Total Pageviews

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Essentials for Attaining Buddhahood

"Is not the meaning of the sutra and the commentary that the way to Buddhahood lies within the two elements of reality and wisdom? Reality means the true nature of all phenomena, and wisdom means the illuminating and manifesting of this true nature. Thus when the riverbed of reality is infinitely broad and deep, the water of wisdom will flow ceaselessly When this reality and wisdom are fused, one attains Buddhahood in one’s present form.

The sutras expounded prior to the Lotus Sutra cannot lead to Buddhahood because they are provisional and expedient teachings that separate reality and wisdom. The Lotus Sutra, however, unites the two as a single entity. The sutra says that the Buddhas open the door of Buddha wisdom to all living beings, show it, cause them to awaken to it, and induce them to enter its path. By realizing this Buddha wisdom, one attains Buddhahood.

This inner enlightenment of the Buddha is far beyond the understanding of voice-hearers and pratyekabuddhas. This is why the “Expedient Means” chapter goes on to say, “Not one of the voice-hearers or pratyekabuddhas is able to comprehend it.” What then are these two elements of reality and wisdom? They are simply the five characters of Namu-myoho-renge-kyo. Shakyamuni Buddha called forth the Bodhisattvas of the Earth and entrusted to them these five characters that constitute the essence of the sutra. This is the teaching that was transferred to the bodhisattvas who had been the disciples of the Buddha since the remote past."

The bum Tanaka Chigaku and his vile Kokuchukai

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanaka_Chigaku

"The Scripture of the Lotus Blossom of the Fine Dharma Chapter 2 Skillful Means" by Leon Hurvitz Part 2

http://www.geocities.ws/bukkokukai/expedient2.html

"The Scripture of the Lotus Blossom of the Fine Dharma Chapter 2 Skillful Means" by Leon Hurvitz Part 1

"The Scripture of the Lotus Blossom of the Fine Dharma" by Leon Hurvitz

Lotus Sutra, Chapter 2

Part 1
                                                    Skillful Means
At that time, the World-Honored One rose serenely from his samadhi and proclaimed to Shariputra: "The Buddhas' wisdom is profound and incalculable. The gateways of their wisdom are hard to understand and hard to enter, so that no voice-hearer or pratyekabuddha can know them. Why is this?  In former times the Buddha, personally approaching hundreds of thousands of myriads of millions of innumerable Buddhas, performed exhaustively the dharmas of those Buddhas' incalculable paths. His fame for bold and earnest exertion having spread everywhere, he achieved profound dharmas that had never been before. What he preaches accords with what is appropriate, but the end point of its meaning is hard to understand. 
"Shariputra, since achieving Buddhahood I have, by a variety of means and by resort to a variety of parables, broadly set forth the spoken doctrine, by countless devices leading the living beings and enabling them to abandon their encumbrances. Why is this? The Thus Come One's expedient devices, his knowledge and insight, and his paramitas have all been acquired to the fullest measure. 
"Shariputra, the Thus Come One's knowledge and insight are broad and great, profound and recondite, without measure and without obstruction. His might, his fearlessness, his dhyana-concentration, his release-samadhi have deeply penetrated the limitless. He has perfected all the dharmas that have never been before. Shariputra, by making a variety of distinctions, the Thus Come One can skillfully preach the dharmas. His words are gentle, gladdening many hearts. Shariputra, to speak of the essential: as for the immeasurable, unlimited dharmas that have never been before, the Buddha has perfected them all. Cease, Shariputra, we need speak no more. Why is this? Concerning the prime, rare, hard-to-understand dharmas, which the Buddha has perfected, only a Buddha and a Buddha can exhaust their reality, namely, the suchness of the dharmas, the suchness of their marks, the suchness of their nature, the suchness of their substance, the suchness of their powers, the suchness of their functions, the suchness of their causes, the suchness of their conditions, the suchness of their effects, the suchness of their retributions, and the absolute identity of their beginning and end." 
At that time the World-Honored One, wishing to restate this doctrine, proclaimed gathas, saying: 
The Hero of the World is incalculable.
Among gods, worldlings
and all varieties of living beings,
None can know the Buddha.
As to the Buddha's strengths,
His sorts of fearlessness,
His deliverances, and his samadhis,
As well as the other dharmas of a Buddha,
None can fathom them.
Formerly, following numberless Buddhas,
He fully trod the various paths,
Those dharmas profound and subtle,
Hard to see and hard to understand.
Throughout countless, millions of kalpas
He trod these various paths; [then]
On the platform of the Path he was able
To achieve the Fruit:  This I fully know.
As to such great fruits and retributions as these,
Such varied doctrines of nature and marks,
I and the Buddhas of the ten directions
Are the only ones who can know these things.
These dharmas cannot be demonstrated;
Words, which are only signs, are quiescent in them.
Among the remaining kinds of living beings
None can understand them,
Except for the multitude of bodhisattvas,
Whose power of faith is firm.
The multitude of the Buddhas' disciples
Formerly made offerings to the Buddhas.
All their outflows now exhausted,
They inhabit this last body.
Men such as these,
Their strength irresistible,
Even if they filled the world,
If all were like Shariputra,
And if, exhausting their thoughts,
All calculated together,
Could not fathom the Buddha's knowledge.
Even if they filled the ten directions,
All of them like Shariputra
And the remaining disciples,
If, further, filling the kshetras
[Buddha-fields] of ten directions
And exhausting their thoughts,
They were to calculate together,
They still could not know it.
If pratyekabuddhas of keen intelligence,
Inhabiting a final body without outflows,
Were to fill even the spheres of the ten directions,
In their number like bamboo groves,
And if, putting their minds together
For millions of incalculable kalpas,
They wished to think on the real knowledge of the Buddha,
None could know a slight portion thereof.
If bodhisattvas
Who have recently launched their thoughts
Who have made offerings to countless Buddhas,
Who understand completely
The direction of the various doctrines,
And who also can preach the Dharma well
Were, in the manner
Of stalks of hemp, bambo, and rice,
To fill the ksetras of the ten directions,
And if, with one mind
And by resort to their subtle wisdom,
For kalpas numerous as Ganges' sands
They were all to think and calculate together,
Still they could not understand
The Buddha's knowledge.
If bodhisattvas who do not backslide,
In number like to Ganges' sands,
Were with one mind to think and seek together,
They still could not know it.
I further proclaim to you, Shariputra,
That that which is without outflows,
Beyond reckoning and discussion,
The extremely profound and subtle Dharma,
I have already gained completely.
[In this age] only I know its marks,
As do the Buddhas [of other ages] in the ten directions.
Shariputra, let it be known
That the Buddhas' words are without discrepancy,
That toward the Dharma preached by the Buddha
One should display the strength of great faith.
After the World-Honored One's dharma
Has long been in effect,
He must preach the truth.
I proclaim to the multitude of voice-hearers
And to those seeking
The vehicle of condition-perceivers
That I am the One who shall cause them
To cast off the bonds of suffering
And attain nirvana.
The Buddha, by the power of expedient devices,
Demonstrates the teaching of the three vehicles.
The living beings, attached to this object and that,
He attracts and thus enables to extricate themselves.

