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Verse for Opening a Sutra There are ten causal conditions for the speaking of this chapter: 1. Person and Dharma. The person is Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. The Dharma
is the manifestation of the Universal Door. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva saves beings from seven difficulties,
counteracts the three poisons, and responds to the two kinds of seeking.
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva is an inconceivable person. The manifestation of
the Universal Door-the response to all seeking and the penetration of all
responses-is an inconceivable Dharma. Because it is inconceivable, it is
called Wonderful Dharma. Because of the causes and conditions of the Wonderful Person and the
Wonderful Dharma, the "Universal Door Chapter" is spoken. 2. Kindness and Compassion. The second causal condition is kindness and
compassion. Because of compassion, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva speaks the
"Universal Door Chapter." What is kindness and compassion? Kindness bestows happiness. Compassion
relieves beings of suffering. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva saves living beings from seven difficulties,
counteracts three kinds of poison, and responds to the two kinds of seeking
of living beings. The seven difficulties are enumerated in the text itself.
The three poisons are greed, hatred, and stupidity. The two seekings are
seeking for a son and seeking for a daughter. Living beings are all poisoned by greed, hatred, and stupidity. However,
if a person who has much greed can always reverently recite the name of Gwan
Shr Yin Bodhisattva, he can separate from greed. If he has a lot of hatred
and can always reverently recite the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, he
can separate from hatred. If he is very stupid and always reverently recites
the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, he can leave his stupidity. There are many forms of greed, and just as many, if not more, forms of
hatred. Stupidity doesn't take too many forms or too few forms. What is
stupidity? It is a lack of wisdom and depth of understanding. It is a
failure to perceive the principle underlying events. In China, the philosopher WangYang-ming said that stupidity is when one's
conduct does not accord with one's knowledge. He says, "Why does someone
fail to do something? It's because he doesn't understand. If he understood,
he would do it." Some people say, "Well, it's possible for some people to understand and
still not do it." But Wang Yang-ming would say, "They don't really
understand. If they really understood, they would do it." His philosophy was
"understanding and doing are one." If a person really understood, he would
not do stupid things. Why do people do stupid things? It's because they
don't really understand. There's a poem about stupid people that goes, Why aren't the flowers always in bloom? Why isn't the moon always full? If only all the waters of the earth would turn to wine! And the leaves of the trees turn to gold! Someone says, "I wish my flowers would always bloom and never fade." People who like the moon wish it would always be full and never wax or
wane, "The full moon is so bright and pretty. And I don't need to light
lamps, so I save money." Wouldn't you say that was stupid? Can the moon be
full every night? No, that's impossible. People who like to drink think, "Every day I have to go buy my bottle of
whiskey or brandy, and it's very expensive. Wouldn't it be great if the lake
turned into wine? I could just go down to the lake and take a drink whenever
I felt like it." People who are greedy for money think, "I have to go to work to earn
money. It's really painful. If all the leaves of the trees turned to money,
wouldn't that be great?" But that's obviously impossible. It's just another
form of imaginary wishful thinking. Another stupid person might be wishing for a Ph.D. degree when he hasn't
even gone to elementary school or high school. That, too, is stupid. Someone
may want to win the horse races when he hasn't even bought a ticket. Stupid as it is, most people fall prey to such types of thinking. So
what's to be done? If you are prone to this type of thinking, you should
change, that's all. With great kindness, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva helps living beings leave
suffering and attain bliss. Out of great kindness and great compassion, the
"Universal Door of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva Chapter" is spoken. 3. Blessings and Wisdom. It is said that Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva
"follows the sounds to relieve beings from suffering." He distinguishes all the different sounds in the world-good sounds, bad
sounds, sounds of suffering, sounds of joy, sounds of what is right, and
sounds of what is wrong. He does this with his wisdom. Where does his wisdom
come from? It comes from the practice of giving. He gives the Dharma to
living beings, and as a result, he gains boundless wisdom and blessings. 4. True Body and Response Bodies. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva uses the
wonderful doctrine of the true body to rescue living beings from the seven
kinds of difficulty, to counteract the three poisons, and to fulfill the two
kinds of seeking. He also manifests in thirty-two kinds of response bodies. The "Universal Door Chapter" is spoken on the basis of the true body and
the response bodies. 5. Medicine King Tree. What is the Medicine King Tree? Long, long ago, there was a man who went into the mountains to gather
firewood. Then he would take it to the market to sell. One day, he met a doctor. The doctor saw something emitting light in the
firewood. He then bought it and took it home. When the doctor opened the
bundle, he found a Medicine King Tree. No matter what illness someone had,
all the doctor had to do was brush the Medicine King Tree over the patients
or hit them with it, and they would be cured. In this way, he saved many
people. What is the Wish-Fulfilling Pearl? "Wish-Fulfilling" means that according
to your heart's desire, you get your wish. If you want something nice to
eat, something very delicious will manifest from inside the pearl for you.
If you want some nice clothes, the outfit of your dreams will manifest from
the Wish-Fulfilling Pearl. This pearl can manifest clothing, food, and even
a place to live. You can say, "Tonight, I want to stay in the most beautiful
room," and it will manifest for you. The next day, the room will go right
back into the pearl. The pearl can manifest exactly the right amount of food for you, never
too much or too little. That's why it's called Wish-Fulfilling. As to your
clothes, you won't need to hang them up in the closet, because when you are
done wearing them, they will go right back into the pearl. How big is the
pearl? It's pretty small. You can carry it with you. It's not heavy, and it
doesn't take a lot of room. A woman is thinking, "Can it get me a good
husband?" Well, I don't know about that. A man is thinking, "Can it get me a
good wife?" Don't ask me that; I really don't know. In any case, then, the "Universal Door Chapter" is like a Medicine King
Tree and a Wish-Fulfilling Pearl. It fulfills your wishes just as you wish.
All you have to do is recite the "Universal Door Chapter," and you will get
what you wish for. However, it's not the case that you can recite it today and have a
response tomorrow. You have to set down a good foundation first. It's like
constructing a building. You have to lay the foundation first. Without the
foundation, you can't build the building. The "Universal Door Chapter" is like a Medicine King Tree and a
Wish-Fulfilling Pearl. It is that magical, amazing, and inconceivable; but
you first have to recite it. You should recite it every day until Gwan Yin
Bodhisattva thinks that you have passed the test, that you are sincere
enough. If you don't regularly recite it, you can't get a response when you
need one. You have to ordinarily apply effort in your cultivation, then an
inconceivable response can have a chance to take place. Someone says, "There are too many things in Buddhism to learn. There are
the Shurangama Mantra, the Great Compassion Mantra, and now the "Universal
Door Chapter." When am I going to get the time?" It doesn't take that much
time. All you have to do is cut an hour off your sleeping time and do a
little less chatting with people. If you don't have any aspirations, nothing
you would like to be "Wish-Fulfilling," then you don't need to recite. If
you say, "I don't want anything. I'm not greedy for anything. I'm not
hateful or stupid, so I don't need to recite this," then what's there to
talk about? But if you feel that perhaps you might run into trouble and need
Gwan Yin Bodhisattva's help in the future, then you should certainly study a
bit more Buddhadharma. The Buddhadharma is like a great sea, and all of you
haven't even drunk one drop of it yet. You'll never be able to drink it all.
Even though you can't drink it all, you can drink your fill according to
your capacity. The Buddhadharma is endless for the taking and inexhaustible
in its function. Thus, we study and recite the "Universal Door Chapter," because it is
like the Medicine King Tree and the Wish-Fulfilling Pearl. 6. Manifest and Secret. When you recite the "Universal Door Chapter,"
sometimes you will obtain a revealed or manifest response. Other times you
will obtain a secret or hidden response. A manifest response is one that everyone can see and understand. The
"Universal Door Chapter" says, "If he enters a great fire, the fire will not
burn him." When this great fire burns, if you single-mindedly believe in
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva and recite his name with true faith, the rooms
around you may burn down, but your room won't. But this is only if by
accident. You can't decide to try it out and light a fire to see if it will
burn. If you do that, it is sure to be burned. Why? Because you are testing
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. That shows that you don't have adequate faith.
That is like, say, you have a friend, and you test him out to see if he's
really a loyal friend. "I'll just leave five hundred dollars here on the
ground. If he's a good person, he won't take it. If he's a bad person, he
will." But why do you want to test out your friend? It's because you don't
really recognize your friend. You don't truly know if he is a good friend. If you don't believe the Sutra and you feel you must test it out to see
if the fire will burn you, you basically don't believe in Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva. Since you don't believe in Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, he doesn't
have time to watch over your affairs. Go ahead and burn your house down if
you like. If you want to commit suicide and jump into the ocean to see if
the water will drown you so that you can test out Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva's
spiritual powers, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva is not going to pay any attention
to you. Since you don't believe in him, he's not going to involve himself in
your business. But if your house accidentally catches fire and you have been
reciting regularly, you won't be burned. But it has to be accidental; it
can't be something that you try as an experiment. "Well, ultimately I don't know if it's true or false if I don't test it
out," you say. If you know it's true, then what? If you don't know it's true, then what?
Whether you know or don't know that it's true, you still have to eat and
wear clothes in order to live. What more do you want? So the neighbor's house burns down, but yours doesn't. That's called a
manifest response. Everybody knows about it. There may also be a secret response. For example, perhaps you are due for
some calamity-you were due to fall into the sea and drown-but Gwan Yin
Bodhisattva secretly lets you know of the danger so that it doesn't happen.
Nobody knows about it. You don't even know about it. You were supposed to
undergo a calamity, but it disappears. That's called a secret response. Say
someone was supposed to be burned to death in a fire, but he believes in
Gwan Yin Bodhisattva and his disaster vanishes. You could have been due to
die in a plane crash, a train crash, or on the highway, and because you
sincerely recite Gwan Yin Bodhisattva's name and the Great Compassion
Mantra, Gwan Yin Bodhisattva secretly and silently dispels calamity and
turns your misfortune into good fortune. Everything is auspicious as you
will. Thus, the "Universal Door Chapter" was spoken because of the manifest and
secret responses. Both the manifest and secret responses are
interpenetrating without obstruction, and so the merit and virtue of the
"Universal Door Chapter" is inconceivable. The Great Compassion Mantra functions in this inconceivable manner as
well as the "Universal Door Chapter." There was once in Manchuria a farmer who was returning home with his
friends from a business trip. When he was almost halfway home, he saw a band
of robbers about a mile up ahead. What was he going to do? He couldn't run
away because it was their territory, and he was sure to be robbed. Just at
that moment, he recited the Great Compassion Mantra. When he got to where
the robbers were, one of them came forward and took the reins from the
driver, saying, "I'll drive." They drove right through the gang of bandits
as if they were invisible. When they were safely through, the man gave the
reins back to the driver. The farmer said, "You saved us from the robbers
today. What is your name? Where do you live? I would like to send you a
reward." The man said, "My name is E Shr Yun." Now, everyone knows there is
a line E shr yun in the Great Compassion Mantra that is the name of a
Dharma Protector. At that time, the farmer didn't remember that E shr yun was in the
Great Compassion Mantra. After the man left, he remembered, "He's a Dharma
Protector in the Great Compassion Mantra!" This is an inconceivable state
manifest from the Great Compassion Mantra. But if you recite it just to test
it out, E Shr Yun is not going to show up. It's only if you recite and
believe in the Mantra that unlucky circumstances can be made lucky. If you
run into E Shr Yun, make sure you recognize him. Don't be like the farmer
who didn't remember who he was until he was gone. 7. Provisional and Real. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva uses the power of the
Dharma body to secretly benefit living beings. This is called the real. He
also uses the thirty-two response bodies to teach and transform living
beings. This is the provisional. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva provides living beings a temporary teaching to
lead them to the real teaching. Because of the provisional and the real, the
"Universal Door Chapter" was spoken. 8. Roots and Traces. With the Dharma body, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva saves
all living beings. The Dharma body is the root. The response bodies used to
teach and transform living beings are the traces. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva's
Dharma body is like the moon; that's the root. The traces are like the
moon's reflection in all the waters. The moon lends its reflections to the waters of a thousand rivers. The "Universal Door Chapter" is spoken because of the root and traces.
With one Dharma body, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva manifests within the hearts
of all living beings. He causes all living beings to change from evil and go
toward the good, to leave suffering and attain bliss, and ultimately to
become Buddhas. Someone is thinking, "No wonder I haven't changed for the better. Gwan
Shr Yin Bodhisattva has not manifested in my mind. That's why I don't wish
to change my faults." Those who smoke, think, "Probably the reason I haven't
quit smoking is that Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva is not helping me." Someone
who likes to drink is thinking, "It's Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva's fault that
I haven't quit drinking. He isn't helping me." And suddenly he is upset with
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, "He's unfair! Why does he help other people, but
not me?" Now, that is stupidity added to stupidity. Why isn't Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva helping you? Because you don't listen
to Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva's instructions. Hearing Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva's name, you should reform yourself and go toward the good. You
should calm your mind down and cool off. Let the past go and concentrate on
doing better in the future. For instance, if you take the precepts, you must
keep the precepts. If you know something is wrong but you still go ahead and
do it anyway, then your offenses are doubled. It's a mistake to blame Gwan
Shr Yin Bodhisattva for not protecting you. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva wants
to help you out, but you keep the door to your mind closed. You don't let
him help! All that Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva can do is sigh and say, "You are
truly pitiful!" So don't blame Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. 9. Condition and Finality. "Condition" refers to causes and conditions.
