It is
very important to understand that a Buddha like Amida is not an abstract concept, nor a symbol or metaphor, but a living Buddha who has a transcendent
body with multiple manifestations for the sake of sentient beings. This body
and His Pure Land are the result of His vows which, upon His Enlightenment,
were fulfilled and transformed into useful tools for delivering sentient
beings.
It is a
grave mistake to speak about Amida Buddha only in terms of his ultimate reality
beyond form (Dharmakaya as suchness) and forget his transcendent manifestation
(Sambhogakaya or Dharmakaya as compassionate means[1])
in form and Name, because without the form and Name of Amida there would be no
possibility for us, sentient beings, to attain Buddhahood. We simply cannot
have access to ultimate Dharmakaya or Buddha nature just like that, as we are in this present life and with this very body. So we need a transcendent
bridge from this world of birth and death (Samsara) to Buddhahood. This
transcendent bridge is Amida Buddha and His Pure Land. We first entrust in
Amida Buddha as an Enlightened Person, go in His Pure Land after death and
there we become Buddhas ourselves.
As long as one is unenlightened, one cannot have faith in the
Dharmakaya as suchness or ultimate Buddha nature. In Dharmakaya as suchness one
can only dwell when he becomes a Buddha himself because in that state there is
a transcendence of any duality. This is what those who deny the reality of Amida
in His transcendental form and of His Pure Land, do not understand.
Only in Amida Buddha with a form and Name, that is, in Amida as described in the Larger Sutra, can one have true faith. Shinran Shonin
also talked about Amida in ultimate terms but he encouraged people to entrust
themselves to Amida as described in the Larger Sutra whose story told
there he fully accepted.
[1] We cannot understand ‘Dharmakaya as suchness’
but ‘Dharmakaya as compassionate means’ makes himself known in Light and Name.
Dharmakaya as compassionate means is still Dharmakaya, but Dharmakaya in action
for the sake of sentient beings.
Thank you for this, Sensei! Learning of Dharmakaya as both suchness and compassionate means aspects is of enormous aid to me in my journey to shinjin! *Gassho*
ReplyDelete