Seonamsa is one of the head monasteries of the Taego Order, which includes over 8,000 monastics and 3,100 temples. What distinguishes the Taego Order from other forms of
Korean Buddhism like the
Jogye Order of Seon is that it allows ordained priests to marry, although
nuns must remain celibate. This custom of married priests is a remnant of
Korea under Japanese rule. However, not all Taego priests are married. This order also includes traditional
monks. Monks tend to remain more separate from society and live in mountain temples, whereas the married clerics are more like parish priests, though this is not always the case. According to the Patriarch of the Taego Order Overseas Parish, Venerable Dr. Jongmae Kenneth Park, the Taego and Jogye orders follow the same
Prātimokṣa, the
vinaya of the
Dharmaguptaka also followed in Vietnam and China. There are 250 bhiksu precepts, 348 bhiksuni precepts, and 10
śrāmaṇera and
śrāmaṇerī (novice) precepts. However, celibacy is optional. Both the Taego and the Jogye use the
Brahma Net Sutra, which contain 10
bodhisattva vows and 48 lesser precepts. Contrary to some misconceptions, the Taego Order does not use bodhisattva vows as the basis of its ordinations. The Taego Order formed in the 1970s from the monks left out of the then Christian-dominated military government's officially recognized group of monks that became the
Jogye Order. This group consisted of 300 celibate
Seon practitioners. One result of this split was that the ritual masters all remained with what became the Taego Order. Today, the Taego Order preserves the full ritual tradition of Korean Buddhism, including the
Yeongsanjae, which is a reenactment of the Buddha's preaching of the
Lotus Sutra on
Vulture Peak. This ritual is held each year at
Bongwonsa on June 6, South Korea's Memorial Day, in part to pray for the dead from the
Korean War. == History ==