Mind Contemplation

The all-embracing feature of the mind contemplation is revealed by the unity of the three categories of Dharma in the quotation from the Avatamsakasūtra:

“The mind, Buddha, and sentient beings are of no distinction.”

Chih-i points out that what mind contemplation can achieve is described by yet another quote from the Avatamsakasūtra:

“When one’s mind traverses the Dharma-realm, taking it as if it is empty space, then one will know the objective realm of all Buddhas.”

Chih-i believes that this quotation, in terms of the mind traversing the Dharma-realm, suggests that mind is related to the Threefold Truth, and that contemplating the mind is the means to attain the Threefold Truth. Chih-i explains:

“The Dharma-realm is identical to the Middle Way. Empty space is identical to Emptiness. The mind and Buddhas are identical to the Provisional. The three together are identical to the objective realm of all Buddhas. This means that if one contemplates [the thought of] one’s mind, one can still be endowed with all the Buddha-dharmas.”

The all-embracing feature of the mind is further emphasized by Chih-i as he holds that contemplating the mind is about one thought embracing reality as a whole:

“In the case of one’s mind traversing the Dharma-realm, when contemplating the mutual opposition of a sensation and its object, one thought arises in the mind which must belong to one of the ten realms. When [one thought] belongs to one realm, it at once embraces one hundred realms and one thousand dharmas. The one thought is replete with all [aspects of reality].”

This passage addresses that all characteristics of reality are contained in the rising of one thought. Therefore, contemplating the mind is the most practical method in reaching truth. (Vol. 2, Page 81-82)

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


Day 7

Day 7 concludes Chapter 3, A Parable, and begins Chapter 4, Understanding by Faith.

Day 7 Full Text

Having last time learned the greatness of the vehicle revealed in the Parable of the Burning House, we consider why the expedient message was necessary.

(The Buddha said to Śāriputra:)
All of you
All Are of my you children.
I am your father.

You were under the fires of many sufferings
For the past innumerable kalpas.
Therefore, I saved you
From the triple world [ with expedients].

I once told you that you had attained extinction.
But you eliminated only birth and death
[By that extinction].
The extinction you attained was not the true one.
What you should do now is
Obtain the wisdom of the Buddha.

The Bodhisattvas in this multitude
Should hear
With one mind
The true teaching of the Buddhas.

The Buddhas, the World-Honored Ones,
Say only expediently [that some are not Bodhisattvas]
To tell the truth,
All living beings taught by them are Bodhisattvas.

[I said:]
“To those who have little wisdom,
And who are deeply attached to sensual desires,
The Buddhas expound the truth that all is suffering.
Those [who hear this truth]
Will have the greatest joy that they have ever had.
The statement of the Buddhas that all is suffering
Is true, not false.
To those who are ignorant
Of the cause of all sufferings,
And who are too deeply attached
To the cause of suffering
To give it up even for a moment,
The Buddhas expound
The [eight right] ways as expedients.

The cause of suffering is greed.
When greed is eliminated,
There is nothing to be attached to.
The extinction of suffering
Is called the third truth.
In order to attain this extinction,
The [eight right] ways must be practiced.
Freedom from the bonds of suffering[,]
[That is, from illusions] is called emancipation.”

From what illusions can one be emancipated, however,
[By the practice of the eight right ways]?
He can be emancipated only from unreal things
[That is, from the five desires] thereby.
He cannot be emancipated from all illusions.
The Buddhas say
That he has not yet attained
The true extinction
Because he has not yet attained
Unsurpassed enlightenment.
I also do not think that I have led him
To the [true] extinction thereby.

The Daily Dharma from Jan. 26, 2018, offers this:

The Buddhas, the World-Honored Ones,
Say only expediently [that some are not Bodhisattvas]
To tell the truth,
All living beings taught by them are Bodhisattvas.

This verse comes from Chapter Three of the Lotus Sūtra. In Chapter Two, the Buddha declared that he only teaches Bodhisattvas. If we believe that we are not Bodhisattvas, we could conclude that the Buddha does not teach us. Part of what the Buddha is explaining here is that we are all Bodhisattvas. The way to reach the Buddha’s enlightenment is by living as Bodhisattvas: beings whose every breath is intended to improve our world.

