2009年7月27日月曜日

On Establishing the Correct Teaching 立正安国論 (興師撰定五大部)

Once there was a traveler who  spoke these words in sorrow to  his host:  In recent years, there have been  unusual disturbances in the heavens,  strange occurrences on earth, famine  and pestilence, all affecting every corner of the empire and spreading  throughout the land. Oxen and horses  lie dead in the streets, and the bones  of the stricken crowd the highways.  

Over half the population has already  been carried off by death, and there  is hardlya single person who does not  grieve.  All the while some put their whole  faith in the “sharp sword”1 of the Buddha Amida and intone the name of  this lord of the Western Land; others  believe that hearing the name of the  Buddha Medicine Master will “heal all  ills”2 and recite the sutra that describes  this Thus Come One of the Eastern  Region. Some, putting their trust in  the passage in the Lotus Sutra that says,  “His illness will be wiped out and he  will know neither old age nor death,”3  pay homage to the wonderful words of  that sutra; others, relying upon the  sutra passage that reads, “The seven  disasters will instantly vanish, and the  seven blessings will instantly appear,”4  conduct ceremonies at which a hudred priests expound the sutra at a  hundred preaching platforms.5 There  are those who follow the esoteric  teachings of the True Word school  and conduct rituals in which they fill  five jars with water,6 and others who  devote themselves entirely to seated  meditation and try to perceive the  emptiness of all phenomena as clearly  as the moon.7 Some write out the  names of the seven guardian spirits8and  paste them on a thousand gates, others  paint pictures of the five mighty bodhisattvas9 and hang them over ten  thousand thresholds, and still others  pray to the heavenly gods and earthly  deities in ceremonies conducted at the  four corners of the capital and on the  four boundaries of the nation. Taking  pity on the plight of the common people, the rulers carry out government  on the national and local levels in a  benevolent manner.  But despite all these efforts, they  merely exhaust themselves in vain. Famine and epidemics rage more fiercely  than ever, beggars are everywhere in  sight, and scenes of death fill our eyes.  Corpses pile up in mounds like observation platforms, and dead bodies lie  side by side like planks on a bridge.  

If we look about, we find that the  sun and moon continue to move in  their accustomed orbits, and the five  planets10 follow the proper course. The  three treasures of Buddhism continue  to exist, and the period of a hundredreigns has not yet expired.11 Then  why is it that the world has already  fallen into decline and that the laws of  the state have come to an end? What  is wrong? What error has been com-  mitted?  The host then spoke: I have been  brooding alone upon this matter, indignant in my heart, but now that you  have come, we can lament together.  Let us discuss the question at length. 

 When a man leaves family life and  enters the Buddhist way, it is be-  cause he hopes to attain Buddhahood  through the teachings of the Buddha.  But attempts now to move the gods  fail to have any effect, and appeals to  the power of the Buddhas produce no  results. When I observe carefully the  state of the world today, I see people  who give way to doubt because of the  lack of understanding [on the part of  eminent priests]. They look up at the  heavens and mouth their resentment,  or gaze down at the earth and sink  deep into despair.  I have pondered the matter carefully  with what limited resources I possess,  and have looked a little at the scriptures  for an answer. The people of today all  turn their backs upon what is right; to  a person, they give their allegiance to  evil. This is the reason that the be-  nevolent deities have abandoned the  nation and departed together, that sages  leave and do not return. And in their  stead devils and demons come, and  disasters and calamities occur. I cannot  keep silent on this matter. I cannot sup-  press my fears.  The guest said: These disasters that  befall the empire, these calamities of  the nation—I am not the only one  pained by them; the whole populace  is weighed down with sorrow. Now  I have been privileged to enter the  orchid room12 and listen to these en-  lightening words of yours. You speak  of the gods and sages taking leave, and  of disasters and calamities arising in  sequence—upon what sutras do you  base your views? Could you describe  for me the passages of proof? 

 The host said: There are numerous  passages that could be cited and a wide  variety of proofs. For example, in the  Golden Light Sutra we read: “[The  four heavenly kings said to the Bud-  dha], ‘Though this sutra exists in the  nation, its ruler has never allowed it to  be propagated. In his heart he turns  away from it, and he takes no pleasure  in hearing its teachings. He neither  makes offerings to it, honors it, nor  praises it. Nor is he willing to honor  or make offerings to the four kinds of  Buddhists who embrace the sutra. In  the end, he makes it impossible for us  and the other countless heavenly be-  ings who are our followers to hear  this profound and wonderful teaching.  He deprives us of the sweet dew of  its words and cuts us off from the flow  of the correct teaching, so that our  majesty and strength are drained away.  Thus the number of beings who occupy the evil paths increases, and the  number who dwell in the human and  heavenly realms decreases. People fall  into the river of the sufferings of birth  and death and turn their backs on the  road to nirvana.  “‘World-Honored One, we, the  four heavenly kings, as well as our various followers and the yakshas and other beings, observing this state of affairs,  have decided to abandon this nation,  for we have no heart to protect it. And  it is not we alone who cast aside this  ruler. All the great benevolent deities  who guard and watch over the count-  less different regions of the country  will also invariably reject him. And  once we and the others abandon and  desert this nation, then many different  types of disasters will occur in the  country, and the ruler will fall from  power. Not a single person in the  entire population will possess a heart  of goodness; there will be nothing but binding and enslaving, killing and  injuring, anger and contention. People  will slander each other or fawn upon  one another, and the laws will be  twisted until even the innocent are  made to suffer. Pestilence will become  rampant, comets will appear again and  again, two suns will come forth side by  side, and eclipses will occur with unaccustomed frequency. 

Black arcs and  white arcs will span the sky as harbingers of ill fortune, stars will fall, the  earth will shake, and noises will issue  from the wells. Torrential rains and  violent winds will come out of sea-  son, famine will constantly occur, and  grains and fruits will not ripen. Marauders from many other regions will  invade and plunder the nation, the  people will suffer all manner of pain  and affliction, and no place will exist  where one may live in safety.’”  The Great Collection Sutra says:  “When the teachings of the Buddha  truly become obscured and lost, then  people will all let their beards, hair, and  fingernails grow long, and the laws  of the world will be forgotten and  ignored. At that time, loud noises will  sound in the air, and the earth will  shake; everything in the world will  begin to move as though it were a  waterwheel. City walls will split and  tumble, and all houses and dwellings  will collapse. Roots, branches, leaves,  petals, and fruits will lose their medicinal properties. With the exception of  the heavens of purity,13 all the regions  of the world of desire will become  deprived of the seven flavors14 and the  three kinds of vitality,15 until not a  trace of them remains any more. All  the good discourses that lead people to  emancipation will at this time disappear. 

The flowers and fruits that grow  in the earth will become few and will  lose their flavor and sweetness. The  wells, springs, and ponds will all go  dry, the land everywhere will turn  brackish and will crack open and warp  into hillocks and gullies. All the mountains will be swept by fire, and the  heavenly beings and dragons will no  longer send down rain. The seedlings  of the crops will all wither and die, all  the living plants will perish, and even  the weeds will cease to grow any more.  Dust will rain down until all is darkness  and the sun and moon no longer shed  their light.  “All the four directions will be  afflicted by drought, and evil omens  will appear again and again. The ten  evil acts will increase greatly, particularlygreed, anger, and foolishness, and  people will think no more of their  fathers and mothers than does the  roe deer.16 Living beings will decline  in numbers, in longevity, physical  strength, dignity, and enjoyment. They  will become estranged from the delightsof the human and heavenly realms,  and all will fall into the paths of evil.  