At that time, in the midst of the great multitude there were voice-hearers, their outflows exhausted, arhants, Ajnatakaundinya and others, twelve hundred persons, as
well as persons who had laucnhed their thoughts toward the rank of pratyekabuddha and bhikshus, buksunis, upasakas, and upasikas, each of whom thought:

"Now, why has the World-Honored One made this speech earnestly praising expedient devices? The Dharma which the Buddha has gained is very hard to understand. He has something to say, whose meaning is hard to know, and which no voice-hearer or pratyekabuddha can attain. The Buddha has preached the doctrine of unique deliverance, which means that we, too, gaining this Dharma, shall reach nirvana. Yet now we do not know where this doctrine tends." At that time, Shariputra, knowing of the doubts in the minds of the fourfold assembly, and himself not yet fully understanding, addressed the Buddha, saying "World-Honored One, for what cause and through what conditions have you earnestly praised the Buddhas' prime device, their extremely profound and subtle Dharma, so hard to understand? In all this long time I have never before heard from the Buddha such a preaching as this. Now the fourfold assembly all have doubts. I beg the World-Honored One to expound this matter. World-Honored One, why have you earnestly praised this very profound and subtle Dharma, so hard to understand?" 
At that time, Shariputra, wishing to restate this idea, proclaimed gathas, saying: 
The Sun of Wisdom,
the Most Venerable of the Great Saints,
After a long time indeed preaches this Dharma,
Himself saying that he has gained such
Strengths, fearlessness, samadhis,
Dhyana-concentrations, releases,
And other such inconceivable dharmas.
On the dharmas attained on the Platform of the Path,
No one is able to put questions.
"My mind [says the Buddha] is difficult to fathom,
Nor is anyone able to question it."
Those who seek to be condition-perceivers,
As well as bhikshus, bhiksunis,
Gods, dragons, demons, spirits, and gandharvas,
 Look at one another and harbor uncertainties,
Entreating the Most Venerable of Two-Legged Beings,
"Why is this? We beg the Buddha to explain it to us."
Of the multitude of voice-hearers
The Buddha has said that I am the first.
Now, with respect to my own knowledge,
I Cannot resolve my doubts
As to whether this is the ultimate Dharma
Or whether it is [merely] a path to tread [toward that Dharma].
The sons born of the Buddha's mouth,
Their palms joined and looking up in expectation,
Beg you to emit a subtle sound
And thus to make timely explanation in keeping with reality.
The gods, dragons, and spirits,
In number like to Ganges' sands,
Bodhisattvas seeking to be Buddhas,
Their great number being eighty thousands,
And of several myriads or, millions of realms
The wheel-turning sage-kings have arrived,
With palms joined and with thoughts deferential,
Wishing to hear of the Perfect Path.

At that time, the Buddha proclaimed to Shariputra: "Cease, cease! There is no need to speak further. If I speak of this matter, gods and men in all the worlds shall be alarmed." 
Shariputra again addressed the Buddha, saying: "World-Honored One, I beg you to preach it! What is the reason? In this assembly numberless hundreds of thousands of myriads of millions of asamkyeyas of living beings, having seen Buddhas, their faculties keen and their wisdom pellucid, if they hear the Buddha's preaching shall be able to put reverent faith in it." At that time Shariputra, wishing to restate this meaning, proclaimed a gatha, saying: 
O King of the Dharma,
Venerable One among the Unexcelled,
Do but preach! I beg you to have no second thoughts.
In this assembly the incalculable multitude
Includes those who can put reverent faith in you.
The Buddha again restrained Shariputra: "If I preach this matter, all the gods, men, and asuras in all the worlds shall be alarmed, and the arrogant bhikshus shall fall into a great trap." At that time the WorldHonored One proclaimed a gatha, saying:
Cease, cease! No need to speak.
My dharma is subtle and hard to imagine.
Those of overweening pride,
If they hear it, shall surely
neither revere it nor believe in it.

At that time, Shariputra again addressed the Buddha, saying: "I beseech you to preach,  
I beseech you to preach! In the present assembly, beings like me, numbering a hundred thousand myriads of millions, in successive incarnations have already been converted by Buddhas. Such men as these shall surely be able to revere and believe. Throughout the long night of time they shall be secure, deriving much advantage therefrom." 
At that time Shariputra, wishing to restate this meaning, proclaimed gathas, saying: 
O You Supremely Venerable among Two-Legged Beings,
I beg you to preach the Prime Dharma!
I am the Buddha's eldest son:
Do but deign to preach explicitly.
Incalculable multitudes in this assembly
Can revere and believe this Dharma.
The Buddha has already, generation after generation,
Taught and converted many like these.
All of one mind, with palms joined,
Wish to listen to the Buddha's Word.
We twelve hundred
And the others who seek to be BuddhasÊ
Beg that, for the sake of this multitude,
You will but deign to preach explicitly.
If they hear this Dharma,
Then they shall evince great joy. 
At that time the World-Honored One declared to Shariputra: 
"Since you have now thrice earnestlybe sought me, how can I not preach?
Now listen with understanding and with careful thought, for I will state it to you explicitly."  
While he was speaking these words, in the assembly bhiksus, bhikshunis, upasakas, and upasikas to the number of five thousand straightway rose from their seats and, doing obeisance to the Buddha, withdrew. For what reason? This group had deep and grave roots of sin and overweening pride, imagining themselves to have attained and to have borne witness to what in fact they had not. Having such faults as these, therefore they did not stay. The World-Honored One, silent, did not restrain them. At that time the Buddha declared to Shariputra: "My assembly has no more branches and leaves, it has only firm fruit. Shariputra, it is just as well that such arrogant ones as these have withdrawn. Now listen well, for I will preach to you." 
Shariputra said: 
"Very well, World-Honored One, for I am eager to hear." 
The Buddha declared to Shariputra: "A subtle Dharma such as this the Buddhas, the Thus Come Ones, preach but occasionally, as the udumbara [cluster fig] blossom appears but once in a while. You should believe that in what the Buddha says the words are not vain. Shariputra, the Buddhas preach the Dharma appropriately; their purport is hard to understand. What is the reason? By resort to numberless devices and to various means, parables, and phrases do I proclaim the dharmas. This Dharma is not a thing that discursive or discriminatory reasoning can understand. Only Buddhas can know it. What is the reason? The Buddhas, the World-Honored Ones, for one great cause alone appear in the world. Shariputra, what do I mean by 'The Buddhas, the World-Honored Ones, for one great cause alone appear in the world?' 
The Buddhas, the World-Honored Ones, appear  in the world because they wish to cause the beings to hear of the Buddha's knowledge and insight and thus enable them to gain purity. They appear in the world because they wish to demonstrate the Buddha's knowledge and insight to the beings. They appear in the world because they wish to cause the beings to understand. They appear in the world because they wish to cause the beings to enter into the path of the Buddha's knowledge and insight. Shariputra, this is the one great cause for which the Buddhas appear in the world." 
The Buddha declared to Shariputra: 
"The Buddhas, the Thus Come Ones, teach the bodhisattvas merely that whatever they do is for one purpose, namely, to demonstrate and make intelligible the Buddha's knowledge and insight to the beings. Shariputra, the Thus Come One by resort to the One Buddha Vehicle alone preaches the Dharma to the beings. There are no other vehicles, whether two or three. Shariputra, the dharmas of the Buddhas in all ten directions are also of this sort. Shariputra, the Buddhas of the past by resort to incalculable and numberless devices and to various means, parables, and phrases proclaimed the dharmas to the beings. These dharmas were all directed toward the One Buddha Vehicle. These beings, hearing the Dharma from the Buddhas, all attain thoroughly to knowledge of all modes. "Shariputra, future Buddhas shall come into the world, and they, too, by resorting to incalculable and numberless devices and to various means, parables, and phrases, shall proclaim the dharmas to the beings. These dharmas shall all be directed toward the One Buddha Vehicle. These beings, hearing the Dharma from the Buddhas, shall all attain thoroughly the knowledge of all modes. 
"Shariputra, the Buddhas, the World-Honored Ones, in the incalculable hundreds of thousands of myriads of millions of Buddha-lands in the ten directions of present time have many beings whom they benefit and put at their ease. These Buddhas also, by resort to incalculable and numberless devices and to various means, parables, and phrases, proclaim the dharmas to the beings. These dharmas are all directed toward the One Buddha Vehicle. These beings, hearing the Dharma from the Buddhas, shall all attain thoroughly to knowledge of all modes. Shariputra, these Buddhas teach the bodhisattvas merely because they wish to demonstrate the Buddha's knowledge and insight to the beings, because they wish to enlighten the beings with the Buddha's knowledge and insight, because they wish to cause the beings to enter into the Buddha's knowledge and insight. "Shariputra, I, too, am like this. Knowing that the beings have various desires and objects to which their thoughts are profoundly attached, following their basic natures, by resort to the expedient power of various means, parables, and phrases, I preach the Dharma to them. Shariputra, I do this only in order that they may gain the One Buddha Vehicle and knowledge of all modes. Shariputra, in the worlds of the ten directions there are not even two vehicles. How much the less can there be three! "Shariputra, the Buddhas come into an evil world stained with five defilements, to wit, the defilement of the kalpa, the defilement of the agonies, the defilement of the beings, the defilement of views, and the defilement of the life-span. When the kalpa is in chaos, Shariputra, the stains of the beings run deep, and with greed and envy they complete unwholesome roots. Therefore, the Buddhas, with their expedient powers, make distinctions in the One Buddha Vehicle and speak of three. "Shariputra, if a disciple of mine, thinking himself an arhant or a pratyekabuddha, neither has heard nor knows of these matters that the Buddhas, the Thus Come Ones, teach to bodhisattvas alone, he is no disciple of the Buddha, neither arhant nor pratyekabuddha.  
If such bhikshus or bhiksunis say to themselves, 'I have already attained arhattva! This is my last body! I have perfected nirvana!' and if then they resolve no further to seek anuttarasamyaksambodhi, be it known that this lot are all persons of overweening pride. What is the reason? That a bhiksu who had truly attained arhattva should not believe this Dharma-that is impossible, except when, after a Buddha's passage into extinction, no Buddha is present. What is the reason? After the Buddha's passage into extinction, persons who receive, keep, read, recite, and understand scriptures like this one shall be hard to find. If they encounter other Buddhas, they shall then get decisive instruction concerning this Dharma. "Shariputra, you must all single-mindedly believe, understand, receive, and keep the Buddha's Word; for in the Word of the Buddhas, the Thus Come Ones, there is nothing either vain or arbitrary. There are no other vehicles; there is only the One Buddha Vehicle." 

