Tuesday, April 25, 2017

since we are publishing stories from the lotus sutra, thought it might be a good idea once more to publish Formation and propagation of the Lotus Sutra from “Promises Made in Past Lives.”

formation and propagation of the Lotus Sutra – notes from Nikkyo Niwano’s Buddhism for Today, a Modern Interpretation of The Threefold Lotus Sutra:

  “No widespread writing system in India in Shakyamuni’s time. . . sermons memorized and spread by word of mouth: people had powers of memory beyond our imagining, and people’s lives less complicated. . . it is almost certain that they [great disciples of the Buddha] did not mishear Shakyamuni’s sermons. . .
  “Frequent conferences held often after death of Buddha.” [Mahayana sutras begin often with the phrase: “Thus have I heard.”]
  In the west we have similar traditions: legends, histories, stories origi­nating from oral transmission passed down from generation to generation, most notably by the wandering blind poet Homer reciting Trojan War Epics—the Iliad and Odyssey; The Song of Roland, 11th Century Chanson de Geste ascribed to the Norman troubadours Théroulde, or Turoldus, which tells the death of Roland and stories related to Charlemagne.

Continuing notes from nikkyo niwano’s buddhism for today: “There is no sutra that is not holy. Teachings have been recorded in Agama, Prajñaparamita, and Amitabha sutras, and many others. But only in the Lotus Sutra was the fundamental spirit of all Shakyamuni’s teachings during his active life clearly expressed for the first time . . . important spirit of all his teachings has been unified and described in easily understood terms; essentials of Buddhism’s very core of Shakyamuni’s teachings explained exhaustively in simple, yet powerful words.
  “After the Buddha’s death, a gulf opened between monks and lay devotees, before either group was aware of it . . . This continually widening gap came about because some monks attached much more importance to the formalities of keeping the precepts than to the fundamental spirit of why the precepts should be kept.
  “The Lotus Sutra appeared under circumstances of a clash between the new and old (Hinayana and Mahayana). Mahayana (great vehicle) stresses that in Buddhism there is only one vehicle to be followed equally by all people, and that the ultimate object of Shakyamuni’s teachings is to bring all people to this vehicle [ultimately to self-attained enlightenment, compassionate mindfulness, and Perfect Enlightenment as the Buddha himself attained].”

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