Today is the third day of Higan week, the three days before the equinox and the three days after. As explained in a Nichiren Shu brochure:
For Buddhists, this period is not just one characterized by days with almost equal portions of light and dark. Rather, it is a period in which we strive to consciously reflect upon ourselves and our deeds.
The today we consider the Perfection of Patience. For this Fall Higan week I’m using Hsuan Hua‘s commentary on the Lotus Sutra in which he discusses the 10 advantages of each pāramitā.
Today let’s discuss the ten advantages of practicing the paramita of patience. In this world, the harder something is to do, the more it’s worth doing. If the task isn’t difficult, it doesn’t have too much value. Therefore, even though it’s hard to practice patience, it brings great benefit and is of tremendous value. What are the ten advantages?
If, in the formative stage of practice, one cultivates patience, in the future one will receive in general the following ten benefits:
Fire will not burn one. Why? Those who practice patience have no internal fire. If there’s no fire within, then fire from the outside has no way to harm one. If one has fire inside, one will get burned. It’s also said:With no deficiency internally, One does not attract trouble from outside.If you have problems inside, you’ll attract sickness from the outside. For example, if you catch a cold, it’s often because you’ve been doing a lot of false thinking internally, which leads to “inner” weakness. You then catch an “external” cold as a result. If you cultivate patience and internally extinguish your fiery temper, so that your nature is like dead ashes, then no external fire will be able to burn you.
Knives will not hurt one. If one cultivates patience, one will not be injured by knives because there are no “knives or guns” within. Without “knives or guns” inside – that is, having no thoughts of harming others – external knives and guns can’t harm one. It’s said:If inside the house there is a superior person, Superior people will come to visit. If inside the house there are petty people, Petty people will stop by.If there are no knives or guns in your inherent nature, you won’t be hurt by knives or guns from the outside. This is genuine philosophy!
Poison will not harm one. Not only can knives not harm one, neither can poison. If one has practiced patience to perfection, then,At knife point, I remain completely calm; Even poisoned, I am totally at ease.One will remain unscathed when encountering the danger of knives and poison. Patriarch Bodhidharma was poisoned six times by jealous rivals but didn’t die. Why? He’d practiced patience for countless eons and with its perfection had attained this pāramitā. Which pāramitā? The antidote to poison.
Water will not drown one. One who cultivates patience to perfection won’t drown in water.
Nonhumans will protect one. Nonhumans refers to gods, dragons, and other spiritual beings of the eightfold division. They will all look out for you and watch over your bodhimaṇḍ
One will obtain a splendid and majestic appearance. Didn’t I tell you that if you cultivate patience, you’ll have a sublime appearance? You’ll delight all who see you and will make no one afraid. People will respect and cherish you and won’t be able to leave you even if they want to. They’ll always want to be around you. A splendid and majestic appearance is the physical manifestation of the purity of one’s thoughts when they’re free of defilement. It’s not the kind of beauty associated with glamour and sex appeal. The splendor and majesty of one’s appearance will inspire reverence. It won’t cause people to become emotionally infatuated or have impure thoughts.
The lower destinies will be closed to one. What are the lower destinies? They refer to the three lower realms: the hells, the realm of animals, and the realm of hungry ghosts. The doors to these destinies will be closed to you. You won’t fall into the destinies of hungry ghosts and hell beings or be reborn as an animal.
One will be born in the Brahma heavens. If you practice patience, in the future you can be born in the great Brahma heavens.
One will be peaceful and joyful day and night. Throughout the three periods of the day and the three periods of the night, you’ll be peaceful and joyful. You won’t be worried about your business during the day and then in the evening wonder whether or not you’re going to lose your job the next day or if you’ll have anything to eat. Most people have a lot of worries and afflictions. If you practice patience, you won’t have these kinds of afflictions. Throughout the day and night, you’ll always be very peaceful and joyful, worry-free.
One will never be separated from joy and happiness. You’ll always be in good spirits and will always be very happy. This kind of happiness isn’t based on external events and stimuli. Rather, it comes from within your inherent nature and is not a contrived display of happiness.
These are the ten advantages of practicing patience.
