The Religions Of Japan From The Dawn Of History To The Era Of M
Chapter 27
"To the millions of China, Corea, and Japan, creator and creation are new and strange terms,"--J.H. De Forest.
"The Law of our Lord, the Buddha, is not a natural science or a religion, but a doctrine of enlightenment; and the object of it is to give rest to the restless, to point out the Master (the Inmost Man) to those that are blind and do not perceive their Original State."
"The Saddharma Pundarika Sutra teaches us how to obtain that desirable knowledge of the mind as it is in itself [universal wisdom] ... Mind is the One Reality, and all Scriptures are the micrographic photographs of its images. He that fully grasps the Divine Body of Sakyamuni, holds ever, even without the written Sutra, the inner Saddharma Pundarika in his hand. He ever reads it mentally, even though he would never read it orally. He is unified with it though he has no thought about it. He is the true keeper of the Sutra."--Zitsuzen Ashitsu of the Tendai sect.
"It [Buddhism] is idealistic. Everything is as we think it. The world is my idea.... Beyond our faith is naught. Hold the Buddhist to his creed and insist that such logic destroys itself, and he triumphs smilingly, 'Self-destructive! Of course it is. All logic is. That is the centre of my philosophy.'"
"It [Buddhism] denounces all desire and offers salvation as the reward of the murder of our affections, hopes, and aspirations. It is possible where conscious existence is believed to be the chief of evils."--George William Knox.
"Swallowing the device of the priests, the people well satisfied, dance their prayers."--Japanese Proverb.
"The wisdom that is from above is ... without variance, without hypocrisy."--James.
"The mystery of God, even Christ in whom are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge."--Paul.