The Lingquan Temple: Fusion of Sacred Geography
The Lingquan Temple rapidly became the most important Buddhist institution for Taiwanese in (or near) Jilong, as almost all of the nearly 1500 Taiwanese registered as belonging to a Buddhist sect in 1919 were members of this institution. As a monk ordained in the Chan/Zen tradition, it did not take a great leap of faith for Shanhui to link himself and his institution to the Sōdō Zen sect. Indeed, when Taiwanese joined the Japanese sects, they did so at the points of greatest familiarity: either through the Lingquan Temple, with its Taiwanese leaders, or through Pure Land, which worshiped Amitabha Buddha much as did adherents of popular Buddhism or "vegetarian teaching".In the Yutian district of Jilong, the monk Jiang Azhen announced that, thanks to the almsgiving of the adherents, a temple called the Lingquan Temple was established in Jilong bao, Yongku zhuang. As a result of the introduction made by the Sōdō sect missionary, Takagishi Tamenori, this temple will become a branch temple of the same sect's root temples (honzan), the Eiheiji and the Sōjiji.
This map shows the temple in its geographic context, linking the temple and region scales.