Wednesday 2 July 2014

Sensei's Daily Encouragement - 02 July 2014 - Year of Opening a New Era of Worldwide Kosen-rufu



Daily Encouragement by Daisaku Ikeda
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
 
The writer Goethe was an unflagging optimist. How was he able to maintain such optimism? Because he was always active. He did not allow his life to stagnate. He writes: "It is better to do the smallest thing in the world than to hold half an hour to be too small a thing." Spending thirty minutes a day assiduously challenging some undertaking can completely change our lives.
 

 
From the Writings of Nichiren Daishonin
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
 
The sutra teaches that women, evil men, and those in the realms of animality and Hell in fact, all the beings of the Ten Worlds can attain Buddhahood in their present form. [This is an incomparably greater wonder than] fire being produced by a stone taken from the bottom of a river, or a lantern lighting up a place that has been dark for a hundred, a thousand, or ten thousand years. If even the most ordinary things of this world are such wonders, then how much more wondrous is the power of the Buddhist Law!"
 
The One Essential Phrase
Written to the lay nun Myoho on July 3, 1278
 

 
Wisdom for Modern Life by Daisaku Ikeda
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
 
If we attain the state of Buddhahood in this lifetime, that state will forever pervade our lives. Throughout the cycle of birth and death, in each new lifetime, we are endowed with good health, wealth and intelligence, along with a supportive, comfortable environment, and lead lives that overflow with good fortune. Each of us will also possess a unique mission and be born in an appropriate form to fulfill it.
 

 
Excerpt from Daisaku Ikeda - A Youthful Diary (02 March 1955) p.230
 
Some Friendships are shallow; others are deep. My relations with some are superficial, while others share my pleasures and my pains. Many people believe only in themselves, but they are egoistic and self-centered. Is this instinctual? Only the Gakkai tries to realize profound and powerful unity based on the principle of 'many in body, one in mind.' In all the world, we are the only ones to do so.
 

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