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The Gohonzon:
Treasure Map of Life
DIAGRAM OF THE GOHONZON TRANSCRIBED
BY HIGH PRIEST NICHIKAN
The following is the key to the accompanying diagram. The key
gives the phoneticized original, English translation and Sanskrit
of characters on the Gohonzon transcribed by Nichikan.
- Nam-myoho-renge-kyo
- Nichiren
- Zai gohan-This is Nichiren Daishonin's
personal seal.
- Dai Bishamon-tenno-Great Heavenly King
Vaishravana (Skt.), also called Tamon-ten (Hearer of Many
Teachings).
- U kuyo sha fuku ka jugo-Those who make
offerings will gain good fortune surpassing the ten honorable
titles [of the Buddha. Note: In Buddhism, making offerings
has a broad meaning; here it means to respect and praise.
- Namu Anryugyo Bosatsu-Bodhisattva Firmly
Established Practices (Skt. Supratishthitacharitra). Note:
The word namu is added to some names in the Gohonzon
as a sign of great respect.
- Namu Jyogyo Bosatsu-Bodhisattva Pure
Practices (Skt. Vishuddhacharitra).
- Namu Shakamuni-butsu-Shakyamuni Buddha.
- Namu Taho Nyorai-Many Treasures Thus
Come One (Skt. Prabhutaratna Tathagata).
- Namu Jogyo Bosatsu-Bodhisattva Superior
Practices (Skt. Vishishtacharitra).
- Namu Muhengyo Bosatsu-Bodhisattva
Boundless Practices (Skt. Anantacharitra).
- Nyaku noran sha zu ha shichibun-Those
who vex and trouble [the practitioners of the Law] will
have their heads split into seven pieces.
- Dai Jikoku-tenno-Great Heavenly King
Upholder of the Nation (Skt. Dhritarashtra).
- Aizen-myo'o-Wisdom King Craving-Filled
(Skt. Ragaraja). Note: The name is written in Siddham,
a medieval Sanskrit orthography.
- Dai Myojo-tenno-Great Heavenly King
Stars, or the god of the stars.
- Dai Gattenno-Great Heavenly King Moon,
or the god of the moon.
- Taishaku-tenno-Heavenly King Shakra
(also known as Heavenly King Indra).
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Click on a white area for the explanation.
Click on a white area
for the explanation.
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- Dai Bontenno-Great Heavenly King Brahma.
- Dai Rokuten no Mao-Devil King of the
Sixth Heaven.
- Dai Nittenno-Great Heavenly King Sun,
or the god of the sun.
- Fudo-myo'o-Wisdom King Immovable (Skt.
Achala). Note: The name is written in Siddham, a medieval
Sanskrit orthography.
- Hachi Dairyuo-Eight Great Dragon Kings.
- Dengyo Daishi-Great Teacher Dengyo.
- Jurasetsunyo-Ten Demon Daughters (Skt.
Rakshasi).
- Kishimojin-Mother of Demon Children
(Skt. Hariti).
- Tendai Daishi-Great Teacher T'ien-t'ai.
- Dai Zojo-tenno-Great Heavenly King
Increase and Growth (Skt. Virudhaka).
- Hachiman Dai Bosatsu-Great Bodhisattva
Hachiman.
- Kore o shosha shi tatematsuru-I respectfully
transcribed this.
- Nichikan, personal seal-Signature
of the high priest who transcribed this Gohonzon, in this
case, Nichikan, consisting of his name and personal seal.
- Tensho-daijin-Sun Goddess.
- Butsumetsugo ni-sen ni-hyaku san-ju yo
nen no aida ichienbudai no uchi mizou no daimandara nari-Never
in 2,230-some years since the passing of the Buddha has
this great mandala appeared in the world.
- Dai Komoku-tenno-Great Heavenly King
Wide-Eyed (Skt. Virupaksha).
- Kyoho go-nen roku-gatsu jusan-nichi-The
13th day of the sixth month in the fifth year of Kyoho
[1720], cyclical sign kanoe-ne.
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The following
section gives further explanation of the diagram of the Nichikan-transcribed
Gohonzon. The numbering of each term corresponds to the numbering
on the diagram.
Many of the Buddhist gods' names include words such as Dai
and tenno. Dai is an honorific term meaning
great; tenno means heavenly king. The word namu
is added to some names as a sign of great respect.
