Sunday 19 April 2020

Sensei's Daily Encouragement - 19 April 2020 - Year of Advancement and Capable People


   Daily Encouragement by Daisaku Ikeda

April 19, 2020

 

At a crucial moment it is the strength and courage of ordinary people who have no name or position in society that save the day. The famous, the well-connected, almost always have too much to lose, and they abandon the cause in order to protect themselves.

 



From The Writings of Nichiren Daishonin

April 19, 2020


The human mind is inconstant; it is ever-changing and unfixed. I thought it wondrous that you pledged faith in my teachings while I was in the province of Sado, and your sincerity in sending your husband all the way here is even more remarkable. The provinces we live in are far apart, and months and years have passed, so I was concerned that you might slacken in your resolve. However, you are increasingly demonstrating the depth of your faith and accumulating good deeds. Surely this is not a result of practice over just one or two previous lifetimes.


The Writings of Nichiren Daishonin, page 491

Reply to the Lay Priest of Ko

Written to the lay priest of Ko on April 12, 1275




Wisdom for Modern Life by Daisaku Ikeda

April 19, 2020


Grass and trees cannot grow without soil. The "soil" that fosters our growth includes our parents, teachers, seniors, or homeland, alma mater, community or company. In any case, everyone has some place where they grew up or someone who nurtured them. Human beings grow as a result of nurturing "soil" in which they express their ability and make the flowers of their lives blossom, just as the spirit of the rice plant returns to the soil and the stalk sprouts to flower and bear grain once again. We should repay our debts of gratitude to this soil in which we developed. This cycle of repaying gratitude will envelop one's whole existence. Your true humanity will never blossom if you seek only to develop yourself.

 



Excerpt from Daisaku Ikeda - A Youthful Diary (09 March 1953) p.139


A lecture for Study Department seniors at the headquarters. Mr. Toda's strictness and the earnestness of those attending remind me of the severe training of master swordsmen. Whenever I participate in a study meeting, I feel I have not studied enough. Profoundly aware of the importance of study.

 


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