[This document can be acquired from a sub-directory coombspapers via anonymous FTP or COOMBSQUEST gopher at the Australian National University, Canberra on the node COOMBS.ANU.EDU.AU or from the ANU Soc.Sci.WWW Server at http://coombs.anu.edu.au/CoombsHome.html] The document's ftp filename and the full directory path are given in the coombspapers top level INDEX files] [This version: 18 July 1994] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- THE TEACHING OF BUDDHA, THE BUDDHIST BIBLE - PUBLISHED BY DWIGHT GODDARD teaching-of-buddha-truth.txt ----------------------------------------------------------------------- The electronic transcription of this book is organised in 4 files: teaching-of-buddha-preface.txt teaching-of-buddha-buddha.txt teaching-of-buddha-truth.txt teaching-of-buddha-brothers.txt ----------------------------------------------------------------------- The following information was supplied on 25 Jun 94 to the Coombspapers Social Sciences data Archive by Cris A. Fugate Book details ============ "Buddha, Truth and Brotherhood; An Epitome of Many Buddhist Scriptures Translated from the Japanese" Author - (The Japanese name of this book is "The Teaching of Buddha, The Buddhist Bible") Publisher - Dwight Goddard, Santa Barbara, California 1934 Printed - J. F. Rowny Press, Santa Barbara, California Copyright by The Open Court Publishing Co., 1906 There is no copyright held on this book (never was any) Transcriber details =================== Cris A. Fugate currently residing at 115C University Village, Fargo, North Dakota 50102 USA. email: fugate@plains.nodak.edu at North Dakota State University Date of transcription: May 1994 No copyright for transcription has been claimed by Cris A.Fugate at the time of lodgement of this electronic text with the Coombspapers Archive. Changes made in transcription ============================= The only change made in the transcription was to leave out page numbers from the table of contents Transcription should otherwise be very close to the original since the text has been proofread several times. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- TRUTH CHAPTER ONE - CAUSATION I. The Four Noble Truths II. Causation III. The Chain of Causation CHAPTER TWO - THE THEORY OF MIND-ONLY AND ACTUALITY I. Uncertainty and Egolessness II. The Fact of Mind-Only III. Ideas-Only IV. Actuality V. The Middle Way CHAPTER THREE - BUDDHA-NATURE I. The Human Mind and the True Mind II. The Mind of Buddha III. Buddha-Nature and Egolessness CHAPTER FOUR - EVIL DESIRES I. Worldly Passions II. The Nature of Man III. The Life of Man IV. Aspects of Human Life CHAPTER FIVE - THE RELIEF OFFERED BY BUDDHA I. The Relief of Buddha II. Buddha's Land of Purity CHAPTER SIX - THE WAY OF PURIFICATION I. Purification of Mind II. The Way of Behavior III. Teaching by Ancient Fables CHAPTER SEVEN - THE WAY OF PRACTICAL ATTAINMENT I. Search for Truth II. The Way of Practice III. The Way of Faith IV. The Way of Concentration V. Sacred Aphorisms ----------------------------------------------------------------------- TRUTH CHAPTER ONE - CAUSATION I. THE FOUR NOBLE TRUTHS 1. The world is full of suffering. Birth is suffering, decrepitude is suffering, so are sickness and death, suffering. To face a man of hatred is suffering, to be separated from a beloved one is suffering, or to be vainly struggling to satisfy one's needs. In fact, life that is not free from desire and passion is always involved with suffering. This is called the Truth of Suffering. The cause of human suffering is undoubtedly found in the thirsts of the physical organism and in the illusions of worldly passion. If these thirsts and illusions are traced to their source, they are found to be rooted in the intense desires of physical instincts. Thus desire, having a strong will-to-live as its basis, goes after what is sensed as being desirable. Sometimes desire even turns toward death. This is called the Truth of the Cause of Suffering. If desire which lies at the root of all human passion can be removed, then passion will die out and all human suffering will be ended. This is called the Truth of the Ending of Suffering. In order to enter into a condition where there is no desire and no suffering, one must follow a certain Path. The stages of this Noble Path are: Right Ideas, Right Resolution, Right Behavior, Right Vocation, Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, Right Concentration. This is called the Truth of the Noble Path to the Ending of Desire. People should keep these Truths clearly in mind, for the world is filled with suffering and if anyone wishes to escape from suffering they must cut the ties of worldly passion which is the sole cause of suffering. The way of life which is free from all worldly passion and suffering can only be known by enlightenment, and enlightenment can only be gained by the discipline of the Noble Path. 2. All those who are seeking enlightenment, must understand these Four Noble Truths. Without this understanding, they will wander about for a long time in the bewildering maze of life's illusions. Those who understand the Four Noble Truths are called: "The people who have acquired the eyes of enlightenment." Therefore, people who wish to follow the Buddha's teachings should concentrate their minds on these Four Noble Truths and seek to make their meaning clear. In all ages, a saint, if he is a true saint, is one who understands them and teaches them to others. When the Four Noble Truths are clearly understood, then the Noble Path will lead them away from greed; and if they are free from greed they will not quarrel with the world, they will not act indecently, nor kill, nor steal, nor cheat, nor abuse, nor flatter, nor envy, nor lose their temper, nor forget the transiency of life; nor will they err in equity. 3. Following the Noble Path is like entering a dark room with a light in the hand; the darkness will all be cleared away, and the room will be filled with light. People who understand the meaning of the Noble Truths and have learned to follow the Noble Path are in possession of a light of wisdom that will clear away the darkness of ignorance. Buddha leads the people, by only following the Four Noble Truths. Those who understand it properly will gain enlightenment; they will be able to guide and support others in this bewildering world, and they will be worthy of trust. When the Four Noble Truths are clearly understood, the sources of all worldly passion are dried up. Advancing from these Four Noble Truths, the disciples of Buddha will attain all other precious truths, will gain the wisdom and piety to understand all meanings, and will become able to preach the Dharma to all the people of all the world. II. CAUSATION 1. There are causes for all human suffering, and there is a way by which they may be ended, because everything in the world is the result of a vast concurrence of causes and conditions, and everything disappears as these causes and conditions change and pass away. Rain falls, wind blows, plants bloom, leaves mature and are blown away; these phenomena are all interrelated with causes and conditions, are brought about by them, and disappear as the causes and conditions change. A child is born by the conditions of parentage; its body is nourished by food, its spirit is nurtured by teaching and experience. Therefore, both flesh and spirit are related to conditions and are changed as conditions change. A net is made up by a series of ties, so everything in this world is connected by a series of ties. If any one thinks that a mesh of a net is an independent, isolated thing, he is mistaken. It is called a net because it is made up of a series of connected meshes, and each mesh has its place and responsibilities in relation to other meshes. 2. Blossoms bloom because of a series of conditions that lead up to blooming; leaves are blown away because a series of conditions lead up to it. Blossoms do not bloom unconditioned, nor does a leaf fall of itself. So everything has its appearing and passing away; nothing remains unchanged. III. THE CHAIN OF CAUSATION 1. What, then is the source of human grief, lamentation, pain and agony? Is it not to be found in the fact that people are generally ignorant and willful? They cling obstinately to a life of wealth, honor, comfort, pleasure, excitement and egoism, ignorant of the fact that it is from the desire for these very things that human suffering starts. From its beginning, the world has been filled with a succession of calamities, besides there are the unavoidable facts of illness, decrepitude and death. But if one considers all the facts carefully, he must be convinced that at the base of all suffering lies the principle of ignorance and desire. If ignorance and desire can be removed, human suffering will come to an end. The principle of ignorance is manifested in the obscurities and false imaginations that fill the human mind. These obscurities and false imaginations rise from the fact that people ignore the emptiness and transitoriness of life and are ignorant of the right reason for the succession of things. From these obscurities and false imaginations there spring impure desires for things that are in fact unobtainable, but for which they restlessly and blindly search. Because of these false imaginations and impure desires, people imagine discriminations where, among things themselves, there are no discriminations. Among the acts of human behavior, inherently, there are no discriminations of right and wrong, but people because of ignorance imagine they are distinctions and discriminate them as right and wrong, all because of the obscurities of false imaginations and impure desires. Because of their ignorance, people are always thinking wrong thoughts and always losing the right view point, and then, by clinging to their supposed ego-personality, they take wrong action and as a result grasp and become attached to a whole body of delusion. But, in fact, there is no such thing as ego-personality, except as it is imagined by the mind in an effort to synthesize its sensual and instinctive desires. Making their karma the field of an ego-personality, using the activities of the mind as seed, beclouding the mind by ignorance, fertilizing it with the rain of impure desires, irrigating it by the willfulness of an ego-personality, they add the conception of evil, and bear about this incarnation of delusion. 2. Ultimately this body of delusion is an activity of their own mind and, therefore, it is their own mind which causes the delusion of grief, lamentation, pain and agony. This whole world of delusion is nothing but the shadow caused by this mind, and for the same reason, the whole world of enlightenment also appears from this same mind. 3. In this world there are three wrong view points, if one clings to these view points, then everything in the world must be denied. First, some people maintain the idea that all human experience is based on destiny; second, some hold that everything is created by God and controlled by his will; third, some say that everything happens by chance. If all has been decided by destiny, both good deeds and evil deeds are destiny, weal and woe are destiny, and nothing exists outside destiny, then all human plans and effort for improvement and progress would be in vain and humanity would be without hope. The same is true of the other conceptions, for, if everything in the last resort is in the hands of God or of blind chance, what hope has humanity except in submission? It is no wonder that people holding these conceptions lose hope and relax their effort to act wisely and avoid evil. No, these three conceptions and viewpoints are all wrong: everything is a succession of appearances whose source is the concurrence of causes and conditions, and these causes and conditions can, in a measure be modified and controlled. CHAPTER TWO - THE THEORY OF MIND-ONLY AND ACTUALITY I. UNCERTAINTY AND EGOLESSNESS 1. Though both body and mind appear because of cooperating cause, it does not follow that there is an ego-personality. As the body of flesh is an aggregate of elements, it is, therefore, impermanent. If the body was an ego-personality, it could do this and that as it determined. A king has the power to praise or punish as he wishes, but a person becomes ill against his intent and desire, he comes to old age unwillingly, and his fortune and his wishes often have little to do with each other. Neither is the mind the ego-personality. The human mind is also an aggregate of causalities and relations. It is in constant change. If the mind was an ego-personality it could do this and that as it determined, but the mind often flies from what it knows is right and chases after evil unwillingly. Nothing seems to happen exactly as the ego desires. 2. If the body is asked whether there is constancy or uncertainty, it would be obliged to answer, uncertainty. If the uncertainty is asked whether it is to be happiness or suffering, it will generally have to answer suffering. But if a man believes that such certainty, so changeable and replete with suffering, is the possession of an ego-personality, he makes a serious mistake. The human mind is also uncertainty and suffering, it has nothing to be called an ego-personality. Therefore, both body and mind which make up an individual life, and the eternal world which seems to surround him, are far removed from both the conceptions of an ego and from "my possession." It is simply the mind clouded over by impure desires, and thus impervious to wisdom, that obstinately persists in thinking of "myself" and "my possession." Since both body and its surroundings are created by cooperating causes, they are continually changing and never can come to an end. The human mind in its never-ending change is like the moving water of a river, is like the burning flame of a candle, is like an ape, forever jumping about, never ceasing for a moment. A wise man, seeing this, should break away from any attachment to the body or mind, if he is ever to attain enlightenment. 3. There are five facts which no one is able to accomplish: first, to cease getting aged when he is actually getting aged; second, to cease being sick when he is actually sick; third, to cease dying when he is actually dying; fourth, to deny dissolution when there is actual dissolution; fifth, to deny extinction when it is already extinction. All people in the world sooner or later run into these facts and most people suffer in consequence of them, but those who have acquired Buddha's teaching do not suffer because they understand that they are unavoidable facts. Then there are four truths that can not be changed and are unavoidable also: first, all sentient life rises from ignorance; second, the consequence of all impure desire is endless change, uncertainty and suffering; third, the existing facts are also change, uncertainty and suffering; fourth, there is nothing that can be called an "ego", and there is no idea of "mine" in all the world. These facts, that everything is empty and passing and egoless, have no connection with the fact of Buddha's appearing or not appearing. These facts and truths are incontrovertable; the Buddha knows this and therefore preaches the Dharma to all people. II. THE FACT OF MIND-ONLY 1. Both delusion and enlightenment originate within the mind, and every fact arises from the activities of mind, just as different things appear from the sleeve of a magician. The activities of the mind have no limit and form the surroundings of life. An impure mind surrounds itself with impure things and a pure mind surrounds itself with pure surroundings, hence surroundings have no more limits than have the activities of the mind. When an artist draws a picture the details are filled in from his own mind and a single picture is capable of an infinite variety of details, so the human mind fills in the surroundings of its life, there is nothing in the world that is not mind-created, and just as the human mind creates, so Buddha creates and all other beings act as Buddha acts, so in the great task of creation the human mind, Buddha and all other beings are alike active. 2. But the mind that creates its surroundings is never free from their shadow; it remembers and fears and laments, not only the past but the present and future because they have arisen out of ignorance and greed. It is out of ignorance and greed that the world of delusion starts and all the vast complex of coordinating causes and conditions exist within the mind and nowhere else. Both life and death arise from mind and exist within the mind and hence when the mind that concerns itself with life and deat h passes, the world of life and death passes with it. An unenlightened and bewildered life rises out of a mind that is bewildered by its own creation of a world of delusion. As they learn that there is no world of delusion outside of the mind, the bewildered mind becomes clear and as they cease to create impure surroundings they attain enlightenment. Thus the world of life and death is created by mind, is in bondage to mind, is ruled by mind; and the mind is master of every situation. As the wheels follow the ox that draws the cart, so suffering follows the mind that surrounds itself with impure thoughts and worldly passions. 3. But if a man speaks and acts by a good mind, happiness follows him as a man's shadow. Those who act in evil, selfish ways suffer not only from the natural consequences of the acts, but are followed by the thought, "I have done wrong", and the memory of the act is stored in karma to work out its inevitable retribution in following lives. But those who act from good motives are made happy by the thought, "I have done a good act" and are made happier by the thought that the good act will bring continuin g happiness in endless lives to follow. If a mind is impure it will cause the feet to stumble on a rough and difficult road with many a fall and much pain; but if the mind is pure the path will be smooth and the journey peaceful. If one is to enjoy a smooth and peaceful path he must cultivate his Buddha-mind, breaking the net of selfish impure thoughts and evil desires. III. IDEAS ONLY 1. Everything originates within the mind. Just as a magician cleverly makes whatever his wishes to appear, so this world of delusion originates within the mind. People look upon it and observe it appearing and disappearing and they believe it to be real and call it life and death. That is, everything is mind-made and has no significance apart from mind. As people come to understand this fact, they are able to remove all delusions and there is an end of all mental disturbance forever. The human mind may be thought of as functioning on three different levels of cognition. On its lowest level it is a discriminating mind; on this level it has the ability to see, hear, taste, smell, touch, to combine these sense concepts, to discriminate them, and to consider their relations. On a higher level it is an intellectual mind where it has the ability to make the inward adjustments that are necessary to harmonize the reactions of the discriminating mind and to relate them to each other and to the whole ego conception. On its highest level it is Universal Mind. As Universal Mind it is pure, tranquil, unconditioned, in its true essential nature, but because of its relation to the lower minds it becomes the storage for their reations and is d efiled by them. 2. The human mind discriminates itself from the things that appear to be outside without realizing that it has first created these very things within its own mind. This has been going on since beginningless time and the delusion has become firmly fixed within the mind, and even adheres to the things themselves. Because of this discrimination between the self and the not-self the mind has come to consider itself as an ego-personality and has become attached to it as being something different and more enduring than the things of the world. Thus, the people of the world grow up in ignorance of the fact that discrimination and thinking of ego-personality are nothing but activities of universal mind. Universal Mind, while remaining pure and tranquil and unconditioned in its self-nature, is the source of all mental processes and is, thus, the foundation for the other two minds and retains within itself all their experiences. The Mind, therefore, like a waterfall, never ceases its activity. Just as a peaceful ocean suddenly becomes a tumult of waves because of some passing tempest, so the ocean of Mind becomes stirred by tempests of delusion and winds of karma. And just as the ocean again becomes peaceful when the tempest passes, so the Ocean of Mind resumes its natural calm when the winds of karma and delusion are stilled. 3. The body and its surroundings are all alike manifestations of the one mind, but as observed by human eyes they appear to be different and they are classified as "observer" and as "things observed." But as nothing in the world exists apart from mind, there can be no essential difference between subject and object. The ego-self and the idea of possession have no true existence. There is only the age-old habits of erroneous thinking that leads people to perceive and to discriminate various aspects of the world where, in reality there are none. All objects, all words, all facts in the world, this body, this treasure, this dwelling, are all appearances that have arisen because of the activities of delusions that are inherent within their own mental processes. If people can change their view-points, can break up these age-old habits of thinking, can rid their minds of the desires and infatuations of egoism, then the wisdom of true enlightenment is possible. If they can bring themselves to understand that everything is only manifestations of their own minds, if they can only keep their minds free from being confused by appearances and deceived by images, then it is possible to gain true enlightenment. The enlightenment preached by Buddha is the true enlightenment. It comes and can only come when the mind is pure of all defilement and clear from all perverting ideas concerning the self and its surroundings. 4. Thus the world of delusion and the world of enlightenment are from the same mind. The effort to keep the mind clear from discriminating ideas so that it can rightly understand the true nature of enlightenment, is the path to enlightenment. For those who are following this path to enlightenment, every circumstance is right and every dwelling place is in Buddha's Land of Purity. In reality all Buddha-lands are designed to be a blessing to people, because people's minds and Buddha-lands are all of the same nature. It is like a house built upon a good foundation. Wherever people live, that is Buddha's Pure Land. But the Land of Buddha must be built upon by pure minds. The pure mind must at the same time be a deep mind, if it is to follow successfully the path to enlightenment. It must be the soul of compassion and charity, it must observe the precepts, it must be tranquil and peaceful, it must be the soul of wisdom, as well as the soul of compassion, the soul that is earnest to use wise and kindly means and methods to bring all people to enlightenment. 