A chip off the old block of Nichiren? Hardly!

http://www.sgi.org/news/interfaith/faith2012/world-interfaith-harmony-week-geneva.html

"The service included Christian psalms and prayers on the theme of breaking down walls which separate people and uniting in harmony, as well as the singing of hymns with an international flavor."

Prayers and Requests for Healing the Sick

Prayers and Requests for Healing the Sick 

In the Sutra it says, 'This good excellent medicine now I leave here. You should take and swallow it. Do not worry that you will not be cured.' It also says, 'This Sutra then is the Excellent medicine for the sick people of Jambudvipa. If there shall be sick people who are able to hear this Sutra, the sickness shall at once dissipate and they shall not die before they grow old.' In the Sublime Writings of Nichiren Shonin it says, 'Though one were to point at the earth and miss, though there were those who snare the empty sky, though the tide were not to come in, though the sun were to rise from the west, it cannot be that the prayers of the Practitioner of the Hokekyo ever fail.'
____________________, aged _____ years, repents of all the beginningless Blasphemy against the Dharma, evil karma, and words and deeds contrary to the Mind of the Lord Buddha. We respectfully pray that his (her) sins and hindrances be dissipated and extinguished and his (her) illness be rapidly cured and that you may protect his (her) bodily health.

Namu Myoho renge kyo

Shakubuku [the forceful practices] outlawed in the Edo period

That never stopped Nikkyo Shonin.

Sowing and Harvest

Kanjin Honzon Sho [True Object of Worship] on Sowing and Harvesting

The original manuscript of the Kanjin Honzon Sho is designated as a National Treasure by the Japanese government and is kept in the treasure storehouse of the Hokekyoju Temple in Ichikawa City, Japan. The document is considered crucial to the understanding of Nichiren Daishonin. Nichiren refers to the treatise as being of the "utmost importance".

The Kanjin Honzon Sho from the Major Works of the SGI is translated from the Gosho Zenshu which is a japanese translation of the original chinese Gosho and it was translated by Nichiren Shoshu priests. One should note that the Nichiren Shoshu and SGI are the only Nichiren sects that advocate Nichiren as True Buddha and the only sects that rely on gosho Zenshu. The Major Works translation reads:

"The “Teacher of the Law” chapter of the Lotus Sutra states, “Since hatred and jealousy toward this sutra abound even when the Thus Come One is in the world, how much more will this be so after his passing?” The “Treasure Tower” chapter states, “They [the Buddhas] make certain that the Law will long endure. . . . [The Thus Come One Many Treasures, I myself ], and these emanation Buddhas who have gathered here, surely know this is our aim.” Look at what the “Encouraging Devotion” and “Peaceful Practices” chapters state about the future. The theoretical teaching was preached for the people after Shakyamuni Buddha’s passing.

As regards the essential teaching, it was addressed exclusively to the people early in the Latter Day of the Law. On the surface, the Buddha seems to have preached this teaching for the enlightenment of the people of his day; he planted the seeds of Buddhahood in their lives in the remote past [numberless major world system dust particle kalpas ago] and nurtured the seeds through his preaching as the sixteenth son of the Buddha Great Universal Wisdom Excellence [major world system dust particle kalpas ago] and through the first four flavors of teachings and the theoretical teaching in this life. Then with the essential teaching he brought his followers to the stage of near-perfect enlightenment and finally to that of perfect enlightenment.

In actuality, however, the essential teaching bears no resemblance whatsoever to the theoretical teaching. The preparation, revelation, and transmission of the essential teaching are intended entirely for the beginning of the Latter Day of the Law. The essential teaching of Shakyamuni’s lifetime and that revealed at the beginning of the Latter Day are both pure and perfect [in that both lead directly to Buddhahood]. Shakyamuni’s, however, is the Buddhism of the harvest, and this is the Buddhism of sowing. The core of his teaching is one chapter and two halves, and the core of mine is the five characters of the daimoku alone." Kanjin Honzon Sho (SGI Major Works ) pp 169-170

The Kanjin Honzon from the NOPPA translation of the Nichiren Shu is translated directly from the Showa Tehon which is the original collection of Gosho written Chinese and medieval Japanese. The NOPPA translation reads.

"It is stated in the tenth chapter of the Lotus Sutra, 'The Teacher of the Dharma': 'This sutra has aroused much hatred and jealousy even in the lifetime of the Buddha. How much more can this be expected after His death!' And in the eleventh chapter, 'Appearance of the Stupa of Treasures': 'Taho Buddha and the Buddhas in manifestation (funjin Buddhas) from all the worlds in the universe gathered together to make this dharma live forever....Buddhas in manifestation should remember My (the Buddha's) intention to keep on spreading the dharma forever.'You may find similar statements in the thirteen chapter, 'Encouragement for Upholding this Sutra', and fourteenth chapter, 'Peaceful Practices'. They show that the theoretical section of the Lotus Sutra is directed to those in the beginning of the Latter Age.

The essential section of the Lotus Sutra is preached solely for those living in the beginning of the Latter Age. At first glance it appears that the seed of Buddhahood was planted in them by the Eternal Buddha in the eternal past or 500 dust particle kalpa ago. The seed germinated and grew within them with the help of all the sutras from the Lotus Sutra preached by the sixteenth prince of Daitsuchisho Buddha in 3,000 dust particle kalpa in the past to all those preached by Sakyamuni in his life before the Lotus Sutra and the theoretical section of the Lotus Sutra. Finally the essential section of the Lotus Sutra enabled them to attain Buddhahood.

