into traditions that eventually took institutional form through various temple lineages like the Honganji, which became major religious and social forces in medieval and early modern Japan. Figures like Kakunyo, Zonkaku and Rennyo further developed Shin Buddhist doctrine and practice through their teaching and scholarship, expanding on the foundations laid by Shinran. According to James Dobbins, "historically, the Shinshū derives its strength from the great number of ordinary people drawn to its simple doctrine of salvation through faith". Its simple and popular message, along with the tireless work of leaders like Shinran and Rennyo led Shin to become the largest Buddhist school in Japan by the sixteenth century.
In the modern era, the tradition also expanded to the West, with Japanese diaspora organizations like Buddhist Churches of America developing unique expressions of Shin Buddhism. Jōdo Shinshū continues today as a central expression of lay-oriented Japanese Buddhism, emphasizing humility, gratitude, and faith in Amida’s boundless vow that carries all devotees to the Pure Land after death.
History
Shinran
lived during the late Heian to early Kamakura period, a time of turmoil for Japan when the Emperor was stripped of political power by the shōguns. Shinran's Hino family was a cadet branch of the Fujiwara that had lost its former status but remained known for scholarly service. Early bereavements, including the probable deaths of both parents, placed Shinran's upbringing in the care of his uncles. In 1181, amid the instability of the late Heian period, he entered monastic life at age nine under the Tendai prelate Jien and received the name Han’en. For the next two decades he lived as a modest hall-monk on Mount Hiei, engaged primarily in liturgy, chanting, and Pure Land–oriented practices associated with Genshin’s lineage, though little else from this period can be historically verified.Around 1201 Shinran, troubled by his inability to attain spiritual progress, undertook a retreat at the Rokkaku-dō. There, he reportedly experienced a revelatory vision of Prince Shōtoku directing him to the Pure Land master Hōnen. On meeting Hōnen that same year, Shinran adopted exclusive nembutsu practice and joined the growing community of Hōnen’s followers, abandoning other Tendai disciplines. Shinran played an important role in copying and transmitting Pure Land texts, and Hōnen’s entrusting of Shinran with a copy of the Senchakushū signified recognition of him as a disciple. At some point Shinran also married entering a new status as a cleric who neither fully retained nor fully relinquished monastic identity.
During this period, Hōnen taught exclusive nembutsu practice to many people in Kyoto and amassed a substantial following but also came under increasing criticism by the Buddhist establishment, who continued to criticize Hōnen even after they signed a formal pledge to behave with good conduct and to not slander other Buddhists. In 1207 a political scandal led to the suppression of Hōnen’s movement. Two disciples were executed, while Hōnen and others, including Shinran, were defrocked and exiled. Shinran was sent to Echigo, where he and his wife Eshinni lived under difficult but mitigated conditions due to local family connections. Shinran and Eshinni had several children.
file:Sugawa dojo.jpg|thumb|An old Shin dōjō in Toyama Prefecture
After their amnesty in 1211, Shinran remained in Echigo for two more years before moving to the Kantō region. During this transition he definitively abandoned complex practices after reflecting on their insufficiency compared to entrusting faith in Amida’s vow. He adopted the names Shinran and Gutoku, identifying himself as “neither monk nor layman.” Over the following two decades he taught throughout Kantō, forming networks of lay communities that met in small dojos to recite the nembutsu and study his guidance. Through active correspondence and sustained teaching, he gathered numerous disciples across varied social strata.
In the 1230s Shinran returned to Kyōto, where he spent his later years writing, compiling, and transmitting Pure Land doctrine. His major work, the Kyōgyōshinshō, presented an extensive scriptural anthology with doctrinal commentary defending Hōnen’s teaching and articulating Shinran’s own understanding of faith He also produced Japanese didactic hymns, commentaries, compilations of Hōnen’s writings, and many letters addressing disciples’ concerns. Though living simply and relying on support from Kantō followers, he remained intellectually active well into old age. His final years were marked by both literary productivity and personal turbulence, including the need to disown his son Zenran for disruptive conduct and false doctrinal claims. Through his teaching, writing, and community networks, Shinran laid the foundations for what later became Jōdo Shinshū.
