All posts by John Hughes

Myōhō Renge Kyō Promise for Dec. 28, 2025

What T’ien-t’ai and Dengyō propagated was based on the doctrine of “3,000 existences contained in one thought” expounded in the theoretical section [of the Lotus Sūtra], while what I, Nichiren, propagate is based on the doctrine of “3,000 existences contained in one thought” in the essential section. The difference between the two is as great as the difference between heaven and earth. Remember this especially at the time of the last moment of life. Have an unwavering faith in the Lotus Sūtra and continue chanting the daimoku, which is the right way of meditation based on the “actual” doctrine of “3,000 existences contained in one thought.”

Toki Nyūdō-dono Go-henji: Chibyō-shō, A Response to Lay Priest Lord Toki

About this project

Daily Dharma for December 28, 2025

20251228-ddi

Illustration by Google Gemini

Show Gemini's thinking

Examining Core Themes
I'm currently focused on the foundational concepts of cause and effect and rebirth. The Lotus Sutra quote provides a strong framework, guiding my exploration of visual representation. I'm prioritizing the spiritual weight of these themes, aiming for a visual style that captures the essence of Japanese Buddhist art. I am now working on how to merge these concepts.

Conceptualizing Visual Narrative
I'm now integrating Japanese Buddhist iconography. My focus is on representing interconnectedness, cause and effect, and rebirth in a visually coherent manner for Instagram. The Buddha figure is central, perhaps with the lotus as a throne. I'm exploring the river or path symbolism and considering a golden net to depict karma and interconnectedness.

Refining Composition Details
I'm finalizing the composition and visual details. The Buddha's posture and the river's flow are solidified. I've decided on the "Wheel of Life" in a more stylized form. The paths of benefit and harm are now distinct, with contrasting visual cues. I'm focusing on incorporating the golden net subtly to emphasize interconnectedness.

Formulating Compositional Elements
I'm now focusing on composition and detail. The Buddha will be in the top center, with a river of life below, splitting into two distinct paths. I will refine the golden net to connect the figures, emphasizing interconnectedness. The quote will be integrated. I'm prioritizing balance between visual impact and spiritual depth.

Evaluating Image Accuracy
I'm currently assessing the generated image's fidelity to the user's prompt. I'm reviewing the visual elements, specifically the incorporation of the specified iconography and stylistic details like the Japanese Buddhist aesthetic and the inclusion of text from the Lotus Sutra.

Verifying Visual Elements
I'm confirming the image's accuracy against the specifications. The illustration accurately renders the provided details: a square Japanese Buddhist-style image with specified iconography, and text integration within the visual framework, specifically the Lotus Sutra quote and the explanatory cartouche. The visual narrative resonates well with the user's text.

Now I will tell you
About my previous existence
And also about yours.
All of you, listen attentively!

The Buddha sings these verses in Chapter Six of the Lotus Sūtra. When the Buddha taught in India 2500 years ago, people took for granted that their lives continued from previous lives and would continue on into future lives. Whatever comforts we enjoy or calamities we endure in this life were thought to be caused by what we did in our former lifetimes. Our actions today were thought to determine what happens in our future lives. To our modern understanding this can sound mystical and unlikely. But if we understand that everything, including our joy and suffering, has causes and conditions, whether or not we realize these results immediately, we know that the result of creating benefit is benefit, and the result of creating harm is harm. When we hold the happiness of all beings to be as precious as our own, we would no more mistreat others than we would want them to mistreat us.

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

The Peril of Using AI to Illustrate the Daily Dharma

Each morning for the past six days I’ve asked Google’s Gemini to create an illustration based on the text of the Daily Dharma sent by zenzaizenzai.com. I’ve been refining the workflow, but in general it has become a simple task.

Until this morning.

I asked Gemini to illustrate this text:

What does the doctrine of spiritual contemplation mean? It means the way of practicing the teaching of the Buddha according to the intent of the Buddha, not necessarily according to what is literally said in the sutra. Suppose there is a man during the time of a famine who offers to the Buddha the only food he has to stay alive for a day. This is the same as offering his life to the Buddha.