"Finality" means putting an end to the cause; it also means understanding
the cause. Why have people come from such great distances to hear the Dharma?
Because they want to understand and put an end to the cause. Also, they have
those causes and conditions from the past that allow them to encounter the
Buddhadharma in this lifetime. 10. Wisdom and Severing. Another reason is the pair of wisdom and
severing. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva is adorned with the virtue of wisdom and
the virtue of severing. With the virtue of wisdom, he teaches and transforms
living beings. With the virtue of severing, he cuts through and severs all
forms of ignorance. The virtue of severing can also be called the virtue of
blessings. Because the Bodhisattva has severed ignorance, he is truly
adorned with blessings and wisdom. The Buddha is complete with blessings and
wisdom. Although a Bodhisattva, Gwan Shr Yin is also adorned with blessings
and wisdom. Together these are ten causal conditions for the speaking of the
"Universal Door Chapter" of the Wonderful Dharma Lotus Flower Sutra. Before we delve into the Sutra text, let's look into the meaning of the
name Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, the Bodhisattva Who Contemplates the World's
Sounds. Gwan, "contemplate," is the wisdom that contemplates.
Shr yin, "the world's sounds," are the states he contemplates. No
matter what sound it is, this Bodhisattva knows. He knows all the sounds of
living beings. He knows every single sound. Why? Because he contemplates
them all day long! Sounds are basically heard, not seen. Why is it said he "contemplates" or
"observes" them? Can you see sounds? No. But Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva can
see them! You can't see them, but he can. He sees them as if they were on a
radar screen. Every living being manifests as a blip on his radar screen. He
can chart your every sound. That's one way to explain it. There's another way, and that is that Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva can see
with his ears and hear with his eyes. Even though we say he observes
the sounds of the world, he can also hear with his eyes. Not only can
he see with his eyes, he can hear with them as well. Why? Because he has the
spiritual powers of the interpenetration of the six sense organs. Others who
cultivate the Dharma Flower Sutra will obtain the purity of the six
faculties. Then they can use the six sense organs in mutual
interpenetration. How much the more so can Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva! Gwan
Shr Yin Bodhisattva, then, can speak with his ears, eat with his ears,
listen with his eyes, and think with his eyes. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva
gained the state of the mutual interpenetration of the six sense organs a
long, long time ago, and so he is able to contemplate the sounds of the
world. "Why does he want to look after so many things," you ask, "observing
sounds all day long? What use is that?" Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva does so because he cannot put down living
beings-you, me, and them. He sees all living beings as his own children.
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva is like a mother to all of us. He is always
checking to see which child is crying, which child is laughing, or which
child might be cold or hungry. He is busy all day long looking after all of
us kids. "Does that make him some kind of a baby-sitter?" you ask. Pretty much, yes. But he doesn't get paid. Too bad! Because he can't put
living beings down, he wants to contemplate the sounds of the world. He
looks to see what suffering living beings are undergoing, and he finds a way
to help them. When he sees living beings in a disaster, he saves them from
it. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva "follows the sounds to rescue beings from
suffering." If you are suffering, all you have to do is recite "Na mwo
Gwan Shr Yin Pu Sa," and you'll find your unlucky circumstances turn into
good fortune. Everything will turn out just as you want it to. Most people
don't know about this most wonderful Dharma, and so when they are in the
greatest danger, it doesn't occur to them to recite Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva's name. If, in great danger, you can remember to recite Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva's name, you will be okay. If you are in a fire, it won't burn
you. If you are in the water, you will not drown. If you don't know how to
swim, you'll just find yourself in a shallow place. This is the response
from Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. All you have to do when in great danger is
recite Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva's name. You are sure to gain a response and
be rescued. But you must have faith. You can't waver between faith and
doubt. Let's say you are in a fire and you are reciting Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva's name, but you're thinking, "This isn't going to work. Nothing
is that magical." With that one doubt, he won't be able to rescue you. Why
not? Because you don't believe. You must single-mindedly believe. "I am
reciting, and Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva will certainly come and save me." Let's say a tiger is just about to swallow you up. You shut your eyes and
recite, "Na mwo Gwan Shr Yin Pu Sa." Suddenly the tiger won't be able
to open his mouth! That's how powerful Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva is; yet it
only happens if you are truly sincere and have faith. Bodhisattvas are beings who enlighten other living beings. They
are also called "living beings with great minds for the Way." They are
"those who enlighten sentient beings." They can also be called "sentient
beings who are enlightened." And so Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva saves living beings-those who are "born
from a multitude of conditions"-from danger and difficulty. What is meant by
"born from a multitude of conditions"? I just said that countries fight with countries, families fight with
families, people fight with people, ghosts fight with ghosts, and animals
fight with animals. The power of the collective karma of living beings
creates our ominous present-day situations. There are many countries, in
fact, where the population is not even composed of human beings! Sometimes a
large group of mice might get reborn together as people in one place and
make up a "country." Or sometimes a population of frogs can be born together
as humans in a particular country. Last spring (1968) a lay disciple showed us an article in the newspaper
that reported there were several tens of thousands of frogs that all
committed suicide together in Thailand. Why did that happen? It shows that
most of the people in that country were frogs before. If you check out their
physiognomy in detail, they even look somewhat like frogs. Each nationality
has its own characteristics, because in former lives they were a particular
kind of animal. Now there are many nationalities in America, and these came
from various types of beings. There were people, animals, and all kinds of
beings. That's the truth! If you look carefully, and if you have the Buddha Eye, the Wisdom Eye, or
the Heavenly Eye, you will know that the people in the world aren't
necessarily "people." There are many kinds of creatures in human form. How
can you tell? If you have the Buddha Eye, or the Wisdom Eye, and you want to
know what people were in their past lives, you look at the "shadow" behind
them. If there is a human "shadow" behind them, then they were people in
their last lives. If they were animals or some strange creatures, they will
have those "shadows" behind them. If you haven't opened your Buddha Eye, Wisdom Eye, or Heavenly Eye, then
you won't be able to tell. Anyway, don't think that everyone you meet is a
person. You don't have to be nervous. If you obtain the Heavenly Eye, you
can know all about these things. Just keep working hard. This is a very
subtle doctrine, however. Most people won't believe it if they haven't
experienced it. However, if you really want to know these things, you have
to put your feet firmly on the ground and cultivate. When you obtain
spiritual powers you will know "The things that Dharma Master said are
really true! He told us really wonderful things!" Then you'll know. Sutra: At that time Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva rose from his seat,
uncovered his right shoulder, placed his palms together, and facing the
Buddha, said, "World Honored One, by means of what causes and conditions is
the Bodhisattva Gwan Shr Yin called 'Gwan Shr Yin'?" "At that time" refers to the time when the chapter on the
Bodhisattva Wondrous Sound was finished and the "Universal Door Chapter" was
about to begin. This is the time when Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva,
being present in the Dharma Flower assembly, asked the Buddha how Gwan Shr
Yin Bodhisattva got his name. "Inexhaustible Intention" is the Bodhisattva's name. In
general, there are three kinds of inexhaustibility. 1. The inexhaustibility of worlds like floating motes of dust. We
shouldn't think that the world consists simply of what our eyes can see or
our ears can hear. There are limitless, boundless worlds-this world, that
world, and an infinite number of worlds. These worlds are like floating
specks of dust. Why "floating?" Because they are in a state of constant
agitation and movement; they are never still. Another aspect of dust is that
it is not clean; our world is filled with dust. When the sun comes out and shines through a crevice in the window, you'll
see an infinite number of dust particles dancing, bobbing up and down.
Where does all this dust come from? It comes from the minds of living
beings. Why? Because living beings' minds have too much polluted thinking.
Polluted thinking is like floating dust. Take a look at how much polluted
thinking you are aware of. Try to imagine how much polluted thinking you
cannot perceive! In a single thought there are ninety kshanas. A
kshana is the briefest instant of time. In one kshana, there are
nine hundred births and deaths. So where do all these worlds come from? They come from living beings'
polluted thoughts. Relying on the truth, they give rise to the false.
From a single false thought, the mountains, the rivers, the great earth, and
all the buildings and vegetation are created. 2. The inexhaustibility of living beings who are obscured by karma.
Worlds are boundless, and boundless living beings are created out of these
worlds. Living beings are born from a mass of causes and conditions. Some
are born from wombs, others from eggs, moisture, or transformation. These
are discussed in detail in the Shurangama Sutra. Living beings are
born from wombs because of the emotion of love. Beings are born from eggs
because of thought. Where do living beings come from? They come from the Buddha-nature. We say, "All living beings have the Buddha-nature and all can become
Buddhas." But this is not the same as saying, "Living beings are
Buddhas." You can't become a Buddha without cultivating. You have to
cultivate, meditate, and study the Buddhadharma. Then you can return to the
root and go back to the source and become a Buddha. You can't say, "Living
beings are Buddhas. We don't need to cultivate!" That's just deviant
knowledge and deviant views. You must cultivate to become a Buddha. 3. The bottomlessness of the river of love. Not just people, but also
animals, are attached to love. They aren't clear about principles, and their
minds of sexual desire are very heavy. You should lighten your desires and
purify your mind. Pare away your thoughts of desire. Then you are not far
from Buddhahood. Why is this river of love bottomless? Because the more you fall, the more
you tend to fall; the deeper you sink, the deeper you get. Thoughts of
desire are like waves, which never stop. Why are there waves on the sea?
It's because there are waves in our minds. The waves in our minds are made
from the river of love, which flows without stopping. No matter how sharp a knife you may use to try to cut off your emotional
love, it's still not easily severed. But it's said that, "The sword of
wisdom can slice through emotion." With genuine wisdom, you can solve the
problem and cut it off. Without wisdom, you fall into the bottomless river
of love. Because of these three kinds of inexhaustibility, Inexhaustible Intention
Bodhisattva wishes to turn inexhaustible worlds into the Land of Ultimate
Bliss, to cause inexhaustible living beings to become Buddhas, and to fill
up the bottomless and inexhaustible river of love. That's why he's called
Inexhaustible Intention. Bodhisattva is a Sanskrit word that means
"enlightened being." Bodhi is "the Way of enlightenment." A sattva
is "one with sentience." A Bodhisattva uses the doctrines of awakening to
the Way to enlighten all beings with sentience. The Bodhisattva resolves, "I
am enlightened, and I am going to find a way to cause all beings to become
enlightened." This is to enlighten oneself and enlighten others. Where do Bodhisattvas come from? They come from living beings.
Bodhisattvas begin as living beings, just like you and me. However, they
become enlightened living beings. We living beings are confused; they have
awakened. If you wake up today, today you are a Bodhisattva. If you wake up
tomorrow, tomorrow you will be a Bodhisattva. Wake up to what? Wake up out of your ignorance. If you can know where
your ignorance came from and break through it, you are awakened. If you
cannot break through your ignorance, you are confused. When one breaks
through ignorance, the Dharma-nature manifests. Ignorance disappears, and
the river of love dries up. Once the river of love has dried up, your wisdom
can manifest. So, a Bodhisattva is a person who enlightens others-an enlightened one
among living beings. Bodhisattvas are also called "living beings with great minds of the Way."
They are also called "Initiating Knights." They can open up living beings'
stupidity and turn it into the original Buddha-nature. When the Dharma Flower Sutra was spoken, five thousand people in
the assembly walked out. Who were they? They were those with overweening
pride. They were arrogant and naughty. When Shakyamuni Buddha started
lecturing the Dharma Flower Sutra, he said, "I am now lecturing the
real truth. I am not speaking provisionally." The five thousand people were
unhappy with him and left in a huff. Having heard the "Wondrous Sound Bodhisattva Chapter," Inexhaustible
Intention Bodhisattva then rose from his seat. In a large assembly,
if you want to say something you have to stand up. You can't just raise your
hand. Not only did he stand up, but he uncovered his right shoulder.
That was the custom to show respect in India, and so today our sashes do not
cover the right shoulder. In India and Southeast Asia, the monks don't have clasps on their sashes.
They just wear them as clothes; they don't need a clasp. Since the robe is
their main piece of clothing and is next to their skin, if it falls off they
will know. In China, the monks wear clothing underneath their sashes. And so
if their sashes fall off, it's not easy for them to detect it. That's why
they attach a clasp to their sashes. Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva uncovered his right shoulder as a
gesture of respect, placed his palms together, and facing the Buddha,
said, "World Honored One." "World Honored One" means that the Buddha is
honored by those in and beyond the world. By means of what causes and
conditions is the Bodhisattva Gwan Shr Yin called 'Gwan Shr Yin'? With
great compassion, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva rescues people from the
seven difficulties, counteracts the three poisons, and responds to the two
kinds of seeking. He has fourteen kinds of fearlessness and nineteen ways of
speaking Dharma. For what reason is he called Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva? What Dharma did he cultivate in the past that he is now called
Gwan Shr Yin? Sutra: The Buddha told Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva, "Good Man, if any
of the limitless hundreds of thousands of myriads of kotis of living
beings who are undergoing all kinds of suffering hear of Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva and recite his name single-mindedly, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva
will immediately hear their voices and rescue them." Commentary: The Buddha told Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva. This is a
phrase of narrative spoken by the Sutra compiler, Ananda. "Good Man,"
said Shakyamuni Buddha, "if any of the limitless hundreds of thousands of
myriads of kotis of living beings… "Let us assume that there are
countless living beings from all types of birth-egg, womb, moisture,
transformation; with form, without form; with thought, without thought; not
totally endowed with thought, and not totally lacking thought-who are
undergoing all kinds of suffering. There are many forms of suffering. In general, they can be said to fall
into four categories. 1. One person may undergo one kind of suffering. This is like a mute who
experiences suffering of which he alone is aware, for he cannot express his
chagrin. Hence there is the saying, "like a mute tasting hwang lyan."
