. Printed in Kumada Ijō's book (1913). This mandala is the artistic source of transcribed copied both in
Nichiren Shōshū,
Kenshōkai and
Soka Gakkai. The
Nichiren Shōshū religion claims that the original mandala at its head temple is the original source of power that is transcribed by the High Priests of Nichiren Shoshu. All loaned by Nichiren Shōshū are copied from the , including the ones currently used by
Kenshōkai for their services. On 28 November 1991, the Soka Gakkai was
expelled by Nichiren Shōshū and thereby lost its source of . By September 1993, the Soka Gakkai began to manufacture their own version and artistic format used today for current members. A transcribed by Nichikan Shōnin, the 26th chief abbot of Taiseki-ji was selected through one of the dissident breakaway priest who provided the woodblock copy when he sided with President
Daisaku Ikeda. The used today by Soka Gakkai was copied and transcribed from the in July 1720 by Nichikan Shōnin (1665–1726), the twenty-sixth High Priest of Nichiren Shōshū. Another in possession of the Soka Gakkai is the wooden copy manufactured in 1974 transcribed from the by 64th High Priest Nissho Shōnin, previously enshrined in
Osaka, and now enshrined in the main SGI headquarters of Daiseido Hall in
Shinjuku,
Tokyo, Japan. • Former Soka Gakkai President
Jōsei Toda described the simply as "a happiness-producing machine", a means for harmonizing with "universal life force". • Former President of
Soka Gakkai International Mr.
Daisaku Ikeda refererred to the as a mirror.
Inscriptions The following inscriptions are found in the transcribed by 26th High Priest Nichikan Shōnin, as is the mainstream format also transcribed by the Successive High Priests of Nichiren Shōshū: • Nichiren Daishōnin: – . "Never in 2,230-some years since the passing of the Buddha has this great mandala appeared in the world." • Nichikan Shonin: – "The 13th day of the sixth month in the fifth year of Kyoho, cyclical sign kanoe-ne." There are also two inscriptions from Miao-lo's commentary ,
The Annotations on "The Words and Phrases of the Lotus Sutra": • – "Those who make offerings will gain good fortune surpassing the ten honorable titles [of the Buddha]." • – "Those who vex and trouble [the practitioners of the Law] will have their heads split into seven pieces." The Soka Gakkai organization maintains that only the conferred by their leadership brings both personal happiness and
kosen-rufu, claiming that they possess the true mandate of Nichiren for widespread propagation. By contrast, Nichiren Shōshū
Hokkekō members often omit the honorific term when referring to used outside their religion, most especially against the Soka Gakkai variant either as a pejorative derision or refusal to acknowledge the implied sacred nature of the outside their sectarian beliefs, often citing them as either fake and lacking the ceremony prescribed to animate a for its spiritual efficacy. The lesser value of is used by Nichiren Shōshū members instead. ==Outside of Nichiren Buddhism==