Nichiren Buddhism

Nichiren Buddhism is a branch of Mahayana Buddhism based on the teachings of the 13th century Japanese monk Nichiren (1222–1282) and belongs to the schools of so-called "Kamakura Buddhism".[1][2] Nichiren Buddhism is a comprehensive term covering several major schools and many sub-schools, as well as several of Japan's new religions. Its many denominations have in common a focus on the chanting and recital of the Lotus Sutra, which is thought to hold extraordinary power.[3]

Nichiren Buddhism is generally noted for its focus on the Lotus Sutra and an attendant belief that all people have an innate Buddha nature and are therefore inherently capable of attaining enlightenment in their current form and present lifetime. It is also noted for its hardline opposition to any other form of Buddhism, which Nichiren saw as deviating from the Buddhist truth he had discovered.

Formal Nichiren Buddhist temple groups are commonly associated with Nichiren Shoshu and Nichiren Shu, while modern 20th century lay groups vary such as Kenshokai, Shoshinkai and Soka Gakkai International, Risshō Kōsei Kai and various others are also known.

Founder

Main article: Nichiren

From the age of 16 until 32, Nichiren, originally a monk of Tendai Buddhism, studied in numerous temples in Japan, especially Mt. Hiei (Enryaku-ji) and Mt. Kōya, in his day the major centers of Buddhist study, in the KyotoNara area. He eventually concluded that the highest teachings of Shakyamuni Buddha (563?–483?BC) were to be found in the Lotus Sutra. The mantra he expounded on 28 April 1253, known as the Daimoku or Odaimoku, Namu-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō, expresses his devotion to that body of teachings.[4] During his lifetime, Nichiren stridently maintained that the contemporary teachings of Buddhism taught by other sects, (particularly the Nembutsu, Zen, Shingon, and Ritsu sects[5]) were, to his mind, mistaken in their interpretations of the correct path to enlightenment, and therefore refuted them publicly and vociferously. In doing so, he provoked the ire of the country's rulers and of the priests of the sects he criticized; he was subjected to persecution which included an attempted beheading and at least two exiles.

Some Nichiren schools see the attempted beheading incident as marking a turning point in Nichiren's teaching, since Nichiren began inscribing the Gohonzon and wrote a number of major doctrinal treatises during his subsequent three-year exile on Sado Island in the Japan Sea. After a pardon and his return from exile, Nichiren moved to Mt. Minobu in today's Yamanashi Prefecture, where he and his disciples built a temple, Kuon-ji. Nichiren spent most of the rest of his life here training disciples.

Basic teachings

Nichiren Buddhism is based on the Lotus Sutra. Common to most lineages of Nichiren Buddhism is the chanting of Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō or Nam Myōhō Renge Kyō, and veneration of the Gohonzon. The definition of Gohonzon varies between the Nichiren schools.

Nichiren Buddhism expounds the doctrine of the Ten Worlds of life, the Ten Factors of existence, the principle of The Three Thousand Realms in a single moment of life[6][7] and the teachings of The Three Proofs[8] for verification of the validity of teachings. Most of these teachings are shared and identical in most schools and groups of Nichiren Buddhism. However, different interpretations are found for the doctrine of the "Three Great Secret Dharmas",[9] called also "The Three Great Secret Laws",[10] and Three Jewels.

Nichiren's writings

Nichiren was a prolific writer. His personal communications and writings to his followers as well as numerous treatises detail his view of the correct form of practice for the Latter Day of the Law (mappō); lay out his views on other Buddhist schools, particularly those of influence during his lifetime; and elucidate his interpretations of Buddhist teachings that preceded his. These writings are collectively known as Gosho (go is an honorific prefix designating respect) or Goibun. Which of these writings, including the Ongi Kuden (orally transmitted teachings), are deemed authentic or apocryphal is a matter of debate within the various schools of today's Nichiren Buddhism.[11][12][13] One of his most important writings the Rissho Ankoku Ron, preserved at Shochuzan Hokekyo-ji, is one of the National Treasures of Japan.[14][15]

Development of Nichiren Buddhism and its major lineages

Nichiren Buddhism is not a single denomination (see following lists). Nichiren was originally an ordained Tendai priest and is not known to have established a separate Buddhist school. Nevertheless, his teachings led to the formation of different schools within several years after his passing. Before his death Nichiren had named "six senior priests" (rokurōsō) whom he wanted to transmit his teachings to future generations: Nisshō (日昭), Nichirō (日朗), Nikō (日向), Nitchō (日頂), Nichiji (日持), and Nikkō (日興). Each started a lineage of schools, but Nichiji eventually travelled to the Asian continent (ca. 1295) and was never heard from again, and Nitchō later in life (1302) rejoined and became a follower of Nikkō.[16]

Schools and lineages

Different interpretations of Nichiren's teachings had led to the establishment of various temples and schools, which however have in common reverence to the two basic doctrines of the chanting and the object of devotion. Although the former five disciples remained loosely affiliated to varying degrees, the last—Nikkō—made a clean break by leaving Kuon-ji in 1289.