Nichiren wrote this passage in his Treatise on Phenomenal and Noumenal Offering (Jiri Kuyō Gosho). The Lotus Sūtra is the highest teaching because it encompasses all beings in all worlds, assuring everyone that they can rid themselves of delusion and reach the Buddha’s enlightenment. The Buddha showed that the universe is constantly changing, even from one moment to the next. When we read the Lotus Sūtra, and allow our minds to become more like the Buddha mind, we learn the meaning behind the words and put that into practice. We do not merely go through the motions mechanically. We understand that calamities are opportunities for us to bring the Buddha’s teaching to life, and that whatever prosperity we gain does not belong to us alone. Whatever we have is for the benefit of all beings.

The illustration I received from Gemini:
fail-20251227-ddi

I have decades of experience selecting artwork to illustrate articles. That was one of my jobs during my career as a newspaper editor. This illustration puzzled me.

20251227-lens-translateUsing the Google Lens app on my phone I translated the text as saying, “Protect the Unique.” I then asked Google Lens to explain the statue, 20251227-amida-explain only to learn this was a representation of Amida Buddha. The app said, “The standing posture often represents the Buddha descending from the heavens to welcome devotees to his paradise. The hand gesture, or mudra, with the right hand raised and the palm facing outward, is known as the abhayada-mudra, which bestows fearlessness. The left hand, with the palm facing outward and downwards, forms the varada-mudra, representing compassion.

As a Nichiren Buddhist I’m not going to use a statue of Amida Buddha to illustrate the Daily Dharma, let alone a quote that doesn’t appear to relate. I went back to Gemini and told it to focus the illustration on the line: The Lotus Sūtra is the highest teaching because it encompasses all beings in all worlds, assuring everyone that they can rid themselves of delusion and reach the Buddha’s enlightenment.

That prompt produced the image I used today:
20251227-ddi
As an editor, I don’t like this image as much as earlier ones. It relies too heavily on words to explain its meaning. A good illustration shouldn’t need words.

I expect to have this happen again in the future and I’ll handle it the same way. But the story doesn’t end here. I went back to Google Gemini to see if it could explain why it produced that original illustration.

I uploaded the illustration to Gemini and asked:

Explain the symbolism of this image in detail and explain the story the illustrator was trying to tell.

Gemini responded:

This image is a rich tapestry of Buddhist iconography and ethical teaching. It illustrates a core tenet of Mahayana Buddhism: that the “sincerity and sacrifice” behind an act are far more spiritually significant than the material value of the gift itself.

The illustrator is telling a story of “ultimate devotion,” specifically highlighting the concept of Dana (generosity) practiced to its highest degree.

1. Key Symbols and Their Meanings

The image uses several classical Buddhist symbols to ground the story in spiritual tradition:

The Bodhi Tree: The monk sits beneath a tree with heart-shaped leaves, representing the tree under which Siddhartha Gautama attained enlightenment. This signifies that the scene is one of high spiritual realization and truth.

The Lotus Flowers: Emerging from clouds and water, the lotus symbolizes “purity and rebirth.” Even in the “mud” of a famine or suffering, a beautiful, pure act of devotion can bloom.

The Golden Buddha: The glowing figure in the background represents the “Triple Gem” (the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha). The rays of light (auras) signify the boundless compassion and wisdom that witness the man’s sacrifice.

The Scroll and the Monk: The monk represents the preservation of the teachings. He is a witness to the man’s karma.

The Bowl of Rice: In the context of a famine, this is not just food; it is a “biological lifeline.” By offering it, the man is physically divesting himself of his means of survival.

2. The Narrative: Sacrifice and Sincerity

The story being told is a classic Buddhist parable (similar to the story of the “Poor Woman’s Lamp” or the “Offering of the Hare”).

