Pure Land is a Mahayana Buddhist concept referring to a transcendent realm emanated by a buddha or bodhisattva which has been purified by their activity and sustaining power. Pure lands are said to be places without the sufferings of samsara and to be beyond the three planes of existence. Many Mahayana Buddhists aspire to be reborn in a Buddha's pure land after death.
The term "Pure Land" is particular to East Asian Buddhism (). In Sanskrit Buddhist sources, the equivalent concept is called a buddha-field () or more technically a pure buddha-field (). It is also known by the Sanskrit term (Buddha land). In Tibetan Buddhism meanwhile, the term "pure realms" ( Wylie: ) is also used as a synonym for buddhafield.
The various traditions that focus on attaining rebirth in a Pure Land are often called Pure Land Buddhism. The English term is ambiguous. It can refer to a way of practice which is found in most Mahayana traditions which employ various means to attain birth in a pure land. This specific concept is termed the "Pure Land Dharma gate" () in East Asian Buddhism. The English term can also refer to specific Buddhist schools or sects which focus on Pure Land practice. Specifically these would be termed () in Chinese and in Japanese.
Pure Lands are also found in the non-Buddhist traditions of Taoism and Bon.
The Mahavastu defines a buddha-field as a realm where "a tathagata, a holy one, fully and perfectly enlightened, is to be found, lives, exists and teaches the Dharma, for the benefit and happiness of the great body of beings, men and gods."
The Indian Mahayana sutras describe many buddha-fields. Mahayana sources hold that there are an infinite number of buddhas, each with their own buddha-field where they teach the Dharma and where sentient beings can be reborn into (due to their good karmic acts). A buddha-field is a place where bodhisattvas can more easily progress spiritually on the bodhisattva path. Jan Nattier has argued that this idea became popular because the traditional understanding of the extreme length of the bodhisattva path seemed very difficult and training under a buddha in a buddha-field (especially prepared to train bodhisattvas) was seen as a faster way to buddhahood, known as stream winning.
Sentient beings who are reborn in these pure buddha-fields due to their good karma also contribute to the development of a Buddha-field, as can bodhisattvas who are able to travel there. These buddha-fields are therefore powerful places which are very advantageous to spiritual progress.
According to Indian sources, the bodhisattva path, by ending all defilements, culminates in the arising of a purified buddha-field, which is the manifestation and reflection of a Buddha's activity. Mahayana sources state that bodhisattvas like Avalokiteà Âvara and Manjushri will obtain their own buddha-fields after they attain full buddhahood. In the Lotus Sutra, Buddha's close followers, such as à ÂÃÂriputra, MahÃÂkÃÂà Âyapa, Subhà «ti, MaudgalyÃÂyana and Buddha's son RÃÂhula are also predicted to attain their own Pure Lands. The relative time-flow in the Pure Lands may be different, with a day in one Pure Land being equivalent to years in another.
Mahayana sources speak of three kinds of buddha-fields: pure, impure, and mixed. An example of an "impure" field is often this world (called Sahàâ âÂÂthe world to be endured"), Sakyamuni's field. Purified fields include Amitabha's buddha-field of Sukhavati. Some sutras say that Sakyamuni chose to come to an impure world due to his vast compassion.
However, not all Mahayana texts agree that Sakyamuni's world is impure. Numerous Mahayana sutras, such as the Pañcaviá¹Âà ÂatisÃÂhasrikàprajñÃÂpÃÂramitÃÂ, Lankavatara, Vimalakirti, and Lotus Sutras, also state that this dualism between purity and impurity is illusory and instead state that even this world is a pure buddha-field.
Thus, according to the Vimalakirti, this seemingly impure world is actually pure. It only appears impure because the deluded and impure minds of sentient beings perceive it like that. As Paul Williams explains: "The impurity that we see is the result of impure awareness, and also the Buddha's compassion in creating a world within which impure beings can grow. Thus the real way to attain a Pure Land is to purify one's own mind. Put another way, we are already in the Pure Land if we but knew it. Whatever the realm, if it is inhabited by people with enlightened pure minds then it is a Pure Land."
Numerous Mahayana sources also connect the concept of a purified buddhafield (parià Âuddha-buddhaká¹£etra) with the purity of one's own mind. Hence, the Vimalakirti sutra states: "the bodhisattva who wishes to purify his buddhaká¹£etra should, first of all, skillfully adorn his own mind. And why? Because to the extent that the mind of a bodhisattva is pure is his buddhaká¹£etra purified."
