ing in return, and that giving ones life constitutes bodhisattva practice. But should one sacrifice ones life at a time when it is not required? In an age when there is no paper, one should use ones own skin. In an age when there are no writing brushes, one should use ones own bones. In an age when people honor the observers of the precepts and the practitioners of the correct teaching while they denounce those who break or ignore the precepts, one should strictly follow the precepts. In an age when Confucianism or Taoism is used to suppress Shakyamunis teachings, one should risk ones life to remonstrate with the emperor, as did the Dharma teachers Tao-an and Hui-yüan and the Tripitaka Master Fa-tao. In an age when people confuse Hinayana and Mahayana teachings, provisional and true teachings, or exoteric and esoteric doctrines, as though unable to distinguish gems from tiles and stones or cows milk from donkeys milk,2 one should strictly differentiate between them, following the example of the great teachers Tien-tai and Dengyo.
It is the nature of beasts to threaten the weak and fear the strong. Our contemporary scholars of the various schools are just like them. They despise a wise man without power, but fear evil rulers. They are no more than fawning retainers. Only by defeating a powerful enemy can one prove ones real strength. When an evil ruler in consort with priests of erroneous teachings tries to destroy the correct teaching and do away with a man of wisdom, those with the heart of a lion king are sure to attain Buddhahood. Like Nichiren, for example. I say this not out of arrogance, but because I am deeply committed to the correct teaching. An arrogant person will always be overcome with fear when meeting a strong enemy, as was the haughty asura who shrank in size and hid himself in a lotus blossom in Heat-Free Lake when re
proached by Shakra. Even a word or a phrase of the correct teaching will enable one to gain the way, if it suits the time and the capacity of the people. But though one studies a thousand sutras and ten thousand treatises, one will not attain Buddhahood if these teachings are unsuitable for the time and the peoples capacity.
Twenty-six years have passed since the battle of Hoji,3 and fighting4 has already broken out twice, on the eleventh and the seventeenth days of the second month of this year. Neither nonBuddhists nor the enemies of Buddhism can destroy the correct teaching of the Thus Come One, but the Buddhas disciples definitely can. As a sutra says, only worms born of the lions body feed on the lion.5 A person of great fortune will never be ruined by enemies, but may be ruined by those who are close. The current battle is what the Medicine Master Sutra means by the calamity of revolt within ones own domain. The Benevolent Kings Sutra states, Once the sages have departed, then the seven disasters are certain to arise. The Golden Light Sutra states, The thirty-three heavenly gods become furious because the king permits evil to run rampant and fails to subdue it. Although I, Nichiren, am not a sage, I am equal to one, for I uphold the Lotus Sutra exactly as it teaches. Furthermore, since I have long understood the ways of the world, the prophecies I have made in this life have all come true. Therefore, you must never doubt what I have told you concerning future existences.
On the twelfth day of the ninth month of last year, when I was arrested, I called out in a loud voice, I, Nichiren, am the pillar, sun, moon, mirror, and eyes of the ruling clan of Kanto.6 If the country abandons me, the seven disasters will occur without fail. Did not this prophecy come true just 60 days and then 150 days later? And those battles were only the first