- Nam-myoho-renge-kyo: The ultimate Law
permeating all phenomena in the universe. The fundamental component
of Nichiren Daishonin's Buddhism, it expresses the true entity
of life that allows people to directly tap their enlightened
nature. Although the deepest meaning of Nam-myoho-renge-kyo
is revealed only through its practice, the literal meaning is:
nam (devotion), the action of practicing Buddhism; myoho
(Mystic Law), the entity of the universe and its phenomenal
manifestations; renge (lotus flower, which blooms and
seeds at the same time), the simultaneity of cause and effect;
kyo (sutra, the voice or teaching of a Buddha), all phenomena.
The invocation of Nam-myoho-renge-kyo was established by Nichiren
Daishonin, on April 28, 1253, at Seicho-ji temple in the province
of Awa. Top
- Nichiren (1222-82): The founder of
the Buddhism upon which the SGI bases its activities. He inscribed
the true object of worship, the Gohonzon, for the observation
of one's mind and established the invocation of Nam-myoho-renge-kyo
as the universal practice to attain enlightenment. Daishonin
is an honorific title that means great sage. He was born on
February 16, 1222, in the small fishing village of Kominato
in Awa Province in what is presently Chiba Prefecture, Japan.
In his writings he states that inscribing the Gohonzon, "...is
the reason for my advent in this world" (MW-1,
p. 30). Top
- Zai gohan: Literally, zai means
to exist; go is an honorific prefix, and in this case,
denotes "Nichiren Daishonin's"; han means personal
seal. Nichiren Daishonin is said to have instructed those who
inscribe the Gohonzon to place the word gohan under his
name. Top
- Dai Bishamon-tenno (Great Heavenly King
Vaishravana): One of the Four Heavenly Kings, who appear
in the Lotus Sutra and vow to protect those who embrace the
sutra. Bishamon lives halfway down the northern side of Mount
Sumeru1 and protects the
north, accompanied by the two classes of demons called yaksha
(Jp. yasha) and rakshasa (rasetsu). Bishamon is
a transliteration of the Sanskrit Vaishravana. This god is said
to always protect the place where the Buddha preaches and listen
to the Buddha's teachings. In the twenty-sixth chapter of the
Lotus Sutra, he pledges to protect the votaries of the sutra.
Top
- "Those who make offerings will gain good
fortune surpassing the ten honorable titles of the Buddha."
The ten honorable titles that express a Buddha's power, wisdom,
virtue and compassion are:
- Thus Come One-one who has come from the world of truth.
A Buddha embodies the fundamental truth of all phenomena
and grasps the law of causality permeating past, present
and future.
- Worthy of Offerings-one who is qualified to receive offerings
from human and heavenly beings.
- Right and Universal Knowledge-one who comprehends all
phenomena correctly and perfectly.
- Perfect Clarity and Conduct-one who understands the eternity
of past, present and future, and who performs good deeds
perfectly.
- Well Gone-one who has gone to the world of enlightenment.
- Understanding of the World-one who understands all secular
and religious affairs through his grasp of the law of causality.
- Unexcelled Worthy-one who stands supreme among all living
beings.
- Leader of People-one who instructs and leads all people
to enlightenment.
- Teacher of Gods and Humans-A teacher who can guide all
human and heavenly beings.
- Buddha, the World-Honored One-an awakened one, endowed
with perfect wisdom and virtue, who can win the respect
of all people. Top
- Namu Anryugyo Bosatsu (Bodhisattva Firmly
Established Practices): One of the four bodhisattvas who are
the leaders of the Bodhisattvas of the Earth. He appears in
the fifteenth chapter of the Lotus Sutra. According to Tao-hsien's2
"Supplement to the Words and Phrases of the Lotus Sutra"
(Hokke Mon gu Fusho Ki), the four bodhisattvas represent
the four virtues of the Buddha: true self, eternity, purity and
happiness. Bodhisattva Anryugyo represents happiness, the unshakable
state of life filled with joy. Top
- Namu Jyogyo Bosatsu (Bodhisattva Pure Practices):
One of the four leaders of the Bodhisattvas of the Earth. He
appears in the fifteenth chapter of the Lotus Sutra. Tao-hsien's
Hokke Mongu Fusho Ki says that the four bodhisattvas
represent the four virtues of the Buddha's life-true self, eternity,
purity and happiness. Bodhisattva Jyogyo represents purity;
the pure state of life that is never swayed by circumstances.
Top
- Namu Shakamuni-butsu (Shakyamuni Buddha):
The first recorded Buddha and founder of Buddhism, born about
2,500 years ago. He was the son of Shuddhodana, the king of
the Shakyas, a small tribe whose kingdom was located in the
foothills of the Himalayas south of what is now central Nepal.
