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Kempon Hokke


Kempon Hokke-shū (顕本法華宗?) is a branch of Nichiren Buddhism based on the teachings of 13th Century Japanese monk, Nichiren. It was founded by Nichijū in 1384. In Japan it has a membership of about 100,000 households and several lay members overseas. The international branch of Kempon Hokke Shu is currently headed by Rev. Sinyou Tsuchiya.

Kempon Hokke's head temple, Myōman-ji (妙満寺?), is located in Kyoto. Kempon Hokke Nichiren’s religious writings inspired Nichijū to leave the Tendai sect to learn more about Nichiren by visiting the various Nichiren temples. Nichijū believed that these temples had already drifted away from Nichiren's spirit and teachings and founded his own temple, Myōman-ji. In 1898, Myomanji-ha incorporated as the Kempon Hokke school and Honda Nissho (1867–1931) was appointed its first head administrator.

Some members of the Kempon Hokke sect gave monetary donations to the construction of Shohondo which housed the Dai-Gohonzon until its ultimate destruction in 1998. It was the engineers belonging to this group which discovered the metal rust caused by the ocean sand mixed in with the mortar of its original construction, the same engineers submitted their annual report and findings to High Priest Nikken Shonin after their extensive research and validation.

Much of Kempon Hokke's underlying teachings are extensions of Tendai (天台, Cn: Tiantai) thought. They include much of its worldview and its rationale for criticism of Buddhist schools that do not acknowledge the Lotus Sutra to be Buddhism's highest teaching, as stated by Buddha Shakyamuni. For example, Kempon Hokke doctrine extends Tendai's classification of the Buddhist sutras into five time periods and eight categories (五時八教?, goji-hakkyō), its theory of 3,000 interpenetrating realms within a single life-moment (一念三千?, Ichinen Sanzen), and its view of the Three Truths (三諦?, Santai).


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