"The method of final salvation that
I have propounded is
neither a sort of meditation, such as has been practiced by many
scholars in China and Japan, nor is it a repetition of the Buddha's
name by those who have studied and understood the deep meaning of it.
It is nothing but the mere repetition of the 'Namu Amida Butsu,'
without a doubt of His mercy, whereby one may be born into the Land of
Perfect Bliss.
The mere repetition with firm faith
includes all the
practical details, such as the threefold preparation of mind and the
four practical rules. If I as an individual had any doctrine more
profound than this, I should miss the mercy of the Two Honorable Ones,
Amida and Shakyamuni, and be left out of the Vow of the Amida Buddha.
Those
who believe this, though they clearly understand all the teachings
Shakyamuni taught throughout his whole life, should behave themselves
like
simple-minded folks, who know not a single letter, or like ignorant
nuns or monks whose faith is implicitly simple.
Thus without pedantic
airs, they should fervently practice the repetition of the name of
Amida, and that alone."