Letters
Lamp for the Latter Ages
2 Response to an Inquiry
from the Nembutsu People of Kasama
According to Shin Buddhism, there are two kinds of people
who seek birth in the Pure Land: those of Other Power and
those of self-power. This has been taught by the Indian masters
and Pure Land teachers.
Self-power is the effort to attain birth, whether by invoking
the names of Buddhas other than Amida and practicing good
acts other than the nembutsu, in accordance with your particular
circumstances and opportunities; or by endeavoring to make
yourself worthy through mending the confusion in your acts,
words, and thoughts, confident of your own powers and guided
by your own calculation.
Other Power is the entrusting of yourself to the Eighteenth
among Amida Tathagata's Vows, the Primal Vow of birth through
the nembutsu, which Amida selected and adopted from among
all other practices. Since this is the Vow of Tathagata, Honen
said: "In Other Power, no working is true working."
"Working" [that is negated] is a term connoting
calculation. Since the calculation of the person seeking birth
is self-power, it is "working." Other Power is entrusting
ourselves to the Primal Vow and our birth becoming firmly
settled; hence it is altogether without one's own working.
Thus, on the one hand, you should not be anxious that Tathagata
will not receive you because you do wrong. A foolish being
is by nature possessed of blind passions, so you must recognize
yourself as a being of karmic evil. On the other hand, you
should not think that you deserve to attain birth because
you are good. You cannot be born into the true and real fulfilled
land through such self-power calculation. I have been taught
that with shinjin of self-power a person can attain birth
only in the realm of indolence, the borderland, the womb-palace,
or the city of doubt.
Through the fulfillment of the Eighteenth Primal Vow, Bodhisattva
Dharmakara has become Amida Tathagata, and the benefit that
surpasses conceptual understanding has come to transcend all
bounds; to express this, Bodhisattva Vasubandhu uses the words,
"Tathagata of unhindered light filling the ten quarters."
Truly know, therefore, that without any differentiation between
people good and bad, and regardless of one's having a heart
of blind passions, all beings are certain to attain birth.
Describing the manner of entrusting in the nembutsu of the
Primal Vow, Genshin, Master of Eshin-in, states in his Essentials
for Attaining Birth: "It makes no difference whether
you are walking, standing still, sitting, or reclining, nor
is there a choice to be made among times, places, or other
circumstances." He affirms beyond question that the person
who has attained true shinjin has been grasped by the compassionate
light. And so, Sakyamuni has taught, at the very moment that
we, possessed of ignorance and blind passions, are born into
the Pure Land of peace, we attain the supreme fruit of Buddhahood.
Yet, it is very rare that people of this corrupt world of
the five defilements embrace the teaching of the one Buddha,
Sakyamuni, alone, and for this reason al the Buddhas throughout
the ten quarters, countless as the sands of the Ganges, have
become witnesses to the attainment of birth through the nembutsu
that embodies Amida's Primal Vow; this Master Shan-tao has
written in his commentary. He explains that Sakyamuni, Amida,
and the Buddhas of the ten quarters, all with the same mind,
are no more apart from sentient beings of the nembutsu than
shadows from things. Hence it is that Sakyamuni rejoices in
persons of shinjin, saying, "They are my true companions."
Persons of shinjin are the true disciples of the Buddha; they
are the ones who abide in right-mindedness. Since they have
been grasped never to be abandoned, they are said to have
attained the diamondlike mind. They are called "the best
among the best," "excellent persons" "wondrous,
excellent persons," "the very finest persons,"
"rare persons." Such people have become established
in the stage of the truly settled and are declared, therefore,
to be the equal of Maitreya Buddha. This means that since
they have realized true shinjin, they will necessarily be
born in the true and real fulfilled land. You should know
that this shinjin is bestowed through the compassionate means
of Sakyamuni, Amida, and all the Buddhas in the quarters.
Therefore you should not disparage the teachings of other
Buddhas or the people who perform good acts other than nembutsu.
Neither should you despise those who scorn and slander people
of nembutsu; rather, you should have compassion and care for
them. This was Honen's teaching.
Respectfully.
The depth of the Buddha's benevolence is such that even with
birth in the realm of indolence and pride, the borderland,
the city of doubt or the womb-palace, which is brought about
only through the compassion revealed in Amida's Nineteenth
and Twentieth Vows, we meet with a happiness that surpasses
understanding. Thus the depth of the Buddha's benevolence
is without bound. But how much more should we realize the
benevolence of the Buddha with birth into the true and real
fulfilled land and attainment of the enlightenment of the
supreme nirvana. This is not a matter that Shoshin-bo or I
have decided ourselves. Not in any way at all.
Kencho 7 [1255], Tenth month, 3rd day
Gutoku Shinran
Written at age 83
[It is said that this letter was copied
from Shinran Shonin's own draft, found among the remains of
the venerable Shoshin-bo and circulated among the followers.]

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