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A Father Takes Faith
As I had not heard from you in a long time, I was feeling
quite anxious. But nothing could be more wonderful than
this matter of Tayu-no-sakan and yourself. It is indeed
marvelous!
It is the usual way of things that when the latter age
begins, sages and worthy men all vanish, and only slanderers,
flatterers, smiling backstabbers and those of crooked principles
fill the land. So we read in the sutras. To illustrate,
as the water dries up, [fish in] the pond will be disturbed,
and when the wind blows, the sea will not remain calm. We
also read that in the latter age, because droughts, epidemics
and great rains and winds come in succession, even the large-hearted
become narrow, and even those who seek the Way lapse into
erroneous views. This being the case, the sutras tell us,
father and mother, husband and wife, and elder brother and
younger brother will be pitted against one another, like
a hunter and a deer, a cat and a mouse, or a hawk and a
pheasant--to say nothing of quarrels among strangers. Ryokan
and other priests, inspired by devils, deceived your father
Saemon-no-tayu and attempted to destroy the two of you,
but you yourself proved to be wise and heeded my admonition.
Therefore, just as two wheels support a cart or two legs
carry a person, as two wings enable a bird to fly or as
the sun and moon aid all living beings, the efforts of you
two brothers have led your father to take faith in the Lotus
Sutra. It is solely on account of you, Hyoe-no-sakan, that
matters have worked out in this way.
According to the teachings of the true sutra, when the
world enters the latter age and Buddhism falls into complete
disorder, a great sage will appear in the world. For example,
the pine tree, which withstands the frost, is called the
monarch of trees, and the chrysanthemum, which continues
to bloom after other plants have withered, is known as a
sacred plant. When the world is at peace, worthy men do
not become apparent, but when the age is in turmoil, both
sages and fools are revealed for what they are. How pitiful
the Hei no Saemon and the lord of Sagami failed to heed
me, Nichiren! If they had, they would surely not have beheaded
the envoys from the Mongol nation who arrived before last
year. No doubt they regret it now.
The eighty-first sovereign, the great ruler known as Emperor
Antoku, commissioned several hundred Shingon teachers, including
the Tendai chief priest Myoun, to offer prayers in an attempt
to subdue Minamoto no Yoritomo, the general of the right.
But their curses "returned to their originators,"
as the sutra says. Myoun was beheaded by Yoshinaka, and
Emperor Antoku was drowned in the western sea. The eighty-second,
eighty-third and eighty-fourth sovereigns, the tonsured
Retired Emperor of Oki, the Retired Emperor of Awa and the
Retired Emperor of Sado, as well as the reigning emperor--these
four rulers had the Tendai chief priest and Administrator
of Monks Jien, as well as more than forty other eminent
monks, including the Omuro and others of the Mii-dera, offer
prayers to subdue the Taira general Yoshitoki. But again,
the curses "returned to their originators," and
these four rulers were banished to remote islands.
Concerning this great evil teaching [of Shingon]: The three
Great Teachers--Kobo, Jikaku and Chisho--repudiated Shakyamuni's
golden words that designate the Lotus Sutra as supreme,
reading them to mean that the Lotus Sutra ranks second or
third and that the Dainichi Sutra is the highest.
Because the above-mentioned emperors placed their trust
in these distorted views, they destroyed both the nation
and themselves in this life and fell into the hell of incessant
suffering in the next.
This next special prayer ritual will be the third. Among
my disciples, those who have passed away are probably now
observing this with the Buddha's eye. And you who have been
spared, watch with your mortal eyes! The ruler and other
high-ranking officials will be carried off to a foreign
country, and those people who conducted the prayer ritual
will die insane, or flee to other provinces, or hide themselves
in the mountains and forests. The messenger of the Lord
Buddha Shakyamuni has twice been paraded through the street,
and his disciples have been thrown into prison, killed,
injured or driven from the provinces where they were living.
Therefore, the guilt of those offenses will surely extend
to each inhabitant of those provinces. For example, many
will be afflicted with white leprosy, black leprosy or all
manner of other terribly grave illnesses. My disciples should
understand this matter thoroughly.
With my deep respect,
Nichiren
The ninth day of the ninth month
This letter is specifically intended for Hyoe-no-Sakan.
It should also be shown to all my disciples in general.
Do not disclose its contents to others.
Major Writings of Nichiren Daishonin, Vol. 6, page
239.
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