See also: jodo, jōdo, and jōdō

English edit

 
English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

A borrowing of Japanese 浄土 (Jōdo, literally Pure Land), q.v.

Proper noun edit

Jodo

  1. (Japanese Buddhism) Synonym of Pure Land: a sect of Buddhism and its primary afterlife, the seat of the Amida Buddha.
    • 1727, Engelbert Kaempfer, translated by John Gaspar Scheuchzer, History of Japan, volume I, page 287:
      ...zealous persons, chiefly the followers of the Sect of Siodo...
    • 1886, Bunyiu Nanjio, chapter IX, in A Short History of the Twelve Japanese Buddhist Sects:
      The Jō-do-shū, or Pure Land sect.
    • 1876, William Elliot Griffis, Mikado's Empire, page 233:
      In 1579, the two great sects of Nichiren and Jōdo held a great discussion upon religious subjects.
    • 1901, R.L. Halsey, The Religion of Japan & the Present Attitude of the Japanese, page 13:
      In the far off West there is said to be the home of Amida... He is free from the chain of transmigration and enjoys a conscious and happy immortality in ‘Jodo’,—that is, in the Pure Land.
    • 1938, Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, Zen Buddhism and Its Influence on Japanese Culture, page 37:
      The Jōdo appeals naturally more to plebeian requirements because of the simpleness of its faith and teaching.
    • 2012, Atsuyoshi Fujiwara, Theology of Culture in a Japanese Context, page 175:
      Jodo Buddhism... had in its structure a grace-based doctrine of salvation of trusting in its goddess that was similar to the doctrine of grace in Christianity.

Noun edit

Jodo (uncountable)

  1. (Japanese Buddhism) Alternative letter-case form of jodo: any of various other pure lands.

References edit