Quotes

Failing to Achieve the True Purpose of the Buddha Dharma

Nichiren criticizes those who follow the two vehicles of the Śrāvakas (lit. “voice hearers” who are the Hinayāna disciples of the Buddha) and the pratyekabuddhas (lit. “privately awakened ones” who contemplate dependent origination on their own) because these kinds of Buddhists attain liberation from the sufferings of this world of birth and death, but are unable to help anyone else, including their parents. Because of this, they fail to achieve the true purpose of the Buddha Dharma. Speaking of these Hinayāna disciples, Nichiren says:

The purpose of becoming a monk by renouncing one’s family is to save one’s parents. Adherents of the two vehicles think that they can emancipate themselves from suffering. It may be true, but it is very difficult for them to benefit others. They may benefit others to some extent, but they will send their parents to the world where their parents can never become Buddhas. Therefore, I say that they do not know the favors of their parents. (Murano, p. 21. See also Hori 2002, pp. 39-40, and Gosho Translation Committee 1999, p. 228)

Nichiren’s conclusion is that only the Lotus Sūtra has the power to enable our parents to attain buddhahood. Other Buddhist teachings and sūtras may state that in principle all beings can attain buddhahood, but only in the Lotus Sūtra is the buddhahood of all men and women guaranteed and even demonstrated.

Open Your Eyes, p12

Nichiren’s Four Admonitions

Nichiren is known primarily for his advocacy of the Lotus Sūtra as the Buddha’s highest teaching and for the practice of chanting its Odaimoku (lit. sacred title) in the form of Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō (lit. Devotion to the Sūtra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Dharma). He is also known for his denunciation of other schools of Buddhism. This denunciation is often summarized in the form of the “four admonitions” (J. shika no kakugen):

Pure Land Buddhism is a way leading to the Hell of Incessant Suffering; Zen Buddhism is the act of heavenly devils, who hinder the Buddhist way; Mantra (Shingon) Buddhism is an evil teaching leading to the destruction of our nation; and Discipline (Ritsu) Buddhism is a false teaching by traitors. (Hori 1992, p. 178 adapted)

Open Your Eyes, p347

The Historical Śākyamuni Buddha’s Admonitions

It must be admitted … that to our ears [Nichiren’s] four admonitions sound very negative and sectarian. However, in reading the record of the Buddha’s last days in the Pāli Canon I believe that I have found statements corresponding to the four admonitions in the teachings of the historical Śākyamuni Buddha.

According to the Mahāparinibbāna-sutta of the Long Discourses of the Buddha, the Buddha spent his last year giving final instructions to Ānanda and his other followers to make sure that the Dharma would be taught correctly after his passing. Let’s examine them one by one.

On their last teaching tour together, Ānanda noticed how weak the Buddha had become due to old age and illness. He remarked that he was sure the Buddha would make some statement about the Sangha regarding a successor. The Buddha told him that he had no statement to make and that in fact they had already been taught all that they needed to know. He said, “I have taught the Dharma, Ānanda, making no inner and outer: the Tathāgata has no teacher’s fist in respect of doctrines.” (Walshe, p. 245

By this the Buddha meant that he had held nothing back or concealed in a closed fist. There were to be no secret teachings to be doled out by any successor. There were no further revelations. This basically undercuts the claims of any group that would claim that in order to practice Buddhism one needs not just the Buddha’s teachings but special initiations or empowerments, or to be taught special esoteric rituals. This was the essence of Nichiren’s critique of Mantra, or esoteric Buddhism: in the Lotus Sūtra we have been taught everything that we need to know, nothing is missing. Through our faith in the Lotus Sūtra we are initiated directly into buddhahood and empowered to actualize the qualities of the Buddha’s insight and virtue in our daily lives.

The Buddha then said, ”Therefore, Ānanda, you should live as islands unto yourselves, being your own refuge, with no one else as your refuge, with the Dharma as an island, with the Dharma as your refuge, with no other refuge.” (Ibid, p. 245) Here the Buddha is saying that we will find the Dharma, the true nature of things, within our own lives by putting his teachings into practice for ourselves. It is not something that will be given to us by some external savior. He says nothing here of having to die and be reborn in a pure land. Nichiren believed that to live one’s life alienated from the chance to realize the Lotus Sūtra’s teaching that this world itself is the true pure land where buddhahood is actualized would in fact lead to a hellish existence. In saying that the practice of nembutsu or calling upon Amitābha Buddha will lead to hell, Nichiren is pointing out that true refuge is found in the Dharma within our own lives here and now.

