Daily Dharma – Mar. 21, 2021

With Nichiren’s boundless compassion, “Namu Myoho Renge Kyo” will be heard forever even beyond the ten-thousand year period of Degeneration. It has the merit of curing the blindness of all people, blocking the way to hell. This merit is superior to those of Dengyō in Japan, T’ien-t’ai in China, Nāgārjuna in India or Kāśyapa who was the Buddha’s disciple. Practice for a hundred years in the Pure Land is not worth the merit of chanting the daimoku for one day in this defiled world. Propagation of the daimoku in a two-thousand year period following the death of the Buddha is not worth as much as spreading the daimoku for even a short while in the Latter Age of Degeneration. This is not from my wisdom; it is solely due to the time in which I live.

Nichiren wrote this passage in his Essay on Gratitude (Hōon-jō). In other writings, he explained that the superiority of the Lotus Sūtra is not in its power to change the world, but its power to lead all beings, without exception, to the same enlightenment the Buddha found. In this sūtra, the Buddha gives us a different idea of time, the world and our lives. All of these are truly boundless, and the Buddha is always here teaching us.

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

Day 27

Day 27 concludes Chapter 23, The Previous Life of Medicine-King Bodhisattva.

Having last month concluded today’s portion of Chapter 23, The Previous Life of Medicine-King Bodhisattva, we begin again Gladly-Seen-By-All-Beings Bodhisattva comment to the Buddha, ‘World-Honored One! You do not change, do you?’

“Having sung this gāthā, Gladly-Seen-By-All-Beings Bodhisattva said to the Buddha, ‘World-Honored One! You do not change, do you?’
“Sun-Moon-Pure-Bright-Virtue Buddha said to Gladly-Seen-By-All-Beings Bodhisattva, ‘Good man! The time of my Nirvana is near at hand. The time of my extinction is coming. Prepare me a comfortable couch! I shall enter into Parinirvana tonight.’ “Then he instructed Gladly-Seen-By-All-Beings Bodhisattva, saying, ‘Good man! I will transmit all my teachings to you. [I also will transmit] to you all the Bodhisattvas and all my great disciples. [I also will transmit] to you my teachings for Anuttara-samyak-saṃbodhi. I also will transmit to you the one thousand Sumeru worlds made of the seven treasures, the jeweled trees, the jeweled platforms, and the gods attending on me. I also will transmit to you the śarīras to be left after my extinction. Distribute my śarīras far and wide and make offerings to them! Erect thousands of stupas [to enshrine them]!’

“Having given these instructions to Gladly-Seen-By-All-Beings Bodhisattva, Sun-Moon-Pure-Bright-Virtue Buddha entered into Nirvana in the last watch of that night. Having seen the extinction of the Buddha, Gladly-Seen-By-All-Beings Bodhisattva was overcome with sorrow. He adored the Buddha all the more. He made a pyre of the candana grown on this shore of the sea, offered it to the body of the Buddha, and burned it. After it burned up, he collected the śarīras. He made eighty-four thousand stupas of treasures[, and put the śarīras therein]. He erected eighty-four thousand stupas[, and enshrined the urns therein]. The stupas were higher than the Third Dhyana-Heaven. They were adorned with yastis. Many streamers and canopies were hanging down [from the stupas]. Many jeweled bells also were fixed [on the stupas].

See The Most Important Display of Devotion

The Most Important Display of Devotion

Purification of ourselves in preparation for sacrificing ourselves to the Buddha can still be an important part of Buddhist practice. For followers of the Dharma Flower Sutra, the highest act of devotion to the Buddha is not meditation or chanting or burning incense, though they may be helpful. The most important display of devotion is bodhisattva practice, the practice of helping others. And for this, preparation is often needed. One kind of preparation is the development of appropriate skills, perhaps especially skill in listening. But more foundational than the development of skills is the matter of purifying our selves of things that get in the way of our being actually helpful.

The Stories of the Lotus Sutra, p248

Calendar: East Meets West

In working my way through Masaharu Anesaki’s book, “Nichiren, The Buddhist Prophet,” in preparation for serializing publication of the book here, I’ve had to contend with the author’s penchant for “accurately” giving the dates of events. After all, accuracy matters when you are a “Professor of the Science of Religion at the Imperial University of Tokyo” in 1916.