On closer examination, however, the essential section differs from the theoretical section. That is to say the essential section, all through the prologue, the main discourse, and the epilogue, was preached for those people in the beginning of the Latter Age of the Decadent Dharma. The teaching of the essential section during the lifetime of Sakyamuni Buddha and that which would spread in the beginning of the Latter Age are likewise absolutely perfect. However the former is for attaining enlightenment, whereas the latter is for sowing the seed of Buddhahood. While the former is crystallized in the sixteenth chapter, 'Duration of the Life of the Buddha', with half a chapter each preceding and following it, the latter is solely embodied in the five characters of Myo, Ho, Ren, Ge, and Kyo, the title of the Lotus Sutra." Kanjin Honzon Sho, Nichiren Shu (NOPPA 1991) pp 120 - 122;

What was referred to by Nichiren as "the teaching for attaining enlightenment" [MW - Buddhism of the Harvest] is the teaching by the historical Buddha during his lifetime, i.e., his spoken words to his disciples. In the Age of Mappo we can only rely on the Lotus Sutra but the manner of its faith, practice, and propagation in the Age of Mappo differs from that done by the historical Buddha during his lifetime. We rely on the Daimoku transmitted by the Buddha to the Bodhisattvas from underground who are commissioned to expound the Lotus Sutra in this Age of Mappo. In Chapter 15 of the Lotus Sutra, the various provisional Bodhisattvas from this and other worlds ask to expound the Lotus Sutra. However, the Buddha demurs saying, "I do not want you to uphold this sutra...." Kanjin Honzon Sho, Nichiren Shu (NOPPA 1991) p 124; MW p 172.

Nichiren, referencing Tien-tai, discusses this rejection: "After all, Sakyamuni Buddha could not reveal his innermost enlightenment, or the great dharma hidden in the lines of the Duration of the Life of the Buddha Chapter [Chapter 16] to those great bodhisattvas from other worlds who had been guided by the teaching of the theoretical section." Kanjin Honzon Sho, Nichiren Shu (NOPPA 1991) p 126; MW 173.

Nichiren continues, explaining that in this Age of Mappo, the essence of the Lotus Sutra, Myo Ho Renge Kyo is taught to the people by the Bodhisattvas from underground, who are the original disciples of Sakyamuni Buddha:

"Lands at the beginning of the Latter Age slander the true dharma and those
who live there have poor capacity for comprehension and faith in Buddhism.
Therefore, instead of relying on Buddhas from other worlds, the Buddha called
out great bodhisattvas from underground to entrust them with the task of
transmitting the five characters of Myo, Ho, Ren, Ge, and Kyo, the essence of
the 'Duration of the Life of the Buddha' chapter, to the people in this world.
It meant also that those guided by the teaching of the theoretical section were
not the original disciples of Sakyamuni Buddha." Kanjin Honzon Sho, Nichiren
Shu (NOPPA 1991) p 126; MW 173.

"Having thus manifested the ten divine powers, Sakyamuni Buddha transmitted
the five characters of Myo, Ho, Ren, Ge, and Kyo to the original disciples of
the Buddha since the eternal past, who had sprung up from underground."
Kanjin Honzon Sho, Nichiren Shu (NOPPA 1991) p 140; MW 176.

"Tien-tai comments on this in his 'Words and Phrases of the Lotus Sutra': Following 'Thereupon Sakyamuni Buddha said to the host of bodhisattvas' is the third section of the chapter on the Divine Powers, summarizing the essence of the Lotus Sutra and transmitting it to the bodhisattvas from underground." Kanjin Honzon Sho, Nichiren Shu (NOPPA 1991) p 142; MW I:76.

"The manifestation of the ten divine powers in the 21st chapter on the
'Divine Powers' is for the sake of transmitting the five characters of Myo,
Ho, Ren, Ge Kyo to the four bodhisattvas of Jogyo, Muhengyo, Jyogyo and
Anryugyo, representing the host of bodhisattvas who had sprung from
underground." Kanjin Honzon Sho, Nichiren Shu (NOPPA 1991) p 142; MW
I:76-77.

Nichiren goes on to explain that the time had only just arrived for the bodhisattvas from underground to appear and propagate Myoho Renge Kyo, the excellent medicine for the Latter Age:

"Now we are at the beginning of the Latter Age of the Decadent Dharma, when Hinayana teachings strike down Mahayana teachings, provisional teachings destroy true teachings, east is taken for west and west for east, and heaven and earth are upside down. Under these circumstances, the four ranks of bodhisattva-teachers who preach the theoretical section of the Lotus Sutra remain in hiding. Gods desert the land which they are supposed to protect. Then, for the first time, those bodhisattvas from underground appear in this world to encourage ignorant people to take the five characters of Myo, Ho, Ren, Ge, and Kyo, the excellent medicine of the Latter Age. Many ignorant people would fall into hell by slandering the five characters, but they would be saved eventually.(NOPPA) pp. 143

As we see, the meaning of the Buddhism of the Harvest and the Buddhism of the Sowing, is not that there are two different Buddhisms, the Buddhism of Shakyamuni and the Buddhism of Nichiren Daishonin but that the time of the Latter Day is for sowing the seed of Buddhahood of the Eternal Shakyamuni rather than harvesting the seed.

I am no longer affiliated with the modern day Kempon Hokke

I am no longer affiliated with the modern Kempon Hokke. The Kempon Hokke doctrines purport to be the doctrines of Nichiren Daishonin, Nichiju, and those of the martyrs of our faith. In practice, however, they too have sold out for the sake of profit, power, and support. In the spirit of neither giving nor receiving, I now declare myself a direct disciple of Shakyamuni Buddha, Nichiren Daishonin, Nichiju Shonin, Nikkyo Shonin, and the martyrs of our faith. As proof of my direct discipleship to Nichiren Daishonin, I site a passage from The Letter to the Lay Priest Ichinosawa:

"Though people may claim to be disciples of Nichiren, if they do not possess some proof of that fact from my hand, you must not trust them."

I possess the writings of Nichiren Daishonin as proof.

"I, Nichiren, am not the founder of any school"

"I, Nichiren, am not the founder of any school, nor am I a latter-day follower of any older school. I am a priest without precepts, neither keeping the precepts nor breaking them. I am an ordinary creature like an ox or a sheep, who is neither particularly wise nor ignorant."

Sunday, June 2, 2013

The Opening of the Eyes: Three Kinds of Enemies of the Lotus Sutra with Commentary Ch. IX

Three Kinds of Enemies of the Lotus Sutra Ch. IX

Surprised at these five proclamations of the Buddha, three of which were revealed in the eleventh chapter and two in the twelth chapter of the Lotus Sutra, bodhisattvas swore to live up to His expectations in the thirteenth chapter entitled "The Encouragement of Keeping this Sutra." Citing sutras as a mirror reflecting the truth, I now let you know how men of the Zen, Ritsu, and Pure Land Schools and their followers today slander the true dharma.

A man called Nichiren was beheaded at one o'clock during the night of the tweflth day in the ninth month last year. His soul has come to the province of Sado and is writing this in the midst of snow in February the following year to be sent to his closest related disciples from past lives. As such this writing of mine may sound to you frightening and precious at the same time. How fearful others will be when they read this writing! This is the bright mirror in which Sakyamuni and Taho Buddhas and other Buddhas in the universe reflected the state of Japan in the future, namely conditions of japan today. Consider this as my memento in case I die.

