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This podcast explores the concept of beginner’s mind through the specific lens of Tiantai and Nichiren Buddhism, distinguishing it from the better-known Zen interpretation. Rather than just a psychological attitude of openness, the author defines this state as a soteriological condition where the full power of enlightenment is already present in the first moment of faith. The sources outline a circular path of practice consisting of three "landings": the simple faith of the beginner, the complex study and discipline of the mature practitioner, and a final return to radical simplicity. Central to this doctrine is the idea that the truer the teaching, the lower the stage of person it can save, making the highest truths accessible to everyone through the daimoku. Ultimately, the text argues that intensive practices like meditation and precepts are not discarded but are subordinated to and contained within the primary act of chanting. This framework presents the beginner not as an amateur, but as a "newborn dragon" who already possesses the entirety of the dharma.
By MarkWhiteLotus3
22 ratings
This podcast explores the concept of beginner’s mind through the specific lens of Tiantai and Nichiren Buddhism, distinguishing it from the better-known Zen interpretation. Rather than just a psychological attitude of openness, the author defines this state as a soteriological condition where the full power of enlightenment is already present in the first moment of faith. The sources outline a circular path of practice consisting of three "landings": the simple faith of the beginner, the complex study and discipline of the mature practitioner, and a final return to radical simplicity. Central to this doctrine is the idea that the truer the teaching, the lower the stage of person it can save, making the highest truths accessible to everyone through the daimoku. Ultimately, the text argues that intensive practices like meditation and precepts are not discarded but are subordinated to and contained within the primary act of chanting. This framework presents the beginner not as an amateur, but as a "newborn dragon" who already possesses the entirety of the dharma.