Shakya of Shakyamuni is taken from the name of this tribe and
muni means sage or saint. His family name was Gautama
(Best Cow) and his given name was Siddhartha (Goal Achieved),
though some scholars say this is a title bestowed on him by
later Buddhists in honor of the enlightenment he attained. For
fifty years, he expounded various sutras (teachings), culminating
in the Lotus Sutra, which he declared his ultimate teaching.
The Lotus Sutra provides the theoretical basis for the Gohonzon.
Top
- Namu Taho Nyorai (Many Treasures Thus Come
One): A Buddha who appears, seated within the Treasure Tower,
at the Ceremony in the Air to bear witness to the truth of Shakyamuni's
teachings in the Lotus Sutra. According to the eleventh chapter
of the Lotus Sutra, Taho Buddha lived in the world of Treasure
Purity in an eastern part of the universe. While still engaged
in bodhisattva practice, he pledged that, even after he had
entered nirvana, he would appear, in the Treasure Tower, and
attest to the validity of the Lotus Sutra wherever anyone might
teach it. In the eleventh chapter, Shakyamuni assembles all
the Buddhas from throughout the universe. He then opens the
Treasure Tower and at Taho's invitation seats himself at this
Buddha's side.
T'ien-t'ai interprets Taho and Shakyamuni seated side by side
in the Treasure Tower as the fusion of reality and wisdom (Jp.
kyochi myogo), with Taho representing the objective truth
or ultimate reality, and Shakyamuni, the subjective wisdom to
realize it. Moreover, Taho Buddha represents the property of
the Law, Shakyamuni Buddha, the property of wisdom, and the
Buddhas from throughout the universe, the property of action;
together they represent the "three properties."3
Nichiren Daishonin uses these interpretations of T'ien-t'ai
and further states in the "Heritage of the Ultimate Law
of Life" that Shakyamuni and Taho represent, respectively,
life and death, the two phases that the entity of life undergoes.
Top
- Namu Jogyo Bosatsu (Bodhisattva Superior
Practices): One of the four bodhisattvas and the leader of the
Bodhisattvas of the Earth. He appears in the fifteenth chapter
of the Lotus Sutra. Tao-hsien says in the Hokke Mongu Fusho
Ki that the four bodhisattvas represent the four virtues
of the Buddha's life: true self, eternity, purity and happiness.
Among these, Jogyo represents the virtue of true self. Nichiren
Daishonin interprets Bodhisattva Jogyo as the provisional or
ephemeral figure of the original Buddha of kuon ganjo4
projected at the Ceremony in the Air (See
September 1997 Living Buddhism, pp. 8-10). Top
- Namu Muhengyo Bosatsu (Bodhisattva Bound-less
Practices): One of the four bodhisattvas who lead the Bodhisattvas
of the Earth. Muhengyo literally means no boundary and represents
eternity, one of the four virtues of the Buddha's life. Top
- Nyaku noran sha zu ha shichibun: "Those
who vex and trouble [the practitioners of the Law] will have
their heads split into seven pieces." An analogy for the
fact that negative causes against the Mystic Law will produce
loss in one's life. Top
- Dai Jikoku-tenno (Great Heavenly King Upholder
of the Nation): One of the Four Heavenly Kings. He lives halfway
down the eastern side of Mount Sumeru and protects the eastern
quarter. In the twenty-sixth chapter of the Lotus Sutra, he
pledges to protect those who embrace the sutra. Top
- Aizen-myo'o (Wisdom Craving-Filled): A Buddhist
deity who is said to purify people's earthly desires and free
them from illusions and the sufferings accruing from earthly
desires. In the esoteric teachings,5
his true identity is regarded as Dainichi (Skt. Mahavairochana)
Buddha or Kongosatta (Skt. Vajrasattva). His name is inscribed
in Siddham, a medieval Sanskrit orthography, on the left hand
side of the Gohonzon as one faces it, signifying the principle
that "earthly desires are enlightenment." Top
- Dai Myojo-tenno (Great Heavenly King Stars,
or the god of the stars): A deification of the stars in Indian
mythology incorporated into Buddhism as one of the twelve gods.6
Top
- Dai Gattenno (Great Heavenly King Moon):
A deification of the moon in Indian mythology, incorporated
into Buddhism as one of the twelve gods.
- Taishaku-tenno (Heaven King Shakra,
also known as Heavenly King Indra):One of the main tutelary
gods of Buddhism, together with Bonten. He is also one of the
twelve gods said to protect the world. Originally the god of
thunder in Indian mythology he was later incorporated into Buddhism
as a protective deity. He lives in a palace called Correct Views
or Joyful to See in the Trayastrimsha Heaven on the peak of
Mount Sumeru and, served by the Four Heavenly Kings, governs
the other thirty-two gods of that heaven.
