Useful links mentioned in the video:
Five conditions for birth in the Pure Land of Amida Buddha
Orthodox Jodo Shinshu Buddhist Teachings. Official website of Amidaji organization.
I would ask these people to try using their own names, John,
Marc, Mary, etc, and see if they can attain birth in the Pure Land through them.
Of course, they can’t and the reason why is that theirs are empty names without
any power.
As the Nembutsu is the saying of Amida’s Name it belongs to Amida and is infused with His infinite merits and Power. This is why it works in bringing us to the Pure Land at the end of our physical bodies. So, it is extremely important that our saying of the Name should be an expression of faith in Amida, and NOT in our capacities to say it often or seldom.
Each of us has his/her own personal relation with Amida Buddha who saves us one by one, having us always in front of His compassionate eyes. We do not need to be heroes, have the same visions or recitation capacities like Masters of the past, but simply say the Nembutsu according to our personal conditions while keeping in mind that Amida did NOT impose a fixed number of recitations in order to be born in His Pure Land: “say my Name perhaps even ten times”. This expression “perhaps even ten times” means ANY NUMBER from one to ten or to hundreds, thousands and as many as we can.
Honen Shonin said:
“It is impossible to predict the length of our lives, and although we may live a long time, the past is in the end like a phantom dream.
Therefore, remember
that together we will enter the same Buddha-land of Amida Buddha. Upon the
lotus flower we will dispel memories of sadness in this defiled world of
suffering, we will reminiscence about our past karmic connections, and we will
vow to save and lead people to Enlightenment in the future. I shared the
importance of this with you when we first met.
Believe deeply in the
Primal Vow[1] of Amida Buddha; do
not doubt even for a moment that you will attain birth in the Pure Land; and
believe that with ten recitations of Namo Amida Butsu you will definitely
achieve birth in the Pure Land through the power of the Primal Vow, however
much negative karma you may have. Please focus on reciting Nembutsu.
“If we only put our
trust in Amida’s Primal Vow, there is no doubt whatever about our future
destiny, but what are we to do with the present world?’
‘Well, the thing to do is to make the Nembutsu practice the chief thing in life, and to lay aside everything that you think may interfere with it. If you cannot stay in one spot and do it, then do it when you are walking. If you cannot do it as a priest, then do it as a layman. If you cannot do it alone, then do it in the company of others. If you cannot do it and at the same time provide yourself with food and clothing, then accept the help of others and go on doing it. Or if you cannot get others to help you, then look after yourself but keep on doing it. Your wife and children and domestics are for this very purpose, of helping you to practice it, and if they prove an obstacle, you ought not to have any. Friends and property are good, if they too prove helpful, but if they prove a hindrance they should be given up. In short, there is nothing that may not help us to Ojo, so long as it helps us to go on the even tenor of our way through life undisturbed.’”[1]
Commentary:
The goal of Buddhism is not to attain happiness here and now which is actually impossible as samsara itself is the karmic effect of our own blind passions and ignorance. However, this doesn’t mean that we should neglect our basic needs. Amida devotees also eat, drink, seek shelter, comfort and good company, they get married, have children, property, etc. There is no problem with this. What Honen Shonin advised us is to use all the aspects of our life as support for the Nembutsu Path. The Primal Vow of Amida does not require asceticism, but only the Nembutsu of faith, so try to arrange your personal life in such a way that you be able to walk the Path of Nembutsu.
“When we say that the
Jodo (Pure Land) is superior to all other sects, and that the Nembutsu is
superior to all other religious disciplines, we mean that it provides salvation
for all classes of sentient beings. Of course, meditation upon the Absolute,
heart longing for perfect knowledge (Bodhi), the reading and reciting of the
Mahayana Sutras, the mystic practices of the Shingon, the meditation of the
Tendai, and so on, all belong to the Dharma of the Buddhas, reveal their
superiority, and tell us how to cross over the sea of birth and death. And yet
on the other hand, they are quite beyond the capacity of people living in these
later degenerate times. After the ten thousand years of these latter evil days
have passed, the average length of human life is to be shortened to ten years,
and many will degenerate so that they will be guilty of the ten evil deeds and
the five deadly sins, and yet the whole of them old and young, male and female,
all without exception, are included within the scope of that Primal Vow, and
are given the assurance that they will be cared for and never forsaken, if they
will but repeat the Nembutsu ten times, or even once. This is why we insist
that the Nembutsu quite outrivals all other sects and disciplines.”[1]
“Those who think that
it is only the Nembutsu of the pious and learned which can eventuate in Ojo (birth
in the Pure Land), and that there is no Ojo for the ignorant and unlettered and
those who go in sinning every day, even if they should say the Nembutsu, have
not yet grasped the fact that the Primal Vow includes both the good and the
bad.
It is impossible in
this life to change man’s nature, which he has inherited through the working of
his karma from a pre-existent state, just in the same way as it is impossible
for a woman in this life to be changed into a man, no matter how much she might
desire it. Those who call upon the sacred Name should do it with the nature
they now have, the wise man as a wise man, the fool as a fool, the pious as
pious, the irreligious as irreligious, and thus all equally may attain Ojo.
The editorial policy of this website is to present only the orthodox teachings of Jodo Shinshu Buddhism. Before I link to any other website, I investigate that website to make sure that they share the same attitude. I reject any website that presents false or divergent teachings, or that links to other websites that present false or divergent teachings.
(Rev Josho)