The True Meaning of 3,000 Existences Contained In One Thought

It is not feasible to explain the true meaning of the doctrine of “3,000 existences contained in one thought” even in the theoretical section of the Lotus Sūtra. Needless to say, it is not mentioned at all in the pre-Lotus sūtras. The doctrine stems from the passage describing the ten aspects of existence in the paragraph on the “brief replacement of the three vehicles with the one true vehicle” (ryaku kaisan-ken’ichi) in the second chapter in the theoretical section of the Lotus Sūtra. Nevertheless, the true meaning of the doctrine is based solely on the essential section of the sūtra. The pre-Lotus sūtras should be judged according to the meaning of the theoretical section, which in turn should be judged by the meaning of the essential section. Only the essential section of the Lotus Sūtra can define its meaning as it preaches.

Jisshō-shō, A Treatise on the Ten Chapters of the Great Concentration and Insight, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Doctrine 2, Page 3-4

Daily Dharma for May 31, 2026

20260531-ddi

Illustration by Google Gemini

Show Gemini's thinking

Gemini Thinking

I have conceptualized the provided Lotus Sūtra verses through a traditional classical Japanese Buddhist style, featuring Šākyamuni Buddha preaching to Medicine-King Bodhisattva and an assembly of monastic and lay practitioners. The scene illustrates the dual themes of "keeping the sūtra" and "making offerings" with figures shown writing, holding scrolls, and presenting devotional items. The setting integrates the suffering saha world in the background with the blissful wonders of the Lotus sūtra in the foreground, illuminated by divine light to symbolize the opening of one's eyes to the truth.

Identified Individuals: The central preaching deity is Šākyamuni Buddha. Seated to his right, holding a sūtra, is Medicine-King Bodhisattva. The surrounding figures represent various monastics and lay devotees ("keepers of the sūtra").

Kanji Translations: The vertical signature text reads 双子座 (Gemini). Within the red hanko seal, the Katakana text reads ジェミニ (Gemini). The text on the primary sūtra scroll is purely symbolic calligraphic text meant to evoke classical sacred sūtra handwriting and has no translation.

If you wish to obtain quickly the knowledge
Of the equality and differences of all things,
Keep this sūtra, and also make offerings
To the keeper of this sūtra!

The Buddha sings these verses to Medicine-King Bodhisattva at the beginning of Chapter Ten of the Lotus Sūtra. When we see things for what they are, how they are similar and how they are different, we see them with the eyes of the Buddha. This Wonderful Dharma in the Lotus Sūtra is the Buddha showing us how to open our eyes to the joys and wonders that exist in this world of conflict and suffering. When we find something valuable, we offer it our time, our thoughts and our devotion. By making offerings to this Wonderful Dharma, and to all those who keep it, our eyes open even more to the truth of our lives.

The Daily Dharma is produced by the Lexington Nichiren Buddhist Community. To subscribe to the daily emails, visit zenzaizenzai.com

The Doctrinal Evolution of ‘Fruit to Cause’ in Nichiren Buddhism

NotebookLM logo This essay was created from the sources uploaded to NotebookLM. Ask questions of these sources here.


20260530-From_Scholasticism_to_Chanting_Law
20260530-From_Scholasticism_to_Chanting_Law

The trajectory of medieval Japanese Buddhist thought is defined by a radical ontological shift: the transition from “linear” asceticism, predicated on gradual progress, to a “simultaneous” realization. In traditional paradigms, enlightenment was envisioned as a distant shore, accessible only through the exhaustive accumulation of merit over  asankhya-kalpas . However, Nichiren Buddhism precipitated a “Copernican Revolution” in this soteriology by asserting that Buddhahood is the foundational ground of practice rather than its terminal result. This is encapsulated in the inversion from  Jūin Shika  (From Cause to Fruit)—the teleological movement from practice toward enlightenment—to  Jūka Kōin  (From Fruit to Cause), wherein the practitioner begins from the Buddha’s enlightened state.To grasp this simultaneity, one must look to the source’s vivid metaphors: just as the moon rising over the eastern mountain is reflected in water the very instant it appears, or as a sound and its echo occur in the same moment, the “Fruit” of enlightenment and the “Cause” of practice are non-dual. The objective of this monograph is to analyze how Nichiren identified a strategic necessity to bridge the chasm between the abstract heights of Tendai “Original Enlightenment” ( Hongaku ) and the spiritual exhaustion of the  Mappō  era. By crystallizing these scholastic theories into the concrete practice of chanting  Namu-Myoho-Renge-Kyo , Nichiren transformed the practitioner from a seeker into a recipient of the Buddha’s own merit.

2. Historical Foundations: The Quest for Rapid Enlightenment

The early Heian period was characterized by an obsession with “Speedy Enlightenment” ( Sokushitsu Jōbutsu ), a doctrinal reaction against the Hosso school’s staggering timeline for Buddhahood. Saichō and Kūkai, the giants of this era, sought to provide a “direct path” ( Jikidō ) that bypassed the traditional requirement of three  asankhya-kalpas .

  • Kūkai (Shingon):  Kūkai’s model of  Sokushin Jōbutsu  (Becoming a Buddha in this lifetime) relied on the esoteric union of the “Three Mysteries” ( Sanmitsu ). By aligning mudra (body), mantra (mouth), and visualization (mind), the practitioner synchronized their finite existence with the cosmic Buddha, Mahavairocana.
  • Saichō (Tendai):  Saichō utilized the Lotus Sutra to argue for a universal path, specifically citing the Dragon King’s daughter ( Ryūnyo ). Crucially, while previous Chinese commentators like Ji-zang and Kuei-chi (Ki) argued her attainment was possible only because she was already at the 10th Stage of a Bodhisattva, Saichō “lowered the bar” by redefining her as being at the  First Dwelling  ( Hatsu-jū ) stage. This was a critical transfer point where an ordinary person ( bonbu ) could shed their mundane status for a sagely one.This historical trajectory involved a progressive “lowering of the bar.” Scholastic successors like Annen and Enchin pushed this further, moving the stage of realization down from the First Dwelling to the  Stage of Name and Words  ( Myōji-soku )—the very inception of the path. This set the stage for the medieval era’s total inversion of Buddhist praxis.

3. The Hongaku Inversion: Transitioning from “Cause-to-Fruit” to “Fruit-to-Cause”

In medieval Tendai,  Hongaku  (Original Enlightenment) discourse became the mainstream philosophical apparatus. It abandoned the notion of “becoming” a Buddha in favor of “self-awareness” that one is already enlightened. This shift was grounded in the structural tension between the two halves of the Lotus Sutra.

