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'''Nichiren Buddhism''' (日蓮系諸宗派: ''Nichiren-kei sho shūha'') is a branch of [[Buddhism]] based on the teachings of the 13th century Japanese [[monk]] [[Nichiren]] (1222–1282). Various forms of Nichiren Buddhism have had great influence among certain sections of Japanese society at different times in the country's history, such as among the merchants of [[Kyoto]] in Japan's Middle Ages and among some ultranationalists during the pre-[[World War II]] era. Nichiren Buddhism is generally noted for its focus on the [[Lotus Sutra]] and an attendant belief that all people have an innate [[Buddha nature]] and are therefore inherently capable of attaining [[Nirvana|enlightenment]] in their current form and present lifetime. It is also noted for positioning itself in opposition to other forms of Japanese Buddhism—in particular the [[Zen]], [[Pure Land]], [[Esoteric Buddhism|esoteric]], [[Shingon]], and [[Buddhism in Japan#Ritsu|Ritsu]] schools<!--This is already mentioned in the body of the article and may be redundant here. I have added Ritsu in light on Nichiren's four dictums (四箇の格言) on these schools-->, which Nichiren saw as deviating from the orthodoxy of Mahayana Buddhism. ''Nichiren Buddhism'' is a comprehensive term covering several major schools and many sub-schools, as well as several of Japan's [[Shinshūkyō|new religions]].
'''Nichiren Buddhism''' (日蓮系諸宗派: ''Nichiren-kei sho shūha'') is a branch of [[Buddhism]] based on the teachings of the 13th century Japanese [[monk]] [[Nichiren]] (1222–1282). Various forms of Nichiren Buddhism have had great influence among certain sections of Japanese society at different times in the country's history, such as among the merchants of [[Kyoto]] in Japan's Middle Ages and among some ultranationalists during the pre-[[World War II]] era. Nichiren Buddhism is generally noted for its focus on the [[Lotus Sutra]] and an attendant belief that all people have an innate [[Buddha nature]] and are therefore inherently capable of attaining [[Nirvana|enlightenment]] in their current form and present lifetime. It is also noted for positioning itself in opposition to other forms of Japanese Buddhism—in particular the [[Zen]], [[Pure Land]], [[Esoteric Buddhism|esoteric]], [[Shingon]], and [[Buddhism in Japan#Ritsu|Ritsu]] schools<!--This is already mentioned in the body of the article and may be redundant here. I have added Ritsu in light on Nichiren's four dictums (四箇の格言) on these schools-->, which Nichiren saw as deviating from the orthodoxy of Mahayana Buddhism. ''Nichiren Buddhism'' is a comprehensive term covering several major schools and many sub-schools, as well as several of Japan's [[Shinshūkyō|new religions]].


HELLO? Boobling Titty fucker poopyhead pooper. Please poop in my crappy slutty poopfuck. Bobcok
==The founder, Nichiren==
From the age of 16 until 32, Nichiren studied in numerous temples in Japan, especially [[Mt. Hiei]] ([[Enryakuji]]) and [[Mount Koya|Mt. Kōya]], in his day the Japanese centers of Buddhist study, in the [[Kyoto]]&ndash;[[Nara, Nara|Nara]] area. He eventually concluded that the highest teachings of [[Gautama Buddha|Shakyamuni Buddha]] (563?–483?BC) were to be found in the [[Lotus Sutra]]. The [[mantra]] he expounded on 28 April 1253, [[Nam Myoho Renge Kyo|Nam-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō]], expresses his devotion to that body of teachings. During his lifetime Nichiren stridently maintained that the contemporary teachings of Buddhism taught by other sects (particularly [[Pure Land Buddhism|Shin]], [[Zen]], [[Shingon]], and [[Buddhism in Japan#Ritsu|Ritsu]]<ref>cf. "four dictums" (四箇の格言 ''shika no kakugen'') entries in ''The Soka Gakkai Dictionary of Buddhism,'' p. 215, and ''Kyōgaku Yōgo Kaisetsu Shū'', p. 54</ref>) were mistaken in their interpretations of the correct path to enlightenment and therefore refuted them publicly and vociferously. In doing so, he provoked the ire of the country's rulers and of the priests of the sects he criticized; he was subjected to persecution which included an attempted beheading and at least two exiles. Some Nichiren schools see the incident of the attempted beheading as marking a turning point in Nichiren's teaching, since Nichiren began inscribing the [[Gohonzon]] and wrote a number of major doctrinal treatises during his subsequent three-year exile on [[Sado Island]] in the Japan Sea. After a pardon and his return from exile, Nichiren moved to Mt. [[Minobu, Yamanashi|Minobu]] in today's [[Yamanashi]] Prefecture, where he and his disciples built a temple, Kuonji. Nichiren spent most of the rest of his life here training disciples and looking after lay believers.


