Difference between revisions of "The Brahma Net Sutra"
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Translated by the [[Buddhist Text]] Translation {{Wiki|Society}} in {{Wiki|USA}} | Translated by the [[Buddhist Text]] Translation {{Wiki|Society}} in {{Wiki|USA}} | ||
+ | [[Brahma Net Sutra]] ([[Brahmajala Sutra]]) This is a [[sutra]] of major significance in [[Mahayana Buddhism]]. In addition to containing the [[ten major precepts]] of [[Mahayana]] (not to kill, steal, lie, etc.) the [[Sutra]] also contains forty-eight less important injunctions. These fifty-eight major and minor [[precepts]] constitute the [[Bodhisattva Precepts]], taken by most [[Mahayana]] [[monks and nuns]] and certain advanced [[lay practitioners]]. | ||
I. [[Vairocana Buddha]] | I. [[Vairocana Buddha]] | ||
− | At that [[time]], [[Vairocana Buddha]] began {{Wiki|speaking}} in general about the Mind-Ground for the [[benefit]] of the Great Assembly. What he said represents but an infinitesimal part, the tip of a [[hair]], of His innumerable teachings -- as numerous as the grains of sand in the [[river]] [[Ganges]]. | + | At that [[time]], [[Vairocana Buddha]] began {{Wiki|speaking}} in general about the [[Mind-Ground]] for the [[benefit]] of the [[Great Assembly]]. What he said represents but an infinitesimal part, the tip of a [[hair]], of His {{Wiki|innumerable}} teachings -- as numerous as the grains of sand in the [[river]] [[Ganges]]. |
− | He concluded: "The Mind-Ground has been explained, is being explained and will be explained by all the [[Buddhas]] -- past, present, and future. It is also the [[Dharma Door]] (cultivation method) that all the [[Bodhisattvas]] of the past, present, and future have studied, are studying and will study." | + | He concluded: "The [[Mind-Ground]] has been explained, is being explained and will be explained by all the [[Buddhas]] -- {{Wiki|past}}, {{Wiki|present}}, and {{Wiki|future}}. It is also the [[Dharma Door]] ([[cultivation]] method) that all the [[Bodhisattvas]] of the {{Wiki|past}}, {{Wiki|present}}, and {{Wiki|future}} have studied, are studying and will study." |
− | "I have cultivated this Mind-Ground [[Dharma Door]] for hundreds of eons. My [[name]] is [[Vairocana]]. I request all [[Buddhas]] to transmit my words to all [[sentient beings]], so as to open this [[path]] of cultivation to all." | + | "I have cultivated this [[Mind-Ground]] [[Dharma Door]] for hundreds of [[eons]]. My [[name]] is [[Vairocana]]. I request all [[Buddhas]] to transmit my words to all [[sentient beings]], so as to open this [[path]] of [[cultivation]] to all." |
− | At that [[time]], from his Lion's [[Throne]] in the [[Lotus | + | At that [[time]], from his Lion's [[Throne]] in the [[Lotus Treasury World]], [[Vairocana Buddha]] emitted rays of [[light]]. A {{Wiki|voice}} among the rays is heard telling the [[Buddhas]] seated on thousands of [[lotus]] petals, "You should practice and uphold the [[Mind-Ground]] [[Dharma Door]] and transmit it to the {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[Sakyamuni]] [[Buddhas]], one after another, as well as to all [[sentient beings]]. Everyone should uphold, read, recite, and singlemindedly put its teachings into practice." |
− | After receiving the Dharma-door of the Mind-Ground, the [[Buddhas]] seated atop the thousands of [[lotus]] [[flowers]] along with the innumerable [[Sakyamuni]] [[Buddhas]] all arose from their [[Lion]] seats, their [[bodies]] emitting innumerable rays of [[light]]. In each of these rays appeared innumerable [[Buddhas]] who simultaneously made [[offerings]] of green, yellow, red and white [[celestial]] [[flowers]] to [[Vairocana Buddha]]. They then slowly took their leave. | + | After receiving the [[Dharma-door]] of the [[Mind-Ground]], the [[Buddhas]] seated atop the thousands of [[lotus]] [[flowers]] along with the {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[Sakyamuni]] [[Buddhas]] all arose from their [[Lion]] seats, their [[bodies]] emitting {{Wiki|innumerable}} rays of [[light]]. In each of these rays appeared {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[Buddhas]] who simultaneously made [[offerings]] of [[green]], [[yellow]], [[red]] and white [[celestial]] [[flowers]] to [[Vairocana Buddha]]. They then slowly took their leave. |
− | The [[Buddhas]] then disappeared from the [[Lotus | + | The [[Buddhas]] then disappeared from the [[Lotus Treasury World]], entered the Essence-Nature [[Empty]] [[Space]] Floral [[Brilliance]] [[Samadhi]] and returned to their former places under the [[Bodhi-tree]] in this [[world]] of [[Jambudvipa]]. They then arose from their [[samadhi]], sat on their [[Diamond]] Thrones in [[Jambudvipa]] and the [[Heaven]] of the [[Four Kings]], and {{Wiki|preached}} the [[Dharma]] of the "Ten Oceans of [[Worlds]]." |
− | Thereupon, they ascended to [[Lord]] Shakya's palace and expounded the "Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}," proceeded to the [[Suyama Heaven]] and taught the "Ten Practices," proceeded further to the Fourth [[Heaven]] and taught the "Ten Dedications," proceeded further to the [[Transformation]] of [[Bliss]] [[Heaven]] and taught the "Ten [[Dhyana]] [[Samadhi]]," proceeded further to the [[Heaven]] of {{Wiki|Comfort}} From Others' [[Emanations]] and taught the "[[Ten Grounds]]," proceeded further to the [[First Dhyana]] [[Heaven]] and taught the "Ten [[Vajra]] Stages," proceeded further to the [[Second Dhyana]] [[ | + | Thereupon, they ascended to [[Lord]] [[Shakya's]] palace and expounded the "Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}," proceeded to the [[Suyama Heaven]] and [[taught]] the "Ten Practices," proceeded further to the Fourth [[Heaven]] and [[taught]] the "[[Ten Dedications]]," proceeded further to the [[Transformation]] of [[Bliss]] [[Heaven]] and [[taught]] the "Ten [[Dhyana]] [[Samadhi]]," proceeded further to the [[Heaven]] of {{Wiki|Comfort}} From Others' [[Emanations]] and [[taught]] the "[[Ten Grounds]]," proceeded further to the [[First Dhyana]] [[Heaven]] and [[taught]] the "Ten [[Vajra]] Stages," proceeded further to the [[Second Dhyana Heaven]] and [[taught]] the "[[Ten Patiences]]," and proceeded further to the [[Third Dhyana]] [[Heaven]] and [[taught]] the "Ten [[Vows]]." Finally, in the [[Fourth Dhyana Heaven]], at [[Lord]] [[Brahma's]] Palace, they [[taught]] the "[[Mind-Ground Dharma-Door]]" [[chapter]], which [[Vairocana Buddha]], in [[eons]] {{Wiki|past}}, expounded in the [[Lotus]] Treasury [[World]] (the [[cosmos]]). |
− | All the other innumerable [[transformation]] [[Sakyamuni]] [[Buddhas]] did likewise in their respective [[worlds]] as the | + | All the other {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[transformation]] [[Sakyamuni]] [[Buddhas]] did likewise in their respective [[worlds]] as the [[chapter]] "[[Auspicious Kalpa]]" has explained. |
II. [[Sakyamuni Buddha]] | II. [[Sakyamuni Buddha]] | ||
− | At that [[time]], [[Sakyamuni Buddha]], after first appearing in the [[Lotus]] Treasury [[World]], proceeded to the [[east]] and appeared in the [[Heavenly]] King's palace to teach the "{{Wiki|Demon}} [[Transforming]] [[Sutra]]." He then descended to [[Jambudvipa]] to be born in [[Kapilavastu]] -- his [[name]] being [[Siddhartha]] and his father's [[name]] [[Suddhodana]]. His mother was [[Queen Maya]]. He achieved [[Enlightenment]] at the age of thirty, after seven years of cultivation, under the [[name]] of [[Sakyamuni Buddha]] | + | At that [[time]], [[Sakyamuni Buddha]], after first appearing in the [[Lotus]] Treasury [[World]], proceeded to the [[east]] and appeared in the [[Heavenly]] King's palace to teach the "{{Wiki|Demon}} [[Transforming]] [[Sutra]]." He then descended to [[Jambudvipa]] to be born in [[Kapilavastu]] -- his [[name]] being [[Siddhartha]] and his father's [[name]] [[Suddhodana]]. His mother was [[Queen Maya]]. He achieved [[Enlightenment]] at the age of thirty, after seven years of [[cultivation]], under the [[name]] of [[Sakyamuni Buddha]] |
− | The [[Buddha]] spoke in ten | + | The [[Buddha]] spoke in ten assemblies from the [[Diamond]] Seat at [[Bodhgaya]] to the palace of [[Brahma]]. |
− | At that [[time]], he contemplated the wonderful [[Jewel]] Net hung in [[Lord]] [[Brahma's]] palace and {{Wiki|preached}} the [[Brahma Net Sutra]] for the Great Assembly. He said: | + | At that [[time]], he contemplated the wonderful [[Jewel]] Net hung in [[Lord]] [[Brahma's]] palace and {{Wiki|preached}} the [[Brahma Net Sutra]] for the [[Great Assembly]]. He said: |
− | "The innumerable [[worlds]] in the [[cosmos]] are like the [[eyes]] of the net. Each and every [[world]] is different, its variety [[infinite]]. So too are the [[Dharma]] Doors (methods of cultivation) taught by the [[Buddhas]]. | + | "The {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[worlds]] in the [[cosmos]] are like the [[eyes]] of the net. Each and every [[world]] is different, its variety [[infinite]]. So too are the [[Dharma]] Doors ([[methods]] of [[cultivation]]) [[taught]] by the [[Buddhas]]. |
− | "I have come to this [[world]] eight thousand times. Based in this [[Saha World]], seated upon the Jeweled [[Diamond]] Seat in [[Bodhgaya]] and all the way up to the palace of the [[Brahma]] [[King]], I have spoken in general about the Mind-Ground [[Dharma Door]] for the [[benefit]] of the great multitude. | + | "I have come to this [[world]] eight thousand times. Based in this [[Saha World]], seated upon the Jeweled [[Diamond]] Seat in [[Bodhgaya]] and all the way up to the palace of the [[Brahma]] [[King]], I have spoken in general about the [[Mind-Ground]] [[Dharma Door]] for the [[benefit]] of the great multitude. |
− | "Thereafter, I descended from the [[Brahma]] King's palace to [[Jambudvipa]], the [[Human World]]. I have {{Wiki|preached}} the [[Diamond]] [[Illuminated]] Jeweled [[Precepts]] (the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]) from beneath the [[Bodhi-tree]] for the sake of all [[sentient beings]] on [[earth]], however dull and [[ignorant]] they may be. These [[precepts]] were customarily recited by [[Vairocana Buddha]] when he first developed the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] in the causal stages. They are precisely the original source of all [[Buddhas]] and all [[Bodhisattvas]] as well as the seed of the [[Buddha Nature]]. | + | "Thereafter, I descended from the [[Brahma]] King's palace to [[Jambudvipa]], the [[Human World]]. I have {{Wiki|preached}} the [[Diamond]] [[Illuminated]] Jeweled [[Precepts]] (the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]) from beneath the [[Bodhi-tree]] for the [[sake]] of all [[sentient beings]] on [[earth]], however dull and [[ignorant]] they may be. These [[precepts]] were customarily recited by [[Vairocana Buddha]] when he first developed the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] in the causal stages. They are precisely the original source of all [[Buddhas]] and all [[Bodhisattvas]] as well as the seed of the [[Buddha Nature]]. |
"All [[sentient beings]] possess this [[Buddha Nature]]. All with [[consciousness]], [[form]], and [[mind]] are encompassed by the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddha Nature]]. [[Sentient beings]] possess the correct [[cause]] of the [[Buddha Nature]] and therefore they will assuredly attain the ever-present [[Dharma Body]]. | "All [[sentient beings]] possess this [[Buddha Nature]]. All with [[consciousness]], [[form]], and [[mind]] are encompassed by the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddha Nature]]. [[Sentient beings]] possess the correct [[cause]] of the [[Buddha Nature]] and therefore they will assuredly attain the ever-present [[Dharma Body]]. | ||
− | For this [[reason]], the ten [[Pratimoksa]] ([[Bodhisattva]]) [[precepts]] came into being in this [[world]]. These [[precepts]] belong to the True [[Dharma]]. They are received and upheld in utmost reverence by all [[sentient beings]] of the Three Periods of [[Time]] -- past, present and future. | + | For this [[reason]], the ten [[Pratimoksa]] ([[Bodhisattva]]) [[precepts]] came into being in this [[world]]. These [[precepts]] belong to the True [[Dharma]]. They are received and upheld in utmost reverence by all [[sentient beings]] of the Three Periods of [[Time]] -- {{Wiki|past}}, {{Wiki|present}} and {{Wiki|future}}. |
− | "Once again, I shall {{Wiki|preach}} for the Great Assembly the chapter on the Inexhaustible [[Precept]] Treasury. These are the [[precepts]] of all [[sentient beings]], the source of the [[pure]] Self-Nature." | + | "Once again, I shall {{Wiki|preach}} for the [[Great Assembly]] the [[chapter]] on the Inexhaustible [[Precept]] Treasury. These are the [[precepts]] of all [[sentient beings]], the source of the [[pure]] [[Self-Nature]]." |
Now, I, [[Vairocana Buddha]] | Now, I, [[Vairocana Buddha]] | ||
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All are seated beneath a [[Bodhi-tree]], | All are seated beneath a [[Bodhi-tree]], | ||
All simultaneously attain [[Buddhahood]]. | All simultaneously attain [[Buddhahood]]. | ||
− | All these innumerable [[Buddhas]] | + | All these {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[Buddhas]] |
Have [[Vairocana]] as their original [[body]]. | Have [[Vairocana]] as their original [[body]]. | ||
These countless [[Sakyamuni]] [[Buddhas]] | These countless [[Sakyamuni]] [[Buddhas]] | ||
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Now listen attentively as I recite | Now listen attentively as I recite | ||
The [[Bodhisattva]] [[Pratimoksa]] -- the source of all [[precepts]] in the [[Buddha Dharma]]. | The [[Bodhisattva]] [[Pratimoksa]] -- the source of all [[precepts]] in the [[Buddha Dharma]]. | ||
− | All of you in the Great Assembly should firmly believe | + | All of you in the [[Great Assembly]] should firmly believe |
− | That you are the [[Buddhas]] of the future, | + | That you are the [[Buddhas]] of the {{Wiki|future}}, |
While I am a [[Buddha]] already accomplished. | While I am a [[Buddha]] already accomplished. | ||
If you should have such [[faith]] at all times, | If you should have such [[faith]] at all times, | ||
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They are in [[essence]] {{Wiki|equal}} to the [[Buddhas]], | They are in [[essence]] {{Wiki|equal}} to the [[Buddhas]], | ||
They are the true offspring of the [[Buddhas]]. | They are the true offspring of the [[Buddhas]]. | ||
− | Therefore, Great Assembly, | + | Therefore, [[Great Assembly]], |
Listen with utmost reverence | Listen with utmost reverence | ||
As I proclaim the [[Bodhisattva]] [[Moral]] Code. | As I proclaim the [[Bodhisattva]] [[Moral]] Code. | ||
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III. The [[Buddha]] Reciting the [[Bodhisattva Precepts]] | III. The [[Buddha]] Reciting the [[Bodhisattva Precepts]] | ||
− | At that [[time]], when [[Sakyamuni Buddha]] first attained [[Supreme Enlightenment]] under the [[Bodhi tree]], he explained the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. The [[Buddha]] taught filial piety toward one's [[parents]], Elder [[Masters]] and the [[Triple Jewel]]. Filial piety and {{Wiki|obedience}}, he said, are the [[Ultimate]] [[Path]] [to [[Buddhahood]] | + | At that [[time]], when [[Sakyamuni Buddha]] first [[attained]] [[Supreme Enlightenment]] under the [[Bodhi tree]], he explained the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. The [[Buddha]] [[taught]] filial piety toward one's [[parents]], Elder [[Masters]] and the [[Triple Jewel]]. Filial piety and {{Wiki|obedience}}, he said, are the [[Ultimate]] [[Path]] [to [[Buddhahood]]). Filial piety is called the [[precepts]] -- and it means {{Wiki|restraint}} and [[cessation]]. |
− | The [[Buddha]] then emitted limitless lights from his {{Wiki|mouth}}. Thereupon, the whole Great Assembly, consisting of innumerable [[Bodhisattvas]], the [[gods]] of the eighteen [[Brahma Heavens]], the [[gods]] of the six [[Desire Heavens]], and the rulers of the sixteen great {{Wiki|kingdoms}} all joined their palms and listened singlemindedly to the [[Buddha]] recite the [[Mahayana]] [[precepts]]. | + | The [[Buddha]] then emitted {{Wiki|limitless}} lights from his {{Wiki|mouth}}. Thereupon, the whole [[Great Assembly]], consisting of {{Wiki|innumerable}} [[Bodhisattvas]], the [[gods]] of the eighteen [[Brahma Heavens]], the [[gods]] of the six [[Desire Heavens]], and the rulers of the sixteen great {{Wiki|kingdoms}} all joined their palms and listened singlemindedly to the [[Buddha]] recite the [[Mahayana]] [[precepts]]. |
− | The [[Buddha]] then said to the [[Bodhisattvas]]: Twice a month I recite the [[precepts]] observed by all [[Buddhas]]. All [[Bodhisattvas]], from those who have just developed the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] to the [[Bodhisattvas]] of the Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, and the [[Ten Grounds]] also recite them. Therefore, this precept-light shines forth from my {{Wiki|mouth}}. It does not arise without a [[cause]]. This [[light]] is neither blue, yellow, red, white, nor black. It is neither [[form]], nor [[thought]]. It is neither [[existent]] nor [[Wikipedia:Nothing|nonexistent]], neither [[cause]] nor effect. This precept-light is precisely the original source of all [[Buddhas]] and all members of this Great Assembly. Therefore all you [[disciples]] of the [[Buddha]] should receive and | + | The [[Buddha]] then said to the [[Bodhisattvas]]: Twice a month I recite the [[precepts]] observed by all [[Buddhas]]. All [[Bodhisattvas]], from those who have just developed the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] to the [[Bodhisattvas]] of the Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}, the Ten Practices, the [[Ten Dedications]], and the [[Ten Grounds]] also recite them. Therefore, this precept-light shines forth from my {{Wiki|mouth}}. It does not arise without a [[cause]]. This [[light]] is neither blue, [[yellow]], [[red]], white, nor black. It is neither [[form]], nor [[thought]]. It is neither [[existent]] nor [[Wikipedia:Nothing|nonexistent]], neither [[cause]] nor effect. This precept-light is precisely the original source of all [[Buddhas]] and all members of this [[Great Assembly]]. Therefore all you [[disciples]] of the [[Buddha]] should receive and observe, read, recite and study these [[precepts]] with utmost [[attention]]. |
[[Disciples]] of the [[Buddha]], listen attentively! Whoever can understand and accept a [[Dharma]] [[Master's]] words of [[transmission]] can receive the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] and be called foremost in [[purity]]. This is true whether that [[person]] is a [[king]], a {{Wiki|prince}}, an official, a [[monk]], a [[nun]], or a [[god]] of the eighteen [[Brahma Heavens]], a [[god]] of the six [[Desire Heavens]], or a [[human]], a [[eunuch]], a libertine, a {{Wiki|prostitute}}, a slave, or a member of the Eight Divisions of [[Divinities]], a [[Vajra]] [[spirit]], an [[animal]], or even a transformation-being. | [[Disciples]] of the [[Buddha]], listen attentively! Whoever can understand and accept a [[Dharma]] [[Master's]] words of [[transmission]] can receive the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] and be called foremost in [[purity]]. This is true whether that [[person]] is a [[king]], a {{Wiki|prince}}, an official, a [[monk]], a [[nun]], or a [[god]] of the eighteen [[Brahma Heavens]], a [[god]] of the six [[Desire Heavens]], or a [[human]], a [[eunuch]], a libertine, a {{Wiki|prostitute}}, a slave, or a member of the Eight Divisions of [[Divinities]], a [[Vajra]] [[spirit]], an [[animal]], or even a transformation-being. | ||
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The [[Buddhas]] said to his [[disciples]], "There are ten major [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. If one receives the [[precepts]] but fails to recite them, he is not a [[Bodhisattva]], nor is he a seed of [[Buddhahood]]. I, too, recite these [[precepts]]. | The [[Buddhas]] said to his [[disciples]], "There are ten major [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. If one receives the [[precepts]] but fails to recite them, he is not a [[Bodhisattva]], nor is he a seed of [[Buddhahood]]. I, too, recite these [[precepts]]. | ||
− | "All [[Bodhisattvas]] have studied them in the past, will study in the future, and are studying them now. I have explained the main {{Wiki|characteristics}} of the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. You should study and | + | "All [[Bodhisattvas]] have studied them in the {{Wiki|past}}, will study in the {{Wiki|future}}, and are studying them now. I have explained the main {{Wiki|characteristics}} of the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. You should study and observe them with all your [[heart]]." |
The [[Buddha]] continued: | The [[Buddha]] continued: | ||
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1. First Major [[Precept]] | 1. First Major [[Precept]] | ||
− | On Killing | + | On {{Wiki|Killing}} |
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] shall not himself kill, encourage others to kill, kill by [[expedient means]], praise killing, rejoice at witnessing killing, or kill through incantation or deviant [[mantras]]. He must not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], methods, or [[karma]] of killing, and shall not intentionally kill any living creature. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] shall not himself kill, encourage others to kill, kill by [[expedient means]], praise {{Wiki|killing}}, rejoice at witnessing {{Wiki|killing}}, or kill through incantation or deviant [[mantras]]. He must not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], [[methods]], or [[karma]] of {{Wiki|killing}}, and shall not intentionally kill any living creature. |
As a [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]], he ought to nurture a [[mind]] of [[compassion]] and filial piety, always devising [[expedient means]] to rescue and {{Wiki|protect}} all [[beings]]. If instead, he fails to restrain himself and kills [[sentient beings]] without [[mercy]], he commits a [[Parajika]] (major) offense. | As a [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]], he ought to nurture a [[mind]] of [[compassion]] and filial piety, always devising [[expedient means]] to rescue and {{Wiki|protect}} all [[beings]]. If instead, he fails to restrain himself and kills [[sentient beings]] without [[mercy]], he commits a [[Parajika]] (major) offense. | ||
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On [[Stealing]] | On [[Stealing]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not himself steal or encourage others to steal, steal by [[expedient means]], steal by means of incantation or deviant [[mantras]]. He should not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], methods, or [[karma]] of [[stealing]]. No valuables or [[possessions]], even those belonging to [[ghosts]] and [[spirits]] or thieves and robbers, be they as small as a needle or blade of grass, may be stolen. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not himself steal or encourage others to steal, steal by [[expedient means]], steal by means of incantation or deviant [[mantras]]. He should not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], [[methods]], or [[karma]] of [[stealing]]. No valuables or [[possessions]], even those belonging to [[ghosts]] and [[spirits]] or thieves and {{Wiki|robbers}}, be they as small as a needle or blade of grass, may be stolen. |
