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Pure Land Buddhism

This thread will be a series of excerpts from the many books now published on Pure Land Buddhism.

This from "The Shin Buddhist Classical Tradition". The words refer to the recitation of the Nembutsu ( i.e. Namu-Amida-Butsu). In my own life, over about 20 years, the words have slowly morphed into "Thank You" and those words themselves into an instinctive gratitude towards all experience as it unfolds in each moment of time.

Shinran (Japan, 13th century) was one of the "fathers" of Pure Land Buddhism. Shin Buddhism is simply another name used.

[i]Shinran declared that the nembutsu was neither a practice nor a good deed. He rejected the meritorious character of nembutsu recitation. It was not a monastic-meditation practice such as monks might use to gain enlightenment, nor was it a good deed which lay people might employ to gain merits for birth in the Pure Land, or worldly benefits such as health, wealth, or spiritual protection. It was not a mantra to dispel disasters or ward off evil as practiced in other sects. While many earlier teachers are recorded as reciting nembutsu as many as 70,000 times a day as a badge of their virtue, there is no record of Shinran’s reciting it in that manner. There is no set time or number for reciting. For him the only reason to recite it is to express gratitude for the deliverance we have already been assured.[/i]
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SW-User
From Rennyo, a Pure Land devotee (15th century Japan) :-

[i]Faith does not arise

Within oneself.

The Entrusting Heart is itself

Given by the Other Power.[/i]

And of "Other Power" (Japanese [i]tariki[/i]) here is a short extract from the book "Tariki: Embracing Despair, Discovering Peace." by Hiroyuki Itsuki. Mr Itsuki knew terrible suffering in his life, very early on, as a child, a refugee, his whole family in fear of their lives. His words are not born of good fortune.

[i]The Other Power (Tariki) derives from the true and full acceptance of the reality that is within us and surrounds us. It is not a philosophy of passivity or iresponsibility, but one of radical spiritual activity, of personal, existential revolution. Its essence is the spontaneous wondrous force that gives us the will to act, to "do what man can do and then wait for heaven's will." Importantly, Other Power is a power that flows from the fundamental realization that, in the lives we live, we are already enlightened. This enlightenment does not come easily. It is born of the unwelcome understanding that, despite our protestations, we are insignificant, imperfect beings, born to a hell of suffering that defines human existence. But in this hell, we sometimes excounter small joys, friendship, the kind acts of strangers, and the miracle of love. We experience moments when we are filled with courage, when the world sparkles with hopes and dreams. There are even times when we are deeply grateful to have been born. These moments are paradise. But paradise is not another realm; it is here, in the very midst of the hell of this world. Other Power, a power that transcends theological distinctions, avails us of these moments. In the endless uncertainties of contemporary life, Other Power confers upon us a flexibility of spirit, an energy to feel joy, and the respite of peace.[/i]

One thing in this book that has always stayed with me was a passage where the author spoke of his father. Of how he had often come in at night and removed his shoes as he sat on the bed - this with a deep sigh. His father had always sought to "improve" himself, to "get on" in life. But the sigh.........

Hiroyuki Itsuki wrote that though he had read many deep books of philosophy, it was his father's sigh that had taught him so much more.

I think that we are learning all the time, surrendering to Grace.