==Schools==
==Schools==

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'{{Citations missing|date=July 2007}} {| style="float:right" | {{MahayanaBuddhism}} |- | {{JapaneseBuddhism}} |} '''Nichiren Buddhism''' (日蓮系諸宗派: ''Nichiren-kei sho shūha'') is a branch of [[Buddhism]] based on the teachings of the 13th century Japanese [[monk]] [[Nichiren]] (1222–1282). Various forms of Nichiren Buddhism have had great influence among certain sections of Japanese society at different times in the country's history, such as among the merchants of [[Kyoto]] in Japan's Middle Ages and among some ultranationalists during the pre-[[World War II]] era. Nichiren Buddhism is generally noted for its focus on the [[Lotus Sutra]] and an attendant belief that all people have an innate [[Buddha nature]] and are therefore inherently capable of attaining [[Nirvana|enlightenment]] in their current form and present lifetime. It is also noted for positioning itself in opposition to other forms of Japanese Buddhism—in particular the [[Zen]], [[Pure Land]], [[Esoteric Buddhism|esoteric]], [[Shingon]], and [[Buddhism in Japan#Ritsu|Ritsu]] schools<!--This is already mentioned in the body of the article and may be redundant here. I have added Ritsu in light on Nichiren's four dictums (四箇の格言) on these schools-->, which Nichiren saw as deviating from the orthodoxy of Mahayana Buddhism. ''Nichiren Buddhism'' is a comprehensive term covering several major schools and many sub-schools, as well as several of Japan's [[Shinshūkyō|new religions]]. ==The founder, Nichiren== From the age of 16 until 32, Nichiren studied in numerous temples in Japan, especially [[Mt. Hiei]] ([[Enryakuji]]) and [[Mount Koya|Mt. Kōya]], in his day the Japanese centers of Buddhist study, in the [[Kyoto]]&ndash;[[Nara, Nara|Nara]] area. He eventually concluded that the highest teachings of [[Gautama Buddha|Shakyamuni Buddha]] (563?–483?BC) were to be found in the [[Lotus Sutra]]. The [[mantra]] he expounded on 28 April 1253, [[Nam Myoho Renge Kyo|Nam-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō]], expresses his devotion to that body of teachings. During his lifetime Nichiren stridently maintained that the contemporary teachings of Buddhism taught by other sects (particularly [[Pure Land Buddhism|Shin]], [[Zen]], [[Shingon]], and [[Buddhism in Japan#Ritsu|Ritsu]]<ref>cf. "four dictums" (四箇の格言 ''shika no kakugen'') entries in ''The Soka Gakkai Dictionary of Buddhism,'' p. 215, and ''Kyōgaku Yōgo Kaisetsu Shū'', p. 54</ref>) were mistaken in their interpretations of the correct path to enlightenment and therefore refuted them publicly and vociferously. In doing so, he provoked the ire of the country's rulers and of the priests of the sects he criticized; he was subjected to persecution which included an attempted beheading and at least two exiles. Some Nichiren schools see the incident of the attempted beheading as marking a turning point in Nichiren's teaching, since Nichiren began inscribing the [[Gohonzon]] and wrote a number of major doctrinal treatises during his subsequent three-year exile on [[Sado Island]] in the Japan Sea. After a pardon and his return from exile, Nichiren moved to Mt. [[Minobu, Yamanashi|Minobu]] in today's [[Yamanashi]] Prefecture, where he and his disciples built a temple, Kuonji. Nichiren spent most of the rest of his life here training disciples and looking after lay believers. ==Schools== Today, Nichiren Buddhism is not a single denomination (see following lists). It began to branch into different schools within several years of Nichiren's passing, before which Nichiren had named ''six senior priests'' (''rokurōsō'') whom he wanted to transmit his teachings to future generations: [[Nisshō]] (日昭), [[Nichirō]] (日朗), [[Nikō]] (日向), [[Nitchō]] (日頂), [[Nichiji]] (日持), and [[Nikkō (priest)|Nikkō]] (日興). Each started a lineage of schools, but Nichiji eventually travelled to the Asian continent (ca. 1295) and was never heard from again, and Nitchō later in life (1302) rejoined and became a follower of Nikkō.