Regarding the Chinese character “myō (wonderful),” the Lotus Sūtra states in chapter 10, “The Teacher of the Dharma,” that this sūtra opens the gate to the expedient teachings expounded in various sūtras and reveals the seal of the truth. Grand Master Chang-an interprets this in the “Preface” in the first fascicle of the Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sūtra that the Buddha opened up the door to the storehouse to disclose the valuables hoarded up in it, which was called myō. Grand Master Miao-lê further explains this in the first fascicle of his Commentary on the Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sūtra that to disclose means to open up. Contemplating on them, I should say, ” myō” means to “open up.”
Hokke Daimoku Shō, Treatise on the Daimoku of the Lotus Sūtra
Chapter 26 teaches incantations (dharani) for the protection of the followers of the Lotus Sutra. The word dharani is translated into Japanese as “remembering all” (for the power of maintaining everything in memory), as “ability to hold” (for firmly keeping good teachings), and as “ability to block” (for firmly insulating oneself from bad teachings). Dharani, regarded as having efficacious power, are a kind of incantation, and are products of esoteric Buddhist thought.
The name “Mother of Demon Children” appears in this chapter. She swears to try to protect the followers of the Lotus Sutra. According to legend, she was originally a demon who snatched children and ate them, but after being admonished by the Buddha was transformed into a deity who protected children. The appearance of the name in this chapter provided an opportunity for faith in Mother of Demon Children to become popular within the Nichiren school.
If anyone resists our incantations
And makes trouble for a Dharma preacher,
Their heads will split into seven pieces. …
Good, good, if you can protect those who receive and keep even the name of the Dharma Flower Sutra, your blessings will be immeasurable.
People have often recited passages such as these. These phrases, the dharani, and Mother of Demons were all used to promote a kind of faith that is beneficial for combating calamity and inviting good fortune in this world.
Today is the second day of Higan week, the three days before the equinox and the three days after. As explained in a Nichiren Shu brochure:
For Buddhists, this period is not just one characterized by days with almost equal portions of light and dark. Rather, it is a period in which we strive to consciously reflect upon ourselves and our deeds.
The today we consider the Perfection of Precepts. For this Fall Higan week I’m using Hsuan Hua‘s commentary on the Lotus Sutra in which he discusses the 10 advantages of each pāramitā.
The ten advantages of practicing the pāramitā of upholding precepts are:
One will perfect omniscient wisdom. If one upholds the precepts well, one can attain omniscient wisdom.
One will study what the Buddhas study. One will learn from the same source as the Buddhas do. The Buddha took the precepts as his teacher. So it’s said that the vajra-bright jeweled precepts are the source of all Buddhas. All Buddhas come forth from precepts.
One will not be despised by the wise. If you uphold the precepts, only ignorant people will speak ill of you. Wise people won’t criticize you. Ignorant people will naturally criticize you, because they’re confused about right and wrong. Why? They have no wisdom. They mistake right for wrong, black for white. These are the acts of ignorant people. If you uphold precepts, wise people won’t speak ill of you; they’ll praise you instead. …
One will not retreat from one’s resolve. This is the most important advantage. One vows, “I will seek the Buddha-dharma no matter how hard it is. I don’t care if I starve to death or freeze to death. I’m not going to retreat. If no one makes offerings to me, that’s the very best thing.” You shouldn’t be greedy for offerings. You shouldn’t drop hints to people in the hope that they’ll buy you things and then think, “I must have virtue and be quite the cultiva-tor. People are making offerings to me!” That would be wrong! You should vow, “I will seek Buddhahood even if it means giving up my head, eyes, brains, marrow, flesh, hands, and feet-even my very life!” …
One will dwell peacefully in proper conduct. Peacefully dwelling in proper conduct means performing proper, not improper, conduct. Proper conduct benefits others rather than yourself. If you’re scheming, your conduct is improper; if you aren’t scheming, your conduct is proper.
One will cast aside birth and death. One shouldn’t cling to birth and death, thinking, “My life is most precious. I have to make nice offerings to my body-give it good and nutritious food as well as vitamins to make it strong.” It may get stronger, but the stronger your body becomes, the weaker your wisdom gets. When your wisdom becomes weak, even if your body is strong, it isn’t genu-inely strong. Because your wisdom life can’t grow, you must cast aside birth and death altogether. You shouldn’t hold on to your physical life at the expense of the life of your wisdom. Look upon birth and death as unimport-ant, thinking, “If I live, I live; if I die, I die,” while at the same time making sure to cultivate. If you fail to cultivate, thinking that birth and death are no problem, then you’ll never be able to break away from the cycle of birth and death. You must see birth and death as unimportant yet still cultivate to end birth and death.
