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In two schools of Buddhism, an important part of the practice is the repetition of special mantras which sound like simple expressions of honor or gratitude to those of us outside of the sects, but which have profound meaning to the practitioners. Is it possible to explain the deeper meaning of Nam-myoho-renge-kyo ("Homage to the Lotus Sutra") as Nichiren Buddhists understand it or Namu Amida Butsu ("Homage to Amida Buddha") as Jodo Shinshu Buddhists understand it or must these thing be understood only through experiencing them?

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My answer is from the Shin perspective, I'll let someone else answer for Nichiren. Indeed you're right in saying that there are "two" meanings of Namu-Amida-Butsu - and that for the person of faith, it has a special meaning. However, in Shin, Namu-Amida-Butsu is not a mantra. It is understood within an entirely different framework from that of Esoteric mantras. For a person without the mind of faith (jp.: shinjin), "Namu-Amida-Butsu" is an effort of calling to Amida for salvation. As you probably already know, the Original Vow of Amida is that people who will sincerely and joyfully entrust themselves to Amida and call upon his Name, they will be saved and will be reborn into the Pure Land. So for a person without shinjin (which means having no doubt whatsoever about Amida's Vow), "Namu-Amida-Butsu" might still be a practice like others in Buddhism, an effort of self-power. For such a person, calling Namu-Amida-Butsu is a willingness to rely on the Other-Power of Amida (on his practice of saving sentient beings). But from the perspective of a person of shinjin, a true person of faith, chanting or reciting "Namu-Amida-Butsu" thinking that this is what will get you to the Pure Land is still caught within the logic of calculating mind, calculating merit ("the more you say it, the more chance you will have to be reborn in the Pure Land"). This mind that "does religious deeds" is the very mind of self-attachment! For a person of shinjin - for Shinran - this logic has to be absolutely abandoned. "Namu-Amida-Butsu" is then understood entirely differently: not as something we do, not as our own practice, but as an embodiment of Amida's practice. Another way to put it, once one totally abandons the idea that it's possible to "save yourself" through enough effort, one totally relies on Other-Power and so there is nothing to practice anymore on our part. There's just an absolute passivity of "deep listening to the Dharma". One realizes that Amida already accomplished all practices so there's nothing to do on our part except to listen to this truth and to rely on it fully. This reliance is true faith, the diamondlike mind, and "Namu-Amida-Butsu" is just the verbal expression thereof. It's the "linguistic embodiment" of our already-having-been-saved by Amida. One is then only a witness of this salvation event, not someone who is practicing to achieve one's own salvation. To practice anything after the salvation-event is to not understand that event. Practising anything after having been saved by Amida would be like looking for a job after you've already won $10 million in the lottery, to give a mundane example.

I realize I didn't do a good job at explaining this here ... it's hard to do it in this format, but I hope that at least it became clear that the Pure Land Way of Master Shinran has nothing to do with Esoteric Buddhism or Mantrayana / the Way of Mantras. It's a wholly different paradigm.

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    @ Methexis, thank you for a very thorough explanation from the Shin pov. And thank you for the correction on my use of the term "mantra". Is there a more appropriate term to refer to words themselves or the practice of speaking them?
    – Robin111
    Jun 19, 2014 at 22:01
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    @Robin111 Thank you for your kind words. The practice is simply referred to as "Nembutsu" which means remembering or recollecting the Buddha. "Nembutsu" is a Japanese word. In China, it is known as "nianfo". In Sanskrit, it is known as Buddhanusmrti. In Shin we call it "Nembutsu" or sometimes "the Name" or "holding the Name" or "saying the Name". However, the Nembutsu needn't always be vocalized. It can be a "silent Nembutsu" (merely thinking "Namu-Amida-Butsu" without vocalizing it) ... This is another reason why Nembutsu isn't a Mantra. AFAIK, in Nichiren Buddhism one has to chant.
    – Methexis
    Jun 20, 2014 at 1:29
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    This is beautiful! @Methexis, thank you very much for this explanation. You have just explained the main point of Pure Land Buddhism.
    – Andriy Volkov
    Jun 22, 2014 at 19:22
  • So, for a person of shinjin, the chanting of "Namu-Amida-Butsu" is similar to a Christian celebrating the Eucharist?
    – ruben2020
    Jun 29, 2020 at 15:02
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This is a great post. I'll add something as a Vajrayana/mantrayana practitioner with some background in sacred sound from various traditions. Nembutsu/chanting is best viewed as an internal evocation of the Amida nature/reality within. As there is no dualism in the Unity of the Buddha mind, there would not be, from a perspective of sacred sound, an 'asking' of Amida for help. Rather there is a coded set of sound and light principles/archetypes in those syllables. Some of this is explained in detail from Shintoism in their use of kototama/kotodama. Tendai and Shingon Buddhism, also arising in Japan, have much esoteric knowledge and a lot of that involves sacred chanting and sacred sound. Ultimately the ability to enter into a pure land is because one has cultivated the atmosphere of a pure land within. Amidas pure land is an exudate of Amidas purified mind. When the projection of light from Amida enters and passes through other beings (though nembustu/chanting) then they are able to appear in the pure land with more reality than do images projected onto a movie screen. Nembutsu is the attunement of the resonance of Amitabhas mind/reality into another being. That resonance and matching when the being undergoes transmigration/transition through death is what would attract a practitioner to entering Amidas pure land. Nembutsu should be done with a base of compassion and not as a goal. Pure motivation is the advancement of happiness and the causes of happiness for others.

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