THE ESOTERIC MEANING OF 'AMIDA'
AMIDA HISHAKU
BY KAKUBAN
An annotated translation with introduction
by Hisao Inagaki
(First published in the Kogyo Daishi Kakuban
kenkyu, 1992)
INTRODUCTION
Kakuban, popularly known as Mitsugon Sonja
(Venerable Mystic Glorification), was born
in Fujitsu-no-sho, Hizen Province (near the
present Kagoshima City), on the 17th of the
6th month, 1095. His father Isa-no-Heiji
Kanemoto was a high officer in charge of
a manor belonging to the Ninnaji temple,
and his mother came from the Tachibana family.
Born as the third of four sons, he was called
Yachitose-maro.
According to the Genko-shakusho, one day when Kakuban was eight years old,
a messenger of the provincial governor came
to see his father to press him for payment
of taxes. The messenger's attitude was rude,
and the boy's father was hiding behind the
screen. The boy was shocked and asked the
monk who was staying at his house, "Who
was that messenger?" and "Who is
the highest authority in Japan?" After
learning that the emperor was the highest
person, he further asked the monk if there
was someone superior to the emperor. The
monk replied that the Buddha was the supreme
authority. This incident prompted him to
decide to become a Buddhist; whereupon he
himself burned incense as an offering to
the Buddha.
His father died when Kakuban was ten, and
in 1107, at the age of 13, he went to Kyoto
and became a disciple of Kanjo, the founder
of the Joju-in Hall and a well-known esoteric
adept. In the following year, he went to
Nara to study the Kusha and Hosso teachings
under Keigyo at the Kofukuji. In 1110 he
returned to the Joju-in and received the
ordination of a novice from Kanjo and was
given the name Shogaku-bo Kakuban - "Enlightened
VAM" (VAM is the mystic syllable of
Mahavairocana in the Vajra-realm Mandala).
After the ordination, Kanjo sent him to Nara
again - this time to the Todaiji to learn
the Sanron and Kegon Teachings. While studying
in Nara, Kakuban had a dream in which a Shinto
god urged him to go up to Mt. Koya. So he
once again returned to the Ninnaji and began
the preparatory practice for becoming an
acarya.
In 1114, at the age of 20 Kakuban received
the full ordination of a monk at the Todaiji,
Nara, and then went up Mt. Koya, where he
was greeted by a Nembutsu sage, Shoren of
the Ojo-in. Being a devout aspirant to Amida's
Pure Land, Shoren undoubtedly had a great
influence on Kakuban. Kakuban learned many
ritual practices under Meijaku, who was also
known as an aspirant to the Pure Land through
the Shingon Nembutsu. Under Meijaku's guidance,
Kakuban particularly practiced the ritual
called "Kokuzo gumonjiho," dedicated
to Kokuzo (Akashagarbha) Bodhisattva. During
his stay on Mt. Koya, until he was 27 of
age, he also received the Dharma-transmission
abhiseka (Denbo kanjo) as many as eight times.
In 1121 Kakuban received from Kanjo of the
Ninnaji the abhiseka of the two Mandalas,
the Realm of Matrix-store and the Realm of
Vajra. Later he tried again and again to
master the Kokuzo gumonjiho ritual, until
at the ninth attempt in 1123 he attained
the transcendent state, and thus spiritual
awakening dawned in his mind.
In 1125 Kakuban is said to have written the
Koyoshu, 3 fascicles, explaining the way
of birth in Amida's Land, and sent it to
his mother. In the following year, he wished
to build a hall on Mt. Koya to revive the
lecture-meeting of transmission of the Dharma,
called "Denbo-e", which was originated
by Kukai for the promotion of studies in
esoteric Buddhism. Coincidentally, a large
estate in Wakayama was donated to him, so
he invoked Shinto gods and built there a
shrine to guard the Denbo-in which was to
be built on Mt. Koya. Later the Negoroji
was built on this site. In 1130 Kakuban received
the patronage of the Ex-emperor Toba and
his sanction to build the Denbo-in on Mt.
Koya. Since that temple proved to be too
small, in 1131 he built the Daidenbo-in temple
(Great Denbo-in). Thus he succeeded in establishing
a center for the study and practice of Shingon.
Kakuban's next effort was to rehabilitate
the Shingon rituals. At that time, there
were two traditions of rituals in the Tomitsu
(the esoteric Buddhism of Shingon as opposed
to that of Tendai): the Ono and Hirosawa
schools, each divided into sub-schools. Besides
those, on Mt. Koya another school, called
"Chuin," was founded by Meizan
(1021-1106). Kakuban sought to unify them
all by establishing the Denbo-in school.