For example, Anesaki gives Nichiren’s birth on the 16th day of the second month as March 30. Nichiren’s declaration of his new school on the 28th day of the fourth month was May 17. And his death on 13th day of the 10th month was November 14.

In my editing of the text before publishing here I’ve simply removed the “accurate” date and left the days and months, but the book’s calendar in the appendix offers an opportunity to show what Western calendars at the time would have dated various events in Nichiren’s life.

The difference in dates stems from the structure of the Japanese lunar-solar calendar, which had a year with twelve or thirteen lunar months, each of 29 or 30 days. A month started on the New Moon.

The numbering of calendar months corresponded to 12 solar points pegged to the winter solstice, spring equinox, summer solstice and autumn equinox. The year began on the winter solstice. The spring equinox was month two and the winter solstice was month 11. Since the lunar month of 29.5 days is shorter than the solar month of 30.5 days, an additional month was added periodically to match the solar points in the year. These added months are called intercalary and were given the same number as the previous month, not unlike the Western concept of the blue moon.

Roughly speaking, the first month corresponds to our modern February and month numbers are shifted by one or two compared to Western dates. The formulas for determining which months were 29 days and which were 30 and where intercalary months were inserted is so complicated that tables are needed to accurately translate the dates.

This is seen today in the celebration of Obon. The Buddha told Maudalyayana, “You can only save your mother from suffering by gathering holy priests in all the worlds throughout the universe on the 15th day of the seventh month.” The official date of Obon in Japan is August 15, although some places celebrate in July.

Here’s the appendix calendar


 

Chronological Table

The Period Before Nichiren

A.D.
500-800 The introduction of Buddhism and its establishment in Japan.

538 (or 552) Buddhism officially introduced into Japan.

593-622 The reign of Prince-regent Shōtoku, the great organizer and patron of Buddhism.

720-760 The flourishing period of Nara, the era of “Heavenly Peace.”

800-1000 The age of ecclesiastical organization.

767-822 Saichō, or Dengyō Daishi, the founder of the Hiei institutions, on the basis of T’ien T’ai Buddhism.

774-835 Kūkai, or Kōbō Daishi, the organizer of Shingon mysticism.

942-1007 Genshin, the abbot of Eshin-in, the greatest of the pioneers of Amita-Buddhism.

1000-1200 The age of ecclesiastical degeneration.

1157 and 1159 The civil wars which gave occasion to the rise of the military clans.

1159-1185 The reign of the Taira clan, in Miyako.

1186 The establishment of the Minamoto Dictatorship at Kamakura.

1200-1300 The age of religious reformation.

1133-1212 Hōnen, the propounder of Amita-Buddhism.

1155-1213 Jōkei, the reformer of Ritsu, or the disciplinary school of Buddhism.

1140-1215 Eisai, the introducer of Zen Buddhism, of the Rinzai school.

1200-1253 Dōgen, the great Zen master, of the Sōdō school.

