The Ten Worlds: Buddhas

Of the Four Higher Worlds – voice­ hearers, privately awakened ones, bodhisattvas, and buddhas – the highest is the world of buddhas. This is the world viewed from the perspective of perfect, unsurpassed awakening. From this perspective, one can see that the world of birth and death is itself the pure land. The world of the buddhas also represents the Buddha-nature, which is our own capacity for perfect and unsurpassed awakening. This world transcends all the other states because it is free of their limitations and suffering, but is also inherent within them as their true nature, infinite and free of suffering.

Lotus Seeds

A Laughingstock

I, Nichiren, am a laughingstock, but how can it be said that the Lotus Sūtra, which I believe in, is also a laughingstock? For instance, even if a purse emits a foul odor, the gold in the purse is beautiful. Even if a pond it stagnant and filthy, the lotus flowers that bloom in the pond are pristine. Likewise, though I am the most insignificant being in Japan, the Lotus Sūtra, which I put faith in, is the supreme of all the Buddhist scriptures.

A sensible person who wants to get hold of gold should not discard it just because the purse containing the gold reeks. If one loves the lotus flower, one should not have disdain for the pond where the lotus plant grows. If I, though insignificant, become a Buddha, it proves the great power of the Lotus Sūtra. Accordingly, if the last moment of my life is not positive, I will hurt the reputation of the Lotus Sūtra. If the last moment of my life happens to be negative, I will not only be viewed as evil by everyone in the world but I will also become a very evil person who ruins the name of the Lotus Sūtra.

Nishiyama-dono Goke-ama Gozen Gohenji, A Response to My Lady, the Nun Widow of Lord Nishiyama, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Volume 7, Followers II, Pages 101

Daily Dharma – Dec. 7, 2019

How did you teach these innumerable Bodhisattvas
In such a short time,
And cause them to aspire for enlightenment
And not falter in seeking enlightenment?

Maitreya Bodhisattva sings these verses to the Buddha in Chapter Fifteen of the Lotus Sūtra. Despite the Buddha’s explanation that he personally taught all of the Bodhisattvas who appear in Chapter Fifteen, Maitreya and others are still confused by what the Buddha has told them. Since they have faith that whatever the Buddha teaches is for their benefit, they persist with their sincere questioning, assured that the Buddha is leading them to enlightenment. While faith is an important part of our practice, recognizing our own confusion, and using questions to resolve that confusion are equally important. The Buddha does not ask for blind obedience. He knows we cannot find peace until we bring our whole being to his practice.

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

Between Day 32 and Day 1: Purification of the Senses

Having completed my 47th cycle through the Lotus Sutra, I mark the The Dharma Practice of Universal Sage Bodhisattva with the verses for purification of the six senses:

If you have evil in your eyes,
Impure with hindrances from actions in the past,
You should recite the Great Vehicle
And reflect on its first principle.

This is called eye repentance.
It exhausts past bad actions.

When the ears hear noise,
The principle of harmony is upset.
This produces craziness,
Like that of a foolish monkey.

You should recite the Great Vehicle
And meditate on the emptiness and formlessness of things,
To exhaust all evils for a long time,
And hear sounds from all directions with heavenly ears.

The nose is attached to scents.
In accord with its contamination, contacts occur.
In this way the deluded nose, in accord with its contamination,
Gives birth to all kinds of entanglements.
If you recite the Great Vehicle sutras
And meditate on the reality of things,
You will long be free from evil actions done in the past
And not do them in future lives.

The tongue causes five kinds of bad consequences
From harsh words spoken in the past.

If you want to control it yourself,
You should make an effort to practice compassion,
Think of the meaning of the true quiescence of things,
And not conceive by making distinctions.

The mind is like a monkey,
Never resting for a moment.

If you want to subdue it,
You should make an effort to recite the
Great Vehicle,
Keeping in mind the Buddha’s great awakened body,
His power, and his freedom from fear.

The body, master of its organs,
Dances freely among these six harmful faculties
Without obstacle,
Like dust swirling in the wind.

If you want to be rid of these evils,
Long separated from dirt and trouble,
Ever in the comfort of nirvana,
And at ease with a calm heart,
You should recite the Great Vehicle sutras
And keep in mind the mother of bodhisattvas.

Innumerable excellent skillful means will be obtained
By reflecting on the true nature of things.
These so-called six methods
Purify the six sense organs.

The whole ocean of hindrances from past actions
Arises from illusion.
If you want to repent, you should sit upright
And reflect on the true nature of things.

All sins are like frost and dew.
The sun of wisdom can dissipate them.
For this reason, with all your heart
You should repent of the six senses.

