All those wishing fulfill
their mission as votaries of the Lotus Sutra must be true
to certain principles. The following principles form the basis
of our efforts to eliminate human suffering through the teachings
of the Buddhism of the Lotus Sutra. We take these principles
as our vow and declaration:
1. The Goal Is Enlightenment.
We declare that each and every
individual who practices in strict accordance with Nichiren's teachings and the Lotus
Sutra will quickly attain enlightenment.
“[The Lotus Sutra] can save even those who commit
the five cardinal sins, or who slander the correct teaching.
Therefore you must be guided by the intent of [the Lotus Sutra,
which is] the immediate attainment of enlightenment, and never
give yourself up to the mistaken views that stem from doubt
or attachments.”
(WND p. 63-64)
“If you chant Myoho-renge-kyo with deep faith
in this principle, you are certain to attain Buddhahood in
this lifetime.”
(WND p. 4)
“After I have passed into extinction, [one]
should accept and uphold this sutra. Such a person assuredly
and without doubt will attain the Buddha way."
(LS ch 21 p. 276)
2. The Law, Not the Person.
We vow to never directly or indirectly
attempt to cause others to follow the Person in the form of
ourselves or anyone else as the Teacher of the way and the
means to attain Buddhahood. We will instead continually focus
on nothing other than the Law and the teachings of both the
Lotus Sutra and of Nichiren as the words that clarify the only direct path
to enlightenment. We will uphold the directive made by Shakyamuni
and Nichiren to, “Rely on the Law and not upon persons.”
“‘Rely on the Law and not upon persons.’ Even
when great bodhisattvas such as Universal Worthy and Manjushri,
men who have returned to the stage of near-perfect enlightenment,
expound the Buddhist teachings, if they do not do so with
the sutra text in hand, then one should not heed them.”
(WND p. 109 and 263)
3. The Practice of Shakubuku.
We vow that the refutation of incorrect, harmful, or misleading teachings
will be an essential practice on our path to enlightenment as long as such
teachings are widely practiced.. With the Buddha
compassion to relieve the sufferings of all others, we will
strictly point out the cause of others’ suffering as their adherence to incorrect,
harmful, and misleading doctrines or
philosophies. We will validate the predictions of the writings
of Nichiren and the Lotus Sutra in our own lifetime with our
actions to lead others to enlightenment through the teachings
of Nichiren and the Lotus Sutra as Bodhisattvas of the Earth.
“Shoju is to be practiced when throughout the
entire country only the Lotus Sutra has spread, and when there
is not even a single misguided teacher expounding erroneous
doctrines…. But the time for shakubuku is very different from
this. It is a time when many different sutras and teachings
spring up here and there like so many orchids and chrysanthemums,
when the various schools command a large following and enjoy
renown, when truth and error stand shoulder to shoulder, and
when Mahayana and Hinayana dispute which is superior. At such
a time, one must set aside all other affairs and devote one’s
attention to rebuking slander of the correct teaching. This
is the practice of shakubuku.”
(WND p. 126)
“When the correct teaching alone is propagated
and there are no erroneous doctrines or misguided teachers,
then one may enter the deep valleys and live in quiet contentment,
devoting one’s time to reciting and copying the sutra and
to the practice of meditation. But when there are provisional
schools or slanderers of the correct teaching in the country,
then it is time to set aside other matters and devote oneself
to rebuking slander.”
(WND p. 127)
“Although few people slander the Lotus Sutra
with actual words of abuse, there are none who accept it.
Some appear to accept the sutra, but their faith in it is
not as deep as their faith in the Nembutsu or other teachings.
And even those with profound faith do not reproach the enemies
of the Lotus Sutra. However great good causes one may make,
or even if one reads and copies the entirety of the Lotus
Sutra a thousand or ten thousand times, or attains the way
of perceiving three thousand realms in a single moment of
life, if one fails to denounce the enemies of the Lotus Sutra,
it will be impossible to attain the way.”
