Peng Shaosheng

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Chinese illustration of Peng Shaosheng

Peng Shaosheng (彭紹升‎, 1740–1796) was a lay Buddhist scholar-practitioner and literatus during the Qing dynasty.[1] He was also known by the sobriquets Erlin Jushi (二林居士) and Zhiguizi (知歸子, "master who knows his true home"), as well as the Buddhist Dharma name Jiqing (際清).[2] Peng is known for his synthesis of Pure Land and Huayan Buddhism as well as for his biographical collections of the lives of eminent laymen, laywomen and Pure Land sages.[1][3][4]

Peng was native of Changzhou (Jiangsu) and came from an elite Chinese family of top imperial Confucian scholars many of whom had been government officials.[2] Peng passed the provincial examination when he was eighteen and at twenty-two, he ranked eighteenth in the palace examination, receiving the degree of jinshi (進士). Peng initially studied the Chinese classics, and also Neo-Confucianism, especially the School of Mind (xinxue 心学) of Wang Yangming and Lu Xiangshan.[2][5][6] He also gave up a government career in order to study privately, and even practiced Daoism for three years.[3]

After turning to Buddhism, studying Hanshan Deqing and the Avatamsaka Sutra, he chose to focus on the Pure Land path practice of nianfo. Peng became a vegetarian at twenty nine and also established a practice center for the practice of nianfo. At the age of thirty-four, he also studied under the Chan Master Xueding (聞學實定禪師) and received Bodhisattva precepts, taking the Dharma name Jiqing. Peng died at the age of fifty-seven.

Peng Shaosheng was also a practitioner of spirit writing (or "planchette writing") and compiled spirit writing texts and seance transcripts.[7]

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