In 1134, an imperial decree was issued to
designate the Daidenbo-in and the Mitsugon-in,
the latter constructed as Kakuban's residence,
as temples for offering up prayers for the
emperor, and Kakuban was nominated as the
first zasu of the Daidenbo-in. Monks of the
Kongobuji, the head temple of Mt. Koya, became
angry and tried to expel Kakuban, but an
Ex-emperor's decree ruled that those monks
be punished. Later that year, Kakuban was
additionally appointed zasu of the Kongobuji.
Until that time, the zasu of the Toji temple
in Kyoto had also been the zasu of the Kongobuji,
and so Mt. Koya had been effectively under
the jurisdiction of Toji. Worried about further
incurring the wrath of those monks who had
already sought his expulsion, Kakuban finally
resigned as zasu of both temples and retired
to the Mitsugon-in.
Nevertheless, the antipathy of the Kongobuji
monks against Kakuban was aggravated. They
even took to arms and attempted to kill him.
Kakuban, however, remained in the Mitsugon-in
and began a discipline of silence for a thousand
days. In 1139, the armed monks destroyed
the Denbo-in and its sub-temples, numbering
more than eighty. Kakuban fled to Negoro
in Wakayama, never to return to Mt. Koya
again. He spent the rest of his life there
teaching students and writing books. In 1143
when he was 49 years of age, he became ill,
and later that year he passed away while
sitting in the lotus posture, making the
appropriate mudra, and facing towards Mahavairocana's
Pure Land. He was given the posthumous title
Kogyo Daishi (the Master who Revived the
Teaching) by Emperor Higashiyama in 1690.
Reconciliation and conflict ensued between
the Kongobuji and the Negoroji, lasting for
more than a hundred years. The great master
Raiyu (1226-1304) finally moved the Daidenbo-in
and the Mitsugon-in to Negoro in 1288, and
declared the independence of the new school,
called Shingi Shingon.
Kakuban's life-work can be summarized under
the following four headings:
(1) Reviving the denbo-e lecture-meetings
to promote the study of the Shingon teachings;
(2) Founding the Denbo-in school to unify
various traditions of Shingon ritualism;
(3) Independence of the Kongobuji from the
jurisdiction of the Toji;
(4) Founding a new school of thought and
practice uniting Shingon esotericism and
the Nembutsu, called 'Shingon Nembutsu' or
'Himitsu Nembutsu.'
Kakuban's literary works, amounting to more
than 150, show the depth and scope of his
scholarship grounded in his dedication to
and his mystic experience of Shingon esotericism.
Above all, he made a great contribution to
the transmission of Kukai's teachings by
elaborating his theories of "attaining
Buddhahood with one's present body"
(sokushin jobutsu), "the Dharmakaya's exposition of the
Dharma" (hosshin seppo), "the ten spiritual stages" (jujushin),
and so on. Based on his practice and personal
experience, Kakuban also wrote a number of
manuals of ritual performance, especially
on the rite for increasing memory, dedicated
to Akashagarbha (Kokuzo gumonjiho), contemplation of the Sanskrit syllable
"A" (ajikan), and contemplation of the moon-disc (gachirinkan). His devotion to the rite for Akashagarbha
is worthy of our special notice, for through
the successful performance of this practice,
he is said to have attained a spiritual awakening
similar to the realization of Buddhahood
with one's present body.
Kakuban is generally credited with having
started the tradition of the esoteric Nembutsu,
but there were some predecessors. From the
middle of the Heian period, especially after
Genshin (942-1017) published his famous Ojoyoshu,
Amida worship became very popular on Mt.
Hiei and elsewhere. In Shingon, too, the
contemplative and oral practice of the Nembutsu
became popular. Saisen (1025°1115) of the
Ninnaji wrote some works on Pure Land Buddhism.
Jitsuhan (1089-1144) of Konponjodo-in, Nakagawa,
Nara, who founded the Nakagawa ritual school
of Shingon, practiced the Nembutsu of the
Pure Land school in his later years and recommended
it to his followers; he wrote among other
works the Jodo-ojoron.
