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Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō

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An inscription of Nam Myōhō Renge Kyō by Japanese artisan Hasegawa Tohaku. Toyama, Japan. Circa Momoyama period, 1568.

Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō[a] (Kanji: 南無妙法蓮華経) is a Japanese sacred phrase chanted within all forms of Nichiren Buddhism. In English, it means "Devotion to the Mystic Dharma of the Lotus Flower Sutra" or "Homage to the Sublime Dharma of the Lotus Sutra".[2][3]

The words 'Myōhō Renge Kyō' refer to the Japanese title of the Lotus Sūtra (Sanskrit: Saddharmapuṇḍarīkasūtra). The phrase is referred to as the Daimoku (題目)[3] or, in honorific form, O-daimoku (お題目) meaning title, and was publicly taught by the Japanese Buddhist priest Nichiren on 28 April 1253 atop Mount Kiyosumi, now memorialized by Seichō-ji temple in Kamogawa, Chiba prefecture, Japan.[4][5]

in Nichiren Buddhism, the practice of prolonged Daimoku chanting is referred to as Shōdai (唱題). Nichiren Buddhist believers claim that the purpose of chanting is to reduce suffering by eradicating negative karma and all karmic retribution,[6] while also advancing the practitioner on the path to perfect and complete awakening.[7]

History

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Lotus Sutra devotion had a long history in China and Japan (especially in the Tiantai school), but it was generally associated with chanting whole chapters of the sutra, or the whole sutra itself, not simply the title. An homage similar to the daimoku is found in Chinese ritual texts belonging to the Tiantai school, such as in the Lotus Repentance of Zhiyi, the founder of the tradition. However, these homage phrases are only recited once as part of the entire ritual, not as a repetitive chant.[8]

The Fahua ch'uan-chi, a Tang dynasty Chinese Lotus Sutra devotional text, contains at least two stories of individuals being saved from hell by reciting "Námó miàofǎ liánhuá jīng", but this is just a single recitation, and the text does not discuss its use as a chant used in continuous religious practice.[8][9]

In Heian period Japan

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The actual practice of chanting the Daimoku, or the title of the Lotus Sutra (in Japanese: Namu-myōhō-renge-kyō), was popularized by the Kamakura-period Buddhist reformer Nichiren (1222–1282). While often assumed to be his original innovation, historical evidence suggests that the practice existed in Japan way before his time. Early references to Daimoku chanting appear in Heian period (794–1185) texts, such as Shui ōjōden and Hokke hyakuza kikigakisho, where it was associated with devotion to the Lotus Sutra. Nichiren, however, transformed this practice by giving it a comprehensive doctrinal foundation and advocating it as the sole means of salvation in the degenerate age of the Final Dharma (mappō).[8]

Fukūken-saku Kannon in the Hokke-dō (Lotus Sutra Ritual Hall) of Tōdai-ji. Kannon (Guanyin), who appears in the Lotus Sutra, was often associated with the daimoku during the Heian period.

The idea that the title of the sutra held the power of the entire sutra could have been influenced by the fact that Zhiyi, the Chinese founder of the Tiantai school, had explained in his commentary to the Lotus Sutra that the title of the sutra contained within it the entire meaning of the whole sutra, and that it signified the sublime (miao 妙) nature of ultimate reality itself.[10]

The earliest authenticated use of the Japanese daimoku dates back to 881, in a prayer composed by Sugawara no Michizane for his deceased parents. In this prayer, the daimoku was actually paired with an homage to Kannon bodhisattva (as Namu Kanzeon Bosatsu, Namu myōhō renge kyō).[11] Similarly, the Kachio engi (possibly dated to the 9th century) states that the monk Shōnyo taught the chanting of Namu-myōhō-renge-kyō and Namu Amida Nyorai.[11]

By the late 10th and early 11th centuries, the daimoku was being chanted on the Tendai school stronghold of Mt. Hiei as an expression of devotion to the Dharma. There is evidence of the Daimoku's use in sutra burials, inscriptions on statues, and other religious practices, indicating its growing significance in both monastic and aristocratic circles.[11] These examples are often associated with Amida Buddha or Kannon. For example, a Kannon statue installed in 1012 at Koryuji temple included inscriptions of the daimoku along with the nembutsu (Namu Amida Butsu).[11]

The Kūkan (Contemplation of Emptiness), a text (questionably) attributed to the Tendai monk Genshin (942–1017), states that those who "abhor the impure Saha world and aspires to the Pure Land of Utmost Bliss should chant Namu Amida Butsu, Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō, Namu Kanzeon Bosatsu," which can be interpreted as honoring correspondingly the three jewels of Buddhism.[11] Similar passages which contain the daimoku as a devotional chant is found in the works of Genshin's disciples, like Kakuun (953-1007), and Kakuchō (952/960-1034).[11]