One will long for and delight in nirvāṇa. One thinks, “What I delight in most is nirvana-the Dharma of transcending birth and death.” Nir means “not coming into being”; vāṇa means “not ceasing to be.” The goal of upholding the precepts is to attain nirvāṇ
One will attain an unfettered mind. What’s meant by an unfettered mind? One may have much wisdom and make a great resolve for bodhi, but then one becomes tied up by the ten fetters of greed, hatred, delusion, arrogance, doubt, the view of self, extreme views, the view of clinging to precepts and austerities, the view of attachment to views, and wrong views. These ten fetters bind up your mind so that wisdom cannot come forth. To attain an unfettered mind is to become liberated.
One will attain supreme samādhi. This is no ordinary samādhi. This samādhi power is formidable! Nothing can disturb it – nothing! It’s an inconceivable level of supreme concentration.
One will not lack the wealth of faith. To have faith is to have wealth. People without faith are poor. If you don’t believe the Dharma Master when he lectures on the Dharma, then you won’t be able to make a resolve for bodhi. If you can’t make a resolve for bodhi, you’re poor. Not lacking the wealth of faith means you have great faith. When you’re full of faith, you’re wealthy.
This is a brief explanation of the ten advantages of upholding the precepts. If one were to go into detail, a great deal more could be said.
You should consider that the Lotus Sūtra is like the king, parents, sun and moon, great ocean, Mt. Sumeru and heaven and earth while other sūtras are like regents, ministers, court nobles, or all the people in the country, various stars, rivers, mountains, trees and plants. We are the ignorant in the Latter Age of Degeneration committing sins and are not capable of accepting the Dharma. The king helps the people rather than his retainers; parents have compassion on their own children more so than unrelated persons; and the light of the sun and the moon is brighter than stars. Likewise, if the Lotus Sūtra is unsuitable to save the ignorant with inferior capacity in the Latter Age of Degeneration, you should realize there is no other sūtra.
Shō Hokke Daimoku-shō, Treastise on Chanting the Daimoku of the Lotus Sūtra
Chapter 25, “The Universal Gateway of the Bodhisattva Regarder of the Cries of the World,” attracted so much respect among people that it became an independent sutra. Here Avalokiteshvara personifies the illumination of the entire world, perceiving it and responding with saving help. According to this chapter, it is possible to be rescued from the seven dangers—fire, water, people-eating demons, swords, demons, torture, and robbery— by chanting the name of the bodhisattva. One can also remove the three poisons—greed, anger, and stupidity. And those wanting to have a baby boy or a baby girl will be able to by doing the same.
In order to save people, Avalokiteshvara transforms himself into thirty-three different bodies according to people’s desires and capacity to understand—an act that symbolizes the bodhisattva’s infinite compassion. In brief, “this bodhisattva can confer fearlessness on living beings.” As one who confers fearlessness, Avalokiteshvara Bodhisattva removes peoples’ fears. That is, the purpose of this chapter is to encourage people to try to live their lives in faith without fear.
Today is the first day of Higan week, the three days before the equinox and the three days after. As explained in a Nichiren Shu brochure:
For Buddhists, this period is not just one characterized by days with almost equal portions of light and dark. Rather, it is a period in which we strive to consciously reflect upon ourselves and our deeds.
The today we consider the Perfection of Generosity. For this Fall Higan week I’m using Hsuan Hua‘s commentary on the Lotus Sutra in which he discusses the 10 advantages of each pāramitā.
Let’s talk about the ten advantages resulting from the pāramitā of giving. What are they?
One will be able to conquer the afflictions associated with stinginess. Stinginess is a form of affliction that’s hard to overcome. With the practice of giving, one can overcome this affliction.
One will be able to maintain a continuous attitude of generosity. Sometimes people’s first thought is to give, but in their next thought they retreat and get stingy. One must resolve to give in thought after thought. The second advantage of practicing true giving is that one develops and maintains an attitude of generosity.
One will be able to share one’s wealth with living beings without discrimination. Because you can give money away to others, your wealth will flow to others and be shared with them.
One will be born in a wealthy, honorable family.
In every life, one will always be generous and ready to give.