Contrast between Trace and Essential Teachings
Feature
Trace Teaching (Shakumon)
Essential Teaching (Honmon)
Logic
Jūin Shika (From Cause to Fruit)
Jūka Kōin (From Fruit to Cause)
Temporal Orientation
Linear / Past-to-Future
Simultaneous / Eternal Now
Buddha Type
Historical Buddha (Shakyamuni)
Eternal Buddha (Kuon Jitsujō)
Nature of Fruit
“Dream-like” goal (Mumei no kenka)
Inherent Reality (Ji-jōjū)
Status of Practice
Cultivation to attain Wisdom
Manifesting inherent Enlightenment

The “So What?” of this logic is found in the metaphor of the  Lotus Flower , where the flower (cause) and the fruit (effect) appear simultaneously. This eliminates the temporal gap between practice and result. However, while Tendai  Hongaku  was intellectually sophisticated, it remained an elite monastic “meditation on the mind” ( Kanshin ). It was a theory of awareness that lacked a visceral, physical methodology for the masses struggling in a declining age.

4. Nichiren’s Rupture: Transforming Theory into the Daimoku

Nichiren identified a strategic necessity to ground the abstract ontological heights of  Hongaku  in a concrete religious practice accessible to the people of  Mappō . His rupture with the past was total; he  inhibited  ( seishi ) the traditional practices of the Precepts ( Kai ) and Meditation ( ), arguing they were insufficient for the age. Instead, he proposed the  substitution of Faith for Wisdom .Nichiren’s innovation was the concept of the  “Bottom of the Text”  ( Mombutei ). He argued that the “Cause” (the Buddha’s practices) and the “Fruit” (the Buddha’s virtues) are entirely contained within the five or seven characters of the Daimoku. This is the  Seed of the Law  ( Shimmin ).

Key Differentiators of Nichiren’s Practice
  1. Mediation through Sound:  In contrast to the “silent contemplation” of Tendai monks, Nichiren emphasized enlightenment through the mouth and ear. Chanting is a physical act that “puts the Buddha into the mouths of the people,” bypassing the need for intellectual mastery.
  2. Faith as the Cause of Wisdom:  At the  Myōji-soku  stage, where ordinary people lack the capacity for profound wisdom ( E ), Nichiren asserted that  Faith  ( Shin ) serves as the functional equivalent, allowing the practitioner to access the Buddha’s enlightened state instantly.
  3. Mandala as Environment:  Nichiren externalized the internal state of enlightenment through the  Gohonzon . By facing this mandala, the practitioner’s environment is not merely a place of suffering but is revealed as the “Constant Pure Land.”Through this shift, the practitioner is no longer a “seeker” toiling up a mountain; they are a “recipient” inheriting the total merit of the Eternal Buddha.

5. Soteriology in the Age of Mappō: The Mission of the “Bodhisattvas of the Earth”

In the era of  Mappō , the “Fruit-to-Cause” model is not merely a philosophical preference but a soteriological requirement. Nichiren distinguished between those who had “sown seeds in past lives” ( Hon-ni-uzen ) and those of the current age who have “no previous merit” ( Honmi-uzen ). For the latter, linear practice is impossible because there is no seed to cultivate. Only the  Seed of the Law  ( Shimmin )—the Daimoku found at the  Mombutei —can plant the potential for Buddhahood directly into their lives.This realization fundamentally reinterprets the practitioner’s identity through the concept of the  Bodhisattvas of the Earth  ( Jiyu no Bosatsu ). By adopting the “Fruit-to-Cause” model, one’s perspective on suffering undergoes a profound transformation:

  • From Karma to Vow:  Personal sufferings are no longer viewed as “debts” from the past (a linear, past-focused view) to be endured. Instead, they are seen as a  voluntarily chosen circumstance —a vow made to demonstrate the power of the Law in the midst of adversity.
  • From Seeker to Provider:  The practitioner moves from being “one who is saved” to “one who saves.” Their life becomes an expression of the Buddha’s work, actualized through  Risshō Ankoku  (establishing the correct teaching for the peace of the land).In this framework, the “Fruit” is the internal state of the Buddha, and the “Cause” is the outward manifestation of that state through compassionate action in a troubled world.

6. Conclusion: The Enduring Impact of the Simultaneous Path

The doctrinal journey from early Heian scholasticism to Nichiren’s praxis reveals a profound continuity in the logic of “Fruit-to-Cause” ( Jūka Kōin ), yet it marks a sharp rupture in implementation. While Tendai provided the theoretical framework that collapsed the distance between cause and effect, it remained trapped in abstract contemplation. Nichiren liberated this logic, turning it into a tangible reality for the common person by replacing the “wisdom” of the elite with the “faith” of the many.

Critical Takeaways of the “Fruit-to-Cause” Paradigm
  1. The Collapse of Linear Time:  The “Fruit-to-Cause” model posits that practice is not a means to an end but the end itself, removing the anxiety of a distant, unattainable goal.
  2. The Primacy of the Seed:  For those in a state of spiritual decline ( Honmi-uzen ), enlightenment is only possible by receiving the “Seed of the Law” ( Shimmin ) contained at the “Bottom of the Text” ( Mombutei ).
  3. The Agency of the Vow:  By beginning from the “Fruit,” practitioners reinterpret their lives as a mission, transforming their identity from passive victims of karma to active messengers of the Buddha.Ultimately, Nichiren’s transformation of Buddhist doctrine provided a limitless sense of purpose to the ordinary individual. It suggests that even in an era of decline, one can stand as a Buddha in the present moment, transforming both self and society through the simple yet profound act of chanting.