While Shakyamuni was engaged in bodhisattva practice, Taishaku
is said to have assumed various forms to test his resolve. According
to the first chapter of the Lotus Sutra, he joined the assembly
on Eagle Peak,7 accompanied
by 20,000 retainers.Top
- Dai Bontenno (Great Heavenly King Brahma):
A god said to live in the first of the four meditation heavens
in the world of form above Mount Sumeru and to rule the saha8
world. In Indian mythology he was regarded as the personification
of the fundamental universal principle (Brahman), and in Buddhism
he was adopted as one of the two major tutelary gods, together
with Taishaku. Top
- Dai Rokuten no Mao (Devil King of the
Sixth Heaven): Many devils appear in Indian and Buddhist
scriptures, the most formidable and powerful of which is the
Devil King of the Sixth Heaven. He is the king of devils who
dwells in the highest of the six heavens of the world of desire
and delights in manipulating others to do his will. He is regarded
as a symbol of lust for power He is also called Takejizaiten,
the king who makes free use of the fruits of others' efforts
for his own pleasure. Served by innumerable minions, he works
to obstruct Buddhist practice and delights in sapping the life
force of other beings. He corresponds to the last of "the
three obstacles and four devils"9.
Nichiren Daishonin interprets this devil as the manifestation
of the fundamental darkness inherent in life. Especially in
Buddhism devils are interpreted to mean functions that work
to block or hinder people in their Buddhist practice. Top
- Dai Nittenno (Great Heavenly King Sun):
The divinity of the sun, adopted in Buddhism as a protective
god. He is said to be a subject of Taishaku. Top
- Fudo-myo'o (Wisdom King Immovable):
A Buddhist deity who serves practitioners by defeating the obstacles
and evils that hinder Buddhist practice. It is said that he
enters into a flame-emitting meditation in which he exudes flames
that destroy all karmic hindrances. Because he never yields
to obstacles, he is called Fudo (immovable). He is popularly
depicted as an angry figure surrounded by flames, holding a
rope and a sword. He signifies that "the sufferings of
birth and death are nirvana (Jp. shoji soku nehan)."
Top
- Hachi Dairyuo (Eight Great Dragon Kings):
Kings of the dragons said to live at the bottom of the sea.
Eight dragon kings, each with many followers, assembled at the
ceremony on Eagle Peak to hear the Lotus Sutra. According to
the Kairyuo Sutra (Sutra of the Dragon King of the Sea), dragons
are often eaten by giant birds called garudas, their
natural enemy. Top
- Dengyo Daishi (Great Teacher Dengyo):
The founder of the Tendai sect in Japan. He is also called
Saicho. At age 12, he entered the Buddhist Order and studied
under Gyohyo at the provincial temple in Omi. In April 785,
he was fully ordained at Todai-ji temple, receiving the 250
precepts. In June of the same year, he went to Mount Hiei and
built a small retreat there where he devoted himself to the
study of Buddhist scriptures and treatises, especially those
of the T'ien-t'ai school.
In 804, Dengyo went to T'ang China accompanied by his disciple,
Gishin. There he studied T'ien-t'ai Buddhism under Miao-lo's
disciple Tao-sui who was then staying at Lung-hsing-ssu temple.