<ref>''Shimpan Bukkyō Tetsugaku Daijiten'', p. 1368</ref> The reasons for the splits are numerous, entangled, and subject to different interpretations depending on which school is telling the story; suffice it to say that the senior priests had different understandings of what Nichiren's lifetime of teaching was about. Although the former five remained loosely affiliated to varying degrees, the last—Nikkō—made a clean break by leaving [[Kuon-ji]] in 1289. He had come to the conclusion that Nikō and the others were embarking on paths to heresy that he could not stem. Kuon-ji eventually became the central temple of today's [[Nichiren Shu]], one of the two largest branches and the one encompassing the numerous minor schools of the Minobu branch into which most of the schools started by Nisshō, Nichirō, and Nichiji have been subsumed. The other dominant branch is centered at [[Taiseki-ji]], the head temple of today's [[Nichiren Shoshu]] school. Taiseki-ji, which Nikkō founded in 1290 after leaving Kuon-ji, was the starting point for the other schools of the Kōmon-ha (興門派, ''kō'' from ''Nikkō'') or Fuji-ha (富士派, from the locality) branch. Other traditional Nichiren schools include several sub-schools that call themselves just Hokke Shū, the Honmon Butsuryū Shū, and the Kempon Hokke Shū. Several of Japan's [[Shinshukyo|new religions]] are also sub-sects of or otherwise based on one or another of the traditional Nichiren schools. The Reiyūkai, Risshō Kōsei Kai, and Nipponzan Myōhōji Sangha stem from one or another of the Kuon-ji/Minobu branch schools, whereas [[Soka Gakkai]], Shōshinkai, and Kenshōkai trace their origins to the Nichiren Shoshu school. ===Major Nichiren Buddhist schools=== <!--Please see the talk page before making changes ot this section --> The following lists are from the [[:ja:メインページ|Japanese Wikipedia]] article on [[:ja:日蓮宗|Nichiren Buddhism]]. ====Traditional schools and their head temples==== Head temple names are given in Roman letters only when the reading could be confirmed. Japanese characters preceded by "ja:" link to articles in the Japanese Wikipedia.<!--This listing was arrived at after much painstaking consensus building on the talk page and elsewhere. Please do not change it --> *[[Nichiren Shu|Nichiren Shū]]: Sozan Minobuzan [[Kuon-ji]] 日蓮宗 祖山身延山[[:ja:久遠寺]] *[[Nichiren Shōshū]]: Sōhonzan [[Taiseki-ji]] 日蓮正宗 総本山 大石寺 *Honmon Butsuryū Shū [[:ja:本門佛立宗]] 大本山宥清寺 *[[Kempon Hokke]] Shu: Sōhonzan Myōman-ji 総本山妙満寺 *Hokkeshū, Honmon Ryū 法華宗(本門流)大本山光長寺・鷲山寺・本興寺・本能寺 *Hokkeshū, Jinmon Ryū 法華宗(陣門流)総本山本成寺 *Hokkeshū, Shinmon Ryū 法華宗(真門流)総本山本隆寺 *Honmon Hokke Shū: Daihonzan Myōren-ji 本門法華宗 大本山妙蓮寺 *Nichiren Honshū: Honzan Yōbō-ji [[:ja:日蓮本宗]] 本山[[:ja:要法寺]] *Nichiren Shū [[Fuju-fuse]]-ha: Sozan Myōkaku-ji 日蓮宗不受不施派 祖山妙覚寺 *Nichiren Hokke Shū 日蓮法華宗 大本山正福寺 *Hokke Nichiren Shū 法華日蓮宗 総本山宝龍寺 *Hompa Nichiren Shū 本派日蓮宗 総本山宗祖寺 *Honke Nichiren Shū (Hyōgo) 本化日蓮宗(兵庫) 総本山妙見寺 *[[Fuju-fuse]] Nichiren Kōmon Shū 不受不施日蓮講門宗 本山本覚寺 *Honke Nichiren Shū (Kyōto) 本化日蓮宗(京都)本山石塔寺 *Shōbō Hokke Shū 正法法華宗 本山大教寺 *Honmon Kyōō Shū 本門経王宗 本山日宏寺 *Nichiren Kōmon Shū 日蓮講門宗 ====Non-traditional schools==== *[[Reiyūkai]] (Spiritual-Friendship-Association) Founded in 1920 by Kakutaro Kubo and Kimi Kotani, Reiyūkai considers itself the grandfather of lay-based new religions devoted to the Lotus Sutra and ancestor veneration. *[[Rissho Kosei Kai|Risshō Kōsei Kai]] *[[Nipponzan Myohoji|Nipponzan Myōhōji]] *Kokuchukai|Kokuchūkai [[:ja:国柱会]] (also 國柱会) *[[Shoshinkai|Shōshinkai]] *Fuji Taisekiji Kenshōkai (also, just ''Kenshōkai'') [[:ja:富士大石寺顕正会]] *Honmon Shōshū 本門正宗 ==== Lay organizations ==== *[[Soka Gakkai|Sōka Gakkai]] (also, [[Soka Gakkai International]] (SGI))<br><small>'''Note:''' Though many sources (e.g., [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9068539 Britannica online]; ''Illustrated'', p. 1443; ''Cambridge'', p. 175; ''Iwanami'', p. 679) characterize Sōka Gakkai as one of Japan’s [[Shinshukyo|new religions]] or as a lay-followers organization of Nichiren Shoshu (to which it has not been affiliated since the early 1990s). Sōka Gakkai and its constituent organizations position themselves as lay organizations whose purpose is to support practitioners of Nichiren Buddhism.<!