In terms of “explaining retinues that are formed by individual vows” (Ming Yüan-sheng Chüan-shu), this category of retinues is referred by Chih-i to the beings that had affinity with the Buddha in their previous lives, and because of their vows, they are reborn in this lifetime to attend the Buddha. If they attained the Path in this lifetime, they are referred by Chih-i as internal retinues (Nei Chüan-shu), and if they have not attained the Path, they are referred by Chih-i as external retinues (Wai Chüan-shu). These external retinues have to wait for the future Buddha to come in order to attain enlightenment. (Vol. 2, Page 291)
The Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sutra: Tien-tai Philosophy of BuddhismMonthly Archives: January 2019
Day 12
Day 12 concludes Chapter 7, The Parable of the Magic City, and completes the Third Volume of the Sutra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma.
Having last month considered the reaction of the 16 princes when the Buddha retired to quiet contemplation for eighty-four thousand kalpas, we consider the Parable of the Magic City in gāthās.
Suppose there was a bad and dangerous road.
Many wild animals lived in the neighborhood.
No man was there; no water nor grass there.
The road was so fearful.Many tens of millions of people
Wished to pass through this dangerous road.
The road was very long.
It was five hundred yojanas long.The people had a leader.
He had a good memory.
He was wise and resolute in mind.
He could save people from dangers.Getting tired,
The people said to him:
“We are tired.
We wish to go back.”He thought:
‘How pitiful they are!
Why do they wish to return
Without getting great treasures?’Thinking of an expedient, he said to himself:
‘I will use my supernatural powers.’
He made a great city by magic,
And adorned it with houses.The city was surrounded by gardens, forests,
And by ponds and pools for bathing.
Many-storied gates and tall buildings [in that city]
Were filled with men and women.Having made all this by magic,
He consoled the people, saying:
“Do not be afraid! Enter that city!
And do anything you like!”They entered that city,
And had great joy.
They felt peaceful,
And thought that they had already passed [ through the road].Seeing that they had already had a rest,
The leader collected them, and said:
“Go on ahead now! This is a magic city.
You were tired out halfway.
You wished to go back.
Therefore, I made this city by magic As an expedient.
Make efforts!
Let us go to the place of treasures!”
From The Magic City: Studying the Lotus Sutra:
I wonder what you could accomplish in your life if you made a commitment from today for 500 days to practice on a regular consistent basis towards the achievement of some change in your life? Would you be able to travel the entire 500 days without giving up or abandoning or forgetting your goal and effort?
The Magic City: Studying the Lotus SutraSutra Strength
A person who believes in the Lotus Sutra and who chants the Odaimoku does not have to be excessively scared of bad karma, because the Lotus Sutra has “Sutra Strength” to directly extinguish bad karma. Its power is executed through penitence with chanting Odaimoku.
Summer WritingsDaily Dharma – Jan. 23, 2019
Seeing [these wonders displayed by] the supernatural powers of his sons, the father had the greatest joy that he had ever had. He joined his hands together towards his sons [staying in the sky], and said, ‘Who is your teacher? Whose disciples are you?’
King Wonderful-Adornment makes this declaration to his sons in Chapter Twenty-Seven of the Lotus Sūtra. His sons had been asked by their mother to display their supernatural powers to their father and awaken the desire in him to hear the Buddha Dharma. We all have abilities of which we are not aware, and can cultivate those abilities so that they may seem miraculous to those who do not understand them. But it is important for us not to fall in the trap of using these abilities to strengthen our ego delusion. Instead we should dedicate our talents towards awakening the joy of the Wonderful Dharma in all beings.
The Daily Dharma is produced by the Lexington Nichiren Buddhist Community. To subscribe to the daily emails, visit zenzaizenzai.com
Nichiren’s Studies on Mt. Hiei
After returning to the Kiyosumidera, Nichiren set out again for the vicinity of the capital, where he studied on Mt. Hiei and at other locations. Virtually nothing is known of his studies on Mt. Hiei. During his stay there, the master of instruction (sōgakutō) was Shunpan, a leading Tendai scholar and the current patriarch of the Sugiu line of the Eshin school. Traditional accounts maintain that Nichiren received from Shunpan the transmission of the Eshin lineage, which some modern scholars have upheld. However, the few brief references to Shunpan in Nichiren’s writings convey no sense of a personal relationship. Takagi Yutaka argues that while Nichiren may have audited Shunpan’s public lectures, his common birth would have precluded his entry into a master-disciple relationship with so eminent a prelate. Moreover, his Kantō accent would have instantly marked him as native of the eastern provinces, despised as culturally backward by people of the Kyoto region. Takagi further suggests that Nichiren’s exclusion from the circles of initiates that formed around the leading masters on Mt. Hiei may have led to his habit of turning to written documents, rather than living teachers, for instruction and verification. The first of the four reliances, “Rely on the Dharma and not upon persons” (ehō fuenin), would be his lifelong motto. Nonetheless, it is noteworthy that Shunpan was among those ranking Tendai prelates who vigorously opposed Hōnen’s teaching. Even if Nichiren’s only exposure to Shunpan were through public lectures, what he heard may have confirmed him in his objections to the exclusive nenbutsu. (Page 244-245)
The Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sutra: Tien-tai Philosophy of BuddhismRetinues Formed By Principal Nature
In terms of “explaining retinues that are formed by principal nature” (Ming Li-hsing Chüan-shu), what Chih-i attempts to convey is that every being possesses the Buddha-nature. The relationship is thus formed by this inherent nature for attaining Buddhahood. Chih-i argues that the fundamental principle of the Buddha-nature that is equally possessed by sentient beings and the Buddha is evidenced in the Buddha’s statement in the Lotus Sūtra, emphasizing that all living beings are his children. Therefore, retinues that are formed by principal nature indicate children and father relationship between sentient beings and the Buddha. (Vol. 2, Page 290-291)
The Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sutra: Tien-tai Philosophy of BuddhismDay 11
Day 11 continues Chapter 7, The Parable of the Magic City
Having last month concluded today’s portion of Chapter 7 with the reaction of the Brahman-heavenly-kings of the five hundred billion worlds in the zenith, we begin again with what occurred when Great-Universal-Wisdom-Excellence Buddha attained Anuttara-samyak-saṃbodhi.