Hwang lyan is the most bitter kind of Chinese herbal medicine. 2. One person may undergo many kinds of suffering. A single individual
may run into natural disasters or manmade calamities, experiencing the
entire gamut of suffering. 3. Many people may undergo one kind of suffering. For example, people in
certain countries experience the pains of war, bloodshed, or political
upheavals. Or there may be epidemics that wipe out entire populations at one
instance. 4. Many people may undergo many kinds of suffering. Because there are
many living beings, there are also many varieties of suffering. How many
kinds of suffering are there? Basically, there's no way to count them all.
In general, there are 84,000 kinds. So what should people do when they have to undergo all these terrible
kinds of suffering? When they hear of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, they
should recite his name single-mindedly. When you are suffering, do
not forget Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. Now, how many people in America have heard of the name of Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva? Those who have heard of it are very few. Think it over.
"Hearing" just means understanding and being able to learn about. You have
studied the Shurangama Sutra and you know of Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva's perfect penetration of the ear organ and his thirty-two
response bodies-all his inconceivable spiritual powers of self-mastery-so
that you recognize Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. Single-mindedness is the most important requisite. You should have one
mind, not two or three. If you are scattered, the effect is lessened. Unless
you turn to one, it is not efficacious. Therefore, be without two or three
minds, but with one mind. "Gwan" means to contemplate. "Shr" means world. "Yin" means sounds. This
Bodhisattva contemplates the sounds in all worlds of all living beings at
all distances who hear of or recite his name. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva
will immediately hear their voices and rescue them. These desperate
living beings will be rescued from all torment. They will be happy. They
will obtain genuine freedom and be without restraints or hang-ups. Sutra: "If a person who upholds the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva enters a
great fire, the fire will not burn him, all because of this Bodhisattva's
awesome spiritual power." Commentary: Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva rescues living beings from seven kinds of
difficulty, the first of which is fire. Another hypothetical case is
presented this time of a person who upholds the name of Gwan Shr
Yin Bodhisattva. "Uphold" means to receive and maintain, and not to
forget. In every thought one recollects the name of Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva, reciting "Na mwo Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva." If such a
person enters a great fire, the fire will not burn him. However, this
means that ordinarily one recites the Bodhisattva's name. One can't wait
until there is a disaster and then recite like crazy to make up for lost
time. There is a saying, In your free time you never light incense, But when there's an emergency, you are on your knees before the
Buddha. If you don't cultivate ordinarily but wait until an emergency to do so,
it's not going to work. "Sometimes there are cases when someone doesn't ordinarily recite, but
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva does save them. How does that happen?" You
ask. Everyone has his or her own set of causes and results. In former lives,
perhaps this person recited vigorously and performed many kinds of
meritorious work. In this life, even though he doesn't recite, the power of
his good roots from reciting in previous lives carries through and he is
saved. This is an example of a distant cause. But if you think you can wait
and rely on your good roots, no one will guarantee you. If you recite well
this life, I will guarantee that in the future you will be helped in an
emergency. If you don't have the penetration of past lives, how do you know
whether you did recite in the past? If you have the Heavenly Eye or Heavenly
Ear, you might know; but still it's better to recite now to be sure. Once there was a man who wanted to go to Pu Two mountain to bow to Gwan
Shr Yin Bodhisattva. He became a vegetarian for three years before going to
Mount Pu Two. Guess what happened? Just as he got on the boat, one of his
neighbors came running up and said, "Our entire neighborhood is on fire."
Then his relatives arrived and said, "It's bad timing. Come back and
save our home!" "I've been preparing for this pilgrimage for three years, and now I'm on
the boat. If the house is supposed to burn, it will burn anyway, even if I
get off the boat now. If Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva protects me, then it won't
burn and I don't need to get off the boat now. I can go to the mountain. I
would rather my house burned down, than that I not get to go bow to Gwan Shr
Yin Bodhisattva." He didn't pay attention to anything after that. He went to Nan Hai to bow
to Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, and when he returned to his own village, every
house in his neighborhood had burned down except for his. Everyone said,
"Why didn't your house burn?" He replied, "I put everything down. I just went to bow to Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva. It was through the power of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva." So if he enters a great fire, the fire will not burn him, all because
of this Bodhisattva's awesome spiritual power. That is why he will not
be burned. Sutra: "If a person being tossed about in the great sea calls out the
Bodhisattva's name, he will find a shallow place." Commentary: If a person being tossed about in the great sea. That is, if he is
accidentally thrown into the ocean, he can be saved by reciting Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva's name. Now, you cannot do it on purpose just to test it out. If
you try to test Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva to see if he is efficacious
or not, he most certainly will not be. You will sink without a doubt. Why?
Because you are testing him! You aren't a teacher and he is not a student,
so why do you want to test him? You don't believe Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva has such spiritual powers, and so you test him out. It's
as if you really don't believe in a friend and so you test him out to see if
he is truly loyal. You put some money out to see if he will steal it. That's
because you really don't know whether he is your good friend. Why would you want to test Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva? Because you don't
really recognize him. But in testing him, you may lose your own life. Don't
experiment with your life. If the person calls out the Bodhisattva's name, he will find a shallow
place. You won't quite know how it happens, but suddenly you will be on
the shore. This is through the power of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. Sutra: "If the hundreds of thousands of myriads of kotis of beings who
seek gold, silver, lapis lazuli, mother-of-pearl, carnelian, coral, amber,
real pearls, and so forth enter the great sea, an evil wind may toss their
boats into the territory of the rakshasha ghosts. But if among them
there is even one person who calls out the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva,
they will all be saved from the difficulty of the rakshashas. For
this reason, he is called Gwan Shr Yin." Commentary: Among the seven kinds of difficulties, this is the third, the difficulty
of meeting with rakshasha ghosts. If the hundreds of thousands of
myriads of kotis of beings who seek gold, silver, lapis lazuli,
mother-of-pearl, carnelian, coral, amber, real pearls, and so forth.
People are greedy for these things because they think they are jewels.
Actually these things are external to the body. Before you have understood
the true jewels within your own nature, even if you greedily pursue external
jewels, they won't be of any great use. They have nothing to do with your
own nature. But most ordinary people seek these things. Every country is greedy for gold, and so most citizens think it is a rare
and valuable thing. Day and night, they scheme to get gold. This goes on to
the point that countries fight with countries over gold. Why do people think
gold is so valuable? Because there's not very much of it, so everybody is
greedy for it. It's hard to get, and so people even dream of it. Some go to
Africa. Some go to America. The Chinese used to call America "Old Gold
Mountain." Everyone ran here from China for the gold. Once they got most of
the gold from America, they ran off to Australia, to "New Gold Mountain." People travel all over for gold. We don't know how many people died on
the high seas coming over here to get gold. A lot of them. But
communications weren't as advanced in those days, and the news didn't get
reported. A lot of people died, and no one ever knew. That's because they
met with the difficulty of the evil wind while searching for jewels. They
had small boats, nothing like the big ones we have today. Some found gold,
but most did not. Everyone knows about those who found gold, but who knows
about all those people who died at sea? There's no record of those who were
lost. Many went to New Gold Mountain, to Australia. People also went to find silver. Gold is first, and silver is second in
value. Next comes lapis lazuli, which is translated as "blue colored gem."
Mother-of-pearl has lines running through it that look like cart tracks, but
its surface is actually very smooth. Carnelian is called "horse brain," because there are thread-like lines
running through it that are the color of blood. In the old days in China,
those who smoked pipes had their long pipes made out of carnelian or jade.
They were very expensive. Those people, having eaten their fill and having
nothing else to do, wanted to be different, to show how unusual they were,
and so they made extravagant pipes. They would compete to see who could have
the most expensive pipes, to show off how rich they were. Coral grows in the ocean in formations that look like trees. Some of them
get to be three feet tall. I have seen one that was one foot tall. There are
small creatures in the ocean who leave their shells in shapes that look like
trees. Such trees are very expensive. In China, Shr Chung was competing to show off his wealth with a certain
relative of the Emperor. The Emperor had given his relative a coral tree,
probably about two feet tall, especially expensive. The person invited Shr
Chung to dinner one night and showed him his coral tree. "See my expensive
coral tree?" he asked. Shr Chung picked it up and threw it on the ground, smashed it into
pieces. The man was crushed. "That was my coral tree, which the Emperor gave
me. Now what?" "Don't worry about it," said Shr Chung, "I'll replace it. Come over to my
house tomorrow and you can pick a coral tree out of my collection." When the Emperor's relative went to Shr Chung's house the next day, he
saw that the guest room was filled with lovely coral trees all over three
feet tall! This man realized he wasn't as wealthy as Shr Chung, even though
he was the Emperor's relative, and so he took a coral tree and left. Later Shr Chung, however, was murdered for his money. It is said, People die because of wealth; Birds die because of food. Amber is another kind of precious stone. Sometimes it's red and sometimes
rich light brown in color. Real pearls are big pearls from the deep ocean. If people should enter the great sea to acquire such things, they
may run into trouble. And suppose an evil wind comes up. This is
hypothetically speaking, mind you. An evil wind is literally a "black wind."
This is something everyone personally has. What do I mean? It's when your face gets all contorted with affliction
and turns black. When you get angry, you have an evil wind. If you have no
temper, then you don't have an evil wind. The great sea is the sea of our
mind-our own nature. The evil wind is ignorance. We speak about it in many
ways, but it all comes back to the same thing-ignorance. Ignorance is also
called affliction. If you have affliction, you have an evil wind. Without
affliction, the sea of your own nature is calm and placid. To seek jewels is
to go within your own nature to look for treasures. When you try to uncover
the treasures within your own nature, you might run into demonic obstacles.
Demonic obstacles arise because you don't have enough Way virtue or virtuous
conduct. If you haven't done enough virtuous deeds, your virtue is not
complete, and so the evil wind-the demonic obstacle-starts blowing. If you
possess great virtue, the evil wind will turn into lucky clouds-fortunate
energy. In China we say, When the Way is lofty, dragons and tigers are subdued. When virtue is profound, ghosts and spirits are respectful. When the Way is lofty, the dragons and tigers will lie down when they see
you. Dragons are basically very fierce, they can move mountains and turn
over the seas with their spiritual penetrations. But if you have the Way,
even though dragons have such spiritual powers, they don't dare use them on
you. They have to lie down. Tigers are very mean, but if you have no anger,
when they see you they will act like tame dogs-like house pets. They will
wag their tails and welcome you like kitty cats. But you must have the Way-Dau.
If you don't, the dragons won't lie down and the tigers won't crouch. If your virtue is sufficiently profound, then when the ghosts and spirits
see you, they will bow. But you must have virtue; otherwise, they won't.
Therefore, developing virtue by doing virtuous deeds is most important. The evil wind may toss their boats into the territory of the
rakshasha ghosts; they will be in trouble. Rakshasha ghosts eat
people's essence and energy. They are female. But if among them-the
people on the boat-there is even one person who calls out the name of
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, they will all be saved-all hundreds of myriads
of millions of them-from the difficulty of the rakshashas. For
this reason, he is called Gwan Shr Yin-the Contemplator of the World's
Sounds. Virtue is something all people should look upon as most important because
virtue is that which makes people different from animals. Without virtue, we
are not different from animals. Virtue must be put into action. If you don't "do" it, it's not there. In Manchuria, I had a very good friend. He was my good friend because he
was of the same Path as I was. When I was observing filial piety by my
mother's grave, he was doing the same by his mother's grave. He was called
Filial Son Yu. Before he began his filial practice, he had been a thief. He
went everywhere tying up people and robbing them. Once he was wounded in a fight. The wound festered and refused to heal
for over half a month. At that time he woke up: "Probably I have been doing
too many wrong things and so my wound won't heal." Then he made a vow, "If
my wound heals, I will never steal again. I will observe filial piety at the
graves of my parents." Having had this thought, the wound was well in a few
days, and he did go start his practice. Many strange things happened to him
then. There isn't enough time to go into all of them in detail today. Once, he sought to stop the rain on behalf of the village, and he cut off
his flesh as an offering to heaven. While he was sitting beside his parents'
graves, it started raining and rained for days and days. He thought, "All
the crops will be flooded," and so he began to pray for the rain to stop. As
a token of his sincerity, he said, "If the rain stops within three days, I
shall cut off my flesh as an offering to the sky and the Buddha." Having
made this vow, oddly enough, in two and a half days or so, the rain stopped. To carry out his vow, he stood before the Buddha image and cut off about
one or two liang of his flesh as an offering. He fainted from the
shock and the pain. When he woke up again, the ground was covered with
blood. The governor of Shwang Cheng County happened by. Seeing Filial Son Yu
lying in a pool of blood, the governor thought he was deranged. But when he
found out the details of his offering, he said, "That's terrific!" and he
was very impressed. Soon after this incident, a little bird came to visit Filial Son Yu. It
chirped in a very strange way. It said, "Do more virtue! Do more virtue!