5. If people wish to make a Buddha-land of this world, they must first cleanse their own minds. If minds are pure, surroundings will be pure. If surroundings are clean and minds are pure, this world will be a house for Buddha. Then, someone will ask, why is this world so crowded with impurities? A blind man can not see the sun nor moon, but that is no reason why he should deny the existence of the sun and moon. When people have impure minds they are blind to the true nature of things; they can not see the purity that is all about them in this world. In those who have a pure and transparent mind there will be an eye of wisdom with which they will be able to recognize, even in this world, Buddha's Land of Purity. IV. ACTUALITY 1. Since everything in this world is caused by the concurrence of causes and conditions, there can be no foundamental distinction between things. The apparent distinctions exist because of people's absurd and deluding thoughts and desires. In the sky there is no distinction of east and west; people create the distinction out of their own minds and then believe it be true. Mathematical numbers from one to infinity are each complete numbers, but each in itself carries no distinction of quantity; people make the distinctions for their own convenience so as to be able to indicate varying amounts. In the universal process of becoming, inherently there are no distinctions between the process of life and the process of destruction; people make a distinction and call the one birth and the other death. In action there is no distinction between right and wrong, but people make a distinction for their own silly convenience. Buddha keeps away from these distinctions and looks upon the world as upon a fleecy passing cloud. To Buddha every definite thing is illusion, something that the mind constructs; he knows that whatever the mind can grasp and throw away are vanity; thus he avoids the pitfalls of images and discriminative thought. 2. People grasp after things for their own imagined convenience and comfort; they grasp after wealth and treasure and honors; they cling desperately to life; they make arbitrary distictions between good and bad, right and wrong, and then vehemently affirm and deny them. For people life is a succession of graspings and attachments, and then, because of it, they must assume the illusions of pain and suffering. Once there was a man on a long journey who came to a river. He said to himself; this side of the river is very difficult and dangerous, the other side seems easier and safer, but how shall I get across? So he builds himself a raft out of branches and reeds and safely crosses the river. Then he thinks to himself, this raft has been very useful to me in crossing the river; I will not abandon it to rot on the bank, but will carry it along with me; and thus he voluntarily assumes an unnecessary burden. Can this man be called a wise man? This parable teaches that a good thing when it becomes an unnecessary burden should be thrown away; how much more a bad thing. A jar does not exist just because it is easily broken, but knowing that the substance of a jar is not real, one should not become attached to it, but if one gets rid of the attachment, he can still use the jar, not to do so would be an instance of throwing away something that, although not perfect, is still useful. We can speak of the horns of a hare, of the child of a barren woman, but they never exist. To grasp after and to become attached to things which have names but lack substance, is foolish. Buddha made it the rule of his life to avoid useless and unnecessary discussions. 3. It has been said that things do not come and do not go, neither do they appear nor disappear, therefore, it is wise not to become attached to things not to lose things. There are things that do not appear and do not disappear, but they are different from that which is un-born and not subject to destruction. Buddha keeps away from both the affirmation of existence and the denial of existence; he preaches: It is both non-existence and not non-existence; it neither gives birth to life, nor does it destroy life. That is, everything being a concordance and succession of causes and conditions, a thing in itself does not exist, so it can be said it is non-existent. At the same time, because it has a relative connection with causes and conditions, it can be said that it is not non-existent. To adhere to a thing because of its form is the source of delusion. If the form is not grasped and adhered to, this false imagination and absurd delusion will not occur. Enlightenment is the wisdom to see this truth and to avoid that foolish delusion. The world, indeed, is like a dream and the treasures of the world are an alluring mirage! Like the apparent distances in a picture, things have no reality in themselves; they are like passing clouds. 4. To believe that things created by an incalculable series of causes can last forever, is a serious mistake; but it is just as great a mistake to believe that things completely disappear. These categories of everlasting life and everlasting death, and affirmation and denial of them, do not apply to the essential nature of things, but only to their appearances as they are observed by human eyes. Because of human desire, people become related and attached to these appearances, but in their essential nature things are free from all relations and attachments. Since everything is created by a series of causes and conditions, the appearance of things is constantly changing; that is, there is no constancy about them as there should be about authentic substances. It is because of this constant change of appearance that we liken things to a mirage and a dream. But, in spite of this constant change in appearance, things, in their essential nature, are constant and changeless. To illustrate: A river to a man seems like a river, but to a hungry demon a river may seem to be like fire or ice. Therefore, to speak to a man about a river existing or not existing would have some sense, but to this fabulous being, such words would have no meaning. In like manner it can be said of everything: "Things are like illusions, they both exist and do not exist." Further, it is a mistake to distinguish this passing life from a changeless life of truth. It can not be said, that apart from this world of change and appearance, there is another world of constancy and truth. This changing, passing life is the life of truth; there is but one authentic life. But ignorant people of this world, assuming that this is a real world, proceed to act upon that absurd assumption. But as this world is only an illusion, their acts being based upon error, only lead them into harm and suffering. But a wise man, recognizing that the world is but an illusion, does not act as if it was real, so he escapes the suffering. V. THE MIDDLE WAY 1. To those who choose the path that leads to Enlightenment, there are two extremes that should be carefully avoided: first, there is the extreme of indulgence to the desires of the body, the whims of the mind and the pride of life, that come naturally to those who cherish the notion that this world is a real world and this life an end in itself. Second, there is the opposite extreme that comes naturally to those who cherish the notion that a world of truth is the only reality; to them it comes easy to renounce this life and to go to an extreme of ascetic discipline and to torture one's body and mind unreasonable. The Noble Path that lies between these two extremes and leads to enlightenment and wisdom and peace of mind may be called the Life of Golden Mean. This Nob le Path of the middle way, to which Buddha referrred in the Four Noble Truths as leading to the extinction of desire and therefore to the ending of suffering, consists of eight stages: Right Ideas, Right Resolution, Right Speech, Right Behavior, Right Livelihood, Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, and Right Dhyana, or Concentration. As has been said, all things appear or disappear by reasons of an endless series of causes. Ignorant people see life as either existence, or non-existence, but wise men see beyond both existence and non-existence to something that includes them both; this is an observation of the Middle Way. Suppose a log is floating in a river. If the log does not become grounded on either bank, or does not sink, or is not taken out by a man, or does not decay, ultimately it will reach the sea. Life is like this log caught in the current of a great river. If a person does not become attached to a life of self-indulgence, nor renouncing life become attached to a life of self-torture; if a person does not become proud of his virtue nor of his evil acts; if in his search for enlightenment he does not become conteptuous of delusion nor fear it; such a person is following the Middle Way by a Noble Path. 2. The important thing in following the path of enlightenment, is to avoid being caught and entangled in any extreme; that is, to always follow a middle course. Knowing that things neither exist nor do not exist, remembering the dream-like nature of everything, reminding himself that even his supposed ego-personality has no substance of its own, one should avoid being caught by any desire for comfort, happiness, or success; or pride of personality, or praise for his good deeds, or caught and entangled by anything else. But if one is to avoid being caught in the current of his desires, he must learn in the very beginning not to grasp after things lest he become habituated to them and become attached to them. He must not become attached to existence nor to non-existence, to anything inside or outside, neither to good things nor to bad things, neither to right nor wrong. If he becomes attached to things, just at that moment, all at once, the life of illusion begins. The one who follows the Noble Path to Enlightenment will not cherish regrets neither will he cherish anticipations, but with equitable and peaceful mind will meet what comes. 3. Enlightenment has no definite form or nature by which it can manifest itself, so in enlightenment itself, there is nothing to be enlightened. Enlightenment exists solely because of delusion and ignorance, if they disappear so will enlightenment. And the opposite is true also; delusion and ignorance exist because of enlightenment; when enlightenment ceases, ignorance and delusion will cease also. Therefore, be on guard against thinking of enlightenment as a "thing" to be grasped after, lest it, too, becomes an obstruction. When the mind that was in darkness becomes enlightened, it passes away, and with its passing, the thing which we call enlightenment passes also. As long as people desire enlightenment and grasp after it, it means that delusion is still with them; therefore they who are following the way to enlightenment must not grasp after it, and if they gain enlightenment they must not become attached to it. When people attain enlightenment but still continue to cherish the notion of enlightenment, it means that enlightenment itself has become an obstructing delusion; therefore, people should follow the path to enlightenment until in their thoughts worldly passions and enlightenment become one thing. 4. This conception of universal oneness - that brings in their essential nature have no distinguishing marks - is called "sunyata." Sunyata means the un-born, having no self-nature, no duality. It is because things in themselves have no form nor characteristics that we can speak of them as neither being born nor being destroyed. There is nothing about the essential nature of things that can be described in terms of discrimination; that is why things are called sunyata. As has been pointed out, all things appear and disappear because of the concurrence of causes and conditions. Nothing ever exists entirely alone; everything is in relations to everything else. Wherever there is light there is shadow; wherever there is length, there is shortness; wherever, therefore, we assert self-substance, we must admit sunyata. As the self-nature of things can not exist alone, there must be emptiness. By the same reasoning, enlightenment can not exist apart from ignorance, nor ignorance apart from enlightenment. If things do not differ in their essense of nature, how can there be duality? 5. People habitually think of themselves as being connected with birth and death, but in reality there are no such conseptions. When people are able to realize this truth, they have realized the truths of non-duality and sunyata. It is because people cherish the idea of an ego-personality that they cling to the idea of possession, but since there is no such thing as an "ego," there can be no such thing as possession. As people are able to realize this truth, they will be able to realize the truth of no self-nature. People cherish the distinction of purity and impurity, but in the nature of things there is no such distinction except as it rises from their false and absurd imaginations. In like manner people make a distinction between good and evil, but there is no good and no evil existing separately. People who are immersed in a world of social relations will make such a distinction, but those who are following the path to enlightenment should recognize no such duality, and it should lead them neither to praise the good and condemn the evil, nor to despise the good and condone the evil. People naturally fear calamity and long for good fortune, but if the distinction is carefully studied, calamity often turns out to be fortune and good fortune to be calamitous. The wise man learns to me et the changing circumstances of life with an equitable spirit, being neither elated by success nor depressed by failure. Thus one realized the truth of non-duality. Therefore, all these words that express relations of duality - such as, existence and non-existence, worldly-passions and true-knowledge, purity and impurity, good and evil - all of these terms of contrast in one's thinking, as they lead only to confusion and delusion, should sedulously be avoided. As people keep free from such terms and from the emotions engendered by them, by so much do they realize sunyata's universal emptiness. 6. Just as the pure and fragrant lotus grows out of the mud of a swamp rather than out of the clean loam of an upland field, so from the muck of worldly passsions springs the pure enlightenment of Buddhahood. The absurd views of other schools and the delusions of worldly passions are, truly, the seed of Buddhahood. If a diver is to secure his treasure of pearl he must descend into the sea, braving all its dangers of jagged coral and vicious sharks, so one must face the perils of worldly passion if he is to secure the precious pearl of enlightenment. He must first know suffering and loneliness before he will appreciate sympathy and compassion. One must first be lost among the mountainous crags of egoism and selfishness, before there will awaken in him the desire to find a path that will lead him to enlightenment. There is a legend of a hermit of old who had such a desire to find the true path that he climbed a mountain of swords and threw himself into the fire and endured them because of his hope. He who is willing to risk the perils of the path will find a cool breeze blowing on the sword-bristling mountains of selfishness and among the fires of hatred and, in the end, will come to realize that the selfishness and worldly passions against which he has struggled and suffered are enlightenment itself. 7. If people adhere to one of two things, though it may appear to be good and right, there is antagonism of thought and, therefore, there is delusion. It is a mistake for people to seek a thing supposed to be good and right, and to flee from another supposed to be bad and evil. If people insist that all things are empty and transitory, it is just as great a mistake as it would be to insist that all things are real and do not change. If people assert that everything is suffering, it is error; if they assert that everything is happiness, that is error, too. If a person becomes attached to his ego-personality, it is a mistake, it cannot save him from dissatisfaction and suffering; therefore the teaching of Buddha brings unity where before there has been opposing duality. If one believes there is no ego, it is also a mistake and it would be useless for him to practice the way of truth. Buddha teaches the Middle Way where duality merges into oneness; it is a Noble Path that leads to contentment and peace. CHAPTER THREE - BUDDHA NATURE I. THE HUMAN MIND AND THE TRUE MIND 1. The world is like a lotus pond filled with many different kinds of plants; there are blossoms of many different tints; some white, some pink, some blue, some red, some yellow; some grow under water, some spread their leaves on the water, and some raise their leaves above the water. Among men there are many more differences. There are differneces of sex, but as for that there is no essential difference of nature, for women, with proper training, may attain enlightenment precisely as men. Among humans there are many kinds and degrees of mentality: some are wise, some are foolish, some are good-natured, some are bad tempered, some are easily led, some are difficult to lead, some possess pure minds and some have minds that are defiled; but these differences are negligible when it comes to the attainment of enlightenment. To be a trainer of elephants, one must possess five qualities: he must have good health, he must have confidence, he must have diligence, he must have sincerity of purpose, and he must have wisdom. To follow Buddha's Noble Path to enlightenment, one must have the same five good qualities. If one has these qualities, whether he be man or woman, it is possible to gain enlightenment; it need not take long to learn the Buddha's teaching, one may begin in the morning and be enlightened by evening, for all humans possess a nature that has affinity for enlightenment. 2. In the practice of the way to enlightenment, people see the Buddha with their own eyes and believe in Buddha with their own minds. The eyes that see Buddha and the mind that believes Buddha are the same eyes and the same mind that, until that day, had wandered in the world of suffering. If a king is beset by bandits, before he attacks them, he must find out where their camp is. So when one is beset by worldly passions, he should first find out their seat. If one is in a house when he opens his eyes he will first notice the interior of the room and only later will he see the view outside the window. In like manner we cannot conceive the eye noticing external things before there is coordination of the eye with the things within the house. If there is a mind within the body, it ought first to know the things of the body, but generally people are interested in external things and seem to know and care little for the things within the body. If the mind was located outside the body, how could it keep in contact with the needs of the body? But, in fact, the body feels what the mind knows, and the mind knows what the body feels. Therefore it can not be said that the human mind is outside or independent of the body. Then, where does the mi nd exist? 3. From the beginning, people, being conditioned by their karma, have wandered about in ignorance, being deluded by two fundamental things. First, they believed that the discriminating mind, which lies at the root of this life of birth and death, was their real nature; and, second, they did not know that, hidden behind the discriminating mind, they possessed a pure mind of enlightenment that was their true nature. When a man closes his fist and raises his arm, the eye sees it and the mind discriminates it, but the mind that discriminates it is not the true mind. The discriminating mind is only a mind for the discrimination of imagined differences that greed and other moods relating to the self have created. The discriminating mind is subject to causes and conditions, it is empty of any self-substance, it is constantly changing. But since people believe that this mind is their real mind, the delusion enters into the causes and conditions that produce suffering. The man opens his hand and the mind perceives it; but what is it that first moves? Is it the mind? or is it the hand? Or is it neither? No, if the hand moves, the mind moves; as the mind moves, the hand moves. But the moving mind is only a superficial appearance of mind; it is not true and fundamental mind. 4. Fundamentally everyone has a pure, clean mind, but it is usually covered over by the defilement and dust of worldly desires which have arisen from his circumstances. These world desires are not of the essence of his nature; they are something added, like intruders or guests in a home. The moon is often hidden by clouds, but its purity remains untarnished. Therefore, people must not be deluded into thinking that these worldly desires, whether they be guest or defilement, are their own true mind. They must continually mind themselves of the fact by continually awakening within themselves the pure and unchanging fundamental mind of enlightenment. As it is, being caught by changing worldly desires and being deluded by their own perverted ideas, they wander about in a world of delusion. The disturbances and defilements of the human mind are aroused by greed and the reations due to their changing circumstances. If the mind does not grasp and become attached to things as they pass, there will be no disturbed and defiled mind. The mind that is not disturbed by things as they occur, that remains pure and tranquil under all circumstances, is the true mind and should be the master. We cannot say that an inn disappears just because the guest is out of sight, neither can we say that the true self has disappeared simply because a mind of changeable ideas and absurd views, which have been aroused by the changing circumstances of life, has temporarily hidden it from attention. No, the human mind, with its burden of false imaginations and its bonds of attachment that change with changing conditions, is not the fundamental and true nature of the human spirit. 