 

Studying Nichiren in NotebookLM

NotebookLM logo Below is a list of sources currently uploaded to my Nichiren notebook. Ask questions of these sources here. Last updated: May 30, 2026)


Title: A response to questions from Soka Gakkai practitioners regarding the similarities and differences among Nichiren Shu, Nichiren Shoshu and the Soka Gakkai
Date: N/A
Author: Rev. Tarabini
Summary: A letter by Reverend Tarabini explaining the theological and institutional differences between Nichiren Shu, Nichiren Shoshu, and Soka Gakkai. It contrasts their approaches to the Lotus Sutra, the status of Nichiren vs. Shakyamuni, and controversies like the authenticity of the Dai-Gohonzon and specific transfer documents.
PDF: nichiren-comparison.pdf

Title: A Votary of the Lotus Sutra Will Meet Ordeals: The Role of Suffering in Nichiren’s Thought
Date: 2014
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Investigating the theological significance of suffering in Nichiren’s life, this piece demonstrates how he interpreted his exiles and hardships as prophetic validation of his status as the sutra’s true votary. Nichiren viewed enduring persecution as a form of “bodily reading” of the Lotus Sutra and a necessary process to expiate past slanders against the Dharma.
PDF: A Votary of the Lotus Sutra Will Meet Ordeals –The Role of Suffering in Nichiren’s Thought (2014)

Title: “Admonishing the State” in the Nichiren Buddhist Tradition
Date: 2020
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Tracing the history of kokka kangyō (admonishing the state) across the Nichiren tradition, this text examines the actions of defiant clerics like Nisshin and Nichikō who challenged secular authorities. The practice profoundly shaped sectarian identity by asserting the supremacy of the Lotus Sutra over state power and rebuking attachment to provisional teachings.
PDF: Admonishing-the-State-2020

Title: “By Imperial Edict and Shogunal Decree”: Politics and the Issue of the Ordination Platform in Modern Lay Nichiren Buddhism
Date: 2003
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This text examines modern interpretations of Nichiren’s teachings, particularly focusing on Tanaka Chigaku’s nationalist millennialism and his fifty-year plan for worldwide conversion. It details the political dynamics and controversies surrounding the effort to establish a state-sponsored ordination platform (kaidan) in modern lay Nichiren Buddhism, noting Tanaka’s profound impact on modern iterations of the faith.
PDF: ByImperialEdictAndShogunalDecree2003

Title: Biographical Studies of Nichiren
Date: 1999
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: A scholarly review evaluating major postwar biographies of Nichiren, particularly those by Takagi Yutaka, Tamura Yoshirō, and Kawazoe Shōji. The review addresses the historiographical challenges of separating sectarian hagiography from historical fact using Nichiren’s own writings and contextualizing him within Kamakura warrior society and the Mongol invasion threat.
PDF: Biographical Studies of Nichiren (1999)

Title: Buddhism (from the Nanzan Guide to Japanese Religions)
Date: 2006
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This source provides a comprehensive bibliographic overview of scholarship on Japanese Buddhism, encompassing a variety of sectarian traditions, historical periods, and academic methodologies. It outlines key publications and shifts in the academic study of Japanese religious traditions from ancient times through the modern era.
PDF: Buddhism (from the Nanzan Guide to Japanese Religions, 2006)

Title: Chanting the August Title of the Lotus Sutra: Daimoku Practices in Classical and Medieval Japan
Date: 1998
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This text explores the historical precedents and evolution of chanting the Lotus Sutra’s title (daimoku) before and during Nichiren’s time. The essay analyzes medieval Tendai texts like the Shuzenji-ketsu and documents how Nichiren transformed the daimoku from a supplementary practice into an exclusive path to salvation for the Final Dharma age.
PDF: Chanting the August title of the Lotus Sutra – Daimoku Practi

Title: Criticism and Appropriation: Nichiren’s Attitude toward Esoteric Buddhism
Date: 1999
Author: Lucia Dora Dolce
Summary: Investigating Nichiren’s complex engagement with esoteric Buddhism (mikkyō), this paper argues that while he heavily criticized Shingon doctrines, he simultaneously appropriated esoteric rituals, mandalas, and mantras into his own framework. By analyzing Nichiren’s annotated Lotus Sutra, it demonstrates how esoteric patterns fundamentally shaped the creation of his Great Mandala (gohonzon).
PDF: Criticism+and+Approprition+Lucia+Dolce

Title: Finding Enlightenment in the Final Age
Date: 2004
Author: Translated by Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This document introduces and translates excerpts from Nichiren’s seminal 1273 treatise, the Kanjin honzon shō, highlighting his belief that traditional meditative paths were ineffective in the degenerate Final Dharma Age. It outlines Nichiren’s prescription of exclusive faith in the Lotus Sutra and the chanting of its title (daimoku) to attain enlightenment and realize the buddha realm.
PDF: Finding Enlightenment in the Final Age (translations from Ka

Title: Fire in the Lotus: The Dynamic Buddhism of Nichiren
Date: 1991
Author: Daniel B. Montgomery
Summary: The first section of a comprehensive book covering the historical development and philosophy of Mahayana Buddhism leading up to Nichiren’s teachings. It explores foundational concepts like the Lotus Sutra’s superiority, the nature of the eternal Buddha, and the classification of Buddhist doctrines that informed Nichiren’s revolutionary framework. The second section of the book chronicles Nichiren’s post-exile life, the succession crisis after his death, and the formation of the various Nichiren lineages such as Nichiren Shu and Nichiren Shoshu. It also discusses the rise of lay movements like Soka Gakkai and the international propagation of the religion, including its expansion into America. The final portion of the book serves as an appendix outlining practical aspects of Nichiren Buddhist liturgy, including the recitations of the Lotus Sutra and chanting instructions. It also features an extensive glossary of Buddhist terms, historical figures, and sectarian branches to aid readers in understanding the Nichiren tradition.
PDF: Fire-in-the-Lotus-p1, Fire-in-the-Lotus-p2, Fire-in-the-Lotus-p3

Title: From Buddha Nature to Original Enlightenment: Contemplating Suchness in Medieval Japan
Date: 2022
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This chapter analyzes the medieval Tendai concept of original enlightenment (hongaku) through an examination of the text The Contemplation of Suchness (Shinnyokan). The study explores the shift from viewing buddha nature as a potential to realizing it as the inherent reality of all sentient and insentient beings in their present state.
PDF: From-Buddha-Nature-to-Original-Enlightenment-Contemplating-Suchness-in-Medieval-Japan-2022

Title: Giving One’s Life for the Lotus Sūtra in Nichiren’s Thought
Date: 2007
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Exploring Nichiren’s rhetoric regarding physical sacrifice for the sake of the Lotus Sutra, this paper shows how he reframed traditional Buddhist somatic offerings. Nichiren equated the mythic self-sacrifices of ancient bodhisattvas with the real-life hardships, exiles, and devotions of his Kamakura-era followers, promising that enduring persecution guaranteed immediate buddhahood.
PDF: Giving One’s Life for the Lotus Sutra in Nichiren’s Thought

