Sunday, 3 June 2012

Sensei's Daily Encouragement - 03 June 2012 - The Year of Developing a Youthful SGI

Daily Encouragement by Daisaku Ikeda
Sunday, June 3, 2012 
 
I would like each of you to rise to the challenge of revolutionizing the area where you live into an ideal community and to do so with the determination to start from where you are right now. This means building a good SGI organization in your local area and building it yourself with loving, painstaking care, the way an artist pours his or her heart and soul into creating a work of art. It also means fostering capable people. Buddhism, after all, can only flourish if there are people who uphold and practice its teachings.  
 

  
From the Writings of Nichiren Daishonin
Sunday, June 3, 2012
 
As I said before, though no chapter of the Lotus Sutra is negligible, among the entire twenty-eight chapters, the "Expedient Means" chapter and the "Life Span" chapter are particularly outstanding. The remaining chapters are all in a sense the branches and leaves of these two chapters. Therefore, for your regular recitation, I recommend that you practice reading the prose sections of the "Expedient Means" and "Life Span" chapters.
 
The Recitation of the "Expedient Means" and "Life Span" Chapters
Written to Hiki Daigaku Saburo Yoshimoto's wife on April 17, 1264  
 

  
Wisdom for Modern Life by Daisaku Ikeda
Sunday, June 3, 2012
 
When we plant the seed of happiness that is faith and carefully tend its growth, it will produce fruit without fail. We have to bear in mind, however, that we cannot plant a seed today and expect it to bear fruit tomorrow. That's not reasonable and Buddhism is reason. If we persevere, bearing in mind the principle faith equals daily life in accord with reason, then our prayers will definitely be answered. This is Nichiren's promise to us. And his words are true beyond any doubt.  
 

 
Daisaku Ikeda - A Youthful Diary (1955) p.263
 
Fall, the season for reading.  No, I would rather make each of the 365 days of the year a "day for reading."

1. Must read the Gosho in its entirety.

2. Will thoroughly read Nichikan's Six-volume Writings.

3. Will carefully read good books of past and present, East and West – especially during the next three years.
The course of my life will be determined over these three years.

Fate, destiny – they are like the flow of a great river.

No one to confide in, no one to blame.

To the dentist in the afternoon.  Can everything be this bad?




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