From about the end of the 10th century, kanjin-hijiri, who urged devotees to make donations for
building temples and for other purposes,
began to settle on Mt. Koya. A little later,
Nembutsu practicers, called hijiri-gata or koya-hijiri (Koya sages) began to appear. They were originally
joji (also shoji; one who performs miscellaneous duties at
a temple while remaining a layman and sometimes
married). Those hijiri who held the Pure Land faith and were devoted
to the Nembutsu, were also in charge of the
crematorium and mortuary chapel. A number
of groups of hijiri lived on Mt. Koya from the middle of the
11th century. They practiced both Shingon
esotericism and the Nembutsu, and their influence
on the spiritual life of the general public
was great.
| Kakuban's Esoteric Nembutsu |
Kakuban's theory of esoteric Nembutsu appears
in the following works:
(1) Gorin kuji hishaku (The Esoteric Meanings
of the Five Elements and the Nine Syllables;
Kogyo Daishi senjutsushu (henceforth abbreviated to KDS.) Vol. 1,
149-152);
(2) Ichigo taiyo himitsushaku (The Esoteric Exposition
of the Most Important Matter in Life; KDS. Vol. 1, 157-176);
(3) Amida hishaku (The Esoteric Meaning of 'Amida'; KDS. Vol. 149-152).
It is believed that the Gorin kuji hishaku was written during the last few years of
the author's life. This work is also called
Tongo ojo hikan (The Esoteric Contemplation
for Quick Attainment of Birth in the Pure
Land). The five elements are: earth (indicated
by 'A'), water ('VA'), fire ('RA'), wind
('HA'), and space ('KHA'); they symbolize
the five Buddhas, five wisdoms, and so forth.
The nine syllables of the Amida mantra are:
M, A, MR, TA, TE, JE, HA, RA, and HUM (Om amrita teje hara hum). Kakuban explains that the five elements
and the nine syllables are essentially the
same and that through contemplation of them,
one can attain birth in the Pure Land. In
this work, Kakuban asserts that the practicer
of the Shingon Nembutsu attains birth in
the highest grade of the highest class (cf.
note 11) like Nagarjuna, who had already
in this life attained the Stage of Joy. As
for the specific cause of birth in the Pure
Land, he says (KDS. Vol. I, 212): "The
three refuges and the five precepts are the
karmic cause for birth in the Pure Land.
The six contemplations, four dhyana, ten good actions, meditation on voidness,
and so forth, can also be the causes of birth
there."
The Ichigo taiyo himitsushaku teaches nine specific points to remember
for Pure Land aspirants. These nine include
"repenting of one's karmic transgressions"
(5), "contemplation of the Pure Land"
(7), and "decisive assurance of birth"
(8). Kakuban emphatically states: "Amida
is the manifestation of Mahavairocana's wisdom;
Mahavairocana is the essential nature of
Amida." (KDS. 1, 172) He thus clarifies
the essential identity of Amida and Mahavairocana
and that of Amida's Land of Utmost Bliss
(Gokuraku) and Mahavairocana's Land of Mystic
Glorification (Mitsugon). The eighth instruction
is "the most important matter to be
taken care of, "as the author notes
under that heading (KDS. I, 172). Here he
elaborates on the terminal care to be taken
of a dying person in order to safeguard his
attainment of birth in the Pure Land: Five
Dharma friends should be in the room of the
dying person and see that the deathbed rite
is properly performed. The rite consists
mainly of repeating the Nembutsu. They should
recite the Nembutsu in time with the breath
of that person for one to seven days, until
he dies. The five friends should also envision
that as they pronounce "NA MO A MI TA
BUH", these syllables enter the mouth
of the dying person as he inhales, and that
those syllables turn into the sun, which
shines forth from his six sense-organs and
breaks the darkness of his karmic transgressions.
This contemplation enables him to attain
the sun-meditation, as taught in the Contemplation Sutra (Kanmuryojukyo) and thus gain birth in the Pure Land.
The Amida-hishaku is a short work covering only one page in
the Taisho Tripitaka edition, but it presents
the essential teaching of the esoteric Nembutsu.
Kakuban first explains that Amida is the
manifestation of the wisdom of the Dharmakaya
Mahavairocana and corresponds to the wisdom
of wonderful discernment (myokanzatchi; pratyaveksana-jnana).
When one realizes the ultimate One Mind which
contains all the Buddhas, divinities, their
wisdoms, and other realms of beings, one
attains unity with Amida. Next, the author
explains thirteen different names of Amida
related to his manifestations of Light, each
as one of the functions of the Dharmakaya's
wisdom of discernment. Lastly, he presents
the esoteric meanings of AMITA.
