800 Years: Taking the Good Medicine

Not since the 1918 influenza pandemic has the entire population of the Earth been at peril, and yet when physicians of great skill created a vaccine that promised to significantly reduce the death toll of COVID-19, people refused to take the medicine.

In the Lotus Sutra we have been left a medicine for the ills of the world. We are not forced to take it. As Nikkyō Niwano says in Buddhism for Today:

“The Buddha never tries to force open our mouths and cram his excellent medicine down our throats. It is a sacred task for us to take it in our hands and put it into our mouths ourselves. The Buddha uses various means so tactfully that we quickly feel inclined to do so.”

Buddhism for Today, p248

With or without mandates, we are asked to have faith and take the medicine. As Gene Reeves explains in Stories of the Lotus Sutra:

“The medicine prepared for and given to the children is not really medicine at all for them until they actually take it. A medicine that is not taken, no matter how well prepared and no matter how good the intentions of the physician, is not effective, not skillful, not yet really medicine.

“The same is true of the Buddha Dharma. It has to be taken or embraced by somebody, has to become real spiritual nourishment for someone, in order to be effective. Again, this is why in the Dharma Flower Sutra teaching is always a two-way relationship. Dharma is not the Dharma until it is received and embraced by someone.”

The Stories of the Lotus Sutra, p202

Unfortunately, some of us have lost our right minds. As Nichiren writes in A Letter to the Ikegami Brothers:

“The reason why such śrāvaka disciples as Śāripūtra and Maudgalyāyana were in the Hell of Incessant Suffering for as long as 3,000 or 500 (million) dust-particle kalpa was not because they committed the crime of ten evil acts, five rebellious sins, or eight rebellious sins such as treason. It was simply because they met “evil friends,” abandoned the faith in the Lotus Sūtra, and moved to the faith in the expedient teachings. Grand Master T’ien-t’ai explains this in his Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sūtra, fascicle 6, “Upon meeting an ‘evil friend,’ people lose their right mind.” The right mind refers to the mind of putting faith in the Lotus Sūtra, and losing the right mind means abandoning the faith in the Lotus Sūtra and putting faith in other sūtras. Therefore, it is preached in the Lotus Sūtra, “The Life Span of the Buddha” chapter, “No matter how effective a medicine is, such a person will never take it.” This is explained by Grand Master T’ien-ta’i in his Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sūtra, fascicle 6, “A person who has lost his right mind will not take a good medicine, no matter how effective it is, choosing instead to roam about the street of life and death, and run away to foreign countries.”

Writings of Nichiren Shōnin, Volume 6, Followers I, Page 75


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