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March 07,
1997
Know the Difference (No.
1): Two Different Religions
By Craig Green & Jeff Farr
Los Angeles
New members joining the youth division today may not
know about the temple issue — even though simply
by joining they are becoming, retroactively, “excommunicated”
Buddhists. Whether we are new members or not, we owe
it to ourselves to periodically reexamine the basics
of the temple issue, its history and the questions it
raises, which is what this series will do.
At first, studying the temple issue may seem to have
little to do with us. To the many SGI members who have
studied the six-year-old conflict, though, it?s been
a great clarification process. Learning through the
Nikken sect?s example what Nichiren Daishonin?s Buddhism
is not, what this Buddhism is becomes much clearer.
What could have more to do with our lives as Buddhists?
Nichiren Daishonin taught that any person can attain
enlightenment through his or her efforts, just as Shakyamuni
did in ancient India. In fact, in “The Izu Exile,”
Nichiren writes that “the Lord Shakyamuni...is
none other than each of us” (Letters of Nichiren,
p. 409).
Nichiren?s Buddhism promotes a brand of humanism that
insists each of us has the tremendous self-sufficiency
of Buddhahood inside. This idea, however, the Nikken
sect has rejected, stating on many occasions that an
intermediary — the priest — is necessary
between us and the Mystic Law.
Since 1991 the SGI and the Nikken sect have gone in
different directions, teaching two different philosophies.
Obviously, as SGI members, it?s important for us to
be clear on the difference.
No. 1 in a series
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