The Contrast of Form
The illustrator creates a sharp visual contrast between the monk (who looks healthy, serene, and well-clothed) and the poor man (who is skeletal, wearing rags, and barefoot). This emphasizes that the man is giving from a place of “lack” rather than “abundance.”
The “Life” Offering
The text at the bottom is the key to the story: “This is the same as offering his life.” In Buddhist philosophy, the merit of an action is determined by the intention (cetana).

If a king gives a thousand gold coins, it is a great gift.
If a starving man gives his last bowl of rice, he has given everything.

The illustrator is showing that this man has transcended his fear of death and his attachment to his own body. By feeding the “Buddha” (or the Sangha) instead of himself, he has achieved a state of selflessness that is the precursor to Enlightenment.

3. Analysis of the Text

The vertical Japanese/Chinese text in the center reads 「唯道のを守る」 (roughly: “Only protecting/keeping the Way”). This reinforces the idea that the man’s act is not just charity, but a strict adherence to the spiritual path (the Way), even when faced with the ultimate personal cost.

Summary of the Illustrator’s Message
The illustrator is teaching the viewer that “true spirituality is found in the depth of one’s sacrifice.” The image serves as a “contemplation” piece to make the viewer ask: “What am I willing to let go of for the sake of what is holy?”

Note that, from Gemini’s perspective, none of this has anything to do with Pure Land teaching or Amida Buddha, which were my primary concern.

I went back to Gemini again. This time I asked:

The statement: “Suppose there is a man during the time of a famine who offers to the Buddha the only food he has to stay alive for a day. This is the same as offering his life to the Buddha.”

Where could I expect to find this statement — what teaching, whose teaching?

Gemini responded:

This statement is a central teaching of Nichiren Daishonin (1222–1282), the 13th-century Japanese Buddhist priest who founded Nichiren Buddhism.

Specifically, you can find this passage in one of his letters (known as Gosho) titled “The Gift of Rice” (Hakumai-ippo-sho).

The Source and Context
Nichiren wrote this letter while living in extreme poverty and isolation on Mount Minobu. During this time, he and his disciples often faced starvation and harsh winters. The letter was written as a thank-you note to a follower who had sent him a gift of polished rice, yams, and other food.

In the letter, Nichiren writes:

“…in a time of famine, offering the food that is the only means for sustaining one’s life that day to the Buddha is offering one’s life to the Buddha.” — The Writings of Nichiren Daishonin, Vol. 1, p. 1126

Key Concepts in This Teaching
Nichiren uses this statement to explain how ordinary people can attain enlightenment. He distinguishes between two types of offerings:

Offering in Actuality
This refers to the legendary stories of ancient sages and bodhisattvas who literally gave up their bodies or lives for the Law (e.g., the boy Snow Mountains who offered his life to a demon to hear a Buddhist verse).
Offering in Principle
This is the practice for ordinary people. Since most people cannot (and are not expected to) literally sacrifice their lives, Nichiren teaches that offering something vital to your own survival—like your last bit of food during a famine—is spiritually equivalent to offering your life.
The Philosophy of “Earnest Resolve”
The core message is that the sincerity of the heart (Japanese: kokorozashi) is what matters most in Buddhism.
Life is the Foremost Treasure
Nichiren explains that life is the most precious thing in the universe. Therefore, the food that sustains life is also a “treasure.”
The Spirit of Contribution
Giving from a place of abundance is easy, but giving from a place of personal lack (the “only food he has to stay alive”) represents the highest form of faith and “earnest resolve.”
Equality of Benefit
By making such a sincere offering, an ordinary person gains the same immense “fortune” or merit as the sages of old who performed literal physical sacrifices.

Note that I didn’t direct Gemini to focus on Nichiren or his teachings. This was its genuine view. This raises the question: Why didn’t the first illustration reflect this understanding?

Such is the peril of Using AI to Illustrate the Daily Dharma.