After that, Dengyo went to Mount T'ien-t'ai where he studied
under Hsing-man, another disciple of Miao-lo. In 805, he returned
to Japan and the next year established the Tendai sect. At that
time, all priests were ordained exclusively in the Theraveda
precepts. Dengyo made continuing efforts to secure imperial
permission for the building of a Mahayana ordination center
on Mount Hiei, despite concentrated opposition from the older
sects of Nara. Permission was finally granted a week after his
death, and in 827, the ordination center was completed by his
successor, Gishin. In addition to this project, after his return
to Japan, Dengyo concentrated his efforts on refuting the interpretations
of the older Buddhist sects. In particular, his ongoing debate
with Tokuichi, a priest of the Hosso sect, is well known. This
debate began in the early Konin era (810-824). Tokuichi asserted
that the one-vehicle teaching of the Lotus Sutra was a provisional
teaching that Shakyamuni Buddha expounded in accordance with
the people's capacity, while the three-vehicle teachings were
true teachings, and that there are some people who are without
the potential to attain Buddhahood. In opposition to this assertion,
Dengyo maintained that all people have the Buddha nature and
that the supreme vehicle of Buddhahood expounded in the Lotus
Sutra is the true teaching. He was a key figure in upholding
the righteousness of the Lotus Sutra in the Middle Day of the
Law. Top
- Jurasetsunyo (Ten Demon Daughters; also
known as the Ten Goddesses): The ten daughters of the female
demon Kishimojin (Skt. Hariti). They are Ramba (Lamba), Biramba
(Vilamba), Kokushi (Kutadanti) or Crooked Teeth, Keshi (Pushpadanti)
or Flowery Teeth, Kokushi (Makutadanti) or Black Teeth, Tahotsu
(Keshini) or Much Hair, Muenzoku (Achala) or Insatiable, Jiyoraku
(Maladhari) or Necklace Bearer, Kodai (Kunti), and Datsu Issaishujo
Shoke (Sarvasattvojohari) or Robber of the Vital Spirit of All
Living Beings. In the twenty-sixth chapter of the Lotus Sutra,
they pledge to protect the sutra's votaries. Top
- Kishimojin (Mother of Demon Children):
A female demon, said to have been a daughter of a yaksha
demon in Rajagriha, India. She had 500 children (some sources
say 1,000 or 10,000). According to the Kishimo Sutra (Sutra
of Kishimojin) and the Binaya Zoji (Monastic Rules With
Respect to Various Matters), she killed the babies of other
people to feed her children, and the terrified and grieving
populace begged Shakyamuni for help. The Buddha then hid Kishimojin's
youngest son, Binkara. She sought him throughout the world for
seven days, but to no avail. In despair she finally asked the
Buddha where he was. Shakyamuni rebuked her for her evil conduct
and made her vow never to kill another child. Then he returned
her son to her. Kishimojin was revered in India as a goddess
who could bestow the blessings of children and easy delivery.
Kishimojin worship was later introduced to Japan. In the twenty-sixth
chapter of the Lotus Sutra, she and her ten daughters pledged
before the Buddha to safeguard the votaries of the Lotus Sutra.
Top
- Tendai Daishi (Great Teacher T'ien-t'ai,
also called Chih-i): The founder of the Chinese T'ien-t'ai
school, commonly referred to as the Great Teacher T'ien-t'ai.
his name and title were taken from Mount T'ien-t'ai, where he
lived.
T'ien-t'ai refuted the scriptural classifications formulated
by the ten major Buddhist schools of his day, which based themselves
either on the Kegon (The Flower Garland Sutra) or Nirvana
Sutra, and devised the classification of "the five periods
and eight teachings," thereby establishing the supremacy
of the Lotus Sutra. He also expounded the theory of "a
life-moment possessing 3,000 realms" (ichinen sanzen).
Because he systematized both its doctrine and method of
practice, he is revered as the founder of the school. If Shakyamuni's
Lotus Sutra provides the theoretical basis for the Gohonzon,
T'ien t'ai's ichinen sanzen can be likened to a blueprint.
Top
- Dai Zojo-tenno (Great Heavenly King Increase
and Growth): One of the Four Heavenly Kings. He lives halfway
down the southern face of Mount Sumeru and guards the south.
Top
- Hachiman Dai Bosatsu (Great Bodhisattva
Hachiman): One of the main deities in Japanese mythology,
along with Tensho Daijin (Sun Goddess). There are several views
concerning the question of how he came to be worshipped. According
to one explanation, in the reign of the twenty-ninth emperor,
Kimmei, the god Hachiman appeared as a smith in the southern
part of Japan, and declared that in a past life he had been
Emperor Ojin, the fifteenth emperor of Japan.
His aid was sought after in his capacity as the god of smiths
when the great image of Vairochana was erected at Todai-ji temple
in Nara, and from that time on, Hachiman came to be more and
more closely associated with Buddhism. Early in the Heian period
(794-1185), the imperial court named him Great Bodhisattva,
an early example of the fusion of Buddhist and Shinto elements.
In his writings, Nichiren Daishonin views Hachiman as a personification
of the function that promotes the agricultural fertility of
a land whose inhabitants embrace the Law. Top
- Kore o shosha shi tatematsuru: "I
respectfully transcribed this." I generally refers
to the high priest who transcribed the Gohonzon. Top
- Nichikan (1665-1726): The twenty-sixth
high priest, who is revered as a restorer of Nichiren Daishonin's
Buddhism, together with Nichiu Shonin, the ninth high priest.
He worked tirelessly to clarify the Daishonin's teachings during
a time when a number of errors and misconceptions had become
widespread.
