Nichiren Shōshū


Nichiren Shōshū is a branch of Nichiren Buddhism based on the teachings of the 13th-century Japanese Buddhist priest Nichiren, claiming him as its founder through his disciple Nikko Shonin, the founder of Head Temple Taiseki-ji, near Mount Fuji. Nichiren Shōshū lay adherents are called Hokkeko members. The Enichizan Myohoji Temple located in Los Angeles, California serves as the organization's headquarters within the United States.
The sect is based on the teachings of Nichiren. Its main object of worship is the Dai Gohonzon, and its logo is the round crane bird. Both its leadership and adherents ascribe the honorific title to Nichiren, as the “Original True Buddha” and the Dai-Shonin while maintaining that the sole legitimate successor to both his ministry and legacy is Nikko Shonin alone and the successive high priests of Nichiren Shōshū, lead by the current High Priest of the sect, Hayase Myoe Ajari Nichinyo Shonin, who ascended to the position on 15 December 2005.

Overview

Nichiren Shōshū is a Mahayana Buddhist sect. Its original name is Nichiren School of the Fuji area, branch of Taisekiji Temple, indicating the general naming of sects at the time, though not united, and then divided in different localized traditions. After the Meiji restoration, it was given its own name, Nichiren Shoshu, in 1912. Its head temple Taiseki-ji, is located on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Japan. Taiseki-ji is visited regularly by Nichiren Shōshū believers from around the world who come to chant to the Dai Gohonzon, which they claim was described by Nichiren as ”…the essence of my Buddhahood written in Sumi Ink.”
Unlike other Mahayana Buddhist practices, Nichiren expounded the Lotus Sutra and chanting Nam-myōhō-renge-kyō as a way for anyone to obtain Enlightenment regardless of one's position in life, condition of circumstances, gender and occupational role as well as not necessarily waiting to be reincarnated into another future existence.
Nichiren Shōshū claims over 700 local temples and additional temple-like facilities in Japan. It also claims 24 overseas official designated temples and 678,000 registered members.
Nichiren Shōshū claims a direct lineage, called Yuijo Ichinen Kechimyaku Sojo, of successive High Priests from Nikko Shonin, who they believe was chosen by Nichiren to carry on the propagation of his Buddhist practice in the Latter Day of the Law, a claim that other Nichiren Buddhist sects assert as well, such as Nichiren-shū. Nichiren Shōshū claims this lineage is set forth in the following Nichiren documents:
  1. The Law that Nichiren propagated throughout his life
  2. The Ikegami Transfer Document
  3. The 106 Articles of Nichiren Shōshū
The current leader of the sect is the 68th High Priest, Nichinyo Shōnin. Nichiren Shōshū priests distinguish themselves from those of most other schools by wearing only white and grey vestment robes and a white surplice, as they believe Nichiren did. Since the Meiji period, Nichiren Shōshū priests, like other Japanese Buddhist sects, have been permitted to marry.

Hokkeko

Lay believers belong to official congregations known as Hokkekō groups, designed to encourage solidarity among fellow members to study the Nichiren Shoshu doctrines and plan one's Tozan pilgrimage to the head temple in Japan. Most attend services at a local temple or in private homes when no temple is nearby. Services are usually officiated by a priest, but lay leaders sometimes fill in when no priest is available. When they gather, believers frequently study Nichiren Shōshū teachings, particularly the various writings of Nichiren, called Gosho. A leader in a local group or district is called Koto while a widely held position on a grander scale was once called So-Koto, now expired and no longer used. The present Dai-Koto leader of the Hokkeko Federation is Mr. Koichiro Hoshino.
The official symbol of Nichiren Shōshū is the crane bird. More specifically, the posture of the crane is in a circular position . Another symbol is the eight wheel of Noble Eightfold Path called Rimbo used by all Buddhist sects, as well as the tortoise crest for Nikko Shonin, who is considered by the school to be the sole and legitimate successor to Nichiren. The Three Friends of Winter combination crest is also present in the temple altars, representing Nichimoku Shonin.

Doctrine

Nichiren Shōshū doctrine extends the Tiantai classification of the Buddhist sutras into five time periods and eight categories, its theory of 3,000 interpenetrating realms within a single life-moment, and its view of the Three Truths in the 21st chapter of the Lotus Sutra which states the following:
  1. - Nichiren Shōshū teaches that Nichiren is the True Buddha for the modern age corresponding to the present Buddhist age and on for eternity—for this reason by referring to him as Nichiren Daishōnin.
  2. - The Dharma, or Mystic Law, is the True Buddha's ultimate teaching, crystallized in Nam Myōhō Renge Kyō.
  3. - The Sangha refers to the collective of Nichiren Shōshū priests who serve to protect and preserve the doctrines and dogma of Nichiren Shōshū.