Myōhō Renge Kyō Promise for Dec. 27, 2025

The Lotus Sūtra Wisdom of Insight Manual by Tripiṭaka Master Amoghavajra is based on the “Appearance of the Stupa of Treasures” chapter [of the Lotus Sūtra], and it regards Śākyamuni Buddha and the Buddha of Many Treasures of the Lotus Sūtra as the honzon, but this idea is not the true intention of the Lotus Sūtra. The daimoku (sacred title) of the Lotus Sūtra is the honzon of Śākyamuni Buddha, the Buddha of Many Treasures and the Buddhas of the worlds throughout the universe. This daimoku should be the honzon for the practicer of the Lotus Sūtra.

Honzon Mondō Shō, Questions and Answers on the Honzon

About this project

Daily Dharma for December 27, 2025

20251227-ddi

Illustration by Google Gemini

Show Gemini's thinking

The first illustration offered by Gemini was not satisfactory. Gemini was told:

Focus the illustration on the line: The Lotus Sūtra is the highest teaching because it encompasses all beings in all worlds, assuring everyone that they can rid themselves of delusion and reach the Buddha’s enlightenment.

Here's Gemini's thinking on this revision:

Revising Core Concept
I'm now zeroing in on the central theme: the Lotus Sutra's encompassing nature and its promise of universal enlightenment. I'm focusing on how to visually represent this grand, all-encompassing message in a concise and clear manner.

Conceptualizing New Imagery
I'm presently building upon the core concept, now concentrating on the visual elements that convey the Lotus Sutra's central tenets. I've broken down the scene into key components: the central Buddha, diverse beings, a blooming lotus as a symbol of enlightenment, and the Lotus Sutra scroll. I'm aiming for a traditional Japanese woodblock print aesthetic with rich colors. The text is also being incorporated, including both the title and the user-provided line, along with the relevant kanji.

Examining Image Alignment
I'm currently reviewing how the illustration aligns with the initial request. The core idea of the Buddha emanating light to a diverse assembly is depicted. The textual elements appear integrated according to specifications. My focus now is on assessing the stylistic implementation, and how well it reflects the traditional Japanese woodblock print aesthetic.

Analyzing Visual Fidelity
I've confirmed the image reflects the core prompt. The central Buddha radiating light and diverse assembly are present. Text integration meets requirements. The woodblock print style is evident, similar to before. I'm satisfied with the prompt fidelity of the current render.

Kanji translation
the kanji text on the scroll held by the Buddha is:

法華経 (Hokekyō)

This translates to "The Lotus Sutra".

It is the title of the Buddhist scripture that is the central theme of the illustration.

What does the doctrine of spiritual contemplation mean? It means the way of practicing the teaching of the Buddha according to the intent of the Buddha, not necessarily according to what is literally said in the sutra. Suppose there is a man during the time of a famine who offers to the Buddha the only food he has to stay alive for a day. This is the same as offering his life to the Buddha.

Nichiren wrote this passage in his Treatise on Phenomenal and Noumenal Offering (Jiri Kuyō Gosho). The Lotus Sūtra is the highest teaching because it encompasses all beings in all worlds, assuring everyone that they can rid themselves of delusion and reach the Buddha’s enlightenment. The Buddha showed that the universe is constantly changing, even from one moment to the next. When we read the Lotus Sūtra, and allow our minds to become more like the Buddha mind, we learn the meaning behind the words and put that into practice. We do not merely go through the motions mechanically. We understand that calamities are opportunities for us to bring the Buddha’s teaching to life, and that whatever prosperity we gain does not belong to us alone. Whatever we have is for the benefit of all beings.

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

Myōhō Renge Kyō Promise for Dec. 26, 2025

How can we identify the sage of the Lotus Sūtra in the Latter Age of Degeneration? The Lotus Sūtra states, “He who preaches this sūtra to others and can uphold it for himself is a messenger of the Buddha.” In other words, anyone who recites eight chapters of the Lotus Sūtra, or one fascicle, one chapter, or just a verse of it, or chants the daimoku is a messenger of the Buddha. He who carries through faith in the Lotus Sūtra to the end, enduring the great persecutions that arise, is the true messenger of the Buddha.