Title: Hokkekyō to Nihon bunka (The Lotus Sutra and Japanese Culture) / Hokkeshū to Nichiren
Date: 2014
Author: Edited by Komatsu Hōshō and Hanano Jūdō
Summary: Part of a Japanese volume on the Lotus Sutra and Nichiren, exploring the development of Lotus thought in Japan. The specific excerpt provides publication details for a collaborative scholarly work containing essays on Nichiren’s interaction with Lotus Sutra philosophy.
PDF: Stone.Nichiren to Hokekyo (2014)

Title: How Nichiren Saw Chishō Daishi Enchin
Date: 1989
Author: Jackie (Jacqueline) Stone
Summary: This text details Nichiren’s critical yet selective appraisal of the Tendai patriarch Chishō Daishi Enchin. While Nichiren frequently attacked Enchin for incorporating esoteric Shingon teachings into Tendai Buddhism, he simultaneously revered Enchin’s Juketsu shū because it vigorously asserted the supremacy of the Lotus Sutra over all other doctrines.
PDF: How Nichiren Saw Chisho Daishi Enchin (1989)

Title: Japanese Lotus Millennialism: From Militant Nationalism to Contemporary Peace Movements
Date: 2000
Author: Jacqueline Stone
Summary: Investigating the flexible nature of millennial visions within the Nichiren Buddhist tradition in modern Japan, this paper demonstrates how the same scriptural inspiration was utilized to fuel prewar militant nationalism (such as Tanaka Chigaku’s Nichirenshugi) and later reimagined to support postwar pacifist and progressive peace movements.
PDF: Japanese Lotus Millenialism – From Militant Nationalism

Title: Joining the Eagle Peak Assembly: Text, Image, and Religious Identity in Nichiren’s ‘Great Mandala’
Date: 2022
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This chapter provides a comprehensive study of Nichiren’s Great Mandala (daimandara/gohonzon) as a dual embodiment of sacred text and visual icon. It explores the mandala’s doctrinal roots, its function in depicting the eternal Eagle Peak assembly, and its profound role as a marker of religious identity and practice within the Nichiren community.
PDF: Joining-the-Eagle-Peak-Assembly-Text-Image-and-Religious-Identity-in-Nichirens-Great-Mandala-2022

Title: Kami to hotoke no bakumatsu ishin: Kōsaku suru shūkyō sekai (Excerpt on Ogawa Taidō)
Date: 2018
Author: Edited by Iwata Mami and Kirihara Kenshin (Text by Jacqueline I. Stone)
Summary: Examining the role of the lay scholar Ogawa Taidō in shaping modern perceptions of Nichiren during the late Edo and early Meiji periods, this text discusses how his accessible, vernacular biographies popularized Nichiren devotion among commoners. This fostered a nationalistic interpretation that intertwined the Lotus Sutra with state protection.
PDF: Ogawa-Taido-Japanese-Text

Title: Kinsei fuju fuse ronsō ni okeru kenryoku ni taisuru jōho to junkyō
Date: 2020 (Bibliography references vary)
Author: N/A (Compiled citations/references)
Summary: A Japanese-language bibliography and set of endnotes concerning the “Fuju Fuse” (neither receiving nor giving) controversy in early modern Nichiren Buddhism. The sources explore the sect’s ideological resistance, martyrdom, and the Edo shogunate’s strict religious controls against those who refused state-sponsored alms.
PDF: not accepting alms-2020

Title: Living the Rissho Ankoku Ron: The Prophetic Call of Nichiren for Today
Date: 2005
Author: Ryuei McCormick
Summary: A modern commentary on Nichiren’s seminal text Rissho Ankoku Ron (Treatise on Spreading Peace Throughout the Country by Establishing the True Dharma). It elucidates the historical calamities that prompted the text, explains Nichiren’s vehement critique of Hōnen’s Pure Land teachings, and argues for the continuing relevance of Nichiren’s prophetic call to uphold the sacred dignity of life.
PDF: Living_Rissho_Ankoku_Ron

Title: Medieval Tendai Hongaku Thought and the New Kamakura Buddhism: A Reconsideration
Date: 1995
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This paper reassesses the intellectual relationship between medieval Tendai “original enlightenment” (hongaku) thought and the founders of the new Kamakura Buddhism. It challenges the traditional view that Kamakura reformers fundamentally broke with Tendai, instead revealing shared paradigms of contemplation and practice through texts like the Shuzenji-ketsu.
PDF: Medieval Tendai Thought and the New Kamakura Buddhism – A Rec

Title: Nenbutsu Leads to the Avīci Hell: Nichiren’s Critique of the Pure Land Teachings
Date: 2013
Author: Jacqueline Stone
Summary: Focusing on Nichiren’s early polemics against the exclusive Pure Land (nenbutsu) movement led by Hōnen, this article highlights how these severe critiques were instrumental in helping Nichiren define his own distinct intellectual territory. It explains how refuting the Senchakushū solidified his mandate of exclusive devotion to the Lotus Sutra as the only path to salvation.
PDF: Nenbutsu Leads to the Avici Hell–Nichiren’s Critique of the Pure Land Teachings (2013)

Title: Nichiren
Date: 2021
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: An encyclopedic entry summarizing the life, doctrine, and legacy of the Japanese Buddhist monk Nichiren. It outlines his core teachings of exclusive devotion to the Lotus Sutra, the historical difficulties in parsing his biography from hagiography, and the proliferation of lay and monastic movements derived from his legacy.
PDF: Nichiren-Brill-Encyclopia-2021

Title: Nichiren
Date: 2020
Author: Jacqueline Stone
Summary: An Oxford Research Encyclopedia entry providing a detailed overview of Nichiren’s life, from his initial awakening and exiles to his retirement at Mount Minobu. The article surveys primary sources, discusses the historiographical challenges of his texts, and reviews major trends in both Japanese and Western scholarship concerning his movement.
PDF: Nichiren.Oxford-Encyclopedia-of-Buddhism-2020

Title: Nichiren gaku no gendai (Contemporary Nichiren Studies)
Date: 2023
Author: Edited by Hamashima Norihiko
Summary: A Japanese-language compilation focusing on modern developments in Nichiren studies. The excerpt provides footnotes discussing the evolution of Nichiren’s thought, the concept of original enlightenment, and references academic debates surrounding the “cause and effect” sequence in the Tendai and Nichiren traditions.
PDF: enlightenment-gradual-immediate