The wicked rulers and monks who  perform these ten evil acts will curse  and destroy my correct teaching and  make it difficult for those in the human  and heavenly realms to stay there. At  that time the benevolent deities and  heavenly kings, who would ordinarily  take pity on living beings, will abandon  this impure and evil nation, and all  will make their way to other regions.”  The Benevolent Kings Sutra states:  “When a nation becomes disordered, it  is the spirits that first show signs of  rampancy. Because the spirits become  rampant, all the people of the nation  become disordered. Invaders come to  plunder the country, and the common  people face annihilation. The ruler, the  high ministers, the crown prince, the  other princes, and the hundred officials  all quarrel with one another over right  and wrong. Heaven and earth manifest  prodigies and strange occurrences; the  twenty-eight constellations, the stars,  and the sun and moon appear at irregular times and in irregular positions;  and numerous outlaws rise up.” The same sutra also states: “Now  when I use the five types of vision to  clearly perceive the three existences, I  see that in their past existences all the  rulers served five hundred Buddhas,  and that is the reason that they were  able to become emperors and sovereigns. And that also is the reason that  all the various sages and arhats are born  in their nations and bring great benefits. 

But if a time should come when  the good fortune of these rulers runs  out, then all the sages will abandon  them and depart. Once the sages have  departed, then the seven disasters are  certain to arise.”  The Medicine Master Sutra states:  “If disasters and calamities should befall  members of the ruling Kshatriya class  and anointed kings,17 such disasters will  be as follows: the calamity of disease  and pestilence among the populace; the  calamity of invasion from foreign lands;  the calamity of revolt within one’s own  domain; the calamity of irregularities  and strange occurrences among the  stars and constellations; the calamity of  eclipses of the sun and moon; the ca-  lamity of unseasonable wind and rain;  and the calamity of rain that fails to fall  even when the season for it has come  and gone.”  In the Benevolent Kings Sutra [the  Buddha addresses King Prasenajit with  these words]: “Great King, the region  where my teachings now hold sway  consists of one billion Sumeru worlds  with one billion suns and moons. Each  of these Sumeru worlds comprises four  continents. In the southern continent  of Jambudvipa, there are sixteen great  states, five hundred middle-sized states,  and ten thousand small states. In these  states, seven types of fearful disasters  may occur. All the rulers of these states  agree that these are indeed disasters.  What, then, are these disasters?  “When the sun and moon depart  from their regular courses, when the  seasons come in the wrong order,  when a red sun or a black sun appears,  when two, three, four, or five suns  appear at the same time, when the sun  is eclipsed and loses its light, or when  one, two, three, four, or five coronas  appear around the sun, this is the first  disaster.  “When the twenty-eight constellations do not move in their regular  courses, when the Metal Star,18 the  Broom Star, the Wheel Star, the  Demon Star, the Fire Star, the Water  Star, the Wind Star, the Ladle Star,  the Southern Dipper, the Northern  Dipper, the great stars of the Five  Garrisons, and all the many stars that  govern the ruler, the three high ministers, and the hundred officials—when  each of these stars manifests some  peculiar behavior, this is the second  disaster. 

 “When huge fires consume the nation, and the people are all burned to  death, or when there are outbreaks of  demon fire, dragon fire, heavenly fire,  mountain god fire, human fire, tree fire,  or bandit fire19—when these prodigies  appear, this is the third disaster.  “When huge floods drown the population; when the seasons come out of  order and there is rain in winter, snow  in summer, thunder and lightning in  winter, and ice, frost, and hail in the  sixth month;20 when red, black, or  green rain falls; when mountains of  dirt and stones come raining down, or  when it rains dust, sand, or gravel;  whenthe rivers and streams run back-  ward; when mountains are afloat and  boulders are washed away—when  freakish happenings of this kind occur,  this is the fourth disaster.  “When huge winds blow the people to their death, and the lands, the  mountains and rivers, and the trees  andforests are all at one time wiped  out; when great winds come out of  season, or when black winds, red  winds, green winds, heavenly winds,  earthly winds, fire winds, and water winds blow—when prodigies of this  kind occur, this is the fifth disaster.  “When heaven and earth and the  whole country are stricken by terrible  heat so that the air seems to be on fire,  when the hundred plants wither and  the five kinds of grain22 fail to ripen,  when the earth is red and scorched and  the inhabitants all perish—when prodigies of this kind occur, this is the sixth  disaster.  

“When enemies rise up on all four  sides and invade the nation, when  rebels appear in the capital and the  outlying regions, when there are fire  bandits, water bandits, wind bandits,  and demon bandits,23 and the population is subjected to devastation and dis-  order, and fighting and plundering  break out everywhere—when prodigies of this type occur, this is the seventh disaster.

”  The Great Collection Sutra says:  “Though for countless existences in  the past the ruler of a state may have  practiced the giving of alms, observed  the precepts, and cultivated wisdom, if  he sees that my teaching is in danger of  perishing and stands idly by without  doing anything to protect it, then all  the inestimable roots of goodness that  he has planted through the practices  just mentioned will be entirely wiped  out, and his country will become the  scene of three inauspicious occurrences.

The first is high grain prices,  the second is warfare, and the third is  epidemics. All the benevolent deities  will abandon the country, and although  the ruler may issue commands, the  people will not obey them. The country will constantly be invaded and  vexed by neighboring nations. Violent  fires will rage out of control, fierce  winds and rains will abound, the waters  will swell and overflow, and the inhabitants will be blown about by winds or  swept away by floods. The paternal and  maternal relatives of the ruler will join  in plotting revolt. Before long, the  ruler will fall gravely ill, and after his  life has come to an end, he will be  reborn in the great hell....And the  same fate will befall the ruler’s consort,  his heir, the high ministers of the state,  the lords of cities, the village heads and  generals, the magistrates of districts,  and the other officials.”  

The passages I have quoted from  these four sutras are perfectly clear—  what person in ten thousand could  possibly doubt their meaning? And yet  the blind and the deluded recklessly  trust to distorted doctrines and fail to recognize the correct teaching. 

Therefore, throughout the empire these days  people are inclined to turn away from  the Buddhas and the sutras, and no  longer endeavor to protect them. Be-  cause of this, the benevolent deities and  sages abandon the nation and leave their  accustomed places. As a result, demons  and evil spirits24 bring about disasters  and caus calamities.  

The guest thereupon flushed with  anger and said: Emperor Ming of the  Later Han dynasty, having comprehended the significance of his dream  of agolden man, welcomed the teachings [of Buddhism] brought by white  horses.25 Prince Jogu, having put down  the rebellion of Moriya [an opponent  of Buddhism],26proceeded to construct  temples and pagodas. Since that time,  from the ruler on down to the common people, all have worshiped the  Buddha images and devoted their attention to the scriptures. As a result,  inthe monasteries of Mount Hiei and  the southern capital at Nara, at the temples of Onjo-ji and To-ji, throughout  the land bounded by the four seas, in  the five provinces of the capital area  and along the seven marches, Bud-  dha images and Buddhist scriptures  havebeen ranged like stars in the sky,  and halls of worship have spread like  clouds. Those who belong to the lineage of Shariputra meditate on the  moon atop Eagle Peak, while those whoadhere to the traditions of Haklenayashas transmit the teachings of  Mount Kukkutapada.

27 How, then, can  anyone say that the teachings of the  Buddha’s lifetime are despised, or that  the three treasures of Buddhism have  ceased to exist? If there is evidence to  support such a contention, I would like  to hear all the facts.  The host, anxious to clarify his  words, replied: To be sure, Buddhist  halls stand rooftop to rooftop, and sutra  storehouses are ranged eave to eave.  Priests are as numerous as bamboo  plants and rushes, monks as common as  rice and hemp seedlings. The temples  and priests have been honored from  centuries past, and every day respect is  paid them anew. But the monks and  priests today are fawning and devious,  and they confuse the people and lead  them astray. The ruler and his subjects  lack understanding and fail to distinguish between what is correct and  what is erroneous.  The Benevolent Kings Sutra, for  example, says: “Evil monks, hoping to  gain fame and profit, in many cases  appear before the ruler, the crown  prince, or the other princes, and take it  upon themselves to preach doctrines  that lead to the violation of the Bud-  dhist Law and the destruction of the  nation. The ruler, failing to perceive  the truth of the situation, listens to and  puts faith in such doctrines, and proceeds to create regulations that are per-  verse in nature and that do not accord  with the rules of Buddhist discipline.  In this way he brings about the  destruction of Buddhism and of the  nation.”  The Nirvana Sutra states: “Bodhisattvas, have no fear of mad elephants.  What you should fear are evil friends!  ...Even if you are killed by a mad elephant, you will not fall into the three  evil paths. But if you are killed by an  evil friend, you are certain to fall into  them.”  The Lotus Sutra says: “In that evil  age there will be monks with perverse  wisdom and hearts that are fawning  and crooked who will suppose they  have attained what they have not  attained, being proud and boastful in  heart. 

Or there will be forest-dwelling  monks wearing clothing of patched  rags and living in retirement, who will  claim they are practicing the true way,  despising and looking down on all  humankind. Greedy for profit and  support, they will preach the Law to  white-robed laymen and will be respected and revered by the world as  though they were arhats who possess  the six transcendental powers....

Because in the midst of the great assembly  they constantly try to defame us, they  will address the rulers, high ministers,  Brahmans, and householders, as well as  the other monks, slandering and speak-  ing evil of us, saying, ‘These are men  of perverted views who preach non-  Buddhist doctrines!’...In a muddied  kalpa, in an evil age there will be many  things to fear. Evil demons will take  possession of others and through them  curse, revile, and heap shame on us....  The evil monks of that muddied age,  failing to understand the Buddha’s  expedient means, how he preaches the  Law in accordance with what is appro-  priate, will confront us with foul lan-  guage and angry frowns; again and  again we will be banished.”28  The Nirvana Sutra says: “After I  have passed away and countless hun-  dreds of years have gone by, the sages  of the four stages29 too will have all  passed away. After the Former Day of  the Law has ended and the Middle Day  of the Law has begun, there will be  monks who will give the appearance of  abiding by the rules of monastic disci-  pline. But they will scarcely ever read  or recite the sutras, and instead will  crave all kinds of food and drink to  nourish their bodies. Though they  wear the clothes of a monk, they will go about searching for alms like so  manyhuntsmen who, narrowing their  eyes, stalk softly. 

They will be like a cat  on the prowl for mice. And they will  constantly reiterate these words, ‘I have  attained arhatship!’ Outwardly they  will seem to be wise and good, but  within they will harbor greed and jeal-  ousy. [And when they are asked to  preach the teachings, they will say noth-  ing,] like Brahmans who have taken  a vow of silence. They are not true  monks—they merely have the appear-  ance of monks. Consumed by their  erroneous views, they slander the cor-  rect teaching.”  When we look at the world in the  light of these passages of scripture, we  see that the situation is just as they  describe it. If we do not admonish the  evil priests, how can we hope to do  good?  The guest, growing more indignant  than ever, said: A wise monarch, by  acting in accord with heaven and earth,  perfects his rule; a sage, by distinguish-  ing between right and wrong, brings  order to the world. The monks and  priests of the world today enjoy the  confidence of the entire empire. If they  were in fact evil monks, then the wise  ruler would put no trust in them. 

If  theywere not true sages, then worthies  and learned persons would not look up  to them. But now, since worthies and  sages do in fact honor and respect  them, they must be nothing less than  paragons of their kind. Why then do  you pour out these wild accusations  anddare to slander them? To whom are  you referring when you speak of “evil  monks”? I would like an explanation.  The host said: In the time of the  Retired Emperor Gotoba there was  a priest named Honen who wrote  a work entitled The Nembutsu Chosen  above All. He contradicted the sacred  teachings of the Buddha’s entire life-  time and brought confusion to people  in every direction. Nembutsu Chosen  above All states: “Regarding the passage  in which the Meditation Master Tao-  ch’o distinguished between the Sacred  Way teachings and the Pure Land  teachings and urged people to abandon  the former and immediately embrace  the latter, first of all, there are two  kinds of Sacred Way teachings, [the  Mahayana and the Hinayana]....Judging from this, we may assume that the  esoteric Mahayana teachings and the  true Mahayana teachings are both  included in the Sacred Way. If that  is so, then the eight present-day  schools—the True Word, Zen, Tendai,  Flower Garland, Three Treatises, Dhar-  ma Characteristics, Treatise on the Ten  Stages Sutra, and Summary of the Ma-hayana—all are included in the Sacred  Way that is to be abandoned. 

 “The Dharma Teacher T’an-luan in  his Commentary on ‘The Treatise on  Rebirth in the Pure Land’ states, ‘I note  that Bodhisattva Nagarjuna’s Commen-  tary on the Ten Stages Sutrasays, “There  are two ways by which a bodhisattva  may reach the state of avaivartika, or  non-retrogression. One is the difficult-  to-practice way, the other is the easy-  to-practice way.”’

 “The difficult-to-practice way is the  same as the Sacred Way teachings, and  the easy-to-practice way is the Pure  Land teachings. Students of the Pure  Land school should first of all un-  derstand this point. Though they may  be people who have previously studied  the Sacred Way teachings, if they wish  to become followers of the Pure Land  teachings, they must discard the Sacred  Way and give their allegiance to the  Pure Land teachings.”  Honen also says: “Regarding the  passage in which the Reverend Shan-  tao distinguished between correct and  sundry practices and urged people to  abandon the sundry and embrace the  correct: Concerning the first of the  sundry practices, that of reading and  reciting sutras, with the exception of the recitation of the Meditation on the  Buddha Infinite Life Sutra and the  other sutras that preach rebirth in the  Pure Land, the embracing, reading, and  recitation of all other sutras, whether  Mahayana or Hinayana, exoteric or  esoteric, is to be regarded as a sundry practice....Concerning the third of  the sundry practices, that of worship-  ing, with the exception of worshiping  the Buddha Amida, the worshiping or  honoring of any other Buddha or bodhisattva, or deity of this world is to be  regarded as a sundry practice....

In the  light of his statement, I declare that  one should abandon such sundry practices and concentrate upon the practice  of the Pure Land teachings. What rea-  son would we have to abandon the  correct practices of the Pure Land  teachings, which insure that out of a  hundred persons all one hundred will  be reborn in the Pure Land, and cling  instead to the various sundry practices  and procedures, which could not save  even one person in a thousand? Fol-  lowers of the way should ponder this  carefully.”  

Honen further states: “In The Chen-  yüan Era Catalog of the Buddhist Canon  we find it recorded that, from the   volumes of the Great Wisdom Sutra to  the Eternity of the Law Sutra, the exo-  teric and esoteric sutras of Mahayana,  or the great vehicle, total works in  , volumes. The phrase [from the  Meditation Sutra] ‘reading and reciting  the great vehicle’ should be applied to  all these works. You should understand  that, when the Buddha was preaching  according to the capacity of his various  listeners, he for a time taught the two  methods of concentrated meditation  and unconcentrated meditation.30 But  later, when he revealed his own enlightenment, he ceased to teach these  two methods. The only teaching that,  once revealed, shall never cease to be  taught is the single doctrine of the  Nembutsu.”  Honen also states: “Regarding the  passage that says that the practitioner of  the Nembutsu must possess three kinds  of mind,31 it is found in the Meditation  Sutra. In his commentary on that sutra  [Shan-tao says]: ‘Someone may ask, “If  there are those who differ in under-  standing and practice from the follow-  ers of the Nembutsu, persons of dis-  torted and mistaken belief, [how should  we confront them]?” I will now make  certain that their perverse and differing  views will not cause trouble. These  persons of evil views with different un-  derstanding and different practices are  compared to a band of robbers who call  back the traveler who has already gone  one or two steps along his journey.’ In  my opinion, when this commentary  speaks of different understanding, different practices, varying doctrines, and  varying beliefs, they are referring to the  teachings of the Sacred Way.”  

Finally, in a concluding passage,  Honen says: “If one wishes to escape  quickly from the sufferings of birth and  death, one should confront these two  superior teachings and then proceed to  put aside the teachings of the Sacred  Way and choose those of the Pure  Land. And if one wishes to follow the  teachings of the Pure Land, one should  confront the correct and sundry prac-  tices and then proceed to abandon all  of the sundry and devote one’s entire  attention to the correct.”  When we examine these passages,  we see that Honen quotes the erro-  neous explanations of T’an-luan, Tao-  ch’o, and Shan-tao, and establishes the  categories of the Sacred Way and the  Pure Land teachings, and of the diffi-  cult-to-practice and the easy-to-prac-  tice ways. He then takes all the   works in , volumes that comprise  the Mahayana teachings of the Bud-  dha’s lifetime, including those of the  Lotus Sutra and the True Word sutras,  along with all the Buddhas and bo-  dhisattvas and the deities of this world, 
and assigns them all to the categories  of the Sacred Way teachings, the diffi-  cult-to-practice way, and the sundry  practices, and urges people to “discard,  close, ignore, and abandon” them. 

 With these four injunctions, he leads  all people astray. On top of that, he  groups together all the sage monks of  the three countries [of India, China,  and Japan] as well as the students of  Buddhism of the ten directions, and  calls them a “band of robbers,” causing  the people to insult them.  In doing so, he turns his back on the  passage in the three Pure Land sutras,  the sutras of his own school, which  contains Amida’s vow to save the peo-  ple “excepting only those who commit  the five cardinal sins and those who  slander the correct teaching.”32 More  fundamentally, he shows that he fails to  understand the warning contained in  the second volume of the Lotus Sutra,  the heart and core of the entire body  of teachings the Buddha expounded in  the five periods of his preaching life,  which reads, “If a person fails to have  faith but instead slanders this sutra...  When his life comes to an end he will  enter the Avichi hell.”33  Now we have come to this latter  age, when people are no longer sages.  Each enters his own dark road, and all  alike forget the direct way. How pitiful  that no one cures them of their blind-  ness! How painful to see them taking  up these false beliefs in vain! As a  result, everyone from the ruler of the  nation on down to the common peo-  ple believes that there are no true sutras  outside the three Pure Land sutras, and  no Buddhas other than the Buddha  Amida with his two attendants.34  Once there were men like Dengyo,  Gishin, Jikaku, and Chisho who jour-  neyed ten thousand miles across the  waves to China to acquire the sacred  teachings, and there visited the mountains and rivers to pay reverence to  Buddhist statues [and carry them back].  In some cases they built holy temples  on the peaks of high mountains in  which to preserve those scriptures and  statues; in other cases they constructed  sacred halls in the bottoms of deep val-  leys where such objects could be wor-  shiped and honored. As a result, the  Buddhas Shakyamuni and Medicine  Master35 shone side by side, casting  their influence upon present and future  ages, while the bodhisattvas Space  Treasury and Earth Repository brought  benefit to the living and the dead. The  rulers of the nation contributed districts or villages so that the lamps  might continue to burn bright before  the images, while the stewards of the  great estates gave their fields and gar-  dens as an offering.  But because of this book by Honen,  this Nembutsu Chosen above All,the lord  of teachings, Shakyamuni, is forgotten,  and all honor is paid to Amida, the  Buddha of the Western Land. The  transmission of the Law [from Shakya-  muni Buddha] is ignored,36 and Medi-  cine Master, the Thus Come One of  the Eastern Region, is neglected.  Attention is paid only to the three Pure  Land sutras in four volumes, and all the  other wonderful scriptures that Shakya-  muni expounded throughout the five  periods of his preaching life are cast  aside. If temples are not dedicated to  Amida, then people no longer have any  desire to support them or pay honor to  the Buddhas enshrined there; if priests  are not practitioners of the Nembutsu,  then people quickly forget all about  giving those priests alms. As a result,  the halls of the Buddha have fallen into  ruin, scarcely a wisp of smoke rising  above their moss-covered roof tiles; and  the priests’ quarters have become emp-  ty and dilapidated, the dew deep on  the grasses in their courtyards. And in  spite of such conditions, no one gives a  thought to protecting the Law or to  restoring the temples. Hence the sage  priests who once presided over the temples leave and do not return, and  the benevolent deities who guarded the  nation depart and no longer appear.  This has all come about because of this  Nembutsu Chosen above All by Honen.  How pitiful to think that, in the space  of a few decades, hundreds, thousands,  tens of thousands of people have been  deluded by these devilish teachings and  in so many cases confused as to the  true teachings of Buddhism. If people  favor what is only incidental and forget  what is primary, can the benevolent  deities be anything but angry? 

If people  cast aside what is perfect and take up  what is biased, can the world escape  the plots of demons? Rather than  offering up ten thousand prayers for  remedy, it would be better simply to  outlaw this one evil.  This time the guest was truly en-  ragedand said: In the ages since our  original teacher, the Buddha Shakyamuni, preached the three Pure Land  sutras, the Dharma Teacher T’an-luan  had originally studied the four treatis-  es,37but abandoned them and put all his  faith in the Pure Land teachings. Simi-  larly, the Meditation Master Tao-ch’o  ceased to spread the varied practices of  the Nirvana Sutra and devoted all his  attention to propagating the practice  that leads one to the Western Pure  Land. The Reverend Shan-tao discard-  ed the sundry practices and established  the single practice of the Nembutsu,  and the Supervisor of Priests Eshin  collected essential passages from various  sutras to form his work, making the  single practice of the Nembutsu the  essence of his teaching. 

Such was the  manner in which these men honored  and respected the Buddha Amida, and  uncountable numbers of people as a  result were able to gain rebirth in the  Pure Land.  Of particular note was the Sage  Honen, who as a child entered the  monastery on Mount Hiei. By the  time he was seventeen, he had worked  his way through all sixty volumes of  Tendai literature,38 and had investigated  all the eight schools and mastered their  essentials. In addition, he had read  through the entire body of sutras and  treatises seven times, and exhausted all  the works of exegesis and biography.  His wisdom shone like the sun and  moon, and his virtue exceeded that of  the earlier teachers.  In spite of all this, he was in doubt as  to the proper path to emancipation and  could not make out the true meaning  of nirvana. 

Therefore, he read and examined all the texts he could, pondered  deeply and considered every possi-  bility, and in the end put aside all the  sutras and concentrated on the single  practice of the Nembutsu. In addition,  he received confirmation of his decision  when Shan-tao miraculously appeared  to him in a dream,39 and he proceeded  to spread his doctrines among friends  and strangers in all four corners of the  land. Thereafter, he was hailed as a re-  incarnationofBodhisattvaGreatPower,  or was revered as Shan-tao reborn. In  every quarter, people of eminent and  lowly birth alike bowed their heads in  respect, and men and women from all  over Japan sought him.  Since that time, the springs and  autumns have succeeded each other,  and the years have piled upon years.  And yet you insist upon putting aside  the venerable teachings of Shakyamuni  Buddha [contained in the Pure Land  sutras] and willfully speak evil of the  passage describing the oath of the Bud-  dha Amida. Why do you try to blame  the sacred age of Honen for the disas-  ters of recent years, going out of your  way to slander the former teachers of  Pure Land doctrines and to heap abuse  on the Sage Honen? You are, as the  saying goes, deliberately blowing back  the fur and hunting for flaws in the  leather, deliberately piercing the skin in  hopes of drawing blood. From ancient  times to the present, the world has  1 never seen such a speaker of evil. You  had better learn a little caution and  restraint. When you pile up such grave  offenses, how can you hope to escape  punishment? I am afraid even to sit  here in your company. I must take up  my staff and be on my way!  The host, smiling, restrained his  guest and said: Insects that live on  smartweed forget how bitter it tastes;  those who stay long in privies forget  how foul the smell is. Here you listen  to my good words and think them  wicked, point to a slanderer of the Law  and call him a sage, mistrust a correct  teacher and take him for an evil priest.  Your confusion is great indeed, and  your offense anything but light. Listen  to my explanation of how this confu-  sion arose, and let us discuss the matter  in detail.  Shakyamuni Buddha expounded the  five periods of doctrines, established  theorder in which they were preached,  and divided them into the provisional  and the true teachings.

 But T’an-luan,  Tao-ch’o, and Shan-tao embraced the  provisional teachings and forgot about  the true ones, went by what had been  taught in the earlier period of the Bud-  dha’s life and discarded what was taught  later. They were not the kind of men  who delve into the deep places of Bud-  dhist doctrine.  Honen in particular, though he fol-  lowed the practices advocated by these  earlier men, was ignorant as to their  source. How do we know this? Be-  cause he lumped together all the   Mahayana scriptures in , volumes  and along with them all the Buddhas  and bodhisattvas and the deities of this  world, and urged people to “discard,  close, ignore, and abandon” them, with  these four injunctions corrupting the  hearts of all people. Thus he poured  out perverted words of his own inven-  tion and took absolutely no cognizance  of the explanations put forth in the  Buddhist scriptures. His is the worst  kind of baseless talk, a clear case of  defamation. There are no words to  describe it, no way to censure it that is  not too mild. And yet people all put  faith in this baseless talk of his, and  without exception pay honor to his  Nembutsu Chosen above All. As a conse-  quence, they revere the three sutras of  the Pure Land and cast all the other  sutras aside; they look up to one Bud-  dha alone, Amida of the Land of Per-  fect Bliss, and forget about the other  Buddhas. A man such as Honen is in  truth the archenemy of the Buddhas  and the scriptures, and the foe of sage  priests and ordinary men and women  alike. And now his distorted teachings  have spread throughout the eight re-  gions of the country, permeating the  ten directions.  You became quite horrified when I  blamed an earlier period40for the disas-  ters that have occurred in recent years.  Perhaps I should cite a few examples  from the past to show you that you are  mistaken in your feelings. 

 The second volume of Great Concen-  tration and Insight quotes a passage from  Records of the Historianthat says, “In the  closing years of the Chou dynasty,  there were persons who let their hair  hang down, went about naked to the  waist, and did not observe the rites and  regulations.” The Annotations on “Great  Concentration and Insight,”in the second  volume, explains this passage by quot-  ing from Tso’s Commentary on “Spring  and Autumn Annals”as follows: “When  King P’ing of the Chou first moved  his capital to the east, he saw men by  the Yi River who let their hair hang  down and performed sacrifices in the  fields. Someone who had great under-  standing said, ‘In less than a hundred  years the dynasty will fall, for the  rites are already neglected.’” From this  it is evident that the portent appears  first, and later the disaster itself comes  about.  [The Great Concentration and Insight passage goes on to say:] “Juan Chi41  was a man of extraordinary talent, but  he let his hair grow like a mass of  brambles and left his belt undone. Lat-  er, the sons of the aristocracy all imitated him, until those who behaved in a  churlish and insulting manner were  thought to be acting quite naturally,  and those who were restrained and  proper in their behavior were ridiculed  as mere peasants. This was a sign that  the Ssu-ma family [the rulers of the  Western Chin dynasty] would meet  with their downfall.”  Similarly, The Record of a Pilgrimage to  China in Search of the Lawby the Great  Teacher Jikaku states that, in the first  year of the Hui-ch’ang era (),  Emperor Wu-tsung of the T’ang dy-  nasty commanded the priest Ching-  shuang of Chang-ching-ssu temple to  transmit the Nembutsu teachings of the  Buddha Amida in the various temples.  

Ching-shuang spent three days in each  temple, going about from one temple  to another without ever ceasing.  In the second year of the same era,  soldiers from the land of the Uighurs42  invaded the borders of the T’ang  empire. In the third year of the same  era, the regional commander in the  area north of the Yellow River sudden-  ly raised a revolt. Later, the kingdom  of Tibet once more refused to obey  orders from China, and the Uighurs  repeatedly seized Chinese territory. On  the whole, the conflicts and uprisings  were like those that prevailed at the  time when the Ch’in dynasty and the  military leader Hsiang Yü were over-  thrown, and the towns and villages  were devastated by fire and other disas-  ters. What was even worse, Emperor  Wu-tsung carried out a vast campaign  to wipe out Buddhist teachings and  destroyed a great many temples and  pagodas. 

He was never able to put  down the uprisings and died in agony  shortly after. (This is the essence of  Jikaku’s original passage.)  In view of these events, we should  consider the fact that Honen belonged  to the time of the Retired Emperor  Gotoba, around the Kennin era (–  ). And what happened to the retired  emperor is evident before our very  eyes.43 Thus T’ang China provided an  earlier example of the fall of an emper-  or, and our own country offers similar  proof. You should neither doubt this nor  consider it strange. The only thing to  do now is to abandon the evil ways and  take up those that are good, to cut off  this affliction at the source, to cut it off  at the root.  The guest, looking somewhat mol-  lified, said: Though I have not yet  probed deeply into the matter, I be-  lieve I understand to some degree what  you are saying. Nevertheless, through-  out the area from Kyoto, the capital, to  Kamakura, the headquarters of the  shogun, there are numerous eminent  Buddhist leaders and key figures in the  clergy. And yet none of them has so far  appealed to the shogun concerning this  affair, or submitted a memorial to the  throne. You, on the other hand, a per-  son of humble position, think nothing  of spewing out offensive accusations.  Your assertion goes too far and your  behavior is unreasonable.  The host said: Though I may be a  person of little ability, I have reverently  given myself to the study of the  Mahayana. A blue fly, if it clings to the  tail of a thoroughbred horse, can travel  ten thousand miles, and the green ivy  that twines around the tall pine can  grow to a thousand feet. I was born as  the son of the one Buddha, Shakyamu-  ni, and I serve the king of scriptures,  the Lotus Sutra. How could I observe  the decline of the Buddhist Law and  not be filled with emotions of pity and  distress?  Moreover, the Nirvana Sutra states:  “If even a good monk sees someone  destroying the teaching and disregards  him,him, or to punish him for his offense,  then you should realize that that monk  is betraying the Buddha’s teaching. But  if he ousts the destroyer of the Law, re-  proaches him, or punishes him, then he  is my disciple and a true voice-hearer.”  Although I may not be a “good  monk,” I certainly do not want to be  accused of “betraying the Buddha’s  teaching.” Therefore, in order to avoid  such charges, I have cited a few gen-  eral principles and given a rough expla-  nation of the matter.  Earlier, in the Gennin era (–  ), petitions to the throne were sub-  mitted time and again by the two tem-  ples of Enryaku-ji and Kofuku-ji. And  as a result, an imperial command and a  letter of instruction from the shogunate  were handed down, ordering that the  woodblocks used in printing Honen’s  Nembutsu Chosen above All be confiscat-  ed and brought to the Great Lecture  Hall of Enryaku-ji. There they were  burned in order to repay the debt owed  to the Buddhas of the three existences.  In addition, orders were given that the  menials at Kanjin-in Shrine should dig  up and destroy Honen’s grave. Then,  Honen’s disciples Ryukan, Shoko, Jokaku, Sassho, and others were con-  demned by the imperial court to exile  in distant regions and were never pardoned.  In view of these facts, how can you  say that no one has submitted a com-  plaint to the authorities concerning  these matters?  

The guest, continuing to speak in a  mild manner, replied: One could hard-  ly say that Honen is the only one who  disparages sutras and speaks ill of other  priests [since you do the same thing  yourself]. However, it is true that he  takes the  Mahayana scriptures in  ,volumes, along with all the Bud-  dhas and bodhisattvas and the deities of  this world, and urges people to “dis-  card, close, ignore, and abandon” them.  There is no doubt that these four in-  junctions are his very words; the mean-  ing of the passage is quite clear. But you  keep harping on this one little “flaw in  the jewel” and severely slandering him  for it. I do not know whether he spoke  out of delusion or out of enlightenment.  Between you and Honen, I cannot tell  which is wise and which is foolish, or  determine whose assertions are right  and whose are wrong.  However, you assert that all the  recent disasters are to be traced to  Nembutsu Chosen above All, speaking  quite volubly on that point and elabo-  rating on the meaning of your asser-  tion. Now surely the peace of the  world and the stability of the nation are  sought by both ruler and subject and  desired by all the inhabitants of the  country.

 The nation achieves prosperity through the Buddhist Law, and  the Law is proven worthy of reverence  by the people who embrace it. If the  nation is destroyed and the people are  wiped out, then who will continue to  pay reverence to the Buddhas?

 Who  will continue to have faith in the Law?  Therefore, one must first of all pray for  the safety of the nation and then work  to establish the Buddhist Law.44 Now if  you know of any means whereby disas-  ters can be prevented and troubles  brought to an end, I would like to hear  about it.  The host said: There is no doubt  that I am the foolish one—I would  never dare claim to be wise. However,  I would just like to quote some pas-  sages from the scriptures and offer  some brief thoughts. Concerning the  means for insuring order in the nation,  there are numerous passages in both  Buddhist and non-Buddhist texts, and  it would be difficult to cite them all  here. Since taking up the study of  Buddhism, however, I have frequently  given thought to this matter, and it  seems to me that restraining those who  slander the Law and respecting the followers of the correct way will assure stability within the nation and peace in  the world at large.  In the Nirvana Sutra, we read: “The  Buddha said, ‘With the exception of  one type of person, you may offer alms  to all kinds of persons, and everyone  will praise you.’

“Chunda said, ‘What do you mean  when you speak of “one type of person”?’  “The Buddha replied, ‘I mean the  type described in this sutra as violators  of the precepts.’  “Chunda spoke again, saying, ‘I am  afraid I still do not understand. May I  ask you to explain further?’  “The Buddha addressed Chunda,  saying, ‘By violators of the precepts, I  mean the icchantika. In the case of all  other types of persons, you may offer  alms, everyone will praise you, and you  will achieve great rewards.’  “Chunda spoke once more, asking,  ‘What is the meaning of the term  icchantika?’  “The Buddha said: ‘Chunda, sup-  pose there should be monks or nuns,  lay men or women who speak care-  less and evil words and slander the  correct teaching, and that they should  go on committing these grave acts  without ever showing any inclination  to reform or any sign of repentance  intheir hearts. Persons of this kind I  would say are following the path of the  icchantika. 

 “‘Again there may be those who  commit the four grave offenses45 or are  guilty of the five cardinal sins, and  who, though aware that they are guilty  of serious faults, from the beginning  have no trace of fear or contrition in  their hearts or, if they do, give no out-  ward sign of it. When it comes to the  correct teaching, they show no inclina-  tion to protect, treasure, and establish it  over the ages, but rather speak of it  with malice and contempt, their words  replete with error. People of this kind  too I would say are following the path  of the icchantika. With the exception  of this one group of people called  icchantika, however, you may offer  alms to all others, and everyone will  praise you.’”  Elsewhere in the same sutra, the  Buddha spoke in these words: “When I  recall the past, I remember that I was  the king of a great state in this continent of Jambudvipa. 

My name was  Sen’yo, and I loved and venerated the  great vehicle scriptures. My heart was  pure and good and had no trace of evil,  jealousy, or stinginess. Good men, at  that time I cherished the great vehicle  teachings in my heart. When I heard  the Brahmans slandering these correct  and equal sutras, I put them to death  on the spot. Good men, as a result  of that action, I never thereafter fell  into hell.”  In another passage it says, “In the  past, when the Thus Come One was  the ruler of a nation and practiced the  way of the bodhisattva, he put to death  a number of Brahmans.”  Again it says: “There are three de-  grees of killings: the lower, middle,  andupper degrees. The lower degree  constitutes the killing of any humble  being, from an ant to any of the vari-  ous kinds of animals. But the killing of  any being that a bodhisattva has chosen  to be born as [to help other living  beings] is excluded. As a result of a  killing of the lower degree, one will fall  into the realms of hell, hungry spirits,  and animals, and will suffer all the pains  appropriate to a killing of the lower  degree. Why should this be? Because  even animals and other humble beings  possess the roots of goodness, insignifi-  cant though those roots may be. That  is why a person who kills such a be-  ingmust suffer full retribution for his  offense.  “Killing any person from an ordi-  nary mortal to an anagamin46 consti-  tutes what is termed the middle de-  gree. As a consequence of such an act of killing, one will fall into the realms  of hell, hungry spirits, and animals, and  will suffer all the pains appropriate to a  killing of the middle degree. The upper  degree of killing refers to the killing  of aparent, an arhat, a pratyekabuddha,  or a bodhisattva who has reached the  stage of non-retrogression. For such a  crime one will fall into the great Avi-  chi hell. Good men, if someone were  to kill an icchantika, that killing would  not fall into any of the three categories just mentioned. 

Good men, the  various Brahmans that I have said were  put to death—all of them were in fact  icchantikas.”  In the Benevolent Kings Sutra, we  read: “The Buddha announced to King  Prasenajit, ‘Thus I entrust the protec-  tion of my teachings to the ruler of the  nation rather than to the monks and  nuns. Why do I do so? Because they  do not possess the kind of power and  authority that the king has.’”  The Nirvana Sutra states: “Now I  entrust the correct teaching, which is  unexcelled, to the rulers, the ministers,  the high officials, and the four kinds of  Buddhists. If anyone should vilify the  correct teaching, then the ministers  andfour kinds of Buddhists should rep-  rimand him and bring him to order.”  It also states: “The Buddha replied:  ‘[Bodhisattva] Kashyapa, it is because  I was a defender of the correct teach-  ing that I have been able to attain this  diamond-like body....Good man, de-  fenders of the correct teaching need  not observe the five precepts or prac-  tice the rules of proper behavior.  Rather they should carry knives and  swords, bows and arrows, halberds and  lances.’”  Again the Buddha said: “Even  though there may be those who ob-  serve the five precepts, they do not  deserve to be called practitioners of the  great vehicle. But even if one does not  observe the five precepts, if one de-  fends the correct teaching, then one  may be called a practitioner of the  great vehicle. Defenders of the correct  teaching ought to arm themselves with  knives and swords, weapons and staves.  Even though they carry swords and  staves, I would call them men who  observe the precepts.”  

The Buddha likewise said: “Good  man, in past ages in this very city of  Kushinagara, a Buddha appeared whose  name was the Thus Come One Joy  Increasing. After this Buddha passed  away, the correct teaching that he had  taught remained in the world for  countless millions of years. Finally, only  forty more years were left before the  Buddhist teaching was due to come to  an end.  “At that time there was a monk  named Realization of Virtue who ob-  served the precepts. There were many  monks at this time who violated the  precepts, and when they heard this  monk preaching, they all conceived  evil designs in their hearts and, arming  themselves with swords and staves,  approached this teacher of the Law.  “At this time the ruler of the king-  dom was named Possessor of Virtue.  He received reports of what was hap-  pening, and, in order to defend the  teaching, he went at once to the place  where the monk was preaching the  Law and fought with all his might  against the evil monks who broke the  precepts. As a result, the monk who  had been preaching was able to es-  cape grievous injury. But the king  received so many wounds from the  knives and swords, halberds and lances,  that there was not a spot on his body  the size of a mustard seed that re-  mained unharmed.  “At this time the monk Realization  of Virtue praised the king, saying:  ‘Splendid, splendid! You, O king, are  now a true defender of the correct  teaching. In ages to come, this body of  yours will surely become a boundless  vessel of the Law!’ “At that time, the king had already  heard the teaching, and he felt great  joy in his heart. Thereupon his life  came to an end, and he was reborn in  the land of the Buddha Akshobhya,  where he became the Buddha’s princi-  pal disciple. Moreover, all the military  leaders, citizens, and associates of the  king who had fought beside him or  had rejoiced in his effort were filled  with an unflagging determination to  achieve enlightenment, and when they  died, all of them were reborn in the  land of the Buddha Akshobhya.