-- see Talk page --></small> ==Doctrine and practices== Much of Nichiren Buddhist doctrine is, at least on the surface, a further development or adaptation of [[Tendai]] (Chinese: [[Tiantai]]) thought, especially as passed down from [[Saichō]] (also known as Dengyō; 767–822). For example, as in Tendai but in contrast to many other Buddhist schools, most Nichiren Buddhists believe that personal enlightenment can be achieved in this world within the practitioner's current lifetime (即身成仏: ''sokushin jōbutsu''). Markedly different from Tendai and any other Buddhist lineage is the Nichiren Buddhists' practice of chanting ''o-daimoku'' (also: ''daimoku''), the repeated recitation of the mantra (phrase) ''Nam-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō'', in some denominations also pronounced ''Namu-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō''. Most Nichiren schools also recite the Lotus Sutra (in Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese text) to varying degrees in their respective versions of the often daily or twice-daily [[gongyo|gongyō]] service. Other details of Nichiren Buddhist practice can differ widely depending on the school. Some recite the whole Lotus Sutra, while others recite only certain chapters, parts of chapters, or verses. Some practitioners worship Buddhist statues or images, and others use the [[Gohonzon]] (a [[mandala]] Nichiren provided for his followers during his lifetime) as their focal point during prayer; others worship only statues or images of various types; whereas yet others venerate only a particular Gohonzon and transcriptions of it.<!-- This article is NOT about a specific group, nor is it intended to represent the views of any one, particular group. If you want to write about what one (such as SGI) does or does not do, write it in (the) article(s) about that group: This article already advises readers to look for group-specific information under the articles on their favorite groups.--> Some schools (chiefly those stemming from Kuon-ji) keep [[Shinto]] shrines in their temple compounds and permit or encourage worship of indigenous Japanese deities, while those stemming from Taiseki-ji (but not Taiseki-ji and Nichiren Shōshū itself) tend to be very strict about their prohibition against worshiping anything exterior, rather they promote using the Gohonzon mandala as a visual representation of every person's inner Buddhahood. Some schools are virulently nationalistic; others are not and are further strictly pacifist. Further, Nichiren Shoshu and other schools stemming from the priest [[Nikkō (priest)|Nikkō]] consider Nichiren to be the True (or Original) Buddha, whereas Nichiren Shu and the others descendant from the other six senior priests see him as a saint, great teacher, or prophet. Schools provide more information on their particular differences. ==Nichiren's writings== Nichiren was a prolific writer. His personal communications and writings to his followers as well as numerous treatises detail his view of the correct form of practice for the ''Latter Day of the Law'' (''[[Buddhist terms and concepts#Mappo|Mappō]]''); lay out his views on other Buddhist schools, particularly those of influence during his lifetime; and elucidate his interpretations of Buddhist teachings that preceded his. These writings are collectively known as ''Gosho'' (''go'' is an honorific prefix designating respect; ''sho'' means ''writings'') in some schools and ''go-ibun'' ("left-behind writings") in others. Over 700 of them, some complete and some only in fragments, have been passed down through the centuries in compilations, as copies, and even many in the original. Some are also available in English translation, most notably in ''Letters of Nichiren'' and ''Selected Writings of Nichiren'' in the ''Translations from the Asian Classics'' series from Columbia University Press; more-sectarian translations of some of his writings are also available. See also: [[Tendai]] and [[Tiantai]] ==Sources and references== ===English=== *''A Dictionary of Buddhist Terms and Concepts''. Nichiren Shoshu International Center, 1983 (Out of print) *''Selected Writings of Nichiren''. Burton Watson et al., trans.; Philip B. Yampolsky, ed. Columbia University Press, 1990 *''Letters of Nichiren''. Burton Watson et al., trans.; Philip B. Yampolsky, ed. Columbia University Press, 1996<br><small>'''Full disclosure statement:''' Although Soka Gakkai retains the copyrights on the foregoing three <!