Shinran's daughter, Kakushinni, came to Kyoto with Shinran, and cared for him in his final years. Shinran's wife Eshinni also wrote many letters which provide critical biographical information on Shinran's life. These letters are currently preserved in the Nishi Hongan temple in Kyoto. Shinran died at the age of 90 in 1263.
After Shinran
From the thirteenth century to the fifteenth century, Shin Buddhism grew from a small movement into one of the largest and most influential schools in Japan. Its popularity among the lower classes in the countryside was a major reason for this rapid growth. In many rural villages, especially in semi-autonomous villages that were not tied to rural estates, Shin Buddhist congregations became a central part of village life. Pure Land missionaries traveled widely during this time spreading the Pure Land teaching, and Shin Buddhist temples were in a good position to absorb many of the new converts and to minister to the lower classes. During this period of sect formation, Shin Buddhists developed their school's doctrine, forms of worship, and systems of religious authority based around temples.Shinran did not concern himself with establishing a temple or any organization in his lifetime, instead, his followers returned to their communities after learning from him, and created informal groups of lay Pure Land followers. These groups met in dōjōs, which were usually small private residences turned into meeting spaces. They met on the 25th of each month, recited the nembutsu and listened to sermons or sutras. They used vertical scrolls with the nembutsu as their main object of worship. Often the calligraphy on these scrolls would be from Shinran himself. Unlike temples, dōjōs were usually run collectively by all members rather than hierarchically by a single priest. Members would usually agree to follow certain rules of conduct which were posted for all to see. Dōjōs were supported by the private donations of all members, unlike established temples which relied on their estates and on elite support. Because much of Shin Buddhism was based on networks of private dōjōs, it did not suffer like other schools from the collapse of the provincial estate system during the 15th and 16th centuries.
Shinran kept in touch with the network of his followers through letters, many of which survive. After his death, his family members and key disciples continued to support and lead local communities through a loose network of groups and temples. Around eighty major disciples of Shinran are known from the sources. Some of the most important communities include those of Shimbutsu, of his son-in-law Kenchi in Takada, the congregation founded by Shōshin in Yokosone, and Shinkai's in Kashima.
A "fairly representative picture" of early Shin religious life can be found in the following passage from a Tendai polemical text:
At the present time lay men and women of the single-minded nembutsu gather to sing the wasan hymns composed by the exile named Gutoku Zenshin and to chant the nembutsu at length in unison. In the “Larger Pure Land Sutra,” where it describes the characteristics of the three classes born in Pure Land, there is the phrase, “The single-minded and exclusive Amida nembutsu”. They take this to be the central message . Pointing out the appearance of the key phrase “single-minded nembutsu,” they refuse to recite the “Smaller Pure Land Sutra,” nor will they perform praise-singing at the six designated times of day. Rather, when men and women do their religious practices, they exert themselves, chanting the six character name, and they sing in unison the wasan hymns of . They are not admonished against such impurities as meat eating, nor do they concern themselves with clerical mantle, robes, rosary, or full attire. Even if they put on a robe, they do not drape the clerical mantle across it, and they wear it over their silk narrow-sleeve gown of various colors. They do not set up monuments to offer up religious merit to the dead, and they teach that one should not observe such things as prohibitions or taboos. This is folly.Shinran's teachings spread in the context of Kamakura period Pure Land Buddhism, a movement that was seen as heretical by most of the orthodox schools of Japanese Buddhism at the time. The Pure Land movement was very internally diverse, and different groups within engaged in intense debates about key issues. These included the debate between reciting the nembutsu many times or just once, and the debate on whether wrong deeds and violation of precepts were made acceptable by one's recitation of the nembutsu, a view which was deemed heretical by most of the major Pure Land institutions and temples at the time.
Shinran's teaching focused on faith and de-emphasized the keeping of clerical precepts or extensive recitation of the nembutsu. As such, Shin followers were often criticized as heretical, even by other Pure Land Buddhists. The Chinzei branch of Jōdo-shū for example, attacked Shin Buddhism as just another form of the single recitation doctrine of Kōsai, which it associated with the licensed evil heresy. This was not an accurate critique since Shinran had explicitly rejected both views, but it was a damaging charge nevertheless. In response, Shin Buddhist leaders like Kakunyo and Zonkaku worked to defend and establish Jōdo Shinshū as a viable and orthodox tradition, critiquing the "licensed evil" view along with other heresies and developing a scholastically robust tradition.