(Reeves, p417-419)

See The Heart of the Entire Lotus Sutra

The Heart of the Entire Lotus Sutra

Nichiren’s interpretation of the entire Lotus Sūtra is grounded in his understanding that the “heart” of the entire sūtra is the wonderful dharma, instantiated in its title, which encapsulates the awakened state that buddhas attain and which opens that buddhahood to all who chant it, however meager their moral virtue or understanding. “To practice only the seven characters Namu Myōhō-renge-kyō might seem narrow,” he said, “but because those characters are the teacher of all buddhas of the past, present, and future; the leader of all the bodhisattvas in the ten directions; and the compass for all sentient beings on the path of attaining buddhahood, that practice is actually profound.”

Two Buddhas, p50

Chih-i’s Theory of the Threefold Buddha Body

Chih-i’s exegesis of the sixteenth chapter of the Lotus Sutra in his Fa-hua wen-chu contains a criticism of previous interpretations of the meaning of “distant past,” and a discussion of different categorizations of the Tathāgata: the twofold Buddha-body and the threefold Buddha-body, the Buddha of the origin, and the Buddha of the trace. Here I will examine how Chih-i applies the theory of the threefold Buddha-body to the Buddha of the Lotus Sutra. The scripture does not mention the different bodies of the Buddha but Chih-i employs existent theories of Buddha-bodies to illustrate the meaning of the text and, at the same time, to present his solution to the conflict between a noumenal and a phenomenal Buddha.

The three bodies the Buddha is endowed with are the dharma body, the recompense body (saṃbhogakāya), and the transformation body (nirmāṇakāya). Chih-i explains the nature of each of these three bodies and the way in which their enlightenment is displayed, supporting his arguments with passages from chapter 16.

The dharma body is defined as a principle “without causes and without results, whether there is a Buddha or no Buddha, everywhere present but without difference, without movement and yet coming forth [i.e., enlightened].” Chih-i infers this from the sentence in the Lotus Sutra: “There is neither birth nor death, or going away or coming forth; neither living nor dead, neither reality nor unreality; neither thus nor otherwise.” The dharma body is therefore a principle which reveals the perfect suchness without distinctions. Its enlightenment is the unchangeable, pure-by-nature tathāgatagarbha (that is, the buddha-nature), which allows the Tathāgata to “know and see the aspect of the triple world as it is, in its real nature.” Since the dharma body is in accord with the principle of suchness, both its nature and its appearance are eternally as they are, whether it is manifested or not as a Buddha; therefore it is not relevant whether it is measurable or not, that is, whether it has duration or not. In another commentary on the Lotus Sutra, Chih-i refers the phrase “neither thus nor otherwise” to the Middle Way, which in Tendai philosophy is synonymous with the real truth.

The recompense body has its scriptural evidence in the passage which proclaims: “The power of my wisdom is such, the light of my wisdom shines infinitely, my life is of countless kalpas, from long-cultivated karma obtained.” Chih-i explains that wisdom (the Buddha-eyes) is the foundation of this aspect of the Tathāgata: it is through wisdom that the Tathāgata attains buddhahood, it is wisdom that allows the recompense body to partake of the ultimate reality. As we shall see, here the emphasis is on the practice which leads to buddhahood.

The third body, the nirmāṇakāya, is characterized by ever-changing form and colors, and by its continuous appearing in the world. This is the meaning of the passages in the sutra “…whether I show myself or others, my deeds or other’s,” and “…revealing myself extinct and not extinct.” The nirmāṇakāya appears in numerous lives and numerous extinctions, is endowed with names which are never the same, and has different ages (the Buddha gives different accounts of the duration of his life). The Tathāgata in this aspect attains enlightenment in a particular place, as shown by the scriptural assertion that “Śākyamuni Buddha left the palace of the Śākyas and entered the place of enlightenment, not far from the city of Gayā.” The life of the nirmāṇakāya is affected by the principle of causation. Being bound to causality, this body is measurable; hence it typifies Śākyamuni as a Buddha restricted in both temporal and spatial terms. Yet, Chih-i underlines the idea that, because finite impermanence cannot be the principle that informs the existence of a Buddha, the transformation body can be seen as partaking in the immeasurable if one does not speak of its activity.