By the late 12th century, the daimoku began to be chanted repeatedly, similar to the nembutsu (chanting of Amida Buddha's name), as seen in records of rituals and ceremonies from this time. Stories from setsuwa (Buddhist tales) further illustrate the daimoku's role as a simple yet powerful practice, accessible even to those with limited knowledge of Buddhism. These tales emphasize the Lotus Sutra's salvific power, suggesting that even uttering its title could form a bond with the Dharma and lead to salvation. However, the practice was not yet as widespread among the common people, remaining more prominent among monks and the nobility.[11] In a story found in the Hokke hyakuza kikigakisho, the daimoku (here: Namu ichijō myōhō renge kyō) is recited by an illiterate Chinese monk who could not learn to chant the Lotus Sutra itself, and the practice later saves him from hell.[11]

Furthermore, during this period, a class of people known as "title chanters" (daimyōsō) emerged, who intoned the daimoku at public lectures and other ceremonies. These figures may have helped spread the practice before the rise of Nichiren Buddhism.[11]

The 12th century practice of the daimoku was often paired with the nembutsu or associated with Pure Land Buddhism. One example from the early 12th century is in the Shui ōjōden (Gleanings of Biographies of People born in the Pure Land), which contains a description of the practice in the context of Pure Land devotion. The text describes how Tachibana no Morisuke (d. 1096) is said to have recited the name of Amida Buddha and the title of the Lotus Sutra every evening while facing West.[11] In another example, the artist Unkei (1150–1223) describes how during a ritual copying of the Lotus Sutra, various devotees would perform three bows for each line of the sutra he copied. With each bow they would recite the daimoku and the nembutsu. Unkei also mentions how local lay supporters of the project also chanted the nembutsu and the daimoku several thousand times.[11]

The Shuzenji-ketsu

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One medieval Tendai oral teachings text (kuden homon), the Shuzenji-ketsu (Doctrinal Decisions of Hsiu-ch'an-ssu), contains an example of daimoku chanting. The Shuzenji-ketsu recommends the chanting of daimoku as a deathbed practice, stating that this practice is a "Dharma container" which can include within it the threefold contemplation of Tiantai. The text mentions that "through the workings of the three powers of the Wondrous Dharma [Dharma, Buddha, Faith], one shall at once attain enlightened wisdom and will not receive a body bound by birth and death."[8] The text also teaches daimoku recitation as a method of contemplating the three thousand realms in one thought (ichinen sanzen), again at the time of death, and pairs it with recitation of the name of Kannon bodhisattva.[8]

The text also teaches daimoku recitation as part of a contemplative rite described as follows:

You should make pictures of images representing the ten realms and enshrine them in ten places. Facing each image, you should, one hundred times, bow with your body, chant Namu Myoho-renge-kyo with your mouth, and contemplate with your mind. When you face the image of hell, contemplate that its fierce flames are themselves precisely emptiness, precisely provisional existence, and precisely the middle, and so on for all the images. When you face the image of the Buddha, contemplate its essence being precisely the threefold truth. You should carry out this practice for one time period in the morning and one time period in the evening. The Great Teacher Zhiyi secretly conferred this Dharma essential for the beings of dull faculties in the last age. If one wishes to escape from birth and death and attain bodhi, then first he should employ this practice. – Shuzenji-ketsu, trans. Jacqueline Stone [12]

The dating of the Shuzenji-ketsu is uncertain and it has provoked much scholarly controversy in Japan. Scholars disagree on whether the work influenced or is influenced by Nichiren, as well as whether it predates him, post-dates Nichiren, or whether it emerged independently at around the same time.[8] Shimaji Daito (1875-1927) for example, places it in the cloistered rule period (1086-1185).[8] Tamura Yoshiro meanwhile dates the work to 1250-1300.[8] Takagi Yutaka meanwhile agrees with the view that the text is from the late Heian period and that it demonstrate's the era's concern for a proper death. Many scholars have noted that devotion to Amitabha and the Lotus Sutra were key elements of the Buddhism of the Heian period, where they were seen as complementary. The Tendai school at mount Hiei was known for a schedule of practice which focused on Lotus Sutra rites in the morning and Pure Land practices in the evening. This custom was later described through the motto "daimoku in the morning and nembutsu in the evening."[8]

Nichiren

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Nichiren bowing before the Gohonzon, a calligraphic mandala depicting the Daimoku