The Buddha said to the bhikṣus:
“When Great-Universal-Wisdom-Excellence Buddha attained Anuttara-samyak-saṃbodhi, five hundred billion Buddha-worlds in each of the ten quarters quaked in the six ways, and all those worlds, including those intercepted from the brilliant rays of light of the sun and the moon by the neighboring worlds, were illumined [by great rays of light], and the living beings of those worlds were able to see each other for the first time. They said to each other, ‘How did you appear so suddenly?’ The palaces of the gods of those worlds, including the palace of Brahmans, also quaked in the six ways. The great rays of light which illumined all those worlds were brighter than the rays of light emitted by those gods.
The Lotus Path: Practicing the Lotus Sutra Volume 1 offers this:
With the Lotus Sutra and our Buddhist practice we can even illuminate the sufferings we are experiencing as well as those we have experienced and with the wisdom learned we can forge a future with different outcomes. No matter how dark or how long darkness has existed in our lives, just as a light illuminates a cave that has been dark for hundreds of years, the Lotus Sutra can bring light and enlightenment to our lives.
Lotus Path: Practicing the Lotus Sutra Volume 1Liberating Ourselves From the Bonds of Suffering
Enlightenment is not the complete elimination of all problems. Instead it is the ability to see through the difficulty and realize those problems are illusions. Suffering is not the experience of pain; it is the experience of the relationship to pain. When we can transform our relationship with the difficulties in our lives and realize they are opportunities and no one is better qualified than ourselves to overcome them, by doing this we can liberate ourselves from the bonds of suffering.
Lecture on the Lotus SutraDaily Dharma – Jan. 22, 2019
Every Buddha vows at the outset:
“I will cause all living beings
To attain the same enlightenment
That I attained.”
The Buddha sings these verses in Chapter Two of the Lotus Sūtra. The Buddha holds nothing back from us. There is nothing hidden or secret in his teachings. He is not threatened by anyone who reaches his wisdom, since he knows this is the potential we all have in us. By his example we can discern between the knowledge that separates from others, and that which unites us with our fellow beings.
The Daily Dharma is produced by the Lexington Nichiren Buddhist Community. To subscribe to the daily emails, visit zenzaizenzai.com
Nichiren’s Two Soteric Modalities
Nichiren’s teaching of exclusive commitment to the Lotus Sūtra in the Final Dharma age undergoes development from two perspectives. While it would be misleading to suggest that these exist as distinct categories in his thought, they may perhaps be thought of as two interconnected soteric modalities. The first is Nichiren’s emphasis on the importance of readiness to give one’s life for the Lotus Sūtra. Since, in Nichiren’s thought, only the Lotus leads to salvation, its devotees, out of compassion, must confront nonbelievers in the sūtra and strictly point out their errors. By enduring the abuse such efforts are likely to call forth, one’s past evil karma can be lessened or eradicated. To incur persecution for the Lotus Sūtra’s sake demonstrates the authenticity of one’s faith; to give one’s life for it is to guarantee one’s future Buddhahood. Nichiren developed this soteriology through his own reading of the Lotus and other sūtras and commentaries over the course of two exiles, various attempts on his life, and other ordeals he and his followers confronted in the course of his turbulent career.
Second, Nichiren taught that in the Final Dharma age, by arousing the mind of faith in the sūtra and chanting its title or daimoku in the phrase “Namu-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō,” one can realize Buddhahood with this very body. In this act, the identity of the Buddha and the ordinary worldling is manifested, and the place of practice becomes the Buddha land. This modality has obvious continuities with the esoteric Tendai tradition from which Nichiren had emerged.
Of these two soteric modalities, the first—attaining Buddhahood by meeting persecution for the sūtra’s sake—stands out more prominently in the body of Nichiren’s writings. It is the “outward face,” so to speak, of his religion and represents his response to immediate circumstances as he and his followers began to meet opposition from the bakufu and to wrestle with the doubts such persecution engendered. After Nichiren’s death, the ethos of “not begrudging bodily life” for the practice and propagation of the Lotus Sūtra proved instrumental in enabling his fledgling community to emerge as an independent sect and to define and maintain its identity vis-ā-vis older and more established institutions. It is in many ways definitive of his tradition, and no comprehensive account of his thought could ignore it. Informing it, however, is the second or “inner” soteric modality, that of realizing Buddhahood in the moment of chanting the daimoku. This is what ties Nichiren to the nonlinear model of salvation that characterizes much of medieval Japanese Buddhism. (Page 241-242)
Original Enlightenment and the Transformation of Medieval Japanese Buddhism