1219 The Hōjōs thrust aside the Minamotos.

1221 The defeat of the Imperial party.

Nichiren’s Lifetime
1222 Nichiren born (second month, 16th day; March 30).
1233 Nichiren sent to Kiyozumi.
1237 Nichiren ordained; his religious struggles.
1243-53 Nichiren studying at Hiei and other centers of Buddhism.
1253 Nichiren proclaims his religion “to the universe” and to mankind (fourth month, 28th day; May 17).
1253-58 Nichiren on missionary journeys, and resident in Kamakura.
1258-59 Nichiren studying at the library of the Iwamoto monastery.
1260 “The Establishment of Righteousness and the Security of the Country presented to the Hōjō government. (seventh month, 16th day; August 24).
1260 Nichiren attacked by a mob (eighth month, 27th day; October 3).
1261-63 Nichiren exiled to Izu (arrived there fifth month, 12th day; June 11th).
1262 Nichiren formulates his five theses.
1263 Nichiren released and returned to Kamakura (second month 22d day; April 1).
1264-68 Nichiren on missionary journeys, chiefly in his native province.
1264 The peril in the Pine Forest (11th month, 11th day; December 1).
1268-69 Mongol envoys come to Japan.
1268 Nichiren renews his remonstrance and sends letters to the authorities and prelates (10th month, 11th day; November 16).
1269-70 Nichiren on missionary journeys, probably in Kai.
1271 Nichiren returns to Kamakura, and the final issue fought.
1271 Nichiren arrested and sentenced to death; the narrow escape at Tatsu-no-kuchi (ninth month, 12th day; October 17).
1271-74 Nichiren exiled to Sado, an island in the Sea of Japan.
1271 Nichiren starts from Echi for Sado (10th month, 10th day; November 13).
1271 Nichiren stays at Teradomari, the port for Sado, (10th month, 21st-27th day; November 24-30).
1271 Nichiren arrives at Sado (10th month, 28th day; December 1).
1272 “Opening the Eyes” finished (second month; March).
1273 “The Spiritual Introspection of the Supreme Beings ” finished (fourth month, 25th day; May 13).
1273 The graphic representation of the Supreme Being made (seventh month, eighth day; August 21).
1273 Several other important essays written.
1274 The sentence of release arrives at Sado third month, eighth day; April 16).
1274 Nichiren arrives at Kamakura (third month, 26th day; May 4).
1274 Nichiren called to the government office (fourth month, eighth day; May 15).
1274 Nichiren leaves Kamakura (fifth month, 12th day; June 17).
1274-82 Nichiren lives in retirement in Minobu.
1274 Nichiren arrives at Minobu (fifth month, 17th day; June 22).
1274 “A Treatise on the Quintessence of the Lotus of Truth” finished (fifth month, 24th day; June 29).
1274 Mongols invade western islands, in autumn.
1275 “The Selection of the Time,” and other writings.
1276 “In Recompense of Indebtedness,” and other writings.
1277-78 The incident of Kingo, Nichiren’s beloved disciple.
1281 “The Three Great Mysteries” finished (fourth month, eighth day; April 27).
1281 The great armada of the Mongols arrives at the Bay of Hakata (fifth month, 21st day; June 9).
1281 Nichiren sends a circular, the “Epistle of the Little Mongols” (sixth month, 16th day; July 3).
1281 The Mongol armada destroyed (int. seventh month, first day; August 16).
1282 Nichiren leaves Minobu (ninth month, eighth day; October 10th).
1282 Nichiren arrives at Ikegami, and writes his last letter (ninth month, 19th day; October 21).
1282 Nichiren dies (10th month, 13th day; November 14th).

The Period After Nichiren’s Death
1300-1500 The rise of Nichirenite Buddhism and its conflicts with other forms of Buddhism.

1283 A convention of Nichiren’s disciples; his writings brought together (the first anniversary of his death).

1289 The first schism; Nikkō deserts Minobu.

1294 Nichizō starts his propaganda in Miyako, later a great center of the Nichirenite propaganda.

1295 Nichiji starts on a missionary journey to the north; believed to have gone to Yezo and Siberia.

1342 Nichizō, the great apostle of Nichiren, dies.

1314-92 Nichijū, the missionary in Miyako and in the north.

1385-1464 Nichiryū, the missionary in the central provinces.

1407-88 Nisshin, the persecuted.

1422-1500 Nicchō, the organizer of the Minobu institutions.

1536 The persecution of the era Temmon, the severest blow given to the Nichirenite movement.

Celebrating Ohigan

Today is the Spring Equinox, which Nichiren Shu celebrates as Higan. Reprinted below is a dharma talk given by Ryuei Michael McCormick in March 2005 at the San Jose Nichiren Buddhist Temple.


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Today we celebrate Ohigan. Ohigan is celebrated twice a year during the spring and autumn equinox, the time of year when the day and night are of equal length. The Ohigan is also a time of transition, from the short days of winter to the long days of summer and back again. As a time of seasonal transition, it also represents the transitions of human life, from the sunny summer of life to dark winter of death. This is why the Ohigan is a time to remember those who have passed on, particularly our ancestors and loved ones. It is also a time to give thought to another kind of transition, from this shore of birth and death to the other shore of enlightenment, wherein birth and death is transcended. In fact, we recite the Odaimoku and the Lotus Sutra for the purpose of enabling those of us still living and those who are deceased for whom we dedicate merit to both arrive at the other shore of awakening.