The Buddhist priest Nichiren (1222-1282) is known today as its greatest promoter of the Daimoku in Japan. Nichiren saw the repetition of the Daimoku as the supreme and highest practice. In Nichiren's writings, he frequently quotes passages from the Lotus Sutra in which the Buddha declared it to be his highest teaching. These passages include: "I have preached various sutras and among those sutras the Lotus is the foremost!", "among all the sutras, it holds the highest place," and "This sutra is king of the sutras."[13][14]

According to Jacqueline Stone who draws on Takagi Yutaka's work, Nichiren's daimoku practice was influenced by three key elements: earlier Heian-period daimoku practices, medieval Tendai doctrine (as seen in texts like the Shuzenji-ketsu), and the nembutsu tradition popularized by Hōnen. Nichiren synthesized these influences to create a unique and exclusive practice centered on the daimoku, which became the core of his new school of Buddhism.[8]

Nichiren's emphasis on daimoku as an exclusive practice paralleled the development of the chanted nembutsu, which had emerged earlier in Pure Land Buddhism. Although Tendai and other Buddhist traditions included recitation-based practices (usually based on mantras or on reciting whole sutras, like the Heart Sutra or Amitabha Sutra), Nichiren elevated the chanting of the daimoku to a central and universal method of attaining enlightenment. Within his early community, interpretations of the practice varied, with some followers viewing it as an expression of faith, while others understood it as a meditative discipline or a means of achieving worldly benefits. His doctrine integrated elements of Tendai philosophy, esoteric Buddhism, and contemporary concerns about the age of mappō, which contributed to its wide appeal.[8]

The Japanese Buddhist priest Nichiren was a known advocate of this recitation, claiming it is the exclusive method to happiness and salvation suited for the Third Age of Buddhism. According to varying believers, Nichiren cited the mantra in his Ongi Kuden,[15][dubiousdiscuss] a transcription of his lectures about the Lotus Sutra, Namu (南無) is a transliteration into Japanese of the Sanskrit namas, and Myōhō Renge Kyō is the Sino-Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese title of the Lotus Sutra (hence, Daimoku, which is a Japanese word meaning 'title'), in the translation by Kumārajīva. Nichiren gives a detailed interpretation of each character (see Ongi kuden#The meaning of Nam(u) Myōhō Renge Kyō) in this text.[16]

The Lotus Sutra is held by Nichiren Buddhists,[17] as well as practitioners of the Tiantai and corresponding Japanese Tendai schools, to be the culmination of Shakyamuni Buddha's fifty years of teaching. However, followers of Nichiren Buddhism consider Myōhō Renge Kyō to be the name of the ultimate law permeating the universe, in unison with human life which can manifest realization, sometimes termed as "Buddha Wisdom" or "attaining Buddhahood", through select Buddhist practices.

Word-by-word translation

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Rock carved with the daimoku, in Wake, Okayama prefecture, Japan

Namu is used in Buddhism as a prefix expressing taking refuge in a Buddha or similar object of veneration. Among varying Nichiren sects, the phonetic use of Nam versus Namu is a linguistic but not a dogmatic issue,[18] due to common contractions and u is devoiced in many varieties of Japanese words.[19] In this mantra, the Japanese drop the "u" sound when chanting at a fast pace, but write "Namu", seeing as it is impossible to contract the word into 'Nam' in their native script.[18]

Namu Myōhō Renge Kyō (南無妙法蓮華經, Chinese: námó miàofǎ liánhuá jīng) consists of the following words:

  • Namu 南無 "devoted to", a transliteration of Sanskrit námas meaning: 'obeisance, reverential salutation, adoration'.[20]
  • Myōhō 妙法 "exquisite law"[3], "sublime Dharma"
    • Myō , from Middle Chinese mièw, "strange, mystery, miracle, cleverness" (cf. Mandarin miào)
    • , from Middle Chinese pjap, "Dharma, law, principle, doctrine" (cf. Mand. )
  • Renge-kyō 蓮華 "Lotus Sutra"
    • Renge 蓮華 "padma (Lotus)"
      • Ren , from Middle Chinese len, "lotus" (cf. Mand. lián)
      • Ge , from Middle Chinese xwæ, "flower" (cf. Mand. huā)
    • Kyō , from Middle Chinese kjeng, "sutra" (cf. Mand. jīng)

Alternative forms and practices

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Daimoku in devanagari script in a monastery in India

In some Tendai liturgy, the Lotus Sutra is praised with different phrases.

