Humane King Sutra


The Humane King Sutra is found in Taisho No. 245 and 246. Many scholars have suspected this sutra to be composed in China but not all scholars agree with this viewpoint. There are two versions: the first is called the Humane King Perfection of Wisdom Sutra, while the second is called the Humane King State-Protection Perfection of Wisdom Sutra, more idiomatically the Prajnaparamita Scripture for Humane Kings Who Wish to Protect their States. Both sutras are found in the prajnaparamita section of the Taisho Tripitaka.
This sutra is unusual in the fact that its target audience, rather than being either lay practitioners or the community of monks and nuns, is the rulership. Thus, for example, where the interlocutors in most scriptures are arhats or bodhisattvas, the discussants in this text are the kings of the sixteen ancient regions of India. The foregrounded teachings, rather than being meditation and wisdom, are "humaneness" and "forbearance" or "ksanti", these being the most applicable religious values for the governance of a Buddhist state. Hence today in some Chinese temples, the sutra is used during prayers on behalf of the government and the country.
A second translation from a Sanskrit text was carried out a few centuries after the appearance of the original version, by the monk Amoghavajra, one of the most important figures in the Chinese Esoteric tradition, as well as a patriarch in the Shingon school of Japan. This second version of the text is similar to the original version, the translation of which was attributed to Kumārajīva, but it contains new sections that include teachings on mandala, mantra, and dhāraṇī.

Themes

One theme of the sutra is impermanence. A passage which is popular in Japan is the four-character expression "the prosperous inevitably decline", which in full reads "The prosperous inevitably decline, the full inevitably empty", and is analogous to sic transit gloria mundi in the West. This is famously quoted in the first line of The Tale of the Heike, whose latter half reads: "the color of the sal tree.

Translations

There are two classical Chinese translations extant:
The discovery of the Old Translated Inwanggyeong in Gugyeol in the mid-1970s contributed to Middle Korean studies.