The presentation in this work is reminiscent
of a short sutra translated by Amoghavajra,
entitled Kuhon ojo Amida sanmaji shu-daranikyo (The
Sutra Presenting the Dharani of the Amida
Samadhi which Ensures Birth in the Nine Ranks
of Enlightenment)(TT. 19, 79b-80a). This sutra first states
that the Land of the Buddha of Infinite Life
is manifest in the samadhi of pure consciousness
glorified with the nine ranks of enlightenment,
which he then explains. Contrary to our expectation,
those nine ranks are not the same as the
nine grades presented in the Contemplation Sutra but are the nine stages of enlightenment
(see note 11). They seem to indicate nine
different virtues contained in the Pure Consciousness
of True Suchness. Within this consciousness
appear twelve Mahamandala figures originating
from the Great Round Mirror-Wisdom. The twelve figures
are the twelve Buddhas, who, according to
the Larger Sutra (Muryojukyo), are different names of Amida and the same
as the last twelve of the thirteen names
given in the Amida-hishaku.
The sutra continues to explain that one who
contemplates those Buddhas and praises their
names can escape from Samsara and reside
in True Suchness. It further states that
one who wishes to enter this Samadhi and
purify his mind and body should concentrate
on the following mantra:
OM A MR TA TE JE HA RA HUM.
By holding fast to this mantra, which is
popularly known as the Amida shoju (the Small Amida Mantra), one can dwell
in the realization of the principle of ultimate
reality. The sutra ends with the usual praise
of the merit of copying and reciting it and
the benefit of its leading the practicer
to the Pure Land.
Kakuban must have read this sutra and used
its essentials in the Amida-hishaku. He re-interprets it as the nine consciousnesses
adorned with nine grades or ranks of enlightenment
which are contained in the One Mind. One
noticeable divergence from the sutra is Kakuban's
use of A MI TA. Instead of following the
more usual esoteric formula of the nine syllables
of the Amida mantra, he teaches that one
who recites AMITA (or AMIDA) can extinguish
his grave karmic offenses and attain boundless
wisdom and merit. He then gives esoteric
meanings of A MI TA.
In summing up the above observations, we
can see that Kakuban uses three kinds of
Amida mantra in the three texts above:
(1) 9 syllable-mantra, i.e., OM (or M) A
MR TA TE JE HA RA HUM., in the Gorin kuji hishaku;
(2) 6 syllable-mantra, i.e., NA MO A MI TA
BUH, in the Ichigo taiyo himitsushaku;
(3) 3 syllable-mantra, i.e., A MI TA., in
the Amida-hishaku.
A comparative study of these three texts
reveals that the Amida-hishaku is an ontological
and metaphysical exposition of the Shingon
Nembutsu and that the Gorin kuji hishaku is the most elaborate exposition of the
authentic esoteric Amida mantra along the
lines of Pure Land thought. Of the three
texts, the Ichigo taiyo himitsushaku shows the closest affinity to the popular
Nembutsu formula of the Pure Land school.
Throughout these works the central Shingon
idea of 'sokushin jobutsu' is evident, and
the Pure Land concept of 'ojo' is interpreted
from this viewpoint. We also note that in
the Gorin kuji hishaku Kakuban warns the practicer of the 9 syllable-mantra
not to despise the 6 syllable-name or the
3 syllable-mantra (KDS. I, 219). Hence we
know that there is no basic difference between
the three mantras. For Kakuban, Amida and
other Buddhas are manifestations of Mahavairocana,
and the Pure Lands of Amida and other Buddhas
are his transformed Lands (KDS. I, 177).
THE ESOTERIC MEANING OF 'AMIDA'
AMIDA HISHAKU
BY KAKUBAN
[1] General discussion (TT. 79, 48a)
Amida Buddha is the embodiment of the wisdom
of discerning and recognizing the Dharmakaya
in one's own nature and is also the common
ground from which all sentient beings attain
enlightenment.
If you contemplate and perceive the One Mind,1) you will also recognize the reality of all
dharmas; if you know the reality of all dharmas,
you will also know the mental activities
of all sentient beings. Thus the One Mind
contains in itself all aspects of the twofold
truth2) without distinction. Every form and mind
of beings in the nine realms3) equally possesses the Five Wisdoms4) in full array. It follows then that the
sages in the Four Mandala5) originally reside in one's body, which is
a temporary conglomeration of the five aggregates,6) and continue to do so everlastingly. The
Holy Ones who are responsive to the practicer
in his Three Mystic Acts7) eternally and pervasively dwell in his delusory
mind of nine consciousnesses.8)
Since the One Mind is identical with all
dharmas, the realm of Buddhas and that of
sentient beings are at once non-dual and
dual. Since all dharmas are identical with
the One Mind, the realm of Buddhas and that
of sentient beings are at once dual and non-dual.