As a [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]], he ought to have a [[mind]] of [[mercy]], [[compassion]], and filial piety -- always helping [[people]] earn [[merits]] and achieve [[happiness]]. If instead, he steals the [[possessions]] of others, he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. | As a [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]], he ought to have a [[mind]] of [[mercy]], [[compassion]], and filial piety -- always helping [[people]] earn [[merits]] and achieve [[happiness]]. If instead, he steals the [[possessions]] of others, he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. | ||
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On {{Wiki|Sexual}} Misconduct | On {{Wiki|Sexual}} Misconduct | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not engage in licentious acts or encourage others to do so. [As a [[monk]] | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not engage in licentious acts or encourage others to do so. [As a [[monk]]) he should not have {{Wiki|sexual}} relations with any {{Wiki|female}} -- be she a [[human]], [[animal]], [[deity]] or [[spirit]] -- nor create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], [[methods]], or [[karma]] of such {{Wiki|misconduct}}. Indeed, he must not engage in improper {{Wiki|sexual}} conduct with anyone. |
− | A [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]] ought to have a [[mind]] of filial piety -- rescuing all [[sentient beings]] and instructing them in the [[Dharma]] of [[purity]] and {{Wiki|chastity}}. If instead, he lacks [[compassion]] and encourages others to engage in {{Wiki|sexual}} relations promiscuously, including with [[animals]] and even their mothers, daughters, sisters, or other close relatives, he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. | + | A [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]] ought to have a [[mind]] of filial piety -- rescuing all [[sentient beings]] and instructing them in the [[Dharma]] of [[purity]] and {{Wiki|chastity}}. If instead, he lacks [[compassion]] and encourages others to engage in {{Wiki|sexual}} relations promiscuously, [[including]] with [[animals]] and even their mothers, daughters, sisters, or other close relatives, he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. |
4. Fourth Major [[Precept]] | 4. Fourth Major [[Precept]] | ||
− | On Lying and False [[Speech]] | + | On {{Wiki|Lying}} and False [[Speech]] |
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not himself use false words and [[speech]], or encourage others to lie or lie by [[expedient means]]. He should not involve himself in the [[causes]], [[conditions]], methods, or [[karma]] of lying, saying that he has seen what he has not seen or vice-versa, or lying implicitly through [[physical]] or [[mental]] means. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not himself use false words and [[speech]], or encourage others to lie or lie by [[expedient means]]. He should not involve himself in the [[causes]], [[conditions]], [[methods]], or [[karma]] of {{Wiki|lying}}, saying that he has seen what he has not seen or vice-versa, or {{Wiki|lying}} implicitly through [[physical]] or [[mental]] means. |
As a [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]], he ought to maintain [[Right Speech]] and [[Right Views]] always, and lead all others to maintain them as well. If instead, he [[causes]] wrong [[speech]], [[wrong views]] or [[evil]] [[karma]] in others, he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. | As a [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]], he ought to maintain [[Right Speech]] and [[Right Views]] always, and lead all others to maintain them as well. If instead, he [[causes]] wrong [[speech]], [[wrong views]] or [[evil]] [[karma]] in others, he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. | ||
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On Selling [[Alcoholic Beverages]] | On Selling [[Alcoholic Beverages]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not trade in [[alcoholic beverages]] or encourage others to do so. He should not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], methods, or [[karma]] of selling any intoxicant whatsoever, for [[intoxicants]] are the [[causes]] and [[conditions]] of all kinds of offenses. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not trade in [[alcoholic beverages]] or encourage others to do so. He should not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], [[methods]], or [[karma]] of selling any intoxicant whatsoever, for [[intoxicants]] are the [[causes]] and [[conditions]] of all kinds of offenses. |
As a [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]], he ought to help all [[sentient beings]] achieve clear [[wisdom]]. If instead, he [[causes]] them to have upside-down, topsy-turvy [[thinking]], he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. | As a [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]], he ought to help all [[sentient beings]] achieve clear [[wisdom]]. If instead, he [[causes]] them to have upside-down, topsy-turvy [[thinking]], he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. | ||
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On Broadcasting the Faults of the Assembly | On Broadcasting the Faults of the Assembly | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not himself broadcast the misdeeds or infractions of Bodhisattva-clerics or Bodhisattva-laypersons, or of [ordinary] [[monks and nuns]] -- nor encourage others to do so. He must not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], methods, or [[karma]] of discussing the offenses of the assembly. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not himself broadcast the [[misdeeds]] or infractions of Bodhisattva-clerics or Bodhisattva-laypersons, or of [ordinary] [[monks and nuns]] -- nor encourage others to do so. He must not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], [[methods]], or [[karma]] of discussing the offenses of the assembly. |
As a [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]], whenever he hears [[evil]] persons, externalists or followers of the [[Two Vehicles]] speak of practices contrary to the [[Dharma]] or contrary to the [[precepts]] within the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|community}}, he should instruct them with a [[compassionate]] [[mind]] and lead them to develop [[wholesome]] [[faith]] in the [[Mahayana]]. | As a [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]], whenever he hears [[evil]] persons, externalists or followers of the [[Two Vehicles]] speak of practices contrary to the [[Dharma]] or contrary to the [[precepts]] within the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|community}}, he should instruct them with a [[compassionate]] [[mind]] and lead them to develop [[wholesome]] [[faith]] in the [[Mahayana]]. | ||
− | If instead, he discusses the faults and misdeeds that occur within the assembly, he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. | + | If instead, he discusses the faults and [[misdeeds]] that occur within the assembly, he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. |
7. Seventh Major [[Precept]] | 7. Seventh Major [[Precept]] | ||
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On Praising Oneself and Disparaging Others | On Praising Oneself and Disparaging Others | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] shall not praise himself and speak ill of others, or encourage others to do so. He must not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], methods, or [[karma]] of praising himself and disparaging others. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] shall not praise himself and speak ill of others, or encourage others to do so. He must not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], [[methods]], or [[karma]] of praising himself and disparaging others. |
− | As a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], he should be willing to stand in for all [[sentient beings]] and endure {{Wiki|humiliation}} and slander -- accepting blame and letting [[sentient beings]] have all the glory. If instead, he displays his own [[virtues]] and conceals the good points of others, thus causing them to [[suffer]] slander, he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. | + | As a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], he should be willing to stand in for all [[sentient beings]] and endure {{Wiki|humiliation}} and [[slander]] -- accepting blame and letting [[sentient beings]] have all the glory. If instead, he displays his [[own]] [[virtues]] and conceals the good points of others, thus causing them to [[suffer]] [[slander]], he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. |
8. Eighth Major [[Precept]] | 8. Eighth Major [[Precept]] | ||
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On [[Stinginess]] and Abuse | On [[Stinginess]] and Abuse | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not be stingy or encourage others to be stingy. He should not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], methods, or [[karma]] of [[stinginess]]. As a [[Bodhisattva]], whenever a destitute [[person]] comes for help, he should give that [[person]] what he needs. If instead, out of [[anger]] and [[resentment]], he denies all assistance -- refusing to help with even a penny, a needle, a blade of grass, even a single sentence or [[ | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not be stingy or encourage others to be stingy. He should not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], [[methods]], or [[karma]] of [[stinginess]]. As a [[Bodhisattva]], whenever a destitute [[person]] comes for help, he should give that [[person]] what he needs. If instead, out of [[anger]] and [[resentment]], he denies all assistance -- refusing to help with even a penny, a needle, a blade of grass, even a single sentence or verse or a [[phrase]] of [[Dharma]], but instead scolds and abuses that [[person]] -- he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. |
9. Ninth Major [[Precept]] | 9. Ninth Major [[Precept]] | ||
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On [[Anger]] and [[Resentment]] | On [[Anger]] and [[Resentment]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] shall not harbor [[anger]] or encourage others to be [[angry]]. He should not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], methods, or [[karma]] of [[anger]]. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] shall not harbor [[anger]] or encourage others to be [[angry]]. He should not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], [[methods]], or [[karma]] of [[anger]]. |
− | As a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], he ought to be [[compassionate]] and filial, helping all [[sentient beings]] develop the [[good roots]] of non-contention. If instead, he insults and abuses [[sentient beings]], or even [[transformation]] [[beings]] [such as [[deities]] and [[spirits]] | + | As a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], he ought to be [[compassionate]] and filial, helping all [[sentient beings]] develop the [[good roots]] of non-contention. If instead, he insults and abuses [[sentient beings]], or even [[transformation]] [[beings]] [such as [[deities]] and [[spirits]]), with harsh words, hitting them with his fists or feet, or attacking them with a knife or club -- or harbors grudges even when the victim confesses his mistakes and humbly seeks [[forgiveness]] in a soft, conciliatory {{Wiki|voice}} -- the [[disciple]] commits a [[Parajika]] offense. |
10. Tenth Major [[Precept]] | 10. Tenth Major [[Precept]] | ||
− | On Slandering the [[Triple Jewel]] | + | On [[Slandering]] the [[Triple Jewel]] |
− | A [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]] shall not himself speak ill of the [[Triple Jewel]] or encourage others to do so. He must not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], methods or [[karma]] of slander. If a [[disciple]] hears but a single [[word]] of slander against the [[Buddha]] from externalists or [[evil]] [[beings]], he [[experiences]] a [[pain]] similar to that of three hundred spears piercing his [[heart]]. How then could he possibly slander the [[Triple Jewel]] himself? | + | A [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]] shall not himself speak ill of the [[Triple Jewel]] or encourage others to do so. He must not create the [[causes]], [[conditions]], [[methods]] or [[karma]] of [[slander]]. If a [[disciple]] hears but a single [[word]] of [[slander]] against the [[Buddha]] from externalists or [[evil]] [[beings]], he [[experiences]] a [[pain]] similar to that of three hundred [[spears]] piercing his [[heart]]. How then could he possibly [[slander]] the [[Triple Jewel]] himself? |
− | Hence, if a [[disciple]] lacks [[faith]] and filial piety towards the [[Triple Jewel]], and even assists [[evil]] persons or those of aberrant [[views]] to slander the [[Triple Jewel]], he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. | + | Hence, if a [[disciple]] lacks [[faith]] and filial piety towards the [[Triple Jewel]], and even assists [[evil]] persons or those of aberrant [[views]] to [[slander]] the [[Triple Jewel]], he commits a [[Parajika]] offense. |
V. Conclusion: The [[Ten Major Precepts]] | V. Conclusion: The [[Ten Major Precepts]] | ||
− | As a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], you should study these ten [[parajika]] (major) [[precepts]] and not break any one of them in even the slightest way -- much less break all of them! Anyone guilty of doing so cannot develop the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] in his current [[life]] and will lose whatever high position he may have attained, be it that of an [[emperor]], [[Wheel-Turning King]], [[Bhiksu]], [[Bhiksuni]] -- as well as whatever level of [[Bodhisattvahood]] he may have reached, whether the Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, the [[Ten Grounds]] -- and all the {{Wiki|fruits}} of the [[eternal Buddha]] [[Nature]]. He will lose all of those levels of [[attainment]] and descend into the Three [[Evil]] [[Realms]], unable to hear the words "[[parents]]" or "[[Triple Jewel]]" for eons! Therefore, [[Buddha's disciples]] should avoid breaking any one of these major [[precepts]]. All of you [[Bodhisattvas]] should study and | + | As a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], you should study these ten [[parajika]] (major) [[precepts]] and not break any one of them in even the slightest way -- much less break all of them! Anyone guilty of doing so cannot develop the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] in his current [[life]] and will lose whatever high position he may have [[attained]], be it that of an [[emperor]], [[Wheel-Turning King]], [[Bhiksu]], [[Bhiksuni]] -- as well as whatever level of [[Bodhisattvahood]] he may have reached, whether the Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}, the Ten Practices, the [[Ten Dedications]], the [[Ten Grounds]] -- and all the {{Wiki|fruits}} of the [[eternal Buddha]] [[Nature]]. He will lose all of those levels of [[attainment]] and descend into the Three [[Evil]] [[Realms]], unable to hear the words "[[parents]]" or "[[Triple Jewel]]" for [[eons]]! Therefore, [[Buddha's disciples]] should avoid breaking any one of these major [[precepts]]. All of you [[Bodhisattvas]] should study and observe the [[Ten Precepts]], which have been observed, are being observed, and will be observed by all [[Bodhisattvas]]. They were explained in detail in the [[chapter]], "The Eighty Thousand Rules of Conduct." |
VI. The Forty-eight Secondary [[Precepts]] | VI. The Forty-eight Secondary [[Precepts]] | ||
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A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] who is destined to become an [[emperor]], a [[Wheel-Turning King]], or high official should first receive the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. He will then be under the [[protection]] of all [[guardian deities]] and [[spirits]], and the [[Buddhas]] will be [[pleased]]. | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] who is destined to become an [[emperor]], a [[Wheel-Turning King]], or high official should first receive the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. He will then be under the [[protection]] of all [[guardian deities]] and [[spirits]], and the [[Buddhas]] will be [[pleased]]. | ||
− | Once he has received the [[precepts]], the [[disciple]] should develop a [[mind]] of filial piety and [[respect]]. Whenever he meets an Elder [[Master]], a [[monk]], or a fellow cultivator of like [[views]] and like conduct, he should rise and greet him with [[respect]]. He must then respectfully make [[offerings]] to the guest-monks, in accord with the [[Dharma]]. He should be willing to pledge himself, his family, as well as his {{Wiki|kingdom}}, cities, [[jewels]] and other [[possessions]]. | + | Once he has received the [[precepts]], the [[disciple]] should develop a [[mind]] of filial piety and [[respect]]. Whenever he meets an Elder [[Master]], a [[monk]], or a fellow cultivator of like [[views]] and like conduct, he should rise and greet him with [[respect]]. He must then respectfully make [[offerings]] to the guest-monks, in accord with the [[Dharma]]. He should be willing to pledge himself, his [[family]], as well as his {{Wiki|kingdom}}, cities, [[jewels]] and other [[possessions]]. |
If instead, he should develop [[conceit]] or [[arrogance]], [[delusion]] or [[anger]], refusing to rise and greet guest-monks and make [[offerings]] to them respectfully, in accordance with the [[Dharma]], he commits a secondary offense. | If instead, he should develop [[conceit]] or [[arrogance]], [[delusion]] or [[anger]], refusing to rise and greet guest-monks and make [[offerings]] to them respectfully, in accordance with the [[Dharma]], he commits a secondary offense. | ||
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A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should not intentionally consume [[alcoholic beverages]], as they are the source of countless offenses. If he but offers a glass of wine to another [[person]], his retribution will be to have no hands for five hundred lifetimes. How could he then consume [[liquor]] himself! Indeed, a [[Bodhisattva]] should not encourage any [[person]] or any other [[sentient being]] to consume [[alcohol]], much less take any [[alcoholic beverages]] himself. A [[disciple]] should not drink any [[alcoholic beverages]] whatsoever. If instead, he deliberately does so or encourages others to do so, he commits a secondary offense. | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should not intentionally consume [[alcoholic beverages]], as they are the source of countless offenses. If he but offers a glass of wine to another [[person]], his retribution will be to have no hands for five hundred lifetimes. How could he then consume [[liquor]] himself! Indeed, a [[Bodhisattva]] should not encourage any [[person]] or any other [[sentient being]] to consume [[alcohol]], much less take any [[alcoholic beverages]] himself. A [[disciple]] should not drink any [[alcoholic beverages]] whatsoever. If instead, he deliberately does so or encourages others to do so, he commits a secondary offense. | ||
− | 3. On Eating Meat | + | 3. On Eating [[Meat]] |
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not deliberately eat meat. He should not eat the flesh of any [[sentient being]]. The meat-eater forfeits the seed of [[Great Compassion]], severs the seed of the [[Buddha Nature]] and [[causes]] | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not deliberately eat meat. He should not eat the flesh of any [[sentient being]]. The meat-eater forfeits the seed of [[Great Compassion]], severs the seed of the [[Buddha Nature]] and [[causes]] ([[animals]] and [[transcendental]]) [[beings]] to avoid him. Those who do so are guilty of countless offenses. Therefore, [[Bodhisattvas]] should not eat the flesh of any [[sentient beings]] whatsoever. If instead, he deliberately eats meat, he commits a secondary offense. |
4. On Five [[Pungent]] Herbs | 4. On Five [[Pungent]] Herbs | ||
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5. On Not [[Teaching]] Repentance | 5. On Not [[Teaching]] Repentance | ||
− | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should see any being violate the [[Five Precepts]], the [[Eight Precepts]], the [[Ten Precepts]], other prohibitions, or commit any of the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]] or any offense which leads to the Eight Adversities -- any violations of the [[precepts]] whatever -- he should counsel the offender to repent and reform. | + | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should see any being violate the [[Five Precepts]], the [[Eight Precepts]], the [[Ten Precepts]], other prohibitions, or commit any of the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]] or any offense which leads to the Eight Adversities -- any violations of the [[precepts]] whatever -- he should counsel the offender to [[repent]] and reform. |
− | Hence, if a [[Bodhisattva]] does not do so and furthermore continues to [[live]] together in the assembly with the offender, share in the [[offerings]] of the laity, participate in the same [[Uposatha]] {{Wiki|ceremony}} and recite the [[precepts]] -- while failing to bring up that person's offense, enjoining him to repent -- the [[disciple]] commits a secondary offense. | + | Hence, if a [[Bodhisattva]] does not do so and furthermore continues to [[live]] together in the assembly with the offender, share in the [[offerings]] of the laity, participate in the same [[Uposatha]] {{Wiki|ceremony}} and recite the [[precepts]] -- while failing to bring up that person's offense, enjoining him to [[repent]] -- the [[disciple]] commits a secondary offense. |
6. Failing to Request the [[Dharma]] or Make [[Offerings]] | 6. Failing to Request the [[Dharma]] or Make [[Offerings]] | ||
− | If an Elder [[Master]], a [[Mahayana]] [[monk]] or fellow cultivator of like [[views]] and practice should come from far away to the [[temple]], residence, city or village of a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], the [[disciple]] should respectfully welcome him and see him off. He should minister to his needs at all times, though doing so may cost as much as three taels of {{Wiki|gold}}! Moreover, the [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should respectfully request the guest-master to {{Wiki|preach}} the [[Dharma]] three times a day by bowing to him without a single [[thought]] of [[resentment]] or weariness. He should be willing to {{Wiki|sacrifice}} himself for the [[Dharma]] and never be lax in requesting it. | + | If an Elder [[Master]], a [[Mahayana]] [[monk]] or fellow cultivator of like [[views]] and practice should come from far away to the [[temple]], residence, city or village of a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], the [[disciple]] should respectfully welcome him and see him off. He should [[minister]] to his needs at all times, though doing so may cost as much as three taels of {{Wiki|gold}}! Moreover, the [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should respectfully request the guest-master to {{Wiki|preach}} the [[Dharma]] three times a day by [[bowing]] to him without a single [[thought]] of [[resentment]] or weariness. He should be willing to {{Wiki|sacrifice}} himself for the [[Dharma]] and never be lax in requesting it. |