Doing more virtue is good!" (Dwo dzwo de! Dwo dzwo de! Dzwo de dwo hau!)
It was telling people to do more good things, the more the better. That's why I'm not afraid of working too hard. I work along with you all
day, and then I lecture at night. I do so because I want to do more giving
of Dharma. In America, the Buddhadharma is extremely scarce, and so I am not
afraid of working hard to give you the Buddhadharma. No matter how hard it
is, I am not going to go on strike. To say nothing of all of you, even if
only one or two of you understand what I am saying, that will be enough. I
will have found "those who know my sound." Now there are so many of you who come every day to hear the Sutra. You
are all my most understanding Dharma friends and so, even though it gets
tiring-people get tired when they work-I go ahead and speak the Buddhadharma
for all of you. Sutra: "Further, if a person who is about to be harmed calls out the name of
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, the swords and staves of the attackers will break
into pieces and he will be saved." Commentary: This is the difficulty of knives and staves. Further, if a person who
is about to be harmed-on the verge of being murdered-calls out the
name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, the swords and staves of the attackers
will break into pieces. Just as they put the knife to your neck or the
stick to your head, the weapon will split apart and be useless. Basically, a
knife is stronger than your neck, but now your neck is stronger, and the
sword breaks. Why does this happen? It's because of the great awesome power of Gwan Shr
Yin Bodhisattva. This power causes your neck to be stronger than iron, so
the sword breaks. And in this way he-the person who is being
attacked-will be saved from the difficulty of knives and staves.
This is all because he recites the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. "Is it that magical?" you say. It is even more efficacious than that! All you have to do is sincerely
and faithfully recite the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. Sutra: "If yakshas and rakshashas enough to fill the three
thousand great thousand world system come to torment a person, if they hear
him call out the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, all those evil ghosts
will not even be able to stare at that person with their evil eyes, how much
the less harm him." Commentary: If yakshas and rakshashas enough to fill the three
thousand great thousand world system come to torment a person.
Yakshas are "speedy ghosts." There are flying yakshas,
space-traveling yakshas, and earth-bound yakshas. Yakshas
are extremely fast. They can run faster than rockets. Rakshashas eat
people's essence and energy. Both these types of ghosts specialize in harming people. The more you try
to bring forth the Bodhi resolve, the madder it makes them and the more they
try to torment you. They think of all kinds of ways to control you so you
can't cultivate. They cause you to retreat. You may bring forth the Bodhi
resolve and be cultivating with great vigor, and then they will come along
and say, "What are you cultivating for? Why do you study the Buddhadharma?
Don't do it. It's of no advantage." They can cause you to have doubts. They will bore into your mind, and
say, "Don't study the Buddhadharma. Go somewhere else, where you can be
free, where you can dance when you want to dance and listen to music when
you want to listen. The Buddhadharma is just 'don't do this, don't do that,
don't, don't, don't!' You can't see movies, can't drink, can't smoke. So
many things that you can't do! The more you study it, the more trouble you
will have." The yakshas and rakshashas cause you to think like
that. You may want to leave the home-life and be a monk, but these ghosts will
say, "That's too bitter. You have to work all day long. You never get enough
sleep, enough clothes to wear, or enough food to eat. You have to work your
head off, practically. Forget it! What use is that?" Someone else might want to be a Bhikshuni, but the yakshas and
rakshashas come along and say, "Get married. You'll have a husband to
keep you company and you can do whatever you want." That's just the work of
yakshas and rakshashas. They specialize in ruining your Bodhi
resolve, your mind of cultivation. If they hear him call out the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, all
those evil ghosts will not even be able to stare at that person with their
evil eyes, how much the less harm him. The yakshas and
rakshashas will come along to torment you. But as soon as you recite the
name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, you will emit light. This light will make
it impossible for them to open their eyes and look at you. If they can't
even open their eyes, how can they harm you? If you always recite the name
of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, you will receive help. This is guaranteed. Sutra: "If a person, whether guilty or not, who has been put in stocks or
bound with chains calls out the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, his
fetters will break apart and he will immediately be saved." Commentary: If a person, whether guilty or not, who has been put in stocks or
bound with chains calls out the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, his
fetters will break apart. A person gets arrested and locked up. Perhaps
he is guilty or perhaps it's a case of mistaken identity or a frame-up. In
any case, he is locked up. However, if he can recite "Na mwo Da Bei
Gwan Shr Yin Pu Sa," very sincerely, the locks will fall off. And he will
immediately be saved. He will be free. I have seen many such responses. At Nan Hwa Monastery, there was a monk called Ti Hwei. He was captured by
the Japanese and locked up in jail with handcuffs and chains. In jail, he
recited Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva's name all day long. Then one night, all of
a sudden, all the chains and handcuffs fell off. The door opened up by
itself, and he ran away. There are many, many other such incidents. And so I
know this is really true, not false. Sutra: "If thieves enough to fill the three thousand great thousand world
system infest a dangerous road on which a merchant chief in charge of costly
jewels is leading a group of merchants, but among the merchants there is
even a single person who says, 'Good men, do not be afraid! You should all
single-mindedly recite the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. This
Bodhisattva bestows fearlessness upon living beings. If you recite his name,
you shall surely be saved from these robbers,' and if upon hearing that, the
merchants all cry out together, 'Na mwo Gwan Shr Yin Pu Sa,' then
they will immediately be saved because they recited his name." Commentary: If thieves enough to fill the three thousand great thousand world
system infest a dangerous road. These are malicious and hateful robbers.
Because they have grudges against people from former lives, in this life
they become thieves and steal things from others. Suppose these thieves lie
await on a perilous road on which a merchant chief in charge of costly
jewels is leading a group of merchants. Naturally, the thieves are going
to want to steal their jewels. But if among the merchants there is
even a single person who says, "Good men, do not be afraid! Friends!
Brothers! Colleagues! You should all single-mindedly recite the name of
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. Use one mind, not two minds, to recite Gwan
Yin Bodhisattva's name. This Bodhisattva bestows fearlessness upon living
beings. If you recite his name, you shall surely be saved from these
robbers." And if upon hearing that, the merchants all cry out together, "Na
mwo Gwan Shr Yin Pu Sa"-Na mwo Bodhisattva Who Contemplates
the Sounds of the World-then they will immediately be saved from
their predicament because they recited his name. This Dharma-door is
especially efficacious. Everyone should believe in it. Don't have doubts. Sutra: "Inexhaustible Intention! The awesome spiritual power of the
Bodhisattva Mahasattva Gwan Shr Yin is as lofty and sublime as that!" Commentary: Shakyamuni Buddha, having explained the above doctrine, now calls out,
"Inexhaustible Intention! The awesome spiritual power of the Bodhisattva
Mahasattva Gwan Shr Yin is as lofty and sublime as that! The power of
his awesome virtue and spiritual penetrations is great, supreme, and
magnificent!" Mahasattvas are great Bodhisattvas among the Bodhisattvas. They are
seniors. By way of analogy, ordinary Bodhisattvas are like compact cars;
they can't carry too many people. Mahasattvas are like big vans that can
carry a lot of people. Sutra: "If living beings who have much sexual desire constantly and
reverently recite the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, they will be
separated from desire." Commentary: If living beings who have much sexual desire. Some people study
the Buddhadharma on one hand, and entertain lustful desire on the other. The
more they study the Dharma, the stronger their desire is. They think about
sex all day long, until their desire thoughts are like flowing water. This
is the worst of thoughts and the worst kind of behavior, a very bad sign.
What should they do? They don't have to get nervous or worry. They should
just constantly and reverently recite the name of Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva. It's not good enough just to recite it; you must also be
reverent. You should bow more to Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. Bowing to the Buddhas is just paying great reverence to the Buddhas. Most
people don't understand what bowing to the Buddhas means. Adherents to
externalist religions say it's just bowing to wooden idols. Blind people
speak blind-talk. They don't have eyes; they can't see the Buddhas' light,
and so they say it's idol worship. But bowing to the Buddhas represents the
reverence in our heart. To respect the Triple Jewel, we must certainly bow to the Buddhas. Take
care not to be arrogant and think, "I am great. I am greater than the
Buddhas. Why should I bow to them?" That's a mistake. If people always bow
and recite Gwan Yin Bodhisattva's name, they will be separated from
desire. It's gone! You say, "But I like sexual desire. What am I going to do without it?" If you like it, you don't have to recite Gwan Yin Bodhisattva's name.
That's all. It's simple enough. If you don't want your sexual desire, you
can get rid of it. If you want to keep it, you don't have to get rid of it.
Either way, it's up to you. Sutra: "If those who have much hatred constantly and reverently recite the
name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, they will be separated from hatred. "If those who are very stupid constantly and reverently recite the
name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, they will be separated from stupidity." Commentary: If there are those who have much hatred, they should recite
Gwan Yin Bodhisattva's name. Hatred manifests as overt anger. Anger is a
kind of affliction. Affliction is just ignorance. Hatred is like fire. It is said, "One spark of fire can burn up a forest of merit and
virtue." Therefore, there is an ancient saying that, The firewood gathered in a thousand days, Goes up in the fire of a single spark's blaze. You can gather firewood for a thousand days, a long time; but one little
match can burn it all up. This describes how ordinarily we may try to do
good and virtuous deeds. We may do this over a long period of time, but then
we get mad and the fire of ignorance rises. All that merit and virtue is
burned right off. If you have a big temper, you will produce ignorance
whenever you open your mouth. What kind of people like to get mad? Asuras! Everyone has come
down a particular path. Some have come down the Buddha path. Some have come
down the path of gods. Others have come down the path of humans, asuras,
animals, ghosts, or hell-beings. Those who have come down the Buddha path are, for the most part,
compassionate. Those who have come down the ghost path are, for the most
part, cheap and lowly. They never take a loss. They are really sneaky and
slimy-not reliable. Unreliable people are said to be ghostly. Those from the
path of humans have affinities with everyone. Those from the animal path are
insatiably greedy for everything. The more the better! Asuras like to
get angry. Those from the immortal path like things clear and light. So now we are talking about asuras. Have you noticed how there are
some people who are just miserable all the time? They are always on the
verge of "blowing their tops." They are just asuras. They have
asura-natures. Can they change? Yes. How? The Dharma Flower Sutra
tells us in detail. All you have to do is constantly and reverently
recite the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. This means to recite all
the time, without ever stopping. Recite constantly and be reverent by going
to temples and bowing to Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. You can't just bow today
and not tomorrow, or bow in the morning and not bow at night. If you have no
work to do, then spend your time bowing and reciting. Gradually, they
will be separated from hatred. Your temper will vanish. You won't know quite how it happened, but strangely enough your temper
will have disappeared. It's just that mysterious. You don't know about this,
but I have had personal experience, and I know. I used to have a terrible
temper. I used to hit and scold people. When I was very young, twelve or so,
I liked to fight with people. No matter how big a person was, he had to
listen to my orders or I would clobber him until he submitted. That's just
an asura-nature. Later, when I studied the Buddhadharma, I realized
that anger was wrong, and I changed. I always recited the name of Gwan Shr
Yin Bodhisattva. So now, sometimes even when my own disciples bully me, I
still don't get angry. My disciples may get mad at me, but I practice
patience and endure it. I know that eventually they will understand that
they are wrong. Before I used to get mad at people, and now, my disciples
get mad at me! "Which ones?" You ask. "You know who you are," I say. Before, I got mad at others; now others get mad at me. This is just
retribution. I have received these bad disciples who bully their good
teacher. But the good teacher doesn't get angry anymore. I don't know where
my temper went, but I am not going to look for it. If I find it again, it
will be even worse! If those who are very stupid. We have already discussed greed and
hatred. Now we will discuss stupidity. These are the three poisons. They
poison our Buddha-natures and put them to sleep. Why haven't we awakened
yet? Why is it that we live as if drunk and die in a dream? It's all because
of the three poisons. The primary form of greed is sexual desire. Sexual desire is extremely
harmful to people's natures. But most people think it's very enjoyable, and
so they engage in all kinds of impure conduct. Day by day, the original
Buddha-nature becomes covered with filth so that its light does not
manifest. This is all because of greed for sex. Sexual desire and hatred are the same thing. Now we are talking about
stupidity. What's that? Stupidity just means that you feel that you are not
stupid. That's stupid! A person may think he is intelligent and wise, but
then you ask him, "Where did you come from? Where are you going to in the
future?" and he can't answer. He doesn't know where he came from or where he
is going, and he says he is intelligent. He won't admit that he is stupid. In this world, everyone looks after the petty business of fame and
profit. People toil for fame and profit all day long. They hurt each other,
kill each other, and commit mayhem-all just for profit. If you put all the
people in the world together, how many would there be? Two. One who seeks
fame, and one who seeks profit. Fame and profit turn people entirely upside down. They don't wake up.
From birth to death, they fight and struggle. Some seek to get elected to
office. Others seek to get rich. Some run after the opposite sex or some
other kind of happiness. But when this happiness goes, at the time of death
they have no idea where they are going. And yet they still think they are
incredible geniuses with great wisdom! "I am the smartest. I have the most
wisdom. I was first in my class every year. I am ahead of everyone in
everything!" Actually, how is it? As long as you haven't recognized your own
original face, no matter how smart you are, it's a false intelligence.