Further, one's mind and the Buddha are, from
the beginning, one. Do not attempt to make
this mind become a Buddha. When delusion
subsides, wisdom appears and then you become
a Buddha with the present body.9)
When it is taught (in other sects) that there
is a Buddha beyond one's self and a pure
land beyond this defiled land, it is for
the purpose of guiding ordinary ignorant
persons of deep attachment and benefiting
sentient beings who have committed the gravest
offenses. Expositions of the Dharma accommodated
to the capacities of people present shallow
and simplified teachings while keeping the
principle of truth hidden. The exposition
of truth by the Dharmakaya Buddha10) opens up the true wisdom and destroys attachments.
If you clearly recognize the deep fountainhead
of the One Mind, the Mind-Lotus of the nine
ranks11) will bloom in the Pure Mind with nine consciousnesses12); if you attain enlightenment through the
Three Mystic Acts, you will perceive the
forms of the Five Buddhas13) manifested in your body through the five
sense-organs.14) Who still aspires to the glorious land of
treasures15) in the beyond? Who still wishes to see the
exquisite forms there?
The difference between delusion and enlightenment
rests with your mind, and so, there is no
Buddha apart from your three modes of action.16) Since the true and the delusory are one,
you can perceive the Land of Utmost Bliss15) in the five states of samsaric existence.17) The moment you understand this truth, this
very mind of yours is called 'Avalokiteshvara,'
for you clearly know the principle of universal
presence of the One Mind in all conditioned
and unconditioned dharmas.17) If you acquire the thorough knowledge of
this mind, you are called 'Amida Tathagata,'
for you truly recognize the One Mind, which
is your innate virtue, free from all discriminations
and attachments.
The above is the outline.
[2] Explanation of the Name
Next, I will explain the name. In India it
was called 'Amita'; in China it was translated
as 'wu-liang-shou,' 'wu-liang-kuang,' and so forth. There are in all thirteen
translations, which are used only in the
exoteric teachings. According to the esoteric
interpretation, all names are, without exception,
mystic names of the Tathagata (Mahavairocana).
Nevertheless, I will explain the true meanings
of these thirteen names.18)
(1) Muryoju (Infinite Life): The Dharmakaya Tathagata
dwells in the Dharma-realm Palace19) without arising or perishing; for this reason,
Mahavairocana Tathagata is also called "48b"
'the Buddha of Infinite Life.'
(2) Muryoko (Infinite Light): The light of the Dharmakaya
Tathagata's wisdom of wonderful discernment
and observation20) illumines innumerable sentient beings and
countless worlds, benefiting them continually
forever; hence, Mahavairocana Tathagata is
also called 'the Buddha of Infinite Light.'
(3) Muhenko (Boundless Light): The Dharmakaya Tathagata's
wisdom of wonderful discernment and observation
is limitless and without bounds; hence, Mahavairocana
Tathagata is also called 'the Buddha of Boundless
Light.'
(4) Mugeko (Unhindered Light): The Dharmakaya Tathagata's
wisdom of wonderful discernment and observation
realizes, all at the same time, the absence
of obstruction among conditioned and unconditioned
dharmas, absolute and relative truth, aspects
and essence of reality, mental functions
of all sentient beings, down to grass, trees,
mountains and rivers; hence, Mahavairocana
Tathagata is also called 'the Buddha of Unhindered
Light.'
(5) Mutaiko (Incomparable Light): The Dharmakaya Tathagata's
wisdom of wonderful discernment and observation
cannot be explained in relative terms, because
from the beginning delusion does not exist.
The true enlightenment which cannot be explained
in relative terms transcends the wisdom of
distinguishing the true and the false; hence,
Mahavairocana Tathagata is also called 'the
Buddha of Incomparable Light.'
(6) The Dharmakaya Tathagata's wisdom of
wonderful discernment and observation brilliantly
illumines the darkness of ignorance in the
consciousness of sentient beings and burns
the defilements of their blind passions like
a blazing fire; hence, Mahavairocana Tathagata
is also called 'the Buddha of the Light of
the Flaming King.'
(7) The light of the Dharmakaya Tathagata's
wonderful wisdom destroys the darkness of
ignorance of sentient beings, reveals the
Palace of Enlightenment in the Mind,21) and enables one to attain, for the first
time, the bliss of original non-production;22) hence, Mahavairocana Tathagata is also called
'the Buddha of the Light of Joy.'
