Ikeda Wisdom Academy The Wisdom of the Lotus Sutra. Review

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Ikeda Wisdom Academy The Wisdom of the Lotus Sutra Review December 2013 Study Review The Wisdom of the Lotus Sutra, vol. 2, Part V - Section 5 The seventh chapter of the Lotus Sutra, The Parable of the Phantom City, starts off with an explanation of the profound connection between Shakyamuni and his disciples through the story of the sixteenth son of the Buddha Great Universal Wisdom Excellence. The account presents the Buddha as he attained enlightenment and preached the Lotus Sutra in a previous lifetime. In the story, Shakyamuni attained enlightenment through Great Universal Wisdom Excellence s teaching and explains to his voice-hearer disciples that he, as his sixteenth son, expounded the sutra to countless beings. Now, Shakyamuni preaches the same Lotus Sutra, reborn to continue teaching the countless beings, who have reappeared as Shakyamuni s voice-hearer disciples due to the causes and conditions of the past. Then another parable is elucidated for the voice-hearers. The chapter presents a parable of a leader who guides a group of travelers through a dangerous mountain pass. The travelers grow weary on the trip and want to turn back. The leader guiding them employs expedient means to conjure up a great city where they can rest. There the members of the troupe rest and recoup their strength. The leader then makes the city disappear as he tells

them that city was nothing more than an illusion he created it so that they could get rest but that the true destination is close at hand. Key Passages Key Passage #1 Not only had Shakyamuni Buddha taught the voice-hearers in his present life, he had instructed them tirelessly and ceaselessly since the remote past. This chapter explains the karmic relationship existing between them since that distant time. Our relationship is not limited to this lifetime alone, Shakyamuni tells them in effect. I have been together with you all along. It is this impassioned message that enables the voice-hearers to awaken to the truth. They are deeply moved. They realize that the teachings of the two vehicles (for voice-hearers and cause-awakened ones), producing only partial enlightenment, were an expedient means, a mere phantom city. And that the treasure land of Buddhahood was the true destination all along. They understand that their mentor, Shakyamuni, guided them with such strong forbearance, such profound mercy and such great skill to bring them along with him to this treasure land. This is the significance of the parable. (WLS-2, 128) The voice-hearer disciples learn from Shakyamuni that their relationship with their mentor was not limited to their present

lifetime. The connection between mentor and disciple has existed since the remote past. The teaching the voice-hearers had previously practiced equated to a phantom city, or an expedient means to arrive at the practice and teaching that would allow them to attain Buddhahood. Key Passage #2 The appearance in the world of a great spiritual leader such as the Buddha Great Universal Wisdom Excellence probably signaled the dawn of a wondrous new age; it marked a time of beginning. Spiritual reformers are sure to appear at the beginning of a new age. These people themselves develop a new dimension of spirituality and liberate the hearts of those caught up in outmoded ways of thinking. Again, they may exert an intangible yet profound spiritual influence on people. Let us of the SGI always advance with the pride of pioneers. Nichiren Daishonin says, The votaries, who chant Nam-myoho-renge-kyo, are the Buddha Great Universal Wisdom Excellence (OTT, 74). (WLS-2, 130) Reformers appear to pioneer a new age to transform the spiritual state of affairs of the people. SGI members are such pioneers who open the way for spiritual reformation toward a new age. Key Passage #3