Nakamura (1980, 1987: p. 207) establishes the Indian background of the padma imagery of the field which is evident iconographically, as well as in motif and metaphor:
The Theravadin PÃÂḷi literature, including the PÃÂḷi Canon, contains various references to "Buddha-fields" (buddhakhetta). One example is a PÃÂḷi Canon text called BuddhÃÂpadÃÂna which discusses the nature of Buddha-fields where many Buddhas reside, describing it as a kind of palace decorated with amazing features like many jewels and lotus flowers. The text states that there are numerous Buddhas with such fields in the ten directions, "as many as are there the numerous jewels, both in the heaven above and on the earth below." Another PÃÂḷi text, the Buddhavamsa, describes how the Buddha is able to use his supernormal powers to generate jewelled walkways and pillars for the benefit of others.
Buddhaghosa in his Vishuddhimagga discusses three types of Buddha-fields, which may be pure, impure, or mixed:
SukhÃÂvatë ("The Blissful") is by far the most popular pure land in East Asian Mahayana Buddhism. It is also the main goal of Pure Land Buddhism, which is centered around faith and devotion to AmitÃÂbha Buddha as the means of attaining rebirth in his pure land. It is also a popular pure land in Tibetan Buddhism as well. The key canonical teachings on SukhÃÂvatë are found in the "three pure land sutras", the main sources for East Asian Pure Land Buddhism: the Smaller SukhÃÂvatë-vyà «ha (T 366), the Longer SukhÃÂvatëvyà «ha Sà «tra, and the Amitayus Contemplation Sutra (i.e. The Contemplation Sutra).
According to Mahayana scriptures, in his past life, Amitabha was a devoted king of a joyous kingdom in a distant eon who renounced his throne to become a monk and vowed to attain buddhahood. He made forty-eight vows which focus on the greatness of his future pure land, pledging that he would not accept buddhahood if any of these vows went unfulfilled. The vows are dedicated to establishing a pure realm accessible to all beings who aspired to be reborn there. This monk would ultimately become Buddha Amitabha. His vows were grounded in hearing his name ("Amitabha"), establishing virtue, and dedicating merit toward rebirth in this pure land.
Some Mahayana sutra teachings say that after Amitabha attains final nirvana, the successors of Amitabha in SukhÃÂvatë will be Avalokiteà Âvara, followed by MahÃÂsthÃÂmaprÃÂpta.
There are numerous East Asian texts discussing the various experiences of Pure Land Buddhists who have gone to the Pure land or had a vision of Sukhavati. Some Buddhists and followers of other religions claimed to have seen Sukhavati and numerous East Asian popular faiths and cults also discuss Sukhavati.
The MahÃÂyÃÂna MahÃÂparinirvÃÂá¹Âa Sà «tra states that à ÂÃÂkyamuni Buddha has his own Pure Land which is far away and is called "Unsurpassable" (Chinese: Wúshèng ç¡åÂÂ). à ÂÃÂkyamuni Buddha is said to manifest from his Pure Land into our world in order to teach the Dharma.
à ÂÃÂkyamuni Buddha is also associated with the assembly in open space over Vulture Peak (éÂÂ鷲山éÂÂ迦淨åÂÂ), which is the site of the preaching of the Lotus Sutra. Tiantai tradition holds that while the founder Zhiyi was chanting the Lotus Sutra, he had a vision of this pure assembly. His teacher Nanyue Huisi is said to have told Zhiyi that they had met in a previous life at this assembly. The Japanese monk Nichiren taught his disciples that through faith in the Lotus Sutra, one could be reborn in the pure land of Vulture Peak after death, promoting it as an alternative postmortem destination to Sukhavati.
Japanese Buddhist schools like Tendai and Nichiren Buddhism see à ÂÃÂkyamuni's pure land as being continuous with this world. This becomes pronounced in Nichiren Buddhism, which affirms the non-duality of this world and the pure land of Vulture peak. Even when addressing one's postmortem destination, Nichiren insisted that the "pure land of Vulture Peak"âÂÂwhile including the deceased faithfulâÂÂis also a sacred reality accessible in this world through faith in the Lotus Sutra. For Nichiren, the samsaric world itself, when properly understood and engaged through faith, is the eternally abiding pure land. This leads to the attainment of buddhahood in one's present body (sokushin jà Âbutsu), without rejecting samsara or aspiring to a realm beyond it. This pure land was also associated with the Land of Tranquil Light (jakkà Âdo å¯Âå ÂÃ¥ÂÂ), the supreme pure land in the Tiantai system.