(8) The light of the Dharmakaya Tathagata's
wonderful wisdom clearly discerns the real
significance of the absolute and relative
truth and illumines conditioned and unconditioned
dharmas; hence, Mahavairocana Tathagata is
also called 'the Buddha of the Light of Wisdom.'
(9) The Dharmakaya Tathagata's wisdom of
wonderful discernment allows him to dwell
in the enjoyment of his own Dharma everlastingly
without change and cessation; hence, Mahavairocana
Tathagata is also called 'the Buddha of Unceasing
Light.'
(10) The Dharmakaya Tathagata's wisdom of
wonderful discernment is inconceivable even
to the Bodhisattvas of Equal Enlightenment23) and of the Tenth Stage; hence, he is also
called 'the Buddha of Inconceivable Light.'
(11) The Dharmakaya Tathagata's wisdom of
wonderful discernment is beyond the reach
of the wisdom of ordinary beings and that
of wise men and sages and cannot be adequately
praised by them; hence, he is also called
'the Buddha of the Light Beyond Praise.'
(12) The Dharmakaya Tathagata's wisdom of
wonderful discernment is originally not defiled
by the objects of the six sense-perceptions;24) hence, he is also called 'the Buddha of
the Light of Purity.'
(13) The light of the Dharmakaya Tathagata's
wonderful wisdom is originally forever present
and illumines everywhere at all times, day
and night, regardless of time and space;
because it excels the sun and the moon of
this world, he is also called 'the Buddha
of the Light Outshining the Sun and the Moon.'
Thus the names of all Buddhas and Bodhisattvas
of the three periods throughout the ten quarters
are different names of the great Dharmakaya.
Again, all Buddhas and Bodhisattvas of the
three periods throughout the ten directions
are manifestations of the discerning wisdoms
of Mahavairocana Tathagata. Further, words
and utterances of all sentient beings are,
without exception, his mystic names. Those
who are deluded about this are called sentient
beings; that which realizes it is called
the Buddha's wisdom. For this reason, one
who pronounces the three syllables, A, MI,
and DA, will have his grave karmic offenses
from the beginningless past extinguished;
one who is mindful of one Buddha, Amida,
will accomplish endless merits and wisdom.
Just as a single gem in Indra's net at once
reflects images of innumerable gems, the
single Buddha, Amida, instantly endows him
with boundless intrinsic merits.
[3] Explanation of the Sanskrit Syllables
Next, I will explain the significance of
the Sanskrit syllables.
(1) A signifies the principle of non-differentiation
and original non-production25) of One Mind; MI26) signifies the principle of non-differentiation,
egolessness, and universal self of One Mind;
TA27) signifies the principle of suchness and
tranquillity of all dharmas pervaded by One
Mind.
(2) A also signifies the Buddha family28), because it symbolizes the oneness of the
principle of reality and the transcendental
wisdom, and represents the essential nature
of the Dharma-realm pervaded by One Mind.
MI signifies the Lotus family,29) because the ultimate reality revealed by
the wisdom of wonderful discernment and observation,
i.e., the voidness of sentient beings and
dharmas, is, like a lotus-flower, originally
undefiled by objects of the six sense-perceptions.
TA signifies the Vajra family,30) because the wonderful wisdom of the Tathagata
is in itself indestructible and destroys
all the delusions, as enemies.
(3) A also31) signifies the principle of voidness; the
essential nature of One Mind is, from the
beginning, free from delusory appearances.
MI signifies the principle of temporariness;
all dharmas pervaded by the undifferentiated
One Mind are temporary existences like illusions.
TA signifies the principle of the middle;
all dharmas pervaded by the undifferentiated
One Mind are free from the two extreme views31) and so, cannot be conceived as having fixed
forms.
(4) A also signifies the principle of existence;
the essential nature of the One Mind is originally
existent, unproduced, and without extinction.
MI signifies the principle of voidness; all
dharmas pervaded by the One Mind are in themselves
ungraspable. TA signifies the principle of
non-voidness; all dharmas pervaded by the
One Mind have, from their origin, been always
possessed of the merits of the Dharmakaya.
(5) A also signifies cause; the realms of
Buddhas and those of sentient beings are
caused respectively by realization of the
One Mind and by ignorance of it. MI signifies
practice; by destroying self-attachment and
attachment to dharmas, one realizes voidness
of self and dharmas, thereby attaining Buddhahood.