The statement that he smashed the armies of the devil is taken to mean that he had fundamentally conquered earthly desires. But simply overcoming earthly desires is not in itself attaining enlightenment. It is one aspect of enlightenment. True enlightenment is inseparable from the compassion and wisdom to lead people to happiness. Phantom City is expounded for the voice-hearers. The voicehearers suppose that enlightenment means extinguishing earthly desires and entering a state of perfect calm and tranquillity. It may be that Shakyamuni describes Great Universal Wisdom Excellence s Buddhahood in this way to indicate to the voice-hearers that conquering earthly desires does not in itself constitute attaining the Buddha s true enlightenment. Compassion, wisdom and earthly desires, of course, belong to the realm of the intangible, of non-substantiality, and they should not be viewed in a phenomenal sense. On that premise, to put it simply, the Buddha s enlightenment lies not in eradicating earthly desires but rather in infusing them with compassion and wisdom. It is a matter of changing the turbid river of earthly desires, karma and suffering into a pure stream of compassion and wisdom, of turning the negative waves of life into waves of goodness. Those who achieve this possess a perfectly tranquil and serene state of life in the sense that they are not troubled by earthly desires; at the same time, their lives have a vigorous dynamism. The Buddha s state of life is like the ocean. No matter what turmoil there may be on the surface, in its depths there is absolute calm and tranquillity. And the Buddha s life constantly pulses with waves of goodness. The Buddha is

called the thus come one because the workings of the Mystic Law come thus, or manifest purely and directly, in his life. This is the Buddha s enlightenment in perfect unification with the Mystic Law. (WLS-2, 131 132) Attaining Buddhahood is not just a matter of overcoming earthly desires. Earthly desires themselves must be transformed into compassion and wisdom in order to reach a dynamic state of life not troubled by earthly desires. Key Passage #4 Stated more simply, this fundamental wish could be described as an aspiration or desire for the happiness of oneself and others. The very simplicity of this might seem anticlimactic, since it s something that all people understand on some level; but making this one s guiding and fundamental spirit is in fact extremely difficult. This is because hindrances in the form of earthly desires, ignorance, greed, egoism and divisiveness prevent people from doing so. To base our lives thoroughly on this spirit, therefore, we need a teacher, a mentor, who can guide us in the right direction. It seems that this is what the Phantom City chapter teaches through the elucidation of the karmic causes and conditions linking mentor and disciple over an extremely long time.

In short, causes and conditions indicates the eternal bonds that form between people. These bonds certainly do not exist apart from human beings, nor do they fetter or bind people externally. On the contrary, the disciples themselves perceive the cause for attaining Buddhahood at the core of their being. That is, they recollect their original aspiration. Also, they awaken to a sense of gratitude for the condition provided by their mentor that is, for their relationship with him in helping them develop this cause for the effect of Buddhahood. This sense of appreciation and excitement at realizing this supreme bond with the mentor is the spirit of Phantom City. (WLS-2, 137 138) Original or fundamental aspiration refers to the desire for happiness for oneself and others. Basing one s life on this spirit is simple but extremely difficult due to life s natural hindrances. A mentor is faith guides disciples into thoroughly living the spirit of happiness for oneself and others. Key Passage #5 And of cause and condition, cause is naturally primary. Conditions function to support and assist the cause. In the path of mentor and disciple, too, the awareness of the disciple is primary. The response of the mentor depends on the strength of the disciple s seeking spirit, sense of responsibility and determination. That said, the Buddha industriously teaches and guides his disciples over past, present and future, never abandoning any of them. He educates

them and embraces them in his mercy. It seems to me that the Buddha s immense compassion is the main point the Lotus Sutra seeks to convey. The disciples believe in and seek out the mentor, and the mentor protects and trains the disciples. The mentor, ultimately, does not abandon even disciples who have forgotten their pledge. This most beautiful of human bonds is the relationship of mentor and disciple in Buddhism The cause and condition for our appearance in this world, President Toda declared, is to hoist up the great flag of kosen-rufu. That s the raison d etre of the SGI organization. And the essence of this organization is the mentor disciple relationship. In Buddhism, therefore, mentor and disciple are comrades advancing together toward the common objective of kosen-rufu, toward the creation of a world where Buddhist ideals and principles are widely embraced. The mentor disciple relationship is an extension of the kind that exists between those with greater experience in life or in faith and those with lesser. In one sense, mentor and disciple stand face to face. Yet on a more fundamental level, mentor and disciple are comrades standing side by side. (WLS-2, 138 139) The path of mentor and disciple coincides with cause and condition. The disciple s awareness and determination is the primary cause for seeking the mentor s response. Mentor and disciple advance together for the sake of kosen-rufu in Buddhism. The mentor, of greater experience, teaches and guides the disciple, of lesser experience, in faith but fundamentally are side by side as comrades advancing toward the objective of ksoen-rufu.