In the Tiantai Manual for the Dharma Flower Samadhi Repentance Rite (Fahua Sanmei Chanyi 法華三昧懺儀, Taisho no. 1941) composed by Tiantai Zhiyi, one finds the following homage to the sutra:[21]

一心奉請: 南無大乘妙法蓮華經 (心想甚深。祕密法藏。悉現在前。受我供養)。

This homage passage (found in a group of similar passages paying homage to various Buddhas and bodhisattvas) reads: "With single-minded devotion, I respectfully entreat Homage to the Great Vehicle Wonderful Dharma Lotus Sūtra." The homage (Ch: 南無大乘妙法蓮華經, pinyin: Nán mó dà chéng miào fǎ lián huá jīng, Jp. romanization: Namu Daijō Myōhō Renge Kyō) is followed by the following instructions "Visualize the profound and secret Dharma treasury fully appearing before one to receive the offerings."[21]

This classic Tiantai Buddhist ritual emphasizes reverence, repentance, and dedication to enlightenment. Practitioners begin by recognizing the nature of all phenomena as inherently empty yet manifesting through karmic conditions. They engage in reverent worship, bowing to Shakyamuni Buddha, past and future Buddhas, and prominent bodhisattvas such as Mañjusri and Samantabhadra. The ritual incorporates a detailed repentance process for transgressions committed through the six sensory faculties (eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body, and mind), acknowledging the karmic consequences of sensory attachments. Practitioners express deep remorse, resolve to abstain from harmful actions, and dedicate their practice to the welfare of all beings. The ritual concludes with invoking the Buddhas and bodhisattvas to teach the Dharma and guide sentient beings toward liberation.[21]

Meanwhile, a Tendai 9th century Hokke Senbo manual (法華懺法) contains an identical daimoku homage:

南無妙法蓮華經 (pronounced: Namo Beuhō Renga Kei)

Tendai sources also contain the alternative daimoku chant:

Namu ichijō myōhō renge kyō (Homage to the One Vehicle Sutra, the Wondrous Dharma Lotus Blossom) [11]

Another alternative homage reads:

Namu byōdō dai e ichijō myōhō renge kyō (南無平等大會一乘妙法蓮華經)

Homage to the Great Assembly of Equality, the One Vehicle, the Wondrous Dharma Lotus Sutra.

Tendai Buddhism generally does not use this phrase as a repetitive chant, as the Daimoku is used in Nichiren Buddhism. However, there is a related practice called the Method for Prostrating to the Dharma Flower Sūtra (禮法華經儀式, Taisho no. 1944) observed today by both monastics and lay practitioners. It can be performed in three forms: long, medium, and short. The long form involves prostrating to each character of the entire sūtra, while the medium form applies this to a selected chapter. The short form, which is more commonly practiced, involves prostrating to the characters of the sūtra’s title, sometimes accompanied by chanting Namu. During this practice, a dedication such as "With single-minded devotion, I pay homage to the Wonderful Dharma Lotus Sūtra, paying homage to the Dharma Jewel of the character Myō (妙)" is recited.[22]

The title of the Lotus Sutra in Sanskrit is Saddharmapuṇḍarīkasūtra, thus a Sanskrit reconstruction of the homage would be:[23]

namaḥ saddharmapuṇḍarīkasūtrāya

Mantra

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In the Kaimokushō (Liberation from Blindness), Nichiren cites a Lotus Sutra mantra. According to Nichiren, this is the "mantra at the core of the Saddharmapuṇḍarīkasūtra" which was discovered by the vajracharya Śubhakarasiṃha "in an iron tower of South India".[24] The Sanskrit mantra is as follows:[24]

namaḥ samyaksambuddhānām

oṃ a aṁ aḥ

sarvabuddhājña-cakṣurbhyām gagana saṁsvā rakṣanī

saddharmapuṇḍarīkasūtram

jā hūṃ ho vajrarakṣaman hūṁ svāhā

References in visual media

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Associations in music

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The words appear in songs including:

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Sometimes truncated phonetically as Nam Myōhō Renge Kyō.[1]