According to Chih-i, in fact, the three bodies are both permanent and impermanent, and are all three inherent in the Buddha of the Lotus Sutra: “One body is three bodies; it is not one, it is not different.” Chih-i here employs the point of view of the “perfect teaching” and applies the principle of “one is three,” which characterizes this type of teaching, to the three Tathāgatas, thus introducing a perspective quite different from that of earlier interpretations. He calls the virtue of being neither one nor three a “secret” or “mysterious” quality and presents it as peculiar to the Buddha of the Lotus Sutra, which other scriptures do not reveal. He denies that the three bodies are either in a horizontal, that is, equal, relation (referring to their innate merits) or in a vertical, that is, hierarchical, relation (referring to the merits derived from practice).
A Buddhist Kaleidoscope; Lucia Dolce, Between Duration and Eternity: Hermeneutics of the ‘Ancient Buddha’ of the Lotus Sutra in Chih-i and Nichiren, Page 226-228

Imaginary Fish Called Himoku

Worms that live in trees eat timber, and fish that live in water drink water. It is said that orchids sigh when a lawn dies, and that an oak is pleased when a pine tree prospers. Even plants are like this. An imaginary bird called hiyoku has two heads in one body with two mouths feeding the single body. Imaginary fish called himoku have only one eye each thus the male and female stay together without separation throughout life. Thus, should be the relationship between a husband and wife. In order to accomplish the faith in the Lotus Sūtra, the wife should not regret being with her husband, even if the result is death. If the wife is of one mind with her husband and struggles with him, she will succeed the dragon girl who attained Buddhahood in the “Devadatta” chapter of the Lotus Sūtra and become an example of attaining Buddhahood by women in the Latter Age of Degeneration.

Kyōdai-shō, A Letter to the Ikegami Brothers, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Volume 6, Followers I, Page 84

Daily Dharma – Dec. 6, 2019

He was patient, gentle,
And friendly with others.
Even when many evils troubled him,
His mind was not moved.

The Buddha sings these verses in Chapter Seventeen of the Lotus Sūtra. This stanza is his description of the Bodhisattva perfection of patience. As with all the perfections, these are qualities we cultivate, rather than something to use to judge how close we or anybody else is to enlightenment. As we progress in these perfections, our view of the world is less obscured by our own mental formations. We begin to see the world for what it is, and each other for what we are.

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

Day 32

Day 32 covers Chapter 28, The Encouragement of Universal-Sage Bodhisattva, closing the Eighth Volume of the Sutra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma.

Having last month concluded the Chapter 28 with the benefits received by those who heard The Encouragement of Universal-Sage Bodhisattva, be begin again with the arrival of Universal Sage.

Thereupon Universal-Sage Bodhisattva, who was famous for his virtues and supernatural powers without hindrance, came from a world [in the distance of many worlds] to the east [of this Sahā-World]. He was accompanied by innumerable, uncountable great Bodhisattvas. All the worlds quaked as he passed through. [The gods] rained down jeweled lotus-flowers, and made many hundreds of thousands of billions of kinds of music. He was also surrounded by a great multitude of innumerable gods, dragons, yakṣas, gandharvas, asuras, garuḍas, kiṃnaras, mahoragas, men and nonhuman beings. They reached Mt. Gṛdhrakūṭa of the Sahā-World by their virtues and supernatural powers. [Universal-Sage Bodhisattva] worshiped [the feet of] Śākyamuni Buddha with his head, walked around the Buddha [from left] to right seven times and said to the Buddha:

“World-Honored One! I heard the Sūtra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma, which you expounded in this Sahā World, from a remote world in which lives Treasure-Power­Virtue-Superior-King Buddha. I came here with many hundreds of thousands of billions of Bodhisattvas in order to hear and receive [this Sūtra]. World-Honored One! Tell me how the good men or women who live after your extinction will be able to obtain this Sūtra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma!”

See The Protection of Universal Sage

The Protection of Universal Sage

In Nichiren’s teaching, it is the bodhisattvas of the earth who play the lead roles in spreading the Lotus Sūtra in the Final Dharma age. But he recognized Samantabhadra [Universal Sage] as a protector and, in one letter written from exile to Sado Island, referred to him as manifesting through two of his most supportive lay followers, the samurai Shinjō Kingo and his wife, Nichigen-nyo: “You were both born of ordinary status, and you live in Kamakura [the seat of Bakufu authority], yet you trust in the Lotus Sūtra without fearing others’ gaze and without begrudging your lives. This is no ordinary matter… . Surely this is what the Lotus Sūtra means where it says that those living in Jambudvipa who believe in this sūtra do so by the power of the bodhisattva Samantabhadra.”

As suggested in the long passage from Nichiren cited above, Samantabadhra is often depicted iconographically as Śākyamuni Buddha’s attendant on the right, with Mañjuśrī attending him on the left. Where Mañjuśrī represents wisdom and realization, Samantabhadra represents teaching and practice. The Lotus Sūtra begins with Mañjuśrī playing a role in preparing the assembly to receive Śākyamuni’s preaching of the sūtra just before his final nirvāṇa; it concludes with Samantabadhra vowing to protect those who uphold the sūtra after he has departed. On Nichiren’s mandala, the names of Mañjuśrī and Samantabhadra appear as representatives of bodhisattvas from other worlds and of the trace teaching.

Two Buddhas, p261