If he does not act in this [[manner]], he commits a secondary offense. | If he does not act in this [[manner]], he commits a secondary offense. | ||
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7. Failing to Attend [[Dharma]] Lectures | 7. Failing to Attend [[Dharma]] Lectures | ||
− | A [[Bodhisattva]] [[disciple]] who is new to the Order should take copies of the appropriate [[sutras]] or [[precept]] {{Wiki|codes}} to any place where such [[sutras]], commentaries, or [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} are being explained, to listen, study, and inquire about the [[Dharma]]. He should go anywhere, be it in a house, beneath a [[tree]], in a [[temple]], in the forests or mountains, or elsewhere. If he fails to do so, he commits a secondary offense. | + | A [[Bodhisattva]] [[disciple]] who is new to the Order should take copies of the appropriate [[sutras]] or [[precept]] {{Wiki|codes}} to any place where such [[sutras]], commentaries, or [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} are being explained, to listen, study, and inquire about the [[Dharma]]. He should go anywhere, be it in a house, beneath a [[tree]], in a [[temple]], in the [[forests]] or [[mountains]], or elsewhere. If he fails to do so, he commits a secondary offense. |
8. On Turning Away from the [[Mahayana]] | 8. On Turning Away from the [[Mahayana]] | ||
− | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] disavows the [[eternal]] [[Mahayana sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, declaring that they were not actually taught by the [[Buddha]], and instead follows and | + | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] disavows the [[eternal]] [[Mahayana sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, declaring that they were not actually [[taught]] by the [[Buddha]], and instead follows and observes those of the [[Two Vehicles]] and deluded externalists, he commits a secondary offense. |
9. On Failure to Care for the Sick | 9. On Failure to Care for the Sick | ||
− | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should see anyone who is sick, he should wholeheartedly provide for that person's needs just as he would for a [[Buddha]]. Of the eight Fields of [[Blessings]], looking after the sick is the most important. A [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]] should take care of his father, mother, [[Dharma]] [[teacher]] or [[disciple]] -- regardless of whether the latter are disabled or [[suffering]] from various kinds of {{Wiki|diseases}}. | + | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should see anyone who is sick, he should wholeheartedly provide for that person's needs just as he would for a [[Buddha]]. Of the eight Fields of [[Blessings]], [[looking after]] the sick is the most important. A [[Buddha's]] [[disciple]] should take [[care]] of his father, mother, [[Dharma]] [[teacher]] or [[disciple]] -- regardless of whether the [[latter]] are disabled or [[suffering]] from various kinds of {{Wiki|diseases}}. |
− | If instead, he becomes [[angry]] and resentful and fails to do so, or refuses to rescue the sick or disabled in [[temples]], cities and towns, forests and mountains, or along the road, he commits a secondary offense. | + | If instead, he becomes [[angry]] and resentful and fails to do so, or refuses to rescue the sick or disabled in [[temples]], cities and towns, [[forests]] and [[mountains]], or along the road, he commits a secondary offense. |
10. On Storing Deadly [[Weapons]] | 10. On Storing Deadly [[Weapons]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should not store [[weapons]] such as knives, clubs, bows, arrows, spears, axes or any other [[weapons]], nor may he keep nets, traps or any such devices used in destroying [[life]]. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should not store [[weapons]] such as knives, clubs, [[bows]], arrows, [[spears]], axes or any other [[weapons]], nor may he keep nets, traps or any such devices used in destroying [[life]]. |
As a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], he must not even avenge the [[death]] of his [[parents]] -- let alone kill [[sentient beings]]! He should not store any [[weapons]] or devices that can be used to kill [[sentient beings]]. If he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary offense. | As a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], he must not even avenge the [[death]] of his [[parents]] -- let alone kill [[sentient beings]]! He should not store any [[weapons]] or devices that can be used to kill [[sentient beings]]. If he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary offense. | ||
− | The first ten secondary [[precepts]] have just been described. [[Disciples]] of the [[Buddha]] should study and respectfully | + | The first ten secondary [[precepts]] have just been described. [[Disciples]] of the [[Buddha]] should study and respectfully observe them. They are explained in detail in the six chapters [now lost] following these [[precepts]]. |
11. On Serving as an Emissary | 11. On Serving as an Emissary | ||
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12. On Unlawful Business Undertakings | 12. On Unlawful Business Undertakings | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not deliberately trade in slaves or sell anyone into servitude, nor should he trade in domestic [[animals]], coffins or wood for caskets. He cannot engage in these types of business himself much less encourage others to do so. Otherwise, he commits a secondary offense. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not deliberately trade in slaves or sell anyone into servitude, nor should he trade in domestic [[animals]], coffins or [[wood]] for caskets. He cannot engage in these types of business himself much less encourage others to do so. Otherwise, he commits a secondary offense. |
− | 13. On Slander and Libel | + | 13. On [[Slander]] and Libel |
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not, without [[cause]] and with [[evil]] {{Wiki|intentions}}, slander [[virtuous]] [[people]], such as Elder [[Masters]], [[monks]] or [[nuns]], [[kings]], princes or other upright persons, saying that they have committed the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]] or broken the Ten Major [[Bodhisattva Precepts]]. He should be [[compassionate]] and filial and treat all [[virtuous]] [[people]] as if they were his father, mother, siblings or other close relatives. If instead, he slanders and harms them, he commits a secondary offense. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not, without [[cause]] and with [[evil]] {{Wiki|intentions}}, [[slander]] [[virtuous]] [[people]], such as Elder [[Masters]], [[monks]] or [[nuns]], [[kings]], princes or other upright persons, saying that they have committed the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]] or broken the Ten Major [[Bodhisattva Precepts]]. He should be [[compassionate]] and filial and treat all [[virtuous]] [[people]] as if they were his father, mother, siblings or other close relatives. If instead, he [[slanders]] and harms them, he commits a secondary offense. |
14. On Starting Wildfires | 14. On Starting Wildfires | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] shall not, out of [[evil]] {{Wiki|intentions}}, start wildfires to clear forests and burn vegetation on mountains and plains, during the fourth to the ninth months of the {{Wiki|lunar}} year. Such | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] shall not, out of [[evil]] {{Wiki|intentions}}, start wildfires to clear [[forests]] and burn vegetation on [[mountains]] and plains, during [[the fourth]] to the ninth months of the {{Wiki|lunar}} year. Such fires [are particularly injurious to [[animals]] during that period and may spread] to people's homes, towns and villages, [[temples]] and [[monasteries]], fields and groves, as well as the [unseen] {{Wiki|dwellings}} and [[possessions]] of [[deities]] and [[ghosts]]. He must not intentionally set [[fire]] to any place where there is [[life]]. If he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary offense. |
15. [[Teaching]] Non-Mahayana [[Dharma]] | 15. [[Teaching]] Non-Mahayana [[Dharma]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must teach one and all, from fellow [[disciples]], relatives and [[spiritual]] friends, to externalists and [[evil]] [[beings]], how to receive and | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must teach one and all, from fellow [[disciples]], relatives and [[spiritual]] friends, to externalists and [[evil]] [[beings]], how to receive and observe the [[Mahayana sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}. He should teach the [[Mahayana]] {{Wiki|principles}} to them and help them develop the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] -- as well as the Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}, the Ten Practices and the [[Ten Dedications]], explaining the order and [[function]] of each of these Thirty [[Minds]] (levels). |
If instead, the [[disciple]], with [[evil]], hateful {{Wiki|intentions}}, perversely teaches them the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} of the Two [[Vehicle]] [[tradition]] as well as the commentaries of deluded externalists, he thereby commits a secondary offense. | If instead, the [[disciple]], with [[evil]], hateful {{Wiki|intentions}}, perversely teaches them the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} of the Two [[Vehicle]] [[tradition]] as well as the commentaries of deluded externalists, he thereby commits a secondary offense. | ||
16. Unsound Explanation of the [[Dharma]] | 16. Unsound Explanation of the [[Dharma]] | ||
− | A [[Bodhisattva]] [[Dharma Master]] must first, with a [[wholesome]] [[mind]], study the rules of deportment, as well as [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} of the [[Mahayana tradition]], and understand their meanings in depth. Then, whenever novices come from afar to seek instruction, he should explain, according to the [[Dharma]], all the [[Bodhisattva]] [[renunciation]] practices, such as burning one's [[body]], arm, or finger [as the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] act in the quest for [[Supreme Enlightenment]] | + | A [[Bodhisattva]] [[Dharma Master]] must first, with a [[wholesome]] [[mind]], study the {{Wiki|rules}} of deportment, as well as [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} of the [[Mahayana tradition]], and understand their meanings in depth. Then, whenever novices come from afar to seek instruction, he should explain, according to the [[Dharma]], all the [[Bodhisattva]] [[renunciation]] practices, such as burning one's [[body]], arm, or finger [as the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] act in the quest for [[Supreme Enlightenment]]). If a [[novice]] is not prepared to follow these practices as an [[offering]] to the [[Buddhas]], he is not a [[Bodhisattva]] [[monk]]. Moreover, a [[Bodhisattva]] [[monk]] should be willing to {{Wiki|sacrifice}} his [[body]] and limbs for starving {{Wiki|beasts}} and [[hungry ghosts]] [as the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] act of [[compassion]] in rescuing [[sentient beings]]). |
After these explanations, the [[Bodhisattva]] [[Dharma Master]] should teach the novices in an orderly way, to [[awaken]] their [[minds]]. If instead, for personal gain, he refuses to teach or teaches in a confused [[manner]], quoting passages out of order and context, or teaches in a [[manner]] that disparages the [[Triple Jewel]], he commits a secondary offense. | After these explanations, the [[Bodhisattva]] [[Dharma Master]] should teach the novices in an orderly way, to [[awaken]] their [[minds]]. If instead, for personal gain, he refuses to teach or teaches in a confused [[manner]], quoting passages out of order and context, or teaches in a [[manner]] that disparages the [[Triple Jewel]], he commits a secondary offense. | ||
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17. On Exacting {{Wiki|Donations}} | 17. On Exacting {{Wiki|Donations}} | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not, for the sake of [[food]], drink, [[money]], [[possessions]] or [[fame]], approach and befriend [[kings]], princes, or high officials and [on the strength of such relationships], exact [[money]], goods or other advantages. Nor may he encourage others to do so. These [[actions]] are called untoward, excessive demands and lack [[compassion]] and filial piety. Such a [[disciple]] commits a secondary offense. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not, for the [[sake]] of [[food]], drink, [[money]], [[possessions]] or [[fame]], approach and befriend [[kings]], princes, or high officials and [on the strength of such relationships], exact [[money]], goods or other advantages. Nor may he encourage others to do so. These [[actions]] are called untoward, excessive demands and lack [[compassion]] and filial piety. Such a [[disciple]] commits a secondary offense. |
18. On Serving as an Inadequate [[Master]] | 18. On Serving as an Inadequate [[Master]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should study the Twelve Divisions of the [[Dharma]] and recite the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] frequently. He should strictly | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should study the Twelve Divisions of the [[Dharma]] and recite the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] frequently. He should strictly observe these [[precepts]] in the [[Six Periods]] of the day and night and fully understand their meaning and {{Wiki|principles}} as well as the [[essence]] of their [[Buddha Nature]]. |
− | If instead, the [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] fails to understand even a sentence or a | + | If instead, the [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] fails to understand even a sentence or a verse of the [[moral]] code or the [[causes]] and [[conditions]] related to the [[precepts]], but pretends to understand them, he is deceiving both himself and others. A [[disciple]] who [[understands]] [[nothing]] of the [[Dharma]], yet acts as a [[teacher]] transmitting the [[precepts]], commits a secondary offense. |
19. On Double-tongued [[Speech]] | 19. On Double-tongued [[Speech]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not, with malicious intent gossip or spread rumors and slander, create discord and disdain for [[virtuous]] [[people]]. [An example is] disparaging a [[monk]] who | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not, with malicious intent {{Wiki|gossip}} or spread rumors and [[slander]], create discord and disdain for [[virtuous]] [[people]]. [An example is] disparaging a [[monk]] who observes the [[Bodhisattva precepts]], as he [makes [[offerings]] to the [[Buddhas]] by] holding an [[incense burner]] to his {{Wiki|forehead}}. A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] who does so commits a secondary offense. |
20. Failure to Liberate [[Sentient Beings]] | 20. Failure to Liberate [[Sentient Beings]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should have a [[mind]] of [[compassion]] and cultivate the practice of liberating [[sentient beings]]. He must reflect thus: throughout the eons of [[time]], all {{Wiki|male}} [[sentient beings]] have been my father, all {{Wiki|female}} [[sentient beings]] my mother. I was born of them, now I slaughter them, I would be slaughtering my [[parents]] as well as eating flesh that was once my own. This is so because all [[elemental]] [[earth]], [[water]], [[fire]] and [[air]] -- the four constituents of all [[life]] -- have previously been part of my [[body]], part of my [[substance]]. I must therefore always cultivate the practice of liberating [[sentient beings]] and enjoin others to do likewise -- as [[sentient beings]] are forever [[reborn]], again and again, [[lifetime]] after [[lifetime]]. If a [[Bodhisattva]] sees an [[animal]] on the verge of being killed, he must devise a way to rescue and {{Wiki|protect}} it, helping it to escape [[suffering]] and [[death]]. The [[disciple]] should always teach the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] to rescue and deliver [[sentient beings]]. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should have a [[mind]] of [[compassion]] and cultivate the practice of liberating [[sentient beings]]. He must reflect thus: throughout the [[eons]] of [[time]], all {{Wiki|male}} [[sentient beings]] have been my father, all {{Wiki|female}} [[sentient beings]] my mother. I was born of them, now I slaughter them, I would be slaughtering my [[parents]] as well as eating flesh that was once my [[own]]. This is so because all [[elemental]] [[earth]], [[water]], [[fire]] and [[air]] -- the four constituents of all [[life]] -- have previously been part of my [[body]], part of my [[substance]]. I must therefore always cultivate the practice of liberating [[sentient beings]] and enjoin others to do likewise -- as [[sentient beings]] are forever [[reborn]], again and again, [[lifetime]] after [[lifetime]]. If a [[Bodhisattva]] sees an [[animal]] on the verge of being killed, he must devise a way to rescue and {{Wiki|protect}} it, helping it to escape [[suffering]] and [[death]]. The [[disciple]] should always teach the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] to rescue and deliver [[sentient beings]]. |
On the day his father, mother, and siblings [[die]], he should invite [[Dharma]] [[Masters]] to explain the [[Bodhisattva]] [[sutras]] and [[precepts]]. This will generate [[merits]] and [[virtues]] and help the deceased either to achieve [[rebirth]] in the [[Pure Lands]] and meet the [[Buddhas]] or to secure [[rebirth]] in the [[human]] or [[celestial]] [[realms]]. If instead, a [[disciple]] fails to do so, he commits a secondary offense. | On the day his father, mother, and siblings [[die]], he should invite [[Dharma]] [[Masters]] to explain the [[Bodhisattva]] [[sutras]] and [[precepts]]. This will generate [[merits]] and [[virtues]] and help the deceased either to achieve [[rebirth]] in the [[Pure Lands]] and meet the [[Buddhas]] or to secure [[rebirth]] in the [[human]] or [[celestial]] [[realms]]. If instead, a [[disciple]] fails to do so, he commits a secondary offense. | ||
− | You should study and respectfully | + | You should study and respectfully observe the above [[ten precepts]]. Each of them is explained in detail in the [[chapter]] "Expiating Offenses." |
21. On {{Wiki|Violence}} and Vengefulness | 21. On {{Wiki|Violence}} and Vengefulness | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not return [[anger]] for [[anger]], blow for blow. He should not seek revenge, even if his father, mother, siblings, or close relatives are killed -- nor should he do so if the [[ruler]] or [[king]] of his country is murdered. To take the [[life]] of one being in order to avenge the killing of another is contrary to filial piety [as we are all related through the eons of [[birth]] and [[rebirth]] | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not return [[anger]] for [[anger]], blow for blow. He should not seek revenge, even if his father, mother, siblings, or close relatives are killed -- nor should he do so if the [[ruler]] or [[king]] of his country is murdered. To take the [[life]] of one being in order to avenge the {{Wiki|killing}} of another is contrary to filial piety [as we are all related through the [[eons]] of [[birth]] and [[rebirth]]). |
Furthermore, he should not keep others in servitude, much less beat or abuse them, creating [[evil]] [[karma]] of [[mind]], [[speech]] and [[body]] day after day -- particularly the offenses of [[speech]]. How much less should he deliberately commit the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]]. Therefore, if a Bodhisattva-monk lacks [[compassion]] and deliberately seeks revenge, even for an injustice done to his close relatives, he commits a secondary offense. | Furthermore, he should not keep others in servitude, much less beat or abuse them, creating [[evil]] [[karma]] of [[mind]], [[speech]] and [[body]] day after day -- particularly the offenses of [[speech]]. How much less should he deliberately commit the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]]. Therefore, if a Bodhisattva-monk lacks [[compassion]] and deliberately seeks revenge, even for an injustice done to his close relatives, he commits a secondary offense. | ||
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22. [[Arrogance]] and Failure to Request the [[Dharma]] | 22. [[Arrogance]] and Failure to Request the [[Dharma]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] who has only recently left home and is still a [[novice]] in the [[Dharma]] should not be conceited. He must not refuse instruction on the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} from [[Dharma]] [[Masters]] on account of his own [[intelligence]], [[worldly]] {{Wiki|learning}}, high position, advanced age, [[noble]] [[lineage]], vast [[understanding]], great [[merits]], extensive [[wealth]] and [[possessions]], etc. Although these [[Masters]] may be of humble [[birth]], young in age, poor, or [[suffering]] [[physical]] [[disabilities]], they may still have genuine [[virtue]] and deep [[understanding]] of [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] who has only recently left home and is still a [[novice]] in the [[Dharma]] should not be conceited. He must not refuse instruction on the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} from [[Dharma]] [[Masters]] on account of his [[own]] [[intelligence]], [[worldly]] {{Wiki|learning}}, high position, advanced age, [[noble]] [[lineage]], vast [[understanding]], great [[merits]], extensive [[wealth]] and [[possessions]], etc. Although these [[Masters]] may be of [[humble]] [[birth]], young in age, poor, or [[suffering]] [[physical]] [[disabilities]], they may still have genuine [[virtue]] and deep [[understanding]] of [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}. |
− | The [[novice]] [[Bodhisattva]] should not judge [[Dharma]] [[Masters]] on the basis of their family background and refuse to seek instructions on the [[Mahayana]] [[truths]] from them. If he does so, he commits a secondary offense. | + | The [[novice]] [[Bodhisattva]] should not [[judge]] [[Dharma]] [[Masters]] on the basis of their [[family]] background and refuse to seek instructions on the [[Mahayana]] [[truths]] from them. If he does so, he commits a secondary offense. |
23. On [[Teaching]] the [[Dharma]] Grudgingly | 23. On [[Teaching]] the [[Dharma]] Grudgingly | ||