Shijō Kingo-dono Gohenji, Response to Lord Shijō Kingo

About this project

Daily Dharma for December 26, 2025

20251226-ddi

Illustration by Google Gemini

Show Gemini's thinking

Developing Visual Concepts
I'm currently focused on translating the concept of hidden Bodhisattva practice, as described in the Lotus Sutra, into a visually coherent image. I'm exploring how to represent this notion of concealed enlightenment within the framework of traditional Japanese Buddhist painting. I am also considering the square format requirement for Instagram.

Conceptualizing Composition Elements
I'm now integrating the elements from the Lotus Sutra into a composition for the square format illustration. I'm focusing on the Śrāvaka and the emergent Bodhisattva within. The goal is to depict the hidden nature of enlightenment. I'm using warm colors, gold accents, and a mandala-like central emblem to create a serene, transformative, feeling. The Lotus Sutra verse will be incorporated as calligraphy.

Evaluating Visual Fidelity
I'm currently assessing the visual fidelity of the image generated, cross-referencing it with the user's initial instructions to determine its accuracy. I'm focusing on how well it renders the square Instagram format and the Buddhist illustration style. I'm also examining the depiction of the specific figures and actions described in the user's prompt.

Analyzing Composition and Content
I'm now examining how the core elements of the user's prompt are visually communicated. The quote integration is successful. The illustration style aligns well, and the depicted figures match the requested monks. The square aspect ratio requested is also accurately rendered. The image accurately portrays the scene with Śrāvakas revealing their Bodhisattva nature. I am confident in passing this on.

My disciples are performing
The Bodhisattva practices secretly
Though they show themselves in the form of Śrāvakas.
They are purifying my world.

The Buddha sings these verses in Chapter Eight of the Lotus Sūtra. The Śrāvakas are those who hear the teachings of the Buddha and put it into practice only for themselves. They are concerned with ending their own suffering and do not believe they have the capacity to reach the Buddha’s enlightenment. But because they can serve as an example to those who are also unsure about receiving this great wisdom, they can be an inspiration to make progress on the path. With the Lotus Sūtra, the Buddha declares that all beings have the capacity for enlightenment, and reveals that all of our pursuits are for the sake of benefiting others. It is when we realize this directly and openly that we perform the Bodhisattva practice, the selfless effort of awakening the world.

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

Hsuan Hua Lotus Sutra Commentary

hsuan-hua-paintingA short biography of Chinese Master Hsuan Hua can be read here:

A Brief Account of the Life of the Venerable Master Hsuan Hua (1918-1995)

Search articles about Hsuan Hua’s Commentary

Where Chinese Master Hsuan Hua and Nichiren Would Disagree

Chanting the Daimoku – Namu Myoho Renge Kyo, Devotion to the Wonderful Dharma Lotus Sutra – is the principal practice of Nichiren followers. In fact, it is the very definition of being a Nichiren Buddhist.

Chinese Master Hsuan Hua actually advocated chanting the Daimoku at one point in his commentary on the Lotus Sutra.

In discussing the passage in Chapter 26, Dhārāṇis,  “If anyone offends or demeans these Dharma teachers he will also offend and demean these Buddhas,” Hsuan Hua says:

How can illiterate people uphold this sūtra? They can focus on reciting the title by saying ‘Namo Wonderful Dharma Lotus Sūtra.’ Reciting the title of the sūtra is the same as reciting the entire sūtra. For those who can’t read, this is one way. They can also ask someone else to uphold, read, recite, explain, or write it out on their behalf.