Title: Nichiren’s Activist Heirs: Sōka Gakkai, Risshō Kōseikai, Nipponzan Myōhōji
Date: 2003
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This chapter analyzes three major contemporary Japanese Buddhist movements—Sōka Gakkai, Risshō Kōseikai, and Nipponzan Myōhōji—as expressions of socially engaged Buddhism. It highlights how each group distinctly interprets their shared heritage of Lotus Sutra devotion and Nichiren’s teachings to justify their respective pacifist and social reform agendas.
PDF: Nichiren Activist Heirs

Title: Nichiren and Nationalism: The Religious Patriotism of Tanaka Chigaku
Date: 1975
Author: Edwin B. Lee
Summary: A biographical and historical study of Tanaka Chigaku, tracing his transformation from a Buddhist priest to a lay nationalist leader. The paper details how Tanaka fused Nichiren’s religious teachings with Japanese imperialism (kokutai) to promote an aggressive religious expansionism aimed at unifying the world.
PDF: nichiren-and-nationalism-lee-web

Title: Nichiren’s Problematic Works
Date: 1999
Author: Sueki Fumihiko
Summary: Addressing the methodological challenges in studying texts attributed to Nichiren whose authenticity is contested, this study proposes a new category for evaluation. Using the Sandai hihō shō and letters to Sairen-bō as case studies, the author advocates evaluating these texts not just for strict authenticity but for how they reflect and elaborate upon Nichiren’s verified thought.
PDF: jjrs-vol-26-sueki-fumihiko

Title: Nichiren Shōnin’s View of Humanity: The Final Dharma Age and the Three Thousand Realms in One Thought-Moment
Date: 1999
Author: Asai Endō
Summary: This article discusses Nichiren’s perspective on human nature within the context of the degenerate Final Dharma Age (mappō) and the Tendai doctrine of the “three thousand realms in one thought-moment”. It emphasizes how Nichiren positioned the practice of shakubuku and chanting the daimoku as the concrete means to activate inherent Buddhahood.
PDF: Asai-Endō.-Nichiren-Shōnins-View-of-Humanity-1999

Title: Nichiren, the Buddhist Prophet
Date: 1916
Author: Masaharu Anesaki
Summary: A foundational biographical text that explores Nichiren’s psychological and spiritual development, mapping his intense missionary work, confrontations with the Kamakura shogunate, and his eventual retirement. It highlights how his experiences formed his profound conviction of his own prophetic role in establishing the Holy See of his religion.
PDF: Nichiren the Buddhist Prophet

Title: Nichiren’s View of Nation and Religion
Date: 1999
Author: Satō Hiroo
Summary: This text analyzes Nichiren’s ideological views on the relationship between secular political power (the nation) and the Buddhist Dharma. It explores how Nichiren prioritized the absolute authority of the Lotus Sutra over state rulers, laying the intellectual groundwork for subsequent forms of principled religious resistance.
PDF: NichirenViewNationReligion-SatoHiro

Title: “Not Mere Written Words”: Perspectives on the Language of the Lotus Sūtra in Medieval Japan
Date: 2006
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Analyzing the “language-positive” devotion to the Lotus Sutra in medieval Japan, this essay explores how the sutra’s written characters were revered not just as symbols, but as the literal embodiment of the Buddha’s mind and intent. It explains how chanting the daimoku and using the text to consecrate images were believed to directly confer liberation and animate physical icons into living buddhas.
PDF: ‘Not Mere Written Words’ – Perspectives on the Language of the

Title: Placing Nichiren in the “Big Picture”: Some Ongoing Issues in Scholarship
Date: 1999
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This article situates Nichiren within the broader discourse of Japanese religious history, evaluating him through the lenses of “Kamakura new Buddhism,” Tendai original enlightenment thought, and medieval religio-cosmological paradigms. It advocates for understanding Nichiren’s doctrines within these wider, interconnected intellectual frameworks.
PDF: Placing Nichiren in the Big Picture – Some Ongoing Issues in S

Title: Priest Nisshin’s Ordeals
Date: 1999
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone (translator)
Summary: Presenting translated excerpts from a hagiographical account of Kuonjōin Nisshin (1407–1488), this text recounts the life of an uncompromising Nichiren evangelizer. The excerpts detail his roadside preaching, miraculous portents, severe torture by the shogun, and unwavering devotion to the Lotus Sutra, illustrating the sect’s ideal of martyrdom.
PDF: Priest Nisshin’s Ordeals (translations from Nisshin Shonin t

Title: Realizing This World as the Buddha Land
Date: 2009
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This chapter investigates the interpretive history of the Lotus Sutra’s premise that the present, physical world is inseparable from the Buddha land. It explores medieval Tiantai/Tendai paradigms and Nichiren’s distinct, immanent vision, noting how these doctrines influenced modern peace movements and engaged Buddhism in Japan.
PDF: Realizing This World as the Buddha Land (2009)

Title: Rebuking the Enemies of the Lotus: Nichirenist Exclusivism in Historical Perspective
Date: 1994
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Examining the historical trajectory of exclusivism (shakubuku) within the Nichiren tradition, this article unpacks how Nichiren’s mandate to vigorously rebuke other sects developed over centuries. It shows how this functioned as a strategy for asserting sectarian identity and provoking persecution as proof of authentic Lotus practice.
PDF: Rebuking the Enemies of the Lotus – Nichirenist Exclusivism in

Title: Refusing the Ruler’s Offerings: Accommodation and Martyrdom in Early Modern Nichiren Buddhism
Date: 2022
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This text analyzes the seventeenth-century fuju fuse (neither receiving nor giving) controversy within Nichiren Buddhism. It details the factional split over whether to accept state patronage from rulers who did not embrace the Lotus Sutra, leading to severe shogunal persecution and the emergence of an underground resistance movement.
PDF: Refusing-the-Ruler’s-Offerings-2022

Title: Review of Hanano Jūdō’s Tendai hongaku shisō to Nichiren kyōgakuDate: 2011
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: A review of Hanano Jūdō’s comprehensive study on Tendai original enlightenment thought and Nichiren doctrine. It praises Hanano’s meticulous text-critical work, particularly on the dating of the Sanjū shika no kotogaki, while highlighting his challenges against established scholarly orthodoxies regarding the authenticity of certain Nichiren texts.
PDF: Review-of-Hanano-Jūdōs-Tendai-honkgaku-shisō-to-Nichiren-kyōgaku-2011