As for the difficulties confronting those who would spread the Lotus Sutra in the Latter Age, first of all it is said in the thirteenth chapter, "Encouragement of Keeping the Sutra:"

We beseech You not to worry!
We will expound this sutra
In the frightful world
After Your death.
Ignorant people may speak
Ill of us and slander us
Or abuse us with swords or sticks.
We will endure all of them.
Monks in the evil world
Cunning, crooked, flattering, and arrogant,
Boast themselves enlightened
While they are not.
Some monks will stay in a monastery,
Wearing robes, sitting quietly,
claiming to be practicing the true way
Despising others staying among the people.
Attached to profit making,
They will preach the dharma for lay people
And will be revered by the people
As though they were arhats with Six Superhuman Powers.
They will have evil thoughts.
Always thinking of worldly matters,
Taking advantage of being in a monastery,
They will be happy to find our faults.
In order to slander us
Among the large crowd
They will always speak ill of us
To the king, ministers, Brahmans,
Lay believers and other monks
Saying that we are crooked in opinion
And preach Brahman teachings.
In the evil world in the in the kalpa of defilement
Many dreadful matters
Such as evil spirits abusing and shaming us,
As we spread the true dharma.
Evil monks of the defiled world,
Without knowledge of the Buddha
Using the expedient and provisional teachings,
Will slander us and frown at us;
Often we will be chased out of monasteries.

Grand Master Miao-le explains this situation in the eighth fascicle of his commentary on the Fa-hua-wen-chu:

This citation from the thirteenth chapter of the
Lotus Sutra could be divided into three parts.
The first line (four phrases) refers to the evil
people as a whole, that is the so-called self-
conceited lay people. The next line refers to
the self-conceited monks, while the following
seven lines refers to those arrogant monks
who consider themselves sages. Of the three,
persecution by the first group of arrogant lay
people is endurable. That of the second group
is harder to endure, while that of the third group,
self styled sages, is most difficult to endure. The
second and third groups are more cunning and
less likely to reveal their faults.

Monk Chih-tu of tung-ch'un states in his Fa-hua-i-tsuan:

First in the five lines starting with "ignorant people,"
the first verse and four phrases refer to the suffering
of "thee kinds of evil acts" --- physical, verbal, and
psychological acts --- committed by lay people. The
next verse beginning with "monks in the evil world"
refer to self-conceited arrogant monks. Third, the
three verses following "some monks will stay in a
monastary" refer to self-conceited sages, who lead
all the wicked people.

He also writes: "Two lines following 'in order to slander us' refer to reporting to the authorities false charges against the true dharma and against those who spread it."

It is said in the Nirvana Sutra, fascicle nine: "Good men! suppose a man of issendai pretending to be an arhat stays in a remote corner of tranquility, slandering Mahayana sutras. Ignorant people who see him may think him to be an arhat or a great bodhisattva." The sutra says also:

At the time this Nirvana Sutra spreads all over the
world, evil monks will steal it and forcible divide it
up into many parts destroying the excellent color,
fragrance, and taste of the true dharma. Although
these evil monks may recite such sutras, they will
miss the true teaching of the Buddha replacing it
with meaningless words of flowery rhetoric. They
will rearrange the sutra taking the beginning part
of the sutra and putting it at the end or visa versa,
or they will move the beginning and ending parts
to the mid-section, or the mid-part to the beginning
or ending part. You must know that such evil monks
are the demons' companions.

The six-facicled Hatsunaion-gyo states:

There will be a man of issendai who acts like an arhat
but commits evil acts; and there will be an arhat who
acts like a man of issendai but has compassion. An
arhat-like man of the issendai refers to the people
who slander Mahayana Buddhism. An arhat who acts
like the man of issendai refers to a man who despises
the Hinayana sages of sravaka and widely preaches
Mahayana Buddhism, assuring the people that both he
and they are bodhisattvas because everybody has
Buddha-nature in himself. Nevertheless, those people
would consider him a man of issendai.

It is said in the Nirvana Sutra:

After the death of the Buddha, and after the Age of the
True Dharma is over, monks in the Age of the Imitative
dharma will no longer be sages. On the surface, they will
appear to keep commandments and recite sutras a little,
but they will devour rich food and enjoy a prosperous life.
Although will wear robes of Buddhist monks they will act
for selfish gain just like hunters walking slowly aiming at
game with narrow eyes, or cats stalking a rat. They will
always claim to be arhats. Outwardly, they will appear to
be wise men and virtuous people, but in heart they will
harbor greed and jealosy just like Brahmans practicing the
excersize of keeping silence. They will appear to be Buddhist
monks, but actually are not. With their rampant evil thoughts
they will slander the true dharma.


Commentary:

Nichiren Daishonin's disciple are delighted to have this writing of encouragement to get through the most difficult times in their lives. While disbelievers and slanderers become terrified at seeing their ugly faces revealed in the mirror of the Lotus Sutra and the Kaimoku Sho.

Nichiren will show how the Zen, Ritsu, Shingon and other priests and believers of the provisional sects of Buddhism are phonies, slanderers of the true dharma, and destined to hell. I assert that the leaders and believers of the New Age religions of the Honmon Butsuryo Shu (HBS), the SGI (Daisaku Ikeda), The Nichiren Shoshu (High Priest Nichinyo) the Nipponzan Myohoji and the Rissho Koseikai who, with their "meaningless words and flowery rhetoric" have hijacked the Lotus Sutra and the Daimoku while propounding inferior teachings for their own gains.

"A man called Nichiren was beheaded at one o'clock during the night of the twelth day in the ninth month last year. His soul has come to the province of Sado and is writing this in the midst of snow in February the following year to be sent to his closest related disciples from past lives."

Nichiren Daishonin was to have been beheaded by the Kamakura Shogunate on september 12th, 1271. He was taken to Tatsunokuchi beach by a battalion of Samurai who had every intention of cutting off his head. It was a moonless night and the troops were giddy with anticipation, only silent for a few moments before the swordsman raised his sword above the head of the Nichiren Daishonin who was kneeling on the sand. Then suddenly a bright orb, probably a glowing meteorite, passed overhead. Many of the soldiers flew to the ground or they prostrated themselves in fear for their lives. Unsure of what do next, they took Nichiren Daishonin to the nearby Lord's manor and shortly thereafter they received word that Nichiren Daishonin's life was to be spared though  exiled to Sado Island.

Nichiren, saying that he was "beheaded" at Tatsunokuchi but that his soul has come to Sado, signifies that he shed his transient identity as a Tientai priest while revealing himself as Bodhisattva Eminent Conduct (Superior Conduct, Jogyo, or Visisticaritra). As the snow falls, tears again well up thinking how fortunate I am to be his disciple.

Just as the soldiers were terrified, the perverse priests and laymen who Nichiren repeatedly criticized, rebuked, and admonished, must have been even more frightened. We, his disciples, the true votaries of the Lotus Sutra, fear nothing. We are delighted to prove the words of the Sutra as Nichiren did.

Then Nichiren Shonin goes on to record the difficulties he experienced [and those that we too are bound to experience] by citing the Thirteenth Chapter of the Lotus Sutra, the Nirvana Sutra, and the commentaries by the votaries of the Lotus Sutra of the Imitative Dharma Age (Middle Day of the Law), Tientai and Dengyo.

The three types of enemies of the Lotus Sutra or the Three Powerful Enemies, are ignorant lay people, run of the mill monks, and secluded monks wearing clothing of patched rags (business suits) who are looked up to by the people as sages or wise men.

The first type of enemy is tolerable, being ignorant and angry they are not much worse than a mosquito bite or athletes foot.

The second, being more cunning, crooked, flattering, arrogant, and boastful, are no more than a belly ache or appendicitis. They are easily cured because they are so readily diagnosed.

The third are even more cunning, having the outward appearance of true sages possessing humility, they are respected by "white robed" laymen. These are like the most virulent form of cancer, amelanotic melanoma that appears to be nothing more than a benign mole or beauty mark that affect all the organs before one even knows that they are affected. They can also be likened to a delicious fruit drink laced with enough poison to kill an elephant.

