Day 10

Day 10 concludes Chapter 6, Assurance of Future Buddhahood, and opens Chapter 7, The Parable of a Magic City.

Having last month consider consider the prediction for Great Kātyāyana, we conclude today’s portion of Chapter 6 with the prediction for Great Maudgalyāyana.

Thereupon the World-Honored One said again to the great multitude:

“Now I will tell you. This Great Maudgalyāyana will make various offerings to eight thousand Buddhas, respect them, and honor them. After the extinction of each of those Buddhas, he will erect a stūpa-mausoleum a thousand yojanas high, and five hundred yojanas wide and deep. He will make it of the seven treasures: gold, silver, lapis lazuli, shell, agate, pearl and ruby. He will offer flowers, necklaces, incense applicable to the skin, incense powder, incense to burn, canopies, banners and streamers to the stūpa-mausoleum. After that he will make the same offerings to two hundred billions of Buddhas. Then he will become a Buddha called Tamālapattra-candana-Fragrance, the Tathāgata, the Deserver of Offerings, the Perfectly Enlightened One, the Man of Wisdom and Practice, the Well-Gone, the Knower of the World, the Unsurpassed Man, the Controller of Men, the Teacher of Gods and Men, the Buddha, the World-Honored One. The kalpa in which he will become that Buddha will be called Joyfulness; and his world, Mind­Happiness. The ground [of his world] will be even, made of crystal, adorned with jeweled trees, and purified with strewn flowers of pearls. Anyone will rejoice at seeing it. Innumerable gods, men, Bodhisattvas and Śrāvakas will live there. The duration of the life of that Buddha will be twenty-four small kalpas. His right teachings will be preserved for forty small kalpas, and the counterfeit of his right teachings also will be preserved for forty small kalpas.”

Thereupon the World-Honored One, wishing to repeat what he had said, sang in gāthās:

After he gives up his present existence,
This Great Maudgalyāyana, a disciple of mine,
Will see many Buddhas,
Many World-Honored Ones.
He will see eight thousand of them,
And then two hundred billions of them.

In order to attain
The enlightenment of the Buddha,
He will make offerings to them, and respect them.
He will perform brahma practices under those Buddhas,
And keep the teachings of those Buddhas
For innumerable kalpas.

After the extinction of each of those Buddhas,
He will erect a stūpa of the seven treasures.
There will be a long golden yasti
On the top of the stūpa.
He will offer flowers, incense and music
To the stūpa-mausoleum of the Buddha.

He will finally complete
The Way of Bodhisattvas,
And become a Buddha
Called Tamala [pattral-candana-Fragrance
In a world called
Mind-Happiness.

The duration of the life of that Buddha
Will be twenty-four [small] kalpas.
He will expound to gods and men
The enlightenment of the Buddha.

As many Śrāvakas as there are sands in the River Ganges
Will have the six supernatural powers,
Including the three major supernatural powers.
They will be exceedingly powerful and virtuous.

Innumerable Bodhisattvas also will live there.
They will be resolute in mind, and strenuous.
They will never falter
In seeking the wisdom of the Buddha.

After the extinction of that Buddha,
His right teachings
Will be preserved for forty small kalpas.
So will the counterfeit of them.

The five hundred disciples of mine
Are powerful and virtuous.
They also shall be assured
Of their future Buddhahood.
They will become Buddhas
In their future lives.

Now I will tell you
About my previous existence
And also about yours.
All of you, listen attentively!

The Daily Dharma from May 16, 2020, offers this:

Now I will tell you
About my previous existence
And also about yours.
All of you, listen attentively!

The Buddha sings these verses in Chapter Six of the Lotus Sūtra. When the Buddha taught in India 2500 years ago, people took for granted that their lives continued from previous lives and would continue on into future lives. Whatever comforts we enjoy or calamities we endure in this life were thought to be caused by what we did in our former lifetimes. Our actions today were thought to determine what happens in our future lives. To our modern understanding this can sound mystical and unlikely. But if we understand that everything, including our joy and suffering, has causes and conditions, whether or not we realize these results immediately, we know that the result of creating benefit is benefit, and the result of creating harm is harm. When we hold the happiness of all beings to be as precious as our own, we would no more mistreat others than we would want them to mistreat us.