    The Three Great Secret Laws

According to the doctrinal beliefs of Nichiren Shoshu, Nichiren instituted the mastery three spiritual disciplines:
  1. Precepts - designed to help practitioners replace the negative causes that they tend to make with positive ones.
  2. Meditation - designed to tranquil and focus the mind towards purity.
  3. Wisdom - designed to discern the causes of negative passions and desires and embody the Buddhist universal truth.
Nichiren Shoshu teaches that Nichiren revealed the Three Great Secret Laws:
  1. The Dai-Gohonzon as the Supreme Object of Worship, sourcing to the vow of Precepts.
  2. The Daimoku of Nam Myoho Renge Kyo as the Supreme Invocation, sourcing to its meditational practice.
  3. The Dai-Sekiji no Honmon Kaidan as the Platform of the High Sanctuary of Essential Teaching, sourcing to its authoritative office of Wisdom.

    Ceremonies

Several ceremonies are conducted within Nichiren Shoshu, some as memorials for lauded figures, others in commemoration or celebration of momentous events, as well as life-cycle event ceremonies for individuals including conversion to Buddhism, marriages and funerals. One of the important ceremonies is calledGojukai, which is a ceremony for the “Acceptance of the Precept”. Gojukai literally means “to receive the precept”.This ceremony is conducted when a person converts to the faith and practice of Nichiren Buddhism and involves the recipient vowing to uphold the teachings of Nichiren Daishonen. The ceremony, officiated by a priest, involves the recitation of the Lotus Sutra, Gongyo, followed by chanting of Daimoku, Shodai, and an observance of the silent prayers. The officiating priest will then administer the “oath of acceptance” in which three questions are asked to the recipient, who answers “I do.”

Daily practice

Nichiren Shōshū teaches that personal enlightenment can be achieved in one's present form and lifetime. Chanting Nam-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō is central to their practice. Only by chanting Nam-myōhō-renge-kyō to the Gohonzon is a person believed to change, or expiate, bad karma and achieve enlightenment. In this process, the individual chooses to lead others to an enlightened state of being.
Nam-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō is called the Daimoku, since it comprises Nam and the Japanese title of the Lotus Sutra, Myōhō-Renge-Kyō. It can be understood as a sort of invocation meaning "I submit myself to the Mystic Law containing the Cause and Effect of the enlightenment of all Buddhas." The believer's practice and faith are believed to call forth the power of the Buddha and the power of the Dharma inherent in the Gohonzon. This practice and faith are thought to expiate the believer's "negative karma", and bring forth a higher life condition.
The daily practice of Nichiren Shōshū believers consists of performing gongyō twice daily, once in the morning and once in the evening. Gongyō entails chanting a portion of Chapter 2 and all of Chapter 16 of the Lotus Sutra and chanting Nam-Myōhō-Renge-Kyō to the Gohonzon, while focusing on the Chinese character 妙 , the second character of the Daimoku.
Morning gongyō consists of a series of five sutra recitations followed by silently recited, prescribed prayers. Evening gongyō encompasses only three sutra recitations and the second, third, and fifth of the same silent prayers. This practice, particularly when shared with others, is regarded as the "true cause" for attaining enlightenment. A traditional bell is used to announce prayers for the Buddhist protection gods of Shoten Zenjin as well as to announce the dead relatives prayed for during Gongyo services.

Object of worship

The Dai Gohonzon is a calligraphic mandala inscribed with Sanskrit and Chinese characters on a plank of Japanese camphorwood and the supreme object of veneration for the Shōshū school. The Nichiren Shōshū school claims that Nichiren inscribed it on 12 October 1279.
The religious importance of this item to Nichiren Shoshu is that the sect claims the ninpō-ikka or "unity of the Person and the Buddhist Law" and the Dai Gohonzon is revered as the personification of Nichiren himself. Every Nichiren Shōshū temple and household possesses a gohonzon that the sect claims is a transcription of the Dai Gohonzon.
The Dai Gohonzon is enshrined at the Hoando worship hall within the Taiseki-ji Grand Main Temple complex grounds at the foot of Mount Fuji. The temple priesthood will only expose the image for constant public veneration once Kosen-rufu is achieved, maintaining the beliefs of Nichiren Shōshū as the primal religion in the world. Unlike the other Gohonzons enshrined at the Head Temple, it is not enshrined with shikimi branches.
s on the Taiseki-ji main entrance of the Dai-Gohonzon sanctuary.
Transcriptions of the Dai Gohonzon, made by successive High Priests of Nichiren Shōshū, are called gohonzon. Most gohonzons in temples are wood tablets in which the inscription is carved; the tablets are coated with black urushi and have gilded characters. Gohonzons enshrined in temples and other similar facilities are personally inscribed by one of the successive High Priests.
Hokkeko followers may make a request to receive a personal gohonzon to their local temple chief priest. These gohonzons are facsimiles printed on paper and presented as a small scroll, measuring approximately 7" x 15" inches. The local chief priest sends all requests to the Head Temple. As these requests are granted, gohonzons are then delivered to the recipient's local priest and he bestows them on the individual members. In this ritual, the recipient vows to sincerely believe in Nichiren's teachings and to practice and uphold the gohonzon of the Three Great Secret Laws.