(WND p. 78)
“I will be the pillar of Japan. I will be the
eyes of Japan. I will be the great ship of Japan. This is
my vow and I will never forsake it.”
(WND p.281)
“I, Nichiren, am sovereign, teacher, father
and mother to all the people of Japan. But the men of the
Tendai school [who do not refute misleading teachings] are
all great enemies of the people. [As Chang-an has noted,]
“One who rids the offender of evil is acting as his parent.”
(WND p.287)
4. Protecting and Maintaining the Correct Teachings.
We vow to strictly
follow the teachings of Nichiren and the Lotus Sutra and always teach about Buddhism using
the writings of Nichiren and the Lotus Sutra. These teachings comprise the documentary
proof of the correct practice of Buddhism. We acknowledge
and affirm that the teachings of Nichiren and the Lotus Sutra are the only teachings
that lead people to attain enlightenment. All others mislead
and end up slandering the Buddha nature inherent in all. If
other writings, teachings, or personal opinions confuse or
corrupt these teachings, they are to be immediately refuted
and discarded. We are aware that without studying Buddhist
doctrine directly, we cannot maintain a correct understanding,
or distinguish between what is correct and what is incorrect
in the realm of Buddhist faith. In order to grow in our practice
of Buddhism, we will apply the study of Buddhism to our own
lives as a basic tenet of Buddhist practice and will never
confuse the study of secular knowledge as being the study
of Buddhist doctrine.
“Exert yourself in the two ways of practice
and study. Without practice and study, there can be no Buddhism.
You must not only persevere yourself; you must also teach
others. Both practice and study arise from faith. Teach others
to the best of your ability, even if it is only a single sentence
or phrase.”
(WND p. 386)
“All bodhisattvas who attain perfect enlightenment
in all cases do so through [the Lotus Sutra].”
(Lotus Sutra ch.10)
"To ignore the supremacy of the Lotus Sutra
and assert that other sutras stand on a par with it is to
commit the worst possible slander of the Law, a major offense
of the utmost gravity.”
(WND p. 61)
5. Organizations.
We vow that any organization that claims itself to be an organization
for the propagation of Buddhism, will either maintain that
sole purpose or we will refute such organization. We vow that
we will not intentionally create an organization that confuses
people as to what they should be doing in order to attain
enlightenment. We vow to never lead people to believe that
secular activities are the practice of Buddhism or that those
activities will result in ultimate happiness. We vow to maintain
the purity of the Buddhist teachings so that people can distinguish
between what will lead them to happiness and what won’t. We
will not create such an organization for any purpose other
than that of teaching Buddhism and encouraging Buddhist faith
and practice or correcting each other as Buddhists using the
teachings of Buddhism. Any other actions of such an organization,
whether promoting political, cultural, educational or peace
activities, are not to be considered acceptable functions
of an organization of votaries of the Lotus Sutra. These activities
dilute and distract from our original intent and vow and
confuse others who have little or no understanding of correct
Buddhist principles.
“Suddenly confronted with the evidence of the
impermanence of life, we may be frightened at the thought
that we have remained so distant from Buddhism and lament
that we have been too engrossed in secular affairs.”
(WND p. 99)
“‘In [the Latter Day of the Law] there will
be evil monks who will steal this sutra and divide it into
many parts, losing the color, scent and flavor of the correct
teaching that it contains. These evil men will read and recite
this sutra, but they will ignore and put aside the profound
and vital principles that the Thus Come One has expounded
in it and replace them with ornate rhetoric and meaningless
talk.’”
(WND p. 271)
“People think that good deeds are all equal
in their goodness; thus they adhere to lesser good and do
not realize that, in doing so, they bring about major evil.”
(WND p. 78)
“Now is the time when, because the impurity
of thought prevails, more people fall into the evil paths
with the intention of creating good causes than they do by
committing evil.”
(WND p. 78)
6. Our True Identity.
Our ever-developing concern to eliminate the
sufferings of others will become the accurate measure of our
personal growth as Bodhisattvas of the Earth, rather than
our social acceptance or position.