5. Let us think of a lecture hall that is light while the sun is shining but is dark after the sun goes down. We can think of the light departing with the sun and the dark coming with the night, but we can not so think of the mind that perceives lightness and darkness. To whom does lightness and darkness belong that we may return them as to an owner? The mind that is susceptible to lightness and darkness can not be given back to anybody; it can only revert to its true nature which is the fundamental nature of the human spirit. It is only a temporary notes changes of lightness and darkness as the sun rises and sets; it is only a temporary mind that has different feelings from moment to moment with the changing circumstances of life; it is not the real and true mind. The fundamental and true mind which realizes the lightness and the darkness is the universal essence of mind. The temporary feelings of good and evil, love and hatred, that have been aroused by surrounding and changing conditions, are only momentary reactions that have had their causes in the guests and the defilement accumulated by the human mind. Behind the desires and world passions which the mind entertains there abides, clear and undefiled, the fundamental and true essence of mind. Water is round in a round receptacle and square in a square one, but water as water has no particular shape. People often forget this fact. People see this and that, they like this and dislike that, they discriminate existence from non-existence; and then being caught in these entanglements and becoming attached to them, suffer in consequence. If people would only give up their attachments to these imaginary and false discriminations, and would restore the purity of their fundamental minds, then both their true minds, and their flesh would be free from defilement and suffering and would know the peacefulness that goes with that freedom. II. THE MIND OF BUDDHA 1. We have spoken of the pure and true mind as being fundamental; it is also the seed of Buddhahood. We will explain this by a simile. One can get fire if he holds a lense between the sun and some combustible, but where does the fire come from? The lense is an enormous distance from the sun; ap parently there is no connection, but the fire certainly appears upon the combustible. But if the combustible was something that would not kindle, there would be no fire. In like manner, if the light of Buddha's Wisdom is concentrated upon the human mind, its true nature which is Buddhahood will be enkindled, and its light will illumine the minds of other people by its brightness, and will awaken faith in Buddha. It is because of Buddha's mercy and compassion that he holds the lense before all human minds that they may be enlightened. 2. Often people disregard the affinity of their true minds for Buddha's enlightening wisdom, and because of it are caught by the entaglement of worldly passions, and become attached to discriminations of good and evil, and then lament because of their bondage and suffering. Why is it the people, possessing this fundamental and pure mind, should still cling to false imaginations and doom themselves to wander about in a world of delusion and suffering, while all about them is the light of Buddha's wisdom? Once upon a time a man looked into what he thought was the right side of a mirror and not seeing his face became insane just because he had carelessly looked into the reverse side of a mirror! But it is just as foolish and unnecessary for a person to go on suffering because he does not gain enlightenment where he expects to find it. There is no failure in enlightenment; the failure is in people who for a long time have been seeking enlightenment in their discriminating and thinking minds, not realizing that they are not true minds, but are imaginary minds that have been caused by the accumulation of greed and illusion overlaying and hiding their true mind. If the accumulation of false imaginations is cleared away, enlightenment will appear. But the strange thing is, that when people gain enlightenment they realize that without false imaginations there could be no enlightenment. 3. Buddha-nature is not something that comes to an end. Though wicked men should be born beasts, or hungry demons, or fall into hell, they can not lose their Buddha-nature. However burned in the defilement of flesh or concealed at the root of worldly desires and forgotten it may be, human affinity for Buddhahood is never quite extinguished. There is an old story told of a man who fell into a drunken sleep. His friend stayed by him as long as he could but, being compelled to go and fearing that he might be in want, the friend hid a jewel in his garment, he wandered about in poverty and hunger. A long time after the men met and the friend told the poor man about the jewel and advised his to search for it. Like the drunken man of the story, people wander about suffering in this life of birth and death, unconscious that hidden away in their inner nature, pure and untarnished, is the priceless treasure of Buddha-nature. 4. But however unconscious people may be of the fact that everyone has within his possession this supreme nature, and however degraded and ignorant they may be, Buddha never loses faith in them because he knows that in the least of them there are, potentially, all the virtues of Buddhahood. So Buddha preaches to them the Dharma, awakens faith in them, leads them away from their chimeras and teaches them that there is no difference between themselves and Buddhahood. Buddha is one who has attained Buddhahood, people are those who are capable of attaining Buddhahood, that is all the difference there is between them. But if anyone thinks that he has attained enlightenment, he is deceiving himself for, although he may be moving in that direction, he has not yet reached Buddhahood. Buddha-nature does not appear without diligent and faithful effort, nor is the task finished until Buddhahood appears. 5. Once upon a time a king gathered some blind men about an elephant and asked them to tell him what an elephant was like. The first man felt of a tusk and said an elephant was like a giant carrot; another happened to touch an ear and said it was like a great fan; another touched his trunk and said he was like a pestle; still another, who happened to feel of his leg, said he was like a mortar; and another who grasped his tail, said he was like a rope. Not one of them was able to tell the king what was the real form of an elephant. In like manner one might ask a hundred men to describe the nature of man and not one of them would be able to describe the true nature of a human being. There is only one possible way by which the true nature of man, the nature that can be disturbed by worldly desires nor destroyed by death, can be realized and that is by the Buddha's Noble Path and by those who practice it. III. BUDDHA-NATURE AND EGOLESSNESS 1. We have been speaking of Buddha-nature as though it was something that could be described, as though it was similar to the "universal soul" of other teachings, which it is not. The concept of an "ego-soul" is something that has been imaginined by a disturbed mind which has first grasped it and then has become attached to it, but which must be abandoned if one is to realize enlightenment. On the contrary Buddha-nature is something indescribable that must first be discovered before it can be realized. In one sense it resembles an "ego-personality" but it is not the "ego" that says "I" and "mine". To believe in the existence of an ego is a negative belief, that thinks non-existence is existence; to deny an universal nature would also be wrong for it would be thinking that existence was non-existence. This can be explained in a parable. A mother took her sick child to a doctor. The doctor gave the sick child medicine and instructed the mother not to let the child nurse until the medicine was digested. The mother did not have the heart to refuse the child when it should try to nurse, so she anointed her breast with something bitter so that the child would keep away from her on its own account. After the medicine had had time to be digested the mother cleansed her breast and let the child nurse. The mother took this method of saving her child in kindness of heart for she loved the child. Like the mother in the parable, Buddha, in order to remove misunderstandings and to break up attachments to an ego-self, denies the existence of an ego; and when the misunderstandings and attachments are done away with, then he explains the reality of the true mind that is Buddhahood. Attachment to an ego-self leads people into delusion, but faith in their Buddha-nature leads them to enlightenment. It is like the woman in a story who was bequeathed a chest and, not knowing that the chest contained gold, she continued to live in poverty, until another person opened the chest and showed her the gold. Buddha opens the minds of people and shows them the pure gold of their Buddha-nature. 2. If people all have this Buddha-nature, why is there so much suffering from people cheating one another and killing one another? And why are there so many distinctions of rank and wealth, of rich and poor? Is it not because the Buddha-nature has been covered over by defilement and worldly passion and the delusion of their minds? There is a story of a wrestler who was accustomed to wear as an ornament on his forehead a precious stone. One time when he was wrestling the stone was crushed into the flesh of his forehead. He thought he had lost the gem and went to a surgeon to have the wound dressed. When the surgeon came to dress the wound he found the gem embedded in the flesh and covered over with blood and dirt. He held up a mirror and showed the stone to the wrestler. Buddha-nature is like the precious stone of this story: it becomes covered over by the dirt and dust of other interests and people think they have lost it, but often after many years some good teaching brings it to mind again. Buddha-nature exists in everyone no matter how deeply it may be covered over by greed, anger and foolishness, or buried by deeds and their retribution. But Buddha-nature can not be lost or destroyed; and because all other things are delusion, sooner or later it will reappear. Like the wrestler in the story who was shown the gem buried in flesh and blood by means of a mirror, so people are shown their Buddha-nature, buried beneath their desires and worldly passions, by means of the enlightenment of Buddha. 3. Buddha-nature is always pure and tranquil no matter how varied the temperaments and surroundings of people may be. Just as milk is always white regardless of the color of a cow's hide, so it matters not how differently karma may condition a person's life or what different effects may follow a person's acts and thoughts; Buddha-nature is always pure and the same. There is a fable told in India of a magical medicine that was hidden in the snowy fastnesses of the Himalayas. For a long time men sought for it in vain, but at last a wise man located it by the sweetness of the water that was flowing from a water pipe. As long as the wise man lived he was able to get this medicine, but after his death the sweet elixir no longer appeared in the water but remained hidden in some far off spring in the mountains, and the water in the pipe turned sour and harmful and of different taste to every one who tried it. In like manner Buddha-nature is hidden away beneath the wild growth of worldly passions and can rarely be discovered, but Buddha found it and revealed it to people, but as they receive it by their varying faculties it tastes different to each one. 4. The diamond is the hardest of known substances; sand and gravel can be ground to powder but diamonds remain unscratched. Buddha-nature is like the diamond. Human nature, its body and mind will wear away but the nature of Buddhahood can not be destroyed. The Buddha Dharma teaches that in human nature there may be endless varieties, but in Buddha-nature there is but one likeness, the likeness of Buddha. Pure gold is procured by melting ore and removing all impure substances. If people would melt the ore of their minds and remove all the impurities of worldly passion and egoism, they would all recover the same pure Buddha-nature. CHAPTER FOUR - EVIL DESIRES I. WORLDLY PASSIONS 1. There are two kinds of worldly passions that defile and cover-over the purity of Buddha-nature. The first is the passion for discrimination and discussion by reason of which people become confused in judgement. It may be called the delusion of reasoning. The second is the passion for emotional experience by reason of which people become confused as to values. This may be called the delusion of practice. Both delusions of reasoning and delusions of practice at first seem fundamental but, really, there are two other worldly passions that are more fundamental. The first is ignorance, and the second is desire. The delusion of reasoning is based upon ignorance, and the delusion of practice is based upon desire, so that the two sets of worldly passion are really one set after all, and together they are the source of all worldly passions. If persons are ignorant how can they reason correctly and safely? As people yield to desire, grasping, clinging and attachment inevitable follow. It is this constant grasping at every pleasant thing they see and hear that leads people into the delusions of practice. Why, some people even yield to desire for the death of the body. From these primary sources all the worldly passions of greed, anger, foolishness, misunderstandings, and the infatuations of egoism, pride, deceit, jealousy, adulation, contempt, inebriety, selfishness, have their risings and appearings. 2. Greed rises from wrong ideas as to what can give true satisfaction; anger rises from wrong ideas as to what is unsatisfactory in one's affairs and surroundings; foolishness rises from wrong ideas as to what one should do or should not do; misunderstand ings arise from wrong ideas that follow listening to wrong teachings. These three - greed, anger and foolishness - are called the fires of the world. The fire of greed consumes those who have lost their true minds through greed; the fire of anger consumes those who have lost their minds through anger; the fire of foolishness consumes those who have lost their true minds through failure to hear and to heed the teachings of Buddha. Indeed, this world is burning up by its many and various fires. There are fires of greed, fires of anger, fires of misunderstandings, fires of infatuation and egoism, fires of decrepitude, sickness and death, fires of sorrow, lamentation, suffereing and agony. Everywhere these fires are raging. These fires of worldly passion not only burn the self, they cause others to suffer and they lead others into wrong acts of body, lips and mind. From the wounds that are caused by these fires there issues a pus that infects and poisons every one it touches and leads them into evil paths. 3. Greed rises in the face of satisfaction; anger rises in the face of dissatisfaction; and foolishness rises from impure thoughts. The evil of greed has little impurity but is hard to remove; the evil of anger has more impurity but it is easy to remove; the evil of foolishness has much impurity and is very hard to overcome. Therefore, people should quench these fires whenever and wherever they appear, by rightly judging as to what can give true satisfaction, by strictly controlling the mind in the face of the unsatisfactory things of life, and by ever recalling Buddha's teachings of good-will and kindness. If the mind is filled with wise and pure and unselfish thoughts, there will be no place for worldly passions to take root. 4. Greed, anger and foolishness are like fever. If one gets this fever, even if he lie in a comfortable room, he will suffer and be tormented by sleeplessness. Those who have no such fever have no difficulty in sleeping peacefully, even on a winter night, on the ground and with only a thin covering of leaves, or on a hot summer's night in a crowded room. These three - greed, anger and foolishness - are the source of all human woe. To get rid of these sources of woe, one must observe the moral precepts, he must practice concentration of mind and he must have wisdom. Observance of the moral precepts will remove the impurities of greed; right concentration of mind will remove the impurities of anger; and wisdom will remove the impurities of foolishness. 5. Human desires are endless. It is like the thirst of a man who drinks salt water; he gets no satisfaction and his thirst is only increased. So it is with man who seeks to gratify his desires; he only gains increased dissatisfaction and his woes are multiplied. The gratification of desires never satisfies; it always leaves behind an unrest and irritation that can never be allayed, and then, if the gratification of his desires is thwarted, it will often drive him insane. To satisfy their desires, people will struggle and fight with each other, king against king, vassal against vassal, parent against son, older brother against a younger brother, sister against sister, friend against friend, they will fight and even kill each other to satisfy their desires. People often ruin their lives in the attempt to satisfy their desires. They will cheat and steal and oppress, and then being caught will suffer from the disgrace of it and its punishment. They will sin agianst their own flesh knowing that the gratification will harm them. They will sin against their own minds knowing perfectly well that the gratification will ultimately bring unhappiness and suffering so imperious is desire. And then there is karma and the suffering of following lives, and the agonies of falling into another world. 6. Of all the worldly passions, lust is the most intense. All other worldly passions seem to follow in its train. Lust seems to provide the soil in which other passions flourish. Lust is like a female demon that eats up all the good deeds of the world. Lust is a viper hiding in a flower garden; it poisons those who come in search of beauty. Lust is a vine that climbs a tree and spreads over the branches until the tree is strangled. Lust insinuates its tentacle into human emotion and sucks away the good sense of the mind until the mind withers. Lust is a bait cast by the evil one that foolish people snap at and are dragged down into the depths of the evil world. If a dry bone is smeared with blood a dog will gnaw at it until he is tired and baffled. Lust to a man is precisely like this bone to a dog, he will gnaw at it until he is exhausted. If a single piece of carrion is thrown to two wild beasts they will fight and claw each other to get it. If a foolish man carries a torch against the wind, he will likely burn himself. Like these two beasts and this foolish man, people fight and suffer because of worldly passion. 7. It is easy to shield the outer body from poisoned arrows, but it is impossible to shield the mind from the poisoned darts that originate within itself. Greed, anger, foolishness and the infatuations of egoism, these four poisoned darts originate within the mind and infect it with deadly poison. If people are infected with these poisons, they will lie, cheat, chatter, abuse, by words, and then will actualize their words by killing, stealing and committing adultry. The three evil states of mind, the four evil words, and the three evil acts if added together become the ten gross evils. If people become accustomed to lying, they will unconsciously commit wrong deeds. Before they can act evil they must lie, and once they begin to lie they will act evilly with unconcern. But as these ten evils all originate within the mind, foolishness is the greatest of the worldly passions. So long as foolishness infects the mind, the mind will proceed to manifest its evil states in evil acts and unconcernedly. Greed, lust, fear, anger, egoism, misfortune, unhappiness, all have relation to foolishness. Thus, foolishness is the greatest of poisons. 8. From worldly passion action follows; from action suffering follows; passion, action, suffering are like a wheel rotating endlessly. The rolling of this wheel has no beginning and no end, how can people escape rebirth. One life following another life according to its karmaic cycle in endless recurrence! If one were to pile the ashes and bones of men appearing in a karmaic cycle, the pile would be mountain high; if one were to collect the milk of mothers who have suckled them, it would be deeper than the sea. Although all people possess the nature of Buddhahood, it is buried so deeply in the defilement of worldly passion that it long remains unknown. That is why suffering is so universal and why there is this endless recurrence of lives of misery. But just as yielding to greed, anger and foolishness accumulates karma and conditions rebirth, so following Buddha's Dharma clears away the defilement of karma and ends rebirth in the world of suffering. II. THE NATURE OF MAN 1. Man's nature is like a dense thicket that has no entrance into it and is difficult to penetrate. In comparison, the nature of an animal is much easier to understand. Still, if we cannot understand the nature of man perfectly, we can, in a general way, classify them according to outstanding differences. First there are those who because of wrong teachings practice austerities and cause themselves to suffer. Second, there are those who, by cruelty, by stealing, and by other unkind acts, cause others to suffer. Third, there are those who cause other people to suffer but are willing to suffer with them; these are mostly social and political reformers. Fourth, there are those who do not suffer themselves and save others from suffering. This last class by following the teachings of Buddha do not give way to greed, anger and foolishness but live peaceful lives of kindness and wisdom. 2. There are other classifications. First, those who pass from darkness to darkness; those that pass from darkness to light; those who pass from light to darkness; those who go from light to light. Those who belong to the first group are born in unfortunate circumstances. They do not know about Buddha's teachings; their minds are clouded by ignorance, they act unwisely by wrong observation, and after death there is rebirth in this world of suffering. Those in the second group have heard of Buddha's teachings and, although born in poor circumstances, keep the mind pure, are sympathetic and charitable, and after death there is rebirth in this world but under better conditions. Those in the third group live in comfort and prosperity and, although they know of Buddha's teachings, do not follow them but give way to impure thoughts, are selfish, act unkindly, and after death there is return to this world of suffering. Those who belong to the fourth class, who go from light to light, live in contentment and comfort. They know and observe Buddha's teachings, they keep a pure mind, they are both charitable and sympathetic, they teach the Dharma to others; after death there is rebirth where there is n o suffering. 