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The Oneness of Good and Evil Developing the courage to accept our innate good and evil The evil of destruction is like a shadow cast by the good of creation. Nature gives and takes life. Even on the cellular level of the human body, the evil of decay and death exists side by side with the good of growth and health. For example, while the precise mechanism of cancer remains unknown, research has demonstrated that the malignant transformation of a cell is linked to cancer-causing genes called oncogenes. In normal cells, oncogenes are called proto-oncogenes, which promote cellular growth and are regulated by cellular genes called tumor-suppressor genes. Tumor-suppressor genes, in other words, control growth-promoting genes, which could potentially turn malignant. ("Cancer: Causation; The Cause of Disease: Abnormal Growth of Cells." Encyclopedia Britannica, CD 1999). Thus, the potential for cancer not only exists in every cell of the body, but also supports the cell's growth and health. Concerning the nature of good and evil. Nichiren Daishonin states:
"Good and evil have been inherent in life since time without beginning..
.The heart of the Lotus school is the doctrine of three thousand realms
in a single moment of life, which reveals that both good and evil are
inherent even in those at the highest stage of perfect enlightenment.
The fundamental nature of enlightenment manifests itself as Brahma and
Shakra, whereas the fundamental darkness manifests itself as the devil
king of the sixth heaven". (The Writings of Nichiren Daishonin,
p. 1113). In the context of the Daishonin's teaching, good means the "fundamental
nature of enlightenment," or absolute freedom and happiness resulting
from profound self-knowledge. Evil indicates the "fundamental darkness,"
or life's innate delusion negating the potential of enlightenment and
causing suffering for oneself and others. This inner darkness echoes
with the despair that our lives are ugly and meaningless: it drives
a wedge of fear that splits the hearts of people into "us"
and "them." The Daishonin's concept of good and evil, in this
sense, may be better understood as the dynamic, innate workings of life
that become manifest or dormant, rather than the external moral codes
determined by cultural and social conditions. Much of our difficulty in discerning the workings of good and evil is due to our unwillingness to acknowledge the potential of both supreme good and evil within our own lives. We don't want to see ourselves as either very good or very bad, hiding instead behind a collective moral mediocrity that requires neither the responsibility of goodness nor the guilt of evil. To flee from the responsibility to realize the full potential of our innate goodness. we say, "I can't be as good as..." To avoid a sense of guilt, we say, "I can't be as bad as..." (Fill in the blanks with the names of those whom you think supremely good and bad respectively, or "Buddha" in the former blank and "devil" in the latter.) For some of us, our moral ambiguity of the self, however, seems to
demand quick judgment of others - those who serve our interest as "good
people" and those whom we dislike as "bad people"- as
if to counterbalance our inner confusion with our forced clarity outside.
Others seem unable to denounce the clearly manifest evil of humanity
for fear of being judged in return. Such people fear the judgment of
others because they themselves lack the courage to see their own potential
for good and evil. As a result, our view of the world becomes narrow,
if not distorted. Paul Tillich, a noted philosopher and theologian of
the last century, said, "The courage to affirm oneself must include
the courage to affirm one's own demonic depth". (The Courage to
Be, p. 122). The Daishonin had the courage to see his own "demonic depth,"
as he candidly wrote: The faith that enables us to experience the freedom and happiness of
Buddhahood is synonymous with the courage to see our potential for both
good and evil. The process of accepting and challenging our fundamental
darkness is necessarily the process of revealing our innate enlightenment.
Likewise, our efforts to help others become aware of their own self-negating
delusion must be accompanied by efforts to help them become aware of
their own self~ affirming power of enlightenment. Without one, another
is impossible. By Shin Yatonmi, based in part on Yasashii Kyogaku (Easy Buddhist Study)
published by Seikyo Press in 1994. This page was last modified on Sunday, August 20, 2006. |