“The Lotus Sutra states, ‘A person who can accept
and uphold this sutra is likewise foremost among all living
beings.’ There is no question about these golden words of
the great sage. And yet people fail to understand this principle
or to examine the matter, but instead seek worldly reputation
or give way to suspicion and prejudice, thus forming the basis
for falling into hell.”
(WND p.60)
“Now, if you wish to attain Buddhahood, you
have only to lower the banner of your arrogance, cast aside
the staff of your anger, and devote yourself exclusively to
the one vehicle of the Lotus Sutra. Worldly fame and profit
are mere baubles of your present existence, and arrogance
and prejudice are ties that will fetter you in the next one.
Ah, you should be ashamed of them! And you should fear them
too!”
(WND p.59)
“Though at present you may taste only a tiny
fraction of the everlasting joys that await you in the future,
surely you should not spend your time thoughtlessly coveting
worldly fame and profit, which are as fleeting as a bolt of
lightening or the morning dew.”
(WND p. 64)
“How long does a lifetime last? If one stops
to consider, it is like a single night’s lodging at a wayside
inn. Should one forget that fact and seek some measure of
worldly fame and profit? Though you may gain them, they will
be mere prosperity in a dream, a delight scarcely to be prized.
You would do better simply to leave such matters to the karma
formed in your previous existences.”
(WND p. 63)
“But in matters of Buddhist doctrines one cannot
jump to conclusions simply on the basis of the eminence of
the person involved.”
(WND p. 109)
7. The Urgency of Our Mission.
We vow to propagate Buddhism with the passion
and urgency that is commensurate with our concern for the
sufferings of others.
“If, knowing the best path, one sees one’s parents
or sovereign taking an evil path, can one fail to admonish
them? If a fool, crazed with wine, is about to drink poison,
can one, knowing this, not try to stop him? In the same way,
if one understands the truth of the Buddhist teachings and
knows the sufferings of [the worlds of hell, hunger and animality],
can one fail to lament at seeing someone to whom one owes
a debt of gratitude about to fall into the evil paths? Rather
one should cast away one’s body and lay down one’s life in
an effort to save such a person. One will never grow weary
of admonishing him, nor will their be limits to one’s grief.”
(WND p. 122-123)
“I hope we may set about as quickly as possible
taking measures to deal with these slanders against the Law
and bring peace to the world without delay…”
(WND p. 26)
8. Our Determination and Vow.
We vow to never forsake our continual practice and development along the most
efficacious Buddhist philosophy no matter what persecutions assail us.
We vow to give our lives for
the sake of the Law.
“This I will state. Let the gods forsake me.
Let all persecutions assail me. Still I will give my life
for the sake of the Law….Here I will make a great vow. Though
I might be offered the rulership of Japan if I would only
abandon the Lotus Sutra, accept the teachings of the Meditation
Sutra, and look forward to rebirth in the Pure Land, though
I might be told that my father and mother will have their
heads cut off if I do not recite the Nembutsu - whatever obstacles
I might encounter, so long as persons of wisdom do not prove
my teachings to be false, I will never yield! All other troubles
are no more to me than dust before the wind.”
(WND p. 280)
From this day forward,
we hereby vow that we will place no other teachings above
the teachings of Buddhism. We vow to never promote any person
or organization ahead of the Lotus Sutra or the teachings
of Nichiren. We vow to teach others about the Law to the best
of our ability and show them how to end their sufferings through
the teachings of the Lotus Sutra. We vow to adhere to the
above declarations as votaries of the Lotus Sutra and Bodhisattvas
of the Earth and remain true to the teachings of Buddhism
throughout our lives or until these teachings are proven false.
References:
LS refers to:
Siddhartha Gautama.
The Lotus Sutra
. Trans. Burton Watson. New York: Columbia University Press, 1993.
WND refers to:
Nichiren.
The Writings of Nichiren Daishonin
. Trans. The Gosho Translation Committee. Tokyo: Soka Gakkai, 1999.