Tuesday 12 February 2013

Daily Gosho - The Problem to Be Pondered Night and Day


Sensei gives us the following guidance to start creating the causes in our life to appear as manifest effects of our determination:


"The moment we resolve "I will become healthy!" "I will become strong!" "I will work cheerfully for kosen-rufu!" our lives begin to move in that direction. We have to make up our minds." President Ikeda

So I am redetermining to determine! To dig even deeper, to chant even more fervently with my Actual Proof Campaign November 2013 determinations at the forefront of my mind and to achieve victories for myself and others, my family and my chapter.


"You must not spend your lives in vain and regret it for ten thousand years to come."

(The Problem to Be Pondered Night and Day  - The Writings of Nichiren Daishonin, Volume 1, page 622) http://www.sgilibrary.org/view.php?page=620 Selection source: "Kyo no Hosshin", Seikyo Shimbun, October 28th, 2012

Background
This letter was written to Toki Jonin, a learned and dedicated disciple who lived in Shimosa Province. In it Nichiren Daishonin stresses the extreme seriousness of the offense of slander and also the importance of embracing the supreme Buddhist teaching. The letter is dated simply the twenty-third day of the eighth month, and though it is generally thought to have been written in the first year of Kenji (1275) at Minobu, no firm conclusion has been reached in this regard. Other opinions are that the Daishonin wrote it in 1276 or even in 1273 while he was still on Sado Island.
In the Daishonin’s teaching, rather than adherence to a specific code of conduct, one’s fundamental posture toward the Mystic Law, or ultimate reality, determines one’s happiness or unhappiness in life. A person who seeks and awakens to the ultimate truth within will attain enlightenment, while one who remains in ignorance of it or even slanders it will continue to be bound by suffering. Hence the Daishonin’s emphasis on exclusive commitment to the Lotus Sutra, which teaches the direct attainment of Buddhahood for all people.
In the last part of this letter, the Daishonin raises a question that had crossed many people’s minds: on the basis of what sort of insight does he dare to criticize such eminent teachers of the past as Kobo, Jikaku, and Chisho? However, instead of answering this question directly, he simply says, “You had better cut short your sleep by night and curtail your leisure by day, and ponder this!” This passage, from which the letter takes its name, suggests that the most important task of our human existence is to seek out and uphold the correct teaching leading to enlightenment.

2 comments:

  1. Keep your determination and U will certainly succed! I will always support U.
    Good luck,
    Carlo

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your support, I feel it :) My son got into his dream school yesterday :)

      Delete