For any kind of journey one needs to pack, or make provisions. Even an overnight trip requires that we bring a change of clothes and toiletries like shaving gear, deodorant, and so on. What kind of provisions, then, do we need to journey to the other shore of enlightenment? In this case, a spare towel or shaving kit will not suffice. We need something that is both less substantial and at the same time more real. According to Mahayana Buddhism, those of us who aspire to buddhahood will require what are called the six paramitas. Paramita is usually translated as “perfection” as in the “six perfections.” But it actually means “crossing over.” So these are the six characteristics of those who are able to cross over from this shore of suffering to the other shore of enlightenment, and who, furthermore, are able to help others to make that transition and cross as well.

In the Unlocking the Mysteries Sutra (Skt. Samdhinirmochana Sutra) the Buddha explains these six provisions for crossing over to Bodhisattva Kuan Yin, the Regarder of the Cries of the World, who asked the Buddha, “How many things should bodhisattvas learn?” The Buddha replied, “In general, there are six things bodhisattvas should learn: generosity, self-discipline, patience, diligence, meditation, and wisdom.” (Adapted from Buddhist Yoga translated by Thomas Clear, p. 75)

Further on, Kuan Yin asks, “How many different kinds of each of the six paramitas are there?” The Buddha replied, “There are three kinds. The three kinds of giving are giving of goods, giving of teaching, and giving of fearlessness.” The Buddha then proceeds to explain each of the six paramitas in terms of the minimum benefit, a more proactive or far-reaching benefit, and a truly transcendent or selfless benefit. He starts with the paramita of giving. Giving of material goods is helpful, but giving people teachings whereby they can help themselves is even better. Best of all is to fearlessly stand by people in times of need or suffering even at the risk of one’s reputation or even life.

“The three kinds of self-discipline are the self-discipline of increasingly giving up what is not good, the self-discipline of increasingly developing what is good, and the self-discipline of increasingly benefiting all beings.” Here we see that self-discipline is not merely self-control but is the work of actively working for the well being of others.

“The three kinds of patience are the patience of bearing injury, the patience of serenity in suffering, and the patience of truthful observation of realities.” Here one is patient even with those who have caused offense or even harm. But even better is to be patient with all forms of suffering, to not be discouraged but to move forward. The last one is most remarkable and particular to bodhisattvas. To face all things as they really are, that is to say impermanent and empty of any fixed or permanent nature requires great patience and courage. At first, the teachings of no-self and emptiness are extremely disconcerting but with patience the bodhisattvas come to realize that things, including the true nature of our own lives, are not “empty and meaningless” but “empty and marvelous.” This is a talk for another day, but for now just note that the Buddha himself realized that the Buddha Dharma itself requires great patience and courage to fully understand and appreciate.

“The three kinds of diligence are diligence as armor, diligence of concerted effort to increasingly develop good qualities, and the diligence of concentrated effort to help sentient beings.” Diligence as armor means that the greatest protection we can have is to continuously strive to overcome our own selfishness and shortsightedness as well as against whatever hardships we may find ourselves faced with. Avoiding bad habits and curbing those we may already have is just a beginning however. We also need to actively cultivate the good. But even beyond that bodhisattvas make efforts for the sake of all beings.

“The three kinds of meditation are meditation in a state of bliss without discriminating thought, still and silent, extremely tranquil and impeccable, thus curing the pains of afflictions; meditation that brings forth virtuous qualities and powers; and meditation that brings forth benefit for sentient beings.” Here meditation is spoken of first in terms of the various states of calm abiding, the dhyanas from whence the word Zen comes from. Beyond that are those forms of meditation that in the sutras grant miraculous powers that can be used to help all beings. Best of all is to attain a state of meditation wherein peace and happiness is communicated to all beings thus inspiring them to initiate their own practice.

“The three kinds of wisdom are wisdom focused on conventional worldly truth, wisdom focused on ultimate truth, and wisdom focused on benefiting sentient beings.” (Ibid, pp.78-79) Conventional worldly truth covers everything from plain old common sense to theoretical physics, but the most important thing is acting skillfully in the world so as to benefit others. Ultimate truth is to realize emptiness wherein all things are dynamically interrelated and all duality is transcended. Best of all is to realize how best to use one’s insight to help all beings also awaken to the truth.

