Monastic discipline Zhongfeng Mingben lived after the "golden age of Chan" of the Tang and the proliferation of Chan during the Tang. His age was regarded as an age of
mofa (
"Degenerate age of the Law"). Zhongfeng Mingben attributed this to a lack of monastic discipline and a lack of personal dedication by monks, and tried to counter this by writing a monastic code, the ''Huan-chu ch'ing-kuei
(Jpn. Genju shingi
), in 1317. This work influenced Musō Soseki, a contemporary of Zhongfeng Mingben, when he wrote his guidelines for monasteries and monks, the Rinsen kakun''.
Gong-an Zhongfeng Mingben was the first to compare the sayings and teachings of the 'masters of the old' with the public cases of the court, the
gong-an. According to Zhongfeng Mingben ''gōng'àn
abbreviates gōngfǔ zhī àndú
(公府之案牘, Japanese kōfu no antoku
– literally the andu
"official correspondence; documents; files" of a gongfu
"government post"), which referred to a "public record" or the "case records of a public law court" in Tang-dynasty China. Kōan/gong'an'' thus serves as a
metaphor for principles of reality beyond the private or subjective opinion of one person and a teacher may test the student's ability to recognize and understand that principle.
Japanese Zen Several Japanese Buddhists came to China to study with Zhongfeng Mingben on Mount T'ien-mu. They formed the Genjū line of the
Rinka monasteries, the more independent monasteries outside the cities and the
Five Mountain System of government-approved temples. Kosen Ingen was the most important of these Japanese students. Other students include Kohō Kakumyō, a teacher of
Bassui Tokushō, and
Jakushitsu Genkō (1290–1367), the founder of
Eigen-ji. Although they never met, Zhongfeng Mingben had a close affinity with
Musō Soseki, via the Japanese students who studied with him.
Wild fox slobber Hakuin's warning against "wild fox slobber" can be traced back to Zhongfeng Mingben. The term "wild fox" points to teachers who lead students astray by giving wrong information. The term wild fox is also the name of the
Wild fox koan. Whereas Zhongfeng Mingben warns against the impossible attempt of totally silencing the mind, Hakuin uses the term in a more positive sense, to denote the workings of koans, which "possess the power to cause sudden death in students, raising the great doubt in their minds that will lead them to the 'great death' and the rebirth of
satori and
enlightenment". ==Criticism==