Nichikan Shonin wrote exegeses on the Daishonin's five major
writings and other works and also wrote the Six-volume Writings
(Rokkan Sho), which distinguishes the correct interpretations
of the Daishonin's teachings from misleading ones. Top
- Tensho-daijin: The Sun Goddess in
Japanese mythology, who was later adopted as a protective god
in Buddhism. According to the oldest extant histories, the Kojiki
(Record of Ancient Matters) and the Nihon Shoki (Chronicles
of Japan), she was the chief deity and also the progenitor of
the imperial clan. In many of his writings, Nichiren Daishonin
views Tensho Daijin as a personification of the workings that
protect the prosperity of those people who have faith in the
Law. Top
- Butsumetsugo ni-sen ni-hyaku san-ju yo
nen no aida ichienbudai no uchi mizou no dai-mandara hari-Never
in 2,230-some years since the passing of the Buddha has this
great mandala appeared in the world. Top
- Dai Komoku-tenno (Great Heavenly King
Wide-Eyed): One of the Four Heavenly Kings. He lives halfway
down the western side of Mount Sumeru and protects the western
continent. With his divine eyesight, he is said to discern evil
and punish those who do evil deeds, and to arouse the aspiration
for attaining Buddhahood. Top
- June 13, 1720, cyclical sign kanoe-ne:
The date the original Gohonzon was transcribed by Nichikan
Shonin. Cyclical sign refers to one of sixty calendar signs,
which are based on the twelve animal signs of the Chinese zodiac
and the ten elements of nature according to old Chinese traditions.
Kanoe-ne means "Year of the Yang (element of) Metal
and the Rat" the thirty-seventh year of the sixty-year
calendar cycle. Top
The
Nichikan-Transcribed Gohonzon
On the Nichikan-transcribed Gohonzon, the ten worlds are represented
in two groups: the four noble worlds (Buddhahood, Bodhisattva,
Realization and Learning) and the six lower paths (Heaven, Humanity,
Anger, Animality, Hunger and Hell). On the Nichikan Gohonzon,
the four noble worlds are indicated by Shakyamuni
Buddha (No. 8) and Many Treasures Thus Come One
(No. 9), who both represent Buddhahood, and the four leaders of
the Bodhisattvas of the Earth-Bodhisattva Superior
Practices (No. 10), Bodhisattva Boundless Practices
(No. 11), Bodhisattva Firmly Established Practices
(No.6), and Bodhisattva Pure Practices (No.7).
The lower six worlds are represented by figures indicating Heaven,
Animality and Hunger. Heaven is indicated, for instance, by the
Four Great Heavenly Kings-Great Heavenly King Hearer
of Many Teachings (No.4), Great Heavenly King
Upholder of the Nation (No. 13), Great Heavenly
King Increase and Growth (No. 27), and Great
Heavenly King Wide-Eyed (No.33), and Great Heavenly
King Sun (No. 20), Great Heavenly King Moon
(No. 16), Great Heavenly King Stars (No.15)
and the Devil King of the Sixth Heaven (No.19).
Animality is indicated by Eight Great Dragon Kings
(No.22), and Hunger is indicated by Mother of Demon
Children (No. 25) and Ten Demon Daughters
(No.24). Top
Other
Characters
T'ien-t'ai (No. 26) and Dengyo
(No. 23) represent those who transmitted the true lineage of Buddhism
in the past. The native gods of India, Great Heavenly
King Indra (No. 17) and Great Heavenly King
Brahma (No.18), are incorporated into the Gohonzon as Buddhist
gods. So, too, are gods native to Japan-Sun Goddess
(No.31) and Great Bodhisattva Hachiman (No.28).
Two names are written in (medieval) ancient Indian Sanskrit,
or Siddham. They are the Buddhist deity Ragaraja
(No. 14), which represents the principle of "earthly desires
are enlightenment," and the Buddhist deity Achala
(No. 21), which represents the principle that "the sufferings
of birth and death are nirvana."
Also inscribed on the Gohonzon is a declaration by the Daishonin
that reads, "Never in the 2,230 years since
the passing of the Buddha has this great mandala appeared in the
world" (No. 32).
Demonstrating the law of causality on the Gohonzon are the two
Buddhist promises-"Those who make offerings
will gain good fortune surpassing the ten honorable titles
[of the Buddha]" (No. 5) and "Those who
vex and trouble [the practitioners of the Law will have their
heads split into seven pieces" (No. 12). Top
Arrangement
of the Gohonzon
The graphic arrangement of the Gohonzon is
based on the concept of the Ceremony in the Air depicted in the
Lotus Sutra. The eleventh or "Emergence
of the Treasure Tower" chapter depicts the appearance
of a magnificent tower: "At that time in the Buddha's presence
there was a tower adorned with the seven treasures, five hundred
yojana in height and two hundred and fifty yojana in
width and depth, that rose up out of the earth and stood suspended
in the air" (The
Lotus Sutra, p.170).