On his deathbed beneath the Sala trees, the Buddha said, “Ānanda, it may be that you will think: ‘The Teacher’s instruction has ceased, now we have no teacher!’ It should not be seen like this, Ānanda, for what I have taught and explained to you as Dharma and discipline will, at my passing, be your teacher.” (Ibid, p. 269-70) According to this account the Buddha did not appoint a successor or patriarch. He believed that the teachings he gave were sufficient guidance. In fact, earlier the Buddha stated that after his passing any teaching put forward as the Dharma, even those by elder monks, should be verified by comparing it to the Buddha’s actual discourses. In calling Zen the school of heavenly devils, Nichiren was criticizing what he perceived as the arrogant claims made by some Zen Masters that their own personal enlightenment superseded the Buddha’s teachings in the sūtras. The point made is that in Buddhism we have the objective criteria of the sūtras to determine what Buddhism actually teaches and we do not have to rely on middlemen. In fact, in Nichiren Buddhism it is taught that we each inherit the Dharma directly from the scrolls of the Lotus Sūtra. This is not to say that we should not seek teachers and mentors for guidance and encouragement, but it means that in the end we cannot go by hearsay. We must discern for ourselves what the Dharma is through our own reading of the sūtras and we must validate the teachings for ourselves through our own practice.

The Buddha also told Ānanda, “If they wish, the Sangha may abolish the minor rules after my passing.” (Ibid, p. 270) Unfortunately Ananda was too distraught to ask the Buddha which of the precepts were to be considered minor rules. At the first Buddhist council, it was decided to keep all the precepts in place because a) circumstances had not changed so there was no reason to change anything, b) changing them would cause the householder supporters of the Sangha to accuse them of laxness after the Buddha’s passing, c) they could not agree on which precepts could be considered minor. In Nichiren’s time the Ritsu or Discipline school championed the practice of all the precepts just as they had been laid down in fourth century BCE India. Nichiren could see that this was no longer appropriate to the time and place, and that such external observance was in any case to miss the true point of Buddhism as taught in the Lotus Sūtra. As we can see, the historical Buddha did not want Buddhism to become a religion bound up in the external observance of increasingly irrelevant rules. As Nichiren Buddhists we do not formally take precepts, but we endeavor to live in the spirit of Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō. This is actually a more demanding course than simply following a list of rules. We must be honest with ourselves, attentive to our actual circumstances, and always try to find the best way to bring the spirit of our devotion to the Lotus Sūtra’s teaching of universal and immanent buddhahood into our work, family, and other significant relationships, in fact into every aspect of our lives.

Open Your Eyes, p350-352

Looking Nowhere But to Our Own Awakening

[T]he Buddha’s final admonitions, and Nichiren’s four admonitions describe the responsibility and the empowerment of authentic Buddhist practice. We do not seek or require external saviors, or special initiations, or gurus, or external rules. Instead we are empowered by the Dharma itself to find within our lives the Buddha’s merits and awakening. This is also a great responsibility as well because it also means that we will have no one to blame but ourselves if we do not look within and live in accord with our true nature as awakened beings. Fortunately, through the practice of Odaimoku we have a simple yet powerful way of reminding ourselves to look to the Wonderful Dharma itself, the Wonderful Dharma of the Lotus Sūtra that assures us that not only are we all buddhas-in-the-making, but we are in fact buddhas actualizing buddhahood. Looking nowhere but to our own awakening for awakening is the true meaning of the Buddha’s final admonitions and the four admonitions of Nichiren. Here is the continuity between the Buddha’s passing, Nichiren’s taking up the banner of the Buddha’s teaching in the Latter Age, and our own reception of the banner of Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō here and now.

Open Your Eyes, p353-353

Third Time Charm

Frequently the Buddha will not respond until he has been asked the same question three times or until he has been assured of some thing three different times. This repetition is an indication of the significance of a certain thing. It is a test of sincerity. It is a test of commitment. It is not intended to be viewed as being cruel or teasing. Three times is almost as if a seal has been made or a serious vow has been offered.

Lecture on the Lotus Sutra

The Historical and the Eternal

As Nichiren Shonin stated in the Ho-on jo, the first of the Three Great Secret Dharmas is the Gohonzon, or Essential Focus of Devotion, which is the all-encompassing life of the Eternal Shakyamuni Buddha. In the Lotus Sutra, prior to Chapter 16, Shakyamuni Buddha is no more than a historical buddha whose birth, awakening, and imminent death all occur within the confines of northern India over the course of a normal human lifetime. In Chapter 16, however, Shakyamuni Buddha clearly demonstrates the unity of the Three Bodies: the historical, the ideal, and the universal aspects of Buddhahood. For this reason, the Shakyamuni Buddha of Chapter 16 is differentiated from the historical Shakyamuni Buddha of the prior teachings by adding the title “Eternal.”

Lotus Seeds

Dōgen’s Praise for the Lotus Sūtra

In the Taking Refuge in the Three Treasures (Kie-Sanbō), Dōgen particularly singled out the Lotus Sūtra for praise.