Nikko had come to the conclusion that the remaining five disciples were embarking on heresy and syncretism of various Buddhist practices that he could no longer accept. Nikko then went to the base of Mount Fuji where he would be offered a piece of land where he would ultimately establish his own school based on orthodoxy, which would later be known as the Taisekiji temple of Nichiren Shoshu. In addition, he is also believed to have erected a Buddhist seminary at Omosu which later affiliated with the Nichiren Shu sect but would continue to retain the circular Crane bird used by Nikko Shonin. Pious legends also recount his journey with the Dai-Gohonzon as he left Mount Minobu, never to return back. [17]

After the passing of Nichiren, practical differences between the various Nichiren schools were relatively minor; nevertheless, the following schools formed around Nichiren's disciples:

In the years following Nichiren's death, his and the temples founded by his disciples remained to a varying degree affiliated. By the 14th century a certain split within the Nichiren Schools occurred though. One differentiates between the so-called Ichi lineage (meaning unity or harmony) and Shoretsu lineage (a contraction of two words meaning superior/inferior).[18][19]

The Itchi–Soretsu controversy was of no interest to outsiders, but it kept Nichiren theologians on their toes and forced them to define their positions with more clarity. It did result in the formation of new sub-sects, but these gave impetus to missionary enterprises which expanded Nichiren Buddhism and helped spread it throughout the country.[20]

The number of adherents to Nichiren's teachings grew steadily during the 14th and 15th century to the extent that whole communities became followers.[21] By 1400, and only being outnumbered by Zen, Nichiren temples had been founded all over Kyoto and although the various sects of Nichiren Buddhism were administratively independent they met in a council to resolve common problems.[22]

By the 16th century Nichiren Buddhism was no longer on the fringe of religious life and a vast number of Kyoto's inhabitants adhered to Nichiren's teachings. The anarchy resulting from the conflict between the shoguns and the emperor resulted in the attacks by the so-called warrior monks from Mount Hiei. In its aftermath "twenty-one Nichiren temples were destroyed by fire … It was estimated that tens of thousands of Nichiren Buddhists lost their lives"[23]

Some researchers compare early Nichiren Buddhism with early Christianity: "Tamura finds Nichiren’s Buddhism to be broadly comparable with Christianity 'as a religion of prophecy, in its spirit of martyrdom, in its apostolic consciousness, and additionally, in its emphasis upon history'".[24]

Based on the tradition set by Nichiren the relationship between the government, other major Buddhist schools and Nichiren temples remained ambiguous though. The adherents of Nichiren Buddhism who made this aspect of Nichiren teachings a central pillar of their belief were the followers of the so-called Fuju-fuse lineage. Their services were partly held in secret and culminated in the persecution and partly even the execution of its believers in 1668. The majority of official Nichiren temples were "tamed" during the Edo period to the effect that they were subsumed "into a nationwide Buddhist parish system designed to ensure religious peace and eradicate the common enemy, Christianity".[21] In this process, also known as the Danka system, Buddhist temples were generally not only a centre of Buddhist practice and learning, but were forced to carry out administrative functions, thereby also being controlled by the government taming any missionary activities.

During the Meiji Restoration from 1868 onwards and in an attempt to eradicate Buddhism[25] Nichiren temples were forced, just like any other Buddhist school, to focus on funeral and memorial services as their main activity. Therefore, Nichiren-Buddhism remained mainly temple-based. Most Nichiren schools, referring to their establishment, state the founding of their respective head or main temple, for example, Nichiren Shū the year 1281, Nichiren Shōshū the year 1288, and Kempon Hokke Shu the year 1384. However, most of today's Nichren schools did not form until the late 19th and early 20th century as, also legal, religious bodies. A last wave of merges took place in the 1950s. Following the above-mentioned divide between the Ichi lineage and Shoretsu lineage, the most notable division is the one between Nichiren Shū and Nichiren Shōshū. Documents first mentioned and discovered by Taiseki-ji priest Nikkyo in 1488 claimed that Nichiren passed full authority "to Nikkō alone. The original documents have disappeared, but 'true copies' are preserved at Taiseki-ji. Other Nichiren bodies ignore them as forgeries."[26]

