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Good Fortune in This Life
At the beginning of spring, I received your New Year's
greetings from your messenger. I also send you my heartfelt
best wishes. I have received your various gifts, including
seventy rice cakes, a bamboo container of sake, a horseload
of potatoes, one paper sack of dried seaweed, two bundles
of radishes and seven yams. These offerings demonstrate
your profound sincerity.
The eighth volume of the Lotus Sutra reads, "His wishes
shall not be in vain, and he will receive his reward of
good fortune in his present life." It also states,
"Truly he will have manifest reward in his present
life." The Great Teacher T'ien-t'ai says, "The
Son of Heaven utters not a single word in vain," and
"The words of the Dharma King contain no falsehood."
A wise ruler will never lie, even if it should bring about
his ruin. How much less would Shakyamuni Buddha ever speak
falsely! When he was King Fumyo [in a previous existence],
he returned to the palace of King Hanzoku [to be executed],
because he upheld the precept against lying. When he met
King Kali [in another past existence], he declared that
those people who speak but little of the truth or who tell
great lies will fall into hell. Moreover, the Lotus Sutra
is the sutra in which the Buddha himself declares, "[The
World-Honored One has long expounded his doctrines and]
now must reveal the truth," and, in addition, it was
expounded at the assembly where Taho Buddha and all the
other Buddhas of the ten directions had gathered like the
sun, the moon, and the countless stars all ranged side by
side. If there should be any falsehood in the Lotus Sutra,
what then can people believe in?
A person who offers even a flower or stick of incense to
so splendid a sutra has served ten billion Buddhas in his
previous existences. Moreover, in the Latter Day of the
Law of Shakyamuni Buddha, when the world is in chaos and
the ruler, his ministers and the common people all hate
the votary of the Lotus Sutra with one accord, so that he
must live like a fish in a small pond in a time of drought
or a deer stalked by a throng of hunters, one who visits
this votary will obtain far greater blessings than he would
acquire by serving the living Shakyamuni Buddha with his
mind, mouth and body for the space of an entire kalpa. All
this is clear from the Buddha's golden words.
The sun is bright and the moon, luminous. The words of
the Lotus Sutra are also bright and luminous, luminous and
bright, like the reflection of a person's face in a polished
mirror or the image of the moon on the surface of clear
water. This being the case, could the Buddha's decree, "He
will receive his reward of good fortune in his present life,"
or his edict, "Truly he will have manifest reward in
his present life," possibly be false for you, Nanjo
Shichiro Jiro, alone? The Buddha declared that even in an
age when the sun should rise in the west or even in a time
when the moon should emerge from the ground, his words would
never prove false. Judging from this, there cannot be the
least doubt that the spirit of your late father is now in
the presence of Lord Shakyamuni, and that you yourself will
receive great blessings in this life. How wonderful, how
splendid!
Nichiren
The nineteenth day of the first month of the second year
of Kenji (1276)
Major Writings of Nichiren Daishonin, Vol. 5, page
185.
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