Practice in Actuality

To say that “the nine realms possess the Buddha realm” is a statement about ontology; it does not mean that deluded persons experience or perceive the world as Buddhas do, or that they act as Buddhas act. To transform consciousness, practice is necessary. The “three thousand realms in one thought-moment” represents not only the ontological basis for the actualization of Buddhahood, but also a “contemplation method” (kanpō). In this sense, as we have seen, Nichiren distinguishes his method of contemplating ichinen sanzen as that of “actuality” (ji), from the method of Chih-i and Saichō, which he terms that of “principle” (ri).The latter of course refers to the introspective method set forth in the Mo-ho chih-kuan, in which the practitioner’s (deluded) thought of one moment is taken as the object of contemplation. But what did Nichiren mean in saying that his was the method of “actuality”? While the notion of “actuality” or ji in Nichiren’s thought has undergone extensive interpretation, there is one particular sense of ji to which Nichiren himself calls attention in this context. In the Kanjin honzon shō, he writes that while Hui-ssu and Chih-i had established the teaching of three thousand realms in one thought-moment, “[T]hey only discussed it as inherent in principle (rigu)” and did not reveal “the five characters of Namu-myōhō-renge-kyō, which represents concrete practice (jigyō), or the object of worship of the teaching of origin. “141 Here, ji clearly carries the Mikkyō connotation of jisō, or “actual forms”—the mūdras, mantras, and mandalas employed in esoteric practice. In Nichiren’s Buddhism, the three thousand realms in one thought-moment takes concrete, “actual” form as the daimoku and a specific object of worship (honzon). These two, together with the ordination platform (kaidan) or, more broadly, the place of practice—constitute what Nichiren called the “three great matters of the ‘Fathoming the Lifespan’ chapter of the origin teaching” (honmon juryōhon no sandaiji) or, as the later tradition would call them, the “three great secret Dharmas” (sandai hihō). In Nichiren’s system, these three form the content of the transmission conferred by Śākyamuni Buddha upon Bodhisattva Superior Conduct at the assembly in the air above Eagle Peak and are destined expressly for the Final Dharma age. All three are entailed in the moment of “embracing” the Lotus Sūtra. (Page 266-267)

Original Enlightenment and the Transformation of Medieval Japanese Buddhism