People with genuine wisdom will not think that they are wise. "Then will they think they are stupid?" you ask. No, they won't think they are stupid or wise. They will feel they are
pretty much the same as everyone else. But in their thinking and attitudes,
they will be clear. They are clear about the fact that everything is like an
illusion; like a bubble, a shadow, a dew drop, or a flash of lightning.
Knowing that everything is like a dream, they will not be greedy for glory,
power, or wealth. Knowing that everything is an illusion, they will not be
greedy for sex, power, or profit. It's all impermanent. All of it. And so
the Vajra Sutra says, "All conditioned dharmas are like a dream, a
bubble, or a shadow." What are conditioned dharmas? They are all those things with marks, all
the things we perceive. All are like illusions, dreams, or bubbles. Would
you say a bubble on the ocean is real? If you say it's real, it will soon
pop and disappear. If you say it's false, there it is! Although it's there,
it has no real substance. A shadow is also false. It's like dew in the
morning. It's there, but as soon as the sun shines on it, it's gone. A
lightning flash appears for but a moment. If you can look upon everything as being like a dream, an illusion, a
bubble, a shadow, dew, or a lightning flash, then what attachments could
there be? None. Without attachments, you'll have genuine understanding. You
won't let your thinking wander as it will to the north, east, south, or
west. You will put down polluted thinking and involvement with the dust of
the world. Having put it all down, you couldn't not become a Buddha if you
tried! You would have wisdom whether you wanted it or not. You would
naturally be wise. When you don't have wisdom, you might think, "I'm pretty wise." But once
you have true wisdom, you will think, "Oh, originally, this was mine all the
time. It did not come from the outside." At that time you won't be arrogant.
You won't think, "See me? I'm the smartest one here. I'm the prettiest one
here. I'm the most talented, incredible, unusual person here." If you think
like that, you are attached to appearances. "Appearances" just means your stinking skin-bag-the dream, illusion,
bubble, shadow, dew drop, and lightning flash. All day long you put on your
nice clothes, eat your fancy food, live in your fine house, and enjoy your
amusements. You may think these are great, but when the time comes to die,
they aren't going to help you out in the least. Besides, in order to satisfy their stinking skin-bags, people are busy
all day long smoking, drinking, stuffing themselves with food, and trying to
fill that bottomless pit. You can't fill a bottomless pit: it all keeps
leaking right out! The more it leaks, the more you fill it; the more you
fill it, the more it leaks. It certainly keeps you busy. Why do I eat one meal a day? Because three meals a day are just too much
trouble! Most people think that eating fine food is a real pleasure; I think
it's a lot of trouble. If you over-eat, your stomach hurts. If you don't eat
enough, your greed isn't satisfied. You think, "That was good. I'd like to
have a little bit more!" If you don't eat such good food, you won't be so
greedy; and it's a lot easier for your stomach. It's just a lot of trouble and it all comes about because of stupidity.
Being stupid, one seeks after pleasure, wealth, enjoyment, and fun with the
opposite sex; it's all upside down. You can be as greedy as you want, and
then what? When the time comes, you are still going to die. When the time
comes to die, you won't have control over the situation at all. Isn't that
stupid? Now, being so stupid, what do we do? Rely upon the method given in the
Dharma Flower Sutra. If people constantly and reverently recite the
name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, they will be separated from stupidity.
Recite the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, and your stupidity will
disappear as your wisdom comes forth. If you know that you are stupid, you have recognized yourself. You have
to have some wisdom to be able to realize that you are stupid. People
without wisdom won't have any idea that they are stupid. The farther they
run, the farther off they get. If it's not bad enough being stupid, they
have to double it by thinking they're intelligent! How do we get rid of our stupidity? We must constantly and reverently
recite the name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva. This is the most wonderful and
efficacious method. It's a money-back guarantee, wonderful beyond words. Speaking of stupidity and wisdom, what is stupidity? What is wisdom? I'll
tell you something you won't believe. Stupidity is wisdom; wisdom is
stupidity! Why do I say this? Take a look at the Heart Sutra: "Form does not differ from
emptiness; emptiness does not differ from form. Form itself is emptiness;
emptiness itself is form." True form comes from true emptiness. True emptiness comes from true form.
They are two and yet not two. If you know how to use it, it's wisdom; if you
can't use it, it's stupidity. Stupidity and wisdom are not two. It just
depends on whether or not you can use it. If you can use it, stupidity turns
to wisdom; if you can't use it, wisdom turns to stupidity. They are two and
yet not two. If you obtain genuine wisdom, then you will know, "Oh,
originally it was like this," and you won't be upside down. Sutra: "Inexhaustible Intention, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva has great awesome
spiritual powers such as these and confers great benefits. Therefore living
beings should always be mindful of him." Commentary: Shakyamuni Buddha calls out, "Inexhaustible Intention, Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva has great awesome spiritual powers such as these. He is able
to rescue us from the seven difficulties and three poisons, and he
confers great benefits." There are many, many ways in which he benefits
living beings with his spiritual powers. Therefore living beings should
always be mindful of him. Living beings should always keep his name in
mind. The text makes it very clear here. It's not good enough just to recite
with your mouth. You must keep his name in your mind. Your mouth doesn't
necessarily have to recite, but you must keep his name in your thoughts. Sutra: "If women who seek sons bow and make offerings to Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva, they will give birth to blessed, virtuous, and wise sons. If
they seek daughters, they will give birth to upright and handsome daughters
who have planted the roots of virtue in previous lives and who are regarded
and respected by all." Commentary: If women who seek sons bow and make offerings of fruits, lamps,
flowers, and so forth to Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, they will give birth
to blessed, virtuous, and wise sons. If they seek sons, they will have
sons. If they seek daughters, they will give birth to upright and
handsome daughters. Their noses will look like noses, their eyes will
look like eyes, their ears will look like ears, and their lips will look
like lips. "Well, could somebody have eyes that don't look like eyes?" you ask. Some people have three-cornered eyes. In China we say these eyes are Jang
Shr Gwei eyes. Jang Shr Gwei was a eunuch in the Tang dynasty in China. He
had a very bad character and cheated everyone, and he had three-cornered
eyes. Most people's eyes just go straight across, but his were triangular.
So you should remember, if you become friends with such people, you will
have a hard time. Jang Shr Gwei eyes make a person very hard to get along
with. "Can a nose not look like a nose?" you ask. Sometimes people have a nose that sticks in instead of out, or it looks
as if someone bit it off. Some people's ears look like a little mouse's
ears, really tiny. Some have ears as long as a rabbit's. Is that
good-looking? If one's ears hang down like the Buddha's, one can be said to
have good ears. But if one's ears are long in the other direction-that is,
they stick way up in the air-then they don't even look like ears, except
maybe rabbit ears. Some people's lips don't look like lips. Some people have
their noses and mouths stuck right together with their ears. They don't even
look human. Dogs aren't even that ugly and weird. Some people like dogs, and
they want to look like dogs, too. But these people with their noses, mouths,
and ears all grown together don't even look as good as dogs. If a daughter
looked like that, no one would like it, because she wouldn't be proper and
attractive. In general, women who are deformed have a hard time getting married, or
even getting a boyfriend. Everyone is afraid of them. However, upright and
handsome daughters are those who have planted the roots of virtue in
previous lives. Why are they upright and beautiful? Beautiful people in
their former lives made offerings of flowers and other things to the Buddhas. During the summer session, one of my disciples said, "No wonder all the
women are making offerings of flowers to the Buddhas. They want to be
beautiful!" These attractive daughters under discussion are ones
who are regarded and respected by all. Everyone is fond of them. Sutra: "Inexhaustible Intention! Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva has powers such as
these. If there are living beings who reverently bow to Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva, they will be blessed and their efforts will not be in vain." Commentary: Having talked about the two kinds of seeking-seeking for a son and
seeking for a daughter-and also having talked about the seven kinds of
difficulties and the three poisons, the Buddha now calls out,
"Inexhaustible Intention! Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva has powers such as these-as
just described above. If there are living beings who reverently bow to
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, they will be blessed and their efforts will not be
in vain." If they can very respectfully pay homage to Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva, their blessed retribution will certainly follow; it won't pass
in vain. It will certainly be there. Sutra: "Therefore living beings should all receive and uphold the name of
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva." Commentary: Therefore living beings should all receive and uphold the name of Gwan
Shr Yin Bodhisattva. "Receive and uphold" means to recite, to keep the
name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva always in mind. If you can recite the name
of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, there is inconceivable power there. Sutra: "Inexhaustible Intention! If a person were to receive and uphold the
names of Bodhisattvas in number as the grains of sand in sixty-two kotis
of Ganges Rivers, and in addition were to exhaustively make offerings to
them of food, drink, clothing, bedding, and medicine, what do you
think-would that good man or good woman's merit and virtue be great or not?" Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva replied, "Very great, World
Honored One." The Buddha said, "If another person were to receive and uphold the
name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva and bow and make offerings but once, that
person's blessings would be equal to and not different from the other
person's. They could not be exhausted in hundreds of thousands of myriads of
kotis of eons." Commentary: "Inexhaustible Intention! If a person were to receive and uphold the
names of Bodhisattvas in number as the grains of sand in sixty-two kotis
of Ganges Rivers. Receive and uphold means to recite the name not of
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, but of other Bodhisattvas, an incredible number of
them. And not only that, if the person in addition were to
exhaustively make offerings to them of food, drink, clothing, bedding, and
medicine, what do you think? Suppose this person throughout his entire
life presents those four kinds of offerings to the Triple Jewel. Would
that good man or good woman's merit and virtue be great or not?" Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva replied, "Very great, World
Honored One." The Buddha said, "If another person were to receive and uphold the
name of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva and bow and make offerings but once-he
doesn't have to make offerings for his entire life, he only has to do it
once, just for a moment-then that person's blessings would be equal to
and not different from the other person's. His blessings would not be
different from those gained by the first person who made offerings to
Bodhisattvas as many as sands of the Ganges Rivers. They could not be
exhausted in hundreds of thousands of myriads of kotis of eons." Sutra: "Inexhaustible Intention, one who receives and upholds the name of
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva obtains the benefit of blessings and virtues as
limitless and boundless as those." Commentary: "Inexhaustible Intention," Shakyamuni Buddha continues, "one
who receives and upholds and recites the name of Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva obtains the benefit of blessings and virtues as limitless and
boundless as those-countless and measureless." Sutra: Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva said to the Buddha, "World Honored
One, how does Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva roam through this Saha World? How
does he speak the Dharma for living beings? How does he carry out this work
with the power of expedients?" Commentary: Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva said to the Buddha, "World Honored
One, how does Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva roam through this Saha World?"
Saha is a Sanskrit word. It means "worthy of being endured." We say
"worthy" because although this world is filled with suffering, living beings
find it worthy of being endured. It's not easy to bear this pain. There is
so much suffering in the Saha World. How can Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva teach
and transform living beings here? How does he speak the Dharma for living
beings? How does he carry out this work with the power of expedients? Sutra: The Buddha told Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva, "Good Man, if
living beings in this land must be saved by means of someone in the body of
a Buddha, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva will manifest in the body of a Buddha and
speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a Pratyekabuddha, he
will manifest in the body of a Pratyekabuddha and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a Hearer, he will
manifest in the body of a Hearer and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of the Brahma King, he
will manifest in the body of the Brahma King and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of Shakra, he will
manifest in the body of Shakra and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of the God of
Self-Mastery, he will manifest in the body of the God of Self-Mastery and
speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of the Great God of
Self-Mastery, he will manifest in the body of the Great God of Self-Mastery
and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a great heavenly
general, he will manifest in the body of a great heavenly general and speak
Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of Vaishravana, he will
manifest in the body of Vaishravana and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a minor king, he will
manifest in the body of a minor king and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of an Elder, he will
manifest in the body of an Elder and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a layman, he will
manifest in the body of a layman and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a minister of state,
he will manifest in the body of a minister of state and speak Dharma for
them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a Brahman, he will
manifest in the body of a Brahman and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a Bhikshu, Bhikshuni,
Upasaka, or Upasika, he will manifest in the body of a Bhikshu, Bhikshuni,
Upasaka, or Upasika and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of the wife of an Elder,
of a layman, of a minister of state, or of a Brahman, he will manifest in a
wife's body and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a pure youth or a
pure maiden, he will manifest in the body of a pure youth or pure maiden and
speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a god, dragon,
yaksha, gandharva, asura, garuda, kinnara,
mahoraga, human, or nonhuman, and so forth, he will manifest in such
a body and speak Dharma for them. "If they must be saved by someone in the body of a Vajra-wielding
spirit, he will manifest in the body of a Vajra-wielding spirit and speak
Dharma for them." Commentary: The Buddha told Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva, "Good Man, if
living beings in this land-in the three thousand great thousand world
system-must be saved by means of someone in the body of a Buddha, Gwan
Shr Yin Bodhisattva will manifest in the body of a Buddha and speak Dharma
for them." "But Gwan Shr Yin is a Bodhisattva; he isn't a Buddha. How can he
manifest as a Buddha? Isn't that just being an impostor?" you ask. No, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva became a Buddha limitless eons ago. His
Buddha name was Proper Dharma Brightness Thus Come One. After becoming a
Buddha, he did not forget about living beings. He came back to the world
again, hiding the great and manifesting the small. He hid away the Buddha
body, and manifested a Bodhisattva body. Arhats may go from the small to the great, but Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva
went from the great, from the Buddha position, back to the Bodhisattva
position. This is called "putting the boat of compassion" in reverse in
order to save living beings. This is what people called "putting the car in
reverse." Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva went backwards from Buddhahood into
Bodhisattvahood in order to guide living beings, and he hid the great and
manifested the small. If they must be saved by someone in the body of a Pratyekabuddha, he
will manifest in the body of a Pratyekabuddha and speak Dharma for them.