3. Some men are like letters carved in a rock; they easily give way to anger and retain their angry thoughts for a long time. Some men are like letters written in sand; they give way to anger also, but the angry thoughts quickly pass away. Some men are like letters written in running water; they do not retain their passing thoughts, they let abuse and uncomfortable gossip pass by unnoticed, their minds are always pure and undisturbed. There are still other men: those who are proud, act rashly and are never satisfied; their nature is easy to understand. Then there are those who are courteous, who always act after consideration; their nature is hard to understand. Then there are those who have overcome desire completely; it is impossible to understand their nature. Thus people can be classified in many different ways but their nature is hard to understand. Only Buddha understands them and by his wisdom leads them by many kinds of teaching. III. THE LIFE OF MAN 1. There is an allegory that depicts human life. Once there was a man in a boat rowing down a river. A man on the shore warned him saying, "Stop rowing down the swift current; there are rapids ahead and a dangerous whirlpool, and there are crocodiles and demons lying in wait in rocky caverns. You will perish if you persist." In this allegory, "the swift river" is a life of lust; "rowing gaily" is giving rein to one's passion; "rapids ahead" means the ensuing suffering and pain; "whirlpool" means, pleasure, "crocodiles and demons" refers to the decay and death that follows a life of lust and indulgence; "the man on the shore," who calls out the warning, is the Buddha. Here is another allegory. A man who has committed a crime is running away; as guards are following him, he tries to hide himself by descending into a well by means of some vines that are growing in it. As he descends he notices a viper in the bottom of the well, so he decides to cling to the vine for safety. After a time when his arms are getting tired, he notices two mice, a white one and a black one, gnawing at the vine. If the vine breaks, he will fall on the viper and perish. Suddenly, on looking upward, he notices just above his face a bee-hive from which occasionally falls a drop of honey. The man, forgetting all his danger, tastes the honey with delight. "A man" means those who are born to suffer and to die alone. "Guards" and "vip ers" refer to the body with all its desires. "Vines in a well" means the continuity of the human life. "Two mice, black and white" refers to the duration of time, to night and day, and the passing of years. "Sweet honey" is the rare happiness that beguiles the suffering of the passing years. 2. Here is another allegory. A king places four vipers in a box and gives the box into the keeping of a servant. He commands the servant to take good care of the serpents and warns him that if he angers them he will be punished with death. The servant, in fear, decides to throw away the box and escape himself. The king sends five guards to recapture the servant. At first they approach the servant in a friendly manner intending to take him back safely, but the servant does not trust their friendliness and escapes to another village. Then in a vision, a voice tells him that in this village there is no safer shelter, and moreover there are six bandits who will attack him, so the servant runs away in fright until he comes to a wild river that blocks his way. At first he is frightened because of the dangers that are following him, but he makes a raft and succeeds in crossing the turbulent current, beyond which he finds safety and peace. "Four vipers in a box" means the body of flesh made up of the four elements of earth, water, fire and air. The body is given into the charge of the mind, but the body is an enemy of the mind, and the mind tries to run away from the body. "Five guards who approach in friendly purpose" mean the five aggregates: sensation, perception, imagination, karma and consciousness which inform body and mind. "The safe shelter" means the six senses, which are no safe shelter after all, and "the six bandits" are the six objects of desire of the six sense minds. Thus, seeing the dangers within the six senses, he runs away once more and comes to the wild current of worldly desires. Then he makes himself a raft of Buddha's good teachings and crosses the wild curren t safely. 3. There is a perilous place in a person's life called "leaving parents, leaving children;" there are three other occasions that are full of peril when a son is helpless to aid his mother or a mother help her son, namely, a conflagration, a flood and a burglary, yet even in these perilous and sad occasions, there still exists a chance for aiding each other. But there are another three occasions when it is impossible for a mother to save her son or a son to save his mother. These three occasions are: the time of sickness, the time of growing old, and the hour of death. How can a mother take her son's place when he is sick? How can a son take her place when she is growing old? How can either help the other when the hour of death approaches? No matter how much they may love each other or how intimate they may have been, one cannot help the other on such occasions. This is the real "parents leaving the child, child leaving parents." 4. Once Yama, the legendary Kind of Hell, asked a man who in life had acted very wickedly, whether, during his life, he had ever met the three heavenly messengers. The man replied: "No, my Lord, I never met any such persons." Yama asked him, if he had ever met an old person bent with age and walking with a cane. To this the man replied: "Yes, my Lord, I have met such persons frequently." Then Yama said to him: "You are suffering this present punishment because you did not recognize in that old man a heavenly messenger sent to warn you that you must quickly change your ways before you too become an old man." Yama asked him again, if he had ever seen a poor and friendless sick man. The man replied: "Yes, my Lord, I have seen many such." Then Yama said to him: "You have come into this place because you failed to recognize in this sick man a messenger from heaven sent to warn you of your own sickness." Then Yama asked his once more, if he had ever seen a dead man. The man replied: "Yes, my Lord, I have been in the presence of death many times." Yama said to him: "It is because you did not recognize in this dead man a heavenly messenger sent to warn you, that you are brought to this. If you had recognized this messenger and taken his warning you would have changed your course, and would not have come to this place of suffering. 5. Once there was a young woman named Kisagotami, the wife of a wealthy man, who lost her mind because of the death of her child. She took the child in her arms and went from house to house begging people to heal her child. Of course they could do nothing for her, but finally a follower of Buddha advised her to see the Blessed One who was then staying at the temple of Jitavana, so the woman carried the dead child to Buddha. The Blessed One looked upon her with sympathy and said: "To heal the child I need some poppy seeds; go and beg four or five poppy seeds from some house where death has never entered." So the poor demented woman went out and sought a house where death had never entered but in vain and at last was obliged to return to Buddha. In his quiet presence her mind cleared and she understood the meaning of his words. She took the body away and buried it and then returned to Buddha and became one of his followers. IV. ASPECTS OF HUMAN LIFE 1. People in this world are prone to be selfish and unsympathetic; they do not know how to love and respect each other; they argue and quarrel over trifling affairs to their own harm and suffering, and life becomes only a dreary round of unhappiness. Regardless of whether they are rich or poor they worry over money affairs; they suffer from poverty and they suffer from wealth. Because their lives are controlled by greed, they are never contented and never satisfied. A wealthy man worries about his estate if he has one, he worries about his mansion and its many servants, he worries about his health and comfort, he worries about his treasures and their safety. He worries lest some disaster befall him, his mansion burn down, robbers break in, bandits carry him off. Then he worries about death and the disposition of his wealth. Indeed, his life is lonely, and after death the future seems more lonely. A poor man always suffers from insufficiency and this serves to awaken endless desires, for land and house and wealth and leisure and luxury. Being alone with greed and covetousness he wears out both body and mind, and comes to death in the middle of life. The whole world seems pitted against him and even the path after death seems lonesome as though he had a long journey to go and no friends to keep him company. 2. Then there are five evils in the world. First, there is cruelty; every creature even insects strive with on another. The strong attack the weak; the weak deceive the strong; everywhere there is fighting and cruelty. Second, there is no clear demarca tion between the rights of a father and a son; between an elder brother and a younger; between a husband and a wife; between a senior relative and a younger; on every occasion each one desires to be the highest and to profit by the other. They cheat each other, there is double dealing and lack of sencerity. Third, there is no clear demarcation as to behavior between men and women. Everyone at times has impure and lascivious thoughts and desires that lead them into questionable acts and often into disputes and fightings and outright injustice and wickedness. Forth, people are prone to disrespect the rights of others, they exaggerate their own importance at the expense of others, they set bad examples of behavior and are unjust in their speech, deceivin g, slandering, abusing and using a double tongue. Fifth, people are prone to neglect their duties toward others. They think too much of their own comfort and their own desires; forget the favours they have received and they cause annoyance to others that often passes into gross injustice. 3. It is natural in this world of suffering for people to think and act selfishly and egoistically and because of it, it is equal natural for suffering and unhappiness to follow. It is natural for people to favor themselves and to neglect others; it is natural for people to let their own desires run into greed and lust and all manner of evil; but because of it they must suffer endlessly. These things are natural but are not absolute, for if people would listen to good teaching and do more considerate and careful thinking the suffering and unhappiness might be avoided. Buddha has shown the world a safe path to enlightenment and emancipation; if people would believe in it and follow it all their suffering and unhappiness would be ended. 4. Because this is a world of suffering people ought to have more sympathy for each other; they ought to respect each other for their good traits and help each other in their difficulties; but instead they are selfish and hard-hearted; they despise each other for their failings and dislike them for their advantages. These aversions generally grow worse with time and after a while become intolerable. Fortunately these feelings of dislike do not often eventuate in acts of violence but they poison life with feelings of hatred and anger that become so deeply carved into the mind that people carry the marks of it to the hour of death. Truly, in this world of greed a man is born alone and dies alone, and there is no one to share his punishment in the life after death. The law of cause and effect is universal; each man must carry his own burden of sin and must go alone to its retribution. But, fortunately, the same law of cause and effect controls good deeds. A life of sympathy and kindness will eventuate in good fortune and happiness. 5. Times of luxury do not last long, they pass away very quickly; nothing in the world can be long enjoyed. Therefore people should cast away while they are young and healthy all their greed and attachment to worldly riches and affairs, and should seek earnestly for true enlightenment, for what lasting happiness can there be apart from enlightenment. Most people, however, disbelieve or ignore this law of cause and effect. They go on in their habits of greed and selfishness and an evil deed brings misfortune. Nor do they really believe that one's acts in this life condition following lives and entail upon others the rewards and punishments of their sins. They lament and complain of their own sufferings, entirely misunderstanding the significance of their present acts to following lives, and the relation of their sufferings to acts of previous lives. They think only of the present desire and the present suffering. Nothing in the world is permanent of lasting, everything is changing and momentary and unpredictable. But people are ignorant and selfish and are concerned only with the desires and sufferings of the passing moment. They do not listen to good teachings nor do they try to understand them, they simply give themselves up to the present interest, like a wild dog or a wolf, and because they do not seek enlightenment there is no end to their own suffering nor to the sufferings of others. 6. As the years go by and people see how strongly they are bound by greed and habit and suffering, they become very sad and discouraged. Often in their discouragement they quarrel with others and sink deeper into sin and give up trying to do better; often their lives come to some untimely end in the very midst of their wickedness. This falling into discouragement because of one's misfortunes and suffering is most unnatural and is contrary to the law of heaven and earth. It is true that everything in this life is transitory and filled with uncertainty, but it is lamentable that anyone should ignore the fact and keep on trying to seek enjoyments and satisfaction of their desires. 7. From beginningless time incalculable numbers of men have been born into this world of delusion and suffering, and they are still being born. It is fortunate that the world has Buddha's teachings and that men can believe in them and be helped. Because times of plenty do not last long and suffering is never far away, people should think deeply, should keep the mind pure and the body well, they should keep away from greed and evil and should seek the good. To some people, fortunately, the knowledge of Buddha's teaching has come; they should seek to understand it and try to be born in Buddha's Pure Land. Knowing Buddha's teachings, they should not follow others into greedy and sinful ways, nor should they keep Buddha's teachings to themselves, but they should follow Buddha's teachings and teach them to others. CHAPTER FIVE - THE RELIEF OFFERED BY BUDDHA I. THE RELIEF OF BUDDHA 1. As already explained, people from beginningless ages have gone on yielding to their worldly passions, repeating sin after sin, and carrying a burden of intolerable acts, unable of their own wisdom or in their own strength to break these habits of greed and indulgence. If they are unable to overcome and remove worldly passions, how can they be expected to realize their true nature of Buddhahood? Buddha, who perfectly understood human nature, had great sympathy for them and made a vow that he would do every thing possible, even at the cost of great hardship to himself, to relieve them from their fears and suffering. To effect this relief he manifested himself as a Bodhisattva and uttered the following vows: (a) Though I enter Buddhahood, I shall not be satisfied until everybody in my country is sure of entering Buddhahood and gaining enlightenment. (b) Though I enter Buddhahood, I shall not be satisfied unless my enlightening power reaches all over the world. (c) Though I enter Buddhahood, I shall not be satisfied unless my life-giving power endures through the ages and saves innumerable people. (d) Though I enter Buddhahood, I shall not be satisfied until all the Buddhas in the Ten Quarters unite in praising my name. (e) Though I enter Buddhahood, I shall not be satisfied unless people with sincere faith endeavor to be reborn in my country, and unless people who repeat my name in sincere faith ten times actually succeed in doing so. (f) Though I enter Buddhahood, I shall not be satisfied until people everywhere determine to attain enlightenment, determine to practice virtue, determine to be reborn in my country, and utter these vows with sincerity. To those who do this I will appear at the hour of death with a great company of Bodhisattvas to welcome them into my Pure Land. (g) Though I attain Buddhahood, I will not be satisfied until people everywhere, hearing my name, think of my country and wish to be reborn there and, to that end, plant seeds of virtue with sincerity, even though they are not able to accomplish all their heart's desire. (h) Though I attain Buddhahood, I will not be satisfied until all those who are born in my Pure Land are certain to attain Buddhahood, so that they may lead many others to enlightenment and to the practice of great compassion. (i) Though I attain Buddhahood, I will not be satisfied until people all over the world are influenced by my spirit of loving compassion that will purify their minds and heal their bodies and lift them above the things of the world. (j) Though I attain Buddhahood, I will not be satisfied until people everywhere, hearing my name, gain right ideas about life and death, and gain that perfect wisdom that will keep their minds pure and tranquil in the midst of the world's greed and suffering. Thus I utter these vows; may I not gain Buddhahood until they are fulfilled. May I become the source of unlimited Light, freeing and radiating the treasures of Wisdom and Virtue, enlightening all lands and emancipating all suffering people. 2. Thus Buddha, by accumulating innumerable virtues through many aeons of ages, became the Buddha of Infinite Light and Boundless Life and perfected his own Buddha-land of Purity wherein he is now living in a world of Peace teaching all people by his own spirit. This Pure Land, wherein there is no suffering, is, indeed, most peaceful and happy. Clothing, food and all beautiful things appear as those who live there wish for them. When a gentle breeze passes through its jewel-laden trees, the music of its holy teachings fills the air and cleanses the minds of all who listen to it from all impurity. In this Pure Land there are many fragrant lotus blossoms, and each bloom has many preceious petals, and each petal shines softly in unspeakable beauty. The radiance of these lotus blossoms brightens the path of Wisdom, and those who listen to the music of the holy teaching are led by that path into perfect peace. 3. Now all the Buddhas of the Ten Quarters, each in his own Buddha-land, are praising the virtues of this Buddha of Infinite Light and Boundless Life. Whoever in these many Buddha-lands hears this Buddha's Name magnified and receives it with joy, his mind becomes one with Buddha's mind and he will be reborn in Buddha's wondrous Land of Purity. Those who are born in that Pure Land share in Buddha's boundless life; their hearts are immediately filled with sympathy for all sufferers and at once they utter their own vows and go forward to manifest Buddha's method of relief. In the spirit of these vows they cast away all worldly adherence and devote their merits to the emancipation of all sentient life; they integrate their own lives with the lives of all others, sharing their illusions and sufferings but, at the same time, realizing their freedom from the bonds and attachments of the worldly life. They know the hindrances and difficulties of the worldly life but they know, also, the boundless potentialities of Buddha's mercy. They are free to go or come, they are free to advance or to stop as they wish, but they choose to remain with those upon whom Buddha has compassion. Therefore, if anyone hearing the Name of this Buddha of Infinite Light is ecouraged to call upon that Name in perfect faith, he shall share in Buddha's mercy. So all people should listen to Buddha's teaching and should follow it even if it seems to lead them again through the flames that envelop this world of life and death. If people truly and earnestly wish to gain enlightenment, they must rely on Buddha. It is impossible for an ordinary person to realize his supreme Buddha-nature without the support of Buddha. 4. Buddha is not far from anyone. His Land of Purity is described as being far away in the Western Quarter but it is, also, within the minds of those who are earnestly devoted to the attainment of Buddhahood. As people picture in their minds the figure of Buddha it is shining in golden splendor but, as they look at it, it divides into eighty-four thousand figures and each figure is emitting eighty-four thousand rays of light and each ray of light enlightens a world, never leaving in darkness a single person who is reciting the name of Buddha. Thus Buddha helps people to take advantage of the relief he offers. By seeing the image of Buddha, one is enabled to realize the mind of Buddha. The Buddha's mind is a great compassion that includes all, even those who are ignorant of his mercy or forgetful of it, much more those who remember it in faith. To those who have faith he offers opportunity to become one with him. As Buddha is the all-inclusive body of compensation, whoever thinks of Buddha, Buddha thinks of him and enters his mind freely. This means, that when a person thinks of Buddha, he has Buddha's mind in all its pure and happy and peaceful perfection. In other words, he is Buddha. Therefore, each one in purity and sincerity of faith, should picture his own mind as being Buddha's mind. 5. Buddha has many forms of transformation and incarnation, and can manifest himself in manifold ways according to the skillful means his wisdom and compassion indicate. Sometimes he can demonstrate his body in immense size to cover all the sky and stretch away into the boundless stellar spaces. Sometimes he manifests in the infinitesimals of nature, sometimes in forms, sometimes in energy, sometimes in aspects of mind, and sometimes in personality. But in some manner or other he will surely appear to those who recite the name of Buddha in faith. To such he always appears accompanied by two Bodhisattvas, the Bodhisattva of Mercy and the Bodhisattva of Wisdom. His manifestations fill all the world for everyone to see but only those who have faith notice him. Those whose faith has been awakened and quickened by their vows are enabled to see his temporal manifestations which bring them abiding satisfation and happiness, but those whose karma and faith enable them to see the real Buddha, are able to realize incalculable fortunes of joy and peace. 