One yojana is said to be the distance
the royal army could march in a day. According to one interpretation,
500 yojana would be equal to the radius of the earth. The
Treasure Tower was closed when it first emerged, but Shakyamuni
opened it when Many Treasures Thus Come One, who appeared to validate
Shakyamuni's teachings, invited him to sit with him in it. This
is how the Ceremony in the Air begins.
Regarding the Treasure Tower, the second Soka Gakkai
president, Josei Toda, says: "Within our lives exists the
magnificent state of life beyond our comprehension called Buddhahood.
This state of life or its power defies our imagination; nor can
our words express it. However, we can concretely manifest this
state in our lives. To explain that our lives can manifest the
latent Buddha nature as a concrete reality is the ceremony depicted
in 'The Emergence of the Treasure Tower' chapter."
In other words, the appearance of the Treasure Tower
is a metaphor for the magnificent Buddha nature in our lives.
In the Lotus Sutra, the opening of the closed doors of the Treasure
Tower represents the transition from a theoretical explanation
of Buddhahood as a potential state to the actual manifestation
of the Buddha nature in each person.
On the Gohonzon, "Nam-myoho-renge-kyo-Nichiren"
corresponds to the Treasure Tower. Shakyamuni Buddha and Many
Treasures Thus Come One are seated in the tower facing the audience.
The rest of the bodhisattvas, deities and various beings are facing
these two Buddhas. In India, important persons are usually seated
to the right. That Shakyamuni is placed to the left of "Nam-myoho-renge-kyo"
as we face the Gohonzon and Bodhisattva Superior Practices (the
leader of the Bodhisattvas of the Earth) to the right means that
Shakyamuni is facing out from within the Treasure Tower and Bodhisattva
Superior Practices is facing him.
The Gohonzon diagram published along with this article
will help you see the position and meaning of each inscription
on the Nichikan-transcribed Gohonzon. It is hoped that explaining
the graphic components of the Gohonzon will make it easier for
you to sense the meaning of Nichiren Daishonin's message to all
humanity-that every individual is potentially a Buddha, that everyone
can attain Buddha-hood through faith in the Gohonzon.
We
can compare the graphic image of the Gohonzon to each of our lives.
Living in such a defiled age as the Latter Day of the Law, our
lives can be easily dominated by the lower life-conditions, such
as Anger or Animality-when this happens it is just like putting
those worlds in the center rather than Nam-myoho-renge-kyo.
Our lives are just like the Treasure Tower, but
they may be closed and buried deep in the earth of delusion. Our
challenge, therefore, is to bring the hidden Treasure Tower up
from within the soil of our fundamental darkness and open it,
establishing Nam-myoho-renge-kyo in the center of our lives and
illuminating our lower life-conditions-putting them in their proper
places.
What
makes this possible is the power of faith and practice for oneself
and others. It is our challenge to continue to practice to the
Gohonzon with firm faith in its message that we are innately endowed
with the supreme treasure. In this way, we can solidify Buddhahood
as the basis of our life-condition, as exemplified by the arrangement
of the Gohonzon.
Top
Footnotes:
- Mount Sumeru: A mountain thought to stand at
the center of the world, according to ancient Indian tradition.
It is said to measure 84,000 yojana above the surface of the
sea and 84,000 yojana below and to be composed of gold, silver,
emerald and crystal, with four sides facing north, south, east
and west, respectively. The god Taishaku resides on the summit,
while the Four Heavenly Kings live halfway down the four sides.
Mount Sumeru is surrounded by seven concentric mountain ranges
made of gold, between which are seven perfumed seas. The seventh
gold mountain range is surrounded by a salt ocean, in which
are the four continents of Purvavideha (Jp. Hotsubadai), Aparagodaniya
(Kuyani), Uttarakuru (Uttannotsu) and Jambudvipa (Embudai),
lying respectively to the east west north and south. It is said
that Buddhism spreads in Jambudvipa. The salt ocean is in turn
bounded by a circular range of iron mountains that stands at
the rim of the world. A sun and a moon move around Mount Sumeru.
- Tao-hsien: A priest of the T'ien-t'ai school in T'ang
China. He wrote the "Supplement to the Words and Phrases
of the Lotus Sutra" (Hokke Mongo Fusho Ki), a commentary
on Miao-lo's "Words and Phrases of the Lotus Sutra"
(Hokke Mongo Ki).