The Rissho Koseikai founded by Nikkyo Niwano has several million members and the leaders are called reverends. They are Universal Universalists who abrogate Nichiren Daishonin [even though they stole his teachings on the recitation of the daimoku] by distorting his teachings on Rissho (Right Law). They are too cowardly to confront the Christians, Muslims, Hindus and the provisional sects of Buddhism. They will destroy the Daishonin's Lotus Sutra teachings if left unchecked.

The Honmon Butsuryu Shu is a much more concise exposition of the teachings of the Lotus Sutra than the Rissho Koseikai. They have about one million members. They arrogantly propagate a teaching divorced from Nichiren but call it Nichiren's. They are known as the Eight Chapter School They do not regularly chant the 2nd and 16th chapters of the Lotus Sutra, preferring to chant principally the 21st chapter. Nichiren Daishonin chanted principally the 16th chapter. They also model their object of worship on their founder Nissen's Gohonzon. They also chant Nam myoho renge kyo rather than Namu myoho renge kyo [as did Nichiren].

Nichiren writes about the correct practice of the Lotus Sutra in the Latter Day:

"I have written out the prose portion of the Hoben chapter for you. You should recite it together with the Jigage which I sent to you earlier" (MW5 p 163)

"As to the blessings derived by you, who, as chief mourner, who have recited the Jigage every morning for a period of 13 years, they "can only be understood and shared between Buddhas." (MW7 p 110)

"In the past there have been many examples of people who, praying to receive benefit in their present or future existences, have acheived their desires by reciting and praising all 8 volumes or the Hoben and Juryo chapters or the Jigage alone." MW 7 p 229

"In your letter, you write 'Since I took faith in this sutra, I have continued to recite the junyoze (Hoben) and the Jigage and chant the daimoku without the slightest neglect" MW 3 p 206-07

"For the sake of your son's repose, I have recited the entire Lotus Sutra once and the Jigage several times, and chantied the daimoku a hundred thousand times" MW7 p239

"Consequenty, the Buddhas throughout the 10 directions looked up to the Jigage as their teacher and attained Buddhahood. The Jigage is like a mother and father to the persons of the world. A person who embraces the Juryo chapter of the Lotus Sutra is sustaining the life of the Buddhas" MW 7 p 112

Another rational for reciting the Hoben-pon and the Juryo-hon is that the Hoben-pon represents the Historical Buddha Shakyamuni, the Juryo-hon represents the Eternal Buddha Shakyamuni and the believer represents an emanation Buddha of the Eternal Buddha. Thus we recite the Hoben-pon and the Juryo-hon to represent the unity of the Three Buddha Bodies.

In the book, The Teachings of the Honmon Butsuryushu by Nisso Fukuoka, we see three pages devoted to Sacred Water and one and a half pages devoted to the Eternal Buddha Shakyamuni.

We also read

"Professor Tashiro met Reverand Kobayashi, who immediately, told Tashiro, 'From today, stop taking any medicine."(The Teachings of Honmon Butsuryushu by Nisso Fukuoka) They disregard that even the Daishonin took medicine from time to time. In the HBS, if the magic Odaimoku, can't cure you, there is always the magic water. Of course the Daimoku and even the Gohonzon water is beneficial, however, Gohonzon water is not a central theme of the Daishonin's Buddhism. Nichiren Dasihonin says our treasures are food, clothing, shelter and medicine. Don't throw away your medicine while continuing to chant Namu Myoho renge kyo.

"The Honmon Butsuryu Shu is distributing several types of Gohonzon. There seems to be several ranks of members who each deserve a different kind of Gohonzon that they offer. One is the proto-type that Nissen made for the first time. The others are either these prototypes embellished with some meaningless words or are supposedly Nissen transcriptions of a Nichiren Gohonzon which can not be found in the Gohonzon Shu(the catalogue of extent Nichiren Gohonzons). A "high ranking" Gohonzon is round-shaped with "golden" decorative border. Reguarding this practice of the HBS (and the SGI and the Nichiren Shoshu of offering different sized Gohonzons to various members of these sects), this non-egalitarian carrot-stick approach to Buddhism panders to the basest instincts of the members.

Nichiryu (1384-1464) founded the Happon branch, but (now it is called 'Hokke Shu Honmon Ryu'). Happon means "Eight Chapters". Of course, the eight chapters from 15 to 22 are important but this is matter of simply being able to read the letters of the Daishonin, so there is no reason to found a new branch centered around this clear-cut doctrine. The HBS under Nissen broke off from this branch in the 1800s.

Nichiryu's sectarian ego caused him to make the branch. So there is nothing other than sectarian doctrines in the branch. Nissen Nagamatsu (1817-1890) then started a bizarre version of the Happon branch in 1857 which eventually split, and the layman led branch became the Honmon Butsuryu Shu in 1947. Apparently, the strange Happon branch produced an even more strange American HBS which appropriates the teachings from the Nichiren Shu and the Kempon Hokke Shu to bolster their case for orthodoxy while further bringing confusion to the teachings of the Buddha and Nichiren Daishonin..

The moon is obscured by clouds. The Honmon Butsuryu Shu are clouds that obscure the Dharma of Supreme Enlightenment. We of the Kempon Hokke, following in the footsteps of Nichiren Daishonin and our founder Nichiju, develop the mind of the Buddha while the theology of the HBS leads to a defiled mind with perverted ideas and the members to remain in delusion. The delusion of greed and jealousy leads them to criticize the Kempon Hokke because we expose them for being clouds that obscure the Dharma.

Because there is the Daimoku Only doctrine in HBS, the believers in that sect pay special attention to the Honzon Mondo Sho Gosho that explains the object of worship in terms of Law and neglect the teachings in the Five Major writings of Nichiren that explain the Gohonzon in terms of the Buddha. The SGI is similar in this regard.

The HBS wants to be an alternative to the SGI in America and elsewhere. How can they be an alternative when there is a hierarchy with three different objects of worship? This reveals that the HBS has replaced faith in the true doctrine of Lord Buddha Shakyamuni and Nichiren Daishonin, with some defiled doctrines of their own making. Here is more proof:

One of the central teachings of the HBS is, "Do not hold a grudge." However, as any man with two eyes can see, their former chief american representative was incapable of putting this teaching into practice while the powers that be in the HBS made him a lay-priest.

Another such doctrine is their reliance on the Alaya or 8th level of consciousness (Arayashiki). Clearly, Nichiren talked about accessing the Amala or 9th level of consciousness. The Kempon Hokke would maintain that the HBS faith and practice is incapable of accessing the Ninth Level of Consciousness and therefore says nothing at all about it.

Most importantly, the Honmon Butsuryo Shu teaches:

"In a Buddha-less world", "and in the interim between the former Buddha and the next Buddha." No matter how many times they chant the daimoku, they are those who do not believe in the Hokke, whose core teaching is, "The Eternal Life of the Buddha," or living Buddha.

As far as The Nipponzan Myohoji, I have too much affection for Nichidatsuu Fujii to criticize him personally. He died in 1985, living to more than 100 and for more than 80 of those years he lived as a mendicant not unlike Nichiren Daishonin. He walked hundreds of thousands of miles chanting the Daimoku for world peace. He remonstrated with governmental authorities and lived his life emulating Bodhisattva Never Despise. He was attacked with tear gas but he never had an ill thought. He loved Buddha Sakyamuni, Nichiren Daishonin, and Bodhisattva Eminent Conduct who he was purported to have met. I think, I can criticize his doctrine however.

One in a million people can attain Buddhahood through the practice of Nipponzon Myohoji. In this case it was Nichidatsu who made the religion great, not the religion of Nipponzan Myohoji that made Nichidatsu great. Very few people in the Latter day can live like Nichidatsu. Even his monk and nun disciples have difficulty following his example. Also, the world is a far more dangerous place with the ascendency of Islamic Fundamentalism. His believers would surely be killed on the streets of Riyadh or in Yemen. Absolute pacificism is not the teaching of the Lotus or Nirvana Sutra.