6. The Mind of Buddhahood with all its boundless potentialities of love and wisdom is compassion itself; Buddha can save anyone. Even the most wicked of people, those who commit unbelievable crimes; whose minds are filled with greed, anger and infatuation; those who steal and act lasciviously; those who are near the end of their lives after years of evil deeds; even those who are already destined to long ages of punishment; even these and all of them. If a good friend comes to them and pleads with them, saying, "You are now facing death, you cannot blot out your life of wickedness, but you can take refuge in the compassion of the Buddha of Infinite Light." In his suffering the wicked man can not understand all about Buddha, but he can repeat the words, "Adoration to Amida Buddha," and by repeating the holy name in singleness of mind, all the sins which have led him into baffling delusions will be cleared away. If simply repeating the holy name can do this, how much more if one is able also to think about Buddha. These who are thus able to repeat the holy name, when they come to the end of life, will be met by Amida Buddha and the Bodhisattvas of Mercy and Wisdom and will be led by them into Buddha's Land, where they will be reborn in all the purity of the white lotus. Therefore, everyone should keep in mind the words, Adoration to Amida Buddha! II. BUDDHA'S LAND OF PURITY 1. The Buddha of Boundless Life and Infinite Light is ever living and is ever radiating his Dharma. In his fair Land there is no suffering it is called the Land of joy. In the midst of this Land there is a lake of pure water, fresh and sparkling, whose waves lap softly on shores of golden sands. Here and there, there are lotus blossoms of many and various tints and colors, whose fragrance fills the air. At different places on the margin of the lake there are pavilions decorated with gold and silver, lapis lazuli and crystal, with marble steps leading down to the water's edge. At other places there are parapets and balustrades overhanging the water and enclosed with curtains and networks of precious gems, and in between there are groves of spice trees and flowering shrubs. The earth is luminous with beauty and the air is vibrant with celestial harmonies. Six times during the day and night, delicately tinted flower petals fall from the sky and people gather them and carry them instantly to all the other Buddha-lands and make offerings of them to the myriad Buddhas, and are back again in Amida's Pure Land with the speed of thought. 2. In this wondrous Land there are many birds and there are no birds of evil omen. There are snow-white storks and swans, and gay-colored peacocks and tropical birds of paradise, and flocks of little birds, softly twittering; and all these birds are birds of transformation. In Buddha's Pure Land they are sweetly singing birds, but in the land of birth and death they are voicing Buddha's teachings and praising Buddha's virtues. Whoever hears and listens to the music of these voices, listens to Buddha's voice and awakens to a newness of faith, joy and peace, in fellowship with the brotherhood of disciples everywhere. Soft zephers pass through the trees of that Pure Land and stir the fragrant curtains of the pavilions and pass away in sweet cadencies of music. People hearing faint echoes of this heavenly music think of Buddha, of the Dharma, of the fellowship of believers. All these excellencies are but reflections of the common things of the Pure Land. 3. Why is Buddha called, the Buddha of Infinite Light and the Buddha of Boundless Life? It is because the splendor of his Truth radiates unimpeded to the outermost and to the inmost limits of the Buddha-lands; it is because the vitality of his living compassion never wanes through asamkheyas of kalpas of lives and aeons of time. It is because those who are reborn in his Pure Land are perfectly enlightened and will never again return to the world of delusion and death. It is because the number of those who by his Light are awakened into newness of Life is uncalculable. Therefore, should all people concentrate their minds on the Divine Name and, as they come toward the end of life even for seven days or one day, they should recite the Buddha's Name in perfect faith. If they do this with undisturbed mind they will be reborn in Buddha's Land of Purity and when he is reborn in the Pure Land he will be met and welcomed by all the Buddhas. If any man hearing of Buddha's Name, awakens faith in his Dharma, concentrates his mind on Buddha, he will be guided and supported by all the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas until he attains perfect enlightenment. CHAPTER SIX - THE WAY OF PURIFICATION I. PURIFICATION OF MIND 1. People have worldly passions which lead them into delusions and suffering. There are five ways of emancipation from the bonds of worldly passions. First, they should have right ideas of things, ideas that are based on careful observation and true understanding of causes and effects and their significance. Since the cause of suffering is seated in the mind's desire and attachment, and since desire and attachment is related to wrong observations of an ego-self and neglect of the significance of the law of cause and effect, and since it is from these wrong observations and neglect that the worldly passions arise, there can be peaceful circumstances if the mind can be rid of these wrong observations. Second, people can get rid of these wrong observations and following worldly passions, by careful and patient mind-control. With efficient mind-control they can avoid desires arising from the sensations of the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and the mental processes and, by so doing, will prevent all worldly passions from arising. Third, they should have correct ideas in regard to the proper use of all things. That is, in regard to articles of food and clothing, they should not think of them in relation to comfort and pleasure, but only in their relation to the body's needs. Clothing is necessary to protect the body against extremes of heat and cold, and to conceal the shame of the body; food is necessary for the nourishment of the body while it is training for enlightenment and Buddhahood. Worldly passions do not arise from the necessary use of these things. Fourth, people should learn endurance; they should learn to endure the discomforts of heat and cold, hunder and thirst; they should learn to be patient when receiving abuse and scorn; for it is the practice of enduring that quenches the fire of worldly passion which is burning up their bodies. Fifth, people should learn to avoid all danger. Just as a wise man keeps away from wild horses or mad dogs, so a man should not make friends with evil men, nor should he go to places that wise men avoid. If one practices caution and prudence the fire of worldly passion which is burning at their vitals will die down. 2. There are five groups of desires in the world that are to be avoided. Desires rising from the forms the eyes see; from the sounds the ears hear; from the fragrance the nose smells; from tastes pleasant to the tongue; from things that are agreeable to the sense of touch; from these five groups of desires come the body's love of comfort. Most people being influenced by the body's love for comfort do not notice the evils that follows comfort, and they are caught in a trap like a deer in the forest is caught in a hunter's trap. Indeed, these five groups of desire arising from the senses are most dangerous traps. Being caught by them, people are entangled in worldly passions and it is not easy to get free from them. 3. There is no way to get free from the traps of worldly passion. Suppose you had caught a snake, a crocodile, a bird, a dog, a fox and a monkey, six creatures of very different nature, suppose you tie them together with a strong rope and let them go. The six creatures will each try to go back to its own lair by its own method: the snake will seek a covering of grass, the crocodile will seek water, the bird will want to fly in the air, the dog will seek a village, the fox will seek the solitary ledges, and the monkey will seek the trees of the forest. In the attempt of each to go his own way there will be a struggle but, being tied together by a rope, the strongest will drag the rest. Like the animals in this example, man is tempted in different ways by the desires of his six senses, eyes, ears, nose, tongue, touch and mind, and is controlled by the predominant desire. Each group of desires at first tries to have its own way but being tied together in one organism they must ultimately move together. But if the six creatures are all tied to a post, after trying to get free until they are all tired out, they will lie down at the post. Now mind is the strongest and is always the master. If people will train and control the mind there will be no further trouble from the other five senses. If the mind is under control people will get happiness both now and in the future. 4. But it is not safe to trust the mind to run wild. Just as the other senses love beautiful and agreeable things, so the mind loves its egoistic comfort which is the love of fame and praise. But fame and praise are like incense that consumes itself and soon disappears. If people chase after honors and public acclaim and forget to keep their deeds right, they are in serious danger and will soon have cause for regret. To chase after fame and wealth and power and love-affairs is like a child licking honey from the blade of a knife. It is like carrying a torch against a high wind, the flame will burn his own hands and face. One can not trust a mind that is filled with greed, anger and infatuation. One must not let the mind run free, it must be kept under strict control. 5. To attain perfect mind-control is a most difficult thing to do. Those who seek to gain enlightenment must first get rid of all mental desires. Desire is a raging fire and if one is seeking enlightenment he must keep away from desire as a man would keep away from sparks if he was carrying a load of hay on his back. But it would be foolish for a man to put out his eyes just because he is fearful of being tempted by beautiful forms; it is foolish to blind oneself and give the mind license. The mind is master and if the mind is under control, lesser desires will disappear. It is difficult to find the way to enlightenment, but is is more painful if people have no mind to seek such a way. Without enlightenment there is endless suffering in this world of life and death. Seeking for the way to enlightenment is like an ox carrying a heavy load through a field of mud. When an ox is tired he can stop and rest, but the mud of greed is too deep for the mind to rest. But if the mind is controlled and kept on the right path there will be no mud of greed to hinder and all its suffering will disappear. 6. Those who seek a sure path to enlightenment must first remove all egoistic pride and be humbly willing to become disciples. The cost will be heavy but all the treasure of the world, all its gold and silver and honors, are not to be compared with wisdom and virtue. To be able to enjoy good health, to bring true happiness to one's family, to bring a sense of peacefulness to everybody, one must first discipline and control his own mind. If he can control his mind he can find the way of enlightenment an d all wisdom and virtue will naturally come to him. Just as treasures are uncovered from the earth, so virtue appears from good deeds, and wisdom appears from a pure and peaceful mind. To walk safely through the maze of human life, one needs the light of wisdom and the guidance of virtue. The Buddha's teaching, which tells people how to get rid of greed, anger and infatuation, is a good teaching and those who follow it attain the happiness of a good life. 7. Human beings tend to move in the direction of their thoughts. If they harbor greedy thoughts, they become more greedy; if they think angry thoughts, they become more angry; if they cherish thoughts of revenge, their feet move in that direction. In harvest time farmers keep their flock confined, lest they break through the fences into the harvest field and give cause for complaint or retaliation; so people must closely guard their minds against trespass and misfortune. They must get rid of the thoughts that stimulate greed, anger and infatuation, and encourage thoughts that stimulate charity and kindness. When spring comes and the pastures have an abundance of green grass, the farmers turn their cattle into the pastures but even then they keep a close watch over them. It is even so with the mind; under the best of conditions the mind will bear watching . 8. In mind-control patience and preserverance are essential. At one time the Blessed One was staying at the town of Kausambi. In this town there was one who cherished hard feelings toward him and who bribed wicked men to circulate false stories about him. Under these circumstances it was difficult for the disciples to get sufficient food from their begging and there was plenty of abuse. Ananda said to the Blessed One: "We had better not stay in a town like this; there are other and better towns to go to." The Blessed One replied: "Supposing the next town is like this, what shall we do?" "Then we can go to another." The Blessed One replied: "No, Ananda, there will be abuse wherever we go. We had better remain here and bear the abuse patiently until it ceases, then we can go to another place. Many things must be taken into consideration besides abuse. There are profits and losses, slander and honor, suffering and pleasure; Buddha is not controlled by these external things, they will cease as quickly as they came." II. THE WAY OF BEHAVIOR 1. Those who are seeking the way of enlightenment must always bear in mind the necessity of constantly keeping pure their body, lips and mind. To keep the body pure one must not kill any living creature, one must not steal, nor act immorally. To keep the lips pure, one must not lie, nor abuse, nor deceive, nor indulge in idle chatter. To keep the mind pure one must remove all greed and anger and false judgement. If the mind becomes impure, the following deeds will be impure; if the deeds are impure, there will be mental suffering, so it is of the greatest importance that the mind be kept pure. 2. Once there was a rich widow who had a good reputation for kindness, modesty and courtesy. She had a house-maid who was wise and diligent. One day the maid thought: "My mistress has a very good reputation; I wonder whether she is good by nature, or is good because of her surroundings. I will try her and find out." The following morning the maid did not appear before her mistress until nearly noon. The mistress was vexed and scolded her impatiently. The maid replied: "If I am lazy for only a day or two, you ought not to become impatient." Then the mistress became angry. The following day the maid was late again. This made the mistress very angry and she struck the maid. This incident became known and the rich widow lost her good reputation. 3. Many people are like this woman. While surroundings are satisfactory they are kind, modest and quiet, but when conditions change and are unsatisfactory, then they are otherwise. We can not call a person really good who only has a peaceful mind and acts rightly when his surroundings are satisfactory. It is only when a person maintains a pure and peaceful mind and whose acts continue good when unpleasant words enter their ears and when other people show ill-will toward them, or when they lack sufficient food, clothes and shelter, that we may call them good. As it is only those who have received the Buddha's teaching and who have trained their minds and bodies by those teachings who can manifest these virtues in the face of unpleasant and unsatisfactory things of life, it is only they who can be called really good and modest and peaceful people. 4. As to purity by words. There are five pairs of words that cause much disturbance in the world: words that are suitable on some occasions and wrong on other occasions; words that fit certain facts and that do not fit other facts; some words are quiet, some are wild; some words are beneficial, some harmful; some words are sympathetic, some are hateful. Whatever words we utter should be chosen with care for people will hear them and be influenced by them for good or ill. If our minds are filled with sympathy and compassion, they will be resistent to the evil words we hear, and we must not let wild words pass our lips lest they arouse feelings of anger and hatred. The words we speak should always be words of sympathy and wisdom. Suppose there is a man who wants to remove all the dirt from the ground. He uses a spade and a winnow and works perseveringly scattering the dirt all about, but in vain. Like the foolish man we can not hope to get rid of all words but we can train our minds and fill them with sympathy so that other minds will be undisturbed by the words they hear. One might like to paint a picture with water colors on the blue sky, but it is impossible. So it is impossible to dry up a great river by the heat of a torch made of hay; or to produce a crackling noise by rubbing together two pieces of well-tanned leather. Like these examples, people should train their minds to be resistent to the words they hear. They should train their minds and keep their minds broad as the earth, unlimited as the sky, deep like a river and soft as well-tanned leather. Even if your enemy catches you and tortures you, if you have feelings of resentment, you are not following the Buddha's teachings. Under every circumstance you should learn to think: "My mind is resistent. Words of hatred and anger shall not pass my lips. I will surround such people with thoughts of sympathy and pity overflowing from a mind filled with compassion for all animate life." 5. There is a fable told of a man who found an anthill which burnt in the daytime and smoked at night. He went to a wise man and asked his advice as to what he should do about it. The wise man told him to dig into it with a sword. This the man did. First he found a gate-bar, then some bubbles, then a pitchfork, then a box, a tortoise, a butcher-knife, a piece of meat and, finally, a dragon came out. The man reported to the wise man what he had found. The wise man explained the significance of it. He said, "Throw away everything but the dragon. Let the dragon alone. Worship the dragon." This is only a fable in which "anthill" represents the human body. "Burns in the daytime" represents the fact that during the daytime people turn into acts the things they thought about during the previous night. "Smokes in the night" indicates the fact that people during the night recall with pleasure or regret the things they had done during the previous day. "A man" means a person who notices things and seeks enlightenment. "A wise man" means Buddha. "A sword" means pure wisdom. "Dig into it" refers to the effort he must make to gain enlightenment. "Gate-bar" represents ignorance, "bubbles" are puffs of suffering and anger, "pitchfork" suggests hesitation and uneasiness, "box" suggests the storage of greed, anger, laziness, fickleness, repentance and regret; "tortoise" means the mind, "butcher-knife" means the sythesis of the five sense desires, and "piece of meat" means the resulting desire that causes a man to grasp after satisfaction. These things are all harmful to a man, so Buddha said, "throw them away." "Dragon" means a mind that has put away all worldly passion. If a man digs into the things about him with the sword of wisdom he will finally come to this dragon. "Leave this dragon alone; do not disturb him; worship the dragon." 6. Pindola, a disciple of Buddha, after gaining enlightenment returned to Kausambi, his native place, to repay them for the kindness they had shown him. By so doing he prepared the field for later sowing Buddha-seeds. On the outskirts of Kausambi city there is a small park that runs along the bank of the river Ganges, that is shaded by many cocoanut trees and where a cool wind blows unceasingly. One day in summer, the Lord came to this park with his consorts for recreation and, after music and pleasure, he fell asleep in the shade of a tree. His wives and ladies-in-waiting, while their Lord was asleep, took a walk and suddenly came upon Pindola sitting in meditation in the shade of another tree. They recognized him as a holy-man and asked him to teach them, which he did. When the Lord awoke from his sleep, he went in search of his ladies and found them surrounding and listening to this man. Being of a jealous and lascivious mind, the Lord became angry and abused Pindola, saying: "It is inexcusable that you, a holy-man, should by in the midst of women and talking with them," Pindola quietly closed his eyes and remained silent. The angry Lord drew his sword and threatened Pindola, but Pindola remained silent. This made the Lord more angry and he broke open an anthill and threw some of the ant-filled dust upon him, but still Pindola remained silent and quietly endured the insult and pain. Then the Lord became ashamed of his angry conduct and begged Pindola's pardon. As a result of this incident Buddha's teaching found its way into the Lord's castle and from there it spread all over the country. 7. A few days later the Lord visited Pindola in the forest retreat where he lived and asked him, saying: "Honored teacher, how is it that disciples of the Buddha can keep their bodies and minds pure and untempted by lust, although they are mostly young men?" Pindola replied: "Noble Lord, the Blessed One has taught us to respect all women. He has taught us to look upon all old women as our mothers, upon those of our age as sisters, upon younger ones as our daughters. Because of this teaching the disciples of Buddha are able to keep their bodies and minds pure and untempted by lust although they are youthful." The Lord continued: "But, Honored teacher, one may have impure thoughts of a woman even though he consider her as a mother, or a sister, or a daughter. How do the disciples of Buddha control their thoughts?" "Noble Lord, the Blessed One taught us to think of our bodies as secreting impurities of all kinds, blood, pus, sweat, and fats, by thinking thus we are able to keep our minds pure." "Honored teacher," still pressed the Lord, "it may be easy for you to do this for you have trained your bodies and minds, but it would be difficult for those who have not had training. They may try to think impurities but their eyes will follow beautiful forms. They may try to see ugliness but they will be tempted by the beautiful figures just the same. There must be some other reason that the young men among the Buddha's disciples are able to keep their actions pure." "Noble Lord," replied Pindola, "the Blessed One teaches us to watch the doors of the five senses. When we see beautiful figures and colors with our eyes, when we hear pleasant sounds with our ears, when we smell fragrances with our nose, or when we taste sweet things with our tongue, or touch soft things with our hands, we are not to become attached to these attractive things, neither are we to be repulsed by unattractive things. It is by this teaching of the Blessed One, to keep a constant watch at the door of the senses, that the young discples are able to keep their minds and bodies pure. "The teaching of the Blessed One is truly marvelous. From my own experience I know that if I confront anything beautiful or pleasing without being on my guard, I am disturbed by the sense impressions. It is of vital importance that one be on guard at the door of the senses, at all times." 