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However, the witnessing of [[auspicious]] [[signs]] is not necessary if the [[disciple]] receives the [[precepts]] directly from a [[Dharma Master]] who has himself received the [[precepts]]. Why is this so? It is because this is a case of [[transmission]] from [[Master]] to [[Master]] and therefore all that is required is a [[mind]] of utter sincerity and [[respect]] on the part of the [[disciple]]. | However, the witnessing of [[auspicious]] [[signs]] is not necessary if the [[disciple]] receives the [[precepts]] directly from a [[Dharma Master]] who has himself received the [[precepts]]. Why is this so? It is because this is a case of [[transmission]] from [[Master]] to [[Master]] and therefore all that is required is a [[mind]] of utter sincerity and [[respect]] on the part of the [[disciple]]. | ||
− | If, within a radius of some three hundred fifty {{Wiki|miles}}, a [[disciple]] cannot find a [[Master]] capable of conferring the [[Bodhisattva precepts]], he may seek to receive them in front of [[Buddha]] or [[Bodhisattva]] images. However, he must {{Wiki|witness}} an [[auspicious]] sign. | + | If, within a {{Wiki|radius}} of some three hundred fifty {{Wiki|miles}}, a [[disciple]] cannot find a [[Master]] capable of conferring the [[Bodhisattva precepts]], he may seek to receive them in front of [[Buddha]] or [[Bodhisattva]] images. However, he must {{Wiki|witness}} an [[auspicious]] sign. |
If a [[Dharma Master]], on account of his extensive [[knowledge]] of [[sutras]] and [[Mahayana]] [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} as well as his close relationship with [[kings]], princes, and high officials, refuses to give appropriate answers to student-Bodhisattvas seeking the meaning of [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, or does so grudgingly, with [[resentment]] and [[arrogance]], he commits a secondary offense. | If a [[Dharma Master]], on account of his extensive [[knowledge]] of [[sutras]] and [[Mahayana]] [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} as well as his close relationship with [[kings]], princes, and high officials, refuses to give appropriate answers to student-Bodhisattvas seeking the meaning of [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, or does so grudgingly, with [[resentment]] and [[arrogance]], he commits a secondary offense. | ||
24. Failure to Practice [[Mahayana Teachings]] | 24. Failure to Practice [[Mahayana Teachings]] | ||
− | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] fails to study [[Mahayana sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} assiduously and cultivate [[correct views]], correct [[nature]] and the correct [[Dharma Body]], it is like [[abandoning]] the Seven [[Precious]] [[Jewels]] for [mere stones]: [[worldly]] texts and the Two-Vehicle or externalist commentaries. To do so is to create the [[causes]] and [[conditions]] that obstruct the [[Path]] to [[Enlightenment]] and cut himself off from his [[Buddha Nature]]. It is a failure to follow the [[Bodhisattva]] [[path]]. If a [[disciple]] intentionally acts in such a [[manner]], he commits a secondary offense. | + | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] fails to study [[Mahayana sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} {{Wiki|assiduously}} and cultivate [[correct views]], correct [[nature]] and the correct [[Dharma Body]], it is like [[abandoning]] the Seven [[Precious]] [[Jewels]] for [mere stones]: [[worldly]] texts and the Two-Vehicle or [[externalist]] commentaries. To do so is to create the [[causes]] and [[conditions]] that obstruct the [[Path]] to [[Enlightenment]] and cut himself off from his [[Buddha Nature]]. It is a failure to follow the [[Bodhisattva]] [[path]]. If a [[disciple]] intentionally acts in such a [[manner]], he commits a secondary offense. |
25. Unskilled [[Leadership]] of the Assembly | 25. Unskilled [[Leadership]] of the Assembly | ||
− | After my passing, if a [[disciple]] should serve as an [[abbot]], elder [[Dharma Master]], [[Precept]] [[Master]], [[Meditation Master]], or Guest Prefect, he must develop a [[compassionate]] [[mind]] and peacefully settle differences within the Assembly -- skillfully administering the resources of the [[Three Jewels]], spending frugally and not treating them as his own property. If instead, he were to create disorder, provoke quarrels and disputes or squander the resources of the Assembly, he would commit a secondary offense. | + | After my passing, if a [[disciple]] should serve as an [[abbot]], elder [[Dharma Master]], [[Precept]] [[Master]], [[Meditation Master]], or Guest Prefect, he must develop a [[compassionate]] [[mind]] and peacefully settle differences within the Assembly -- skillfully administering the resources of the [[Three Jewels]], spending frugally and not treating them as his [[own]] property. If instead, he were to create disorder, provoke quarrels and [[disputes]] or squander the resources of the Assembly, he would commit a secondary offense. |
26. Accepting Personal [[Offerings]] | 26. Accepting Personal [[Offerings]] | ||
− | Once a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] has settled down in a [[temple]], if visiting [[Bodhisattva]] [[Bhiksus]] should arrive at the [[temple]] precincts, the guest quarters established by the [[king]], or even the [[summer retreat]] quarters, or the quarters of the Great Assembly, the [[disciple]] should welcome the visiting [[monks]] and see them off. He should provide them with such [[essentials]] as [[food]] and drink, a place to [[live]], beds, chairs, and the like. If the host does not have the necessary means, he should be willing to pawn himself or cut off and sell his own flesh. | + | Once a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] has settled down in a [[temple]], if visiting [[Bodhisattva]] [[Bhiksus]] should arrive at the [[temple]] precincts, the guest quarters established by the [[king]], or even the [[summer retreat]] quarters, or the quarters of the [[Great Assembly]], the [[disciple]] should welcome the visiting [[monks]] and see them off. He should provide them with such [[essentials]] as [[food]] and drink, a place to [[live]], beds, chairs, and the like. If the host does not have the necessary means, he should be willing to pawn himself or cut off and sell his [[own]] flesh. |
− | Whenever there are meal [[offerings]] and {{Wiki|ceremonies}} at a layman's home, visiting [[monks]] should be given a fair share of the [[offerings]]. The [[abbot]] should send the [[monks]], whether residents or guests, to the donor's place in turn [according to their sacerdotal age or [[merits]] and [[virtues]] | + | Whenever there are meal [[offerings]] and {{Wiki|ceremonies}} at a layman's home, visiting [[monks]] should be given a fair share of the [[offerings]]. The [[abbot]] should send the [[monks]], whether residents or guests, to the donor's place in turn [according to their sacerdotal age or [[merits]] and [[virtues]]). If only resident [[monks]] are allowed to accept invitations and not visiting [[monks]], the [[abbot]] is committing a grievous offense and is behaving no differently than an [[animal]]. He is unworthy of being a [[monk]] or a son of the [[Buddha]], and is guilty of a secondary offense. |
27. Accepting Discriminatory Invitations | 27. Accepting Discriminatory Invitations | ||
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28. Issuing Discriminatory Invitations | 28. Issuing Discriminatory Invitations | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], be he a [[Bodhisattva]] [[monk]], lay [[Bodhisattva]], or other donor, should, when inviting [[monks]] or [[nuns]] to conduct a [[prayer]] session, come to the [[temple]] and inform the [[monk]] in charge. The [[monk]] will then tell him: "Inviting members of the [[Sangha]] according to the proper order is tantamount to inviting the [[Arhats]] of the [[Ten Directions]]. To offer a discriminatory special invitation to [such a [[worthy]] group as] five hundred [[Arhats]] or Bodhisattva-monks will not generate as much [[merit]] as inviting one ordinary [[monk]], if it is his turn. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], be he a [[Bodhisattva]] [[monk]], lay [[Bodhisattva]], or other {{Wiki|donor}}, should, when inviting [[monks]] or [[nuns]] to conduct a [[prayer]] session, come to the [[temple]] and inform the [[monk]] in charge. The [[monk]] will then tell him: "Inviting members of the [[Sangha]] according to the proper order is tantamount to inviting the [[Arhats]] of the [[Ten Directions]]. To offer a discriminatory special invitation to [such a [[worthy]] group as] five hundred [[Arhats]] or Bodhisattva-monks will not generate as much [[merit]] as inviting one ordinary [[monk]], if it is his turn. |
− | There is no provision in the teachings of the Seven [[Buddhas]] for discriminatory invitations. To do so is to follow externalist practices and to contradict filial piety [toward all [[sentient beings]] | + | There is no provision in the teachings of the Seven [[Buddhas]] for discriminatory invitations. To do so is to follow [[externalist]] practices and to contradict filial piety [toward all [[sentient beings]]). If a [[disciple]] deliberately issues a discriminatory invitation, he commits a secondary offense. |
29. On Improper Livelihoods | 29. On Improper Livelihoods | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should not, for the sake of gain or with [[evil]] {{Wiki|intentions}}, engage in the business of [[prostitution]], selling the wiles and charms of men and women. He must also not cook for himself, milling and pounding grain. Neither may he act as a fortune-teller predicting the [[gender]] of children, reading [[dreams]] and the like. Nor shall he practice sorcery, work as a trainer of falcons or [[hunting]] {{Wiki|dogs}}, nor make a living concocting hundreds and thousands of [[poisons]] from deadly {{Wiki|snakes}}, insects, or from {{Wiki|gold}} and {{Wiki|silver}}. Such occupations lack [[mercy]], [[compassion]], and filial piety [toward [[sentient beings]] | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should not, for the [[sake]] of gain or with [[evil]] {{Wiki|intentions}}, engage in the business of [[prostitution]], selling the wiles and charms of men and women. He must also not cook for himself, milling and pounding grain. Neither may he act as a fortune-teller predicting the [[gender]] of children, reading [[dreams]] and the like. Nor shall he practice {{Wiki|sorcery}}, work as a trainer of falcons or [[hunting]] {{Wiki|dogs}}, nor make a living concocting hundreds and thousands of [[poisons]] from deadly {{Wiki|snakes}}, {{Wiki|insects}}, or from {{Wiki|gold}} and {{Wiki|silver}}. Such occupations lack [[mercy]], [[compassion]], and filial piety [toward [[sentient beings]]). Therefore, if a [[Bodhisattva]] intentionally engages in these occupations, he commits a secondary offense. |
30. On Handling Business Affairs for the Laity | 30. On Handling Business Affairs for the Laity | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not, with [[evil]] {{Wiki|intentions}}, slander the [[Triple Jewel]] while pretending to be their close adherent -- preaching the [[Truth]] of [[Emptiness]] while his [[actions]] are in the [[realm]] of [[Existence]]. Furthermore, he must not handle [[worldly]] affairs for the laity, acting as a go-between or matchmaker -- creating the [[karma]] of [[attachment]]. Moreover, during the six days of [[fasting]] each month and the three months of [[fasting]] each year, a [[disciple]] should strictly | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not, with [[evil]] {{Wiki|intentions}}, [[slander]] the [[Triple Jewel]] while pretending to be their close adherent -- preaching the [[Truth]] of [[Emptiness]] while his [[actions]] are in the [[realm]] of [[Existence]]. Furthermore, he must not handle [[worldly]] affairs for the laity, acting as a go-between or matchmaker -- creating the [[karma]] of [[attachment]]. Moreover, during the six days of [[fasting]] each month and the three months of [[fasting]] each year, a [[disciple]] should strictly observe all [[precepts]], particularly against {{Wiki|killing}}, [[stealing]] and the {{Wiki|rules}} against breaking the fast. Otherwise, the [[disciple]] commits a secondary offense. |
− | A [[Bodhisattva]] should respectfully study and | + | A [[Bodhisattva]] should respectfully study and observe the ten preceding [[precepts]]. They are explained in detail in the [[Chapter]] on "Prohibitions". |
31. Rescuing Clerics Along with [[Sacred]] [[Objects]] | 31. Rescuing Clerics Along with [[Sacred]] [[Objects]] | ||
− | After my passing, in the [[evil]] periods that will follow, there will be externalists, [[evil]] persons, thieves and robbers who steal and sell [[statues]] and paintings of [[Buddhas]], [[Bodhisattvas]] and [those to whom [[respect]] is due such as] their [[parents]]. They may even peddle copies of [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, or sell [[monks]], [[nuns]] or those who follow the [[Bodhisattva Path]] or have developed the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] to serve as retainers or servants to officials and others. | + | After my passing, in the [[evil]] periods that will follow, there will be externalists, [[evil]] persons, thieves and {{Wiki|robbers}} who steal and sell [[statues]] and paintings of [[Buddhas]], [[Bodhisattvas]] and [those to whom [[respect]] is due such as] their [[parents]]. They may even peddle copies of [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, or sell [[monks]], [[nuns]] or those who follow the [[Bodhisattva Path]] or have developed the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] to serve as retainers or servants to officials and others. |
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], upon witnessing such pitiful events, must develop a [[mind]] of [[compassion]] and find ways to rescue and {{Wiki|protect}} all persons and valuables, raising funds wherever he can for this purpose. If a [[Bodhisattva]] does not act in this [[manner]], he commits a secondary offense. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]], upon witnessing such pitiful events, must develop a [[mind]] of [[compassion]] and find ways to rescue and {{Wiki|protect}} all persons and valuables, raising funds wherever he can for this {{Wiki|purpose}}. If a [[Bodhisattva]] does not act in this [[manner]], he commits a secondary offense. |
32. On Harming [[Sentient Beings]] | 32. On Harming [[Sentient Beings]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not sell knives, clubs, bows, arrows, other life-taking devices, nor keep altered scales or [[measuring]] devices. He should not abuse his governmental position to confiscate people's [[possessions]], nor should he, with [[malice]] at [[heart]], restrain or imprison others or sabotage their [[success]]. In addition, he should not raise cats, {{Wiki|dogs}}, {{Wiki|foxes}}, pigs and other such [[animals]]. If he intentionally does such things, he commits a secondary offense. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not sell knives, clubs, [[bows]], arrows, other life-taking devices, nor keep altered scales or [[measuring]] devices. He should not abuse his governmental position to confiscate people's [[possessions]], nor should he, with [[malice]] at [[heart]], restrain or imprison others or sabotage their [[success]]. In addition, he should not raise cats, {{Wiki|dogs}}, {{Wiki|foxes}}, pigs and other such [[animals]]. If he intentionally does such things, he commits a secondary offense. |
33. On Watching Improper [[Activities]] | 33. On Watching Improper [[Activities]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not, with [[evil]] {{Wiki|intentions}}, watch [[people]] fighting or the battling of armies, rebels, [[gangs]] and the like, should not listen to the {{Wiki|sounds}} of [[conch shells]], drums, horns, guitars, flutes, lutes, songs or other {{Wiki|music}}, nor should he be party to any [[form]] of [[gambling]], whether dice, checkers, or the like. Furthermore, he should not practice fortune-telling or {{Wiki|divination}} nor should he be an accomplice to thieves and bandits. He must not participate in any of these [[activities]]. If instead, he intentionally does so, he commits a secondary offense. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] must not, with [[evil]] {{Wiki|intentions}}, watch [[people]] fighting or the battling of armies, rebels, [[gangs]] and the like, should not listen to the {{Wiki|sounds}} of [[conch shells]], [[drums]], horns, guitars, flutes, lutes, songs or other {{Wiki|music}}, nor should he be party to any [[form]] of [[gambling]], whether dice, checkers, or the like. Furthermore, he should not practice [[fortune-telling]] or {{Wiki|divination}} nor should he be an accomplice to thieves and bandits. He must not participate in any of these [[activities]]. If instead, he intentionally does so, he commits a secondary offense. |
34. {{Wiki|Temporary}} [[Abandoning]] of the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] | 34. {{Wiki|Temporary}} [[Abandoning]] of the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should observe the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] every day, whether walking, [[standing]], reclining or seated -- reading and reciting them day and night. He should be resolute in keeping the [[precepts]], as strong as a [[diamond]], as desperate as a shipwrecked [[person]] [[clinging]] to a small log while attempting to cross the ocean, or as principled as the "[[Bhiksu]] [[bound]] by reeds". Furthermore, he should always have a [[wholesome]] [[faith]] in the teachings of the [[Mahayana]]. [[Conscious]] that [[sentient beings]] are [[Buddhas-to-be]] while the [[Buddhas]] are [[realized]] [[Buddhas]], he should develop the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]] and maintain it in each and every [[thought]], without retrogression. |
− | If a [[Bodhisattva]] has but a single [[thought]] in the [[direction]] of the [[Two Vehicles]] or externalist teachings, he commits a secondary offense. | + | If a [[Bodhisattva]] has but a single [[thought]] in the [[direction]] of the [[Two Vehicles]] or [[externalist]] teachings, he commits a secondary offense. |
35. Failure to Make Great [[Vows]] | 35. Failure to Make Great [[Vows]] | ||
− | A [[Bodhisattva]] must make many great [[vows]] -- to be filial to his [[parents]] and [[Dharma]] [[teachers]], to meet good [[spiritual]] advisors, friends, and colleagues who will keep [[teaching]] him the [[Mahayana sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} as well as the Stages of [[Bodhisattva]] Practice (the Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, and the [[Ten Grounds]]). He should further [[vow]] to understand these teachings clearly so that he can practice according to the [[Dharma]] while resolutely keeping the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]]. If necessary, he should lay down his [[life]] rather than abandon this resolve for even a [[single moment]]. If a [[Bodhisattva]] does not make such [[vows]], he commits a secondary offense. | + | A [[Bodhisattva]] must make many great [[vows]] -- to be filial to his [[parents]] and [[Dharma]] [[teachers]], to meet good [[spiritual]] advisors, friends, and [[colleagues]] who will keep [[teaching]] him the [[Mahayana sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} as well as the Stages of [[Bodhisattva]] Practice (the Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}, the Ten Practices, the [[Ten Dedications]], and the [[Ten Grounds]]). He should further [[vow]] to understand these teachings clearly so that he can practice according to the [[Dharma]] while resolutely keeping the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]]. If necessary, he should lay down his [[life]] rather than abandon this resolve for even a [[single moment]]. If a [[Bodhisattva]] does not make such [[vows]], he commits a secondary offense. |
36. Failure to Make Resolutions | 36. Failure to Make Resolutions | ||
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1.- I would rather jump into a [[raging]] blaze, a deep [[Wikipedia:Abyss (religion)|abyss]], or into a mountain of knives, than engage in impure [[actions]] with any woman, thus violating the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} of the [[Buddhas]] of the Three Periods of [[Time]]. | 1.- I would rather jump into a [[raging]] blaze, a deep [[Wikipedia:Abyss (religion)|abyss]], or into a mountain of knives, than engage in impure [[actions]] with any woman, thus violating the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} of the [[Buddhas]] of the Three Periods of [[Time]]. | ||
− | 2.- I would rather wrap myself a thousand times with a | + | 2.- I would rather wrap myself a thousand times with a red-hot {{Wiki|iron}} net, than let this [[body]], should it break the [[precepts]], wear clothing provided by the [[faithful]]. |
− | I would rather swallow red [[hot]] {{Wiki|iron}} pellets and drink molten {{Wiki|iron}} for hundreds of thousands of eons, than let this {{Wiki|mouth}}, should it break the [[precepts]], consume [[food]] and drink provided by the faithful. | + | I would rather swallow [[red]] [[hot]] {{Wiki|iron}} pellets and drink molten {{Wiki|iron}} for hundreds of thousands of [[eons]], than let this {{Wiki|mouth}}, should it break the [[precepts]], consume [[food]] and drink provided by the [[faithful]]. |
− | I would rather lie on a bonfire or a burning {{Wiki|iron}} net than let this [[body]], should it break the [[precepts]], rest on bedding, blankets and mats supplied by the faithful. | + | I would rather lie on a bonfire or a burning {{Wiki|iron}} net than let this [[body]], should it break the [[precepts]], rest on bedding, blankets and mats supplied by the [[faithful]]. |
− | I would rather be impaled for eons by hundreds of spears, than let this [[body]], should it break the [[precepts]], receive medications from the faithful. | + | I would rather be impaled for [[eons]] by hundreds of [[spears]], than let this [[body]], should it break the [[precepts]], receive medications from the [[faithful]]. |
− | I would rather jump into a cauldron of boiling oil and roast for hundreds of thousands of eons, than let this [[body]], should it break the [[precepts]], receive [[shelter]], groves, [[gardens]], or fields from the faithful. | + | I would rather jump into a cauldron of boiling oil and roast for hundreds of thousands of [[eons]], than let this [[body]], should it break the [[precepts]], receive [[shelter]], groves, [[gardens]], or fields from the [[faithful]]. |
− | 3.- I would rather be pulverized from head to toe by an {{Wiki|iron}} sledge hammer, than let this [[body]], should it break the [[precepts]], accept [[respect]] and reverence from the faithful. | + | 3.- I would rather be pulverized from head to toe by an {{Wiki|iron}} sledge hammer, than let this [[body]], should it break the [[precepts]], accept [[respect]] and reverence from the [[faithful]]. |
− | 4.- I would rather have both [[eyes]] blinded by hundreds of thousands of swords and spears, rather than break the [[precepts]] by looking at beautiful [[forms]]. [In the same vein, I shall keep my [[mind]] from being sullied by exquisite {{Wiki|sounds}}, fragrances, [[food]] and [[sensations]].] | + | 4.- I would rather have both [[eyes]] blinded by hundreds of thousands of swords and [[spears]], rather than break the [[precepts]] by [[looking at]] beautiful [[forms]]. [In the same vein, I shall keep my [[mind]] from being sullied by exquisite {{Wiki|sounds}}, fragrances, [[food]] and [[sensations]].] |
