Golden Winged Great Peng


The Golden Winged Great Peng, originally known as Dapeng Jinchi Mingwang, is a Buddhist bird deity in the Chinese religion and Mahayana Buddhism. He is the spiritual uncle of the Buddha and gave him a high position on heaven as a guardian deity of the Vulture Peak. His origins are said to derive from an Indian bird god Garuda. Peng is one of the 8 demi-gods of Buddhism and helps to guard Mount Sumeru and Trāyastriṃśa from being attacked by the Asuras.
Peng is appearances in Chinese ancient literature Journey to the West, General Yue Fei and also mentioned in some Chinese buddhism literature.

Legends

According to legend, during the primordial times, the original Phoenix, the leader of flying beings, gave birth to the peacock Mahamayuri and the eagle Golden Winged Great Peng. The peacock once consumed the Buddha, who however managed to escape via cut her stomach. The Buddha intended to kill the peacock, however the deities told him to stop, thus the Buddha promoted her to be his godmother, therefore the eagle would be his uncle and gave the eagle a high position on heaven.
Peng sits at the head of the Buddha's throne in the Western Paradise. His fiery temper is aroused when a bat-spirit passes gas during the Enlightened One's sermon on the Lotus Sutra. He swoops down from the throne and snatches her up in his beak, killing her instantly. The Buddha admonishes the bird for his transgression of Buddhist law and exiles him to earth. His rebirth in the human world actually serves to counterbalance the actions of a nomadic antagonist.

''Journey to the West''

Peng is an antagonist of the 16th-century Chinese classic novel Journey to the West. He is a demonic eagle who was born from the primordial Phoenix. The Buddha gave the Eagle a high position on Heaven and unfortunately only serves to fuel his big ego. For unknown reason, the Eagle transformed himself into a humanoid form, the Golden Winged Great Peng, ate all the residents of the Lion Camel Kingdom, ruled it for 500 years, and befriend the Azure Lion Demon and the Yellow Toothed Elephant Demon to eat Tang Sanzang. His powers and position of being technically the uncle of the Buddha fuels his big ego as he considers himself above everyone else. He is armed with a ji and capable of flying over great distances. He possesses a Flask of Yin and Yang Essence which can suck in unsuspecting victims.
Peng set up several plans to capture Tang Sanzang and his companions and even successfully captured Sun Wukong himself. After numerous humiliating failures under the hand of the three demon kings, Wukong met the Buddha for help and learned about the backstory of Peng. After a battle between Wukong and the three demons, both the Lion and the Elephant are forced to revert to their original forms, and the Buddha shows up to subdue Peng and take him back to Vulture Peak.
After his defeat at the hand of the Buddha, Peng admits that he enjoys his life as a demon and eating humans, though after listening to the Buddha, Peng has no choice but abandoned his evil goals and redeemed himself in the process. After some struggle, the bird agrees to become a protector of Buddhist law. Much later, when Sanzang and his companion received the scriptures, the Buddha, knew that those are the scriptures with no text, orders the Eagle to chase them and took the fake scriptures. The Eagle did this right away. Thus, Chinese fiction portrays Peng as a powerful demon king that submits to the Buddha and perches above his throne as a hot-tempered guardian deity.

''Shurangama Mantra''

The Shurangama Mantra is a dhāraṇī or long mantra of Buddhist practice in China, Japan and Korea. The 302nd line of the mantra is pertains to the great golden-winged peng bird, the garuda, and its retinue. Its retinue includes all species of birds. They are all governed by the great golden-winged peng bird, who is the king among birds. The peng bird feasts exclusively on dragons. His wing-span measures an astounding 330 yojanas. When he flaps his wings, the waters of the sea part clear to the deepest seabed.

Overview

A literary motif appearing in Journey to the West and The Story of Yue Fei depicts the bird deity Peng as a demon-turned-Buddhist guardian who sits above the Buddha's throne.
The Ming dynasty examples suggest Peng was considered a common element of the Buddha's enlightenment torana. The bird god is in effect a guardian of the faith who watches over the world from an exalted position high atop the Buddha's throne.