Yoshiro Tamura: ‘The Phrases of Difficulty in Embracing the Sutra’

In chapter 11, a jeweled Stupa rises up out of the ground and hangs in the air. Shakyamuni Buddha shifts his seat from Mt. Gṛdhrakūṭa to the jeweled Stupa in the air. Thus the scene changes from the meeting place on Mt. Gṛdhrakūṭa to the meeting place in the air. After chapter 22, the setting returns to Mt. Gṛdhrakūṭa. This has been called the “three meetings in two settings.”

The especially notable things in chapter 11 include the rising up out of the ground of a jeweled stupa, the two buddhas sitting side-by-side, the gathering together of Shakyamuni Buddha’s embodiment or representative buddhas, and the one universal buddha-land. … This chapter also teaches and explains the so-called “six difficult and nine easy practices” concerning the proclamation of the Lotus Sutra. Further, the verses at the end of the chapter, from “This sutra is so difficult to embrace . . .” up to the last phrase, . . . should receive offerings from all human and heavenly beings,” are known as “the phrases of difficulty in embracing the sutra,” or the “jeweled Stupa verses.” Even now people continue to recite them frequently.

Yoshiro Tamura, "Introduction to the Lotus Sutra", p76-77