5.- I further [[vow]] that all [[sentient beings]] will achieve [[Buddhahood]]. | 5.- I further [[vow]] that all [[sentient beings]] will achieve [[Buddhahood]]. | ||
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37. Traveling in [[Dangerous]] Areas | 37. Traveling in [[Dangerous]] Areas | ||
− | [As a cleric], a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should engage in [[ascetic]] practices twice each year. He should sit in [[meditation]], winter and summer, and | + | [As a cleric], a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should engage in [[ascetic]] practices twice each year. He should sit in [[meditation]], winter and summer, and observe the [[summer retreat]]. During those periods, he should always carry eighteen [[essentials]] such as a willow branch (for a toothbrush), ash-water (for soap), the [[traditional]] three clerical [[robes]], an [[incense burner]], a [[begging bowl]], a sitting mat, a [[water]] filter, bedding, copies of [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} as well as [[statues]] of [[Buddhas]] and [[Bodhisattvas]]. |
When practicing austerities and when traveling, be it for thirty {{Wiki|miles}} or three hundred {{Wiki|miles}}, a cleric should always have the eighteen [[essentials]] with him. The two periods of austerities are from the 15th of the first [[lunar month]] to the 15th of the third month, and from the 15th of the eighth [[lunar month]] to the 15th of the tenth month. During the periods of austerities, he requires these eighteen [[essentials]] just as a {{Wiki|bird}} needs its two wings. | When practicing austerities and when traveling, be it for thirty {{Wiki|miles}} or three hundred {{Wiki|miles}}, a cleric should always have the eighteen [[essentials]] with him. The two periods of austerities are from the 15th of the first [[lunar month]] to the 15th of the third month, and from the 15th of the eighth [[lunar month]] to the 15th of the tenth month. During the periods of austerities, he requires these eighteen [[essentials]] just as a {{Wiki|bird}} needs its two wings. | ||
− | Twice each month, the [[novice]] [[Bodhisattva]] should attend the [[Uposattha]] {{Wiki|ceremony}} and recite the Ten Major and Forty-eight Secondary [[Precepts]]. Such recitations should be done before images of the [[Buddhas]] and [[Bodhisattvas]]. If only one [[person]] attends the {{Wiki|ceremony}}, then he should do the reciting. If two, three, or even hundreds of thousands attend the {{Wiki|ceremony}}, still only one [[person]] should recite. Everyone else should listen in [[silence]]. The one reciting should sit on a higher level than the audience, and everyone should be dressed in clerical [[robes]]. During the [[summer retreat]], each and every [[activity]] should be managed in accordance with the [[Dharma]]. | + | Twice each month, the [[novice]] [[Bodhisattva]] should attend the [[Uposattha]] {{Wiki|ceremony}} and recite the Ten Major and Forty-eight Secondary [[Precepts]]. Such [[recitations]] should be done before images of the [[Buddhas]] and [[Bodhisattvas]]. If only one [[person]] attends the {{Wiki|ceremony}}, then he should do the reciting. If two, three, or even hundreds of thousands attend the {{Wiki|ceremony}}, still only one [[person]] should recite. Everyone else should listen in [[silence]]. The one reciting should sit on a higher level than the audience, and everyone should be dressed in clerical [[robes]]. During the [[summer retreat]], each and every [[activity]] should be managed in accordance with the [[Dharma]]. |
− | When practicing the austerities, the [[Buddhist]] [[disciple]] should avoid [[dangerous]] areas, unstable {{Wiki|kingdoms}}, countries ruled by [[evil]] [[kings]], precipitous terrains, remote wildernesses, regions inhabited by bandits, thieves, or [[lions]], {{Wiki|tigers}}, wolves, {{Wiki|poisonous}} {{Wiki|snakes}}, or areas [[subject]] to hurricanes, floods and | + | When practicing the austerities, the [[Buddhist]] [[disciple]] should avoid [[dangerous]] areas, unstable {{Wiki|kingdoms}}, countries ruled by [[evil]] [[kings]], precipitous terrains, remote wildernesses, regions inhabited by bandits, thieves, or [[lions]], {{Wiki|tigers}}, wolves, {{Wiki|poisonous}} {{Wiki|snakes}}, or areas [[subject]] to hurricanes, floods and fires. The [[disciple]] should avoid all such [[dangerous]] areas when practicing the austerities and also when observing the [[summer retreat]]. Otherwise, he commits a secondary offense. |
38. Order of Seating Within the Assembly | 38. Order of Seating Within the Assembly | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should sit in the proper order when in the Assembly. Those who received the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] first sit first, those who received the [[precepts]] afterwards should sit behind. Whether old or young, a [[Bhiksu]] or [[Bhiksuni]], a [[person]] of {{Wiki|status}}, a [[king]], a {{Wiki|prince}}, a [[eunuch]], or a servant, etc., each should sit according to the order in which he received the [[precepts]]. [[Disciples]] of the [[Buddha]] should not be like externalists or deluded [[people]] who base their order on age or sit without any order at all -- in barbarian fashion. In my [[Dharma]], the order of sitting is based on seniority of [[ordination]]. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should sit in the proper order when in the Assembly. Those who received the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] first sit first, those who received the [[precepts]] afterwards should sit behind. Whether old or young, a [[Bhiksu]] or [[Bhiksuni]], a [[person]] of {{Wiki|status}}, a [[king]], a {{Wiki|prince}}, a [[eunuch]], or a servant, etc., each should sit according to the order in which he received the [[precepts]]. [[Disciples]] of the [[Buddha]] should not be like externalists or deluded [[people]] who base their order on age or sit without any order at all -- in [[barbarian]] fashion. In my [[Dharma]], the order of sitting is based on seniority of [[ordination]]. |
Therefore, if a [[Bodhisattva]] does not follow the order of sitting according to the [[Dharma]], he commits a secondary offense. | Therefore, if a [[Bodhisattva]] does not follow the order of sitting according to the [[Dharma]], he commits a secondary offense. | ||
39. Failure to Cultivate [[Merits]] and [[Wisdom]] | 39. Failure to Cultivate [[Merits]] and [[Wisdom]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should constantly counsel and teach all [[people]] to establish [[monasteries]], [[temples]] and [[pagodas]] in mountains and forests, [[gardens]] and fields. He should also construct [[stupas]] for the [[Buddhas]] and buildings for winter and summer [[retreats]]. All facilities required for the practice of the [[Dharma]] should be established. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should constantly counsel and teach all [[people]] to establish [[monasteries]], [[temples]] and [[pagodas]] in [[mountains]] and [[forests]], [[gardens]] and fields. He should also construct [[stupas]] for the [[Buddhas]] and buildings for winter and summer [[retreats]]. All facilities required for the practice of the [[Dharma]] should be established. |
Moreover, a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should explain [[Mahayana sutras]] and the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] to all [[sentient beings]]. In times of [[sickness]], national {{Wiki|calamities}}, impending warfare or upon the [[death]] of one's [[parents]], brothers and sisters, [[Dharma]] [[Masters]] and [[Precept]] [[Masters]], a [[Bodhisattva]] should lecture and explain [[Mahayana sutras]] and the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] weekly for up to seven weeks. | Moreover, a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should explain [[Mahayana sutras]] and the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] to all [[sentient beings]]. In times of [[sickness]], national {{Wiki|calamities}}, impending warfare or upon the [[death]] of one's [[parents]], brothers and sisters, [[Dharma]] [[Masters]] and [[Precept]] [[Masters]], a [[Bodhisattva]] should lecture and explain [[Mahayana sutras]] and the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] weekly for up to seven weeks. | ||
− | The [[disciple]] should read, recite, and explain the [[Mahayana sutras]] and the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] in all [[prayer]] gatherings, in his business undertakings and during periods of calamity -- [[fire]], flood, storms, ships lost at sea in turbulent waters or stalked by {{Wiki|demons}} ... In the same vein, he should do so in order to transcend [[evil]] [[karma]], the Three [[Evil]] [[Realms]], the Eight Difficulties, the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]], all [[forms]] of imprisonment, or excessive [[sexual desire]], [[anger]], [[delusion]], and {{Wiki|illness}}. | + | The [[disciple]] should read, recite, and explain the [[Mahayana sutras]] and the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] in all [[prayer]] gatherings, in his business undertakings and during periods of calamity -- [[fire]], flood, storms, ships lost at sea in turbulent waters or stalked by {{Wiki|demons}} ... In the same vein, he should do so in order to transcend [[evil]] [[karma]], the Three [[Evil]] [[Realms]], the [[Eight Difficulties]], the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]], all [[forms]] of imprisonment, or excessive [[sexual desire]], [[anger]], [[delusion]], and {{Wiki|illness}}. |
If a [[novice]] [[Bodhisattva]] fails to act as indicated, he commits a secondary offense. | If a [[novice]] [[Bodhisattva]] fails to act as indicated, he commits a secondary offense. | ||
− | The [[Bodhisattva]] should study and respectfully | + | The [[Bodhisattva]] should study and respectfully observe the nine [[precepts]] just mentioned above, as explained in the "[[Brahma]] [[Altar]]" [[chapter]]. |
40. {{Wiki|Discrimination}} in Conferring the [[Precepts]] | 40. {{Wiki|Discrimination}} in Conferring the [[Precepts]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should not be selective and show preference in conferring the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. Each and every [[person]] can receive the [[precepts]] -- [[kings]], princes, high officials, [[Bhiksus]], [[Bhiksunis]], [[laymen]], [[laywomen]], libertines, {{Wiki|prostitutes}}, the [[gods]] in the eighteen [[Brahma Heavens]] or the six [[Desire Heavens]], asexual persons, bisexual persons, eunuchs, slaves, or {{Wiki|demons}} and [[ghosts]] of all types. [[Buddhist]] [[disciples]] should be instructed to wear [[robes]] and [[sleep]] on cloth of a [[neutral]] {{Wiki|color}}, formed by blending blue, yellow, red, black and purple dyes all together. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should not be selective and show preference in conferring the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. Each and every [[person]] can receive the [[precepts]] -- [[kings]], princes, high officials, [[Bhiksus]], [[Bhiksunis]], [[laymen]], [[laywomen]], libertines, {{Wiki|prostitutes}}, the [[gods]] in the eighteen [[Brahma Heavens]] or the six [[Desire Heavens]], asexual persons, [[bisexual]] persons, [[eunuchs]], slaves, or {{Wiki|demons}} and [[ghosts]] of all types. [[Buddhist]] [[disciples]] should be instructed to wear [[robes]] and [[sleep]] on cloth of a [[neutral]] {{Wiki|color}}, formed by blending blue, [[yellow]], [[red]], black and purple dyes all together. |
The clothing of [[monks and nuns]] should, in all countries, be different from those worn by ordinary persons. | The clothing of [[monks and nuns]] should, in all countries, be different from those worn by ordinary persons. | ||
Before someone is allowed to receive the [[Bodhisattva precepts]], he should be asked: "have you committed any of the Cardinal [[Sins]]?" The [[Precept]] [[Master]] should not allow those who have committed such [[sins]] to receive the [[precepts]]. | Before someone is allowed to receive the [[Bodhisattva precepts]], he should be asked: "have you committed any of the Cardinal [[Sins]]?" The [[Precept]] [[Master]] should not allow those who have committed such [[sins]] to receive the [[precepts]]. | ||
− | Here are the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]]: shedding the [[Buddha's]] {{Wiki|blood}}, murdering an [[Arhat]], killing one's father, killing one's mother, murdering a [[Dharma]] [[Teacher]], murdering a [[Precept]] [[Master]] or disrupting the [[harmony]] of the [[Sangha]]. | + | Here are the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]]: shedding the [[Buddha's]] {{Wiki|blood}}, murdering an [[Arhat]], {{Wiki|killing}} one's father, {{Wiki|killing}} one's mother, murdering a [[Dharma]] [[Teacher]], murdering a [[Precept]] [[Master]] or disrupting the [[harmony]] of the [[Sangha]]. |
Except for those who have committed the Cardinal [[Sins]], everyone can receive the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. | Except for those who have committed the Cardinal [[Sins]], everyone can receive the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. | ||
− | The [[Dharma]] rules of the [[Buddhist Order]] prohibit [[monks and nuns]] from bowing down before rulers, [[parents]], relatives, {{Wiki|demons}} and [[ghosts]]. | + | The [[Dharma]] {{Wiki|rules}} of the [[Buddhist Order]] prohibit [[monks and nuns]] from [[bowing]] down before rulers, [[parents]], relatives, {{Wiki|demons}} and [[ghosts]]. |
− | Anyone who [[understands]] the explanations of the [[Precept]] [[Master]] can receive the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. Therefore, if a [[person]] were to come from thirty to three hundred {{Wiki|miles}} away seeking the [[Dharma]] and the [[Precept]] [[Master]], out of meanness and [[anger]], does not promptly confer these [[precepts]], he commits a secondary offense. | + | Anyone who [[understands]] the explanations of the [[Precept]] [[Master]] can receive the [[Bodhisattva precepts]]. Therefore, if a [[person]] were to come from thirty to three hundred {{Wiki|miles}} away seeking the [[Dharma]] and the [[Precept]] [[Master]], out of {{Wiki|meanness}} and [[anger]], does not promptly confer these [[precepts]], he commits a secondary offense. |
41. [[Teaching]] for the Sake of Profit | 41. [[Teaching]] for the Sake of Profit | ||
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These two [[Masters]] should ask the [[Precept]] candidate whether he has committed any of the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]] in this [[life]]. If he has, he cannot receive the [[precepts]]. If not, he may receive the [[precepts]]. | These two [[Masters]] should ask the [[Precept]] candidate whether he has committed any of the Seven Cardinal [[Sins]] in this [[life]]. If he has, he cannot receive the [[precepts]]. If not, he may receive the [[precepts]]. | ||
− | If he has broken any of the [[Ten Major Precepts]], he should be instructed to repent before the [[statues]] of [[Buddhas]] and [[Bodhisattvas]]. He should do so six times a day and recite the Ten Major and Forty-eight Minor [[Precepts]], paying [[respect]] with utter sincerity to the [[Buddhas]] of the Three Periods of [[Time]]. He should continue in this [[manner]] until he receives an [[auspicious]] response, which could occur after seven days, fourteen days, twenty-one days, or even a year. Examples of [[auspicious]] [[signs]] include: experiencing the [[Buddhas]] rub the {{Wiki|crown}} of one's head, or [[seeing]] lights, halos, [[flowers]] and other such rare [[phenomena]]. | + | If he has broken any of the [[Ten Major Precepts]], he should be instructed to [[repent]] before the [[statues]] of [[Buddhas]] and [[Bodhisattvas]]. He should do so [[six times]] a day and recite the Ten Major and Forty-eight Minor [[Precepts]], paying [[respect]] with utter sincerity to the [[Buddhas]] of the Three Periods of [[Time]]. He should continue in this [[manner]] until he receives an [[auspicious]] response, which could occur after seven days, fourteen days, twenty-one days, or even a year. Examples of [[auspicious]] [[signs]] include: experiencing the [[Buddhas]] rub the {{Wiki|crown}} of one's head, or [[seeing]] lights, halos, [[flowers]] and other such rare [[phenomena]]. |
− | The witnessing of an [[auspicious]] sign indicates that the candidate's [[karma]] has been dissipated. Otherwise, although he has repented, it was of no avail. He still has not received the [[precepts]]. However, the [[merits]] accrued will increase his chances of receiving the [[precepts]] in a future [[lifetime]]. | + | The witnessing of an [[auspicious]] sign indicates that the candidate's [[karma]] has been dissipated. Otherwise, although he has repented, it was of no avail. He still has not received the [[precepts]]. However, the [[merits]] accrued will increase his chances of receiving the [[precepts]] in a {{Wiki|future}} [[lifetime]]. |
− | Unlike the case of a major [[Bodhisattva]] [[precept]], if a candidate has violated any of the Forty-eight Secondary [[Precepts]], he can confess his infraction and sincerely repent before Bodhisattva-monks or [[nuns]]. After that, his offense will be eradicated. | + | Unlike the case of a major [[Bodhisattva]] [[precept]], if a candidate has violated any of the Forty-eight Secondary [[Precepts]], he can confess his infraction and sincerely [[repent]] before Bodhisattva-monks or [[nuns]]. After that, his offense will be eradicated. |
− | The officiating [[Master]], however, must fully understand the [[Mahayana sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, the secondary as well as the major [[Bodhisattva precepts]], what constitutes an offense and what does not, the [[truth]] of Primary Meaning, as well as the various [[Bodhisattva]] cultivation stages -- the Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, the [[Ten Grounds]], and {{Wiki|Equal}} and Wonderful [[Enlightenment]]. | + | The officiating [[Master]], however, must fully understand the [[Mahayana sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, the secondary as well as the major [[Bodhisattva precepts]], what constitutes an offense and what does not, the [[truth]] of Primary Meaning, as well as the various [[Bodhisattva]] [[cultivation]] stages -- the Ten {{Wiki|Dwellings}}, the Ten Practices, the [[Ten Dedications]], the [[Ten Grounds]], and {{Wiki|Equal}} and Wonderful [[Enlightenment]]. |
− | He should also know the type and {{Wiki|degree}} of contemplation required for entering and exiting these stages and be familiar with the Ten Limbs of [[Enlightenment]] as well as a variety of other contemplations. | + | He should also know the type and {{Wiki|degree}} of contemplation required for entering and exiting these stages and be familiar with the Ten Limbs of [[Enlightenment]] as well as a variety of other [[contemplations]]. |
If he is not familiar with the above and, out of [[greed]] for [[fame]], [[disciples]] or [[offerings]], he makes a [[pretense]] of [[understanding]] the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, he is deceiving himself as well as others. Hence, if he intentionally acts as [[Precept]] [[Master]], transmitting the [[precepts]] to others, he commits a secondary offense. | If he is not familiar with the above and, out of [[greed]] for [[fame]], [[disciples]] or [[offerings]], he makes a [[pretense]] of [[understanding]] the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, he is deceiving himself as well as others. Hence, if he intentionally acts as [[Precept]] [[Master]], transmitting the [[precepts]] to others, he commits a secondary offense. | ||
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42. Reciting the [[Precepts]] to [[Evil]] Persons | 42. Reciting the [[Precepts]] to [[Evil]] Persons | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should not, with a [[greedy]] motive, expound the great [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]] before those who have not received them, externalists or persons with [[Wikipedia:Heterodoxy|heterodox]] [[views]]. Except in the case of [[kings]] or supreme rulers, he may not expound the [[precepts]] before any such [[person]]. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should not, with a [[greedy]] {{Wiki|motive}}, expound the great [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]] before those who have not received them, externalists or persons with [[Wikipedia:Heterodoxy|heterodox]] [[views]]. Except in the case of [[kings]] or supreme rulers, he may not expound the [[precepts]] before any such [[person]]. |
Persons who hold [[Wikipedia:Heterodoxy|heterodox]] [[views]] and do not accept the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]] are untamed in [[nature]]. They will not, [[lifetime]] after [[lifetime]], encounter the [[Triple Jewel]]. They are as mindless as [[trees]] and stones; they are no different from wooden stumps. Hence, if a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] expounds the [[precepts]] of the Seven [[Buddhas]] before such persons, he commits a secondary offense. | Persons who hold [[Wikipedia:Heterodoxy|heterodox]] [[views]] and do not accept the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]] are untamed in [[nature]]. They will not, [[lifetime]] after [[lifetime]], encounter the [[Triple Jewel]]. They are as mindless as [[trees]] and stones; they are no different from wooden stumps. Hence, if a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] expounds the [[precepts]] of the Seven [[Buddhas]] before such persons, he commits a secondary offense. | ||
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43. [[Thoughts]] of Violating the [[Precepts]] | 43. [[Thoughts]] of Violating the [[Precepts]] | ||
− | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] joins the Order out of [[pure]] [[faith]], receives the correct [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]], but then develops [[thoughts]] of violating the [[precepts]], he is unworthy of receiving any [[offerings]] from the faithful, unworthy of walking on the ground of his motherland, unworthy of drinking its [[water]]. | + | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] joins the Order out of [[pure]] [[faith]], receives the correct [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]], but then develops [[thoughts]] of violating the [[precepts]], he is unworthy of receiving any [[offerings]] from the [[faithful]], unworthy of walking on the ground of his motherland, unworthy of drinking its [[water]]. |
Five thousand [[guardian spirits]] constantly block his way, calling him "[[Evil]] thief!" These [[spirits]] always follow him into people's homes, villages and towns, sweeping away his very footprints. Everyone curses such a [[disciple]], calling him a "Thief within the [[Dharma]]." All [[sentient beings]] avert their [[eyes]], not wishing to see him. | Five thousand [[guardian spirits]] constantly block his way, calling him "[[Evil]] thief!" These [[spirits]] always follow him into people's homes, villages and towns, sweeping away his very footprints. Everyone curses such a [[disciple]], calling him a "Thief within the [[Dharma]]." All [[sentient beings]] avert their [[eyes]], not wishing to see him. | ||
