Wednesday 17 October 2012

Daily Gosho - Reply to Yasaburo


Seems a common theme in my district this week; that is, our battle to decisively win, no matter what.  Between us, we have some karmic retribution to lessen, and we're at the junction of Win or Lose. And I've just reached the point on my daimoku chart entitled "Crossroads of the Crucial Moment". Mystic, innit...
And of course, as we have nam-myoho-renge-kyo, we will win. May not be today, might not be tomorrow, but we will most definitely triumph. As Nichiren Daishonin writes, it's in our lives to meet with the obstacle that's personal to us, at this exact moment. We made the causes to be in this particular situation, now to take responsibility for it, and keep forging on with our strong determined prayer. We are on the battlefield with the best armoury at our disposal - our daimoku.
Let's win together, my friends and comrades-in-faith...

"You must simply make up your mind. Look at the world this year as a mirror. The reason that you have survived until now when so many have died was so that you would meet with this affair."

(Reply to Yasaburo - The Writings of Nichiren Daishonin, Vol.1, page 829) http://www.sgilibrary.org/view.php?page=827 Selection source: Kyo no Hosshin, Seikyo Shimbun, August 25th, 2012

Background
This letter was written at Minobu to the believer Yasaburo. One explanation identifies Yasaburo with a man named Saito Yasaburo, who lived at Numazu in Suruga Province. The wording of the last paragraph suggests that he may have been a samurai.
Yasaburo had evidently sought the Daishonin’s advice in preparation for an upcoming debate with a priest of the Pure Land school. This letter is the Daishonin’s reply. It can be roughly divided into two parts. The first and longer part outlines the general argument that the Daishonin suggests Yasaburo should present in debating with a follower of the Pure Land school. The second, beginning from “Now if that priest objects . . . ,” instructs Yasaburo in how to press his opponent on specific points and urges him to muster up a resolute spirit.
The letter states that only Shakyamuni possesses the three virtues of sovereign, teacher, and parent with respect to the people of this saha world. In the Daishonin’s day, due to the growing influence of the Pure Land school, people tended increasingly to place their trust in Amida Buddha of the Western Paradise, hoping to win rebirth in his Pure Land after death. But the Daishonin stressed the importance of reverence for Shakyamuni, the historical founder of Buddhism who actually appeared in this world. Here he asserts that to worship Amida and slight Shakyamuni is an act of utter disloyalty. Thus, though the believers in Amida may seem to be devoted to pious acts, they are in fact guilty of an offense far worse than that of impious men with no religious awareness whatsoever. Their grave error, the Daishonin says, is bringing disaster on the country in the form of famine, epidemics, and the impending Mongol invasion.

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