TA signifies Buddha; undifferentiated One
Mind expresses the principle of reality of
suchness and the transcendental wisdom, which
are among the qualities of Buddhahood.
The above analysis is the explanation of
the Sanskrit syllables. These syllables have
no fixed forms in their mutual relations,
just as (images reflected in) the gems attached
to Indra's net cannot be taken up or discarded,
for the undifferentiated One Mind is ungraspable.
The above gives the meanings (of the syllables).
There is no syllable apart from its meaning;
no meaning apart from the syllable. It is
a delusory view of discrimination to accept
one and discard the other, or vice versa.
To hate this Saha world and seek birth in
the Land of Utmost Bliss, or to dislike this
defiled body and revere the Buddha-body,
is termed ignorance and also delusion. Even
in the world of defilement, during the period
of decline, if one continues to meditate
on the undifferentiated Dharma-realm, how
can one not attain the Buddhist Way?
1. The One Mind is the all-inclusive absolute
mind, from which all Buddhas, Bodhisattvas,
and sages appear and to which all dharmas
and sentient beings return. It is the same
as the Buddha-nature. The merits and virtues
contained in One Mind are symbolically represented
as Mahavairocana.
2. The twofold truth or reality is: absolute
reality or paramartha-satya) and conventional or relative reality (samvritti-satya).
3. The nine realms are: hell, the realms
of hungry spirits, animals, asuras, humans,
devas, shravakas, pratyekabuddhas, and bodhisattvas,
that is all realms other than that of the
Buddha, the tenth.
4. The five wisdoms are: (1) the wisdom of
realizing the essence of the Dharma-realm
(dharmadhatu-svabhava-jnana), (2) the great round mirror-wisdom (adarsha-jnana), (3) the wisdom of non-distinction (samata-jnana), (4) the wisdom of wonderful discernment
(pratyaveksana-jnana), and (5) wisdom of manifesting transformed
bodies (krityanusthana-jnana).
5. The four kinds of mandala are: (1) great
mandala (mahamandala); a Buddha or Bodhisattva or a painting
of his figure; (2) mandala of sacred attributes
(samaya-mandala); symbols held in the hands of a divinity
such as an ensign, sword, wheel, jewel, or
lotus flower; also a painting of such an
object; (3) mandala of sacred letters (dharma-mandala); seed-syllables, words, and the meanings
of all sutras; and (4) mandala of iconic
figures (karma-mandala); sculptures showing
the posture and gestures of a divinity.
6. The five aggregates (panca-skandhah) are: (1) matter or form (rupa); (2) perception (vedana); (3) conception (samjna); (4) volition (samskara); and (5) consciousness (vijnana).
7. The three mystic acts are: (1) bodily
mystic act (forming the manual sign (mudra) of a specific divinity; (2) verbal mystic
act (reciting the mantra of a specific divinity;
and (3) mental mystic act (meditating on
a specific divinity).
8. The nine consciousnesses are: (1) visual
consciousness, (2) auditory consciousness,
(3) olfactory consciousness, (4) gustatory
consciousness, (5) tactile consciousness,
(6) mental consciousness, (7) ego-consciousness
(manas), (8) alaya-consciousness, and (9) amala-consciousness.
The theory of nine consciousnesses is attributed
to the Shoron (She-lun) school, which flourished
in China for about a hundred years from the
latter half of the 6th century. In the present
context, however, the 9th consciousness,
which is usually considered undefiled, is
treated from our viewpoint as being obscured
by delusion.
9. Cf. H. Inagaki, "Kukai's Sokushin-jobutsu-gi," Asia Major, Vol. 17 Part 2, 1972; reprint published
by Ryukoku Translation Center, 1975, under
the title, "Kukai's Principle of Attaining Buddhahood
with the Present Body."