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44. Failure to {{Wiki|Honor}} the [[Sutras]] and [[Moral]] {{Wiki|Codes}} | 44. Failure to {{Wiki|Honor}} the [[Sutras]] and [[Moral]] {{Wiki|Codes}} | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should always singlemindedly receive, | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should always singlemindedly receive, observe, read and recite the [[Mahayana sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}. He should copy the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}} onto bark, paper, fine cloth, or {{Wiki|bamboo}} slats and not hesitate to use his [[own]] {{Wiki|skin}} as paper, draw his [[own]] {{Wiki|blood}} for ink and his marrow for ink solvent, or split his {{Wiki|bones}} for use as pens. He should use [[precious]] [[gems]], priceless [[incense]] and [[flowers]] and other [[precious]] things to make and adorn covers and cases to store the [[sutras]] and {{Wiki|codes}}. |
Hence, if he does not make [[offerings]] to the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, in accordance with the [[Dharma]], he commits a secondary offense. | Hence, if he does not make [[offerings]] to the [[sutras]] and [[moral]] {{Wiki|codes}}, in accordance with the [[Dharma]], he commits a secondary offense. | ||
45. Failure to Teach [[Sentient Beings]] | 45. Failure to Teach [[Sentient Beings]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should develop a [[mind]] of [[Great Compassion]]. Whenever he enters people's homes, villages, cities or towns, and sees [[sentient beings]], he should say aloud, "You [[sentient beings]] should all take the [[Three Refuges]] and receive the Ten [Major [[Bodhisattva]] | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should develop a [[mind]] of [[Great Compassion]]. Whenever he enters people's homes, villages, cities or towns, and sees [[sentient beings]], he should say aloud, "You [[sentient beings]] should all take the [[Three Refuges]] and receive the Ten [Major [[Bodhisattva]]) [[Precepts]]." Should he come across cows, pigs, [[horses]], {{Wiki|sheep}} and other kinds of [[animals]], he should [[concentrate]] and say aloud, "You are now [[animals]]; you should develop the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]]." A [[Bodhisattva]], wherever he goes, be it climbing a mountain, entering a {{Wiki|forest}}, crossing a [[river]], or walking through a field should help all [[sentient beings]] develop the [[Bodhi]] [[Mind]]. |
If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] does not wholeheartedly teach and rescue [[sentient beings]] in such a [[manner]], he commits a secondary offense. | If a [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] does not wholeheartedly teach and rescue [[sentient beings]] in such a [[manner]], he commits a secondary offense. | ||
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A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should always have a [[mind]] of [[Great Compassion]] to teach and [[transform]] [[sentient beings]]. Whether visiting wealthy and {{Wiki|aristocratic}} donors or addressing [[Dharma]] gatherings, he should not remain [[standing]] while explaining the [[Dharma]] to [[laymen]], but should occupy a raised seat in front of the lay assembly. | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] should always have a [[mind]] of [[Great Compassion]] to teach and [[transform]] [[sentient beings]]. Whether visiting wealthy and {{Wiki|aristocratic}} donors or addressing [[Dharma]] gatherings, he should not remain [[standing]] while explaining the [[Dharma]] to [[laymen]], but should occupy a raised seat in front of the lay assembly. | ||
− | A [[Bhiksu]] serving as [[Dharma]] instructor must not be [[standing]] while lecturing to the Fourfold Assembly. During such lectures, the [[Dharma Master]] should sit on a raised seat amidst [[flowers]] and [[incense]], while the Fourfold Assembly must listen from lower seats. The Assembly must [[respect]] and follow the [[Master]] like filial sons obeying their [[parents]] or [[Brahmans]] worshipping [[fire]]. If a [[Dharma Master]] does not follow these rules while preaching the [[Dharma]], he commits a secondary offense. | + | A [[Bhiksu]] serving as [[Dharma]] instructor must not be [[standing]] while lecturing to the [[Fourfold Assembly]]. During such lectures, the [[Dharma Master]] should sit on a raised seat amidst [[flowers]] and [[incense]], while the [[Fourfold Assembly]] must listen from lower seats. The Assembly must [[respect]] and follow the [[Master]] like filial sons obeying their [[parents]] or [[Brahmans]] worshipping [[fire]]. If a [[Dharma Master]] does not follow these {{Wiki|rules}} while preaching the [[Dharma]], he commits a secondary offense. |
47. On Regulations Against the [[Dharma]] | 47. On Regulations Against the [[Dharma]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] who has accepted the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]] with a faithful [[mind]], must not use his high official position (as a [[king]], {{Wiki|prince}}, official, etc.) to undermine the [[moral]] code of the [[Buddhas]]. He may not establish rules and regulations preventing the four kinds of lay [[disciples]] from joining the Order and practicing the Way, nor may he prohibit the making of [[Buddha]] or [[Bodhisattva]] images, [[statues]] and [[stupas]], or the [[printing]] and distribution of [[sutras]] and {{Wiki|codes}}. Likewise, he must not establish rules and regulations placing controls on the Fourfold Assembly. If highly placed lay [[disciples]] engage in [[actions]] contrary to the [[Dharma]], they are no different from vassals in the service of [illegitimate] rulers. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] who has accepted the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]] with a [[faithful]] [[mind]], must not use his high official position (as a [[king]], {{Wiki|prince}}, official, etc.) to undermine the [[moral]] code of the [[Buddhas]]. He may not establish {{Wiki|rules}} and regulations preventing the four kinds of lay [[disciples]] from joining the Order and practicing the Way, nor may he prohibit the making of [[Buddha]] or [[Bodhisattva]] images, [[statues]] and [[stupas]], or the [[printing]] and distribution of [[sutras]] and {{Wiki|codes}}. Likewise, he must not establish {{Wiki|rules}} and regulations placing controls on the [[Fourfold Assembly]]. If highly placed lay [[disciples]] engage in [[actions]] contrary to the [[Dharma]], they are no different from vassals in the service of [illegitimate] rulers. |
A [[Bodhisattva]] should rightfully receive [[respect]] and [[offerings]] from all. If instead, he is forced to defer to officials, this is contrary to the [[Dharma]], contrary to the [[moral]] code. | A [[Bodhisattva]] should rightfully receive [[respect]] and [[offerings]] from all. If instead, he is forced to defer to officials, this is contrary to the [[Dharma]], contrary to the [[moral]] code. | ||
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48. On Destroying the [[Dharma]] | 48. On Destroying the [[Dharma]] | ||
− | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] who becomes a [[monk]] with [[wholesome]] {{Wiki|intentions}} must not, for [[fame]] or profit, explain the [[precepts]] to [[kings]] or officials in such a way as to [[cause]] [[monks]], [[nuns]] or [[laymen]] who have received the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] to be tied up, thrown into prison or forcefully conscripted. If a [[Bodhisattva]] acts in such a [[manner]], he is no different from a worm in a lion's [[body]], eating away at the lion's flesh. This is not something a worm living outside the [[lion]] can do. Likewise, only [[disciples]] of the [[Buddhas]] can bring down the [[Dharma]] -- no externalist or {{Wiki|demon}} can do so. | + | A [[disciple]] of the [[Buddha]] who becomes a [[monk]] with [[wholesome]] {{Wiki|intentions}} must not, for [[fame]] or profit, explain the [[precepts]] to [[kings]] or officials in such a way as to [[cause]] [[monks]], [[nuns]] or [[laymen]] who have received the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] to be tied up, thrown into {{Wiki|prison}} or forcefully conscripted. If a [[Bodhisattva]] acts in such a [[manner]], he is no different from a worm in a lion's [[body]], eating away at the lion's flesh. This is not something a worm living outside the [[lion]] can do. Likewise, only [[disciples]] of the [[Buddhas]] can bring down the [[Dharma]] -- no [[externalist]] or {{Wiki|demon}} can do so. |
− | Those who have received the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddha]] should {{Wiki|protect}} and | + | Those who have received the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddha]] should {{Wiki|protect}} and observe them just as a mother would [[care]] for her only child or a filial son his [[parents]]. They must not break the [[precepts]]. |
− | If a [[Bodhisattva]] hears externalists or evil-minded persons speak ill of, or disparage, the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]], he should [[feel]] as though his [[heart]] were pierced by three hundred spears, or his [[body]] stabbed with a thousand knives or thrashed with a thousand clubs. He would rather [[suffer]] in the [[hells]] himself for a hundred eons than hear [[evil]] [[beings]] disparage the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddha]]. How much worse it would be if the [[disciple]] were to break the [[precepts]] himself or incite others to do so! This is indeed an unfilial [[mind]]! Hence, if he violates the [[precepts]] intentionally, he commits a secondary offense. | + | If a [[Bodhisattva]] hears externalists or evil-minded persons speak ill of, or disparage, the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]], he should [[feel]] as though his [[heart]] were pierced by three hundred [[spears]], or his [[body]] stabbed with a thousand knives or thrashed with a thousand clubs. He would rather [[suffer]] in the [[hells]] himself for a hundred [[eons]] than hear [[evil]] [[beings]] disparage the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddha]]. How much worse it would be if the [[disciple]] were to break the [[precepts]] himself or incite others to do so! This is indeed an unfilial [[mind]]! Hence, if he violates the [[precepts]] intentionally, he commits a secondary offense. |
The preceding nine [[precepts]] should be studied and respectfully observed with utmost [[faith]]. | The preceding nine [[precepts]] should be studied and respectfully observed with utmost [[faith]]. | ||
VII. Conclusion | VII. Conclusion | ||
− | The [[Buddha]] said, "All of you [[disciples]]! These are the Forty-eight Secondary [[Precepts]] that you should | + | The [[Buddha]] said, "All of you [[disciples]]! These are the Forty-eight Secondary [[Precepts]] that you should observe. [[Bodhisattvas]] of the {{Wiki|past}} have recited them, those of the {{Wiki|future}} will recite them, those of the {{Wiki|present}} are now reciting them. |
− | "[[Disciples]] of the [[Buddha]]! You should all listen! These Ten Major and Forty-eight Secondary [[Precepts]] are recited by all [[Buddhas]] of the Three Periods of [[Time]] -- past, present, and future. I now recite them as well." | + | "[[Disciples]] of the [[Buddha]]! You should all listen! These Ten Major and Forty-eight Secondary [[Precepts]] are recited by all [[Buddhas]] of the Three Periods of [[Time]] -- {{Wiki|past}}, {{Wiki|present}}, and {{Wiki|future}}. I now recite them as well." |
VIII. Epilogue | VIII. Epilogue | ||
− | The [[Buddha]] continued: "Everyone in the Assembly -- [[kings]], princes, officials, [[Bhiksus]], [[Bhiksunis]], [[laymen]], [[laywomen]] and those who have received the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] -- should receive and | + | The [[Buddha]] continued: "Everyone in the Assembly -- [[kings]], princes, officials, [[Bhiksus]], [[Bhiksunis]], [[laymen]], [[laywomen]] and those who have received the [[Bodhisattva precepts]] -- should receive and observe, read and recite, explain and copy these [[precepts]] of the [[eternal Buddha]] [[Nature]] so that they can circulate without interruption for the edification of all [[sentient beings]]. They will then encounter the [[Buddhas]] and receive the teachings from each one in succession. [[Lifetime]] after [[lifetime]], they will escape the Three [[Evil]] [[Paths]] and the [[Eight Difficulties]] and will always be [[reborn]] in the [[human]] and [[celestial]] [[realms]]." |
− | I have concluded a general explanation of the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]] beneath this [[Bodhi Tree]]. All in this Assembly should singlemindedly study the [[Pratimoksa]] [[precepts]] and joyfully | + | I have concluded a general explanation of the [[precepts]] of the [[Buddhas]] beneath this [[Bodhi Tree]]. All in this Assembly should singlemindedly study the [[Pratimoksa]] [[precepts]] and joyfully observe them. |
− | These [[precepts]] are explained in detail in the exhortation section of the "Markless [[Celestial]] [[King]]" chapter. | + | These [[precepts]] are explained in detail in the exhortation section of the "Markless [[Celestial]] [[King]]" [[chapter]]. |
At that [[time]], the [[Bodhisattvas]] of the Three Thousand [[World]] System ([[cosmos]]) sat listening with utmost reverence to the [[Buddha]] reciting the [[precepts]]. They then joyously received and observed them. | At that [[time]], the [[Bodhisattvas]] of the Three Thousand [[World]] System ([[cosmos]]) sat listening with utmost reverence to the [[Buddha]] reciting the [[precepts]]. They then joyously received and observed them. | ||
− | As [[Buddha Sakyamuni]] finished explaining the Ten Inexhaustible [[Precepts]] of the "Mind-Ground [[Dharma Door]]" chapter, (which [[Vairocana Buddha]] had previously proclaimed in the [[Lotus Flower]] Treasury [[World]]), countless other [[Sakyamuni]] [[Buddhas]] did the same. | + | As [[Buddha Sakyamuni]] finished explaining the Ten Inexhaustible [[Precepts]] of the "[[Mind-Ground]] [[Dharma Door]]" [[chapter]], (which [[Vairocana Buddha]] had previously proclaimed in the [[Lotus Flower]] Treasury [[World]]), countless other [[Sakyamuni]] [[Buddhas]] did the same. |
As [[Sakyamuni Buddha]] {{Wiki|preached}} in ten different places, from the [[Mahesvara]] [[Heaven]] Palace to the [[Bodhi Tree]], for the [[benefit]] of countless [[Bodhisattvas]] and other [[beings]], all the countless [[Buddhas]] in the [[infinite]] lands of the [[Lotus]] Treasury [[World]] did the same. | As [[Sakyamuni Buddha]] {{Wiki|preached}} in ten different places, from the [[Mahesvara]] [[Heaven]] Palace to the [[Bodhi Tree]], for the [[benefit]] of countless [[Bodhisattvas]] and other [[beings]], all the countless [[Buddhas]] in the [[infinite]] lands of the [[Lotus]] Treasury [[World]] did the same. | ||
− | They explained the [[Buddha's]] [[Mind]] Treasury (the Thirty [[Minds]]), Ground Treasury, [[Precept]] Treasury, [[Infinite]] [[Actions]] and [[Vows]] Treasury, the Treasury of the Ever-Present [[Buddha Nature]] as [[Cause and Effect]] of [[Buddhahood]]. Thus, all the [[Buddhas]] completed their expositions of the countless [[Dharma]] Treasuries. | + | They explained the [[Buddha's]] [[Mind]] Treasury (the Thirty [[Minds]]), Ground Treasury, [[Precept]] Treasury, [[Infinite]] [[Actions]] and [[Vows]] Treasury, the Treasury of the Ever-Present [[Buddha Nature]] as [[Cause and Effect]] of [[Buddhahood]]. Thus, all the [[Buddhas]] completed their [[expositions]] of the countless [[Dharma]] Treasuries. |
− | All [[sentient beings]] throughout the billions of [[worlds]] gladly receive and | + | All [[sentient beings]] throughout the billions of [[worlds]] gladly receive and observe these Teachings. |
− | The {{Wiki|characteristics}} of the Mind-Ground are explained in greater detail in the chapter "Seven [[Forms]] of Conduct of the [[Buddha]] Floral Brilliance [[King]]." | + | The {{Wiki|characteristics}} of the [[Mind-Ground]] are explained in greater detail in the [[chapter]] "Seven [[Forms]] of Conduct of the [[Buddha]] Floral [[Brilliance]] [[King]]." |
− | IX. Verses of Praise | + | IX. Verses of [[Praise]] |
The [[sages]] with great [[samadhi]] and [[wisdom]] | The [[sages]] with great [[samadhi]] and [[wisdom]] | ||
− | Can | + | Can observe this [[teaching]]; |
Even before reaching [[Buddhahood]] | Even before reaching [[Buddhahood]] | ||
They are blessed with five benefits: | They are blessed with five benefits: | ||
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Cannot obtain this [[teaching]]. | Cannot obtain this [[teaching]]. | ||
Nor can followers of the [[Two Vehicles]], | Nor can followers of the [[Two Vehicles]], | ||
− | abiding in quietude, | + | abiding in [[quietude]], |
Plant their [[seeds]] within it. | Plant their [[seeds]] within it. | ||
To nurture the sprouts of [[Bodhi]], | To nurture the sprouts of [[Bodhi]], | ||
To [[illuminate]] the [[world]] with [[wisdom]], | To [[illuminate]] the [[world]] with [[wisdom]], | ||
− | You should carefully | + | You should carefully observe |
− | The True Mark of all [[dharmas]]: | + | The [[True Mark]] of all [[dharmas]]: |
Neither born nor {{Wiki|unborn}}, | Neither born nor {{Wiki|unborn}}, | ||
Neither [[eternal]] nor [[extinct]], | Neither [[eternal]] nor [[extinct]], | ||
Neither the same nor different, | Neither the same nor different, | ||
Neither coming nor going. | Neither coming nor going. | ||
− | In that singleminded state | + | In that singleminded [[state]] |
The [[disciple]] should diligently cultivate | The [[disciple]] should diligently cultivate | ||
And adorn the [[Bodhisattva's]] practices and [[deeds]] | And adorn the [[Bodhisattva's]] practices and [[deeds]] | ||
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Therefore, all [[disciples]] of the [[Buddha]] | Therefore, all [[disciples]] of the [[Buddha]] | ||
Should develop great resolve, | Should develop great resolve, | ||
− | And strictly | + | And strictly observe the [[Buddha's]] [[precepts]] |
As though they were brilliant [[gems]]. | As though they were brilliant [[gems]]. | ||
− | All [[Bodhisattvas]] of the past | + | All [[Bodhisattvas]] of the {{Wiki|past}} |
Have studied these [[precepts]]; | Have studied these [[precepts]]; | ||
− | Those of the future will also study them. | + | Those of the {{Wiki|future}} will also study them. |
− | Those of the present study them as well. | + | Those of the {{Wiki|present}} study them as well. |
This is the [[path]] walked by the [[Buddhas]], | This is the [[path]] walked by the [[Buddhas]], | ||
And praised by the [[Buddhas]]. | And praised by the [[Buddhas]]. | ||
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X. Verses of [[Dedication]] | X. Verses of [[Dedication]] | ||
In the [[Lotus]] Treasury [[World]], | In the [[Lotus]] Treasury [[World]], | ||
− | [[Vairocana]] explained an infinitesimal part of the Mind-Ground Door, | + | [[Vairocana]] explained an infinitesimal part of the [[Mind-Ground]] Door, |
Transmitting it to the Sakyamunis: | Transmitting it to the Sakyamunis: | ||
Major and minor [[precepts]] are clearly delineated, | Major and minor [[precepts]] are clearly delineated, |
Latest revision as of 15:40, 12 November 2020
Translated by the Buddhist Text Translation Society in USA
Brahma Net Sutra (Brahmajala Sutra) This is a sutra of major significance in Mahayana Buddhism. In addition to containing the ten major precepts of Mahayana (not to kill, steal, lie, etc.) the Sutra also contains forty-eight less important injunctions. These fifty-eight major and minor precepts constitute the Bodhisattva Precepts, taken by most Mahayana monks and nuns and certain advanced lay practitioners.
I. Vairocana Buddha
At that time, Vairocana Buddha began speaking in general about the Mind-Ground for the benefit of the Great Assembly. What he said represents but an infinitesimal part, the tip of a hair, of His innumerable teachings -- as numerous as the grains of sand in the river Ganges.
He concluded: "The Mind-Ground has been explained, is being explained and will be explained by all the Buddhas -- past, present, and future. It is also the Dharma Door (cultivation method) that all the Bodhisattvas of the past, present, and future have studied, are studying and will study."
"I have cultivated this Mind-Ground Dharma Door for hundreds of eons. My name is Vairocana. I request all Buddhas to transmit my words to all sentient beings, so as to open this path of cultivation to all."
At that time, from his Lion's Throne in the Lotus Treasury World, Vairocana Buddha emitted rays of light. A voice among the rays is heard telling the Buddhas seated on thousands of lotus petals, "You should practice and uphold the Mind-Ground Dharma Door and transmit it to the innumerable Sakyamuni Buddhas, one after another, as well as to all sentient beings. Everyone should uphold, read, recite, and singlemindedly put its teachings into practice."
After receiving the Dharma-door of the Mind-Ground, the Buddhas seated atop the thousands of lotus flowers along with the innumerable Sakyamuni Buddhas all arose from their Lion seats, their bodies emitting innumerable rays of light. In each of these rays appeared innumerable Buddhas who simultaneously made offerings of green, yellow, red and white celestial flowers to Vairocana Buddha. They then slowly took their leave.
The Buddhas then disappeared from the Lotus Treasury World, entered the Essence-Nature Empty Space Floral Brilliance Samadhi and returned to their former places under the Bodhi-tree in this world of Jambudvipa. They then arose from their samadhi, sat on their Diamond Thrones in Jambudvipa and the Heaven of the Four Kings, and preached the Dharma of the "Ten Oceans of Worlds."
Thereupon, they ascended to Lord Shakya's palace and expounded the "Ten Dwellings," proceeded to the Suyama Heaven and taught the "Ten Practices," proceeded further to the Fourth Heaven and taught the "Ten Dedications," proceeded further to the Transformation of Bliss Heaven and taught the "Ten Dhyana Samadhi," proceeded further to the Heaven of Comfort From Others' Emanations and taught the "Ten Grounds," proceeded further to the First Dhyana Heaven and taught the "Ten Vajra Stages," proceeded further to the Second Dhyana Heaven and taught the "Ten Patiences," and proceeded further to the Third Dhyana Heaven and taught the "Ten Vows." Finally, in the Fourth Dhyana Heaven, at Lord Brahma's Palace, they taught the "Mind-Ground Dharma-Door" chapter, which Vairocana Buddha, in eons past, expounded in the Lotus Treasury World (the cosmos).
All the other innumerable transformation Sakyamuni Buddhas did likewise in their respective worlds as the chapter "Auspicious Kalpa" has explained.
II. Sakyamuni Buddha
At that time, Sakyamuni Buddha, after first appearing in the Lotus Treasury World, proceeded to the east and appeared in the Heavenly King's palace to teach the "Demon Transforming Sutra." He then descended to Jambudvipa to be born in Kapilavastu -- his name being Siddhartha and his father's name Suddhodana. His mother was Queen Maya. He achieved Enlightenment at the age of thirty, after seven years of cultivation, under the name of Sakyamuni Buddha
The Buddha spoke in ten assemblies from the Diamond Seat at Bodhgaya to the palace of Brahma.