Title: Review of Ōtani Eiichi’s Nichirenshugi to wa nan datta no ka
Date: 2021
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: This source reviews Ōtani Eiichi’s book examining the nature of “Nichirenism” (Nichirenshugi) in modern Japan. Stone commends Ōtani’s synthesis of primary materials and his ability to contextualize the movement’s prominent figures and political-religious ideology within broader East Asian and global history.
PDF: Review-of-Otani-Eiichi.Nichirenshugi-to-wa-nan-datta-no-ka-2021

Title: Review of David A. Snow’s Shakubuku and Jane Hurst’s Nichiren Shoshu Buddhism and the Soka Gakkai in America
Date: 1993
Author: Jacqueline Stone
Summary: Reviews two participant-observer studies on the American branch of Soka Gakkai (NSA/SGI-USA). The piece highlights how these sympathetic accounts explore the organization’s goals, ideology, and adaptation of Japanese Nichiren Shōshū practices—such as chanting the daimoku—within an American cultural context.
PDF: Snow-Hurst-reviews-1993.pdf

Title: Some Reflections on Critical Buddhism
Date: 1999
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: A review essay discussing the anthology Pruning the Bodhi Tree and the “Critical Buddhism” movement spearheaded by Hakamaya Noriaki and Matsumoto Shirō. The article discusses their controversial rejection of original enlightenment (hongaku) thought and Buddha-nature as non-Buddhist, acknowledging the debate’s deep implications for Japanese Buddhist scholarship.
PDF: Some Reflections on Critical Buddhism (1999)

Title: Senjika ni okeru Nichiren monka to ‘fukei’ mondai: Yokuatsu to teikō no igi
Date: 2018
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: A Japanese-language paper investigating the “lèse-majesté” (fukei) incidents involving Nichiren followers during Japan’s wartime regime. It explores the significance of state oppression against the sect and the meaning of religious resistance under the imperial system.
PDF: Stone.Senjika-ni-okeru-Nichiren-monka-to-fukei-mondai-Yokuatsu-to-teiko-no-igi-2018

Title: Some Disputed Writings in the Nichiren Corpus: Textual, Hermeneutical and Historical Problems
Date: 1990
Author: Jacqueline Ilyse Stone
Summary: This dissertation investigates a controversial collection of texts attributed to the Japanese Buddhist teacher Nichiren (1222–1282) that interpret his Lotus Sūtra teachings through the framework of the Tendai doctrine of “original enlightenment” (hongaku shisō). Rather than definitively proving or disproving the authenticity of these works, the study explores the textual, historical, and hermeneutical debates surrounding them, demonstrating how modern academic assumptions and sectarian agendas have frequently driven the effort to label these texts as apocryphal,. By analyzing specific doctrinal essays, personal letters, and oral teachings within the disputed corpus, the author highlights the profound difficulties in distinguishing Nichiren’s authentic voice from the redactions of his later disciples, ultimately shedding light on the politics of textual scholarship and the broader intellectual development of Kamakura Buddhism.
PDF: 1990-Dissertation-SomeDisputedWritingsNichirenCorpus

Title: Tanaka Chigaku on “The Age of Unification”
Date: 2019
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Analyzes the modern nationalist thinker Tanaka Chigaku’s concept of the “Age of Unification,” in which the world would be united under the banner of Nichiren Buddhism and the Japanese emperor. It highlights Tanaka’s promotion of a state-sponsored ordination platform (kaidan) to actualize a global, pure land on earth.
PDF: Tanaka-Chigaku-on-the-Age-of-Unification-2019

Title: The Atsuhara Affair: The Lotus Sutra, Persecution, and Religious Identity in the Early Nichiren Tradition
Date: 2014
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Documents the 1279 Atsuhara persecution, wherein twenty peasant followers of Nichiren were arrested and three executed. The study explores how Nichiren framed this tragedy as a fulfillment of scriptural prophecy, shaping a lasting normative ideal of martyrdom and unyielding religious identity for the Nichiren tradition.
PDF: The Atsuhara Affair–The Lotus Sutra, Persecution, and Religious Identity in the Early Nichiren Tradition (2014)

Title: The Contemplation of Suchness
Date: 1999
Author: Translated by Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Introduces and translates the medieval Japanese Tendai text Shinnyokan (The Contemplation of Suchness). Originally attributed to Genshin but written later in the vernacular, the text reflects key developments in early medieval Buddhist thought by making profound contemplative doctrines more accessible to a non-monastic audience.
PDF: The Contemplation of Suchness (translations from Shinnyokan

Title: The Moment of Death in Nichiren’s Thought
Date: 2003
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Examines Nichiren’s teachings concerning the moment of death, specifically his critique of Pure Land deathbed practices. Nichiren asserted that the single practice of chanting the daimoku guarantees a peaceful death and rebirth in the Pure Land of Eagle Peak, leading to later sect developments like the “rinjū mandala”.
PDF: The Moment of Death in Nichiren’s Thought (2003)

Title: The Sin of “Slandering the True Dharma” in Nichiren’s Thought
Date: 2012
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Details Nichiren’s doctrine regarding “slander of the Dharma” (hōbō), the ultimate sin in his theology. It shows how Nichiren held that following provisional teachings constituted slander, though he paradoxically maintained that even slanderers would eventually attain Buddhahood after expiating their offenses by forming a “reverse connection”.
PDF: The Sin of Slandering the True Dharma in Nichiren’s Thought (2012)

Title: The Account of How Nichiren Miraculously Escaped Beheading and Its Modern Critics: History and Hagiography in a Japanese Buddhist Tradition
Date: 2022
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Traces the reception history and modern scholarly debate surrounding the “Tatsunokuchi Persecution,” an episode where Nichiren supposedly escaped execution via a miraculous celestial object. The paper examines the tension between sectarian hagiography and modern evidence-based research regarding the authenticity of his autobiographical accounts.
PDF: The-Account-of-How-Nichiren-Miraculously-Escaped-Beheading-and-Its-Modern-Critics-2022

Title: The Doctrines of Nichiren
Date: 1893
Author: Compiled by the Right Virtuous Abbot Kobayashi
Summary: A late 19th-century English-language primer on the core teachings of Nichiren Buddhism. Compiled by Abbot Kobayashi of the Nichiren College, the text introduces Western readers to the distinction between the “original” and “subordinate” Buddha, and the central practice of chanting the Daimoku to attain blessings.
PDF: The Doctrine of Nichiren with a Sketch of his Life

