The Pusa yingluo benye jing; 2 fascicles, eight chapters; T 1485.24.1010b-1023a. Translation into Chinese was attributed to Zhu fonian 竺佛念 but later scholarship considers it to have been written in China during the fifth or sixth century. In common with the Huayan jing 华严经, Renwang jing 仁王经, Sutra of Brahma's Net 梵网经, etc., it discusses the course of the bodhisattva's practice through the fifty-two stages, the pure precepts, the ten pa^ramita^s, etc. It was commented on by Zhiyi 智顗 in terms of its relation to the Sutra of Brahma's Net. The only commentary which dealt with this treatise exclusively was the one done by Wonhyo 元晓, of which only the second fascicle remains. Commonly referred to by the short titles of 本业经 and 璎珞经, but the latter abbreviation also refers to another scripture of similar name.