--Not two: Nichiren Shoshu International Center has been subsumed by SGI since the 1992 split between Soka Gakkai and Nichiren Shoshu, and despite its name it was never directly affiliated with Nichiren Shoshu--> works and financed their publication, they show some deviation from similar works published under Soka Gakkai's own name.</small> *''The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Japan''. Paul Bowring and Peter Kornicki, eds. Cambridge University Press, 1993. ISBN 0-521-40352-9 (Referred to in text as ''Cambridge''.) *''Japan: An Illustrated Encyclopedia''. Kondansha, 1993, ISBN 4-06-205938-X; CD-ROM version, 1999. (Referred to in text as ''Illustrated''.) *''The Doctrines and Practice of Nichiren Shoshu''. Nichiren Shoshu Overseas Bureau, 2002<!--this is a valid reference; do not remove it--> *''The Soka Gakkai Dictionary of Buddhism''. Soka Gakkai, 2002, ISBN 4-412-01205-0 ===Japanese=== *''Nichiren Shōshū yōgi'' (日蓮正宗要義; "The essential tenets of Nichiren Shoshu"). Taiseki-ji, 1978, rev. ed. 1999 *''Shimpan Bukkyō Tetsugaku Daijiten'' (新版 仏教哲学大辞典: "Grand dictionary of Buddhist philosophy, rev. ed."). Seikyo Shimbunsha, 1985. No ISBN. *''Nichiren Shōshū-shi no kisoteki kenkyū'' (日蓮正宗史の基礎的研究; "A study of fundaments of Nichiren Shoshu history"). (Rev.) Yamaguchi Handō. Sankibo Bussho-rin, 1993. ISBN 4-7963-0763-X *''Iwanami Nihonshi Jiten'' (岩波 日本史辞典: "Iwanami dictionary of Japanese history"). Iwanami Shoten, 1999. ISBN 4-00-080093-0 (Referred to in text as ''Iwanami''.) *''Nichiren Shōshū Nyūmon'' (日蓮正宗入門; "Introduction to Nichiren Shoshu"). Taiseki-ji, 2002 *''Kyōgaku Yōgo Kaisetsu Shū'' (教学解説用語集; "Glossary of Nichiren Shoshu Buddhist terms"). (Rev.) Kyōdō Enoki, comp. Watō Henshūshitsu, 2006. == Footnotes == {{reflist}} ==External links== * [http://www.kemponhokke.com/ Kempon Hokke Shu U.S. site] * [http://www.nichirenshoshu.or.jp/ Nichiren Shoshu's English website] * [http://www.nichirenshu.org/ Nichiren Shu official website] * [http://www.nichirenscoffeehouse.net/ Nichiren's Coffeehouse interfaith directory] * [http://www.sgi.org/ Soka Gakkai International] * [http://www.nichirenbuddhist.org/ Nichiren Buddhist Association of America] * [http://www.religionfacts.com/buddhism/sects/nichiren.htm ReligionFacts.com on Nichiren Buddhism] Contains some inaccuracies; e.g., the photo of an altar is not of a Nichiren Shoshu one. * [http://www.reiyukai.or.jp Reiyukai Japan] and [http://www.reiyukai-usa.org Reiyukai America] * [http://www.nichirenshueuropa.com Nichiren Shu in Italy and the rest of Europe] * [http://www.hbsitalia.com Honmon Butsuryushu italian official web site] * [http://www.honmon-butsuryushu.or.jp Honmon Butsuryushu japanese official web site] {{Buddhism topics}} [[Category:Buddhism in Japan]] [[Category:Nichiren Buddhism|*]] [[cs:Ničirenova škola]] [[de:Nichiren-Buddhismus]] [[fr:Bouddhisme de Nichiren]] [[ko:니치렌슈]] [[it:Buddhismo Nichiren]] [[nl:Nichiren-boeddhisme]] [[ja:日蓮宗]] [[pt:Budismo de Nitiren]] [[ru:Нитирэн (буддизм)]] [[fi:Nichiren-buddhalaisuus]] [[th:นิชิเรนโชชู]] [[uk:Нітірен-сю]] [[zh:日蓮宗]]'
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
'{{Citations missing|date=July 2007}} {| style="float:right" | {{MahayanaBuddhism}} |- | {{JapaneseBuddhism}} |} '''Nichiren Buddhism''' (日蓮系諸宗派: ''Nichiren-kei sho shūha'') is a branch of [[Buddhism]] based on the teachings of the 13th century Japanese [[monk]] [[Nichiren]] (1222–1282). Various forms of Nichiren Buddhism have had great influence among certain sections of Japanese society at different times in the country's history, such as among the merchants of [[Kyoto]] in Japan's Middle Ages and among some ultranationalists during the pre-[[World War II]] era. Nichiren Buddhism is generally noted for its focus on the [[Lotus Sutra]] and an attendant belief that all people have an innate [[Buddha nature]] and are therefore inherently capable of attaining [[Nirvana|enlightenment]] in their current form and present lifetime. It is also noted for positioning itself in opposition to other forms of Japanese Buddhism—in particular the [[Zen]], [[Pure Land]], [[Esoteric Buddhism|esoteric]], [[Shingon]], and [[Buddhism in Japan#Ritsu|Ritsu]] schools<!