Pratyekabuddhas are Those Enlightened by Conditions. When the Buddha is in
the world, they are called Those Enlightened by Conditions. When no Buddha
is in the world, they are called Solitarily Enlightened Ones. When the Buddha is in the world, they cultivate the Twelve Causes and
Conditions and awaken to the Way, and they realize that everything is
suffering, impermanent, empty, and without self. Knowing this, they put
everything down and gain enlightenment. When no Buddha is in the world, they also cultivate the Twelve Causes and
Conditions. In the spring they watch the white flowers bloom. In the autumn
they watch the yellow leaves fall. Observing the unceasing changes of
nature, they wake up to the four marks of conditioned existence-production,
dwelling, decay, and emptiness; all of which are impermanent-and they gain
enlightenment. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva observes the causal conditions of living beings.
He has the Penetration of the Heavenly Eye and the Penetration of the
Heavenly Ear. With the Heavenly Eye he sees afar, and with the Heavenly Ear
he hears afar. If he sees a living being who should be saved by a
Pratyekabuddha, he manifests as a Pratyekabuddha and speaks the Dharma of
the Twelve Causes and Conditions for them. "Don't you know where your ignorance comes from? It's from a single
thought of nonenlightenment. Your one thought of nonenlightenment produced
ignorance in the Treasury of the Thus Come One. With ignorance, there was
activity, …." He speaks the Dharma to that living being. Having heard the Dharma, this potential Pratyekabuddha quickly gets
enlightened. Then Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva causes him to bring forth the
Bodhisattva resolve and go from the small toward the great. If they must be saved by someone in the body of a Hearer, he will
manifest in the body of a Hearer and speak Dharma for them. What are
Hearers? They are Arhats. Those Enlightened by Conditions and Hearers
together make up the Two Vehicles. Hearers are those who awakened to the Way
when they heard the sound of the Buddha's voice as he taught the Four Holy
Truths. The Four Holy Truths are suffering, accumulation, extinction, and
the Way. Shakyamuni Buddha turned the Dharma-wheel of the Four Truths three times
for the Five Bhikshus. After he gained enlightenment, the Buddha went to the
Deer Park to speak the Dharma for the Five Bhikshus, including
Ajnatakaundinya. He spoke the Four Truths in three ways. The first turning is called the Demonstration Turning. He said, (1) "This is suffering. It oppresses the nature. It is unbearable." There are three kinds of suffering: the suffering of suffering; the
suffering of decay; and the suffering of process. There are also eight kinds of suffering: birth; old age; sickness; death;
being separated from what you love; being joined to what you hate; not
getting what you want; and the raging blaze of the five skandhas. Suffering bears down on people to the point that they never know a
moment's peace. It pushes people so hard that they can't breathe. The
problem of suffering is that of oppression. (2) "This is accumulation. Its nature is seduction." Accumulation refers
to the amassing of afflictions. Where does affliction come from? It comes
from suffering. One suffers to the point that one can't stand it, and then
one gets angry. (3) "This is extinction. Its nature is that it can be certified to." One
can be certified to the Bliss of Still Extinction, to the wonderful fruit of
Nirvana. (4) "This is the Way. Its nature is that it can be cultivated." Everyone
can cultivate the Way. There is not a single person who is not qualified.
Everyone can be certified to the principle-substance of Nirvana. The second turning of the Four Truths is the Exhortation Turning: 1. This is suffering. I already know it. 2. This is accumulation. I have already cut it off. 3. This is extinction. I have already been certified to it. 4. This is the Way. I have already cultivated it. Shakyamuni Buddha then turned the third turning of the Wheel of Four
Truths, the Certification Turning. He said, 1. This is suffering. You should know it. 2. This is accumulation. You should cut it off. 3. This is extinction. You should certify to it. 4. This is the Way. You should walk it. He turned the Dharma-wheel of the Four Truths three times. When the Five
Bhikshus heard it, they got enlightened. And since they were awakened by the
Buddha's sound, they are called Hearers. The Hearers and Those Enlightened by Conditions are called the Two
Vehicles. Those of the Two Vehicles are just the Small Vehicle. What's small
about them? What's great about the Great Vehicle? Basically, nothing is small and nothing is great. Great and small are
based on the discriminating thoughts of living beings. Some minds are small,
and some are great. Originally, the mind extends to the ends of space and
the Dharma Realm. However, each one of us has not been able to use the
original Thus Come One's Storehouse Nature. Some can use a little part of
it. Others can use a little more. Some can use this entire nature. Those who
can use this entire nature are the Buddhas. They have returned to the root
and gone back to the source. Those who use a large part of it are the
Bodhisattvas. Bodhisattvas have great wisdom, and so they can utilize more
of the treasures of their original home. Those of the Small Vehicle know
less, use less, and so are called the Small Vehicle. If Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva meets a living being with the potential of a
Hearer, he manifests in the body of a Hearer and speaks the Dharma to save
him. If they must be saved by someone in the body of the Brahma King, he
will manifest in the body of the Brahma King and speak Dharma for them.
The Brahma King is the king in the Great Brahma Heaven. Brahma means pure.
He's very independent and free up there. If they must be saved by someone in the body of Shakra, he will
manifest in the body of Shakra and speak Dharma for them. In the
Amitabha Sutra, Shakra is referred to as Shakra Devanam Indrah. There
are actually many of them. Right now, we know about the Heaven of the
Thirty-three here in our world, where our Lord Shakra resides. Most people
call him God. The twenty-seventh line of the Shurangama Mantra is, "Na mwo yin two
la ye." That's Shakra. He is known and worshipped as
Almighty God by most people. This heavenly lord possesses much authority and
spiritual penetrations. However, he is still just a resident of heaven, and
his life will come to an end. Shakra rules all the gods up there and takes
care of business in heaven. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva will use the body of Shakra to save living
beings who can be crossed over in that way. He speaks the Dharma to them in
the body of Shakra. It's easy to cross over living beings if you are the same as they are.
They are more likely to accept your teaching. It's easy to be friends with
someone in your own line of work. Business people are friends with business
people, students with students, Buddhists with Buddhists, gamblers with
gamblers, and robbers with robbers. People seek out their own kind. Those of
the same kind are called "friends." Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva will manifest
as the same as they are to teach and transform them. When someone believes in Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva and makes offerings,
and when one relies on the Bodhisattva's Dharma to cultivate, then that
person turns into Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, and Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva has just gained a transformation body. We say he has
thousands of hundreds of kotis of transformation bodies. You can
imitate him and then become a transformation body of his. There are no fixed Dharmas. You shouldn't be attached to things being a
certain way. If you want things to be a certain way, can you fix it so for
certain you won't die? If you can definitely not die, then you can have
things fixed as you like them. But if you can't and you are sure to die,
then nothing is fixed. Therefore, there are no fixed dharmas in the
Buddhadharma. There can be millions of transformation bodies. If a hundred people
imitate you, they are your hundred transformation bodies. If a thousand
people study with you, then you have a thousand transformation bodies. If
ten thousand people study with you, learn the doctrines you teach them, and
then pass them on to others, who in turn accept and cultivate them, then you
have ten thousand transformation bodies. It's not that hard to have a million transformation bodies. All you have
to do is resolve to propagate the Buddhadharma, and then you will gain
limitless transformation bodies. That's speaking of it from the viewpoint of specifics. To speak of it
from the viewpoint of principle, if you become a Buddha, you can really
transform into a million bodies. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva can manifest in
the body of Shakra to speak the Dharma. If they must be saved by someone in the body of the God of
Self-Mastery, he will manifest in the body of the God of Self-Mastery and
speak Dharma for them. The God of Self-Mastery refers to the heavenly
demons and adherents to externalist ways. For example, some religions claim
they alone are the highest, and they deny the existence of the Buddha, the
Dharma, and the Sangha. Why? Because they are too happy and independent.
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva doesn't blame them. When he sees their conditions
are ripe, he manifests in the body of the God of Self-Mastery and speaks the
Buddhadharma to gather them in. If they must be saved by someone in the body of a great heavenly
general, he will manifest in the body of a great heavenly general and speak
Dharma for them. There are two ways to explain this. You could say this was a spirit in
the heavens who is a great general. Another way is to say that this refers
to the gods who have just exhausted their heavenly blessings and are about
to fall among human beings to become great generals. Generals may have a lot of authority, but they may not understand the
Buddhadharma. In that case, they may create a lot of karma and must undergo
various kinds of retribution. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva observes the causes
and conditions and, seeing how they can be saved, manifests as a great
general and speaks the Dharma to them. They can then return from confusion
and go toward enlightenment, put down all worldly happiness to seek
transcendental, inexhaustible bliss. If they must be saved by someone in the body of Vaishravana, he will
manifest in the body of Vaishravana and speak Dharma for them.
Vaishravana is one of the Four Heavenly Kings. He resides in the north in
Uttarakuru, and his name means "Much Learning." If they must be saved by someone in the body of a minor king, he will
manifest in the body of a minor king and speak Dharma for them. A minor
king rules over only one country. If they must be saved by someone in the body of an Elder, he will
manifest in the body of an Elder and speak Dharma for them. The Elders
are those with noble names who are mature in years. They have Way-virtue and
reputation. People above them like them and people below them respect them. Elders don't necessarily have to be old; however, they are usually
wealthy and honored and have Way-virtue and wisdom. Elders are very
fair-minded and treat everyone with the same kindness. They like to help
people. Because they like to help people, they become known as Elders. If someone should be saved by the body of an Elder, Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva will appear as a great wealthy Elder and speak the Dharma for
that person. In the Great Compassion Mantra, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva
appears as a great, awesome-looking Elder with a long beard. If they must be saved by someone in the body of a layman, he will
manifest in the body of a layman and speak Dharma for them. What is a
layman? A layman is a person who lives at home and believes in the
Buddhadharma. He keeps the Five Precepts and practices the Ten Good Deeds. What are the Five Precepts? They are: no killing, no stealing, no
sexual misconduct, no lying, and no taking of intoxicants. Now many of you
have taken the Five Precepts and are laypeople. The Ten Good Deeds are the opposite of the Ten Evils. Of the Ten Evils,
there are three with the body: killing, stealing, and sexual misconduct;
three with the mind: greed, hatred, and stupidity; and four with the mouth:
frivolous speech, false speech, abusive speech, and backbiting. Frivolous speech means that one talks improperly. Perhaps one talks about
women or men, pouring out a lot of irresponsible, deviant, and improper
talk. False speech is lying. Abusive speech means scolding and slandering
people. Backbiting is when one person has two tongues! How can this happen?
He talks one way to one person. He talks another way to another person. He
gossips back and forth and creates schisms among people. Altogether these are Ten Evils. If you refrain from the Ten Evils, you
are practicing the Ten Good Deeds: not killing, not stealing, and not
committing sexual misconduct; not being greedy, not being hateful, and not
being stupid; not speaking in a frivolous manner, and not indulging in
abusive speech, false speech, or backbiting. Those are the Ten Good Deeds. Whereas left-home people have the responsibility to propagate the
Buddhadharma, laypeople have the responsibility to protect the Buddhadharma
and the Triple Jewel. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, seeing living beings who should be saved by the
body of a layman, will manifest in a layman's body and speak Dharma for
them. If they must be saved by someone in the body of a minister of state,
he will manifest in the body of a minister of state and speak Dharma for
them. If they must be saved by someone in the body of a Brahman, he will
manifest in the body of a Brahman and speak Dharma for them. Brahmans
are a caste in India. They practice pure conduct. If they must be saved by someone in the body of a Bhikshu, Bhikshuni,
Upasaka, or Upasika, he will manifest in the body of a Bhikshu, Bhikshuni,
Upasaka, or Upasika and speak Dharma for them. A Bhikshu is a man who
has left the home-life. "Bhikshu" is a Sanskrit word. It has three meanings:
mendicant, frightener of Mara, and destroyer of evil. A Bhikshuni is a woman
who has left the home-life, and the same three meanings apply. A Upasaka is a layman. Upasaka means "close in work." Upasakas
work very closely with the Triple Jewel, always bowing to the Buddha and
listening to the Dharma. An Upasika is a laywoman who is close to the Triple
Jewel. Upasakas and Upasikas serve and protect the Triple Jewel. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva will manifest in any one of these four kinds of
bodies to save these people, speaking Dharma for them. If they must be saved by someone in the body of the wife of an Elder,
of a layman, of a minister of state, or of a Brahman, he will manifest in a
wife's body and speak Dharma for them. Gwan Yin Bodhisattva will
manifest in the body of a woman and speak Dharma. If they must be saved by someone in the body of a pure youth or pure
maiden, he will manifest in the body of a pure youth or a pure maiden and
speak Dharma for them. "Must" here means that the causes and conditions
are such that as a young boy or girl, this living being can understand the
Buddhadharma and cultivate the Way. For example, Wei Two Bodhisattva vowed
that in every life he would manifest in the body of a pure youth. The Dragon
Girl also made a vow to manifest in every life as a pure maiden and never
marry. "Youth" here means that they are still innocent and intact. Once one has
sexual contact with the opposite sex, one's body is no longer "complete." In
China they call this "ruining the body." Before one has sexual intercourse,
one is a virgin. In Chinese martial arts, there is a practice called "virgin skill." When
this practice is accomplished, knives or guns cannot harm one. Within, they
smelt their energy, which hasn't been ruined by intercourse, and they reach
a level of skill whereby even knives or guns cannot harm them. Outwardly,
they smelt their muscles, sinews, skin, and bones. One of my disciples took refuge with me for the sole purpose of studying
this skill. I taught him to meditate first, and he did. He had some Chan
samadhi, but then he started looking into Taoism. He learned how to send
a small child out the top of his head, but I don't know how far the small
child could go. Lately, he hasn't been practicing. He said his mother wants
him to go back to Hong Kong to get married. He has never even seen the girl
before, but the marriage has already been arranged with the government. I
told him, "Okay, you go and get married. But when you come back, you aren't
going to be able to study the virgin skill." He laughed! In Buddhism, young boys and young girls are said to have clean bodies.