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

Home Practice

Aside from reading books or articles online, you are probably most likely to encounter Buddhism at a temple, at a practice center, or at a small group meeting in a home. However, Nichiren Buddhism is focused on daily practice, and daily practice means home practice. Practice at temples and at practice centers are aimed at helping people learn and practice Buddhism in their daily lives.

Lotus Seeds

Consummated in the Lotus Sūtra

There are immeasurable doctrines, with vast and far-reaching meaning. Further, they are mutually interrelated, from the shallow to the profound, some apparent and some hidden. The horizontal [identities] are all included and the vertical [grades of teaching and practice] are culminated. They are all consummated in the Lotus Sūtra. The Buddhas of old, the twenty-thousand [named Sun and Moon] Glow,594 Kasyapa, and so forth, constructed teachings, and the subtle was here culminated.

Foundations of T'ien T'ai Philosophy, p 250
594
Candrasūryapradīpa. In the introductory chapter of the Lotus Sūtra it is said that these Buddhas, all with the same name, preached the Sūtra of Immeasurable Meanings as an introduction to the Lotus Sūtra. return

Misunderstanding by Scholars of the Tendai School

In this respect, it can be said that those scholars of the present Tendai School who insist on the superiority of the Great Concentration and Insight over the Lotus Sūtra are ungrateful to their Founder T’ien-t’ai. How can they escape from that charge? Grand Master T’ien-t’ai was called Medicine King Bodhisattva when he heard Śākyamuni Buddha preaching the Lotus Sūtra on Mt. Sacred Eagle. He was at once Grand Master T’ien-t’ai in Sui China and Grand Master Dengyō in Japan. The teaching he propagated in his past, present and the future lives is on the whole the teaching of the Wonderful Dharma. There is no such person but Śākyamuni Buddha in India, China and Japan who has propagated the Lotus Sūtra throughout the past, present and future. Being the noblest, Grand Master T’ien-t’ai was misunderstood by scholars of the Tendai School inheriting his teaching, who pinned the guilt of their mistake on the innocent Grand Master. Is this not a serious sin?

Risshō Kanjō, A Treatise on Establishing the Right Way of Meditation, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Doctrine 2, Page 226

Daily Dharma – May 10, 2021

Medicine-King! The Bodhisattvas who, having been surprised at hearing this Sūtra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma, doubt and fear it, know this, are beginners in Bodhisattvahood. The Śrāvakas who, having been surprised at hearing this sūtra, doubt and fear it, know this, are men of arrogance.

The Buddha makes this declaration to Medicine-King Bodhisattva in Chapter Ten of the Lotus Sūtra. In his earlier teachings, he described the thoughts, words and deeds which would help shed our delusions and remove suffering. Many of those following him came to believe that they were superior to other beings and did not want to waste their time even associating with them much less attempting to save them from their suffering. With this Lotus Sūtra, the Buddha reveals that even the most wicked and deluded among us have the capacity for enlightenment and deserve our respect. The more we resist this teaching, in our thoughts, words and deeds, the farther we place ourselves from the Buddha’s wisdom.

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

Day 9

Day 9 covers Chapter 5, The Simile of Herbs, and introduces Chapter 6, Assurance of Future Buddhahood.


Having last month considered how the Buddha is like the great cloud covering the entire world, we consider the equality and differences of all things.