List of High Priests

RankHigh PriestDate of BirthDate of Death
1Nichiren Daishonin16 February 122213 October 1282
2Nikko Shonin8 March 12467 February 1333
3Nichimoku Shonin28 April 126015 November 1333
4Nichido Shonin128326 February 1341
5Nichigyo ShoninUnrecorded13 August 1369
6Nichiji ShoninUnrecorded4 June 1406
7Nichi a ShoninUnrecorded10 March 1407
8Nichi-ei Shonin7 November 13534 August 1419
9Nichiu Shonin16 April 140229 September 1482
10Nichijo ShoninUnrecorded20 November 1472
11Nittei ShoninUnrecorded7 April 1472
12Nitchin Shonin146924 June 1527
13Nichi-in Shonin15186 July 1589
14Nisshu Shonin155517 August 1617
15Nissho Shonin15627 April 1622
16Nichiju Shonin156721 February 1632
17Nissei Shonin16005 November 1683
18Nichi-ei Shonin3 March 15947 March 1638
19Nisshun Shonin161012 November 1669
20Nitten Shonin161121 September 1686
21Nichinin Shonin16124 September 1680
22Nisshun Shonin163729 October 1691
23Nikkei Shonin164814 November 1707
24Nichi-ei Shonin165024 February 1715
25Nichiyu Shonin166928 December 1729
26Nichikan Shonin7 August 166519 August 1726
27Nichiyo Shonin16704 June 1723
28Nissho Shonin168125 August 1734
29Nitto Shonin3 March 16891 December 1737
30Nitchu Shonin168711 October 1743
31Nichi-in Shonin17 October 168714 June 1769
32Nikkyo Shonin170412 August 1757
33Nichigen Shonin15 August 171126 February 1778
34Nisshin Shonin171426 July 1765
35Nichi-on Shonin17163 July 1774
36Nikken Shonin17173 October 1791
37Nippo Shonin23 January 173126 May 1803
38Nittai Shonin173120 February 1785
39Nichijun Shonin173630 July 1801
40Nichinin Shonin174725 August 1795
41Nichimon Shonin175114 August 1796
42Nichigon Shonin174811 July 1797
43Nisso Shonin17593 December 1805
44Nissen Shonin17607 January 1822
45Nichirei ShoninUnrecorded8 May 1808
46Nitcho Shonin176627 January 1817
47Nisshu Shonin176922 September 1816
48Nichiryo Shonin18 February 177129 May 1851
49Nisso Shonin17738 May 1830
50Nichijo Shonin17951 May 1836
51Nichi-ei Shonin17989 July 1877
52Nichiden Shonin25 August 181724 June 1890
53Nichijo Shonin11 October 183125 June 1892
54Nichi-in Shonin16 March 18292 June 1880
55Nippu Shonin5 February 18354 March 1919
56Nichi-o Shonin184815 June 1922
57Nissho Shonin24 May 186526 January 1928
58Nitchu Shonin18 December 186118 August 1923
59Nichiko Shonin24 February 186723 November 1957
60Nichikai Shonin23 August 187321 November 1943
61Nichiryu Shonin10 August 187424 March 1947
62Nikkyo Shonin18 September 186917 June 1945
63Nichiman Shonin5 March 18737 January 1951
64Nissho Shonin24 September 187914 October 1957
65Nichijun Shonin10 October 189817 November 1959
66Nittatsu Shonin15 April 190222 July 1979
67Nikken Shonin19 December 192220 September 2019
68Nichinyo Shonin25 February 1935Current High Priest

The following groups, which had been associated with Nichiren Shoshu, were expelled in the years 1974, 1980, and 1991.

