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僧堂

Pronunciations

Basic Meaning: saṃgha hall

Senses:

  • Literally, 'hall'   for the 'saṃgha'  . Because can also be translated as 'monk,'  僧堂 is often rendered in English as 'monks' hall.' That is not an error, but 'saṃgha hall' is a more apt translation, for two reasons. First, all of the buildings in a monastery are for use by monks, but the 僧堂 is the place where only the great assembly of monks 大衆 — a 'saṃgha' in the sense of a 'group' or 'collective' — is quartered. Monks who hold various monastic offices are not part of the great assembly: they have their own quarters where they perform their duties, keep their personal possessions, and sleep at night. Secondly, the 僧堂 has traditionally been considered one of the three most important buildings in a monastery, the first two being the buddha hall 佛殿 and the Dharma hall 法堂. Because the 'Three Treasures'  三寶 are the 'Buddha, dharma, and saṃgha'  佛法僧, the third building in this set is best called the 'saṃgha hall.'

    In Song and Yuan dynasty Chinese monasteries and the medieval Japanese Zen monasteries (such as Dōgenʼs Eiheiji 永平寺) that were modeled after them, the saṃgha hall was the central facility on the west side of a monastery compound. It was a large structure divided internally into an inner and an outer hall and surrounded by enclosed corridors that connected it with nearby ancillary facilities. The inner hall was further divided into front and rear sections and featured low, wide sitting platforms arranged in several blocks in the center of the floor space and along the walls. Enshrined on an altar in the center of the inner hall was an image of Mañjuśrī Bodhisattva, called the Sacred Monk, who was treated both as the tutelary deity of the hall and the highest ranking 'monk' in the assembly. Registered monks of the great assembly spent much of their time at their individual places on the platforms, sitting in meditation, taking their meals, and spreading out bedding for sleep at night. Their bowls were hung above their seats, and their few personal effects and monkish implements were stored in boxes at the rear of the platforms. Seats in the inner hall were also designated for the abbot and the monastic officers and assistants who directed the training there. Monks with no special duties were seated in order of seniority, according to years elapsed since ordination. Other officers, acolytes, and unregistered monks were assigned seating places in the outer hall, where the platforms were not deep enough to recline on. They would gather in the saṃgha hall for meals, ceremonies, and a few periods of meditation but slept elsewhere. Observances centered in the saṃgha hall included: recitations of buddha names to generate merit in support of prayers; rites marking the induction and retirement of monastic officers in the ranks of stewards and precepts; novice ordinations; sūtra chanting; prayer services sponsored by lay patrons, who would enter the hall to make cash donations and hear their prayers recited; and formal tea services. Apart from those group observances, however, the individual drinking of tea, sūtra reading or chanting (whether for study or devotional purposes), and writing were not allowed in the saṃgha hall, lest they interfere with the attitude of introspective concentration that monks were supposed to maintain there. Monks of the great assembly could engage in such activities only at their seats in the common quarters. Contrary to the claims of some modern scholarship, saṃgha halls were a standard feature of all major Buddhist monasteries in Song and Yuan dynasty China. The modes of practice that went on in them were neither invented by nor unique to monks belonging to the Zen school.

    In Kamakura period (1185–1333) Japan, there were a few Chinese-style monasteries not associated with the Zen tradition that had saṃgha halls, but Zen monks such as Dōgen 道元 and Keizan were in the forefront of the movement to implement saṃgha hall training. During that period, most Zen monasteries in Japan had saṃgha halls, but the divisiveness of competing lineages and the proliferation of mortuary sub-temples 塔頭 in the Muromachi period (1333–1573) resulted in the demise of those facilities for communal training. It was not until 1796 that a Song Chinese style saṃgha hall was rebuilt at Eiheiji 永平寺 and an effort was made to reinstate the modes of training there that had originally been established by Dōgen. Even today, there are only a handful of Song style saṃgha halls operating in Japan, all of them at Sōtō monasteries (Eiheiji 永平寺 and Sōjiji 總持寺 first among them).

    In Edo period (1600–1868) Japan, the term saṃgha hall 僧堂 came to refer to any Zen temple that operated as a training monastery, that is, a place with a meditation hall 禪堂 and a sizeable community of monks in training under a Zen master, as opposed to an ordinary parish temple which typically housed just a resident priest and a few disciples. In the revival of communal monastic practice that was sparked by the importation of so-called Ōbaku Zen from China in the seventeenth century, ordinary temples were converted into training monasteries by 'opening platforms'  開單, which is to say, building meditation halls. 〔五分律 T 1421.22.65b22

    [Griffith Foulk]
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    [Dictionary References]

    Bukkyō jiten (Ui) 664

    Bulgyo sajeon 500a

    Zengaku daijiten (Komazawa U.) 749a

    Iwanami bukkyō jiten 516

    A Glossary of Zen Terms (Inagaki) 379

    Japanese-English Buddhist Dictionary (Daitō shuppansha) 305b/339

    Zenrin shōkisen (Mujaku Dōchū) 67-68(with map)/31

    Record of Linji: Rinzairoku (Yanagida) 218-3(with map)

    Japanese-English Zen Buddhist Dictionary (Yokoi) 727

    Zen Dust (Sasaki) 222

    Zengo jiten (Iriya and Koga) 11-P26

    Bukkyōgo daijiten (Nakamura) 875c

    Fo Guang Dictionary 5739

    Ding Fubao

    Bukkyō daijiten (Mochizuki) (v.1-6)3093b,1690c, (v.9-10)538c

    Bukkyō daijiten (Oda) 1076-3*126-3-1



    Entry created: 2001-09-08

    Updated: 2009-11-23