Title: Tiantai Buddhism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Date: 2022 (approximate)
Author: Brook Ziporyn
Summary: A comprehensive encyclopedia entry outlining the philosophical tenets of Tiantai Buddhism, formulated by Zhiyi. It explicates complex doctrines such as the Three Truths, transformative self-recontextualization, and the paradoxical ultimate reality of all appearances, demonstrating how Tiantai integrates diverse Buddhist teachings into a holistic framework.
Website: Tiantai Buddhism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

Title: “Upholding Faith in the Buddhadharma and Repaying the Nation” (1863)
Date: 2021 (original 1863)
Author: Ogawa Taidō (Translated by Jacqueline I. Stone)
Summary: A translation of a mid-nineteenth-century treatise by the lay scholar Ogawa Taidō that equates religious devotion to the Lotus Sutra with ultimate national loyalty. Ogawa argues that Japan’s domestic unrest and foreign threats can only be quelled by abandoning provisional sects and embracing the supreme teachings of the Buddhadharma.
PDF: Ogawa-Taido-Upholding-Faith-in-the-Buddhadharma-and-Repaying-the-Nation-2021

Title: “We Alone Can Save Japan”: Soka Gakkai’s Wartime Antecedents and Its Postwar Conversion Campaign
Date: 2021
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Analyzes the postwar growth of the Soka Gakkai under its second president, Toda Jōsei. It explains how Toda’s massive proselytizing campaign combined Nichiren Shōshū doctrine, a new “life philosophy,” and the goal of establishing a national ordination platform to rebuild a devastated postwar Japan.
PDF: We-Alone-Can-Save-Japan-Soka-Gakkais-Wartime-Antecedents-and-Its-Postwar-Conversion-Campaign-2022

Title: When Disobedience Is Filial and Resistance Is Loyal: The Lotus Sutra and Social Obligations in the Medieval Nichiren Tradition
Date: 2002
Author: Jacqueline I. Stone
Summary: Explores how medieval Nichiren Buddhists negotiated the conflict between secular social obligations (like filial piety and feudal loyalty) and exclusive devotion to the Lotus Sutra. It shows that resisting secular authorities for the sake of the Dharma was ultimately reframed as the highest form of loyalty and filial piety.
PDF: When Disobedience is Filial and Resistance is Loyal

Mortal Enemy of the Buddha Dharma

(Hitherto missing) A sleeping lion does not turn angry unless it is provoked. Waves do not rise unless a pole is thrust in the river. Likewise, if we do not refute the slanderer of the True Dharma, we will not encounter hardship. It is preached in the Nirvana Sūtra, “If a virtuous priest upon seeing a person who destroys the dharma disregards him and does not censure him, such a priest is a mortal enemy of the Buddha Dharma.” If we do not take the word “disregard” seriously in this citation, it is inevitable that we will fall into the Hell of Incessant Suffering in the next life, though we seemingly may be able to pass through this life without trouble.

Therefore, Grand Master Nan-yüeh states in his Lotus Sūtra’s Four Peaceful Practices, “Suppose a bodhisattva protects an evil person and is unwilling to punish him, allowing his evil to increase, thus bringing trouble to virtuous people, and destroying the True Dharma. Such a bodhisattva is not a true bodhisattva. Outwardly he pretends to be a bodhisattva to deceive others, saying always, ‘I am practicing the paramita of perseverance.’ Such a person will fall into hell together with all the other evil people.”

The Ten Wheel Sūtra also preaches, “Do not live with a slanderer of the True Dharma. Do not befriend him or approach him. Doing so, will inevitably lead you to fall into the Avīci Hell.” When one enters a forest of sandalwood, the sweet fragrance clings to one’s body even though no branches are broken. Likewise, when one befriends or approaches a slanderer of the True Dharma, the merits one has accumulated will vanish and that person will fall into hell together with the slanderer. Therefore, Grand Master Miao-lê warns in his Annotations on the Great Concentration and Insight, “If one, who is not initially evil, approaches and befriends an evil person, it is inevitable that one will become evil in time, spreading his wicked ways throughout the country.”

Nambu Rokurō-dono Gosho, A Letter to Lord Nambu Rokurō, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Followers II, Volume 7, Page 170-171

Daily Dharma for May 30, 2026

20260530-ddi

Illustration by Google Gemini

Show Gemini's thinking

Gemini Thinking

The illustration conceptualizes the verses from Chapter Twenty-Six of the Lotus Sūtra, focusing on the vow of protection and the psychological consequences of creating harm. The painting centers on an 'expounder of the Dharma,' a monk reading a scroll, who is flanked by supportive figures representing the Mother-of-Devils and the rakṣasī demons (though fewer than ten, representing the group). In the lower section, three figures represent those who 'trouble' the teacher; they are shown in varying states of mental and physical anguish, their heads symbolically 'split' (indicated by stress lines), paralleling the bare, broken branches of the arjaka-tree on the far left. The natural, cohesive landscape represents living in harmony, as Śākyamuni Buddha looks down with compassion from the upper realm.

Translation:

双子座 (Signature): Gemini

ジェミニ (Hanko Seal): Gemini

Anyone who does not keep our spells
But troubles the expounder of the Dharma
Shall have his head split into seven pieces
Just as the branches of the arjaka-tree [are split].

The ten rakṣasī demons and Mother-of-Devils sing these verses in Chapter Twenty-Six of the Lotus Sūtra. They are among the many gods and other supernatural beings who vow to protect all those who keep and practice the Buddha Dharma. These verses help us to understand the nature of those who create harm in the world and to develop a heart of compassion towards them. The nature of delusion is that it sets up a world separate from the world we all share. It puts a barrier between us and the world out of fear that this world will harm us. The Buddha’s teachings show us how to develop the courage to live in harmony with this world, rather than splitting ourselves from it, and splitting ourselves in it.

