Page 63 - Popular Deities of Chinese Buddhism (Illustrated) and Symbols
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C VII





            ao hih wo


            haisajyaguru uddha



            Yao  Shih  Fwo,  one  of  the  three  foremost  Buddhas  of  the


            Chinese Pantheon, is a Buddha of the past era. Better known

            to  the  people  as  the  Buddha  of  Medicine  or  the  Master  of

            Healing, he is dear to the hearts of many, for they have indeed

            received his blessings in the forms of miraculous cures from all

            kinds of illness. e Buddha’s efficacy in preventing calamities

            and  granting  prosperity  besides  curing  illness  has  attracted  a

             steady number of believers and devotees since the time of the

            Eastern Chin Dynasty ( 317–420) to the present day. e

            Sutra of the Buddha of Medicine (Bhaisajyaraja Sutra) was also


            translated into Chinese at that period of time which provided a

            full account on the peerless Buddha, his Paradise and his Twelve

            Great Vows. However the later translation made by Tripitaka

            Master Hsuan Tsang, the famous monk of the Tang Dynasty,

            known as e Sutra of the Master of Healing (Bhaisajyaguru-

            Vaidurya-Prabhasa Tathagata), is the more popular Sutra which

            is widely read by most people today.




            e title ‘Master of Healing’, is a literal translation of his Sanskrit

            name ‘Bhaisajyaguru’, the Buddha who favours worshippers with

            relief from the troubles of the world. Apart from curing illness,

            warding such calamities as famine, drought and plague, granting

            longevity and assisting the dead, Yao Shih Fwo is known to have

            dispensed all kinds of mundane benefits to those who pray to him.




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