At the time the documents may have served to underline Taiseki-ji's supposed superiority amongst Nikkō temples, especially in respect to Ikegami Honmon-ji the site of Nikkō's tomb. In the later context of developments the above-mentioned claims served as a reason on which, what would later become, Nichiren Shōshū based its orthodoxy on Nichiren-Buddhism in general. Even though there had been efforts by temples of the Nikkō lineage in the late 19th century to unify into one single separate Nichiren school the Kommon-ha, today's Nichiren Shōshū comprises only the Taiseki-ji temple and its dependent temples. It is not identical to the historical Nikkō or Fuji lineage. Parts of the Kommon-ha, the Honmon-Shu, eventually became part of Nichren Shu in the 1950s. New religions[27][28] like Sōka Gakkai, Shōshinkai, and Kenshōkai trace their origins to the Nichiren Shōshū school, most notably amongst those is Sōka Gakkai, which due to its steady growth is regarded today as Japan's largest lay Buddhist organization.

Kuon-ji eventually became the head temple of today's Nichiren Shū, today the largest branch amongst traditional schools, encompassing the schools and temples tracing their origins to Nikō, Nisshō, Nichirō, Nichiji and also Nikkō. The Reiyūkai, Risshō Kōsei Kai, and Nipponzan-Myōhōji-Daisanga stem, in one form or another, from the Kuon-ji lineage.

The Fuji-lineage

Several temples located near Mount Fuji continue to follow Nichiren Buddhism, commonly referred to as Fuji-Fusē. The Fuji-lineage is often associated with Nichiren Shoshu Buddhism or organisations formally affiliated with it but is not limited to.

The Fuji-lineage includes the following temples:

Major Nichiren Buddhist schools and organisations

The following lists are based on the Japanese Wikipedia article on Nichiren Buddhism.

Major Nichiren Buddhist schools and their head temples

In alphabetical order (Japanese characters preceded by "ja:" link to articles in the Japanese Wikipedia).

Major Nichiren Buddhist based movements and lay organisations

In alphabetical order (Japanese characters preceded by "ja:" link to articles in the Japanese Wikipedia):

Nationalistic interpretations

Both Nichiren and his followers have been associated with fervent Japanese nationalism known as Nichirenism not least between the Meiji period and the conclusion of World War II. [37] [38]

The nationalistic interpretation of Nichiren's teachings are to be found mainly within lay Buddhist movements like Kokuchūkai or Kenshōkai, most notable in this context however are the May 15 Incident, the League of Blood Incident and Tanaka Chigaku's Kokuchūkai. [39] [40] [41]