--This is already mentioned in the body of the article and may be redundant here. I have added Ritsu in light on Nichiren's four dictums (四箇の格言) on these schools-->, which Nichiren saw as deviating from the orthodoxy of Mahayana Buddhism. ''Nichiren Buddhism'' is a comprehensive term covering several major schools and many sub-schools, as well as several of Japan's [[Shinshūkyō|new religions]]. HELLO? Boobling Titty fucker poopyhead pooper. Please poop in my crappy slutty poopfuck. Bobcok ==Schools== Today, Nichiren Buddhism is not a single denomination (see following lists). It began to branch into different schools within several years of Nichiren's passing, before which Nichiren had named ''six senior priests'' (''rokurōsō'') whom he wanted to transmit his teachings to future generations: [[Nisshō]] (日昭), [[Nichirō]] (日朗), [[Nikō]] (日向), [[Nitchō]] (日頂), [[Nichiji]] (日持), and [[Nikkō (priest)|Nikkō]] (日興). Each started a lineage of schools, but Nichiji eventually travelled to the Asian continent (ca. 1295) and was never heard from again, and Nitchō later in life (1302) rejoined and became a follower of Nikkō.<ref>''Shimpan Bukkyō Tetsugaku Daijiten'', p. 1368</ref> The reasons for the splits are numerous, entangled, and subject to different interpretations depending on which school is telling the story; suffice it to say that the senior priests had different understandings of what Nichiren's lifetime of teaching was about. Although the former five remained loosely affiliated to varying degrees, the last—Nikkō—made a clean break by leaving [[Kuon-ji]] in 1289. He had come to the conclusion that Nikō and the others were embarking on paths to heresy that he could not stem. Kuon-ji eventually became the central temple of today's [[Nichiren Shu]], one of the two largest branches and the one encompassing the numerous minor schools of the Minobu branch into which most of the schools started by Nisshō, Nichirō, and Nichiji have been subsumed. The other dominant branch is centered at [[Taiseki-ji]], the head temple of today's [[Nichiren Shoshu]] school. Taiseki-ji, which Nikkō founded in 1290 after leaving Kuon-ji, was the starting point for the other schools of the Kōmon-ha (興門派, ''kō'' from ''Nikkō'') or Fuji-ha (富士派, from the locality) branch. Other traditional Nichiren schools include several sub-schools that call themselves just Hokke Shū, the Honmon Butsuryū Shū, and the Kempon Hokke Shū. Several of Japan's [[Shinshukyo|new religions]] are also sub-sects of or otherwise based on one or another of the traditional Nichiren schools. The Reiyūkai, Risshō Kōsei Kai, and Nipponzan Myōhōji Sangha stem from one or another of the Kuon-ji/Minobu branch schools, whereas [[Soka Gakkai]], Shōshinkai, and Kenshōkai trace their origins to the Nichiren Shoshu school. ===Major Nichiren Buddhist schools=== <!--Please see the talk page before making changes ot this section --> The following lists are from the [[:ja:メインページ|Japanese Wikipedia]] article on [[:ja:日蓮宗|Nichiren Buddhism]]. ====Traditional schools and their head temples==== Head temple names are given in Roman letters only when the reading could be confirmed. Japanese characters preceded by "ja:" link to articles in the Japanese Wikipedia.<!--This listing was arrived at after much painstaking consensus building on the talk page and elsewhere. Please do not change it --> *[[Nichiren Shu|Nichiren Shū]]: Sozan Minobuzan [[Kuon-ji]] 日蓮宗 祖山身延山[[:ja:久遠寺]] *[[Nichiren Shōshū]]: Sōhonzan [[Taiseki-ji]] 日蓮正宗 総本山 大石寺 *Honmon Butsuryū Shū [[:ja:本門佛立宗]] 大本山宥清寺 *[[Kempon Hokke]] Shu: Sōhonzan Myōman-ji 総本山妙満寺 *Hokkeshū, Honmon Ryū 法華宗(本門流)大本山光長寺・鷲山寺・本興寺・本能寺 *Hokkeshū, Jinmon Ryū 法華宗(陣門流)総本山本成寺 *Hokkeshū, Shinmon Ryū 法華宗(真門流)総本山本隆寺 *Honmon Hokke Shū: Daihonzan Myōren-ji 本門法華宗 大本山妙蓮寺 *Nichiren Honshū: Honzan Yōbō-ji [[:ja:日蓮本宗]] 本山[[:ja:要法寺]] *Nichiren Shū [[Fuju-fuse]]-ha: Sozan Myōkaku-ji 日蓮宗不受不施派 祖山妙覚寺 *Nichiren Hokke Shū 日蓮法華宗 大本山正福寺 *Hokke Nichiren Shū 法華日蓮宗 総本山宝龍寺 *Hompa Nichiren Shū 本派日蓮宗 総本山宗祖寺 *Honke Nichiren Shū (Hyōgo) 本化日蓮宗(兵庫) 総本山妙見寺 *[[Fuju-fuse]] Nichiren Kōmon Shū 不受不施日蓮講門宗 本山本覚寺 *Honke Nichiren Shū (Kyōto) 本化日蓮宗(京都)本山石塔寺 *Shōbō Hokke Shū 正法法華宗 本山大教寺 *Honmon Kyōō Shū 本門経王宗 本山日宏寺 *Nichiren Kōmon Shū 日蓮講門宗 ====Non-traditional schools==== *[[Reiyūkai]] (Spiritual-Friendship-Association) Founded in 1920 by Kakutaro Kubo and Kimi Kotani, Reiyūkai considers itself the grandfather of lay-based new religions devoted