The Lotus Sūtra is the one great purpose of the buddha tathāgatas. Of all the sūtras preached by the Great Teacher Śākyamuni, the Lotus Sūtra is the great king and is the great teacher. Other sūtras and other Dharmas are all the subjects and the retinue of the Lotus Sūtra. What is preached in the Lotus Sūtra is just the truth; what is preached in other sūtras always includes skillful means, which are not the Buddha’s fundamental intention. If we evoked preaching contained in other sūtras in order to compare and appraise the Lotus Sūtra, that would be backwards. Without being covered by the influence of the merit of the Lotus Sūtra, other sūtras could not exist. Other sūtras are all waiting to devote themselves to the Lotus Sūtra. (Nishijima, Gudo and Cross, Chodo, trans. Master Dogen’s Shobogrnzo Books, Book 4, p. 178 modified)

Open Your Eyes, p404

Zhiyi’s 10 Guidelines for Teaching and Practicing Buddhism

Zhiyi, the Tiantai founder, sets out ten things that Buddhist monks should keep in mind when teaching and practicing Buddhism. Roughly these ten are to:

  1. Clarify that the principle of the path is the quiescent and inconceivable true nature of reality.
  2. Establish the structure and framework of the sūtras, particularly in terms of the eight kinds of teachings that include four types according to content and four according to method.
  3. Reconcile seeming contradictions with the four aims of teaching in order to meet people’s worldly desires, individual strengths, therapeutic needs, or to directly teach the ultimate truth.
  4. Eliminate wrong views and attitudes.
  5. Practice in a way that is appropriate to one’s ability and without pride.
  6. Deeply understand the meaning of the teachings both broadly and deeply.
  7. Unfold the meaning of the sūtras gradually with attention to context and in coordination with the meanings in other sūtras.
  8. Gradually settle the interpretation of the sūtras in agreement with what they actually say.
  9. Make sure to match meanings and connotations when translating sūtras.
  10. Fully assimilate the meaning of the sūtras through contemplation.

Zhiyi claims to maintain nine of these practices, with the exception of translation of Buddhist texts, and criticizes those monks who only study but do not practice meditative contemplation on the one hand, and on the other hand criticizes those who only meditate but do not study.

Except for translation, in nine out of ten ways I am vastly different from those monks in the world who study only the writings or those Zen monks who are concerned with formality. Some Zen monks concentrate on meditation, but their meditation is either shallow or false. They practice none of the remaining nine except for meditation. This is not idle talk. Wise men in the future who have eyes should consider this seriously. (Hori 2002, p. 100)

Zhiyi is making the point that the true practitioner maintains a balance between the study of the Buddha’s teachings to inform practice and the putting into practice of the teachings through meditation. In this he is not only saying that those who study the sūtras and those who meditate should have mutual respect, as the Venerable Mahācunda advised, but that a true practitioner will engage in both in order to have authentic practice and understanding.

Open Your Eyes, p409-410

Teaching Buddhism

[W]hen teaching I think it is very important to keep in mind what both Nichiren and the Buddha taught: to only speak of what is true and beneficial, and to speak at the appropriate time – when the listener will be the most receptive to the message or at least when a warning must be given even if it will be rejected. While the truth may be agreeable or disagreeable to the listener, it is important that we make sure we are speaking out of compassion and not arrogance, egoism, or some misguided sectarianism. Really, I think the application of the ways of embracing and subduing come down to our own good sense. In the end, it is about embracing what is wholesome in others and in ourselves whenever we can, but also subduing what is unwholesome in ourselves and others when that is called for. It is about encouraging the cultivation of Buddhism until the fulfillment of its highest aim, but also subduing any complacence or other negative attitudes or unwholesome attachments that would prevent the realization and actualization of Buddhism’s highest aim.

Open Your Eyes, p583

The Personal Choice of Embracing or Subduing

I would now like to share my own personal understanding of the ways of embracing and subduing. It seems to me that the way of embracing is the way of peacefully minding one’s own business and contemplating the Dharma in private while still being prepared and able to teach others if they ask about Buddhism in a way that will encourage them where they are in their own understanding and according to their own ability. The way of subduing is the way of public witness to the truth, and that may include denouncing corrupt or false teachings and practices that are going by the name of Buddhism. The way of subduing does not cater to limited views and understandings of Buddhism but more forthrightly challenges or even goads fellow Buddhists to aim for the ultimate realization and actualization of buddhahood. It is a way based on compassion and courage that may provoke hostility in those who do not wish to have their views challenged. The way of subduing also allows for the legitimate and lawful defense of those who speak the truth from violence and oppression.

I feel that, going by Nichiren’s criteria, the circumstances of today more often than not require the method of embracing as most people are simply ignorant about Buddhism and are not slanderers of the Lotus Sūtra, which is to say Buddhists who are trying to get people to neglect or reject the Lotus Sūtra. We are all now countries of “evil and ignorant people” who do not know enough about Buddhism to be considered slanderers.

Open Your Eyes, p581-582