
Published online:
17 November 2016
Published in print:
30 November 2014
Online ISBN:
9780824869786
Print ISBN:
9780824839277
Contents
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The Non-Action Teachings The Non-Action Teachings
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Venerating a written text Venerating a written text
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Social, gender, and geographical background Social, gender, and geographical background
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Messianic expectations or heretic ideas? Messianic expectations or heretic ideas?
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The movement as a Reformation movement The movement as a Reformation movement
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Chapter
8 Rediscovering Lay Buddhism
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Pages
219–234
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Published:November 2014
Cite
ter Haar, Barend J., 'Rediscovering Lay Buddhism', Practicing Scripture: A Lay Buddhist Movement in Late Imperial China (Honolulu, HI , 2014; online edn, Hawai'i Scholarship Online, 17 Nov. 2016), https://doi.org/10.21313/hawaii/9780824839277.003.0008, accessed 17 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
In this final chapter, I return to some core issues, such as the important of venerating scripture, the kind of people who joined the movement, and the much-asserted messianic background of the movement. I conclude with a brief comparison of the Non-Action Teachings with the Reformation of sixteenth century Europe, showing some similarities (the focus on agency of the lay believer) and differences (the unimportance of the monastic community in the Chinese case).
Subject
Buddhism
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