On the Eighteen Perfections Chapter3

On the Eighteen Perfections Chapter3

Written by Nichiren

Background

“Next, with regard to the entity or essence of the lotus,12 there are many different types of entity. First is the lotus that is the entity of virtue, the virtue of the three truths of the innate nature. This is one type of lotus entity.

“Second is the lotus entity of the innate nature. The various phenomena of the three thousand realms from the beginning have never departed from the entity of the lotus [of the wonderful Law], and this is a type of lotus entity.

“Third is the entity that is the absolute goodness of the sea of effects. All phenomena from the beginning possess the Buddha’s three bodies and dwell in the Land of Tranquil Light. Even one single phenomenon does not depart from the three bodies and therefore it can manifest the effects of the three bodies. This is a type of lotus entity.

“Fourth is the entity that is the essential truth of the larger kind. There are two types of essential truth, the essential truth that is eternal and unchanging and the essential truth that functions in accordance with changing circumstances. Both of these are called the essential truth of the lesser kind. In contrast to these is the inconceivable that is the innate nature of all phenomena, which does not display the characteristics of the essential teaching and the theoretical teaching, tranquillity and brightness,13 and so forth. This is a type of lotus entity.

 

Background

Nichiren Daishonin wrote this letter on the third day of the eleventh month in 1280 at Minobu to his disciple Sairen-bō Nichijō, formally a priest of the Tendai school.

In it he addresses, through a series of eleven questions and answers, the doctrine known as the eighteen perfections and other teachings elucidated in The Daily Records of the Transmission at Hsiu-ch’an-ssu Temple, a document by Dengyō, the founder of the Tendai school in Japan.

After assessing and analyzing these teachings from various viewpoints, the Daishonin concludes that, in the Latter Day of the Law, one should not be attached to the doctrines put forth by T’ien-t’ai of China. The way to attaining enlightenment, he asserts, lies in reciting the daimoku of the Lotus Sutra, or Nam-myoho-renge-kyo.

The contents of this letter can be divided into three sections. The first section opens with the question, “Where does the doctrine of the eighteen perfections derive from?” (p. 900) and ends with the statement “. . . the source of all phenomena, the threefold contemplation in a single mind, the three thousand realms in a single moment of life, the three truths, the six stages of practice, the unification of reality and wisdom, the ultimate meaning of the essential teaching and theoretical teaching—all these teachings have their origin in and arise from the single character ren

In this section, the Daishonin first introduces what Dengyō taught concerning each of the eighteen perfections by quoting Dengyō’s Daily Records of the Transmission. Next, because, among the five characters of Myoho-renge-kyo, the teaching of the eighteen perfections originated from the single character ren, or lotus, the Daishonin quotes passages from the same document to illustrate the profound meaning of the character ren, from the perspective of each of the five major principles—name, entity or essence, quality, function, and teaching. These five principles were set forth by T’ien-t’ai in his Profound Meaning of the Lotus Sutra, where he applied them to each of the five characters of the sutra’s title, Myoho-renge-kyo. But in this work, the Daishonin examines them only as they apply to the character ren. In conclusion, he states that all phenomena, and all teachings regarding enlightenment expounded by T’ien-t’ai, such as the threefold contemplation in a single mind and the three thousand realms in a single moment of life, originated from the character ren.

The second section begins with the question, “What is ‘the general theory of the five major principles’?” and continues through the statement “With regard to the state of this enlightenment, the Buddha gives the name concentration to the tranquillity of the essential nature of all phenomena. And he gives the name insight to [the wisdom that is] tranquil and constantly in a state of brightness” .

In this section, the Daishonin again quotes from Daily Records of the Transmission, this time concerning the general theory of the five major principles. Each of the five characters of Myoho-renge-kyo corresponds to one of the five major principles, he explains, myō to name,  to entity or essence, ren to quality, ge to function, and kyō to teaching.

Next, within the general theory of the five major principles there are two categories, the five major principles as they pertain to the Buddha’s intention, and the five major principles as they pertain to the capacities and feelings of the people. Of these two, the former represents the five types of vision that characterize the enlightenment of all Buddhas. And these five types of vision correspond to the five kinds of wisdom, which in turn correspond to the nine consciousnesses (the wisdom of ordinary people corresponds to the shallower five levels of consciousness, and the remaining four correspond to the deeper four levels of consciousness).

The five major principles as they pertain to the people’s capacities and feeling, indicate Myoho-renge-kyo as it was expounded in accord with the capacities of the people. “Since there are five characters in the title Myoho-renge-kyo,” the Daishonin says, “there are accordingly five types of threefold contemplation in a single mind,” and he explains each type.

The third and final section begins with the question, “When the concentration and insight of the natural enlightenment that is bright in and of itself are carried out, do the doctrines of three thousand realms in a single moment of life and the threefold contemplation in a single mind apply?” and proceeds to the end of the letter. Here the Daishonin discusses the relationship between the “concentration and insight of the natural enlightenment that is bright in and of itself,” and the principle of three thousand realms in a single moment of life. He concludes that this concept of the concentration and insight as expounded by T’ien-t’ai and propagated in the Middle Day of the Law should be discarded today in the Latter Day of the Law. The Daishonin identifies the correct practice for attaining Buddhahood in the Latter Day as the recitation and propagation of the daimoku of the Lotus Sutra, that is, Nam-myoho-renge-kyo. He concludes, “Nichiren’s disciples, like Nichiren himself, should invariably practice the correct principles. . . . The essential thing, therefore, is that at each hour, at each moment, one should chant Nam-myoho-renge-kyo.”

 

Notes

12. In The Daily Records of the Transmission at Hsiu-ch’an-ssu Temple, Dengyō explains the character ren, or lotus, from the viewpoint of the five major principles—name, entity or essence, quality, function, and teaching. The text now proceeds to explain the principle of lotus as an entity or essence.

13. In this paragraph, it is explained that “the essential truth of the larger kind” consists of the two “essential truths of the lesser kind,” that is, “the essential truth that is eternal and unchanging” (which is also described as “the characteristics of the theoretical teaching” and “tranquillity”) and “the essential truth that functions in accordance with changing circumstances” (which is also described as “the characteristics of the essential teaching” and “brightness”). But this does not mean that there are two different types of essential truth. These are two aspects of one essential truth.

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