One will be loved and cherished by the fourfold assembly. The bhikṣus, bhikṣunīs, upāsakās, and upāsikās will all like you because you’re generous.
One will remain undaunted in the presence of the multitudes. If you have no virtue, you’ll be easily intimidated by others. If you meet someone with virtue, you’ll be intimidated by them. If you meet someone who is mean and wicked, you’ll be intimidated as well. You’ll be terrified of both the good and the bad. If you practice giving, no matter how much tough opposition you encounter from other people – be it good or bad opposition – you won’t be afraid. You’ll remain undaunted in the presence of the multitudes.
One’s good reputation will be heard everywhere. If you practice giving, everyone will know that you’re a great and wealthy elder. Your good reputation will be known by all.
One’s hands and feet will be soft and supple. Your hands will be as supple and smooth as cotton. They won’t be coarse like sandpaper. The Buddhas’ hands are said to be as soft as tūla cotton, which is a result of them practicing giving in every life.
This advantage is even better. What is it? One will encounter a genuine good spiritual teacher in whichever monastery one is. If you fail to meet a genuine good spiritual teacher, it’s because you didn’t practice giving in your past lives. If you come across good spiritual teachers, they’ll employ “relentless compassion” to remonstrate with you and give you advice that you don’t want to hear. Although their words might sound critical, their constructive criticism comes from a compassionate heart.
These ten advantages will be conferred upon those who practice giving. Each of the remaining five pāramitās also has ten advantages.
I received your letter, in which you said that you used to chant one chapter of the Lotus Sūtra each day, taking twenty-eight days to finish chanting it once; and that recently, however, you chant only the “Previous Life of the Medicine-King Bodhisattva” chapter each day. Then you asked: “Should I chant each chapter each day as I used to?”
You may chant the whole twenty-eight chapters, one chapter, one paragraph, one sentence or even one character of the Lotus Sūtra a day. Or, you may chant the daimoku, “Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō,” just once in a day or once in your whole life. Even if you may never chant the daimoku yourself, you may rejoice at hearing others chant it just once in your whole life. Or you may rejoice with others who rejoice at hearing a voice chanting the daimoku.
Gassui Gasho, A Letter on Menstruation, Nyonin Gosho
Chapter 24 uses the model of bodhisattva Wonderful Voice to describe the mental concentrations (samadhi) and divine powers of liberation that are acquired through faith. Here faith is meant to foster a kind of immovable and transcendent spirit drawn to involvement in the eddies of this changing world. The chapter emphasizes cultivating such an ability to be able to cope with this world as well as is possible.
For this Fall Higan week I’m using Chinese Master Hsuan Hua‘s commentary on the Lotus Sutra. Before starting Higan week tomorrow, I offer Hsuan Hua’s explaination of the Counteraction, Interaction and Rewards associated with the Six Pāramitās.
The six pāramitās can also be explained in three other ways.
Counteraction. The first pāramitā, giving, counteracts stinginess. Being stingy, you are reluctant to give. Giving is an act of letting go. The second pāramitā, upholding precepts, counteracts breaking the precepts. The third pāramitā, patience, counteracts hatred. The fourth pāramitā, vigor, counteracts indolence, so that you won’t be lax. The fifth pāramitā, dhyāna, counteracts scatteredness. The sixth pāramitā, prajña, counteracts ignorance.
Interaction. If one [becomes a monastic when one] renounces one’s household life and wife – that is, if one practices giving – one is upholding precepts. When one is able to endure humiliation without complaining, one is patient. Having been patient, one can be vigorous. Having been vigorous, one can regulate the five sense faculties – eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and body – so they no longer play tricks and will listen to you. When the five sense faculties have been regulated, you’ll understand the nature of the Dharma realm. To understand the Dharma realm is prajā. This is an explanation of the six pāramitās according to their Interaction.
Rewards. Giving brings the reward of being rich. Upholding the precepts brings the reward of the perfection and refinement of the six sense faculties. You won’t be blind or crippled, or lack a hand or leg, or otherwise lack the complete six sense faculties – eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body, and mind. Patience brings the reward of physical beauty. You’ll be born with good looks. Why are people ugly? Because in past lives they were impatient and couldn’t cope with their difficulties. Vigor brings the reward of having great power and authority. Dhyāna brings the reward of a long and healthy life. You can live as long as you like. Prajña brings the reward of unobstructed eloquence.