In the Winter 2026 Nichiren Shu News, the top article is Rev. Chokei Mitsuoka’s New Year’s message. In that message he states, “Last year, we established the “Nichiren Shu Grand Design.” What is the Grand Design and what does it involve? I have a NotebookLM project where I have been keeping sources relevant to Nichiren Shu’s efforts since the 1966 Protect the Dharma Movement. (See it here.) I asked NotebookLM to do some deep research and, from the sources it identified, create a briefing doc for Western readers describing the Nichiren Shu Grand Design. What’s planned? What are the goals? How does this compare to earlier efforts such as the Protect the Dharma Movement. Below is that report.
The Evolution of Faith: A Strategic Briefing on the Nichiren Shū “Grand Design”
1. Introduction: The Contemporary Mandate for Sectarian Regeneration
In the high-stakes landscape of traditional Japanese Buddhism, historic institutions are currently navigating a precarious transition toward relevance within a post-secular global environment. For Nichiren Shū, institutional survival is no longer a matter of passive heritage preservation but a strategic mandate for active engagement. The “Grand Design”—the Long-term Comprehensive Plan (長期総合計画)—serves as the critical mechanism for this evolution. Formulated under the successive leadership of the Tanaka Keshen and Mitsuoka Chokei administrations, the Grand Design is articulated as the path to “Sectarian Regeneration” (宗門再生). It represents a deliberate shift away from the fragmented, short-term administrative cycles of the past toward a future-oriented model of institutional continuity. This briefing analyzes the Grand Design not as an isolated initiative, but as the modern culmination of a reformist trajectory that began with the existential crises of the mid-20th century.
2. The Genesis of Reform: The Postwar Crisis and the 1966 “Protect the Dharma” Movement
The 1966 “Protect the Dharma” (Gohō Undō) movement was a reactionary modernization necessitated by the structural collapse of the traditional Buddhist order following World War II. The sect faced a series of existential ruptures that rendered the traditional Danka (parishioner) system untenable. To survive, the leadership recognized that Nichiren Shū had to transition from a religion of hereditary obligation to one of conscious, active faith.
The 1966 movement was precipitated by five primary strategic catalysts:
- Agricultural Land Reforms and Financial Ruin: Postwar government reforms stripped temples of their independent agricultural estates, their primary source of revenue. This forced a desperate and often undignified reliance on funeral and memorial fees for survival.
- The Stigma of “Funeral Buddhism”: The resulting financial dependence on death rites led to the scathing critique of the sect as a “funeral business,” spiritually stagnant and disconnected from the needs of the living.
- Rapid Urbanization and Rural Collapse: The disintegration of the traditional family system and a mass migration to urban centers caused a rural collapse. Families left ancestral temples behind, resulting in a catastrophic decline in the hereditary Danka membership base.
- Social “Egotism” and Modern Anxiety: In an era defined by industrial pollution and the specter of nuclear war, leaders observed a culture of “spiraling egotism” where the trauma of defeat led individuals to prioritize self-interest over community welfare.
- The Aggressive Rise of New Religious Movements: Most notably, Soka Gakkai utilized confrontational proselytization (shakubuku) to successfully recruit millions of passive Nichiren Shū parishioners by offering a practical, lay-led application of faith.
Crucially, this redefined the role of the layperson. The core theological shift of this era was the transition from a passive “Parishioner consciousness” (Danka) to an active “Follower identity” (Shinto). Laypeople were no longer mere supporters of a temple hierarchy; they were empowered as “Bodhisattvas of the Earth,” tasked with a personal mission to spread the Dharma and protect the faith in a turbulent society.
3. The Grand Design: Goals, Infrastructure, and the 750th Memorial
The strategic anchor for the “Grand Design” is the 750th Memorial of Nichiren Shōnin’s passing (scheduled for 2031/32). While the 800th Anniversary of the founder’s birth (2021) served as a past milestone for the Kechien movement, the Grand Design looks forward, utilizing the upcoming memorial to instill long-term administrative stability. Under the Tanaka and Mitsuoka administrations, the objective has been to prevent institutional drift by moving toward a plan that prioritizes “mobility and action.”
Key initiatives within the Grand Design include:
- Administrative Centralization and Continuity: The plan is centralized at the Nichiren Shū Administrative Headquarters to ensure that strategic goals transcend four-year administrative terms, providing a consistent 10-to-20-year trajectory for the sect.