Nichidatsu wrote:

"We have come to an age when we must have mutual trust to survive. To trust -- this is a religious civilization. To save others and to save the world --- these are the tasks of a spiritual civilization."

"The outcome obtained with the spirit of compliance in edifying the people on the teachings is much more beneficial than any argument or intellectual dialogue. When compliance and fawning are treated at the same level, it results in both oneself and others losing the merits of the Dharma."(ibid.)

"It means to comply with the correct teachings. It is at the same time a practice not to go against any person. A Bodhisattva should not cast a sidelong glance at the deeds and conducts of the people and deride their bewilderment, but rather should have the mindset of bouncing a ball when coming across a child, and listening to the old reminisce."(ibid)

"The seventh category of ju-ekou is a level called tou-zui-junichi-issai-shujou-ekou. It means to equally accept and follow (zuijun) all people with an impartial mind. What is the reason for even impartially following the unenlightened who engages in evil and knows no virtue? It is a practice of enveloping all people with great compassion. It is akin to a mother’s heart that gives what her child seeks and together rejoices."(ibid.)

"The practice of shakubuku by The Bodhisattva Who Never Despises wastangyo-raihai (the sole practice of worshiping the Buddha within others). Shakubuku, it is nothing more than the practice to follow others without confronting them. When we talk of shakubuku, it somehow seems to evoke aggressiveness to the surface. This should never be the case."(ibid.)

The gentle practices are futile in this period of the Age of Decay. This is why I think the legacy of Nipponzan Myohoji will remain limited and the great desire of Nichidatsu will remain unfulfilled through the gentle practices. Some people can't be trusted. Those who strap explosives to mental defectives in order to blow up a pet market teaming with people can't be reasoned with. They must be broken and subdued. "Chant the Daimoku for peace and security in this very life," will not resonate with these men. They only will understand the sharp words of the Lotus Sutra that condemns them to the hell of incessant suffering if they don't reform the perverted tenets in their heart. Motherly love will not reform the errant sons of Islam. The strictness of our father Sakyamuni Buddha of the Juryo Chapter is what is required today.

Nichiren Daishonin would never comply with evil men or evil doctrines. I don't think he would have approved of Nichidatsu's spirit of interfaith cooperation with Gandhi, even in an effort to realize world peace.

As far as the SGI and the Nichiren Shoshu, Daisaku Ikeda and the High Priest of Nichiren Shoshu, I will talk about them at length in my concluding comments on this section of the Opening of the Eyes.

Namu Nichidatsuu Fuji. He meant well.

Opening of the Eyes: Three Kind of Enemies Ch. IX cont...


Now, in the light of the Lotus preached on Mt. Sacred Eagle and Nirvana preached under the twin sala tree, as bright as the sun and the moon, and commentaries by Miao-le of P'i-chan and Chih-tu of Tung-ch'un as brilliant as a clear mirror, sectarian schools today and ugly faces of Zen, Ritsu, and Pure Land follower in entire Japan are seen without a trace of a cloud.

It is said in the Myohorenge-kyo (Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Dharma) that it would be spread "in the dreadful world after the death of the Buddha" (Chapter 13); "in the latter evil day," "in the latter days," "during the latter daysa when the dharma is about to disappear" (Chapter 14); "in the evil days of decadent dharma" (Chapter 17); and "during the fifth 500-year period after the death of the Buddha" (Chapter 23). Likewise it is said in the shohoke-kyo (Lotus Sutra of the True Dharma, "Kanzeppon" chapter, that the sutra would be spread "in the latter days" and "in the coming latter days." The tembon Hokekyo (Lotus Sutra with Additions) says the same.

Grand master T'ien-t'ai has written: "The three Southern masters and seven Northern masters of Buddhism in China during the Age of the Imitative Dharma have become enemies of the Lotus Sutra." Grand Master Dengyo has this to say: "Toward the end of the Age of the Imitative Dharma scholars of the Six schools of Nara were the enemies of the Lotus." During the time of these two grand masters however, the enemies had not yet become apparent.

As for the Latter Age of the Decadent dharma, it was determined by innumerous bodhisattvas, eighty trillion nayuta in number, that there would be three kinds of enemies of the Lotus Sutra at the beginning of the Latter Age following the 1,000-year Age of the True Dharma and another 1,000-year Age of the Imitative dharma after the death of the Buddha. This was determined in the presence of Sakyamuni Buddha and Taho Buddha sitting side by side in the stupa of seven treasures like the sun and moon, as well as Buddhas in manifestation (funjin Buddhas) from all over the universe sitting under trees of gems like stars in the sky. How could this be false?

It has been some 2,200 years since the death of Sakyamuni Buddha. Even if a finger pointing to the earth misses it, or flowers fail to bloom in spring, the three kinds of enemies of the Lotus Sutra are bound to appear in Japan. If so, who will be among the three kinds of enemies? Or, who will be considered to be a practitioner of the Lotus Sutra? We are not sure. Are we among the so-called three kinds of enemies? Or are we among the practitioners of the Lotus Sutra? We are not sure.

It was during the night of the day of the fourth month in the twenty-fourth year (1029 B.C.) of King Chou, the fourth sovereign of the Chou dynasty in ancient China, that rays of light in five colors flashed in the sky from north to south, brightening it as though it were daytime. The earth trembled six ways, rivers, ponds, and wells rose without rain, and all grasses and trees blossomed and bore fruit. It was miraculous! Greatly alarmed, King Chao consulted historian Su-yu about this and was told that this was an omen of the birth of a sage in the land to the west. The historian continued: "Nothing will happen for now, but in a thousand years the teaching of that sage, who was just born in the western land, will come to this land to save the people." Su-yu was a petty Confucianist who had not yet eliminated delusions and evil passions. Yet he was able to foretell 1,000 years in advance. As he predicted, Buddhism was introduced to China 1,015 years after the death of the Buddha, in the tenth year of the Yung-p'ing era (67 A.D.) during the reign of Ming-ti, the second emperor of the Later han.

The prediction of the Lotus Sutra is incomparably superior to that of Su-yu, as it was presented by bodhisattvas in the presence of Sakyamuni Buddha, and Taho Buddha, and Buddhas in manifestation who had come from all over the universe. As such, how could there not be three kinds of enemies of the Lotus Sutra in Japan today? Sakyamuni has said in the Fuhozo-kyo (Buddha's Successors Sutra): "During the 1,000 year Age of the True dharma after my death, twenty -four would come in succession to spread My true dharma." Besides such direct disciples as Kasyapa and Ananda, Monk Parsva, and Bodhisattva Asvaghosa and Nagarjuna had already appeared exactly as predicted 100, 600, and 700 years after the death of the Buddha repectively. Why is it that only this prediction of three kinds of enemies of the Lotus Sutra has not come true? If this prediction has not come true, the whole teaching of the Lotus Sutra will be false and the assurance that Sariputra and kasyapa be the future Keko and Komyo Buddhas respectively would come to naught. This would mean that the pre-Lotus sutras would in turn become true and final with the result that Sariputra and other sravaka men would never obtain Buddhahood. It would mean that we should not offer any alms to such sravaka men as Ananda even if we should do so to dogs and foxes. What should we do the? What should we do?

The "ignorant people," the first of the three kinds of enemies of the Lotus Sutra, seem to be influential followers of the second and third enemies referred to as "monks in the evil world" and "monks in robes or patched rags" in the sutra. Grand Master Miao-le referred to this first kind of enemy as "self-conceited lay people," while Monk Chih-tu said that they would "raise false charges to the authorities."

As for the second group of the three enemies of the Lotus Sutra, it is said in the Lotus Sutra: "Monks in the evil world will be cunning, flattering and arrogant, and boast of themselves as enlightened while they have not understood anything." The Nirvana Sutra states: "There will be evil monks then.... Although these evil monks recite such sutras, they will lose sight of the profound teaching of the Buddha."

