Affirmation of The Concrete

William LaFleur describes how Tendai thought, especially Chih-i’s Mo-ho-chih-kuan and the Lotus Sutra, influenced a transformation of Japanese poetry in the twelfth century. He points out that in the Lotus Sutra there is a philosophical move that is the opposite of what predominated in the West under the influence of Platonism. In the Sutra, “the illustration is in no way subordinate to what it illustrates.” Not a shadow of something else more real, “the narratives of the Lotus are not a means to an end beyond themselves. Their concrete mode of expression is not ‘chaff’ to be dispensed with in order to attain a more abstract, rational, or spiritual truth.” The Sutra itself says:

Even if you search in all directions,
You will find no other vehicles –
Except the skillful means of the Buddha.

In other words, apart from concrete events, apart from stories, teachings, actions, and so on, there is no Buddhism.

The Stories of the Lotus Sutra, p13-14