to the Lotus Sutra and ancestor veneration. *[[Rissho Kosei Kai|Risshō Kōsei Kai]] *[[Nipponzan Myohoji|Nipponzan Myōhōji]] *Kokuchukai|Kokuchūkai [[:ja:国柱会]] (also 國柱会) *[[Shoshinkai|Shōshinkai]] *Fuji Taisekiji Kenshōkai (also, just ''Kenshōkai'') [[:ja:富士大石寺顕正会]] *Honmon Shōshū 本門正宗 ==== Lay organizations ==== *[[Soka Gakkai|Sōka Gakkai]] (also, [[Soka Gakkai International]] (SGI))<br><small>'''Note:''' Though many sources (e.g., [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9068539 Britannica online]; ''Illustrated'', p. 1443; ''Cambridge'', p. 175; ''Iwanami'', p. 679) characterize Sōka Gakkai as one of Japan’s [[Shinshukyo|new religions]] or as a lay-followers organization of Nichiren Shoshu (to which it has not been affiliated since the early 1990s). Sōka Gakkai and its constituent organizations position themselves as lay organizations whose purpose is to support practitioners of Nichiren Buddhism.<!-- see Talk page --></small> ==Doctrine and practices== Much of Nichiren Buddhist doctrine is, at least on the surface, a further development or adaptation of [[Tendai]] (Chinese: [[Tiantai]]) thought, especially as passed down from [[Saichō]] (also known as Dengyō; 767–822). For example, as in Tendai but in contrast to many other Buddhist schools, most Nichiren Buddhists believe that personal enlightenment can be achieved in this world within the practitioner's current lifetime (即身成仏: ''sokushin jōbutsu''). Markedly different from Tendai and any other Buddhist lineage is the Nichiren Buddhists' practice of chanting ''o-daimoku'' (also: ''daimoku''), the repeated recitation of the mantra (phrase) ''Nam-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō'', in some denominations also pronounced ''Namu-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō''. Most Nichiren schools also recite the Lotus Sutra (in Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese text) to varying degrees in their respective versions of the often daily or twice-daily [[gongyo|gongyō]] service. Other details of Nichiren Buddhist practice can differ widely depending on the school. Some recite the whole Lotus Sutra, while others recite only certain chapters, parts of chapters, or verses. Some practitioners worship Buddhist statues or images, and others use the [[Gohonzon]] (a [[mandala]] Nichiren provided for his followers during his lifetime) as their focal point during prayer; others worship only statues or images of various types; whereas yet others venerate only a particular Gohonzon and transcriptions of it.<!-- This article is NOT about a specific group, nor is it intended to represent the views of any one, particular group. If you want to write about what one (such as SGI) does or does not do, write it in (the) article(s) about that group: This article already advises readers to look for group-specific information under the articles on their favorite groups.--> Some schools (chiefly those stemming from Kuon-ji) keep [[Shinto]] shrines in their temple compounds and permit or encourage worship of indigenous Japanese deities, while those stemming from Taiseki-ji (but not Taiseki-ji and Nichiren Shōshū itself) tend to be very strict about their prohibition against worshiping anything exterior, rather they promote using the Gohonzon mandala as a visual representation of every person's inner Buddhahood. Some schools are virulently nationalistic; others are not and are further strictly pacifist. Further, Nichiren Shoshu and other schools stemming from the priest [[Nikkō (priest)|Nikkō]] consider Nichiren to be the True (or Original) Buddha, whereas Nichiren Shu and the others descendant from the other six senior priests see him as a saint, great teacher, or prophet. Schools provide more information on their particular differences. ==Nichiren's writings== Nichiren was a prolific writer. His personal communications and writings to his followers as well as numerous treatises detail his view of the correct form of practice for the ''Latter Day of the Law'' (''[[Buddhist terms and concepts#Mappo|Mappō]]''); lay out his views on other Buddhist schools, particularly those of influence during his lifetime; and elucidate his interpretations of Buddhist teachings that preceded his. These writings are collectively known as ''Gosho'' (''go'' is an honorific prefix designating respect; ''sho'' means ''writings'') in some schools and ''go-ibun'' ("left-behind writings") in others. Over 700 of them, some complete and some only in fragments, have been passed down through the centuries in compilations, as copies, and even many in the original. Some are also available in English translation, most notably in ''Letters of Nichiren'' and ''Selected Writings of Nichiren'' in the ''Translations from the Asian Classics'' series from Columbia University Press; more-sectarian translations of some of his writings are also available. See also: [[Tendai]] and [[Tiantai]] ==Sources and references== ===English=== *''A Dictionary of Buddhist Terms and Concepts''. Nichiren Shoshu International Center, 1983 (Out of print) *''Selected Writings of Nichiren''. Burton Watson et al., trans.; Philip B. Yampolsky, ed. Columbia University Press, 1990 *''Letters of Nichiren''. Burton Watson et al., trans.; Philip B. Yampolsky, ed. Columbia University Press, 1996<br><small>'''Full disclosure statement:''' Although Soka Gakkai retains the copyrights on the foregoing three <!--Not two: Nichiren Shoshu International Center has been subsumed by SGI since the 1992 split between Soka Gakkai and Nichiren Shoshu, and despite its name it was never directly affiliated with Nichiren Shoshu--> works and financed their publication, they show some deviation from similar works published under Soka Gakkai's own name.</small> *''The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Japan''. Paul Bowring and Peter Kornicki, eds. Cambridge University Press, 1993. ISBN 0-521-40352-9 (Referred to in text as ''Cambridge''.) *''Japan: An Illustrated Encyclopedia''. Kondansha, 1993, ISBN 4-06-205938-X; CD-ROM version, 1999. (Referred to in text as ''Illustrated''.) *''The Doctrines and Practice of Nichiren Shoshu''. Nichiren Shoshu Overseas Bureau, 2002<!--this is a valid reference; do not remove it--> *''The Soka Gakkai Dictionary of Buddhism''. Soka Gakkai, 2002, ISBN 4-412-01205-0 ===Japanese=== *''Nichiren Shōshū yōgi'' (日蓮正宗要義; "The essential tenets of Nichiren Shoshu"). Taiseki-ji, 1978, rev. ed. 1999 *''Shimpan Bukkyō Tetsugaku Daijiten'' (新版 仏教哲学大辞典: "Grand dictionary of Buddhist philosophy, rev. ed."). Seikyo Shimbunsha, 1985. No ISBN. *''Nichiren Shōshū-shi no kisoteki kenkyū'' (日蓮正宗史の基礎的研究; "A study of fundaments of Nichiren Shoshu history"). (Rev.) Yamaguchi Handō. Sankibo Bussho-rin, 1993. ISBN 4-7963-0763-X *''Iwanami Nihonshi Jiten'' (岩波 日本史辞典: "Iwanami dictionary of Japanese history"). Iwanami Shoten, 1999. ISBN 4-00-080093-0 (Referred to in text as ''Iwanami''.) *''Nichiren Shōshū Nyūmon'' (日蓮正宗入門; "Introduction to Nichiren Shoshu"). Taiseki-ji, 2002 *''Kyōgaku Yōgo Kaisetsu Shū'' (教学解説用語集; "Glossary of Nichiren Shoshu Buddhist terms"). (Rev.) Kyōdō Enoki, comp. Watō Henshūshitsu, 2006. == Footnotes == {{reflist}} ==External links== * [http://www.kemponhokke.com/ Kempon Hokke Shu U.S. site] * [http://www.nichirenshoshu.or.jp/ Nichiren Shoshu's English website] * [http://www.nichirenshu.org/ Nichiren Shu official website] * [http://www.nichirenscoffeehouse.net/ Nichiren's Coffeehouse interfaith directory] * [http://www.sgi.org/ Soka Gakkai International] * [http://www.nichirenbuddhist.org/ Nichiren Buddhist Association of America] * [http://www.religionfacts.com/buddhism/sects/nichiren.htm ReligionFacts.com on Nichiren Buddhism] Contains some inaccuracies; e.g., the photo of an altar is not of a Nichiren Shoshu one. * [http://www.reiyukai.or.jp Reiyukai Japan] and [http://www.reiyukai-usa.org Reiyukai America] * [http://www.nichirenshueuropa.com Nichiren Shu in Italy and the rest of Europe] * [http://www.hbsitalia.com Honmon Butsuryushu italian official web site] * [http://www.honmon-butsuryushu.or.jp Honmon Butsuryushu japanese official web site] {{Buddhism topics}} [[Category:Buddhism in Japan]] [[Category:Nichiren Buddhism|*]] [[cs:Ničirenova škola]] [[de:Nichiren-Buddhismus]] [[fr:Bouddhisme de Nichiren]] [[ko:니치렌슈]] [[it:Buddhismo Nichiren]] [[nl:Nichiren-boeddhisme]] [[ja:日蓮宗]] [[pt:Budismo de Nitiren]] [[ru:Нитирэн (буддизм)]] [[fi:Nichiren-buddhalaisuus]] [[th:นิชิเรนโชชู]] [[uk:Нітірен-сю]] [[zh:日蓮宗]]'
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