According to the BuddhÃÂvataá¹Âsaka Sà «tra, the whole universe is a vast pure buddha-field which has been purified by the cosmic Vairocana Buddha. This is the view of Pure Land which is found in the Chinese Huayan tradition and in Chinese Esoteric Buddhism. According to this view, our world is just one small part of this universal Pure Land which is named: "Ocean of worlds, whose surface and inside are decorated with an arrangement of flowers" (Sanskrit: Kusumatalagarbha-vyà «hÃÂlamkÃÂra-lokadhÃÂtusamudra). It is also called the "Lotus Treasury World" (Chinese: è¯èµä¸ÂçÂÂ, Skt. Padmagarbha-lokadhÃÂtu), since it is an array of billions of worlds in a lotus flower shape.
Furthermore, Ghanavyà «ha (Dense Array or Secret Adornment) is considered to be the supreme pure buddhafield specific to Vairocana. It appears in Mahayana sutras like the Ghanavyà «ha Sutra. According to this sutra, by following virtuous teachers, hearing and contemplating Buddha Dharma, and letting go of all concepts and craving, one can be reborn there, achieve enlightenment, and manifest in countless ways to help all beings.
In East Asian Esoteric Buddhist traditions, like Shingon, the dual mandalas of the Vajradhatu and Garbhadhatu mandalas are considered to be the representation of the buddhafield of MahÃÂvairocana Buddha, the supreme cosmic Buddha.
The "Inner Court of Tushita" (å ÂçÂÂå §é¢) is Maitreya's pure land, which is actually located in the deva realm of Tuá¹£ita. Some Buddhist scriptures teach that Maitreya is currently teaching at the Inner Court of Tuá¹£ita. Some Buddhist Masters, such as Xuanzang, expressed a wish to be reborn there.
Other Buddhist monks, such as Xuyun, also aspired to be reborn in the Inner Court of Tuá¹£ita in order to meet Maitreya.
The Inner Court of Tuá¹£ita was historically a popular place for Buddhists to wish to be reborn in; however, the vast majority of Pure Land Buddhists today hope to be reborn in Sukhavati.
Some followers of the Chinese Salvationist religion called Yiguandao have also claimed to have traveled there.
Later Indian Buddhism developed a schema of five main Buddhas (called the Five TathÃÂgatas). In this schema, which is popular in Esoteric Buddhism and is organized as a mandala, there the five Pure Lands of the five key Buddhas are:
In Chinese Buddhism, the Pure Land was commonly seen as a transcendent realm beyond the three realms (the desire realm, form realm and formless realm) into which one can be reborn after death. This view is also called "other direction" or "western direction" pure land. This view of the Pure Land as an actual realm or place was defended by masters of Pure Land Buddhism like Shandao.
Another interpretation of a Pure Land is that it is non-dual with our world since the whole world is mind-only. The Vimalakërti Sutra was widely cited by exponents of this non-dual view of the Pure Land, often called "mind-only" Pure Land (wéixën jìngtàå¯å¿Âæ·¨åÂÂ). This was commonly defended by masters of the Chan / Zen school, but was also accepted by some figures in various traditions including in Tiantai, Pure Land, Yogacara, Zen, and Nichiren Buddhism. Another sutra which teaches the view that the pure land is mainly a kind of pure mind or wisdom (i.e. the five wisdoms) is the Buddhabhà «mi-sà «tra (Scripture on the Buddha Land, Ch: ä½Â說ä½Âå°ç¶Â, Taishà  Tripitaka no. 680).
In the Platform Sutra for example, Huineng states that only the deluded hope to be born in a faraway land in the west, while the wise who know their nature is empty seek the Pure Land by purifying their minds. These two views of the Pure Land led to many debates in Chinese Buddhism.
