In the Sahassavagga section of the Dhammapada, Shakyamuni says:
“Better it is to live one day seeing the rise and
fall of things than to live a hundred years without ever seeing the rise and
fall of things.
… Better it is to live one day seeing the Supreme
Truth than to live a hundred years without ever seeing the Supreme Truth”
This comes from one of Shakyamuni’s earlier
teachings and while we know that Shakyamuni revealed his ultimate teaching in
The Lotus Sutra, we can also see that this earlier teaching contains universal
truths about awakening to the Mystic Law and the reality of all phenomena.
In fact from the teachings of the four noble truths and the eightfold path onwards, Shakyamuni was encouraging us to
understand the causes of our suffering and teaching us a path to happiness.
Since those early days, the Buddha taught many
different teachings in relation to the time and capabilities of the hearers,
and three key principles became established among future generations of buddhists
which were judged to guarantee the authenticity of a doctrine as a Buddhist
doctrine.
These three criteria, also known as the three Dharma
seals, were the concepts of impermanence, non-self and nirvana.
1 IMPERMANENCE (EVERYTHING CHANGES)
Everything is in a constant state of change. We are born.
We grow old. We get sick. We die.
Fruit ripens then spoils. The
movement of the sea erodes coastlines. A
movie star’s career rises or declines.
Fashions change. Companies go
bankrupt. We fall in love. We get married. We grow apart. We get divorced. Empires rise and fall.
Does
this mean that impermanence has to be a source of suffering? Not at all.
It may seem like a negative and pessimistic view of life, but it’s our failure
to understand impermanence that causes us suffering. Once we awaken to this universal truth we are
encouraged in two ways. Firstly, it allows you to make the most of every moment
during the good times. This could be an
opportunity to reconnect with a loved one you have lost touch with or to
cherish the person right in front of you.
Secondly, if you are going through bad times, impermanence gives you
hope that things will change for the better.
Nichiren’s famous words of encouragement in his
letter “Happiness in This World” are “Suffer what there is to suffer. Enjoy what there is to enjoy. Regard both
suffering and joy as facts of life, and continue chanting Nam-myoho-renge-kyo,
no matter what happens. How could this
be anything other than the boundless joy of the Law? Strengthen your power of faith more than
ever.” (WND1, p681)
His advice isn’t just to go with the flow of life
and to suffer and enjoy whatever life brings, but to “see” the impermance of all
phenomena and wake up to the true reality of our suffering and joy. Nichiren
is teaching us to use our faith and practice to make the most of every moment
of our life.
The Vietnamese Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh explains
that “The Buddha implored us not just to
talk about impermanence, but to use it as an instrument to help us penetrate
deeply into reality and obtain liberating insight. … Without impermanence, life
is not possible. How can we transform our suffering if things are not
impermanent? How can our daughter grow
up into a beautiful young lady? How can the situation in the world improve? We need impermanence for social justice and
for hope.”
2 NON-SELF (AN ETERNITY OF NON-INDEPENDENCE)
The concept of non-self is based on the view that
our present identity is not eternal, and even though we will be reborn with a
new identity based on our eternal entity’s accumulated causes and effects,
there is no eternal independent self that will continue life on another plane
of existence, such as the Christian concept of heaven or hell.
Also it’s impossible to live a life where we exist
independently from others and our environment, and we are constantly influencing,
and are influenced by, our environment and the people we come into contact
with, both directly and indirectly (through TV, literature, blogs, etc.).
3 NIRVANA (ETERNAL HAPPINESS)
When unenlightened our ignorance, greed and anger,
and our inability to clearly understand IMPERMANENCE and NON-SELF, leads us to
a life of suffering, but when we awaken to these realities that life, and even our
own identity, are changeable and that everything is connected, we can achieve the
highest state of calm and serenity – NIRVANA.
THE LOTUS SUTRA AND THE ONE
DHARMA SEAL
The SGI Dictionary of
Buddhism describes the THREE DHARMA SEALS “ as standards to
determine whether or not a sutra or a doctrine was valid” and continues that within Chinese Mahayana
Buddhism these three seals were seen as a concept of early Buddhism. “It established instead the one Dharma seal, which was the
principle of the ultimate reality, or the true aspect of all phenomena. The Dharma seal of the ultimate reality is based on
the Lotus Sutra, which sets forth this true aspect of all phenomena.”
2005 PEACE
PROPOSAL
Every year
since 1983 President Ikeda has written a Peace Proposal (see also For the Sake of Peace) with a Buddhist perspective on how to bring peace to society through committees,
treaties and dialogue.
In his
2005 Peace Proposal, ”Towards a New Era of Dialogue: Humanism Explored”, he summarised the Buddhist concept of these
three Dharma seals:
“The
impermanence of all phenomena (shogyo-mujo) explains that all things,
events and experiences can be understood as an unbroken continuity of change
and transformation. Because everything
changes, there is nothing that has a fixed, independent existence or substance
(shoho-muga). The enlightened
state realized through the fully developed capacity to discern this reality is
referred to as the tranquility of nirvana (nehan-jakujo).
This
describes the initial awakening achieved by Shakyamuni when he realized that
all things arise in the context of their interrelatedness; this is a world woven of the rich threads of
diversity, as all things exist in a web of interdependence, each serving as the
cause or connection by which all other things come into being.”
(Daisaku Ikeda, 2005 Peace Proposal, p5)
Most Buddhist schools claim they are following
Shakyamuni’s true intent through their own faith and practice of one or more of
his teachings, so Shakyamuni also gave a warning of who to trust in
the future…
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