- Three properties: The three properties are: (1) the
property of the Law (Jp. hosshin), or the essential property
of the Buddha's life, which is the truth to which the Buddha
is enlightened; (2) the property of wisdom (Jp. hoshin),
or the spiritual property of the Buddha's life, which enables
the Buddha to perceive the truth; and (3) the property of action
Up ojin), or the physical property of the Buddha's life.
The property of action is the Buddha's body with which he carries
out compassionate actions to save people, or these actions themselves.
- Kuon ganjo: Time without beginning. Also called
the infinite past. The term kuon ganjo is used to indicate
an eternity without beginning, as opposed to the specific point
in time called gohyaku-jintengo, which is expounded in
the sixteenth chapter of the Lotus Sutra. Kuon ganjo suggests
a past far older than even the inconceivably distant gohyaku-jintengo,
but philosophically speaking, it indicates that dimension
that is outside the temporal framework, having neither beginning
nor end.
- Esoteric teachings: Those teachings that are revealed
secretly and are beyond the understanding of ordinary people.
According to the Shingon sect, the esoteric teachings are those
teachings that were preached by Dainichi (Skt. Mahavairochana)
Buddha to Kongosattva (Vajrasattva), who compiled them and sealed
them in an iron tower in southem India where they were later
transferred to Nagarjuna by Kongosutra.
Esoteric Buddhism is a form of Tantrism, which incorporates
indigenous magical and ritualistic elements such as symbolic
gestures (mudras), spells (mantras) and mystic
syllables (dharanis), as well as diagrams (mandalas)
and the worship of numerous deities.
- Twelve gods: Twelve kinds of gods said to protect the
world. They are the god of earth, the god of water, the god
of fire, the god of wind, Ishana who lives in the sixth, or
highest, heaven of the world of desire, Taishaku, Emma, Bonten,
Bishamon, the rakushasa (Jp. rasetsu) demons, the god
of the sun and the god of the moon.
- Eagle Peak: Sometimes called Vulture Peak. A mountain
located to the northeast of Rajagriha, the capital of Magadha
in ancient India, where Shakyamuni is said to have expounded
the Lotus Sutra and other teachings. According to the "Treatise
on the Sutra of the Perfection of Wisdom" (Jp. Daichido
Ron), Eagle Peak got its name because the summit is shaped
like an eagle and because it was inhabited by many eagles. The
expression Eagle Peak is also used to symbolize the Buddha
land or the state of Buddhahood.
- Saha world: This world, which is full
of sufferings. The Sanskrit word saha means endurance. It is
called this because people in this world must endure many sufferings
stemming from the three poisons-greed, anger and foolishness-and
other earthly desires.
- Three obstacles and four devils: A categorization of
the various obstacles and hindrances that trouble one's practice
of Buddhism. The three obstacles are: (1) The obstacle of earthly
desires, or obstacles arising from the three poisons of greed,
anger and foolishness. (2) The obstacle of karma, or obstacles
due to bad karma created by committing negative causes. This
category is also interpreted as opposition from one's wife or
children. (3) The obstacle of retribution, or obstacles due
to painful retribution for actions in the three evil paths (the
three lower of the ten worlds-Hell Hunger and Animality). This
category also indicates obstacles caused by one's sovereign,
parents or other persons who carry some sort of secular authority.
The four devils are: (1) The hindrance of the five components,
that is, those obstructions caused by one's physical and mental
functions. (2) The hindrance of earthly desires, or obstructions
arising from the three poisons. (3) The hindrance of death,
because the fear and suffering that death entails obstruct one's
practice of Buddhism. (4) The hindrance of the Devil of the
Sixth Heaven. This obstruction is usually said to take the form
of oppression by those in power.
In "Letter to the
Brothers," Nichiren Daishonin states.: "If you
propagate it, devils will arise without fail. Were it not for
these, there would be no way of knowing that this is the true
teaching.... [Quoting from the works of T'ien-t'ai] 'As practice
progresses and understanding grows, the three obstacles and
four devils emerge, vying with one another to interfere....
You should be neither influenced nor frightened by them. If
you are frightened by them, you will be prevented from practicing
true Buddhism.' This quotation not only applies to Nichiren
but also is the guide for his disciples. Reverently make this
teaching your own and transmit it as an axiom of faith to future
generations" (MW-1, p.145).
(A version of this article appeared in the August 29, 1997, World
Tribune.)
(Source: Living Buddhism 11/97)
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