“The various teachings I expound are of the same content, of the same taste. Those who emancipate themselves [from the bonds of existence,] from illusions, and from birth and death, will finally obtain the knowledge of the equality and differences of all things. But those who hear or keep my teachings or read or recite the sutras in which my teachings are expounded, or act according to my teachings, do not know the merits that they will be able to obtain by these practices. Why is that? It is because only I know their capacities, appearances, entities and natures. Only I know what teachings they have in memory, what teachings they have in mind, what teachings they practice, how they memorize the teachings, how they think of the teachings, how they practice the teachings, for what purpose they memorize the teachings, for what purpose they think of the teachings, for what purpose they practice the teachings, and for what purpose they keep what teachings. Only I see clearly and without hindrance that they are at various stages [of enlightenment]. I know this, but they do not know just as the trees and grasses including herbs in the thickets and forests do not know whether they are superior or middle or inferior. My teachings are of the same content, of the same taste. Those who emancipate themselves [from the bonds of existence,] from illusions, and from birth and death, will finally attain Nirvana, that is, eternal tranquility or extinction. They will be able to return to the state of the Void.

“Although I knew the equality and differences of all things, I refrained from expounding it to them in order to protect them because I saw their [various] desires.

“Kāśyapa, and all of you present here! It is an extraordinarily rare thing to see that you have understood, believed and received the Dharma which I expounded variously according to the capacities of all living beings because it is difficult to understand the Dharma which the Buddhas, the World-Honored Ones, expound according to the capacities of all living beings.”

See The Universality of the Dharma Flower Sutra

Mothers’ Day 2021

Mothers’ Day

An offering of flowers

All Teachings Enter the Lotus Throne

All teachings, whether they contain three flavors or two flavors or one flavor or arouse all [flavors], resolve the crude and lead to the subtle; all enter the Lotus Throne. In the Tripiṭaka [Teaching] the result is preserved,591 that which is difficult to destroy is destroyed, that which is difficult to expose is exposed. How can it be said that it is easy to destroy and easy to expose? It is an entrance to the Lotus Throne which is completely in accordance with the feelings [of sentient beings], relies on the basis, and manifests the real [truth] of this doctrine.

The text [of the Lotus Sūtra] says, “The seven-jeweled great vehicles, whose number was immeasurable, was presented to each of all the sons.”592 This refers to exposing the conventional and manifesting the real. All of the crude [teachings] are [ultimately] subtle, the absolute subtlety.

If it is as I have explained above, the Lotus Sūtra embraces all the Sūtras, and phenomenal reality is ultimately explained here. This is the original intention of the Buddha in appearing in this world, the significance of all dharma-teachings.

Foundations of T'ien T'ai Philosophy, p 250
591
The Shakusen kōgi interprets this phrase as referring to the attachment to the fruit of arhatship and the resulting severance of the intent to attain Buddhahood. return
592
This quote is from the parable of the burning house. Hurvitz, Lotus Sūtra, 60, translates, “I have carriages such as these, made of the seven jewels, in incalculable numbers. I must give one to each of them with undiscriminating thought.” return

The Few With Sincere Faith

Look at the world around us. There are many who say they have deep faith, but there is not one person in 10,000,000 who is sincere. The Nirvana Sūtra says: “Those who do not have faith in the Buddha Dharma and fall into evil paths are as many as the dirt on the earth; those who have faith in the Buddha Dharma and become Buddhas are as few as the amount of dirt piled on a fingernail.”

Minobu-san Gosho, Mt. Minobu Letter, Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Volume 5, Page 129

Daily Dharma – May 9, 2021

Anyone who expounds the Dharma, if he wishes,
Will be able to cause the living beings
Of the one thousand million Sumeru-worlds
To hear his wonderful voice.

The Buddha sings these verses to Constant-Endeavor Bodhisattva in Chapter Nineteen of the Lotus Sūtra, describing those who keep the Lotus Sūtra. When we learn to hear the voice of the Wonderful Dharma, we recognize it in everything that surrounds us. When we speak with the voice of the Wonderful Dharma, we are in accord with the reality of all things. There is no need to distinguish between our voice and the voice of the Ever-Present Buddha who is always thinking of how to lead all beings to enlightenment. The only thing that blocks this voice is the comfort of our own attachment and delusion.

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