Grand Master T'ien-t'ai laments in his Mo-ho shih-kuan: "Those without faith in the Lotus Sutra consider it to be only for sages and to be too difficult for ignorant people like themselves. Those without wisdom become self-conceited considering themselves equal to the Buddha."

Commentary:

At this very time of the Degenerate Age, these last passages refers to the SGI who, though reciting the Lotus Sutra, declare, "The Lotus Sutra is no longer valid in Mappo," "the Lotus Sutra is too difficult to understand without the insight of President Ikeda," and "we are equal to Sakyamuni Buddha, he is nothing special."

It also refers to the Nichiren Shoshu High Priests, the self proclaimed  priest intermediaries who alone "understands the heart of the Lotus Sutra," and who assert that "Sakyamuni is but a cast off Buddha."

Finally, it refers to Shingon, Pure Land, and Zen.

Three Kind of Enemies Ch. IX cont...

For instance, grand master Tao-cho stated in his An-le-chi that the second reason why the Lotus Sutra should be given up was that its teaching was too profound for ignorant people to understand. Likewise, Honen states in his Senchaku-shu: "All religious practices except for the nembutsu do not suit the intelligence of the people nor the time." Grand Master Miao-le in his Commentary on the Fa-hua- wen-chu, fascicle 10, warned against such misconceptions by saying:

Those who would misunderstand the Lotus Sutra
perhaps do not know how meritorious the acts of
beginners can be. they give credit to those of high
rank and despise the beginners. It is shown in the
Lotus sutra that even the acts of beginners can be
meritorious in the strength of the sutra.

Grand Master Dengyo also claims:

The ages of the True Dharma and the imitative
Dharma are about to pass with the Latter age of
the Decadent Dharma just around the corner. It
is exactly the time now for all people to be saved
by the one true teaching of the Lotus Sutra. How
do I know it? It is said in the fourteenth chapter,
"Peaceful Practices," of the Lotus Sutra that the
sutra would spread in the Latter Age when the
Dharma is about to disappear.

Venerable Eshin says, "The Whole of Japan is ready to believe in the perfect teaching of the Lotus Sutra."

Whom should we believe in, Tao-ch'o, Dengyo, Honen or Eshin? Tao-ch'o and honen do not have any basis in the Buddhist scriptures, while Dengyo and Eshin who, at least in this writing cited by the Daishonin, base their assertions firmly upon the Lotus Sutra. Moreover, to all Buddhist monks in Japan, Grand Master Dengyo of Mt. Hiei is the master presiding over their initiation ceremony. How could they follow Honen, who is haunted by a heavenly devil. and abandon the master who performs their own initiation ceremony? If Honen is a wise man, why did he not mention in his Senchaku-shu those interpretations of Dengyo and Eshin and compare them with his own? Since he did not do so, he is to be blamed for having concealed them. It is Honen and other monks without any commandments and with evil views that are pointed to in the Lotus Sutra as "the monks in the evil world," the second of the three kinds of enemies of the Lotus Sutra.

Commentary:

Nichiren writes:

"Nowhere in all the five thousand or seven thousand volumes of sutras
listed in the Kai-yuan era catalogue do we find a single scriptural passage
that expresses disapproval of the Lotus Sutra and advises one to discard it or
to cast it aside, nor any passage that says it is to be classified among the
incorrect passages or abandoned. [If you disagree] you had better find some
reliable passage from the sutras [that will support your view], so that you may
rescue Shantao and Honen from their torments in the hell of incessant
sufferings"

Yet, Nichikan who was known as the restorer of the Nichiren Shoshu wrote:

"The purpose of the Hoben-pon is to smash the provisional teachings, the Purpose of the Juryo-hon is to smash the Hoben-pon, and the purpose of the Daimoku is to smash the Juryo-hon."

The Hoben-pon represents the Three Bodied Tathagata in his historical aspect, the Juryo-hon represents the Three Bodied Tathagata in his Bliss Body aspect and the Daimoku represents the Three Bodied Tathagata in his Dharma Body aspect. That is why the Daishonin said you can not forsake even the theoretical section of the Lotus Sutra. You can not separate the Three Buddha Bodies except as an artificial construct.

Nichikan and the successive High Priests of Nichiren Shoshu are no different than the Shingon priests who separate and place Mahavairochaina or Dainichi Buddha (representing the Dharma Body) above the other Buddhas of the ten directions, including the Three Bodied Tathagata Shakyamuni. They know nothing of the Three Bodied Tathagata or the true teachings of the Lotus Sutra.

These priests are the present day second of the Three Powerful Enemies of the Lotus Sutra.


Three Kind of Enemies Ch. IX cont...

It is said in the Nirvana Sutra: 'Before listening to the Lotus Sutra, we had all been men of evil views." Grand Master Miao-le explains this in his Fa-hua hsuan-i shih-ch'ien: "The Buddha himself called his pre-Lotus Three Teachings (zokyo or Hinayana, tsugyo or common to Hinayana and Mahayana, and bekkyo or Mahayana) evil." T'ien-t'ai, citing the words of the Nirvana Sutra just mentioned, says in his Mo-ho chih-kuan: "They called themselves evil. isn't 'evil' bad?" Miao-le explains this in his commentary to the Mo-ho chih-kuan:

"Evil" means "wicked." Therefore we must know
that only the engyo (perfect teaching) among the
Four Teachings is correct. But it has two meanings.
First it means that following the "perfect teaching"
(engyo) while rejecting the remaining three is correct,
and rejecting the "perfect teaching" while following
the three is erroneous. This is a relative point of view.
Secondly, it means that attachment to the "perfect
teaching" is considered erroneous while detachment
from it is correct. This is an absolute point of view in
which there is no difference in the eyes of the Buddha
between the "perfect teaching" and the remaining three
of the so-called Four Teachings. Either way, we have to
stay away from error. It is bad to attach ourselves to
the "perfect teaching," how much worse it is to attach
ourselves to the Three Teachings!

Compared to Hinayana Buddhism all Brahma schools are in error. compared to the Lotus Sutra, the correct way of Hinayana Buddhism or first four of the so-called "five tastes" and the first three of the Four Teachings are all evil and erroneous. the Lotus Sutra alone is true and correct. The 'perfect teaching" preached in such pre-Lotus sutras as the Flower Garland, Hodo, and Hannya Sutras is called perfect but its perfection is only from a relative point of view. it is still inferior to the absolute exquisiteness of the Lotus Sutra.

Also, the "perfect teaching" of the pre-Lotus sutras is erroneous because it still remains in the first three categories of the Four Teachings. Therefore, we are still treading the way of error even if we practice the ultimate teaching of the pre-Lotus sutras such as the Flower Garland and Hannya. How much more should Honen and his disciples and followers be in error! They depended on such petty sutras as the Kanmuryoju-kyo, which are inferior to such pre-Lotus sutras as the Flower Garland and Hannya, taking the "Lotus" in the Kanmuryoju-kyo and urging the people to discard the Lotus sutra. Aren't they the so-called slanderers of the true dharma? Sakyamuni, Taho, and numerous other Buddhas from all over the universe came to this world in order to have the Lotus Sutra remain here forever. Honen and Pure Land believers in Japan claim that the Lotus sutra in the Latter Age of the Decadent Dharma will perish before the Pure Land School. Aren't they the enemies of Sakyamuni, Taho, and many other buddhas from all the worlds in the universe?

Commentary:

Honen's cry was, "to close, ignore and abandon" the Lotus Sutra. Nichikan's was to smash the Hoben-pon and the Juryo-hon. Now they reside together in the Avici Hell.

Nichiki and Nissatsu the Nichiren Shu traitors to the Nichiren faith and the mentors of Ryuei

http://nirc.nanzan-u.ac.jp/nfile/2644