10. Refers to Mahavairocana.
11. 'The nine ranks' as used in the Contemplation Sutra (Kanmuryojukyo) refer to the nine grades of aspirants who
attain nine different levels of birth in
Amida's Pure Land. Here the term seems to
refer to the following nine ranks mentioned
in the Kuhon ojo Amida sanmaji shu-daranikyo (TT. 19, 79c; hereafter, abbreviated to
Daranikyo): (1) the upper grade of the upper class, shinjikiji (stage of true form), (2) the middle grade
of the upper class, mukuji (stage of non-defilement), (3) the lower
grade of the upper class, rikuji (stage of separation from defilement); (4)
the upper grade of the middle class, zengakuji (stage of excellent enlightenment); (5)
the middle grade of the middle class, myorikiji (stage of intellectual power); (6) the lower
grade of the middle class, muroji (stage of absence of impurities); (7) the
upper grade of the lower class, shinkakuji (stage of enlightenment of truth); (8) the
middle grade of the lower class, gengakuji (stage of enlightenment of wisdom); and
(9) the lower grade of the lower class, rakumonji (stage of the gate of happiness). In this
sutra these nine ranks represent the nine
pure consciousnesses of True Suchness. In
the Gorin kuji hishaku (KDS. I, 212) Kakuban seems to use the term kuhon in the same sense as in the Contemplation
Sutra (Kanmuryojukyo), but his usage of this
term in the Shingonshu sokushin jobutsugisho
(KDS. I, 32) is still different from that
of the Contemplation Sutra.
12. The Pure Mind with nine consciousnesses
refers to the purified states of the nine
consciousnesses mentioned above; Kakuban's
phraseology is reminiscent of (Samadhi of
Pure Consciousness with nine ranks) mentioned
in the Daranikyo (TT. 19, 79c).
13. For the five Buddhas, see H. Inagaki,
Dictionary of Japanese Buddhist Terms, 3rd edition, 1988, under gobutsu.
14. The five sense-organs are eyes, ears,
nose, tongue, and the tactile body.
15. Refers to Amida's Pure Land.
16. Bodily act, speech, and thought.
17. The five states of samsaric existence
are: hell and the realms of hungry spirits,
animals, humans, and devas.
18. Of the 13 names, the first is the name
of Amida Buddha specifically used in the
Larger Sutra (Muryojukyo). The next 12 names are his appellations
describing different functions and characteristics
of his light; cf. TT. 12. 270a-b. The Daranikyo also mentions those twelve appellations
related to his light, stating that they represent
twelve Mahamandalas (i.e., figures of Buddhas
and sages) which are reflected in the great-mirror
wisdom.
19. The Dharmadhatu Palace of Mahavairocana
in the Realm of the Matrix-store Mandala
is located in the Maheshvara Heaven (Daijizaiten);
its full name is Kodai kongo hokaigu (the Great Palace of the Diamond-like Dharma-realm).
20. Myokanzatchi corresponds to the sixth consciousness and
is represented by Amida. Here it is interpreted
as belonging to Mahavairocana.
21. 'Palace' is a symbolic expression of
Enlightenment realized in the ultimate nature
of one's mind.
22. 'Original non-production', Skt. anutpattika-dharma-ksanti, is the insight of realizing the voidness
of all dharmas.
23. 'Equal Enlightenment' is the highest
stage of a bodhisattva which corresponds
to the 51st stage of the 52-stage career.
24. 'The objects of the six sense-perceptions'
are form, sound, odor, taste, tangible objects,
and objects of the mind.
25. The Sanskrit syllable 'A' is here construed
as 'ady-anutpada' (original non-production).
26. 'MI' seems to be construed here as 'mahatman' (great self).
27. 'TA' represents 'tathata' (true suchness).
28. The three families, Buddha, Lotus, and
Vajra, are the three divisions of Buddhas
and divinities in the Mahavairocana Sutra. The lotus symbolizes the ultimate principle
(ri) contained in the pure Bodhi-mind and
free from defilement by blind passions; the
indestructible wisdom (chi) of realizing
the ultimate principle is compared to the
Vajra; the two perfect virtues of Enlightenment
belong to the Buddha family. Three syllables
used for them are respectively A, SA, and
VA.
29. The Lotus family is also known as Kannon-bu (Avalokiteshvara family) and Ho-bu (Dharma family). In the Realm of the Matrix-store
Mandala, the 36 sages, headed by Avalokiteshvara,
belong to this family.
30. The Vajra family corresponds to Kongoshu-in (Vajrapani section) of the Realm of the
Matrix-store Mandala which contains 33 sages,
headed by Kongosatta (Vajrasattva).
31. The theory that A, MI, and TA represent
the triple truth of the void, the temporary,
and the middle was propounded by Genshin
(942-1017) of Mt. Hiei; cf. Kanjin ryakuyosho (Eshin Sozu zenshu, I, 277). Kakuban also says in the Gorin kuji hishaku (KDS. I, 212): "The practicer of the
Single Path of the Unconditioned (i.e., one
who follows the Tendai teaching) contemplates
the void, the temporary, and the middle through
the contemplation of A, MI, and TA."
Return to Mahayana-index; Index.