Key Passage #6 If the world of Buddhahood is the end or objective, then the nine worlds become the process leading to it. The view that we only arrive at Buddhahood after escaping the nine worlds implies discontinuity between the nine worlds and the world of Buddhahood in other words, that the nine worlds do not contain the world of Buddhahood, and vice versa. But, as indicated in the above passage from The Record of the Orally Transmitted Teachings, the idea that we attain enlightenment only after eradicating the three categories of illusion is the way of thinking of the provisional, pre-lotus Sutra teachings. Shakyamuni s true intention in expounding the Lotus Sutra was to clarify that the nine worlds contain the world of Buddhahood and that the expedient means are themselves the truth. Accordingly, the phantom city and the treasure land are not separate or distinct. The phantom city is identical to the treasure land. From this perspective, the process is, in actuality, the end. In other words, the attainment of Buddhahood is not a destination at the end of the road of Buddhist practice. Rather, the actions of someone who practices and spreads Buddhism are themselves the actions of the Buddha The Buddha is not some nonhuman or superhuman being who dwells apart from this world. Nichiren Daishonin says, Buddha in fact is the living beings of the nine worlds (OTT, 29). Ordinary people who uphold and propagate the Mystic Law are themselves Buddhas; this is the essence of the Daishonin s Buddhism.

The state of Buddhahood manifests in our every action; the wisdom and compassion of the Buddha manifest in our lives from moment to moment. Truly, this is the meaning of each moment of life in the phantom city is a moment of life in the treasure land. (WLS-2, 144 145) Buddhahood as a destination implies no mutual possession of the Ten Worlds. Rather, Buddhahood manifests in the nine worlds and therefore, means the phantom city and the treasure land are not separate. Key Passage #7 To view kosen-rufu as a point when an ideal has been attained is not without meaning. But I wanted to emphasize the importance of the spirit to spread Buddhism. We must not think of the journey, the process of achieving this ideal, as just a means. Those who make this mistake, using others as mere tools to achieve some end, may repeat the mistakes of revolutionary movements of the past that produced innumerable tragedies. Buddhism is a religion that exists for the sake of human beings. Under no circumstances should people be victimized or turned into a means to an end. That is my conviction as a Buddhist. To advance, we have to set up phantom cities in the form of targets. But on a deeper level, efforts to proceed toward and reach these phantom cities are themselves the actions of the Buddha. And the arena for these endeavors is itself the treasure land. (WLS-2, 146)

Viewing the goal of attaining kosen-rufu as a path, not as a fixed goal, allows for the process of achieving that ideal to be the emphasis. When targets are set up to advance kosen-rufu, these targets in themselves become the actions of kosen-rufu. At once, these actions are the means and goal themselves. Questions for Discussion The questions below can be used during discussion sessions. They are intended to serve as example questions to generate faith-based discussion on the material covered. 1. Soren Kierkegaard wrote in The Present Age, Our age is essentially one of understanding and reflection, without passion, momentarily bursting into enthusiasm, and shrewdly relapsing into repose. What do you think he meant by this? Does this correlate to your own view of society? (Refer to p. 125) 2. How does the voice-hearers learning of their relationship with Shakyamuni change their perspective on Shakyamuni s enlightenment in this lifetime? (Refer to p. 128) 3. In terms of attaining enlightenment, what else is necessary to achieve a more complete state of Buddhahood other than conquering earthly desires? (Refer to p. 131) 4. Why is cause primary in causes and condition? (Refer to p. 137) 5. Discuss the depth of connection that Mr. Toda established with Mr. Makiguchi during their imprisonment based on the sutra? (Refer to pp. 139 140) 6. Should kosen-rufu be viewed as a goal or a path? (p. 146)