At that time, he contemplated the wonderful Jewel Net hung in Lord Brahma's palace and preached the Brahma Net Sutra for the Great Assembly. He said:
"The innumerable worlds in the cosmos are like the eyes of the net. Each and every world is different, its variety infinite. So too are the Dharma Doors (methods of cultivation) taught by the Buddhas.
"I have come to this world eight thousand times. Based in this Saha World, seated upon the Jeweled Diamond Seat in Bodhgaya and all the way up to the palace of the Brahma King, I have spoken in general about the Mind-Ground Dharma Door for the benefit of the great multitude.
"Thereafter, I descended from the Brahma King's palace to Jambudvipa, the Human World. I have preached the Diamond Illuminated Jeweled Precepts (the Bodhisattva precepts) from beneath the Bodhi-tree for the sake of all sentient beings on earth, however dull and ignorant they may be. These precepts were customarily recited by Vairocana Buddha when he first developed the Bodhi Mind in the causal stages. They are precisely the original source of all Buddhas and all Bodhisattvas as well as the seed of the Buddha Nature.
"All sentient beings possess this Buddha Nature. All with consciousness, form, and mind are encompassed by the precepts of the Buddha Nature. Sentient beings possess the correct cause of the Buddha Nature and therefore they will assuredly attain the ever-present Dharma Body.
For this reason, the ten Pratimoksa (Bodhisattva) precepts came into being in this world. These precepts belong to the True Dharma. They are received and upheld in utmost reverence by all sentient beings of the Three Periods of Time -- past, present and future.
"Once again, I shall preach for the Great Assembly the chapter on the Inexhaustible Precept Treasury. These are the precepts of all sentient beings, the source of the pure Self-Nature."
Now, I, Vairocana Buddha
Am sitting atop a lotus pedestal;
On a thousand flowers surrounding me
Are a thousand Sakyamuni Buddhas.
Each flower supports a hundred million worlds;
In each world a Sakyamuni Buddha appears.
All are seated beneath a Bodhi-tree,
All simultaneously attain Buddhahood.
All these innumerable Buddhas
Have Vairocana as their original body.
These countless Sakyamuni Buddhas
All bring followers along -- as numerous as
motes of dust.
They all proceed to my lotus pedestal
To listen to the Buddha's precepts.
I now preach the Dharma, this exquisite nectar.
Afterward, the countless Buddhas return to
their respective worlds
And, under a Bodhi-tree, proclaim these
major and minor precepts
Of Vairocana, the Original Buddha.
The precepts are like the radiant sun and moon,
Like a shining necklace of gems,
Bodhisattvas as numerous as motes of dust
Uphold them and attain Buddhahood.
These precepts are recited by Vairocana,
These precepts I recite as well.
You novice Bodhisattvas
Should reverently accept and uphold them.
And once you have done so,
Transmit and teach them to sentient beings.
Now listen attentively as I recite
The Bodhisattva Pratimoksa -- the source of all precepts in the Buddha Dharma.
All of you in the Great Assembly should firmly believe
That you are the Buddhas of the future,
While I am a Buddha already accomplished.
If you should have such faith at all times,
Then this precept code is fulfilled.
All beings with resolve
Should accept and uphold the Buddha's precepts.
Sentient beings on receiving them
Join forthwith the ranks of Buddhas.
They are in essence equal to the Buddhas,
They are the true offspring of the Buddhas.
Therefore, Great Assembly,
Listen with utmost reverence
As I proclaim the Bodhisattva Moral Code.
III. The Buddha Reciting the Bodhisattva Precepts
At that time, when Sakyamuni Buddha first attained Supreme Enlightenment under the Bodhi tree, he explained the Bodhisattva precepts. The Buddha taught filial piety toward one's parents, Elder Masters and the Triple Jewel. Filial piety and obedience, he said, are the Ultimate Path [to Buddhahood). Filial piety is called the precepts -- and it means restraint and cessation.
The Buddha then emitted limitless lights from his mouth. Thereupon, the whole Great Assembly, consisting of innumerable Bodhisattvas, the gods of the eighteen Brahma Heavens, the gods of the six Desire Heavens, and the rulers of the sixteen great kingdoms all joined their palms and listened singlemindedly to the Buddha recite the Mahayana precepts.
The Buddha then said to the Bodhisattvas: Twice a month I recite the precepts observed by all Buddhas. All Bodhisattvas, from those who have just developed the Bodhi Mind to the Bodhisattvas of the Ten Dwellings, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, and the Ten Grounds also recite them. Therefore, this precept-light shines forth from my mouth. It does not arise without a cause. This light is neither blue, yellow, red, white, nor black. It is neither form, nor thought. It is neither existent nor nonexistent, neither cause nor effect. This precept-light is precisely the original source of all Buddhas and all members of this Great Assembly. Therefore all you disciples of the Buddha should receive and observe, read, recite and study these precepts with utmost attention.
Disciples of the Buddha, listen attentively! Whoever can understand and accept a Dharma Master's words of transmission can receive the Bodhisattva precepts and be called foremost in purity. This is true whether that person is a king, a prince, an official, a monk, a nun, or a god of the eighteen Brahma Heavens, a god of the six Desire Heavens, or a human, a eunuch, a libertine, a prostitute, a slave, or a member of the Eight Divisions of Divinities, a Vajra spirit, an animal, or even a transformation-being.
IV. The Ten Major Precepts
The Buddhas said to his disciples, "There are ten major Bodhisattva precepts. If one receives the precepts but fails to recite them, he is not a Bodhisattva, nor is he a seed of Buddhahood. I, too, recite these precepts.
"All Bodhisattvas have studied them in the past, will study in the future, and are studying them now. I have explained the main characteristics of the Bodhisattva precepts. You should study and observe them with all your heart."
The Buddha continued:
1. First Major Precept
On Killing
A disciple of the Buddha shall not himself kill, encourage others to kill, kill by expedient means, praise killing, rejoice at witnessing killing, or kill through incantation or deviant mantras. He must not create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of killing, and shall not intentionally kill any living creature.
As a Buddha's disciple, he ought to nurture a mind of compassion and filial piety, always devising expedient means to rescue and protect all beings. If instead, he fails to restrain himself and kills sentient beings without mercy, he commits a Parajika (major) offense.
2. Second Major Precept
On Stealing
A disciple of the Buddha must not himself steal or encourage others to steal, steal by expedient means, steal by means of incantation or deviant mantras. He should not create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of stealing. No valuables or possessions, even those belonging to ghosts and spirits or thieves and robbers, be they as small as a needle or blade of grass, may be stolen.
As a Buddha's disciple, he ought to have a mind of mercy, compassion, and filial piety -- always helping people earn merits and achieve happiness. If instead, he steals the possessions of others, he commits a Parajika offense.
3. Third Major Precept
On Sexual Misconduct
A disciple of the Buddha must not engage in licentious acts or encourage others to do so. [As a monk) he should not have sexual relations with any female -- be she a human, animal, deity or spirit -- nor create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of such misconduct. Indeed, he must not engage in improper sexual conduct with anyone.
A Buddha's disciple ought to have a mind of filial piety -- rescuing all sentient beings and instructing them in the Dharma of purity and chastity. If instead, he lacks compassion and encourages others to engage in sexual relations promiscuously, including with animals and even their mothers, daughters, sisters, or other close relatives, he commits a Parajika offense.
4. Fourth Major Precept
On Lying and False Speech
A disciple of the Buddha must not himself use false words and speech, or encourage others to lie or lie by expedient means. He should not involve himself in the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of lying, saying that he has seen what he has not seen or vice-versa, or lying implicitly through physical or mental means.
As a Buddha's disciple, he ought to maintain Right Speech and Right Views always, and lead all others to maintain them as well. If instead, he causes wrong speech, wrong views or evil karma in others, he commits a Parajika offense.
5. Fifth Major Precept
On Selling Alcoholic Beverages
A disciple of the Buddha must not trade in alcoholic beverages or encourage others to do so. He should not create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of selling any intoxicant whatsoever, for intoxicants are the causes and conditions of all kinds of offenses.
As a Buddha's disciple, he ought to help all sentient beings achieve clear wisdom. If instead, he causes them to have upside-down, topsy-turvy thinking, he commits a Parajika offense.
6. Sixth Major Precept
On Broadcasting the Faults of the Assembly
A disciple of the Buddha must not himself broadcast the misdeeds or infractions of Bodhisattva-clerics or Bodhisattva-laypersons, or of [ordinary] monks and nuns -- nor encourage others to do so. He must not create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of discussing the offenses of the assembly.
As a Buddha's disciple, whenever he hears evil persons, externalists or followers of the Two Vehicles speak of practices contrary to the Dharma or contrary to the precepts within the Buddhist community, he should instruct them with a compassionate mind and lead them to develop wholesome faith in the Mahayana.
If instead, he discusses the faults and misdeeds that occur within the assembly, he commits a Parajika offense.
7. Seventh Major Precept
On Praising Oneself and Disparaging Others
A disciple of the Buddha shall not praise himself and speak ill of others, or encourage others to do so. He must not create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of praising himself and disparaging others.
As a disciple of the Buddha, he should be willing to stand in for all sentient beings and endure humiliation and slander -- accepting blame and letting sentient beings have all the glory. If instead, he displays his own virtues and conceals the good points of others, thus causing them to suffer slander, he commits a Parajika offense.
8. Eighth Major Precept
On Stinginess and Abuse
A disciple of the Buddha must not be stingy or encourage others to be stingy. He should not create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of stinginess. As a Bodhisattva, whenever a destitute person comes for help, he should give that person what he needs. If instead, out of anger and resentment, he denies all assistance -- refusing to help with even a penny, a needle, a blade of grass, even a single sentence or verse or a phrase of Dharma, but instead scolds and abuses that person -- he commits a Parajika offense.
9. Ninth Major Precept
On Anger and Resentment
A disciple of the Buddha shall not harbor anger or encourage others to be angry. He should not create the causes, conditions, methods, or karma of anger.
As a disciple of the Buddha, he ought to be compassionate and filial, helping all sentient beings develop the good roots of non-contention. If instead, he insults and abuses sentient beings, or even transformation beings [such as deities and spirits), with harsh words, hitting them with his fists or feet, or attacking them with a knife or club -- or harbors grudges even when the victim confesses his mistakes and humbly seeks forgiveness in a soft, conciliatory voice -- the disciple commits a Parajika offense.
10. Tenth Major Precept
On Slandering the Triple Jewel
A Buddha's disciple shall not himself speak ill of the Triple Jewel or encourage others to do so. He must not create the causes, conditions, methods or karma of slander. If a disciple hears but a single word of slander against the Buddha from externalists or evil beings, he experiences a pain similar to that of three hundred spears piercing his heart. How then could he possibly slander the Triple Jewel himself?
Hence, if a disciple lacks faith and filial piety towards the Triple Jewel, and even assists evil persons or those of aberrant views to slander the Triple Jewel, he commits a Parajika offense.
V. Conclusion: The Ten Major Precepts
As a disciple of the Buddha, you should study these ten parajika (major) precepts and not break any one of them in even the slightest way -- much less break all of them! Anyone guilty of doing so cannot develop the Bodhi Mind in his current life and will lose whatever high position he may have attained, be it that of an emperor, Wheel-Turning King, Bhiksu, Bhiksuni -- as well as whatever level of Bodhisattvahood he may have reached, whether the Ten Dwellings, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, the Ten Grounds -- and all the fruits of the eternal Buddha Nature. He will lose all of those levels of attainment and descend into the Three Evil Realms, unable to hear the words "parents" or "Triple Jewel" for eons! Therefore, Buddha's disciples should avoid breaking any one of these major precepts. All of you Bodhisattvas should study and observe the Ten Precepts, which have been observed, are being observed, and will be observed by all Bodhisattvas. They were explained in detail in the chapter, "The Eighty Thousand Rules of Conduct."
VI. The Forty-eight Secondary Precepts
Then the Buddha told the Bodhisattvas, "Now that I have explained the Ten Major Precepts, I will speak about the forty-eight secondary precepts."
1. Disrespect toward Teachers and Friends
A disciple of the Buddha who is destined to become an emperor, a Wheel-Turning King, or high official should first receive the Bodhisattva precepts. He will then be under the protection of all guardian deities and spirits, and the Buddhas will be pleased.
Once he has received the precepts, the disciple should develop a mind of filial piety and respect. Whenever he meets an Elder Master, a monk, or a fellow cultivator of like views and like conduct, he should rise and greet him with respect. He must then respectfully make offerings to the guest-monks, in accord with the Dharma. He should be willing to pledge himself, his family, as well as his kingdom, cities, jewels and other possessions.
If instead, he should develop conceit or arrogance, delusion or anger, refusing to rise and greet guest-monks and make offerings to them respectfully, in accordance with the Dharma, he commits a secondary offense.
2. On Consuming Alcoholic Beverages
A disciple of the Buddha should not intentionally consume alcoholic beverages, as they are the source of countless offenses. If he but offers a glass of wine to another person, his retribution will be to have no hands for five hundred lifetimes. How could he then consume liquor himself! Indeed, a Bodhisattva should not encourage any person or any other sentient being to consume alcohol, much less take any alcoholic beverages himself. A disciple should not drink any alcoholic beverages whatsoever. If instead, he deliberately does so or encourages others to do so, he commits a secondary offense.
3. On Eating Meat
A disciple of the Buddha must not deliberately eat meat. He should not eat the flesh of any sentient being. The meat-eater forfeits the seed of Great Compassion, severs the seed of the Buddha Nature and causes (animals and transcendental) beings to avoid him. Those who do so are guilty of countless offenses. Therefore, Bodhisattvas should not eat the flesh of any sentient beings whatsoever. If instead, he deliberately eats meat, he commits a secondary offense.
4. On Five Pungent Herbs
A disciple of the Buddha should not eat the five pungent herbs -- garlic, chives, leeks, onions, and asafoetida.This is so even if they are added as flavoring to other main dishes. Hence, if he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary offense.
5. On Not Teaching Repentance
If a disciple of the Buddha should see any being violate the Five Precepts, the Eight Precepts, the Ten Precepts, other prohibitions, or commit any of the Seven Cardinal Sins or any offense which leads to the Eight Adversities -- any violations of the precepts whatever -- he should counsel the offender to repent and reform.
Hence, if a Bodhisattva does not do so and furthermore continues to live together in the assembly with the offender, share in the offerings of the laity, participate in the same Uposatha ceremony and recite the precepts -- while failing to bring up that person's offense, enjoining him to repent -- the disciple commits a secondary offense.
6. Failing to Request the Dharma or Make Offerings
If an Elder Master, a Mahayana monk or fellow cultivator of like views and practice should come from far away to the temple, residence, city or village of a disciple of the Buddha, the disciple should respectfully welcome him and see him off. He should minister to his needs at all times, though doing so may cost as much as three taels of gold! Moreover, the disciple of the Buddha should respectfully request the guest-master to preach the Dharma three times a day by bowing to him without a single thought of resentment or weariness. He should be willing to sacrifice himself for the Dharma and never be lax in requesting it.
If he does not act in this manner, he commits a secondary offense.
7. Failing to Attend Dharma Lectures
A Bodhisattva disciple who is new to the Order should take copies of the appropriate sutras or precept codes to any place where such sutras, commentaries, or moral codes are being explained, to listen, study, and inquire about the Dharma. He should go anywhere, be it in a house, beneath a tree, in a temple, in the forests or mountains, or elsewhere. If he fails to do so, he commits a secondary offense.
8. On Turning Away from the Mahayana
If a disciple of the Buddha disavows the eternal Mahayana sutras and moral codes, declaring that they were not actually taught by the Buddha, and instead follows and observes those of the Two Vehicles and deluded externalists, he commits a secondary offense.
9. On Failure to Care for the Sick
If a disciple of the Buddha should see anyone who is sick, he should wholeheartedly provide for that person's needs just as he would for a Buddha. Of the eight Fields of Blessings, looking after the sick is the most important. A Buddha's disciple should take care of his father, mother, Dharma teacher or disciple -- regardless of whether the latter are disabled or suffering from various kinds of diseases.
If instead, he becomes angry and resentful and fails to do so, or refuses to rescue the sick or disabled in temples, cities and towns, forests and mountains, or along the road, he commits a secondary offense.
10. On Storing Deadly Weapons
A disciple of the Buddha should not store weapons such as knives, clubs, bows, arrows, spears, axes or any other weapons, nor may he keep nets, traps or any such devices used in destroying life.
As a disciple of the Buddha, he must not even avenge the death of his parents -- let alone kill sentient beings! He should not store any weapons or devices that can be used to kill sentient beings. If he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary offense.
The first ten secondary precepts have just been described. Disciples of the Buddha should study and respectfully observe them. They are explained in detail in the six chapters [now lost] following these precepts.
11. On Serving as an Emissary
A disciple of the Buddha shall not, out of personal benefit or evil intentions, act as a country's emissary to foster military confrontation and war causing the slaughter of countless sentient beings. As a disciple of the Buddha, he should not be involved in military affairs, or serve as a courier between armies, much less act as a willing catalyst for war. If he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary offense.
12. On Unlawful Business Undertakings
A disciple of the Buddha must not deliberately trade in slaves or sell anyone into servitude, nor should he trade in domestic animals, coffins or wood for caskets. He cannot engage in these types of business himself much less encourage others to do so. Otherwise, he commits a secondary offense.
13. On Slander and Libel
A disciple of the Buddha must not, without cause and with evil intentions, slander virtuous people, such as Elder Masters, monks or nuns, kings, princes or other upright persons, saying that they have committed the Seven Cardinal Sins or broken the Ten Major Bodhisattva Precepts. He should be compassionate and filial and treat all virtuous people as if they were his father, mother, siblings or other close relatives. If instead, he slanders and harms them, he commits a secondary offense.
14. On Starting Wildfires
A disciple of the Buddha shall not, out of evil intentions, start wildfires to clear forests and burn vegetation on mountains and plains, during the fourth to the ninth months of the lunar year. Such fires [are particularly injurious to animals during that period and may spread] to people's homes, towns and villages, temples and monasteries, fields and groves, as well as the [unseen] dwellings and possessions of deities and ghosts. He must not intentionally set fire to any place where there is life. If he deliberately does so, he commits a secondary offense.
15. Teaching Non-Mahayana Dharma
A disciple of the Buddha must teach one and all, from fellow disciples, relatives and spiritual friends, to externalists and evil beings, how to receive and observe the Mahayana sutras and moral codes. He should teach the Mahayana principles to them and help them develop the Bodhi Mind -- as well as the Ten Dwellings, the Ten Practices and the Ten Dedications, explaining the order and function of each of these Thirty Minds (levels).
If instead, the disciple, with evil, hateful intentions, perversely teaches them the sutras and moral codes of the Two Vehicle tradition as well as the commentaries of deluded externalists, he thereby commits a secondary offense.
16. Unsound Explanation of the Dharma
A Bodhisattva Dharma Master must first, with a wholesome mind, study the rules of deportment, as well as sutras and moral codes of the Mahayana tradition, and understand their meanings in depth. Then, whenever novices come from afar to seek instruction, he should explain, according to the Dharma, all the Bodhisattva renunciation practices, such as burning one's body, arm, or finger [as the ultimate act in the quest for Supreme Enlightenment). If a novice is not prepared to follow these practices as an offering to the Buddhas, he is not a Bodhisattva monk. Moreover, a Bodhisattva monk should be willing to sacrifice his body and limbs for starving beasts and hungry ghosts [as the ultimate act of compassion in rescuing sentient beings).
After these explanations, the Bodhisattva Dharma Master should teach the novices in an orderly way, to awaken their minds. If instead, for personal gain, he refuses to teach or teaches in a confused manner, quoting passages out of order and context, or teaches in a manner that disparages the Triple Jewel, he commits a secondary offense.
17. On Exacting Donations
A disciple of the Buddha must not, for the sake of food, drink, money, possessions or fame, approach and befriend kings, princes, or high officials and [on the strength of such relationships], exact money, goods or other advantages. Nor may he encourage others to do so. These actions are called untoward, excessive demands and lack compassion and filial piety. Such a disciple commits a secondary offense.
18. On Serving as an Inadequate Master
A disciple of the Buddha should study the Twelve Divisions of the Dharma and recite the Bodhisattva precepts frequently. He should strictly observe these precepts in the Six Periods of the day and night and fully understand their meaning and principles as well as the essence of their Buddha Nature.
If instead, the disciple of the Buddha fails to understand even a sentence or a verse of the moral code or the causes and conditions related to the precepts, but pretends to understand them, he is deceiving both himself and others. A disciple who understands nothing of the Dharma, yet acts as a teacher transmitting the precepts, commits a secondary offense.