Young boys belong to the trigram chyan, which is yang. Young girls
belong to the trigram kun, which is yin. One is pure yang and one is
pure yin. This is a very pure state, without defilement. It's possible for
one to cultivate to success very quickly. If young children can meditate,
they can quickly gain the Penetration of the Heavenly Eye and open their
Five Eyes. To "enter the Way as a virgin" is most valuable. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva observes the causes and conditions, and if he
sees someone who is to be crossed over by means of the body of a pure youth
or pure maiden, he will manifest in such a body to speak Dharma for them. He
will cause them to bring forth the Bodhi resolve, and quickly accomplish the
Buddha Way. If they must be saved by someone in the body of a god, dragon,
yaksha, gandharva, asura, garuda, kinnara,
mahoraga, human, or nonhuman, and so forth, he will manifest in such
a body and speak Dharma for them. There are many kinds of dragons. There
are dragons in the heavens, dragons in the seas, and hidden dragons.
Heavenly dragons are Dharma protectors in the heavens. Sea dragons live in
the dragon palace and are the leaders among all the fish and marine life.
There are also dragons who are in charge of making rain. There are dragons
in charge of guarding treasuries of jewels that are buried in the earth. In
the ancient days, there were many, many dragons. Nowadays people don't see
them, so they think they don't exist. Actually, there are many of them. When the Great Master Sixth Patriarch was at Nan Hwa Monastery, there was
a poisonous dragon who used to spit poisonous fog. This fog made people
sick, and some even died from it. The present day Chan Hall at Nan Hwa
Monastery was built over what used to be the pool of this poisonous dragon.
The surface area of the pool was about (?) . Nobody knew how deep it
was. This dragon was not a good dragon; it was poisonous and hurt people. The
left-home people at Nan Hwa Monastery all got sick from it. One time, it
manifested spiritual penetrations for the Sixth Patriarch and appeared in a
body so big that it filled up the entire pool. When the Sixth Patriarch saw
this, he laughed. "Hah!" he said, "You can manifest in a large body, but I
bet you can't manifest in a small body! You're not that talented." Hearing this challenge, the dragon suddenly hid away its large body and
manifested in a small body, about one foot long, skipping on top of the
water. The Sixth Patriarch said, "Oh, you do have some talent. You can be big
and small, but I bet you can't jump into my bowl here!" When the dragon heard this, it jumped right into the Sixth Patriarch's
bowl. "You got in the bowl, but you won't get out!" said the Sixth
Patriarch. The dragon tried every trick it had, but it couldn't jump out of the
bowl. What a dirty trick! The Sixth Patriarch said, "Don't be so feisty! How did you turn into a
poisonous dragon? In former lives, you cultivated. You had good roots. You
heard the Buddhadharma, but your hatred was too heavy and your temper too
big. This is called 'being quick with the vehicle but slow with the
precepts.' You investigated the Buddhadharma very thoroughly, but you didn't
keep the precepts, and so you have fallen into the body of a dragon. You
shouldn't think that you are so talented just because you can be big or
small. Here you are in my bowl, and you can't get out." Hearing this, the dragon was subdued. The Sixth Patriarch then spoke
Dharma for it. When it understood the Dharma, it cast off its dragon body.
Its little skeleton was preserved at Nan Hwa Monastery for a long time, but
then got lost during the warfare in that area. So that's how the Sixth
Patriarch subdued the poisonous dragon. During the Tang Dynasty there was a minister by the name of Wei Dzeng.
Although he was an official in the human realm, he was also able to go up
into the heavens to be a heavenly official. At that time there was a dragon
whom everyone called "Little White Dragon." The people asked the dragon to
please allow 1.3 inches of rain to fall, but it sent down 1.3 feet of rain,
and the crops were totally flooded. This was a violation of the heavenly
laws, so they called on Wei Dzeng to slay Little White Dragon. Little White Dragon knew that Wei Dzeng was after it, and so it appeared
in a dream to the Tang Emperor Tai-Dzung, and said, "You are a dragon, and I
am also a dragon. You should save me." The Emperor said, "Since we are both dragons, brother, I will certainly
help you out. How can I save you?" The dragon said, "I made a mistake with the rain, and I let too much
fall. Tomorrow I am due to receive my retribution and be killed by your
Minister Wei Dzeng." "Well, that's easy enough to take care of," said the Emperor. "He is my
Minister. I'll just tell him not to kill you. Don't worry." The next day the Emperor called Wei Dzeng in for a game of chess,
thinking that if Wei Dzeng was occupied playing chess, he would not be able
to kill the dragon. They began their game, and around eleven o'clock
Wei-Dzeng fell asleep right in the middle of the game. The Emperor was
delighted with this, because now he certainly couldn't kill the dragon. However, who could have guessed that when Wei Dzeng was asleep, his
spirit left him, went up to the heaven, grabbed his heavenly sword and
killed the dragon! When the spirit came back, Wei Dzeng woke up, and they
continued their chess game. Soon it was past noon, the time after which the dragon would be safe. The
Emperor was very happy thinking he had saved his brother and probably
created great merit and virtue for himself. Who would have guessed that on
that very night, Little White Dragon would return to the Emperor, demanding
the Emperor's life! "You said you were my brother and you would save me. Why
didn't you save me? Your Minister killed me and now I want your life! It's
just as if you killed me yourself." When the Emperor woke up, he was petrified. He told Syu Mau Gung about
it, and Syu Mau Gung said, "It's not important. There are two people who can
stand up to the dragon. Who are they? They are Chin Chyung, a yellow-faced
Heavenly General, and Jing De, a black-faced Heavenly General. If you can
get these two to watch the back door, Little White Dragon won't dare come
in." The Emperor then ordered the two of them to stand guard at the door, and
sure enough, Little White Dragon didn't show up that night. However, the two
Great Generals couldn't watch the door at night forever; it was too
exhausting. So pictures of them were painted and pasted outside the back
door, and the dragon stayed away. At New Year's, Chinese people used to put
up their pictures beside the doors to keep the demons and ghosts away. Dragons became dragons because they were "quick with the vehicle and slow
with the precepts." They cultivated and were very intelligent. They mastered
the Buddhadharma right away. But they did not keep the precepts. Because
they were quick with the vehicle, they have spiritual powers and can
transform themselves. But because they did not keep the precepts, they have
fallen into the bodies of animals. Dragons are animals, you know. Yakshas are speedy ghosts. They can run faster than rockets. Gandharvas are music spirits. They like to sniff incense and make
music. When the Jade Emperor wishes to hear music, he burns some chye-lan
incense or chandana incense and all the gandharvas gather to
make music. Asuras are the ugly ones who love to fight. One of my disciples
knows his dog is an asura. Many dogs are asuras. Horses can be
asuras, too. The wild horses, or mavericks, who like to make trouble
in the herd are asuras. Bulls are asuras out front. Look at the horns on their heads, put
there just to fight! Bulls are asuras who used to wear iron helmets.
When they get reborn as animals, they remembered they had those weapons on
their heads, and so they end up with two horns. Chickens and roosters can
also be asuras. The roosters are always fighting with each other. Some insects, such as crickets, who fight with each other to death are
asuras. During the Sung dynasty, it was very popular to stage cricket
fights. People would bet on them. Any other animals who like to fight-such
as snakes, mice, cats, and so forth-are asuras. Asura is a Sanskrit word and means "ugly." They are hideous. Their
lips are as big as a pig's. Their noses are as long as an elephant's. They
have eyes like oxen and little ears like mice. They are ugly. Perhaps they
have a person's body and a pig's head, or a person's body and an ox's head,
or a horse's head, or a tiger's head. But, while the male asuras are
very ugly, the female asuras are very beautiful. As I have told you many times before, the asura king Vemachitrin
had a beautiful daughter named Shachi to whom the Jade Emperor became
engaged. Why did he want to marry her? The Jade Emperor still has a body
with thoughts of desire. Because he has not severed thoughts of sexual
desire, he likes beautiful women. One day, catching sight of the beautiful
asura girl, he became enamored of her and asked the asura king
for his daughter's hand in marriage. The asura king thought, "The
Jade Emperor has got a lot of power. I had best not cross him." After they were married, the Jade Emperor liked to listen to an immortal
speak Dharma. Because he went to the lectures every day, the asura
girl soon grew suspicious. "He goes out every day and never gets home until
late at night. Most likely he's out playing around with other women." Finally, she confronted him, "Just where do you go every day? You
wouldn't be conducting some improper business on the side, would you?" "No," said the Jade Emperor. "I go to the lectures on the Sutras every
day, and that's why I'm always home late. You shouldn't be suspicious." The asura girl, not believing he was going to the Sutra lectures,
decided he must certainly be up to no good. She had a certain amount of
spiritual power and was able to make herself invisible. She could be
standing in one spot, and ordinary people with mortal eyes, or even the Jade
Emperor with his heavenly eyes, couldn't see her. So one day when, as usual, the Jade Emperor got in his chariot and headed
for the lecture, the asura girl made herself invisible and rode
along. Upon arriving, the Jade Emperor got out of the chariot and so did the
asura girl. Then, she materialized. "What are you doing here?" asked the Jade Emperor in surprise. "What are you doing here?" she snorted, looking around at
the beautiful goddesses in the assembly. "I've come to listen to the Sutra lectures," he said. "Well, so have I," she countered. Now, the Jade Emperor is still a common mortal; he's not a certified sage
by any means, and so he sometimes gets afflicted. This time he picked up his
flower whip and lashed the asura girl. The asura girl was
furious and went directly to her father. Previously, when the Jade Emperor was about to be married, he had invited
the asura king to a banquet. As a gesture of respect to his new
father-in-law, he sent out his generals and troops to welcome him. However,
the asura king was suspicious of the welcoming party. He felt
intimidated and was displeased at the Jade Emperor's show of power. Now his
daughter returned with the report that the Jade Emperor was not following
the rules at all. "Every day he goes out with other women," the asura girl said.
"And today, when I tried to talk to him about it, he struck me!" At this, the asura king became enraged. "Jade Emperor," he
stormed, "this means war! We're going to fight to the finish," and he
mobilized the asura troops against the Jade Emperor. Strangely enough, the Jade Emperor lost battle after battle and could
find no way to overcome the asura king. Finally, he had no recourse
but to ask the Buddha for help. The Buddha told him to instruct his troops
all to recite "Maha prajna paramita!" As they went into battle, they
recited the phrase-"Maha prajna paramita!"-the asuras lost
battle after battle until they had retreated as far as they could and were
backed up into a lotus root. Why was the asura king unable to withstand the "Maha prajna
paramita?" It's very simple: Before the Jade Emperor's troops recited
it, they would win a battle and then lose a battle; after they recited the
phrase the Buddha taught them, they won continuously. Previously, the asuras and the heavenly troops had been more or
less equal in strength. Neither side had any wisdom to speak of, and their
battles were utterly chaotic. When the heavenly troops recited "Maha
prajna paramita," they attained great wisdom while the asuras
still had none. When those without wisdom fight those with wisdom, they
invariably lose. So the asuras were very stupid, and the heavenly
troops were very wise. When the wise battles against the stupid, sooner or
later, the stupid one always loses. Such was the situation between the
asuras and the heavenly troops. Now, the asuras have come into the world, and so there is fighting
and conflict everywhere. Anyone who has a bad temper can turn into an
asura, or perhaps even be one right now. If you can change your temper
and cultivate patience, you can stay out of the path of asuras. Garudas are the great gold-winged peng birds who
formerly ate dragons; but now, thanks to the Buddha, they are vegetarians.