The Daily Dharma is produced by the Lexington Nichiren Buddhist Community. To subscribe to the daily emails, visit zenzaizenzai.com

Good and Wicked Countries

Of the 25 transmitters of the Buddhist dharma, all except the Buddha are men of temporary manifestation dispatched by the Buddha to lead living beings. Āryadeva, the 14th of the 25 transmitters, was killed by a non-Buddhist, and Venerable Simha, the 25th transmitter, was beheaded by King Dammira. Many others such as Buddhamitra and Bodhisattva Nāgārjuna encountered various difficulties. On the other hand, some were firmly supported by the rulers and were able to spread the dharma without encountering difficulties. Why is it that some transmitters were persecuted while others were not? I believe it is because there exist good and wicked countries in the world and aggressive and persuasive means of spreading a religion. This was true even during the Ages of the True Dharma and the Semblance Dharma. It was also true even in India, the central land of the Buddhist dharma. All the more so in Japan, a remote country land, at the beginning of the Latter Age of Degeneration. It has been expected from the beginning that I would encounter great difficulties when I tried to spread the teaching of the Lotus Sutra. I simply waited for them to arise.

Tenjū Kyōju Hōmon, Lightening the Karmic Retribution, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Followers 1, Volume 6, Page 30

Daily Dharma for May 29, 2026

20260529-ddi

Illustration by Google Gemini

Show Gemini's thinking

Gemini Thinking

Here is a conceptual summary and translation of the elements included in this visual Dharma teaching:

Conceptual Thinking:
This illustration visualizes the passage from Chapter Fifteen of the Lotus Sūtra by depicting the inseparable connection between faith, benevolent action, and the realization of the highest Dharma. In the heavenly realm, Śākyamuni Buddha emits a stream of golden light representing the "power of faith," which flows directly to a monk practicing good deeds in the earthly realm. The monk, representing the practitioner, is actively "doing good patiently" by offering food to those in need. This act of creating benefit in the world allows him to "hear" or perceive the golden verses of the Dharma that rise around him—teachings only accessible through direct practice.

Identified Figures & Deities:

Śākyamuni Buddha: Seated on the lotus throne in the heavenly realm.

A Buddhist Monk: In the foreground, practicing compassion.

Kanji Translation:

信力 (Shinriki): The Power of Faith.

聞未曾有法 (Mon Mizouhou): Hear the Dharma that you have never heard before.

Arouse your power of faith,
And do good patiently!
You will be able to hear the Dharma
That you have never heard before.

The Buddha sings these verses in Chapter Fifteen of the Lotus Sūtra. These are another emphasis of the superiority of those who put the Buddha’s teachings into practice rather than those who merely hear and understand them. It is only when we are engaged in creating benefit in the world, in helping all beings to become enlightened, that we are able to hear the Buddha’s highest teaching, the teaching of his own enlightenment.

The Daily Dharma is produced by the Lexington Nichiren Buddhist Community. To subscribe to the daily emails, visit zenzaizenzai.com

The Only Dependable Teaching

[T]he only dependable teaching is a phrase in fascicle seven of the Lotus Sūtra saying: “Propagate this sūtra throughout Jambudvipa during the last 500-year period after My passing.” Grand Master Dengyō interprets this: “The Ages of the True Dharma and Semblance Dharma are approaching the end, and the Latter Age of Degeneration is around the corner. It is the time when the One Vehicle teaching of the Lotus Sūtra will be propagated.”

Mikoshi Buri Gosho, Intimidation with the Portable Shrine, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Biography and Desciples, Volume 5, Page 143

Daily Dharma for May 28, 2026

20260528-ddi

Illustration by Google Gemini

Show Gemini's thinking

Gemini Thinking

A serene, classical Japanese Buddhist painting (yamato-e style) rendered on an aged silk scroll, composed perfectly in a 1:1 square format. The artwork utilizes traditional mineral pigments (azurite blue, malachite green, cinnabar red), subtle colors, and extensive, soft application of gold leaf for halos and decorative elements.

The composition centers on a large, multi-storied, jewel-encrusted Japanese-style stūpa (pagoda) floating amidst swirling, stylized clouds. The central structure of the stūpa has miraculously split open, revealing Many-Treasures Buddha (Tahō Nyorai) seated inside. He is bathed in a warm, golden radiance, depicted with a compassionate expression and wearing ornate robes adorned with gold leaf patterns. His hands are in a gesture of praise and confirmation as he looks down toward Śākyamuni.

Below the floating stūpa, seated upon a multi-tiered lotus throne supported by a jeweled dais, is Śākyamuni Buddha (Shaka Nyorai). He has a calm, meditative expression and a prominent circular gold halo. He is performing the dharmachakra mudra (teaching gesture), expounding the Lotus Sutra. He is surrounded by a large multitude of monks, bodhisattvas, and lay disciples gathered on the ground, looking up with expressions of reverence and awe at the miraculous appearance of the stūpa and Tahō Buddha.

The background shows a stylized, peaceful landscape of rolling green hills, ancient pine trees, and a distant temple compound, all depicted with soft, flowing brushwork characteristic of classical Japanese painting. The overall color palette is muted yet rich, emphasizing warm golds, deep reds, and natural mineral tones.

Text Integration

In the lower-right corner, subtly integrated into the composition, is the vertical Kanji artist's signature: 双子座.

Immediately below the signature is a small, red square hanko (seal) containing the Katakana text: ジェミニ.

Along the upper-right edge of the painting, a narrow, vertical cartouche features the title of the sutra in classical Kanji: 妙法蓮華經 (Myōhō Renge Kyō).

The painting possesses an antique, devotional quality, with subtle aging and fine crackle texture visible on the silk surface.

Thereupon a loud voice of praise was heard from within the stūpa of treasures: “Excellent, excellent! You, Śākyamuni, the World-Honored One, have expounded to this great multitude the Sūtra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma, the Teaching of Equality, the Great Wisdom, the Dharma for Bodhisattvas, the Dharma Upheld by the Buddhas. So it is, so it is. What you, Śākyamuni, the World-Honored One, have expounded is all true.”

This declaration comes from Many-Treasures Buddha (Tahō, Prabhutaratna) at the beginning of Chapter Eleven of the Lotus Sūtra. In the story, Many-Treasures came from a world far away from this world of conflict when he heard the Buddha giving his highest teaching and appeared in a tower (stūpa) of wonderful treasures to confirm the truth of this teaching. By the Teaching of Equality, he means that all beings can become enlightened through this teaching. By the Great Wisdom, he means that the teaching is the same as the Buddha’s own mind. By the Dharma for Bodhisattvas, he means that to receive this teaching we awaken to our natures to benefit all beings. And by the Dharma Upheld by the Buddhas, he means that all Buddhas in all worlds encourage and help those who practice this sūtra.

The Daily Dharma is produced by the Lexington Nichiren Buddhist Community. To subscribe to the daily emails, visit zenzaizenzai.com

On the Journey to a Place of Treasures