8. Whenever a person expresses the thoughts of his mind in action there is always a reaction that follows. If one abuses you, there is a temptation to answer in kind, or to become revenged. One should be on guard against this natural reaction. It is like sweeping dust against the wind, it does not get rid of the dust and it defiles oneself. Misfortune always dogs the steps of one who gives way to the desire for revenge. The same is true of pleasant acts: if one makes a present there is a natural desire to expect something in return, or if one receives a present or a kindness there is an impulse to return something similar. There is really more danger in the reaction to pleasant things than to evil things, because one is tempted to please the other regardless of the wisdom of the act. For instance, there is pleasure in music and entertainments and dancing; in themselves they seem harmless, but in their reations there are evils against which one should be on guard. Music after all is only an exciting of the emotions, and the dance is but the act of a crazy mind to cover the desire for something quite different. Those who seek enlightenment can well afford to avoid the allurements of music and dancing; and those who are seeking to realize a quiet mind should avoid entertainments and only smile when they face something pleasant. 9. Better than a selfish mind that desires and seeks after pleasant things for oneself, is a mind intent on following the Noble Path. One should get rid of a selfish mind and replace it with a mind that is earnest to help others. An act to make another happy, inspires the other to make still another happy, and so happiness is aroused and abounds. Thousands of candles can be lighted from a single candle, and the life of the single candle will not be shortened. Happiness never decreases by being shared. Those who seek enlightenment must be careful of their first steps. No matter how high one's aspiration may be, it must be attained step by step, and first steps must be taken first. The first steps of the path to enlightenment must be taken in our every-day life, today and tomorrow and the next day. 10. At the very beginning of the path to enlightenment there are twenty difficulties. 1. It is hard for a poor man to be very generous. 2. It is hard for a rich man to learn the way of enlightenment. 3. It is hard to seek enlightenment at the cost of self-sacrifice. 4. It is hard to see the Buddha-world in the present world. 5. it is hard to hear the Buddha-teaching in the turmoil of the world's life. 6. It is hard to keep the mind pure against the instincts of the body. 7. It is hard not to desire things that are beautiful and attractive. 8. It is hard for a strong man not to use his strength to satisfy his desires. 9. It is hard when one is insulted not to get angry. 10. It is hard to remain innocent when tempted by sudden circumstances. 11. It is hard to apply oneself to study. 12. It is hard not to despise a beginner. 13. If successful it is hard to keep humble. 14. It is hard to get a good friend. 15. It is hard to endure the discipline that leads to enlightenment. 16. It is hard not to be disturbed by external conditions and circumstances. 17. It is hard to teach others by being mindful of their natures. 18. It is hard to attain a peaceful mind. 19. It is hard not to argue about right and wrong. 20. It is hard to find and learn and practice a good method. 11. Good men and bad men differ from each other in three characteristics. Bad men do not recognize a sinful act to be sinful; if the sinfulness of the act is brought to their attention, they do not cease doing it, they do not like to have anyone inform them of their sinful acts. Thus good men and bad men differ radically. Bad men never appreciate kindness shown them, but wise men appreciate and are grateful. Wise men try to express their appreciation and gratitude by some return of kindness, not only to their benefactor, but to everyone else. III. TEACHING BY ANCIENT FABLES 1. Queen of Videha in India once dreamed of an elephant that had six ivory tusks. She coveted the tusks and besought the king to get them for her. The king loved the queen and, although the task seemed an impossible one, he offered a reward to any hunter who would get the ivory from a six-tusked elephant. It happened that there was just such an elephant in the Himalaya Mountains who was training for Buddhahood. A hunter had seen it and it had saved his life in an emergency. The hunter, blinded by the great reward and forgetting the kindness the elephant had done him, returned to the mountain to kill the elephant. The hunter knowing that the elephant was seeking Buddhahood, disguised himself in the robe of a Buddhist monk and thus catching the elephant off guard shot it with a poisoned arrow. The elephant, knowing that its end was near and knowing that the hunter had been overcome by the worldly desire for the reward, had compassion upon him and sheltered him from the fury of the other elephants. Then the elephant asked the hunter why he had done such a foolish thing. The hunter told of the reward and confessed that he coveted the six tusks. The elephant immediately broke off the tusks by hitting them against a tree and gave them to the hunter and said to him: "By this gift I have completed my training for Buddhahood and will be reborn in the world of men. When I become Buddha, I will help you to get rid of your three poisonous arrows of greed, anger and infatuation." 2. In a thicket at the foot of the Himalaya Mountains there once lived a parrot who had started on the path to enlightenment. One day a fire started in the thicket and the birds and animals were in frightened confusion. The parrot feeling compassion for their fright and suffering and wishing to repay the kindness he had received, tried to do all it could to save them. It dipped itself in a pond and flew over the fire and shook off the drops of water to extinguish the fire. This spirit of kindness and self-sacrifice was noticed by a high god who came down from the sky and the high god said to the parrot: "You have a galant mind, but what good do you expect to accomplish by a few drops of water against this great conflagration?" The parrot answered: "Nothing can be accomplished by mere strength, but everything can be accomplished by the spirit of gratitude and self-sacrifice. I will try over and over again and then in the next life." The great god was impressed by the parrot's spirit and together they extinguished the fire. 3. One day a couple of men were standing in front of a house discussing the man who lived there. One said to the other: "He is a nice man but is very temperamental, he has a hot temper and gets angry quickly." The man overheard the remark, rushed out of the house and attacked the two men, striking and kicking him. If he had been a wise man he would have thanked them for their kindness, but being a foolish man he proved that they were right. Once there was a wealthy but foolish man. He envied another man his beautiful three-story house and made up his mind to have one just like it. He called a carpenter and ordered him to build it. The carpenter consented and immediately began the first story. The wealthy man noticed it with irritation and said: "I don't want a foundation or a second story, I just want the beautiful third story. Build it quickly." A foolish man always thinks of results, but is impatient with the effort that is necessary to get a good result. No good result can be attained without proper effort, just as there can be no third story without a foundation and a first story and a second story. A foolish man was once boiling honey. His friend suddenly appeared and the foolish man wanted to offer him some honey, but it was too hot, so without removing it from the fire he fanned it to get it cool. In like manner it is impossible to get the honey of cool wisdom without first removing the fires of worldly passion. 4. Once a beautiful and well dressed woman visited a house. The master of the house asked her who she was; she replied that she was the godness of wealth. The master of the house was delighted and treated her nicely. Soon after another woman appeared who was ugly looking and poorly dressed. The master asked who she was and the wopman replied that she was the goddess of poverty. The master was frightened and tried to get her out of the house, but the woman refused to depart, saying, "The goddess of wealth is my sister. There is an agreement between us that we are never to live separately; if you chase me out, she goes with me." But the master was so afraid of her that he put her out and when he returned the other woman had disappeared also. Birth goes with death. Fortune goes with misfortune. Bad things follow good things. Foolish people dread misfortune and strive after good fortune, but wise men ignore differences of fortune and thus are not disturbed by their passing. 5. Once there lived a poor artist who left his home to seek his fortune. After three years of hard struggle he had saved three hundred pieces of gold and decided to return to his home. On his way he came to a great temple in which a grand ceremony was in progress. He was greatly impressed by it and thought to himself: "Hitherto I have thought only of the present; I have never considered my future happiness. It is a part of my good fortune that I have come to this good place; I must take advantage of it to plant seeds of merit." Thinking thus he gratefully donated all his savings to the temple and returned to his home penniless. When he reached his home, his wife reproached him for not bringing her some money for her support. The poor artist replied that he had saved some money but had put it where it would be safe. When she pressed him to tell her where he had hidden it, he confessed that he had given it to the monks at a certain temple. This made the wife angry and she scolded her husband and finally carried the master to the local judge. When the judge asked the artist for his defence, the artist said that he had not acted foolishly, for he had saved the money after a long and hard struggle and wanted to use it as seed for future good fortune. When he came to the temple it seemed to him that there was the field where he should plant his gold as seed for good fortune. Then he added: "As I gave the monks the gold, I seemed to be throwing away all greed and stinginess, and seemed to be gaining true wisdom." The judge praised the artist's spirit, and those who were present manifested their approval by helping him to find good employment. Thus the artist and his wife entered into permanent good fortune. 6. A man living near to a cemetery heard one night a voice calling to him from a grave. He was too timid to investigate it himself but the next day he told it to a braver friend. This friend went to the cemetery the following night and, sure enough, the voice was heard issuing from a grave. The friend asked who it was and what it wanted. The voice replied: "I am a hidden treasure that has decided to give itself to someone. I offered it to a man last night but he was too timid to come after it, so I will give it to you. Tomorrow I will come to your house with my seven followers." The friend said: "I will be waiting for you, but please tell me how I am to treat you?" The voice replied: "We will come in monk's robes. Have a room ready for us with hot water to wash our feet and hands, and seats for us and eight bowls of gruel. After the meal, you are to lead us one by one into a closed room when we will transform ourselves into crocks of gold." The next morning the friend prepared the room just as he was told and waited for the monks to appear. In due time they appeared and the friend received them courteously and after they had eaten the food he led them into the closed room, when each monk turned himself into a crock of gold. There was a very envious and greedy man in the same village who learned of the incident and he invited eight monks to his house. After their meal he led them into a closed room, but not turning themselves into crocks of gold, he became angry and treated them roughly and the police came and punished the man. As for the timid man, when he heard that the voice from the grave had brought wealth to the brave man, he went to the house of the brave man and demanded the gold, saying that it was his, because the voice was first addressed to him. The brave man said he could have the crocks, but when the timid man opened them he found them containing snakes that attacked him. The king heard about the matter and ruled that the crocks belonged to the brave man and uttered the following observation: "Everything in the world goes like this. Foolish people are avaricious for good results but are too timid to go after them and, therefore, are continually failing. These foolish and timid people think of external things, they do not have either faith or courage to face the internal things of mind by which alone true success is attained." CHAPTER SEVEN - THE WAY OF PRACTICAL ATTAINMENT I. SEARCH FOR TRUTH 1. In the search for truth there are certain questions that are immaterial. Of what material is the universe constructed? Is the universe eternal? Are there limits to the universe? What is the ideal form of organization of human society? These questions have no vital relation to enlightenment. If one were to postpone the search and practice for enlightenment until such questions were cleared, he would die before he found the Path. Suppose a man was pierced by a poisoned arrow, and a surgeon was called to extract the arrow, but the man objected, saying, "Wait a little. Before you begin, I want to know who shot this arrow. Was it a man or a woman? Was it some one of noble birth, or was it peasant? Was it a big bow, or a small bow, that shot the arrow? What was the bow-string made of? Was it made of fiber, or of gut? Was the arrow made of rattan, or of reed? What feathers were used? Before you extract the arrow, I want to know all about these things." Before all this information can be secured, the poison will have time to circulate all through the system; the man may die before it is recured. The first duty is to remove the arrow with its poison. When a fire of passion is endangering the world, the composition of the universe matters little. The question of whether the universe has limits or is eternal can wait until some way is found to extinguish the fires; and so can the question to whether the present organization of society is ideal or not. In the face of the problems of birth, old age, sickness and death; in the presence of lamentation, sorrow, suffering and pain; one should first search for a way to end them and then devote himself to the practice of that way. The Buddha's Dharma teaches what it is important to know and not what is unimportant. That is, it teaches people that they must learn what they should learn, remove what they should remove, train for what they sould train, become enlightened about what they should become enlightened. Therefore, people should first discern what is of first importance, what problem should first be solved, what is the first misfortune to be expected. To do all this, they must first undertake the training of the mind, t hat is, they must first seek mind-control. 2. Suppose a man goes to the forest to get some of the pith that grows in the center of a tree and returns with a burden of branches and leaves thinking that he has secured what he went after; would he not be foolish? But that is what many people are doing. A person seeks a path that will lead him away from birth, old age, sickness and death, or from lamentation, sorrow, suffering and pain, then he follows the path a little way and notices some little advance and immediately he becomes proud and conceited and domineering. He is like the man who sought pith and went away satisfied with a burden of leaves. Another man becoming satisfied with the progress he has made by a little effort, relaxes his effort and becomes proud and conceited, he is carrying a way only a load of branches. Still another man finding that his mind is becoming calmer and his thoughts clearer, he too relaxes his effort and becomes proud and conceited; he has a burden of the bark of the tree. Then again, another man becomes proud and coneited because he notices that he has gained a measure of intuitive insight; he has a load of the woody fiver of the tree. All these seekers who become easily satisfied by their effort and become proud and overbearing relax their effort and easily fall into idleness. Such pe ople will inevitably again face suffering. Those who seek the true path to enlightenment must not expect an easy task nor one made pleasant by offers of respect and honor and devotion. And more, they must not aim at a little slight effort, or a trifling advance in calmness or knowledge or insight. They must aim at the high and difficult goal of perfection; perfect insight, perfect enlightenment, perfect calmness. There is no place for relaxation of effort or self praise until Buddhahood is attained. 3. First of all, one should get clearly in mind the basic and essential nature of this world of life and death. It has no self-substance of its own. It is simply a vast concordance of causes and conditions that have had their origin solely and exclusively, in the activities of the mind as it has been stimulated by ignorance, false imaginations, desires and infatuation. It is not something external about which the mind has false conceptions; it has no substance whatever. It has come into appearance by the processes of the mind itself, manifesting its own delusions. It is founded and built-up out of the desires of the mind, out of its sufferings and struggle incident to the pain caused by its own greed, anger and infatuation. Its ultimate source is ignorance, it is shrouded in the darkness of delusion, it appears through suffering and sorrow. There is nothing but mind and when it is uncontrolled it fashions a fanciful and everchanging dream-world of delusion. Those who aim at enlightenment should get this clearly in mind, and then proceed to fight it out with mind through mind. 4. Oh my mind! Why do you hover so restlessly over the changing circumstances of life? Why do you make me so confused and restless? Why do you urge me to collect so many things? You are like a plow that you break in pieces just as you begin to plow; you are like a rudder that you dismantle just as you are venturing out on the sea of life and death. Of what use are many rebirths if we make no good use of this life? Oh my mind! Once you caused me to be born as a king, and then you caused me to be born an outcast and to beg my food. Sometimes you cause me to be born in heavenly mansions of the gods and to dwell in luxury and in ecstacy, then you plunge me into th e flames of hell. Oh my foolish, foolish mind! Thus you have led me along different paths and I have been obedient to you and docile. But now I have heard Buddha's Dharma, do not disturb me any more nor cause me further sufferings, but together, humbly and patiently, let us seek enlightenment. Oh my mind! If you could only learn that everything is empty and transitory; if you could only learn not to grasp after things, not to covet things, not to give way to greed, anger and foolishness; then we might journey in quietness. Then, by severing the bonds of desire by the sword of wisdom, being undisturbed by changing circumstances good or bad, loss or gain, we might dwell in peace. Oh my dear mind! It was you who first awakened faith, it was you who suggested our seeking enlightenment. Why do you give way so easily to greed, love of comfort and pleasanst excitement? Oh my mind! Why do rush hither and thither with no definite purpose? Let us cross the wild sea of delusion. Hitherto I have acted as you wished, but now you must act as I wish and, together, we will follow the Buddha's Dharma. Oh my dear mind! These mountains, rivers and seas are changeable and pain-producing. Where in this world of delusion shall we seek quietness? Let us follow the Buddha's Dharma and cross over to the other shore of Enlightenment. 5. Those who really seek the path to enlightenment must dictate terms to the mind. Then they must proceed with strong determination. Even though they are abused by some and scorned by others they must go foward with undisturbed mind. They must not become angry though they are beaten by fists, or hit by stones, or gashed by swords. Even if enemies saw off the head from the body, the mind must not be disturbed. If they let their mind become darkened by the things they suffer, they are not following the teaching of Buddha. On the contrary they must take advantage of their enemy's treatment to return kindness for injury. They must determine, no matter what happens to them, to remain steadfast, unmovable, ever radiating thoughts of compassion and good-will. Let abuse come, let misfortune come, one should resolve to remain unmoved and tranquil in mind. For the sake of enlightenment, I will accomplish the impossible, I will endure the unendurable. I will give to the uttermost. If I am told that to gain enlightenment I must limit my food to a single grain of rice a day, I will eat only one grain of rice. If the path of enlightenment leads through fire, I will go forward through fire. But one must not do these things for any ulterior purpose. One should do them because it is the wise thing, the right thing, to do. One should do them out of a spirit of compassion, as a mother does things for her little child, for her sick child, with no thought of her own strength or comfort. 