These are the six paramitas, the six kinds of qualities that enable us to cross over from delusion to enlightenment, from birth and death to deathlessness. According to Nichiren Shonin in the Kanjin Honzon Sho: “…Shakyamuni Buddha’s merit of practicing the bodhisattva way leading to buddhahood, as well as that of preaching and saving all living beings since his attainment of buddhahood, are altogether contained in the five characters of Myo Ho Ren Ge Kyo. Consequently, when we uphold the five characters, the merits that he accumulated before and after his attainment of buddhahood are naturally inclined to us.” This means that we should hear this description of the six paramitas as a promise that these are the kinds of qualities that we will find within our own lives and bring out more and more based on our trust and confidence in Namu Myoho Renge Kyo. This short phrase is a seed that we plant in our lives and cultivate every time we recite it, and the six paramitas are among the innumerable fruits that this seed will produce in our lives. Let us chant Namu Myoho Renge Kyo with full confidence and joyful anticipation of transcendent fruits that are our provisions for crossing over to the other shore of perfect and complete awakening and boundless compassionate action on behalf of all beings.


Copyright by Ryuei Michael McCormick. Reprinted with permission March 20, 2021

‘Jōzon Myōhōko, Shinjin Mukeken’

In another past lifetime of the Buddha he was the ruler of a great country because of the accumulation of virtue in the past. But he was neglectful in ruling the country. His 100 ministers and all the people revered him as a consequence of the pleasurable results of his former observance of the ten virtuous acts. But this would prove to be like the flame of a lamp flickering in the wind, or a dream on a spring night, or the brief blooming of morning glories on a bamboo fence. Though he had followed the virtuous precepts in his past lives, now that he had been born as the ruler of a great country he was enticed by the murderous demon of impermanence and spent his life in vain, neglecting to practice the good. [If he continued in this way] he would sink into the bottomless flames of the Hell of Incessant Suffering, where there is no distinction between warriors and peasants. The flames of the three torments would scorch him, his five limbs would be bound in iron cords, and the gag of the three torments would be inserted into his mouth. The monstrous jailers of hell armed with tridents and screaming callously, would punish him by stabbing him all over his body. The sounds of his cries would reach up to the heavens, and in his grief he would fall to the ground. His 100 ministers and all his people would be unable to come to his aid, nor could his family and loved ones come to save him. [He thought of his beloved wife] with whom he slept and awoke on the same bed within the brocade curtains. Together they were like two birds with one wing each who must fly together in the heavens, or like two trees with branches intertwined on the earth. The days and months they had spent together had amassed into years, but not even she and their children could come to visit him. Reflecting on these things he opened his storehouses and donated gold and silver and all the seven treasures in order to support the Saṃgha. He donated elephants and horses, and even his wife and children to them. Later he blew a conch seeking for the great Dharma. He beat a drum seeking for the great Dharma. He sought the Dharma in all directions. At that time there was a seer named Asita. This seer came to the king saying, “I can teach you the True Dharma if you are able to serve me well.” The king rejoiced and entered the mountains, where he collected fruit, gathered firewood, picked vegetables, and drew water for a thousand years. All the while he constantly recited, “Jōzon Myōhōko, Shinjin Mukeken,” which means, “Because I am seeking the Wonderful Dharma I do not feel tired in body and mind.” Through this practice he was able to obtain the Dharma of the five Chinese characters: myō, hō, ren, ge, and kyō. This king would become Śākyamuni Buddha in a future life. In our country there is a Japanese poem that tells how he received the Dharma by serving his master. When a sūtra is copied and presented this verse is sung: “I obtained the Lotus Sūtra by gathering firewood, picking vegetables, and drawing water.” Hearing this I am overcome with emotion.

Minobu-san Gosho, Mt. Minobu Letter, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Volume 5, Page 126-127

Daily Dharma – Mar. 20, 2021

I collected firewood and the fruits of trees and grasses,
And offered these things to him respectfully from time to time.
I never felt tired in body and mind
Because I was thinking of the Wonderful Dharma.