Kenshokai (顕正会) — (1974)

In 1974, a lay group called Myōshinkō from the Myokoji Temple in Shinagawa ward in Tokyo was expelled by High Priest Nittatsu Hosoi from Nichiren Shōshū after holding a public protest against Soka Gakkai for claiming that the Shohondo building was the true and permanent national sanctuary of the Dai Gohonzon as mandated by Nichiren, even without the conversion of Emperor Showa. The group was known for being brazen in confronting Soka Gakkai and being confrontational with the late Nittatsu Shonin, resulting in a lawsuit against him amidst public protest. They are known for reciting two Hiki-Daimoku and one regular, a developed practice that has unknown origins. The group is highly devoted to the Dai Gohonzon enshrined at Taisekiji even without the support or affiliation of Nichiren Shōshū.
The group later changed its name to Fuji Taisekiji Kenshōkai. Kenshōkai has been described as one of the fastest growing denominations of Buddhism in Japan. The Kenshokai uses an enlarged, variant copy transcription of the Dai Gohonzon image from the year 1728 by Nichikan Shonin, the 26th Chief Priest of Head Temple Taisekiji. The image uses the exact same brown ornamental border used by Nichiren Shoshu.

Shōshinkai (正信会) — (1980)

In 1980, a group of Nichiren Shōshū priests and lay supporters called Shōshinkai were expelled from the Head Temple by 67th High Priest Nikken Shonin for questioning the legitimacy of the new head abbot Nikken and for criticising Soka Gakkai's influence on temple affairs. At the time, Soka Gakkai supported Nikken's claim to be the rightful successor of Nittatsu Hosoi as high priest. Shōshinkai continues to refer to itself as the true Nichiren Shōshū. Shōshinkai later founded a dissident association of Nichiren Shoshu priests seeking reformation and began transcribing their own creative version of the Gohonzon rather than taking a transcribed copy from one of the Nichiren Shōshū high priests. Most of them have aged or deceased, and their temples have since reverted back to Nichiren Shoshu administration after their death, having been replaced with younger priests affiliated with the Head Temple Taisekiji. Some of these older priests have also joined other Nichiren sects or made their own, such as the case in Taiwan.

Soka Gakkai (創価学会) — (1991)

Nichiren Shōshū excommunicated the Soka Gakkai and the Soka Gakkai International on 28 November 1991.
Soka Gakkai had emerged as a lay organization affiliated with one of the temples located in the Taiseki-ji land complex, founded by Tsunesaburo Makiguchi, who was converted by Sokei Mitani, the principal of Meijiro Kenshin Junior and Senior High School to Nichiren Shoshu on 4 June 1928. The organization grew under second president Jōsei Toda, and continued to base its teachings on Nichiren Shōshū until the development of doctrinal conflicts with the third Soka Gakkai President and Soka Gakkai International president, Daisaku Ikeda.
As early as 1956, such doctrinal conflicts simmered, evident by the alleged declaration of second president of Soka Gakkai, Josei Toda to the 65th High Priest Nichijun Shonin during the reconstruction of Myoden-ji Temple, claiming the organizational leadership no longer upheld Nichiren Shoshu doctrines.
On 10 May 1974, the Vice-President of Soka Gakkai, Hiroshi Hojo, submitted a written report to Daisaku Ikeda proposing a schism with Nichiren Shōshū, using the example of Protestants and Roman Catholics as "differences". In response, High Priest Nittatsu Hosoi refused the proposal to create a board committee that would overlook temple affairs and its bookkeeping practices, while mentioning his gratitude for the construction of the Shohondo building. Furthermore, Nittatsu acknowledged the possibility of the split, and specifically threatened to place the Dai-Gohonzon back into the Nichiren Shōshū treasury building where only a select few faithful would be able to venerate the image. The climax which ultimately led to the resignation of third president Daisaku Ikeda in 1979 from his post as Sokoto or lay leader went hand in hand with the formal excommunication by High Priest Nikken Abe.
These and other conflicts resulted in a complete and formal disassociation of the two sides after Nichiren Shōshū excommunicated the leaders of the Sōka Gakkai and stripped it of its status as a lay organization of Nichiren Shōshū in 1991. Ultimately, Daisaku Ikeda was excommunicated from the role of Sokoto or lay leader by High Priest Nikken, while the formal decree of excommunication invalidated the tax exempt status of Soka Gakkai under Japanese law due to its lack of temple affiliation.
Further causes of conflict came when the temple priesthood began to notice the construction of Community Centers instead of funding construction of new Nichiren Shōshū temples. On 30 September 1997, Nichiren Shōshū finally excommunicated all Soka Gakkai International members.

Opposing views

Most significant is the alleged monopoly of Nichiren Buddhism through the devotional Tozan pilgrimages to the Dai Gohonzon, alleging it to be a forgery, unsubstantiated by historical provenance, stolen and hostaged, or outright commercialized for either profit or exclusivity.
The opinion of academic researchers such as American author Daniel Alfred Metraux, claims the issue of doctrinal authority as the central point of the conflict: