Daily Dharma – Sept. 11, 2018

T’ien’tai, therefore, makes clear that all things and phenomena in the ten realms are manifestations of the ultimate reality. Since ultimate reality is another name of the Lotus Sutra, what he states is that all things and phenomena are equal to the Lotus Sutra.

Nichiren wrote this as part of his letter to monk Sairen-bō in his Treatise on All Phenomena as Ultimate Reality (Shohō-Jissō Shō). This was another way of Nichiren expressing his understanding that the Buddha’s highest wisdom is not something that takes us out of this world, but is found within the everyday experiences of our lives. Even the realms of anger, greed, fear, hostility, calm and pleasure are part of the Buddha’s pure land. The practice of the Wonderful Dharma is not to escape from these difficult places, but to use them to benefit all beings. To be caught up in them is to be deluded about their evanescent nature. To see them for what they are is to know the joy of enlightenment.

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

Number 1

One is equated with Tao—the ultimate unity of Heaven (e.g. Yang), Earth (e.g. Yin) and Man (Multitudes). Similarly, the number “one” in Chih-i’s system is the representation of the Ultimate Truth. This Ultimate Truth is absolute, inasmuch as it reveals the authentic nature of reality. Therefore, this Ultimate Truth refers to the one vehicle of Buddhahood, the ultimate goal for all living beings to strive for, which is the theme of the Lotus Sūtra. The Three Vehicles (śrāvaka, pratyekabuddha, and bodhisattva) are all unified under the Buddha-vehicle. (Page 129)

The Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sutra: Tien-tai Philosophy of Buddhism


A Matter of Pride

Though we must remain calm and stable in bad times as well as good, when things are going well, human beings not infrequently tend to be complacent or proud. Buddhism teaches that there are many different kinds of pride: in family background, in health, in youth and power, in good reputation, in influence, in wealth, in personal beauty, in knowledge, in strength, in technical or artistic skills, and so on. Pride in one’s sense of compassion and in merciful works indicates immature faith and lack of understanding of the true nature of compassion. Although it is wrong to be proud of powers and abilities, it is still worse to be proud of powers and abilities that one does not even possess. Nonetheless, many people make this mistake.

Pride causes a person to lose modesty and the sense of sympathy with others. Buddhism has long recommended the life of poverty and suffering not for its own sake but to serve as a precaution against pride in happiness and good fortune, to stimulate a constant feeling of modesty and humility, and to awaken a feeling of compassion and protection for unfortunate people through actual knowledge of what it means to be unfortunate. (Page 133-134)

The Beginnings of Buddhism

Day 5

Day 5 begins Chapter 3, A Parable

Having last month listened as Śāriputra asks the Buddha to reassure “these twelve hundred people” of their future Buddhahood, we hear Śākyamuni’s reply to Śāriputra.

Thereupon the Buddha said to Śāriputra:
“Did I not tell you, ‘The Buddhas, the World-Honored Ones, expound the Dharma with expedients, that is, with various stories of previous lives, with various parables, with various similes, and with various discourses only for the purpose of causing all living beings to attain Anuttara-samyak-saṃbodhi’? All these teachings of the Buddhas are for the purpose of teaching Bodhisattvas. Śāriputra! Now I will explain this with a parable. Those who have wisdom will be able to understand the reason if they hear the following parable.

“Śāriputra! Suppose there lived a very rich man in a certain country, in a certain village, in a certain town. He was old. His wealth was immeasurable. He had many paddy fields, houses, and servants. His manor house was large, but had only one gate. In that house lived many people, numbering a hundred or two hundred or five hundred. The buildings were in decay, the fences and walls corrupt, the bases of the pillars rotten, and the beams and ridgepoles tilting and slanted.

“All of a sudden fires broke out at the same time from all sides of the house, and it began to burn. In this house lived children of the rich man, numbering ten or twenty or thirty. The rich man was very frightened at the great fires breaking out from the four sides of the house. He thought, ‘I am able to get out of the gate of the burning house safely, but my children are still inside. They are engrossed in playing. They do not know that the fires are coming towards them. They are not frightened or afraid. They are about to suffer, but do not mind. They do not wish to get out.’ Śāriputra! He also thought, ‘I am strong-muscled. I will put them in a flower-plate or on a table and bring them out.’

“But he thought again, ‘This house has only one gate. Worse still, the gate is narrow and small. My children are too young to know this. They are attached to the place where they are playing. They may fall [out of the plate or table] and get burned. I had better tell them of the danger. This house is already burning. They must come out quickly so as not to be burned to death.’

“Having thought this, he said to his children as he had thought, ‘Come out quickly!’ He warned them with these good words out of his compassion towards them, but they were too much engrossed in playing to hear the words of their father. They were not frightened or afraid. They did not wish to come out. They did not know what a fire was, what a house was, and what they would lose. They ran about happily. They only glanced at their father occasionally.

The Daily Dharma from Aug. 1, 2018, offers this:

Having thought this, he said to his children as he had thought, ‘Come out quickly!’ He warned them with these good words out of his compassion towards them, but they were too much engrossed in playing to hear the words of their father. They were not frightened or afraid. They did not wish to come out. They did not know what a fire was, what a house was, and what they would lose. They ran about happily. They only glanced at their father occasionally.

This passage is part of the Parable of the Burning House, told by the Buddha in Chapter Three of the Lotus Sūtra. In this story, he compares us living in this world of conflict to children playing in a dangerous house. As the children in the story were too distracted by their games to hear their father’s warnings, we are often too distracted by the attachments of our world to hear the voice of the Buddha.

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

Ichinen Sanzen of Ri and Ichinen Sanzen of Ji

Ichinen Sanzen established by Grand Master T’ien-tai is called Ichinen Sanzen of Ri or Ichinen Sanzen of the theoretical section of the Lotus Sutra. On the other hand, Ichinen Sanzen understood by Nichiren Shōnin is called Ichinen Sanzen of Ji or Ichinen Sanzen of essential section of the Lotus Sutra. … [T]he core of Nichiren Shōnin’s religion is Ichinen Sanzen, especially the mutual possession of the ten realms. T’ien-tai’s Ichinen Sanzen is focused on the ten suchnesses of Chapter 2, Expedients, of the Lotus Sutra. In Nichiren Shōnin’s understanding of Ichinen Sanzen, it is most important that nine realms possess the realm of Buddha and also that the realm of Buddha possesses the other nine realms. Without this mutual possession between the realm of Buddha and the nine realms, Sokushin Jōbutsu (attaining Buddhahood with one’s current body) and Juji Jōbutsu (attaining Buddhahood by upholding the Dharma) would not be possible.

Buddha Seed: Understanding the Odaimoku


Ichinen Sanzen comparison

Daily Dharma – Sept. 10, 2018

Suppose parents who had an aversion to alcohol had a son who loved to drink liquor. Because of their love for their son and also to cater to his whim, they made it a point to offer him alcohol, pretending that they were also drinkers of liquor. The hopeless son then assumed that his parents truly loved alcohol. Sutras preached according to others’ minds are the same.

Nichiren wrote this passage in his treatise, The Sutra Preached in Accordance to [the Buddha’s] Own Mind (Zui-jii Gosho). In the Lotus Sūtra, the Buddha sets aside his expedient teachings and leads us to his own way of thinking. He knew the difficulty of changing our habits and beliefs, so he started by catering to our selfish desires to be happy and end our own suffering. For us to realize our full potential for wisdom and compassion, we must stand up to our fears and nourish our true nature as Bodhisattvas: beings who exist to create benefits for the entire universe.

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

Affirmation of the Mundane World

The affirmation of the mundane world is more known to be associated with Confucian ideology, which is concerned with more or less the fulfillment of one’s moral duty as a person in society. Though the contents of this affirmation of the mundane world in Taoism, Confucianism, and Chih-i’s philosophical system are quite different, their positive attitudes towards phenomena are the same. One is reminded of Chih-i’s well-known statement that underlies his affirmation of worldly phenomena: “Every color and fragrance is none but the Middle Way.” If every worldly entity manifests nothing else but the truth of the Middle Way, it is of course not to be negated, but to be affirmed.

The Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sutra: Tien-tai Philosophy of Buddhism


Self-Interest

As long as peoples’ interests coincide, they can generally work together in harmony: one will usually attempt to ingratiate himself with the other. But when interests conflict, suddenly one turns on the other with hatred, antagonism, and malice. Such things happen when people are completely controlled by the things of the world and strive to satisfy only their own egoistic, narrow aims. People who understand the truth about the nature of all things neither think nor act in this egoistic way, since they see everything from a high, all-encompassing standpoint enabling them to fuse their own interests with those of everyone else. In a society composed of such people there would be no fighting, no discord, no distrust, and no suspicion because everyone would know the joy of union with his fellow human beings.

The Beginnings of Buddhism

Day 4

Day 4 finishes Chapter 2, Expedients, and completes the first volume of the Sūtra of the Lotus flower of the Wonderful Dharma.

Having last month considered those who have already attained the enlightenment of the Buddha, we learn that the countless Buddhas in the future will employ expedients.

The World-Honored Ones in the future
Will be countless in number.
Those Tathāgatas also
Will expound the Dharma with expedients.

The Tathāgatas save all living beings
With innumerable expedients.
They cause all living beings to enter the Way
To the wisdom-without-āsravas of the Buddha.
Anyone who hears the Dharma
Will not fail to become a Buddha.

Every Buddha vows at the outset:
“I will cause all living beings
To attain the same enlightenment
That I attained.”

The future Buddhas will expound many thousands
Of myriads of millions of teachings
For just one purpose,
That is, for the purpose of revealing the One Vehicle.

The Introduction of the Lotus Sutra offers this:

Toward the end of this chapter, the Buddha expounds a well-known teaching called, “A small good deed leads a person to become a Buddha.” This teaching states that whenever someone shows sincere faith in the Buddha by performing a good deed, no matter how tiny it may be, this act sets him on the path to Buddhahood, and he or she is sure to become a Buddha eventually. Even though such a person is not yet a Buddha, he or she is on the way, and deserves respect as a future Buddha.

For example, even a person who has never performed any special practice can become a Buddha simply by making an offering, such as incense, flowers, or the wonderful sounds of music, in front of a Stupa (a round dome-shaped shrine) or an image of the Buddha. The sutra repeatedly maintains that such people “have already attained the enlightenment of the Buddha.” Furthermore, just entering a shrine only once and reciting, “Namo Buddhaya” (Homage to the Buddha!), or offering a single flower, is enough to enable anyone to become a Buddha. What is more, even a child at play, who pretends to build a Stupa by heaping up a pile of sand or dirt, “has already become a Buddha.” In the same way, if a child draws a picture of the Buddha on a wall with a stick or the back of his fingernail, and makes a gesture of praying to it, he or she has already become a Buddha (or, as the sutra says again, “has already attained the enlightenment of the Buddha”), (The Buddha is pure good: any act of good on our part, no matter how small or insignificant it may appear to be, puts us in his embrace from which nothing can ever separate us.)

The sutra presents various instances, one by one in order, to show that any small act of good will on our part enables us to become a Buddha. From these concrete examples, we can see that the One Vehicle is the teaching of the Buddha himself—boundless in bounty, pouring forth perfect life in limitless supply, lending a hand to everyone, and leading all of us to his own enlightenment. Finally, the sutra adds, “Anyone who even hears the Dharma (law/truth) will not fail to become a Buddha!”

Introduction to the Lotus Sutra

The Buddha-Heart

We have said [before] that there is no distinction between the body of any given man and that of the Buddha himself. When the reason of this is understood, everyone ought to exercise the Buddha-heart as soon as any thought arises in his mind. The Buddha-heart means a heart that is set upon practicing the Great Way. Each man ought to pursue the interest proper to his true nature – the acquisition of enlightenment ‐ and to reap the fruits which accrue from the pleasures arising out of friendship for his fellow-men. But the generality of people, not being sufficiently firm in their determination, fail to preserve and enjoy those fruits; their will is weak, and their power of meditation inadequate. This is a human frailty for which provision is made. Instead of insisting upon the mental process, which is too severe for them, our Sect allows them to adopt a mechanical oral practice; in other words, it substitutes the repetition of the Daimoku, or Title of the [Lotus Sutra], for the intellectual discipline. The formula to be repeated is Na-mu Myo Ho Ren-ge Kyo, and these words form the Daimoku, the merits of which were known to Sakyamuni ages and ages ago.

Doctrines of Nichiren (1893)