Magazine Archives

March–April 2005, Volume 32

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Thousand Buddhas

From the Advisor’s Desk

Heeding the Voices in Our Hearts
by Kinzo Takemura

Reflections

Striving and Good Habits
by Nichiko Niwano

“All phenomena are constantly changing. Strive to practice my teachings diligently.” These are said to have been Shakyamuni Buddha’s last words. They indicate that recognizing impermanence and striving to advance spiritually are the keys to the practice of Buddhism. The following is a translation of a recent interview with Rev. Nichiko Niwano that originally appeared in Rissho Kosei-kai’s Japanese periodical Yakushin.

The Role of Faith in a Moral Life
by Nikkyo Niwano

The Stories of the Lotus Sutra

Bodhisattvas of the Earth
by Gene Reeves

Chapter 15 tells of the enormous number of bodhisattvas who sprang up out of the earth, whom the Buddha explains he himself has been teaching and leading from the most remote past.

Essays

Buddhist Ecological Ideas and Practices
by Wei Dedong

Buddhism itself is not ecology, but it contains extremely profound ecological ideas and practices. Their philosophical basis can be found in the teaching of “dependent origination.”

God and the Garden
by Kenneth J. Dale

In this essay, the author shares some of his musings and discoveries regarding the questions: Who is God? What is God? Where is God? How do we talk about God?

Meditation and Compassion in Action
by Bhikkhu Sanghasena

We must make meditation and compassion part of our daily lives, like our breathing. True compassion, true love is to serve others, to share all good things with others, to share the pain and sufferings of all fellow beings.

Gotama Buddha (71)

The Historicity of Gotama Buddha
by Hajime Nakamura

Buddhists in southern Asia and those in northern Asia disagree on the most likely dates for the Buddha’s birth and death. Scholars around the world still debate the issue, but seem agreed that he usually displayed warm affection for his followers.

Buddhist Living

Coming Home
by Carol J. Ewer

An American member of Rissho Kosei-kai describes how her introduction to Buddhist teachings and experience in hoza counseling sessions allowed her to confront the truth about her life.

Small Trips of Self-Discovery
by Etsu Sakamoto, Hiroe Terauchi, and Satoe Takahashi

Three members of Rissho Kosei-kai relate how their lives have changed through their participation in training sessions at the seminar house in Ome, a western suburb of Tokyo. Within the beauty of nature, various programs–sutra chanting, hoza, lectures on the Lotus Sutra, as well as forest conservation work–were conducted during the two- or three-day sessions. Since the Ome Seminar House was established in 1966, a large number of members, including many youths, have visited it, making friends with fellow participants, discovering their inner selves, and confirming the joy of having faith.

The Threefold Lotus Sutra: A Modern Commentary (81)

The Sutra of the Lotus Flower of the Wonderful Law
Chapter 9: Prediction of the Destiny of Arhats, Training and Trained
by Nikkyo Niwano