References

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  1. ^ Chinese Buddhist Encyclopedia - Five or seven characters
  2. ^ SGDB (2002), Lotus Sutra of the Wonderful Law Archived 2014-05-20 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b c Kenkyusha (1991), p. [page needed].
  4. ^ Anesaki (1916), p. 34.
  5. ^ SGDB (2002), Nichiren Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "Myohoji". Archived from the original on 2016-08-09. Retrieved 2016-06-14.
  7. ^ "Soka Gakkai (Global)".
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Stone, Jacqueline. "Chanting the August title of the Lotus Sūtra Daimoku Practices in Classical and Medieval Japan 1998". Re-Visioning "Kamakura" Buddhism.
  9. ^ Stone, Jacqueline, Original Enlightenment and the Transformation of Medieval Japanese Buddhism
  10. ^ Rhodes, Robert F. (2016). Tiantai Hermeneutics: Zhiyi’s Interpretation of the Lotus Sutra Presented in the Miaofa lianhua jing xuanyi. In The Buddha’s Words and Their Interpretations, ed. Takami Inoue and Imre Hamar, 139–153. Kyoto: The Shin Buddhist Comprehensive Research Institute, Otani University.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Stone, Jacqueline, "Chanting the August Title of the Lotus Sutra: Daimoku Practices in Classical and Medieval Japan" in Payne, Richard K.. Re-Visioning 'Kamakura' Buddhism, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1998. https://doi.org/10.1515/9780824843939
  12. ^ Ranallo-Higgins, Frederick M. "Knowing Nichiren, Scholar Jacqueline Stone on one of Buddhism's great traditions and its founder: An interview with Jacqueline Stone by Frederick M. Ranallo-Higgins". Tricycle: The Buddhist Review. Retrieved 2025-03-17.
  13. ^ "The Teacher of the Law". The Lotus Sutra and its Opening and Closing Sutras. Translated by Watson, Burton Dewitt.
  14. ^ "Former Affairs of the Bodhisattva Medicine King". The Lotus Sutra and its Opening and Closing Sutras. Translated by Watson, Burton Dewitt.
  15. ^ Watson (2005), p. [page needed].
  16. ^ Masatoshi, Ueki (2001). Gender equality in Buddhism. Peter Lang. pp. 136, 159–161. ISBN 0820451339.
  17. ^ "The Meaning of Nam-myoho-renge-kyo | Benefits & Miracles". Angel Manifest. 2020-01-13. Retrieved 2022-04-17.
  18. ^ a b Ryuei (1999), Nam or Namu? Does it really matter?.
  19. ^ P. M, Suzuki (2011). The Phonetics of Japanese Language: With Reference to Japanese Script. Routledge. p. 49. ISBN 978-0415594134.
  20. ^ "Monier-Williams Sanskrit Dictionary 1899 Advanced".
  21. ^ a b c Zhiyi, Manual for the Dharma Flower Samadhi Repentance Rite (Fahua Sanmei Chanyi 法華三昧懺儀, Taisho no. 1941), CBETA
  22. ^ Method for Prostrating to the Dharma Flower Sūtra (禮法華經儀式, Taisho no. 1944), CBETA
  23. ^ The Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Volumes 6-7. International Association of Buddhist Studies, the University of Michigan. 1983. p. 76.
  24. ^ a b Nichiren (2000). Kaimokusho or Liberation from Blindness. Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research. p. 60. ISBN 978-1-886439-12-2.
  25. ^ livemint.com (2008-04-16). "Exhibition of 'Lotus Sutra' in the capital". Livemint. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
  26. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Gandhiji's Prayer meeting - full audio - 31 May 1947". You Tube and Gandhi Serve. Gandhiserve Foundation. 12 October 2009. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
  27. ^ Gandhi, Rajmohan. "Gandhi Voyage starts in world's largest Muslim nation". www.rajmohangandhi.com. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
  28. ^ Gandhi, Rajmohan (1 March 2008). Gandhi: The man, his people and the empire (1 ed.). University of California Press.
  29. ^ Gandhi, Rajmohan. "What gandhi wanted for India". The Week. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
  30. ^ a b c d e "Myo in the Media". Ft Worth Buddhas. Soka Gakkai International-Fort Worth. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  31. ^ "The Last Temptation of Homer". 20th Century Fox. 1993. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  32. ^ "Watch Buster Williams: Bass to Infinity | Prime Video". Amazon.
  33. ^ "Baggio: The Divine Ponytail", Wikipedia, 2023-08-02, retrieved 2023-08-14
  34. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Let Go and Let God". Grace and Gratitude. YouTube. November 30, 2013. Retrieved July 16, 2019.
  35. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "yoko ono namyohorengekyo music video". Namyohorengekyo. YouTube. March 16, 2013. Retrieved September 28, 2021.
  36. ^ "Tina Turner - Nam Myoho Renge Kyo (2H Buddhist Mantra)". YouTube. 15 December 2015.
  37. ^ West, Kanye (24 July 2018). "No More Parties in LA". Youtube. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
  38. ^ "Ugly – Sha Lyrics | 1 review".

Sources

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Further reading

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