Bibliography

Translations of Nichiren's writings

English

Japanese

References

  1. Jacqueline I. Stone , Original Enlightenment and the Transformation of Medieval Japanese Buddhism (Studies in East Asian Buddhism), University of Hawaii Press 2003, ISBN 978-0824827717, pp 239
  2. Richard K. Payne, Re-Visioning Kamakura Buddhism (Studies in East Asian Buddhism) (Studies in East Asian Buddhism, 11), University of Hawaii Press, ISBN 978-0824820787 , pp 24
  3. ed, Jacob Neusner, (2003). World religions in America : an introduction (3. ed.). Louisville, Ky. ;London: Westminster John Knox. p. 225. ISBN 978-0664224752.
  4. Anesaki, Masaharu, Nichiren, the Buddhist prophet, Cambridge : Harvard University Press (1916), p. 34
  5. cf. "four dictums" (四箇の格言 shika no kakugen) entries in The Soka Gakkai Dictionary of Buddhism, p. 215, and Kyōgaku Yōgo Kaisetsu Shū, p. 54
  6. Lotus Seeds, The Essence of Nichiren Shu Buddhism page 63, ISBN 0970592000
  7. "SGI Library Online - The Soka Gakkai Dictionary of Buddhism". Sgilibrary.org. Retrieved 2013-10-02.
  8. "SGI Library Online - The Soka Gakkai Dictionary of Buddhism". Sgilibrary.org. Retrieved 2013-10-02.
  9. Lotus Seeds, The Essence of Nichiren Shu Buddhism page 72, ISBN 0970592000
  10. "SGI Library Online - The Soka Gakkai Dictionary of Buddhism". Sgilibrary.org. Retrieved 2013-10-02.
  11. Stone, Jacqueline I. (1990).Some disputed writings in the Nichiren corpus: Textual, hermeneutical and historical problems, dissertation, Los Angeles: University of California; retrieved07/26/2013
  12. Sueki Fumehiko: Nichirens Problematic Works, Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 26/3-4, 261-280, 1999
  13. Listing of Authenticated Gosho (Goibun) of Nichiren DaiShonin
  14. "Nichiren and His Time: Rissho ankoku ron". Kyoto National Museum. Archived from the original on 2013-02-11.
  15. http://www.nichiren-shu.org/AboutUs/major/hokekyoji.html
  16. Shimpan Bukkyō Tetsugaku Daijiten, p. 1368
  17. "The Fuji Lineage: History of Nichiren Buddhism". Nichirenscoffeehouse.net. Retrieved 2013-10-02.
  18. Tarabini (undated). A response to questions from Soka Gakkai practitioners regarding the similarities and differences among Nichiren Shu, Nichiren Shoshu and the Soka Gakkai. from: nichiren-shu.org
  19. Stone, Jaqueline. Original Enlightenment and the Transformation of Medieval Japanese Buddhism, Honolulu, Hawaii: University of Hawai'i Press, 1999
  20. Montgomery, Daniel (1991). Fire in the Lotus, The Dynamic Religion of Nichiren, London: Mandala, ISBN 1852740914 , page 175-176
  21. 1 2 "Nichiren Buddhism". Philtar.ac.uk. Retrieved 2013-10-02.
  22. Montgomery, Daniel (1991). Fire in the Lotus, The Dynamic Religion of Nichiren, London: Mandala, ISBN 1852740914, page 160
  23. George/Willa Tanabe (1989). The Lotus Sutra in Japanese Culture, University of Hawaii Press, ISBN 0824811984
  24. J. Stone, Biographical Studies of Nichiren, Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 26/3-4, page 448
  25. "Transcultural Studies". Archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de. Retrieved 2014-04-28.
  26. Montgomery, Daniel (1991). Fire in the Lotus, The Dynamic Religion of Nichiren, London: Mandala, ISBN 1852740914, page 169
  27. "Soka-gakkai (Japanese religion) - Encyclopedia Britannica". Britannica.com. 2013-12-05. Retrieved 2014-04-28.
  28. "Soka Gakkai International: The Global Expansion of a Japanese Buddhist Movement - Métraux - 2013 - Religion Compass - Wiley Online Library". Onlinelibrary.wiley.com. Retrieved 2014-04-28.
  29. Timeline of Ikeda’s life, daisakuikeda.org
  30. Métraux, Daniel A., “The Dispute Between the Soka Gakkai and the Nichiren Shoshu Priesthood: A Lay Revolution Against a Conservative Clergy”, Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 1992, 19/4, pp. 328 and 330
  31. Wilson, Bryan and Dobbelaere, Kareland, “A Time to Chant: The Soka Gakkai Buddhists in Britain”, Clarendon Press, 1994. ISBN 978-0-19-827915-0. p. 240
  32. Strand, Clark, “Waking the Buddha”, Middleway Press, 2014. ISBN 978-0-9779245-6-1. pp. 149-150
  33. http://www.nichiren.com/en/history-e.html
  34. http://myokan-ko.net/english/sgi13.html
  35. Chronology of events according to „Association of Youthful Priests Dedicated to the Reformation of Nichiren Shoshu”.
  36. Chronology of events according to Nichiren Shoshu
  37. Revisiting Nichiren; Ruben L. F. Habito and Jacqueline I. Stone
  38. Kodera, Takashi James (March 1979). "Nichiren and His Nationalistic Eschatology". Religious Studies (Cambridge University Press) 15 (1): 41–53. doi:10.1017/s0034412500011057. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  39. Tanaka Chigaku: What is Nippon Kokutai? Introduction to Nipponese National Principles. Shishio Bunka, Tokyo 1935-36
  40. Brian Daizen Victoria, Senior Lecturer Centre for Asian Studies, University of Adelaide, Engaged Buddhism: A Skeleton in the Closet?
  41. Pokorny, Lukas (2011). Neue religiöse Bewegungen in Japan heute: ein Überblick [New Religious Movements in Japan Today: a Survey]. In: Hödl, Hans Gerald and Veronika Futterknecht, ed. Religionen nach der Säkularisierung. Festschrift für Johann Figl zum 65. Geburtstag, Wien: LIT, p. 187

External links

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