The garuda bird is a Dharma protector for Shakyamuni Buddha. As to food and drink, in Buddhism, the morning is the time when the gods
eat. The Buddha eats only at noontime. Animals eat in the afternoon, and
ghosts eat at night. Now, ghosts basically can never find food to eat. They watch people
eating, and they try to snatch some of the food. When they hear the clatter
of plates and silverware, they come running to steal food. But when the food
enters their mouths, it turns into fire. This happens because their karmic
retribution is so heavy that they cannot eat food. They mistakenly think
that people use some kind of magic on the food and make it turn into fire,
and so they get angry at people and fight with them or make them sick. That
is why left-home people do not eat at night. Since the gods eat in the morning, when left-home people eat breakfast,
they send out some food for the gods. They also send out food for the ghost
mother and her children. This rakshasha ghost mother used to eat human children. Why was
she called "ghost mother"? Because she had one thousand ghost children. She
always led her own children to places where they could steal children to
eat. Sometimes a woman was pregnant. The ghost mother then followed her
around and waited for a chance to eat the child. Perhaps the pregnant woman
would get angry, get sick, eat too much, sleep too much, get in a peculiar
mood, or drink some wine. At that time, the ghost mother would rush in and
eat the unborn baby. She ate not only unborn children but also newborn
children. This circumstance brought the great grief of there being lost
children for many families. They then went to the Buddha and asked for help. Seeing the ghost mother had eaten lots of children, the Buddha thought,
"I should save the children of the world." So he took her youngest one, the
thousandth one of the ghost mother's children, and kept it in his bowl. The ghost mother still had 999 children left, but she just happened to
love her littlest child the best and thought of him as a treasure. She went
everywhere looking for her "treasure," but to no avail. "Where did he go?"
she wondered. When she passed by the Buddha's place, she listened and heard
her child crying. She then figured out that her little baby ghost was stuck
underneath the Buddha's bowl. Without hesitation, she tried to seize the
bowl to save her child, but no matter how hard she tried, she couldn't budge
it. Finally, she went back and got her other 999 children, and all of them
tried to use their ghost penetrations to move the bowl. But still it
couldn't be budged. Then, they all went to the Buddha to conduct negotiations. "Buddha, you
are the most compassionate one. Why have you taken my little baby away and
put him under your bowl? You are not very compassionate, are you?" the
mother ghost cleverly said. The Buddha said, "So I am not being compassionate? How about you?" The ghost mother said, "I don't need to be compassionate. I am a ghost
mother. Why should I be compassionate?" "If you aren't going to be compassionate, the least you could do is
refrain from killing and eating people," said the Buddha. "If I don't eat people, what am I going to eat?" she demanded. "What else
is there? I can eat only children. I don't like to eat adults or old people,
because their flesh is smelly and rotten. It's children's flesh that I like,
because it's tasty and tender!" The Buddha asked, "How many children do you have?" "I have one thousand children," she replied. The Buddha said, "Among your one thousand children, you are missing only
one child. Why are you so worried?" "But I can't go with even one less son!" she cried. "How many children have you eaten?" asked the Buddha. "Oh! I could never give you a total-as many as sands in the Ganges River,
for sure," she said. The Buddha said, "You have eaten so many human children. How do you think
their mothers felt when they lost their own children?" "That's their business," said the ghost mother. "You're wrong. Now you are missing one child, and you can't bear it. How
do you expect human mothers to stand it when you eat so many of their
children?" "Basically, I don't want to eat children. But I have nothing to eat. If I
don't steal children to eat, my children and I will starve to death." The Buddha then told the ghost mother, "From now on, you must not steal
any more children to eat. You should take refuge with the Triple Jewel and
uphold the Five Precepts. And when my disciples eat, they will give you a
share of their food." The ghost mother relented. She had her child back. After that, she didn't
eat children anymore. She became a vegetarian. Kinnaras are also musical spirits. They look like people, except
that they have a single horn on their head, and it's sometimes doubtful
whether they are spirits or people. Kinnara means "doubtful spirit." Mahoragas are big snakes. They aren't skinny like most snakes;
they are very fat. Natives of Gwang-dung Province eat the flesh of these
snakes. But then again, sometimes the snakes eat people. People eat them, so
they eat people. During the time of Emperor Wu of Lyang, the Emperor's wife was called
Syi-Shr. Emperor Wu believed in the Buddha and the Triple Jewel, but his
wife was quite adamant in her disbelief, and she also had a vicious and
jealous temperament. Because of her jealous nature and her disbelief in the
Triple Jewel, after she died, she fell into the body of one of these snakes. This snake could speak, and it addressed the Emperor, asking him to save
it. "Do you know who I am? I am your wife. But because I didn't believe in
the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha, and because I didn't revere the
Triple Jewel, I fell into the body of a big snake." Hearing this, the Emperor sent for Dhyana Master Jr-Gung to save her.
While she was alive, the Emperor's wife couldn't get along with Dhyana
Master Jr-Gung. But when he came to save her, she bowed to him and repented.
Dhyana Master Jr-Gung then wrote the Lyang-Hwang Repentance-the
Repentance of the Emperor of Lyang. He and other high monks bowed this
repentance and crossed over the Emperor's wife. Because of it, the Emperor's
wife cast off the snake body and was reborn in the heavens. When the Buddha was in the world, the mahoragas took refuge with
the Triple Jewel, and so they are also Dharma protectors within the
Buddhadharma. "Nonhuman" refers to all kinds of animals. If living beings must be saved in any one of the bodies mentioned above,
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva will manifest in such a body and speak Dharma for
them. He contemplates all the gods, dragons, and the eightfold division and
manifests in the appropriate body to save them. If they must be saved by someone in the body of a Vajra-wielding
spirit, he will manifest in the body of a Vajra-wielding spirit and speak
Dharma for them. The Vajra-wielding spirits are Dharma protectors. Long ago, there was a wheel-turning sage king who had a thousand
sons by his first wife. How could one woman have a thousand sons? She had a
very long life. However, he wasn't satisfied with one thousand sons, and so
he took another wife and had two sons by her. The thousand sons made a vow, saying, "We are going to cultivate and
become Buddhas. We will do it in order. We will draw straws." When they drew
straws, Shakyamuni Buddha came up with number four, and so he was the fourth
to become a Buddha. Now we are in the eon called "Worthy." The thousand
princes from of old are to appear as the thousand Buddhas in this eon.
Shakyamuni Buddha is the fourth Buddha in the Worthy Eon. The two sons of the king's second wife also made vows. One of them vowed,
"When our thousand older brothers become Buddhas, no matter what order, I
will be the first to go and request him to speak Dharma." The second brother said, "You are going to request the Buddha to speak
Dharma. I am going to make a vow to be a Dharma protector. Whenever
one of my brothers becomes a Buddha, I shall go protect him." Thus, the
Vajra-wielding spirit is just the son who made a vow to be a Dharma
protector long, long ago, before the Worthy Eon. Sutra: "Inexhaustible Intention! Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva has accomplished
merit and virtue such as this and, in all manner of forms, roams throughout
the land, saving and liberating living beings." Commentary: Shakyamuni Buddha finished telling about the various transformation
bodies of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva and said, "Inexhaustible Intention!
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva has accomplished merit and virtue such as this and,
in all manner of forms, as mentioned above, roams throughout the
land, saving and liberating living beings." Sutra: "Therefore you should all single-mindedly make offerings to Gwan Shr
Yin Bodhisattva. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva Mahasattva can, in the midst of
fear, crisis, and hardship, bestow fearlessness. That is why in this Saha
World all call him the "Bestower of Fearlessness." Commentary: Therefore you should all single-mindedly make offerings to Gwan Shr
Yin Bodhisattva. Do not have "two minds," that is, do not have doubts.
"One mind" means one mind of faith. If you have doubts, there is no merit
and virtue, and no response. You should make offerings to Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva with one heart. Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva Mahasattva can, in
the midst of fear, crisis, and hardship, bestow fearlessness. That is why in
this Saha World all call him the "Bestower of Fearlessness." He can
remove all of your anxiety and distress. Sutra: Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva said to the Buddha, "World Honored
One, I shall now make an offering to Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva." He then
removed his necklace of pearls, its value in the hundreds of thousands of
ounces of gold, and offered it to the Bodhisattva, saying, "Humane One,
accept this Dharma offering, this necklace of precious pearls." Commentary: Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva said to the Buddha, "World Honored
One, I shall now make an offering to Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva." Having
heard the Buddha encourage all beings to make offerings to Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva, Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva decided to do just that.
Even though Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva himself had already
become a Bodhisattva, on hearing about Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva's great
merit, virtue, and awesome spiritual power, he still wished to make an
offering, so as to nurture his own merit and virtue. He then removed his necklace of pearls, its value in the hundreds of
thousands of ounces of gold, and offered it to the Bodhisattva
immediately, without thinking twice. The beads were made out of the
most expensive gems. Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva presented the necklace to Gwan Shr
Yin Bodhisattva, saying, "Humane One, accept this Dharma offering, this
necklace of precious pearls." "Humane One" is a title used among
Bodhisattvas when speaking to each other. Now, jewels basically are an offering of wealth. But why does
Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva speak of it as an offering of Dharma?
There are three kinds of giving: the giving of wealth, the giving of Dharma,
and the giving of fearlessness. In making this offering, Inexhaustible
Intention Bodhisattva did not have it in his mind that this gift was worth a
great deal of money. He just wanted to present the necklace to Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva. Why does the text say that its value was in the hundreds of thousands of
ounces of gold? This was added by Venerable Ananda when he compiled the
Sutra. Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva himself certainly didn't mention
that the necklace was worth so much money. He wanted to make an offering to
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, and this necklace was something he liked. He gave
it away as a token of respect, to show that there was no conception of
personal wealth between the two Bodhisattvas. Thus, although the necklace
would appear to be a gift of wealth, it was given in the spirit of a gift of
Dharma. It was sealing the mind by means of the mind. Sutra: Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva refused to accept it. Commentary: Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva refused to accept it. Inexhaustible
Intention Bodhisattva had offered a valuable necklace to Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva, but the latter refused to accept it. Why? Because Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva had come to the Dharma Flower Assembly to hear the Buddha speak
the Dharma Flower Sutra, and he had not received the Buddha's
permission to accept offerings, and so he was being polite and refused the
offering. Besides which, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva didn't have any greed for such
things. He wouldn't say, "What a valuable necklace! I'd better take it while
I have a chance." To Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, there is no giver, nothing
given, and no receiver. Offerings or no offerings, he sees them all as the
same. Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva had merit and virtue, but Gwan Shr
Yin Bodhisattva wouldn't accept the gift. Sutra: Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva again said to Gwan Shr Yin
Bodhisattva, "Humane One, out of pity for us, accept this necklace." Commentary: Seeing Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva refuse the offering,
Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva again said to Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva,
"Humane One, out of pity for us, accept this necklace." He wasn't
half-hearted about it, like most people. Most people would just say, "Okay,
if you don't want it, I won't give it. I'll take it back." No, instead, Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva got nervous and repeated
his request. He said, "Greatly Compassionate and Humane Bodhisattva, please
pity me, Inexhaustible Intention, and all the four assemblies of disciples.
I want to make offerings to you, Humane One, on behalf of the fourfold
assembly and all living beings. I am representing living beings in making
this offering to you. I beg you to have pity on living beings and accept
this offering." Sutra: The Buddha then told Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, "You should take pity
on Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva and the fourfold assembly, as well as
the gods, dragons, yakshas, gandharvas, asuras,
garudas, kinnaras, mahoragas, humans, nonhumans, and so
forth, and accept this necklace." Commentary: Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva had made it clear that he was
determined to make his offering, and Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva had made it
clear that he was determined not to accept it. "I don't want such a nice
thing. I don't have any Way virtue. You keep it," he said. Inexhaustible
Intention Bodhisattva started bowing and begging him to accept it. Well, just at this impasse, Shakyamuni Buddha stepped in to intervene and
present a solution. He, the Buddha, then told Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva,
"You should take pity on Inexhaustible Intention Bodhisattva and the
fourfold assembly, as well as the gods, dragons, yakshas,
gandharvas, asuras, garudas, kinnaras, mahoragas,
humans, nonhumans, and so forth, and accept this necklace. Since they
have brought forth their true minds to present you with this gift, you
shouldn't refuse their offering." Sutra: Then, out of pity for the fourfold assembly, the gods, dragons,
humans, nonhumans, and so forth, Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva accepted the
necklace. He divided it into two parts: one part he offered to Shakyamuni
Buddha and one part he offered to the Stupa of Many Jewels Buddha. Commentary: Then, out of pity for the fourfold assembly-Bhikshus, Bhikshunis,
Upasakas, Upasikas-the gods, dragons, humans, nonhumans, and so forth,
Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva accepted the necklace. He accepted it, but then
offered it up right away. He divided it into two parts: one part he
offered to Shakyamuni Buddha and one part he offered to the Stupa of Many
Jewels Buddha. No wonder Gwan Shr Yin is a Bodhisattva. Such a valuable
thing, and he didn't want it. Ah! He accepted his offering and immediately
transferred his gift to Shakyamuni Buddha and Many Jewels Buddha. Measureless eons ago, Many Jewels Buddha became a Buddha. He vowed that
after any person became a Buddha and then spoke the Dharma Flower Sutra,
he would rise up out of the earth into empty space and go to that place to
certify the Dharma Flower Sutra as the most perfect of Sutras. Shakyamuni Buddha spoke the Avatamsaka, Agama, Vaipulya, and Prajna
teachings. When he was about to speak the Dharma Flower Sutra, Many
Jewels Buddha emerged to certify it. Now Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva gives half
of the necklace as an offering to Many Jewels Buddha. Sutra: "Inexhaustible Intention, such is the self-mastery and spiritual power
of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, who roams throughout the Saha World." Commentary: Inexhaustible Intention, such is the self-mastery and spiritual power of Gwan Shr Yin Bodhisattva, who roams throughout the Saha World. Thus, everyone should recite his name, "Na mwo Gwan Shr Yin Pu Sa," and make offerings to him. |
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