This book is about new Korean Buddhism called Won Buddhism which was created by a religious genius named Chungbin Park (Sot'aesan) in 1916. Park innovated traditional Buddhism in the following various ways. First; Won Buddhists do not worship Buddha statues any longer; but instead enshrine circle (Il-Won-Sang) as a symbol of the Truth. That is why this Buddhism is called Won Buddhism ('won' means circle in Korean). Second; celibacy system of traditional Buddhism is no longer valid in this Buddhism. But it should be noted that only male minister can marry; not female minister! Third; we can find many Won Buddhist temples in the cities; whereas traditional Buddhist temples are located in deep mountains. The fourth characteristic of Won Buddhism is that canons of this Buddhism are written in easy modern Korean; while those of traditional Buddhism are mainly in difficult classical Chinese. This book may be remembered as the first easy introductory book in English on Won Buddhism.
#69477 in Books Regnery Publishing 2005-08-01Ingredients: Example IngredientsOriginal language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.10 x .69 x 7.34l; 1.04 #File Name: 0895260131270 pagesGreat product!
Review
40 of 40 people found the following review helpful. If you are Islamic; this book is going to offend you.By S. PaineI already have a copy of the Quran in English; and a book that describes and praises Islam and its history. I wanted one from the opposite angle and this book is clear; authoritative; and full of further reading (not all biased). Obviously well researched; obviously not even-handed (neither expected by me nor claimed by the author). I'd call it a solid beginning for anyone wanting to understand the negative view of Islam; with a rich roadmap for further study in that direction.~"I like to be open-minded. That's why I can't remember anything!"4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Great BookBy LeonardA very good book for those who want to know the truth about history and this so-called religion; that is really a political system suitable for the 8th century.5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. Five StarsBy Johnny Boyall went well