Dear Bro n Sis, 
 
Akan sangat baik sekali jika ada di antara anda yang bersedia menerjemahkan 
artikel singkat ini untuk konsumsi publik. Dan seumpamanya ada di antara anda 
yang email ke saya, maaf, saya baru akan dapat membalas kamis depan karena 
keluar kota.
 
Anumodana
 
JL
  "Completing the Peace"- Master Yin Shun (1906-2005)By Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi, The 
Buddhist Channel, July 4, 2005


"May I be able to revisit this human world of suffering and hardship life after 
life, and dedicate myself to extol the voice of perfect enlightenment for 
humanity!" 





Taipei, Taiwan -- The Chinese expression used to describe the death of an 
eminent monk or nun, yuan ji, literally means "completion of the peace." On 
June 3rd, at 10:07 am in Taiwan, the Venerable Master Yin Shun "completed the 
peace," bringing to an end a lifetime that spanned almost a full century. The 
passing of Master Yin Shun is especially significant for us here at Bodhi 
Monastery, for he was the teacher of our own founder and guiding elder, Master 
Jen Chun. He had thus been in a sense the "spiritual patron" of our monastery 
and its affiliate, the Yin Shun Foundation. While we feel poignantly the loss 
of this great mentor, we also celebrate the end of a life nobly lived in the 
service of the Dharma and all humankind. 

During the course of his long life, Master Yin Shun came to be recognized as 
the foremost Chinese scholar-monk of the modern age, with close to fifty 
volumes to his credit. He had also established a Buddhist seminary, FuYan 
Institute of Buddhist Studies, in Hsin Chu, and a lecture hall, HuiJi, in 
Taipei. Master Yin Shun was not only a scholar, however; he was also a 
visionary and a reformer.

Unlike the academic scholar, his erudition was not motivated by a mere thirst 
for factual knowledge about Buddhism, but by a desire to understand the 
fundamental truth of the Dharma -- to understand Buddhism in its depths and as 
a whole. This urge for understanding was in turn driven by a conviction that 
the Buddha's teaching provided the key to rescue the world from suffering, that 
it offered a "message of world benevolence." When he first embraced the Dharma, 
however, he found the Chinese Buddhism that he encountered singularly unfit to 
meet this urgent challenge. He thus set out to use his understanding of 
Buddhist history and philosophy to transform the face of Chinese Buddhism and 
bring it into accord with the modern age. 

Though in his early years he faced stiff opposition from a conservative 
monastic establishment, especially after he migrated to Taiwan, for the past 
three decades he has been hailed as the most seminal thinker in the Chinese 
Buddhist world. In the eyes of many he would rank with the greatest Chinese 
masters of all time. A mark of the esteem he won was seen in the thousands of 
monastics and lay devotees who attended his funeral in Hsin Chu on June 11th. 
Even the president of Taiwan came to pay him farewell homage. 

It is significant that Master Yin Shun did not come from a Buddhist family and 
thus did not receive the Dharma as part of his family heritage. He had to 
discover it at the end of a long and painful spiritual search that led him 
through Taoism, Confucianism, and even Christianity, and brought him to the 
edge of despair. Several years after he began to study Buddhism, both his 
parents died in close succession, and this left him free to fulfill his heart's 
desire to enter the homeless life of a monk. He received ordination in 1930, 
but his joy was soon overcast by shadows. When he saw how Buddhism was 
practiced in the China of his time, he was struck by the discrepancy between 
the Buddha Dharma he read about in the sacred texts and the stark actuality of 
Chinese Buddhism that he could observe around him: a religion mired in 
superstition, empty ritual, and blind devotion. This gap became the problem 
that obsessed him and that he sought to rectify in his writings. 

To understand the degenerative tendencies in Chinese Buddhism, Master Yin Shun 
made a thorough study of the Chinese Tripitaka, going back to the Indian 
origins of Buddhism. Indian Buddhism thus became the focus of his scholarship. 
Early in his scholarly career he wrote a detailed history of Indian Buddhism 
and later produced several specialized studies of different topics in Indian 
Buddhist history. These include an insightful attempt to reconstruct the 
process by which the canonical collections of the early Buddhist schools were 
compiled; a volume on the development of the Abhidharma systems; and a 
1300-page work on the origin and early history of Mahayana Buddhism. His 
writings also explored most of the Indian philosophical schools, with special 
emphasis on the Madhyamaka, which he considered the high point in the evolution 
of Buddhist thought. In The Way to Buddhahood, available in English translation 
(Wisdom Publications), the Master synthesized all the "vehicles" of Buddhism in
 accordance with a comprehensive scheme that unifies all the different Buddhist 
teachings into a single graded path. 

Despite his vast achievements in the sphere of Buddhist scholarship, Master Yin 
Shun was not interested in knowledge for its own sake. His scholarship was 
driven, not by an urge for abstract knowledge, but by a determination to bring 
to light the potential of Buddhism as a world-redeeming, world-illuminating 
force. The transformed and purified form of Buddhism that Master Yin Shun 
advocated, which constituted his special platform, was what he called "Buddhism 
for the human realm." Whereas many Chinese regarded Buddhism as a protection 
against ghosts and demons or as a ticket to a heavenly rebirth, he saw the 
Buddha's teachings as a guide to the conduct of life in this world, the human 
realm in which we dwell. 

His approach to Buddhism thus sought to recover the human-centered side of 
Early Buddhism as well as of the early Mahayana. It also harmonized with the 
rich humanistic tradition of indigenous Chinese thought. However, for Master 
Yin Shun, the practice of Dharma was to be applied to life in this world not 
solely for mundane benefits -- and this is an important qualification -- but 
because this world provides the proper field for developing the qualities 
needed to achieve the ultimate, transcendent Buddhist goal: perfect Buddhahood. 

The "human vehicle" is not self-sufficient, but a means to enter the Buddha 
vehicle. As a Mahayana Buddhist, Master Yin Shun gave precedence to the 
practice of the bodhisattva path, but he emphasized the continuity of this path 
with the practices advocated in the Early Buddhism of the Agamas and Nikayas. 
He thus helped to recover this ancient stratum of Buddhist thought and 
practice, long lost in Chinese Buddhism. He did not give much credence to such 
ideas as "rapid attainment of Buddhahood" or "becoming a Buddha in this very 
life," nor did he encourage the quest for rebirth in the Pure Land of Amitabha 
Buddha.

He was particularly resistant to the deification of the buddhas and 
bodhisattvas and the "deity practices" of late Indian Mahayana, which he 
considered largely responsible for the decline of Buddhism in India. He 
stressed instead what he calls the "normal" bodhisattva path, which revolves 
around the generation of the bodhicitta, the cultivation of great compassion, 
the practice of the six paramitas, and the clarification of right view based on 
the wisdom of the middle way. His own great wish, which he often expressed in 
his writings, was to be reborn in the human world again and again and to follow 
the bodhisattva path as a human being. 

Master Yin Shun did not try to build a personality cult around himself, nor did 
he allow others to turn him into an object of adoration. As a man he was 
simple, humble, and unassuming; he always stressed the central importance of 
the Dharma, not of himself.

During his life he was a true example of the Buddhist teaching of selflessness, 
which he himself explained with depth and clarity in his writings. Though his 
passing deprives us of his physical presence, he will live on in his teachings, 
above all in his books. It remains a major project for Buddhist scholarship in 
the West to see that these are translated into English.



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