The Buddha teaches these verses in Chapter Twelve of the Lotus Sūtra. They are part of a story of one of his previous lives. He was a king who gave up his throne to search for someone to teach him. When he found a seer who knew the Wonderful Dharma, he became the servant of the seer and served him with enthusiasm. These verses remind us of the enthusiasm that comes from hearing the Buddha’s teachings.

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

Day 26

Day 26 concludes Chapter 21, The Supernatural Powers of the Tathāgatas, includes Chapter 22, Transmission, and introduces Chapter 23, The Previous Life of Medicine-King Bodhisattva.

Having last month considered why Medicine-King Bodhisattva walk about this Sahā-World, we consider the purification Gladly-Seen-By-All-Beings Bodhisattva performed before sacrificing his life.

“Thereupon [Sun-Moon-Pure-Bright-Virtue] Buddha expounded the Sūtra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma to Gladly-Seen-By-All-Beings Bodhisattva, to the other Bodhisattvas, and also to the Śrāvakas. Gladly-Seen-By-All-Beings Bodhisattva willingly practiced austerities under Sun-Moon-Pure-Bright-Virtue Buddha. He walked about the world, seeking Buddhahood strenuously with all his heart for twelve thousand years until at last he obtained the samadhi by which he could transform himself into any other living being: Having obtained this samadhi, he had great joy.

“He thought, ‘I have obtained the samadhi by which I can transform myself into any other living being because I heard the Sūtra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma. Now I will make offerings to Sun-Moon-Pure-Bright-Virtue Buddha and also to the Sūtra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma.’

“He entered into this samadhi at once. He filled the sky with the clouds of mandārava-flowers, mahā-mandārava-flowers and the powdered incense of hard and black candana, and rained down those flowers and incense. He also rained down the powdered incense of the candana grown on this shore of the sea [between Mt. Sumeru and the Jambudvipa]. Six shu of this incense was worth the Sahā-World. He offered all these things to the Buddha.

“Having made these offerings [to the Buddha], he emerged from the samadhi, and thought, ‘I have now made offerings to the Buddha by my supernatural powers. But these offerings are less valuable than the offering of my own body.’

“Then he ate various kinds of incense taken from candana, kunduruka, turṣka, pṛkkā, aloes and sumac, and drank perfumed oil taken from the flowers of campaka and other flowers[. He continued doing all this] for twelve hundred years. Then he applied perfumed oil to his skin, put on a heavenly garment of treasures in the presence of Sun-Moon-Pure-Bright-Virtue Buddha, sprinkled various kinds of perfumed oil on the garment, and set fire to his body, making a vow by his supernatural powers. The light of the flame illumined the worlds numbering eight thousands of millions of times the number of the sands of the River Ganges.

See A Kind of Purification

A Kind of Purification

What we see in the case of Medicine King Bodhisattva is a kind of purification that is a masking. This might mean, for example, that rather than trying to pretend to ourselves that we are purely selfless, we need to recognize that we are actually interested in what we are doing and even expect to gain from it in some way. If we can recognize our own interest in everything we do, we might be able to avoid the kind of purely self-serving activity, selfishness, and self-centeredness that gets in the way of actually being helpful to others. Similarly, if we can recognize our own anger and the reasons for it, we need not express it in ways that lead others to become angry. We can wear the perfume of a smile!

Such purification is, of course, itself both for our benefit and for the benefit of the Buddha. By being aware of our desires and anger and confusions, and, at the same time, purifying ourselves of them with perfume, we can improve both our own lives and the lives of others.

The Stories of the Lotus Sutra, p249-250

Tolerance: The Toll of Impatience

The mental attitudes of intolerance and impatience take an enormous toll on all of us. Residing in these closed and rigid postures, we resent the situation in which we stand, and that resentment undermines flexible points of view from which we might engage the world effectively. When impatient or intolerant, we diminish ourselves and others by inhabiting a rigid smallness of mind. The perfection of tolerance includes a patient willingness to accept present reality as the point of departure for transformative work in the world. The patient person is content to be wherever he or she is right now, no matter what this situation happens to be. Contentment in this case is not letting go of effort and striving; what it releases is the struggle, the unnecessary conflict that stands in the way of lucid assessment and sustained conviction.

Six Perfections: Buddhism & the Cultivation of Character, p 121