Is the Nine Lotus Sutra a True Sutra?

The interpretation of the true scriptures is the Taoist scriptures. Metaphor is a good experience

Nine Lotus Sutra, a classic of China folk religion. Non-Taoist scriptures, in this sense, do not belong to the true scriptures.

Jiu Lian Jing was written in the Ming Dynasty. As an early folk religious classic in China, it is an important material to study the emergence and evolution of some folk sects in Ming and Qing Dynasties. Jiu Lian Jing has been copied, published and engraved from the Ming Dynasty to the Republic of China, and it has been circulated continuously. In this long process, this book has had a certain influence on some folk religious sects, and has been absorbed by several sects as their own classics, thus showing a constantly changing trend. For a long time, academic circles have paid close attention to Jiu Lian Jing and published many papers. This precious book is often mentioned and discussed in some research monographs on China folk religion.

The full name is "Huang Dan Jiu Lian Return to Truth Volume", which consists of two volumes. Written by Wilson, the ancestor of the Ming Dynasty literary school. Commonly known as Laojiu Hokkekyo, there is a folded version of Ming Jiajing in China (1526). Another book, Continuation of Nine Lotus Classics, was compiled by Wilson's disciples, with two volumes and twenty-four articles, which were copied according to Qing Yongzheng and Qianlong's engravings during the Republic of China. Bao Juan tells the story of Wilson's missionary work after receiving incense, and expounds the thought that the three religions should rob, repair the road at that time and return to the natural palace.