Hsuan Hua Lotus Sutra Commentary, v14, ch26, p23

But chanting praise for the Lotus Sutra is not one of the practices Hsuan Hua advocates for his literate followers. In “The Path Within,” a free collection of talks by teachers of the Dharma Realm Buddhist Association published in 2024, Bhikṣu Heng Lyu offers an explanation of what’s expected of followers of Master Hsuan Hua:

When we took refuge’ with Master Hsuan Hua, he asked us to bow to the Buddhas ten thousand times to reduce our karmic obstructions, such as arrogance. He also asked us to practice the Six Great Principles to cultivate our virtue and character as the foundation for being a good person. [The Six Great Principles are: (1) no contention, (2) no greed, (3) no seeking, (4) no selfishness, (5) no seeking personal advantage, and (6) no lying.] After that, we could choose a Dharma practice of our own, whether it be meditation, recitation of the Buddha’s name [Pure Land practice], mantra recitation, or sūtra recitation. The idea is that after you perfect yourself as a person, you attain Buddhahood. This is what the Venerable Master Hua designed especially for us and it is the best sequence of practice.

The Path Within, p14-15

That, of course, couldn’t be further from Nichiren’s view of the sequence of practice. As Nichiren writes:

QUESTION: Regarding the one who truly practices Buddhism, how does one preserve one’s faith?

ANSWER: According to the Lotus Sūtra, the Buddha first preached various provisional teachings, which were later merged into the Lotus Sūtra, the only way to Buddhahood. All the people in Japan misinterpret this, saying that since various provisional teachings were merged in the Lotus Sūtra, they all are equal in value or in depth of meaning. Thus, it is said, reciting the name of Amitābha Buddha (the Buddha of Infinite Life), chanting mystic mantra words, practicing Zen meditation, or keeping and reciting the names of any of the sūtras, Buddhas, and bodhisattvas are equivalent to practicing the Lotus Sūtra, and therefore those who practice any of these are true practicers of Buddhism.

I say this is a great mistake.

Nyosetsu Shugyō-shō, True Way of Practicing the Teaching of the Buddha, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Faith and Practice, Volume 4, Page 89

And another area where Hsuan Hua and Nichiren would disagree would be the utility in devotion to World Voice Perceiver Bodhisattva.

The chapter on Guan Shi Yin Bodhisattva, the Chinese name for World Voice Perceiver, was the opening chapter for Hsuan Hua’s lectures on the Lotus Sutra that became his 14-volume commentary. Devotion to Guan Yin Bodhisattva is a repeated topic throughout the commentary. Here’s one example from the discussion of Chapter 21, The Supernatural Powers of the Tathāgatas. This sort of digression from the commentary  is labeled a Timely Teaching:

With Every Recitation, You Gain A Measure Of Benefit

We’re now holding a Guan Yin session. You could say that this Dharma is difficult to encounter in hundreds of thousands of millions of eons. You shouldn’t think it’s easy to recite Namo Guan Shi Yin Bodhisattva. With every recitation, you gain a measure of benefit. The chapter “The Universal Door of Guan Yin Bodhisattva” states that “if beings overwhelmed with sexual desire can be constantly and reverently mindful of Guan Yin Bodhisattva, their passion will subside…. If dull and foolish beings can be constantly and reverently mindful of Guan Yin Bodhisattva, they will leave ignorance behind.”

Isn’t it true that these are the greatest of benefits? If you’re overcome with desire and lust, your mind will have neither peace nor joy. How do you leave desire behind? You can leave desire behind by reciting Guan Yin Bodhisattva’s name.

“If beings beset by much anger can be constantly and reverently mindful of Guan Yin Bodhisattva, they will rid themselves of anger.” There’s an adage that says,

A tiger-like spirit and delusion’s blaze
Spring from the roots of offenses in former lives’ days.

The blaze of your anger is a tiger-like spirit. Nothing is more ferocious. Why are you beset by so much anger? This anger stems from the offenses you committed in former lives. If you can be constantly and reverently mindful of Guan Yin Bodhisattva, you’ll be free from anger. Your bad temper will fade away.

Let me tell you something. I used to have a temper bigger than anyone else’s. I was always getting mad at people. If I wasn’t beating them, I was scolding them. I’ve told you this many times. When I was little, I loved to hit and scold people. No matter who they were, I made them submit to me. I’d beat up anybody who refused to do what I said. But now I no longer like to hit or scold anyone. I don’t know how or when I got rid of my anger, but it’s gone.