In a similar fashion, according to the Huayan school patriarch Fazang, the ultimate view of the Buddha's Pure Land (derived from the Avatamsaka sutra) is that it is interfused with all worlds in the multiverse and indeed with all phenomena (dharmas). This view of the Buddha's Pure Land is inconceivable and all pervasive. Since for Fazang, the entire Dharma realm is visible within each particle in the universe, the Pure Land is therefore contained in every phenomena and is non-dual with our world.Later Chinese thinkers similarly attempted to synthesize the two ideas. Yúnqë Zhà «hóng (1535âÂÂ1615) saw the Pure Land as an actual place which is a useful upaya (skill means) created by the Buddha. Once beings reach this realm, they realize that it is just the Buddha mind, and that the Buddha's wisdom was not ever separate from their own mind. Real sages can see that both ideas are interconnected and thus can affirm both without any conflict. Similarly, HÃÂnshÃÂn Déqëng (c. 1546âÂÂ1623) taught a synthesis of these various views on the nature of the pure land.
East Asian Buddhist thinkers taught various schemas which outlined different types or levels of the pure lands. One of the most influential of these was that taught in the Tiantai school which outlined four pure lands:
In Japanese Pure land Buddhism meanwhile, a common distinction is between two main lands that Pure Land devotees can be reborn in: the Transformed Land and the Fulfilled Land. Shinran (1173 â 1263), the founder of Jà Âdo Shinshà «, discusses this theory, drawing on the teachings of Shandao. Shinran's schema is as follows:
According to Hanshan Deqing (1546âÂÂ1623), who was a leading Chan monk in Ming China, there are three kinds of Pure Lands (associated with the trikaya, the three bodies of the buddha):
In Tibetan Buddhism, buddhafields (Skt. buddhaká¹£etra; Wylie: sangs rgyas kyi zhing) or pure realms (Wyl. dag pa'i zhing) are understood as realms arising due to the intention and aspiration of a buddha or bodhisattva. They are also understood to manifest effortlessly and spontaneously from the Buddha qualities.
In Tibetan Buddhism, it is generally held there are two main types of pure lands or buddhafields:
All buddhafields are understood as ultimately arising from the DharmakÃÂya, the foundational aspect of the "triple body" of Buddhahood (trikaya). The DharmakÃÂya is the basis, ground, or "source" (; Sanskrit: dharmodaya), the true nature of reality, out of which all buddhas and buddhafields arise.
Tibetan Buddhism also holds that this world is also a pure land, since samsara and nirvana are non-dual. Specifically, our world is the pure land of the Sambhoghakaya Vairocana Buddha, as stated in the Avatamsaka sutra and other scriptures. Though our realm is already pure, we cannot see the purity of the world due to our delusion and afflictions (as per the Vimalakirti Sutra). However, on attaining the higher bodhisattva stages, the purified mind will be able to witness the purity of this world, along with the majestic displays of the jeweled ground, divine flowers, and so on. Furthermore, Tibetan Vajrayana deity yoga methods require the yogi to maintain a "pure vision" of this realm as being the pure realm of the deity, along with the visualization of their chosen deity. To fail to do this at all times is a deviation from the tantric practice and the esoteric view taught in the tantras.
As explained by Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche:
Mandalas, especially sand mandalas, are 'Pure Lands' and may be understood as NirmÃÂá¹ÂakÃÂya, as are all murti, thangka and sacred tools that have been consecrated, dedicated and the 'deity' (yidam) invoked and requested to reside. Some namkha are Pure Lands. According to NirmÃÂá¹ÂakÃÂya (as tulku) theory, nirmanakaya spontaneously arise due to the intention, aspiration, faith and devotion of the sangha.
Chinese Taoism adopted the idea of heaven realms similar to pure lands from Chinese Buddhism. One popular afterlife in Chinese Taoism is the pure land of eternal Sukha (Chánglè JìngtÃÂ, éÂᾬÂæ·¨åÂÂ). It has a similar function to pure lands in Buddhism. This pure land is the realm of TàiyàZhÃÂnrén also known by the longer title Heavenly Venerable Taiyi Savior from Suffering, the Great Emperor of Azure Radiance (éÂÂè¯大å¸Â太ä¹ÂæÂÂè¦天å°Â). Taiyi, like Amitabha, is also said to provide salvation for all sentient beings in the 10 directions, with a different incarnation for each direction.
Chinese Manichean texts also contain depictions of pure lands.
There are various Pure Land worlds described in various texts of various Chinese folk religions and Chinese new religions.