6. Once there was a king who loved his people and his country and ruled them with wisdom and kindness and, because of it, his country was prosperous and peaceful. He was always seeing for greater wisdom and enlightenment; he even offered rewards to anyone who could lead him to worthy teachers. His worth and wisdom finally came to the attention of the gods, but they determined to test him. A god disguised as a demon appeared before the gates of the king's palace and asked to be brought before the king as he had a holy teaching for him. The king sent for him and asked for instruction. The demon took on a dreadful form and demanded food he liked. Choice food was offered the demon, but he insisted that he must have the warm flesh and blood of a human. The crown-prince offered his body and the queen offered her body, but still the demon was unsatisfied and demanded the body of the king. The king expressed his willingness to give his body, but asked that he might first hear the teaching so that he could benefit his country by it. Suddenly the god uttered the following wise teaching: "Lamentation rises from desire and fear rises from desire. Those who remove desire have no lamentation and no fear." Suddenly the god resumed the true form and the prince and the queen also appear ed among them. 7. Once there was a seeker of the true path who visited the Himalayas in search of good teaching. He cared nothing for all the treasures of earth or for all the delights of heaven, but he sought the teaching that would remove all mental delusions. The gods were impressed by the man's earnestness and sincerity and decided to test his sincerity. So one of the gods manifested himself as a demon and appeared in the Himalayas singing: "Everyting changes, everything appears and disappeares." The seeker heard this song and it pleased him very much. It pleased him as though, being thirsty, he had found a spring of cool water, or as though, being in bondage, he had suddenly been set free. He said to himself, at last I have found the true teaching tha t I have sought for so long. He followed the voice and at last came upon the frightful demon. With uneasy mind he approached the demon and said: "Was it you who sang the holy song that I have just heard? If it was you, please sing more of it." The demon replied: "Yes, it was my song, but I can not sing more of it until I have had something to eat, I am starving." The good man begged him very earnestly to sing more of it, saying: "It has a sacred meaning to me and I have sought its meaning for a long time. I have only heard a part of it, please let me hear more of it." The demon said again, and this time more threateningly: "I am starving, but if I can taste warm flesh and the blood of a man, I will finish the song." The good man in his earnestness to hear the teaching promised the demon that he could have his body after he had heard the teaching. Then the demon sang the complete song: Everything changes and passes, Things appearing, things disappearing. But when all is over - Everything having appeared And everything having disappeared, Both being and extinction transcended - Still the basic emptiness and silence abides, And that is blissful peace. Hearing this, the good man quietly climbed a tree and threw himself down at the feet of the demon, but the demon had disappeared and a radiant god received the body of the good man unharmed. 8. Once upon a time there was an earnest seeker of the path that leads to enlightenment, named Sadaprarudita. He cast aside every temptation to profit and honor and sought enlightenment at the risk of his life. One day a voice from heaven came to him, saying: "Go straight toward the east. Do not think of either heat or cold, pay no attention to worldly praise or scorn, do not be bothered by questions of good or evil, but just keep on going east. In the far east you will find a true teacher and will ga in enlightenment." Sudaprarudita was very pleased to get this definite instruction and immediately started on his journey eastward. At times there was no path leading in that direction but he pressed on, sleeping where night found him in a lonely field or in the wild mountains. Being a stranger in a strange land he suffered many humiliations; once he sold himself into slavery, selling his own flesh from hunger, but at last he found the true teacher. There is a saying, "Good things are costly," and Sadaprarudita found it true in his case, for even after he had found the true teacher he had many difficulties in reaching his presence. He had no flowers to offer the teacher and no money with which to reward him. He tried to sell his services but could find no one to hire him. There seemed to be an evil spirit hindering him every way he turned. The path to enlightenment is a hard path, it may cost a man his life. At last Sadaprarudita reached the presence of the teacher and then he had a new difficulty, he had no paper on which to take notes of the master's teaching, and no brush and no ink. Then he punctured his wrist and took notes in his own blood. In this way he secured the precious truth. 9. Once there was a boy named Sudhana who wished for enlightenment and who easrnestly sought the way. He went to many different teachers. From a fisherman he learned the lore of the sea and it suggested the tempests and waves on the great ocean of life and death. From a doctor he learned compassion toward sick people in their suffering. From a wealthy man he learned that saving pennies was the secret of his fortune and he thought how necessary it is to conserve every trifling gain on the path to enlightenment. From a meditating monk he learned that the pure and peaceful mind had a miraculous power to purify and tranquilize other minds. Once he met a woman of exceptional personality and was impressed by her benevolent spirit and from her he learned a lesson that charity was the fruit of wisdom. Once he met an aged wanderer who told him that to reach a certain place he had to scale a mountain of swords and pass through a valley of fire. From him he learned that he must be dauntless on his own journey to enlightenment. Thus Sudhana learned from his experiences that there was true teaching to be gained from everything one sees or hears. But besides learning from people's words and teaching, Sudhana received instruction from many other souces. He learned patience from a poor, physically imperfect woman; he learned a lesson of simple happiness from watching children playing in the street; from some gentle and humble people, who never thought of wanting anything that anybody else wanted, he learned the secret of living at peace with all the world. He learned a lesson of harmony from watching the blending of the elements of incense, and a lesson of thanksgiving from the offerings of flowers. One day in passing through a forest he rested under a noble tree and noticed near by a tiny seedling growing out of a fallen and decayed tree and it taught him a lesson of impermanence. One day in making his way over the hight mountains and taking advantage of the contour of the peaks and valleys to make his path as easy as possible, he thought to himself, "In this same manner I must take advantage of the varied experiences of life to find a path for the mind in its search for enlightenment. His mind often became arid and parched from the flaming wish of his heart for enlightenment, but the friendly sunlight by day and the twinkling stars by night constantly refreshed his spirit. Thus Sudhana profited by the experiences of his long journey. Indeed, those who seek for enlightenment must think of their minds as castles that must be built strong and resistent without but convenient and beautiful within. They must close the castle gates against enemies, but they must open them wide for Buddha and respectfully and humbly invite him to enter the inmost fastness, there to offer him the fragrant incense of faith and the flowers of gratitude and gladness. II. THE WAY OF PRACTICE 1. For those who are seeking enlightenment, there are three methods of practice that must be understood and followed. First, rules for practical behavior; second, right concentration of mind; and third, wisdom. Every man, whether he be a common man or an ascetic, should follow the precepts for good behavior. He should control both his mind and body, he should guard the gates of his five senses. He should be afraid of even a trifling forgetfulness and from moment to moment should endeavor to practice only good deeds. What is meant by concentration of mind? It means, not becoming attached to thoughts and desires as they arise, not permitting new thoughts to arise, and then to hold the mind pure and tranquil. What is wisdom? It is wisdom to perfectly understand and to patiently accept the Four Noble Truths; to know the fact of suffering and its nature; to know the source of suffering; to know what constitutes the end of suffering; to know the Noble Path that leads to the end of suffering. Those who are earnestly following these three methods of practice may rightly be called disciples of Buddha. Supposing a donkey was following a herd of cows and loudly proclaiming, "Look, I am a cow." Would any one believe him? It is just as foolish for a man who does not follow the three methods of practice, to boast that he is a disciple of Buddha. Before a farmer gathers a harvest he must first plow the ground, sow the seed, irrigate, and remove the weeds as they spring up in springtime. Just so the seeker for enlightenment must follow the three methods of practice. A farmer does not expect to see buds today, to see plants tomorrow, to gather a harvest the day after. Neither can one who seeks enlightenment expect to remove worldly desires today, to remove attachments and habits tomorrow, and to get enlightenment the day after. Just as plants receive the patient care of the farmer after the seed has been sown and during the changes of climate and during the growth from seed to plant, so the seeker for enlightenment must patiently and perseveringly cultivate the soil of enlightenment by follow ing the three methods of practice. If he does this he will surely see the plant of right knowledge growing steadily, and in due time he will receive the harvest of enlightenment. 2. It is difficult to advance along the path that leads to enlightenment so long as one is covetous of comforts and luxuries and letting his mind be disturbed by the desires of the senses. There is a wide difference between the enjoyment of life and the enjoyment of the Dharma. As has been explained, mind is the source of all things. If the mind enjoys worldly affairs, illusions and suffering will inevitably follow, but if the mind enjoys the Dharma, happiness, contentment and enlightenment will just as surely follow. Therefore, those who are seeking enlightenment should keep their minds pure and patiently practice the three methods. If they keep the precepts it will be natural to practice concentration of mind, and if they practice concentration it will be just as natural for them to practice wisdom, and wisdom will lead them to enlightenment. Indeed, these three methods (keeping the precepts, practicing concentration of mind and always acting wisely) are the true path to enlightenment. If people do not follow these three methods, they accumulate mental delusions. They can only get enlightenment by following this true path. They must not argue with worldly people about it, but they must patiently meditate in this inner world of a pure mind. 3. If the three methods of practice are analyzed they reveal the Eightfold Noble Path, (namely, Right Observation, Right Thought, Right Speech, Right Behavior, Right Livelihood, Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, Right Concentration), the four points to be considered, the four right procedures, the five faculties to be employed, and the six paths of right effort. Right Observation means to thoroughly understand the Four Noble Truths, to observe things truly and not to be deceived by appearances and desires. Right Thought means the resolution not to cherish desires, not to be fearful nor angry, not to harm any living thing. Right Speech means the avoidance of lying words, idle words, abusive words, double-tongued. Right Behavior means the practice of kindness, the practice of honesty, the practice of purity. Right Livelihood means to avoid any life that would bring shame to a man. Right Effort means to be guided by right spiritual ideals. Right Mindfulness means to maintain a pure and thoughtful mind. Right Concentration means to keep the mind pure and tranquil seeking to realize the mind's pure essence. There are four points to be considered: First, to consider the body impure, to seek to remove all attachments to it. Second, to consider the senses as a source of suffering, whatever their feelings of pain or pleasure may be. Third, to consider the mind to be in a constant state of flux. Four, to consider everything in the world as being a concordance of cause and conditions and that nothing remains unchanged for ever. There are four right procedures: First, to prevent evil from starting. Second, to remove all evils as soon as it starts. Third, to induce the doing of good deeds. Fourth, to encourage the growth and continuance of good deeds that have already started. And five faculties or powers: First, faith to believe; second, the will to make the endeavor; third, the faculty of reliable memory; fourth, the ability to concentrate attention; fifth, the ability to maintain clear wisdom in the conservation of results. 4. There are six paths for reaching the other shore of Enlightenment: The path of charity, the path of right behavior, the path of endurance, the path of endeavor, the path of concentration of mind, and the path of wisdom. By following these methods or paths one can surely pass over from the shore of delusion to the shore of enlightenment. The practice of charity gets rid of selfishness; the practice of good behavior keeps one thoughtful of the rights and comforts of others; the practice of endurance helps one to control a fearful or angry mind; the practice of endeavor helps one to be diligent and faithful; the practice of concentration helps one to control a wandering and futile mind; the practice of wisdom changes a dark and confused mind into a clear and penetrating insight. Charity and good behavior are like the foundation of a great castle. Endurance and faith are the walls of the castle that protect against outside enemies. Concentration and wisdom are the personal armor that protects one against the assaults of life and death. 5. If one gives a gift only after he has been importuned, or because it is easier to give than not to give, it is charity of course but it is not true charity. True charity gives freely from a sympathetic heart before any request has been made, and true charity is not occasional but is constant. Neither is true charity if after the act there are feelings of regret or self-praise; true charity gives with pleasure, forgetting himself as the giver, the one who has received the gift and the gift itself. True charity springs spontaneously from a merciful heart with no thought of any return or of any inconvenience or even of life itself, desiring only that others with the self may enter into a life of Enlightenement. 6. Once there was a prince named Satta who went into the forest with his two older brothers. At the root of a cliff they saw a famishing tigress with newly born cubs and the tigress was evidently tempted to devour them. The two elder brothers ran away in fear but Satta threw himself over the cliff in front of the tigress to save the lives of the little cubs. Prince Satta did this charitable act spontaneously but within his mind he was thinking: "This body is changing and impermanent; I have loved this body with no thought of throwing it away but now I make it an offering that both this tigress and myself may gain enlightenment." This thought in the mind of Prince Satta shows the true determination to gain enlightenment. 7. There are four emotional states that the seeker for enlightenment should cherish: They are mercy, tenderness, gladness and equality. One can remove greed by cherishing mercy; one can remove anger by tenderness; one can remove suffering by gladness; one can remove the habit of discrimination of enemies and friends by cherishing an equitable mind. It is great mercy to remove everything that does not tend to make people happy and contented; it is a great tenderness to make people happy and contented; it is a great gladness to see everyone happy and contented; there is great peacefulness when everyone is happy and contented, then one can have equal feelings toward everybody. With care one may cherish these four emotional states and develop them until they are habitual, but it is not an easy thing to do. An evil mind is as hard to get rid of as a watch dog, and a right mind is as easy to lose as a deer in a forest; or an evil mind is as hard to remove as letters carved in stone, and a right mind is as easy to lose as words written in water. Indeed, it is the most difficult thing in life to train oneself for enlightenment. 8. There was a disciple of the Blessed One whose name was Srona. He was born in a wealthy family and was a young man of delicate health, but he was very earnest to gain enlightenment and, it is said, that he tried so hard that his feet sweat blood. The Blessed One pitied him and said to him: "Srona, my boy, did you ever study playing the harp in your home? You know that a harp does not make music if the strings are stretched too much or too little. It only makes music when the strings are stretched just right. "The training for enlightenment is just like tuning a harp. One can not attain elightenment if he is idle, but neither can he attain enlightenment if he stretches the strings of his mind too tightly. One must be considerate and act wisely." Srona profited by these words and finally gained what he sought. 9. Once there was a prince, who was skillful in the use of the five weapons. One day he was returning to his home from his practice and met a monster whose skin was invulnerable. The monster started for him but nothing daunted the prince shot an arrow at him which fell harmless. Then he threw his spear which failed to penetrate the thick skin. Then he threw the bar and the javelin but they made no impression. Then he drew his sword but the sword broke. Then the prince attacked the monster with his hands and feet but to no purpose for the monster clutched him in his giant arms and held him fast. Then the prince tried to use his head but in vain. The monster said: "It is useless for you to resist, I am going to devour you." But the prince answered: "You may think that I am helpless, but I still have one weapon left. If you devour me, I will destroy you from your stomach." The courage of the prince disturbed the monster and he asked, "How can you do that?" The prince replied: "By the power of the Truth." Then the monster released him and begged for instruction in the Truth. The teaching of this fable is to encourage disciples to be persevering in their efforts and to be undaunted in the face of many reverses. 10. Both offensive self-assertion and shamelessness offend mankind, but dishonor and shame protect mankind. People respect their parents and elders, they respect their older brothers and sisters, because they are sensitive to dishonor and shame. After self-reflection it is meritorious to withhold honor from the self and to feel ashamed by observing other people. If a man possesses a repentant spirit his sins will disappear, but if he has an unrepentant spirit his sins will continue and he must be condemned. A man who merely hears the Dharma with his ears, has not received it; it is only the one who hears it rightly and who considers its meaning and its relation to himself that can receive it and profit by it. If a man loves worldly affairs, enjoys idle talk, falls asleep while he is in training, he will fail in his speech for enlightenment. Faith, humility, shame, sincerity of effort and wisdom are the great sources of strength to him who is seeking enlightenment; among them wisdom is the greatest and all the rest are but aspects of wisdom. 11. In training for enlightenment, some may succeed quickly and others more slowly; therefore, one should not be troubled to see others become enlightened. When a man is practicing archery he does not expect an early success but he knows that if he practices patiently that he will become more and more accurate. A river begins as a little brook but grows ever larger until it flows into the great ocean. Like these examples, if one trains with patience and perseverence, he will surely gain enlightenment. As it has been explained, if one keeps his eyes open, he will see the teaching everywhere, so his opportunities for advancement are endless. Once there was a man who was offering incense at an altar and the noticed that the fragrance was neither coming nor going, it neither appeared nor disappeared; from this mere trifle, he suddently gained enlightenment. Once there was a man who got a thorn into his foot. He felt the sharp pain and the thought came to him, that pain was only a reation of the mind. From that chance a deeper thought followed, a mind may get out of hand if one fails to control it, or it may become pure if one succeeds. From these thoughts, a little later, enlightenment came to him. There was another man who was very avaricious. One day he was thinking of his greedy mind when the thought came to him, greedy thoughts are but shavings and kindlings that wisdom can kindle and consume. That thought was the beginning of his enlighten ment. There is an old saying: "Keep your mind level. If the mind is level, the whole world will be level." Consider these words. Realize that all the distinctions of the world are but observations of a mind. There is a path to enlightenment in those very words. Indeed, the ways to Enlightenment are endless. III. THE WAY OF FAITH 1. Those who take refuge in the three treasures, Buddha, Dharma and Brotherhood, are called disciples of Buddha. The disciples of Buddha observe four norms of mind-control, namely, the precepts, faith, charity and wisdom. The disciples of Buddha practice the five precepts: not to kill any living creature, not to steal, not to act impurely, not to lie, and not to use intoxicants of any kind. The disciples of Buddha try to keep away from greediness and selfishness and to practice charity. The disciples of Buddha, understanding the law of cooperating causses and keeping in mind the transiency of life, conform to the norm of wisdom. A tree leaning toward the east will fall eastward and those who listen to the Buddha's Dharma and maintain faith in it will be reborn in the Buddha's Pure Land. 2. It has just been said that those who believe in the three treasures, Buddha, Dharma and the Brotherhood, are called the disciples of Buddha. Buddha is the one who attained perfect enlightenment and used his attainment to emancipate and bless all mankind. The Dharma is the truth and the spirit of enlightenment and the teachings that explain it. The Brotherhood is the perfect fellowship of believers in Buddha and Dharma. It has no limits of space or time but radiates always and everywhere the spirit of Buddha and the truth of the Dharma. The Brotherhood is the happy gathering of those who are radiating the spirit of Buddha and awakening faith in Buddha and the Dharma. We speak of Buddhahood, Dharma and Brotherhood as though they were three different things, but they are really only one. Buddha is manifested in his Dharma and is realized by the Brotherhood. Therefore, to believe in the Dharma and to cherish the Brotherhood is to have faith in the Dharma and to cherish the Brotherhood. Therefore, people are emancipated and enlightened simply by having faith in Buddha. Buddha is the perfectly Enlightened One and he loves everybody as though each was his only son. So if anyone regards Buddha as his own parent, he identifies himself with Buddha and attains enlightenment. Those who thus regard Buddha will be supported by his wisdom and perfumed with his grace. 