Zero
faith in one’s own power or personal merits, and total faith in the Power of
Amida Buddha will naturally make one humble, while teaching and promoting the
idea that a samsaric deluded person can have true merits will inevitably lead to subtle
spiritual arrogance. This is the very reason that the border land is sometimes called
the Realm of Indolence and Pride (Keman)[2].
Unfortunately, very few pay attention to the meaning of this title and the
words of Amida Buddha himself in His Primal Vow, “entrust yourself to me and
say my Name perhaps even ten times”. Saying of the Name is linked with faith in
Amida, and NOT in our capacity to say it many times with a focused mind, or in
our personal merits, etc.
I know Jodo Shinshu is still not so well known in the Buddhist world and the paradigm of “zero self-power/total Other Power” is hard to understand by many followers of various other schools with more public success in the West, but that does not mean we do not have the right to criticize the very much spread propaganda of reliance on “personal power”. Buddhist history is filled with monks of various schools contradicting each other in treatises and discussions, so we should, after all, simply agree to disagree on this and other topics. Our single goal is to awake as many beings as possible to the Infinite Power and Compassion of Amida Buddha who created a Path where even the village idiot, the evil and those with a distracted mind are assured of birth in the Pure Land.
We
wish that ordinary people filled with blind passions no longer think that
Buddhism is only for the nice, “virtuous” and smiling spiritual elites who are
always focused and “pure”, but answer imemdiately to Amida's Compassionate Call that
does not discriminate anyone.
Shinran Shonin said,
"Know that the Primal Vow of Amida makes no distinction between people young and old, good and evil; only shinjin (faith) is essential. For it is the Vow to save the person whose karmic evil is deep and grave and whose blind passions abound." [3]
"The power of the Vow is
without limit;
Thus, even our karmic evil, deep and heavy, is not oppressive.
The Buddha's wisdom is without bounds;
Thus, even those of distracted minds and self-indulgence are not
abandoned".[4]
Honen Shonin also said,
"The
heinous will be saved and the venal embraced by Amida Buddha; the bad will be
saved and the good embraced; those who will live far will be saved and those
who live near embraced; those who live long after Buddha Shakyamuni's entrance
into Parinirvana will be saved and those who lived shortly after, embraced. The
profundity and extensiveness of the great compassionate Primal Vow are beyond
verbal description. Believe in it in the depth of your heart and validate the
truth within yourself." [5]
Useful links related with this video,
The Name of Amida Buddha is the Great Practice
Elements of genuine faith: 7) To say the Name of Amida Buddha
The meaning of “no working is true working” in relation with our birth in the Pure Land
The difference between those born in the Pure Land in the embryonic form and those born by transformation – commentary on sections 43, 44 and 45 of the Larger Sutra False (mundane) merits vs True (supramundane) merits
Faith in Amida Buddha is not the creation of our mind
Again on the idea that faith in Amida comes from Amida - very simple explanations
Shinran – a manifestation of Amida Buddha and Avalokitesvara We do not rely on personal vows but on Amida's Primal Vow
[2] It is thus called because those born there are too proud to believe in the Buddha’s Primal Vow whole-heartedly, and due to the lack of faith they are not so dilligent as to advance to the True Land of Recompense. cf with Tannisho – Notes Lamenting Differences, Ryukoku Translation Series, Ryukoku University, Kyoto, 1962, p. 41, fn 1.
[3] Shinran Shonin, Tannisho, chapter I, The Collected Works of Shinran, Shin Buddhism Translation Series, Jodo Shinshu Hongwanji-ha, Kyoto, 1997, p.661
[4] Shinran Shonin, Hymns of the Dharma Ages (Shozomatsu Wasan), The Collected Works of Shinran, Shin Buddhism Translation Series, Jodo Shinshu Hongwanji-ha, Kyoto, 1997, p.408
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