"It is impossible to live in the world without attachments, or indeed to
eradicate them. Our affections for others, the desire to succeed in our
endeavors, our interests and passions, our love of life itself--all of
these are attachments and potential sources of disappointment or
suffering, but they are the substance of our humanity and the elements
of engaged and fulfilled lives."
Buddhism is a teaching of liberation, aimed at freeing people from
the inevitable sufferings of life. To this end, early Buddhist teachings
focused on the impermanence of all things. The Buddha realized that
nothing in this world stays the same; everything is in a constant state
of change. Pleasurable conditions, favorable circumstances, our
relationships with those we hold dear, our health and well-being--any
sense of comfort and security we derive from these things is continually
threatened by life's flux and uncertainty, and ultimately by death, the
most profound change of all.
The Buddha saw that people's ignorance of the nature of change was
the cause of suffering. We desire to hold on to what we value, and we
suffer when life's inevitable process of change separates us from those
things. Liberation from suffering comes, he taught, when we are able to
sever our attachments to the transient things of this world.
Buddhist practice, in this perspective, is oriented away from the
world: life is suffering, the world is a place of uncertainty;
liberation lies in freeing oneself from attachment to worldly things and
concerns, attaining a transcendent enlightenment.
The Lotus Sutra, upon which Nichiren Buddhism is based, is
revolutionary in that it reverses this orientation, overturning the
basic premises of the Buddha's earlier teachings and focusing people's
attention instead on the infinite possibilities of life and the joy of
living in the world.
Where other teachings had regarded enlightenment, or the final
liberation of Buddhahood, as a goal to be attained at some future point
in time, in the teachings of the Lotus Sutra each person is inherently
and originally a Buddha. Through Buddhist practice we develop our
enlightened qualities and exercise them in the world here and now for
the sake of others and for the purpose of positively transforming
society. The true nature of our lives at this moment is one of expansive
freedom and possibility.
This dramatic reorientation effected by the Lotus Sutra is distilled
in the key and seemingly paradoxical concepts of Nichiren Buddhism that
"earthly desires are enlightenment" and "the sufferings of birth and
death are nirvana." The image of the pure lotus flower blossoming in the
muddy swamp is a metaphor that encapsulates this perspective--freedom,
liberation, enlightenment are forged and expressed in the very midst of
the murky swamp of life with its problems, pains and contradictions.
It is impossible to live in the world without attachments, or indeed
to eradicate them. Our affections for others, the desire to succeed in
our endeavors, our interests and passions, our love of life itself--all
of these are attachments and potential sources of disappointment or
suffering, but they are the substance of our humanity and the elements
of engaged and fulfilled lives.
The challenge is not to rid oneself of attachments but, in the words
of Nichiren, to become enlightened concerning them. The teachings of
Nichiren thus stress the transformation, rather than the elimination, of
desire. Desires and attachments fuel the quest for enlightenment. As he
wrote: "Now Nichiren and others who chant Nam-myoho-renge-kyo . . .
burn the firewood of earthly desires and behold the fire of enlightened
wisdom..."
In their proper perspective--when we can see them clearly and master
them rather than being mastered by them--desires and attachments enable
us to lead interesting and significant lives. As SGI President Daisaku
Ikeda says, "Our Buddhist practice enables us to discern their true
nature and utilize them as the driving force to become happy."
It is our small ego, our "lesser self," that makes us slaves to our
desires and causes us to suffer. Buddhist practice enables us to break
out of the shell of our lesser self and awaken to the "greater self" of
our inherent Buddha nature.
This expanded sense of self is based on a clear awareness of the
interconnected fabric of life which we are part of and which sustains
us. When awakened to the reality of our relatedness to all life, we can
overcome the fear of change and experience the deeper continuities
beyond and beneath the ceaseless flow of change.
The basic character of our greater self is compassion. Ultimate
freedom is experienced when we develop the ability to channel the full
energy of our attachments into compassionate concern and action on
behalf of others.
Source: http://www.sgi.org/buddhism/buddhist-concepts/attachments-and-liberation.html
This explanation is an example of why I believe that Nichiren's teachings give more hope for the victory of the human race than any other teaching. The sheer intelligence of it and the irrefutable good sense are penetrating.
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