  “Later, the monk Realization of  Virtue also died, and he too was re-  born in the land of the Buddha Aksho-  bhya, where he became second among  the Buddha’s voice-hearer disciples.  Thus, if the correct teaching is about  to come to an end, this is the way one  ought to support and defend it.  “Kashyapa, the king who lived at  that time was I myself, and the monk  who preached was the Buddha Kashya-  pa.47 Kashyapa, those who defend the  correct teaching enjoy this kind of  boundless reward. As a consequence, I  have been able to obtain the distin-  guished characteristics that I possess  today, to adorn myself with them, and  to put on the Dharma body that can  never be destroyed.”  Then the Buddha declared to Bodhi-  sattva Kashyapa: “For this reason, lay-  men believers and others who wish to  defend the Law should arm themselves  with swords and staves and protect it in  this manner.  “Good man, in the age of impurity  and evil after I have passed away, the  nation will fall into devastation and dis-  order, men will plunder and steal from  one another, and the common people  will be reduced to starvation. Because  of hunger, many men at that time will  declare their determination to leave  their families and become monks. Men  such as these may be called shavepates.48  When this crowd of shavepates see any-  one who is attempting to protect the  correct teaching, they will chase after  him and drive him away, or even kill  him or do him injury.

 That is why I  nowgive permission for monks who  observe the precepts to associate with  and keep company with white-robed  laymen who bear swords and staves.  Even though they carry swords and  staves, I would call them men who ob-  serve the precepts. But although they  may carry swords and staves, they should  never use them to take life.”  The Lotus Sutra says: “If a person  fails to have faith but instead slanders  this sutra, immediately he will destroy  all the seeds for becoming a Buddha in  this world....When his life comes to  an end he will enter the Avichi hell.”  The meaning of these passages from  the sutras is perfectly clear. What need  is there for me to add any further  explanation? If we accept the words of  the Lotus Sutra, then we must under-  stand that slandering the Mahayana  scriptures is more serious than com-  mitting the five cardinal sins countless  times. Therefore, one who does so will  be confined in the great citadel of the  Avichi hell and cannot hope for release  for an immeasurable length of time.  According to the Nirvana Sutra, even  though you may give alms to a person  who has committed the five cardinal  sins, you must never give alms to a per-  son who has slandered the Law. One  who kills so much as an ant will invari-  ably fall into the three evil paths, but  one who helps eradicate slander of the  Law will ascend to the state from  which there can be no retrogression.  Thus the passage tells us that the monk  Realization of Virtue was reborn as the  Buddha Kashyapa, and that King Pos-  sessor of Virtue was reborn as the Bud-  dha Shakyamuni.  The Lotus and the Nirvana sutras  represent the very heart of the doc-  trines that Shakyamuni preached dur-  ing the five periods of his teaching life. 

Their warnings must be viewed with  the utmost gravity. Who would fail to  heed them? And yet those people who  forget about the correct way and slan-  der the Law put more trust than ever  in Honen’s Nembutsu Chosen above All  and grow blinder than ever in their  foolishness.  Thus some of them, remembering  how their master looked in life, fashion  wooden sculptures and paintings of  him, while others, putting faith in his  perverse teachings, carve woodblocks  with which to print his ugly words.  These writings they scatter about  throughout the area bounded by the  seas, carrying them beyond the cities  and into the countryside until, wher-  ever honor is paid, it is to the practices  of this school, and wherever alms are  given, it is to the priests of this school.  As a result, we see people cutting off  the fingers of the images of Shakya-  muniand refashioning them to form the  gesture of Amida, or converting the  temples formerly dedicated to Medi-  cine Master, the Thus Come One of  theEastern Region, and replacing his  statues with those of Amida, the Thus  Come One of the Western Land. Or  we find the ceremony of copying the  Lotus Sutra, which had been carried  out for over four hundred years on  Mount Hiei, being suspended and the  copying of the three Pure Land sutras  substituted in its place, or the annual  lectures49 on the doctrines of the Great  Teacher T’ien-t’ai being replaced by  lectures on the teachings of Shan-tao.  Indeed, the slanderous people and their  associates are too numerous to count.  Are they not destroyers of the Bud-  dha? Are they not destroyers of the  Law? Are they not destroyers of the  Buddhist Order? And all their distorted  teachings derive from Nembutsu Chosen  above All.  Alas, how pitiful that people should  turn their backs on the true words of  prohibition spoken by the Thus Come  One [Shakyamuni]! How tragic that  they should heed the gross and deluded  words of this ignorant priest! If we  hope to bring order and tranquillity to  the world without further delay, we  must put an end to these slanders of  the Law that fill the country.  

The guest said: If we are to put  an end to these people who slander  theLaw and do away with those who  violate the prohibitions of the Bud-  dha, then are we to condemn them to  death as described in the sutra passages  you have just cited? If we do that,  thenwe ourselves will be guilty of in-  flicting injury and death upon others,  and will suffer the consequences, will  we not?  In the Great Collection Sutra, the  Buddha says: “If a person shaves his  head and puts on clerical robes, then,  whether that person observes the pre-  cepts or violates them, both heavenly  and human beings should give him  alms. In doing so, they are giving alms  and support to me, for that person is  my son. But if men beat that person,  they are beating my son, and if they  curse and insult him, they are revilingme.”

If we stop to consider, we must real-  ize that, regardless of whether one is  good or bad, right or wrong, if he is a  priest, then he deserves to have alms  and nourishment extended to him. For  how could one beat and insult the son  and still not cause grief and sorrow to  the father? The Brahmans of the Bam-  boo Staff school who killed the Vener-  able Maudgalyayana have for a long  time been sunk in the depths of the  hell of incessant suffering. Because De-  vadatta murdered the nun Utpalavarna,  he has for a long time gasped in the  flames of the Avichi hell. Examples  from earlier ages make the matter per-  fectly clear, and later ages fear this  offense most of all. 

You speak of punishing those who slander the Law, but  to do so would violate the Buddha’s prohibitions. I can hardly believe that  such a course would be right. How can  you justify that?  The host said: You have clearly seen  the sutra passages that I have cited, and  yet you can ask a question like that!  Are they beyond the power of your  mind to comprehend? Or do you fail  to understand the reasoning behind  them? I certainly have no intention of  censuring the sons of the Buddha. My  only hatred is for the act of slander-  ing the Law. According to the Buddhist teachings, prior to Shakyamuni  slanderous monks would have incurred  the death penalty. But since the time  of Shakyamuni, the One Who Can  Endure, the giving of alms to slander-  ous monks is forbidden in the sutra  teachings. 

Now if all the four kinds of  Buddhists within the four seas and the  ten thousand lands would only cease  giving alms to wicked priests and in-  stead all come over to the side of the  good, then how could any more troubles rise to plague us, or disasters come  to confront us?  With this the guest moved off his  mat in a gesture of respect, straightened  the collar of his robe, and said: The  Buddhist teachings vary greatly, and it  is difficult to investigate each doctrine  in full. I have had many doubts and  perplexities, and have been unable to  distinguish right from wrong.  Nevertheless, this work by the Sage  Honen, Nembutsu Chosen above All,  does in fact exist. And it lumps to-  gether all the various Buddhas, sutras,  bodhisattvas, and deities, and says that  one should “discard, close, ignore, and  abandon” them. The meaning of the  text is perfectly clear. And as a result of  this, the sages have departed from the  nation, the benevolent deities have left  their dwelling places, hunger and thirst  fill the world, and disease and pesti-  lence spread widely.  Now, by citing passages from a wide  variety of scriptures, you have clearly  demonstrated the rights and wrongs of  the matter. 