“Who said so?” you say. “You’ve still got a bad temper!” You’ve never seen me in a bad temper. It would’ve scared you to death. My temper disappeared because I recited Guan Yin Bodhisattva’s name.

We’re holding a Guan Yin session right now. Whenever you’ve got time, whether you’re a monastic or a layperson, you should recite Guan Yin Bodhisattva’s name. Laypeople who aren’t working, unless you’re particularly busy or have important business to attend to, should come and recite Guan Yin Bodhisattva’s name. Reciting only one time is better and more meritorious than earning a hundred dollars in a day.

You may think, “What use is reciting Guan Yin Bodhisattva’s name?” It’s very useful. “But if I earn a hundred dollars, I can buy food to eat. Reciting Guan Yin Bodhisattva’s name isn’t going to fill me up when I’m hungry.” You think that because your heart isn’t pure and true. If you had a pure heart, you’d naturally become full. Not only would you be full, you’d have sweet dew in your mouth while you were reciting. Guan Yin Bodhisattva would anoint you with sweet dew so that while you were reciting Guan Yin Bodhisattva’s name, you’d taste something sweeter than candy. If you don’t recite, you won’t have this experience. But if you do recite, it’ll happen naturally. I’m most certainly not lying to you. If you sincerely recite Namo Guan Yin Bodhisattva, you’ll experience a flavor sensation sweeter than eating candy.

You don’t know the benefits of reciting, so you think you can just goof off, make phone calls, or go do other things. You’re just wasting precious time by failing to be single-minded. When you focus, you’ll forget about everything else, including eating and wearing clothes. All that remains is that one phrase, Namo Guan Shi Yin Bodhisattva.

If you can achieve that, Guan Shi Yin Bodhisattva will anoint your crown with sweet dew and pat you on the head, saying, “You’re such a good kid. Good boy! Good girl! Bring forth the great resolve for bodhi. I’ll help you. As you progress on the Path, you’ll be free from demons. You’ll be successful in your cultivation.” However, you can only achieve this through sincere practice.

Hsuan Hua Lotus Sutra Commentary, v12, ch21, p21-23

While driving with my wife to the Sacramento Nichiren Buddhist Church last Sunday, I was discussing how devotion to World Voice Perceiver Bodhisattva and chanting Namu Kanzeon Bodhisattva could be considered a part of the Lotus Sutra. Who could object? But then I realized Nichiren would:

Chanting “Namu Myō hō Renge Kyō ” swallows up the functions of “Namu Amida Butsu,” “Namu Dainichi shingon,” and “Namu Kanzeon bosatsu” as well as all the Buddhas, sutras, and bodhisattvas. All these will be of no use without the functions of the Lotus Sutra. This can be seen by everyone, for it has been realized in front of everyone. When I, Nichiren recite “Namu Myō hō Renge Kyō ” the function of “Namu Amida Butsu” disappears just as the moon wanes, the tide ebbs, grasses in autumn and winter wither and ice melts under the sun.

Essay on Gratitude, Hoon-Jō, Writings of Nichiren Shonin,
Volume 3, Page 48


Next: Studying the Dharma

Myōhō Renge Kyō Promise for Dec. 25, 2025

The Lotus Sutra is the true teaching because the Buddha Sakyamuni preached it from the bottom of his heart exactly as he was enlightened. Other sutras were taught according to listeners’ level of understanding. The Buddha teaches righteousness. The chanting of the sutra will lead us to righteousness unconsciously. For example, the creeping mugwort grass among the hemp will grow straight, or the body of a snake will become straight if it goes into a straight pipe, or if one has good friends, his attitudes will become good. Likewise, one who believes in the Lotus Sutra will attain Buddhahood.

Merits of the Lotus Sutra, Zui-Ji-I Gosho

About this project