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

The 10 Voice Hearers

“Voice-hearers” (Sanskrit, shravaka) refers to those monastic disciples who heard the voice of the Buddha in person. From the stand­point of Mahayana Buddhism, the voice-hearers are Hinayana disciples who listened and followed the teachings of the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path. … Traditionally ten major disciples are listed. They are representative of the different qualities that were valued by Hinayana Buddhism:

  • Shariputra, foremost in wisdom
  • Mahakashyapa, foremost in ascetic practices
  • Ananda, foremost in hearing the sutras
  • Subhuti, foremost in understanding emptiness
  • Purna, foremost in expounding the Dharma
  • Maudgalyayana, foremost in supernatural powers
  • Katyayana, foremost in explaining the Dharma
  • Aniruddha, foremost in clairvoyance (the divine eye)
  • Upali, foremost in observing the precepts
  • Rahula, foremost in inconspicuous practice
Lotus World: An Illustrated Guide to the Gohonzon

Daily Dharma – Nov. 15, 2018

Please remember that the service to your lord itself is practicing the teaching of the Lotus Sutra. Interpreting the scriptural statement in the Lotus Sutra, Grand Master T’ien-t’ai, therefore, states in his Great Concentration and Insight: “All the activities and daily work of the people in the secular world do not contradict the truth preached by the Buddha.” Please contemplate the spirit of this scriptural statement again and again.

Nichiren wrote this passage in his Response to a Follower (Dannotsu Bō Gohenji). In our frustration with this world of conflict, we may think it best to remove ourselves from those who are increasing the delusions of others. In this letter, Nichiren reminds us that the relationships we have in our lives are important. Service to others does not necessarily mean giving them what they ask for. It means wishing that they lose their delusions and nourishing the Buddha nature within them.

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

Mind Contemplation

For Chih-i, mind contemplation is the most accessible way to approach the Ultimate Truth, because Dharma of Sentient Beings is too broad and Dharma of Buddha is too high in approaching the Ultimate Truth. Contemplating mind, on the other hand, is related to the Threefold Truth and to the all-embracing feature of the mind. As the Ultimate Truth concerns the Threefold Truth and is all embracing, mind contemplation is proved to be the ultimate approach of penetrating the Ultimate Truth. (Vol. 2, Page 81)

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


Day 6

Day 6 continues Chapter 3, A Parable

Day 6 Full Text

Having last time considered Śākyamuni’s skillful expedients, we consider who was attracted to the sheep cart, the deer cart and the bullock cart.

“Śāriputra! Those who have intelligence, who receive the Dharma by faith after hearing it from the Buddha, from the World Honored One, and who seek Nirvāṇa with strenuous efforts in order to get out of the triple world, are called Śrāvakas. They may be likened to the children who left the burning house in order to get the sheep-carts. Those who receive the Dharma by faith after hearing it from the Buddha, from the World-Honored One, who seek the self-originating wisdom with strenuous efforts, who wish to have good tranquility in seclusion, and who perfectly understand the causes of all things, are called Pratyekabuddhas. They may be likened to the children who left the burning house in order to get the deer-carts. Those who receive the Dharma by faith after hearing it from the Buddha, from the World-Honored One, who strenuously seek the knowledge of all things, the wisdom of the Buddha, the self-originating wisdom, the wisdom to be obtained without teachers, and the insight and powers and fearlessness of the Tathāgata, who give peace to innumerable living beings out of their compassion towards them, and who benefit gods and men, that is to say, who save all living beings, are called men of the Great Vehicle. Bodhisattvas are called Mahasattvas because they seek this vehicle. They may be likened to the children who left the burning house in order to get the bullock-carts.

The Introduction to the Lotus Sutra offers this on the Three Carts:

From the theoretical standpoint, [The Parable of the Burning House] explains the relationship between the Three Vehicles and the One Vehicle. The three toy carts – the sheep-cart, deer-cart, and bullock-cart – respectively represent the Sravaka-Vehicle of the “hearers,” the Pratyekabuddha-Vehicle of the “private Buddhas,” and the Bodhisattva-Vehicle of those who serve and enlighten others. The large white bullock cart which is given to each of the children symbolizes the One Buddha Vehicle. The rich man first offered his children three kinds of carts as expedients, but in the end he gave each of them an identical large white bullock-cart. Obviously the Buddha told this parable to illustrate that the One Vehicle is true and the three are mere expedients. The differences between the One Vehicle and the Three Vehicles, which were discussed theoretically in Chapter Two, are now explained in a graphic story that anyone can understand and remember.

Introduction to the Lotus Sutra

Karmic Inheritance

People understand that the nature of karma is that it is the result of our own previous wrongdoings which we made in a previous life (we just don’t remember), of the present life, and we must reap what we have sown by ourselves. However, if you cannot completely atone for the harvest of bad karma during your life, it will be transferred to your children or grandchildren just like an inheritance. This shows that our bad karma is not always only caused by us. Therefore, since olden times people have feared karma, prayed to the Buddha and examined their own behavior carefully.
It is especially important that we should know that by making good karma we are able to extinguish bad karma. Therefore, karma is not fatalism, but is an improvable problem.

Summer Writings

Daily Dharma – Nov. 14, 2018

All living beings are either noble or humble. They are either handsome or ugly. They are destined to be reborn either in a better region or in a worse region. All of them will be reflected on the pure bodies [of the good men or women].

The Buddha makes this declaration to Constant-Endeavor Bodhisattva in Chapter Nineteen of the Lotus Sūtra, describing those who keep the Lotus Sūtra. Much of what we see in the world is a projection of our own biases and ignorance. We see things for what we want them to be rather than what they are. We classify the people in our lives as friends, enemies or strangers not because of their inherent qualities, but because of how they treat us. When we act for the benefit of others rather than our own gratification, we are showing them their true qualities. We let them see themselves for what they are.

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

The Subtlety of the Buddha-Dharma

The subtlety of the Buddha-dharma is described by Chih-i as follows:

“The hundred realms and the thousand suchnesses are the objective realm of the Buddha, and only Buddhas … can exhaust such principle [reality]. It is like a huge box: its cover has to be correspondingly huge too. With the unlimited Buddha-knowledge, [the Buddha] illuminates the vast and great Buddhahood and objective realm. For [the Buddha] to reach to the bottom [of this reality] is called ‘following his own will.’ If [the Buddha] illuminates the characteristics of the nine other Dharma realms from beginning to end without leaving out a thread or a mustard seed, this is called ‘following another’s will.’ On the basis of these two dharmas [of following the Buddha’s own will and another’s will], [the Buddha] manifests the Traces of the ten realms, either showing his own body or another’s body, and either speaking the words following his own will or the words following another’s will. Both his own will and another’s will are inconceivable, and both his own body and the body of another are extremely subtle and quiescent. [Ultimately,] all of them are neither Relative nor Ultimate, and yet, [they] are capable of responding to the Relative of the nine realms and the Ultimate of the one realm, causing no loss or decrease to the Buddha-dharma.” (Vol 2, Page 81)

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


Day 5

Day 5 begins Chapter 3, A Parable

Day 5 Full Text

Having last time heard Śākyamuni’s reply to Śāriputra, we continue with the Parable of the Burning House and complete today’s portion of Chapter 3, A Parable.

“Thereupon the rich man thought, ‘This house will be burned down soon by this great fire. If they and I do not get out at once, we shall be burned. I will save them from this danger with an expedient.

“An idea came to his mind that his children would be attracted by the various toys which they wished to have. He said to them, ‘The toys you wish to have are rare and difficult to obtain. You will be sorry if you do not get them now. There are sheep-carts, deer carts, and bullock-carts outside the gate. You can play with them. Come out of this burning house quickly! I will give you any of them according to your wishes.’

“Hearing of the toys from their father, the children rushed quickly out of the burning house, pushing one another, and striving to be first, because they thought that they could get what they each wished to have. The rich man, who saw them having come out safely and sitting in the open on the crossroad with no more hindrance, felt relieved and danced with joy. They said to their father, ‘Father! Give us the toys! Give us the sheep-carts, deer-cart and bullock-carts you promised us!’

“Śāriputra! Then the rich man gave each of them a large cart of the same size. The cart was tall, wide and deep, adorned with many treasures, surrounded by railings, and having bells hanging on the four sides. A canopy adorned with rare treasures was fixed on the top of it. Garlands of flowers, tied with jeweled ropes, were hanging from the canopy. In the cart were quilts spread one on another, and a red pillow. The cart was yoked with white bullocks. The color of the skin of the white bullocks was bright; their build, beautiful and stout; and their pace, regular. They could run as swift as the wind. The cart was guarded by many attendants. [This great rich man gave one of these carts to each of his children] because his wealth was so immeasurable that his various storehouses were full [of treasures]. He thought, ‘My treasures are limitless. I should not give inferior, smaller carts to them. They are all my children. Therefore, I love them without partiality. I have a countless number of these large carts of the seven treasures. I gave one of these to each of my children equally. There should be no discrimination. The large carts are numerous enough to be given to all the people of this country. Needless to say, I can give them to my sons. [Therefore, I did.]’

As a child of the 1950s, steeped in the mid-century fear of spoiling children, I find it a measure of the Buddha’s enlightenment that he proclaims: “They are all my children. Therefore, I love them without partiality.”