Therefore, I have com-  pletely forsaken my earlier mistaken  convictions, and my ears and eyes have  been opened on point after point.  There can be no doubt that all peo-  ple, from the ruler on down to the  general populace, rejoice in and desire  the stability of the nation and the peace  of the world. If we can quickly put an  end to the alms that are given to these  icchantikas and insure that continuing  support is instead given to the host of  true priests and nuns, if we can still  these “white waves”50 that trouble the  ocean of the Buddha and cut down  these “green groves” that overgrow the  mountain of the Law, then the world  may become as peaceful as it was in the  golden ages of Fu Hsi and Shen Nung,  and the nation may flourish as it did  under the sage rulers Yao and Shun.51  After that, there will be time to dip  into the waters of the Law and to  decide which are shallow doctrines and  which are deep, and to pay honor to  the pillars and beams that support the  house of the Buddha.  The host exclaimed with delight:  The dove has changed into a hawk, the  sparrow into a clam.52 How gratifying!  You have associated with a friend in  the orchid room and have become as  straight as mugwort growing among  hemp.53 If you will truly give consider-  ation to the troubles I have been de-  scribing and put entire faith in these  words of mine, then the winds will  blow gently, the waves will be calm,  and in no time at all we will enjoy  bountiful harvests.  But a person’s heart may change  with the times, and the nature of a  thing may alter with its surroundings.  Just as the moon on the water will be  tossed about by the waves, or the sol-  diers in the vanguard will be cowed by  the swords of the enemy, so, although  at this moment you may say you  believe in my words, I fear that later you will forget them completely.  Now if we wish first of all to bring  security to the nation and to pray for  our present and future lives, then we  must hasten to examine and consider  the situation and take measures as soon  as possible to remedy it.  Why do I say this? Because, of the  seven types of disasters described in  the Medicine Master Sutra, five have  already occurred. Only two have yet to  appear, the calamity of invasion from  foreign lands and the calamity of revolt  within one’s own domain. And of  the three calamities mentioned in the  Great Collection Sutra, two have al-  ready made their appearance. Only one  remains, the disaster of warfare.  

The different types of disaster and  calamity enumerated in the Golden  Light Sutra have arisen one after the  other. Only that described as maraud-  ers from other regions invading and  plundering the nation has yet to mate-  rialize. This is the only trouble that has  not yet come. And of the seven disas-  ters listed in the Benevolent Kings  Sutra, six are now upon us in full force.  Only one has not yet appeared, the  calamity that occurs “when enemies  rise up on all four sides and invade the  nation.”  Moreover, as the Benevolent Kings  Sutra says: “When a nation becomes  disordered, it is the spirits that first  show signs of rampancy. Because the  spirits become rampant, all the people  of the nation become disordered.”  Now if we examine the present situa-  tion carefully in the light of this pas-  sage, we will see that the various spirits  have for some time been rampant, and  many of the people have perished. If  the first predicted misfortune in the  sutra has already occurred, as is obvi-  ous, then how can we doubt that the  later disasters will follow? If, in punish-  ment for the evil doctrines that are  upheld, the troubles that have yet to  appear should fall upon us one after the  other, then it will be too late to act,  will it not?  

Emperors and kings have their foun-  dation in the state and bring peace and  order to the age; ministers and com-  moners hold possession of their fields  and gardens and supply the needs of  the world. But if marauders come from  other regions to invade the nation, or  if revolt breaks out within the do-  mainand people’s lands are seized and  plundered, how can there be anything  but terror and confusion? If the nation  is destroyed and people’s homes are  wiped out, then where can one flee for  safety? If you care anything about your  personal security, you should first of all  pray for order and tranquillity through-  out the four quarters of the land,  should you not?  It seems to me that when people are  in this world they all fear what their lot  may be in the life to come. So it is that  they put their faith in distorted doc-  trines and pay honor to slanderous  teachings. It distresses me that they  should be so confused about right and  wrong, and at the same time I feel pity  that, having embraced Buddhism, they  should have chosen the wrong kind.  With the power of faith that is in their  hearts, why must they recklessly give  credence to distorted doctrines? If they  do not shake off these delusions that  they cling to but continue to harbor  erroneous views, then they will quick-  ly leave this world of the living and  surely fall into the hell of incessant suf-  fering. 

 Thus the Great Collection Sutra  says: “Though for countless existences  in the past the ruler of a state may have  practiced the giving of alms, observed  the precepts, and cultivated wisdom, if  he sees that my teaching is in danger of  perishing and stands idly by without  doing anything to protect it, then all  the inestimable roots of goodness that  he has planted through the practices  just mentioned will be entirely wiped  24 out...Before long, the ruler will fall  gravely ill, and after his life has come to  an end, he will be reborn in the great  hell....And the same fate will befall  the ruler’s consort, his heir, the high  ministers of the state, the lords of cities,  the village heads and generals, the  magistrates of districts, and the other  officials.”  The Benevolent Kings Sutra states:  “If persons destroy the teachings of the  Buddha, they will have no filial sons,  noharmony with their six kinds of rela-  tives,54 and no aid from the heavenly  deities and dragons. Disease and evil  demons will come day after day to tor-  ment them, disasters will descend on  them incessantly, and misfortunes will  dog them wherever they go. And when  they die, they will fall into the realms  of hell, hungry spirits, and animals.  Even if they should be reborn as  humanbeings, they will be destined to  become soldiers or slaves. Retribution  will follow as an echo follows a sound,  or a shadow follows a form. Someone  writing at night may put out the lamp,  but the words he has written will still  remain. It is the same with the effect of  the deeds we perform in the threefold  world.”  The second volume of the Lotus  Sutra says, “If a person fails to have  faith but instead slanders this sutra...  When his life comes to an end he will  enter the Avichi hell.” And in the  “Never Disparaging” chapter in the  seventh volume, it says, “For a thou-  sand kalpas they underwent great suf-  fering in the Avichi hell.” 

 In the Nirvana Sutra, we read: “If a  person separates himself from good  friends, refuses to listen to the correct  teaching, and instead embraces evil  teachings, then as a result he will sink  down into the Avichi hell, where the  size of his body will become eighty-  four thousand yojanas in total length  and breadth.”55  When we examine this wide variety  of sutras, we find that they all stress  how grave a matter it is to slander the  correct teaching. How pitiful that peo-  ple should all go out of the gate of the  correct teaching and enter so deep into  the prison of these distorted doctrines!  How stupid that they should fall one  after another into the snares of these  evil doctrines and remain for so long  entangled in this net of slanderous  teachings! They lose their way in these  mists and miasmas, and sink down  amid the raging flames of hell. How  could one not grieve? How could one  not suffer?  Therefore, you must quickly reform  the tenets that you hold in your heart  and embrace the one true vehicle, the  single good doctrine [of the Lotus  Sutra]. If you do so, then the threefold  world will become the Buddha land,  and how could a Buddha land ever  decline? The regions in the ten directions will all become treasure realms,  and how could a treasure realm ever  suffer harm? If you live in a country  that knows no decline or diminution,  in a land that suffers no harm or dis-  ruption, then your body will find  peace and security, and your mind will  be calm and untroubled. You must  believe my words; heed what I say!  The guest said: Since it concerns  both this life and the lives to come,  who could fail to be cautious in a mat-  ter such as this? Who could fail to  agree with you? Now when I examine  the passages you have cited from the  sutras and see exactly what the Buddha  has said, I realize that slandering the  Law is a very grave fault indeed, that  violating the Law is in truth a terrible  offense. I have put all my faith in one  Buddha alone, Amida, and rejected all  the other Buddhas. I have honored the  three Pure Land sutras and set aside the  other sutras. But this was not due to  any distorted ideas of my own concep tion. I was simply obeying the words of  the eminent men of the past. 

And the same is true of all the other persons in  the ten directions.  But now I realize that to do so  means to exhaust oneself in futile  efforts in this life and to fall into the  Avichi hell in the life to come. The  texts you have cited are perfectly clear  on this point, and their arguments are  detailed—they leave no room for  doubt. From now on, with your kind  instruction to guide me, I wish to continue dispelling the ignorance from my  mind. I hope we may set about as  quickly as possible taking measures to  deal with these slanders against the Law  and to bring peace to the world without delay, thus insuring that we may  live in safety in this life and enjoy good  fortune in the life to come. But it is  not enough that I alone should accept  and have faith in your words—we  must see to it that others as well are  warned of their errors. 

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  2. Oooh...so you are the honi one who avait mal pensé....

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