- 750th Memorial Infrastructure: Systematic preparations for the 2031/32 celebrations act as a driver for sectarian unity and provide a concrete target for large-scale propagation and temple revitalization.
- The Digital Transition to a Global Sangha: Accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, the Grand Design has integrated online propagation—such as 24-hour digital chanting—to transition the sect from a “Japanese temple religion” to a borderless, international faith community.
- Social Action and Sectarian Regeneration: The plan seeks to regenerate the sect’s purpose by addressing modern social crises—including isolation, poverty, and environmental degradation—thereby proving the Lotus Sutra’s utility in a globalized, pluralistic world.
4. Comparative Analysis: 1966 “Protect the Dharma” vs. 2026 “Grand Design”
The strategic evolution of Nichiren Shū is best understood by contrasting the internal focus of the mid-20th century with the external social ambitions of the current era.
Dimension 1966 “Protect the Dharma” 2026 “Grand Design” Primary Threat Aggressive “New Religions” (Soka Gakkai) Modern social crises (Isolation, poverty, instability) Core Methodology Internal standardization and self-reflection Mobility, social action, and global regeneration Target Audience Passive hereditary parishioners (Danka) Global Sangha and the socially vulnerable Theological Emphasis Shoju (Gentle persuasion) / Standardized practice Active Humanism and “Inochi ni Gasshō” The strategic implication of this shift is profound. In 1966, the priority was internal standardization to create a unified identity against rivals, typified by the Shingyō Hikkei (Handbook of Faith and Practice). By 2026, the focus has pivoted to sectarian regeneration through external social action. The sect has moved from a defensive posture—protecting its borders—to an offensive, humanitarian posture, leveraging its unified identity to address global suffering.
5. Ethical Action: The “Inochi ni Gasshō” Philosophy
The behavioral engine of the modern Grand Design is the slogan “Inochi ni Gasshō” (Palm to Palm with All Life). This philosophy translates the abstract theology of the Lotus Sutra into a humanistic ethical framework. It utilizes the “Four Infinite Virtues”—Benevolence, Compassion, Joy, and Selflessness—to guide the sect’s engagement with a world plagued by “spiraling egotism.”
The Grand Design grounds its social action in the model of Bodhisattva Never-Disparaging (Jōfukyō), who revered the inherent Buddha-nature in every being he encountered. This model is not merely theoretical; it is exemplified by historical figures such as Tsunawaki Ryūmyō (1876–1970). A Nichiren Shū priest, Tsunawaki founded the Minobu Shinkei-en (Deeply Respect Garden), the first Japanese-led hospital for leprosy patients, embodying the “Deeply Respect” (Shinkei) ethos of Jōfukyō long before the modern Grand Design was formalized.
Modern Nichiren Shū differentiates itself through three critical frameworks:
- Universal Inclusion: Following the Jōfukyō model, the sect mandates respect for all life, contrasting with the perceived exclusivity of some Nichiren-based “New Religions.”
- Shoju as Preferred Methodology: In a pluralistic society, the sect emphasizes Shoju (gentle persuasion) over the aggressive Shakubuku. This requires intense self-discipline, as the practitioner must first embody the Dharma before they can embrace others warmly according to their circumstances.
- Eshō Funi (Nonduality of Person and Environment): This doctrine asserts that social peace (Ankoku) is inseparable from internal spiritual discipline, linking personal practice directly to the resolution of environmental and social crises.
6. Conclusion: The Future of Nichiren Shū in a Global Context
The Grand Design represents the successful transition of Nichiren Shū from a localized, heritage-based organization to a strategically agile global institution. By moving from the 1966 mandate of “protecting” the faith from external rivals to the 2026 mandate of “regenerating” the sect for global service, the institution has repositioned itself for a non-specialist, international audience.
This move from internal standard-setting to external social engagement demonstrates a mature institutional trajectory. Through the implementation of these long-term comprehensive goals, Nichiren Shū is fulfilling its mandate to turn “Prophecy into Peace,” ensuring that the teachings of the Lotus Sutra remain an active, compassionate force in a fragmented world.
Research this topic and the other Nichiren Shu efforts since 1966 on NotebookLM. Read more