3. Nothing in the world brings greater benefit than to believe in Buddha. Just hearing Buddha's name, believing and being pleased by it for a moment is rewarding. Therefore one must please himself seeking the teaching even through the conflagration that is over all the world. It will be hard to meet a teacher who can explain the Dharma,it will be harder to meet a Buddha, but it will be harder to become a worthy disciple. But now that you have met the Dharma that it is hard to meet, and have had it explained to you that it is hard to understand, you ought to rejoice and believe and have faith in Buddha. 4. On the long journey of human life, faith is the best of companions, faith is the best refreshment by the way, and the greatest reward at the end. Faith is the hand that receives the Dharma, faith is the hand that receives the profit. Faith removes greed, fear and pride; faith teaches courtesy and wins respect, faith frees one from the bondage of circumstances, faith gives one courage to meet hardship, faith gives one power to overcome temptation, faith enables one to keep his deeds bright and pure, faith enriches the mind with wisdom. Faith is the fire that consumes all the impurities of worldly desire, faith removes the burden, faith is the guide that leads the way, faith is the encouragement when the way is long and wearisome, faith brings on to e nlightenment. Faith brings us into the presence of Buddha, faith brings us to where Buddha's arm supports us. Faith softens the hard and selfish minds of people and gives them a friendly spirit and a mind of understanding sympathy. 5. Those who have faith have the wisdom to recognize Buddha's teaching in whatever they hear. Those who have faith have the wisdom to see that everything is but the appearance that arises from cooperating causes and conditions, and then faith gives them the grace of patient acceptance and the ability to conform to conditions peacefully. Faith gives them the wisdom to recognize the transiency of life and the grace not to be surprised or grieved at whatever comes or with the passing of life itself, knowing that however conditions and appearances may change, the trueness of life remains unchanged. Faith has three significant aspects: a humble and patient self-desprecia tion, a rejoicing and sincere respect for the virtues of others, and a graceful acceptance of Buddha's appearance. Every one should cultivate these aspects of faith; they should be sensitive to their failings and their impurities, they should be ashamed of them and confess them; they should diligently practice the recognition of the good traits and good deeds of others and praise then for them, they should habitually desire to act with Buddha and live with Buddha. The mind of faith is the mind of sincerity; it is a deep mind, an unquestioning mind, a mind that is sincerely glad to be led to Buddha's Pure Land by Buddha's power and in his own way. Therefore, Buddha gives a power of faith that leads people to the Pure Land, a power that purifies them, a power that protects them from self-delusion. Even if they have faith only for a moment, when they hear the Buddha's name, that is praised all over the world, it will bring them to his Pure Land. 6. Faith is not something that is added to the worldly mind - it is the mind's true nature of Buddhahood. In most minds Buddha-nature is defiles and deeply covered by ignorance and worldly passion, but faith uncovers the true Buddha-nature and discovers it, because one who understands Buddha is Buddha himself; one who has faith in Buddha is Buddha himself. But it is difficult to uncover and recover one's true nature; it is difficult to maintain a pure mind in the constant rise and fall of greed, anger and worldly passion, but faith enables one to do it. Within the forest of Eranda there is said to grow the poisonous Eranda tree that grows nowhere else, and that the sweet Candana tree will not grow there. It is a miracle if a Candana tree grows in an Eranda forest. It is a like miracle if faith in Buddha grows in the heart of worldly people. Therefore, the faith to believe in Buddha is called a "rootless" faith. That is, it has no root by which it can grow in the human mind, but it has a root to grow in the merciful mind of Buddha. Thus faith is fruitful and sacred. 7. But faith is hard to awaken in an easy-going mind. In the path to enlightenment the difficulties are very great and one can not easily overcome them. In particular there are five suspicions that lurk in the shadows of the human mind and which tend to discourage faith. First, there is doubt of the Buddha's wisdom; second, there is doubt in the Buddha's teaching; third, there is doubt of the personality that is explaining Buddha's teachings; fourth, there is doubt as to whether the ways and methods suggested for following the Noble Path are reliable; and fifth, there is doubt as to whether others who are seeking to understand the Dharma and follow Buddha's teachings are sincere, which tends to make one arrogant and impatient. Indeed, there is nothing more dreadful than the habit of doubt. Faith draws people together, but doubt separates them. It is a poison that disintegrates friendships and breaks up pleasant relations. It is a thorn that irritates and hurts; it is a sword that kills. One should beware of cherishing a mind of doubt. 8. The beginnings of faith were planted by the compassion of Buddha, long, long ago. When one has faith he should realize this fact and be very grateful to Buddha for his goodness. They should never forget that it is not because of their own merit that they have awakened faith, but because it was Buddha's merit which long ago threw its pure light of faith into human minds and dispelled the darkness of their ignorance, and you who have present faith have entered into their heritage. In spite of living in ordinary life, one can be born in the Pure Land, as we awaken faith through Buddha's long continued mercy. It is, indeed, hard to be born in this world, but it is harder to be reborn in Buddha's Pure Land. It is hard to hear the Dharma, it is harder to awaken faith; therefore everyone should try his best to hear the Dharma, and respond to Buddha's love. IV. THE WAY OF CONCENTRATION 1. If a disciple is to be successful in the practice of concentration, he must observe four things. First. He must have a clear understanding that all things are only manifestations of the mind itself. Second. He must discard the notion of birth, abiding and disappearance. Third. He must clearly understand the egolessness of both things and persons. And fourth. He must have a true conception of what constitutes self-realization of Noble Wisdom. He must understand that it is based upon identity and oneness and emptiness, and threre is nothing to be discriminated or predicated concerning it. When a disciple is no longer attached to words and their meanings, he will be able to establish himself where there will be "a turning about" in the deepest seat of consciousness by means of which he will be able to attain self-realization of Noble Wisdom. 2. There are two aspects of self-realization, namely, the teachings about it and the realization itself. The teachings as variously given in the Doctrinal works are intended to awaken in all beings a true perception of the Dharma. They are designed to keep one away from all dualistic notions of being and non-being, of oneness and otherness. Realization itself is within the inner consciousness. It is an inner experience that has no connection with the lower mind system and its discrimination of words, ideas and philosophical speculations. It shines out with its own clear light to reveal the error and foolishness of mind-constructed teachings, to tender impotent all evil influences from without, and to guide one unerringly to the realm of truth. 3. There are four kinds of Dhyana practice. First. The Dhyana practiced by the ignorant who do not understand its purpose and with whom it becomes sitting still with vacant minds. This is also the Dhyana practiced by those who, seeing the body as a shadow and skeleton full of suffering and empurity, despise it and seek to attain emancipation from it by the mere cessation of thought. Second. The Dhyana devoted to the examination of meaning is practiced by those who, perceiving the untenability of such ideas as self, other and both, and who have passed beyond the two-fold egolessness, devote Dhyana to an examination of the significance of egolessness and the differentiations of the Bodhisattva stages. Third. The Dhyana with essence, or oneness, or the Divine name for its objects, is practiced by those earnest disciples and masters who, while fully recognizing the two-fold egolessness and the imagelessness of Essence, yet cling to the notion of an ultimate suchness. Fourth. The Dhyana of Buddhas is practiced by those who have entered upon the stage of Buddhahood and who, abiding in the triple bliss which characterizes the self-realization of Noble Wisdom, are devoting themselves for the sake of all beings to the accomplishment of incomprehensible works for their emancipation. This is the pure Dhyana of the Buddha where all lesser things and ideas are transcended and forgotten and there remains only a perfect state of imagelessness. 4. Those who practice Dhyana should retire to solitary place and, sitting erect, should definitely seek to tranquilize the mind. Do not fix the thoughts on the breath, do not let the thoughts dwell on what you have seen, heard, learned or memorized. All particularizations and discriminations, all recollections and imaginations should be excluded from conscious thought, and even the idea of exclusion should be excluded, because, the mind if it is to be tranquilized, must be like mind essence, that is, be devoid of all attributes, free of all distinctions, calm and undisturbed. There are two aspects of Dhyana, first there is the effort to suppress idle thinking, and second, there is an effort of concentration to realize this emptiness and purity. At first a beginner will have to practice these separately, but as he gains in mind-control, the two efforts will merge into one. In conscious thinking, thoughts are preceded by perception, perception by sensation, and sensation by some external stimulas, so one who is seeking to tranquilize his mind should first abandon the notion of an external world and should concentrate attention on the empty aspect of mind-essence. That is, he should concentrate attention on the inner world of his mind and seek by intuition to realize its true nature. If thoughts should arise, he should not become attached to them, nor should he seek to eject them, but he should let them pass unheeded, and continue his effort not to let them again arise. Gradually attaining tranquilization, he will unconsciously enter into the more receptive state of Samadhi and in that state prejudices and hindrances will vanish, faith will be awakened, aspiration will be strengthened, and realization will be attained. But to those who are doubtful, sacrilegious, destitute of faith, encumbered with hindrances of karma, arrogance, and indolence, the door is closed. 5. To those who earnestly and faithfully and perseveringly practice Dhyana, certain benefits will accure, but if the disciple is trained only in the cessation of thought, his mind will easily sink into stupidity and he will become self-centered and will no longer take pleasure in doing good deeds and he will forget to be sympathetic and compassionate, therefore he should constantly discipline himself in concentration of mind on the emptiness aspect of all things. This will awaken in the mind of every earnest disciple a deep compassion for the sufferings of all beings and will prompt him to be dauntless, earnest and devoted. It will prompt him as far as his strength and mind permits, to practice those deeds which are beneficial both to himself and others: Whether moving, standing, sitting he should assiduously concentrate his mind on what should be wisely done and what should be wisely left undone. This is the active side of Dhyana. 6. But if a disciple only practices the active aspect, his mind may lack tranquility and become too susceptible to doubt and uncertainty. His mind may become out of accord with truth, or it may not attain to the highest wisdom, therefore the two aspects of cessation and activity should be practiced side by side. Cessation and activity are not antogonistic but are complementary to each other. If either one or the other is missing or out of balance the disciple will be unable to attain highest perfect wisdom. But when Dhyana is rightly practiced, faith will be strengthened, inisight will be cleared, and the assurance of ultimate success will become unshakable, and in due course will eventuate in self-realization of Noble Wisdom. V. SACRED APHORISMS 1. "He abused me, he laughed at me, he struck me." Thus one thinks and so long as he cherishes such thoughts his anger continues. Anger will never disappear so long as thoughts of resentment are cherished in the mind. Anger will disappear just as soon as thoughts of resentment are forgotten. If the roof is improperly made or is in disrepair, the rain will get into the house; so greed enters the mind that is improperly trained or is out of control. To be idle is a short road to death and to be diligent is a way of life; foolish people are idle, wise people are diligent. An arrow-maker tries to make his arrows straight, so a wise man tries to keep his mind straight. A disturbed mind is forever active, jumping hither and thither, and is hard to control; but a tranquil mind is peaceful, therefore it is wise to keep the mind under control. It is a man's own mind that lures him into evil ways; it is not his enemy or his foe. The one who protects his mind from greed, anger and infatuation, is the one who enjoys real and lasting peace. 2. To utter pleasant words without practicing a good life, is like a fine flower without fragrance. The fragrance of a flower does not come to one against the wind; but honor comes to a good man even in the face of adversity. A night seems long to a sleepless man and a journey seems long to a weary traveler; so the times of delusion and suffering seem long to a man who does not know the right teaching. On a trail a man should travel with a companion of equal mind or one who has a better mind; one had better travel alone than to travel with a foolish man. An insincere and evil friend is more to be feared than a wild beast; a wild beast may wound your body, but an evil friend will wound your mind. So long as a man can not control his own mind, how can get any satisfaction from thinking such thoughts as "This is my son," or "This is my treasure?" A foolish man suffers from such thoughts. A foolish man, though he associates with a wise man, cannot understand the wise man's wisdom. No more can a spoon taste of the food it carries. Fresh milk is often slow to curdle, so sinful actions do not always bring immediate punishment. Sinful actions are more like coals of file that are hidden in the ashes and keep on smouldering and later cause a greater file. A man is foolish to cherish desires for privileges and promotion and profits and honor, for such desires can never bring happiness but will rather bring suffering. A good friend who points out mistakes and imperfections and rebukes evil is to be more respected than though he revealed a secret of hidden treasure. 3. A man who is pleased when he receives good instruction will sleep peacefully, because his mind is cleansed thereby. A carpenter seeks to make his beam straight; an arrow-maker seeks to make his arrow well balanced; the digger of an irrigation ditch seeks to make the water run smooth; so a wise man seeks to control his mind so that it will function smoothly and truly. A great rock is not disturbed by the wind; neither is the mind of a wise man disturbed by either honor or abuse. To control oneself is better than to control others; to conquer onelself is greater victory than to conquer thousands in a battle. To live a single day and hear a good teaching is better than to live a hundred years in ignorance. Those who love themselves must be on constant guard lest they yield to evil desires. Once in a lifetime, at least, they should awaken faith, either in youth, or in middle age, or even in old age. The world is always buring, buring with fires of greed, anger and foolishness; one should flee from such a danger. The world is like a bubble, it is like the gossamer web of a spider, it is like the defilement of a dirty jar; one should constantly protect the purity of his true mind. 4. To avoid evil, to seek the good, to keep the mind pure; this is the essence of the Buddha's teaching. Endurance is the most difficult of all disciplines, but it is to the one who endures that the final victory is given. One must remove resentment while he is exposed to resentment; one must remove sorrow while he is in the midst of sorrow; one must remove greediness while is still tempted to be greedy. To live a pure unselfish life, one must live in the midst of abundance but count nothing as his own. To be healthy is a great advantage; to be contented with what one has is more than the possession of great wealth; to be considered reliable is the truest mark of friendliness; to attain enlightenment is the highest happiness. When one has feelings of dislike for evil, when one feels tranquil, when one finds pleasure in listening to good teachings; - when one has these feelings, and understands them, his is free of fear. Do not become attached to the things you like, do not cherish aversion to the things you dislike. Sorrow, fear and bondage follow one's likes and dislikes. 5. Rust being born of iron destroyes iron; so evil being born of man destroys man. A scripture that is not read with sincerity soon becomes covered with dust; a house that is not occupied soon becomes filthy; so an idle man soon becomes defiled. Impure acts defile a woman; stinginess defiles charity; so evil acts defile not only this life but following lives. But the defilement to be most dreaded is the defilement of ignorance. A man can not hope to purify either his body or mind until ignorance is removed. It is easy to slip into shamelessness, to be pert and bold like a crow, to hurt others and then forget it; it is hard, indeed, to be ashamed, to be respected and honored, to get rid of all attachments, to keep pure in thought and deed, to become wise. It is easy to point out the mistakes of others, it is hard to admit one's own mistakes. A man broadcasts the sins of others without thinking, but he hides his own sins as a gambler hides his false dice. The sky holds no trace of bird or smoke or storm; an evil teaching carries no enlightenment; nothing hs stability; so an enlightened mind is undisturbed. 6. As a knight guards his castle gate, so one must guard his mind from dangers without and dangers within; he must not neglect it for a moment. Oneself is master of himself, oneself is relied upon by himself, therefore, one should be thoughtful of himself and control himself. The first step toward spiritual freedom is to control the mind, to stop idle chatter, to keep silent. The sun makes the day bright, the moon makes the night beautiful, an uniform adds to the dignity of a soldier; so the habit of meditation distinguishes the seeker for enlightenment. He who is unable to guard his five senses and who becomes tempted by his surroundings, is not the one who can train for enlightenment. He who firmly guards the gate-ways of his five senses and who keeps his mind under control is the one who can successfully train for enlightenment. 7. He who is in bondage to his likes and dislikes can not rightly understand the significance of circumstances and tends to be overcome by them; he who is free from attachments rightly understands circumstances and to him all things become new and significant. Happiness follows sorrow, sorrow follows happiness, but when one no longer discriminates happiness and sorrow, the difference between a good deed and a bad deed disappears and one is able to realize freedom. To worry in anticipation or to cherish regret for the past is like cutting reeds that wither in a day. The secret of health for both mind and body is not to mourn for the past, not to worry about the future, not to anticipate the future, but to live the present moment wisely and earnestly. Do not dwell in the past, do not dream of the future, concentrate the mind on the present moment. It is a worthy task to do the present duty well and to complete it; do not seek to avoid it, do not postpone it lightly. 8. One must try to escape from the darkness of ignorance and suffering, and must seek for enlightenment. In this effort and search, wisdom is the best guide and faith is the best companion. If one's body and mind is under control he should give evidence of it in virtuous deeds. This is a sacred duty. Faith will then be his wealth, sincerity will give life a sweet savor, and to accumulate virtues will be his sacred task. On the journey of life faith is nourishment, virtuous deeds are a shelter, wisdom is the light of day and right mindfulness is its protection by night. If a man lives a pure life nothing can destroy him; if he has conquered greed nothing can limit his freedom. One should forget himself for the sake of his family; one should forget his family for the sake of his village; one should forget his village for the sake of his country; one should forget all the world for the sake of enlightenment. Everything is changeable, everything appears and disappears; there is no blissful peace until one passes beyond both being and extinction. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- end of file