19. On Double-tongued Speech
A disciple of the Buddha must not, with malicious intent gossip or spread rumors and slander, create discord and disdain for virtuous people. [An example is] disparaging a monk who observes the Bodhisattva precepts, as he [makes offerings to the Buddhas by] holding an incense burner to his forehead. A disciple of the Buddha who does so commits a secondary offense.
20. Failure to Liberate Sentient Beings
A disciple of the Buddha should have a mind of compassion and cultivate the practice of liberating sentient beings. He must reflect thus: throughout the eons of time, all male sentient beings have been my father, all female sentient beings my mother. I was born of them, now I slaughter them, I would be slaughtering my parents as well as eating flesh that was once my own. This is so because all elemental earth, water, fire and air -- the four constituents of all life -- have previously been part of my body, part of my substance. I must therefore always cultivate the practice of liberating sentient beings and enjoin others to do likewise -- as sentient beings are forever reborn, again and again, lifetime after lifetime. If a Bodhisattva sees an animal on the verge of being killed, he must devise a way to rescue and protect it, helping it to escape suffering and death. The disciple should always teach the Bodhisattva precepts to rescue and deliver sentient beings.
On the day his father, mother, and siblings die, he should invite Dharma Masters to explain the Bodhisattva sutras and precepts. This will generate merits and virtues and help the deceased either to achieve rebirth in the Pure Lands and meet the Buddhas or to secure rebirth in the human or celestial realms. If instead, a disciple fails to do so, he commits a secondary offense.
You should study and respectfully observe the above ten precepts. Each of them is explained in detail in the chapter "Expiating Offenses."
21. On Violence and Vengefulness
A disciple of the Buddha must not return anger for anger, blow for blow. He should not seek revenge, even if his father, mother, siblings, or close relatives are killed -- nor should he do so if the ruler or king of his country is murdered. To take the life of one being in order to avenge the killing of another is contrary to filial piety [as we are all related through the eons of birth and rebirth).
Furthermore, he should not keep others in servitude, much less beat or abuse them, creating evil karma of mind, speech and body day after day -- particularly the offenses of speech. How much less should he deliberately commit the Seven Cardinal Sins. Therefore, if a Bodhisattva-monk lacks compassion and deliberately seeks revenge, even for an injustice done to his close relatives, he commits a secondary offense.
22. Arrogance and Failure to Request the Dharma
A disciple of the Buddha who has only recently left home and is still a novice in the Dharma should not be conceited. He must not refuse instruction on the sutras and moral codes from Dharma Masters on account of his own intelligence, worldly learning, high position, advanced age, noble lineage, vast understanding, great merits, extensive wealth and possessions, etc. Although these Masters may be of humble birth, young in age, poor, or suffering physical disabilities, they may still have genuine virtue and deep understanding of sutras and moral codes.
The novice Bodhisattva should not judge Dharma Masters on the basis of their family background and refuse to seek instructions on the Mahayana truths from them. If he does so, he commits a secondary offense.
23. On Teaching the Dharma Grudgingly
After my passing, if a disciple should, with a wholesome mind, wish to receive the Bodhisattva precepts, he may make a vow to do so before the images of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas and practice repentance before these images for seven days. If he then experiences a vision, he has received the precepts. If he does not, he should continue doing so for fourteen days, twenty-one days, or even a whole year, seeking to witness an auspicious sign. After witnessing such a sign, he could, in front of images of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, formally receive the precepts. If he has not witnessed such a sign, although he may have accepted the precepts before the Buddha images, he has not actually received the precepts.
However, the witnessing of auspicious signs is not necessary if the disciple receives the precepts directly from a Dharma Master who has himself received the precepts. Why is this so? It is because this is a case of transmission from Master to Master and therefore all that is required is a mind of utter sincerity and respect on the part of the disciple.
If, within a radius of some three hundred fifty miles, a disciple cannot find a Master capable of conferring the Bodhisattva precepts, he may seek to receive them in front of Buddha or Bodhisattva images. However, he must witness an auspicious sign.
If a Dharma Master, on account of his extensive knowledge of sutras and Mahayana moral codes as well as his close relationship with kings, princes, and high officials, refuses to give appropriate answers to student-Bodhisattvas seeking the meaning of sutras and moral codes, or does so grudgingly, with resentment and arrogance, he commits a secondary offense.
24. Failure to Practice Mahayana Teachings
If a disciple of the Buddha fails to study Mahayana sutras and moral codes assiduously and cultivate correct views, correct nature and the correct Dharma Body, it is like abandoning the Seven Precious Jewels for [mere stones]: worldly texts and the Two-Vehicle or externalist commentaries. To do so is to create the causes and conditions that obstruct the Path to Enlightenment and cut himself off from his Buddha Nature. It is a failure to follow the Bodhisattva path. If a disciple intentionally acts in such a manner, he commits a secondary offense.
25. Unskilled Leadership of the Assembly
After my passing, if a disciple should serve as an abbot, elder Dharma Master, Precept Master, Meditation Master, or Guest Prefect, he must develop a compassionate mind and peacefully settle differences within the Assembly -- skillfully administering the resources of the Three Jewels, spending frugally and not treating them as his own property. If instead, he were to create disorder, provoke quarrels and disputes or squander the resources of the Assembly, he would commit a secondary offense.
26. Accepting Personal Offerings
Once a disciple of the Buddha has settled down in a temple, if visiting Bodhisattva Bhiksus should arrive at the temple precincts, the guest quarters established by the king, or even the summer retreat quarters, or the quarters of the Great Assembly, the disciple should welcome the visiting monks and see them off. He should provide them with such essentials as food and drink, a place to live, beds, chairs, and the like. If the host does not have the necessary means, he should be willing to pawn himself or cut off and sell his own flesh.
Whenever there are meal offerings and ceremonies at a layman's home, visiting monks should be given a fair share of the offerings. The abbot should send the monks, whether residents or guests, to the donor's place in turn [according to their sacerdotal age or merits and virtues). If only resident monks are allowed to accept invitations and not visiting monks, the abbot is committing a grievous offense and is behaving no differently than an animal. He is unworthy of being a monk or a son of the Buddha, and is guilty of a secondary offense.
27. Accepting Discriminatory Invitations
A disciple of the Buddha must not accept personal invitations nor appropriate the offerings for himself. Such offerings rightly belong to the Sangha -- the whole community of monks and nuns of the Ten Directions. To accept personal offerings is to steal the possessions of the Sangha of the Ten Directions. It is tantamount to stealing what belongs to the Eight Fields of Blessings: Buddhas, Sages, Dharma Masters, Precept Masters, monks/nuns, mothers, fathers, the sick. Such a disciple commits a secondary offense.
28. Issuing Discriminatory Invitations
A disciple of the Buddha, be he a Bodhisattva monk, lay Bodhisattva, or other donor, should, when inviting monks or nuns to conduct a prayer session, come to the temple and inform the monk in charge. The monk will then tell him: "Inviting members of the Sangha according to the proper order is tantamount to inviting the Arhats of the Ten Directions. To offer a discriminatory special invitation to [such a worthy group as] five hundred Arhats or Bodhisattva-monks will not generate as much merit as inviting one ordinary monk, if it is his turn.
There is no provision in the teachings of the Seven Buddhas for discriminatory invitations. To do so is to follow externalist practices and to contradict filial piety [toward all sentient beings). If a disciple deliberately issues a discriminatory invitation, he commits a secondary offense.
29. On Improper Livelihoods
A disciple of the Buddha should not, for the sake of gain or with evil intentions, engage in the business of prostitution, selling the wiles and charms of men and women. He must also not cook for himself, milling and pounding grain. Neither may he act as a fortune-teller predicting the gender of children, reading dreams and the like. Nor shall he practice sorcery, work as a trainer of falcons or hunting dogs, nor make a living concocting hundreds and thousands of poisons from deadly snakes, insects, or from gold and silver. Such occupations lack mercy, compassion, and filial piety [toward sentient beings). Therefore, if a Bodhisattva intentionally engages in these occupations, he commits a secondary offense.
30. On Handling Business Affairs for the Laity
A disciple of the Buddha must not, with evil intentions, slander the Triple Jewel while pretending to be their close adherent -- preaching the Truth of Emptiness while his actions are in the realm of Existence. Furthermore, he must not handle worldly affairs for the laity, acting as a go-between or matchmaker -- creating the karma of attachment. Moreover, during the six days of fasting each month and the three months of fasting each year, a disciple should strictly observe all precepts, particularly against killing, stealing and the rules against breaking the fast. Otherwise, the disciple commits a secondary offense.
A Bodhisattva should respectfully study and observe the ten preceding precepts. They are explained in detail in the Chapter on "Prohibitions".
31. Rescuing Clerics Along with Sacred Objects
After my passing, in the evil periods that will follow, there will be externalists, evil persons, thieves and robbers who steal and sell statues and paintings of Buddhas, Bodhisattvas and [those to whom respect is due such as] their parents. They may even peddle copies of sutras and moral codes, or sell monks, nuns or those who follow the Bodhisattva Path or have developed the Bodhi Mind to serve as retainers or servants to officials and others.
A disciple of the Buddha, upon witnessing such pitiful events, must develop a mind of compassion and find ways to rescue and protect all persons and valuables, raising funds wherever he can for this purpose. If a Bodhisattva does not act in this manner, he commits a secondary offense.
32. On Harming Sentient Beings
A disciple of the Buddha must not sell knives, clubs, bows, arrows, other life-taking devices, nor keep altered scales or measuring devices. He should not abuse his governmental position to confiscate people's possessions, nor should he, with malice at heart, restrain or imprison others or sabotage their success. In addition, he should not raise cats, dogs, foxes, pigs and other such animals. If he intentionally does such things, he commits a secondary offense.
33. On Watching Improper Activities
A disciple of the Buddha must not, with evil intentions, watch people fighting or the battling of armies, rebels, gangs and the like, should not listen to the sounds of conch shells, drums, horns, guitars, flutes, lutes, songs or other music, nor should he be party to any form of gambling, whether dice, checkers, or the like. Furthermore, he should not practice fortune-telling or divination nor should he be an accomplice to thieves and bandits. He must not participate in any of these activities. If instead, he intentionally does so, he commits a secondary offense.
34. Temporary Abandoning of the Bodhi Mind
A disciple of the Buddha should observe the Bodhisattva precepts every day, whether walking, standing, reclining or seated -- reading and reciting them day and night. He should be resolute in keeping the precepts, as strong as a diamond, as desperate as a shipwrecked person clinging to a small log while attempting to cross the ocean, or as principled as the "Bhiksu bound by reeds". Furthermore, he should always have a wholesome faith in the teachings of the Mahayana. Conscious that sentient beings are Buddhas-to-be while the Buddhas are realized Buddhas, he should develop the Bodhi Mind and maintain it in each and every thought, without retrogression.
If a Bodhisattva has but a single thought in the direction of the Two Vehicles or externalist teachings, he commits a secondary offense.
35. Failure to Make Great Vows
A Bodhisattva must make many great vows -- to be filial to his parents and Dharma teachers, to meet good spiritual advisors, friends, and colleagues who will keep teaching him the Mahayana sutras and moral codes as well as the Stages of Bodhisattva Practice (the Ten Dwellings, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, and the Ten Grounds). He should further vow to understand these teachings clearly so that he can practice according to the Dharma while resolutely keeping the precepts of the Buddhas. If necessary, he should lay down his life rather than abandon this resolve for even a single moment. If a Bodhisattva does not make such vows, he commits a secondary offense.
36. Failure to Make Resolutions
Once a Bodhisattva has made these Great Vows, he should strictly keep the precepts of the Buddhas and make the following resolutions:
1.- I would rather jump into a raging blaze, a deep abyss, or into a mountain of knives, than engage in impure actions with any woman, thus violating the sutras and moral codes of the Buddhas of the Three Periods of Time.
2.- I would rather wrap myself a thousand times with a red-hot iron net, than let this body, should it break the precepts, wear clothing provided by the faithful.
I would rather swallow red hot iron pellets and drink molten iron for hundreds of thousands of eons, than let this mouth, should it break the precepts, consume food and drink provided by the faithful.
I would rather lie on a bonfire or a burning iron net than let this body, should it break the precepts, rest on bedding, blankets and mats supplied by the faithful.
I would rather be impaled for eons by hundreds of spears, than let this body, should it break the precepts, receive medications from the faithful.
I would rather jump into a cauldron of boiling oil and roast for hundreds of thousands of eons, than let this body, should it break the precepts, receive shelter, groves, gardens, or fields from the faithful.
3.- I would rather be pulverized from head to toe by an iron sledge hammer, than let this body, should it break the precepts, accept respect and reverence from the faithful.
4.- I would rather have both eyes blinded by hundreds of thousands of swords and spears, rather than break the precepts by looking at beautiful forms. [In the same vein, I shall keep my mind from being sullied by exquisite sounds, fragrances, food and sensations.]
5.- I further vow that all sentient beings will achieve Buddhahood.
If a disciple of the Buddha does not make the preceding great resolutions, he commits a secondary offense.
37. Traveling in Dangerous Areas
[As a cleric], a disciple of the Buddha should engage in ascetic practices twice each year. He should sit in meditation, winter and summer, and observe the summer retreat. During those periods, he should always carry eighteen essentials such as a willow branch (for a toothbrush), ash-water (for soap), the traditional three clerical robes, an incense burner, a begging bowl, a sitting mat, a water filter, bedding, copies of sutras and moral codes as well as statues of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas.
When practicing austerities and when traveling, be it for thirty miles or three hundred miles, a cleric should always have the eighteen essentials with him. The two periods of austerities are from the 15th of the first lunar month to the 15th of the third month, and from the 15th of the eighth lunar month to the 15th of the tenth month. During the periods of austerities, he requires these eighteen essentials just as a bird needs its two wings.
Twice each month, the novice Bodhisattva should attend the Uposattha ceremony and recite the Ten Major and Forty-eight Secondary Precepts. Such recitations should be done before images of the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. If only one person attends the ceremony, then he should do the reciting. If two, three, or even hundreds of thousands attend the ceremony, still only one person should recite. Everyone else should listen in silence. The one reciting should sit on a higher level than the audience, and everyone should be dressed in clerical robes. During the summer retreat, each and every activity should be managed in accordance with the Dharma.
When practicing the austerities, the Buddhist disciple should avoid dangerous areas, unstable kingdoms, countries ruled by evil kings, precipitous terrains, remote wildernesses, regions inhabited by bandits, thieves, or lions, tigers, wolves, poisonous snakes, or areas subject to hurricanes, floods and fires. The disciple should avoid all such dangerous areas when practicing the austerities and also when observing the summer retreat. Otherwise, he commits a secondary offense.
38. Order of Seating Within the Assembly
A disciple of the Buddha should sit in the proper order when in the Assembly. Those who received the Bodhisattva precepts first sit first, those who received the precepts afterwards should sit behind. Whether old or young, a Bhiksu or Bhiksuni, a person of status, a king, a prince, a eunuch, or a servant, etc., each should sit according to the order in which he received the precepts. Disciples of the Buddha should not be like externalists or deluded people who base their order on age or sit without any order at all -- in barbarian fashion. In my Dharma, the order of sitting is based on seniority of ordination.
Therefore, if a Bodhisattva does not follow the order of sitting according to the Dharma, he commits a secondary offense.
39. Failure to Cultivate Merits and Wisdom
A disciple of the Buddha should constantly counsel and teach all people to establish monasteries, temples and pagodas in mountains and forests, gardens and fields. He should also construct stupas for the Buddhas and buildings for winter and summer retreats. All facilities required for the practice of the Dharma should be established.
Moreover, a disciple of the Buddha should explain Mahayana sutras and the Bodhisattva precepts to all sentient beings. In times of sickness, national calamities, impending warfare or upon the death of one's parents, brothers and sisters, Dharma Masters and Precept Masters, a Bodhisattva should lecture and explain Mahayana sutras and the Bodhisattva precepts weekly for up to seven weeks.
The disciple should read, recite, and explain the Mahayana sutras and the Bodhisattva precepts in all prayer gatherings, in his business undertakings and during periods of calamity -- fire, flood, storms, ships lost at sea in turbulent waters or stalked by demons ... In the same vein, he should do so in order to transcend evil karma, the Three Evil Realms, the Eight Difficulties, the Seven Cardinal Sins, all forms of imprisonment, or excessive sexual desire, anger, delusion, and illness.
If a novice Bodhisattva fails to act as indicated, he commits a secondary offense.
The Bodhisattva should study and respectfully observe the nine precepts just mentioned above, as explained in the "Brahma Altar" chapter.
40. Discrimination in Conferring the Precepts
A disciple of the Buddha should not be selective and show preference in conferring the Bodhisattva precepts. Each and every person can receive the precepts -- kings, princes, high officials, Bhiksus, Bhiksunis, laymen, laywomen, libertines, prostitutes, the gods in the eighteen Brahma Heavens or the six Desire Heavens, asexual persons, bisexual persons, eunuchs, slaves, or demons and ghosts of all types. Buddhist disciples should be instructed to wear robes and sleep on cloth of a neutral color, formed by blending blue, yellow, red, black and purple dyes all together.
The clothing of monks and nuns should, in all countries, be different from those worn by ordinary persons.
Before someone is allowed to receive the Bodhisattva precepts, he should be asked: "have you committed any of the Cardinal Sins?" The Precept Master should not allow those who have committed such sins to receive the precepts.
Here are the Seven Cardinal Sins: shedding the Buddha's blood, murdering an Arhat, killing one's father, killing one's mother, murdering a Dharma Teacher, murdering a Precept Master or disrupting the harmony of the Sangha.
Except for those who have committed the Cardinal Sins, everyone can receive the Bodhisattva precepts.
The Dharma rules of the Buddhist Order prohibit monks and nuns from bowing down before rulers, parents, relatives, demons and ghosts.
Anyone who understands the explanations of the Precept Master can receive the Bodhisattva precepts. Therefore, if a person were to come from thirty to three hundred miles away seeking the Dharma and the Precept Master, out of meanness and anger, does not promptly confer these precepts, he commits a secondary offense.
41. Teaching for the Sake of Profit
If a disciple of the Buddha, when teaching others and developing their faith in the Mahayana, should discover that a particular person wishes to receive the Bodhisattva precepts, he should act as a teaching master and instruct that person to seek out two Masters, a Dharma Master and a Precept Master.
These two Masters should ask the Precept candidate whether he has committed any of the Seven Cardinal Sins in this life. If he has, he cannot receive the precepts. If not, he may receive the precepts.
If he has broken any of the Ten Major Precepts, he should be instructed to repent before the statues of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. He should do so six times a day and recite the Ten Major and Forty-eight Minor Precepts, paying respect with utter sincerity to the Buddhas of the Three Periods of Time. He should continue in this manner until he receives an auspicious response, which could occur after seven days, fourteen days, twenty-one days, or even a year. Examples of auspicious signs include: experiencing the Buddhas rub the crown of one's head, or seeing lights, halos, flowers and other such rare phenomena.
The witnessing of an auspicious sign indicates that the candidate's karma has been dissipated. Otherwise, although he has repented, it was of no avail. He still has not received the precepts. However, the merits accrued will increase his chances of receiving the precepts in a future lifetime.
Unlike the case of a major Bodhisattva precept, if a candidate has violated any of the Forty-eight Secondary Precepts, he can confess his infraction and sincerely repent before Bodhisattva-monks or nuns. After that, his offense will be eradicated.
The officiating Master, however, must fully understand the Mahayana sutras and moral codes, the secondary as well as the major Bodhisattva precepts, what constitutes an offense and what does not, the truth of Primary Meaning, as well as the various Bodhisattva cultivation stages -- the Ten Dwellings, the Ten Practices, the Ten Dedications, the Ten Grounds, and Equal and Wonderful Enlightenment.
He should also know the type and degree of contemplation required for entering and exiting these stages and be familiar with the Ten Limbs of Enlightenment as well as a variety of other contemplations.
If he is not familiar with the above and, out of greed for fame, disciples or offerings, he makes a pretense of understanding the sutras and moral codes, he is deceiving himself as well as others. Hence, if he intentionally acts as Precept Master, transmitting the precepts to others, he commits a secondary offense.
42. Reciting the Precepts to Evil Persons
A disciple of the Buddha should not, with a greedy motive, expound the great precepts of the Buddhas before those who have not received them, externalists or persons with heterodox views. Except in the case of kings or supreme rulers, he may not expound the precepts before any such person.
Persons who hold heterodox views and do not accept the precepts of the Buddhas are untamed in nature. They will not, lifetime after lifetime, encounter the Triple Jewel. They are as mindless as trees and stones; they are no different from wooden stumps. Hence, if a disciple of the Buddha expounds the precepts of the Seven Buddhas before such persons, he commits a secondary offense.
43. Thoughts of Violating the Precepts
If a disciple of the Buddha joins the Order out of pure faith, receives the correct precepts of the Buddhas, but then develops thoughts of violating the precepts, he is unworthy of receiving any offerings from the faithful, unworthy of walking on the ground of his motherland, unworthy of drinking its water.
Five thousand guardian spirits constantly block his way, calling him "Evil thief!" These spirits always follow him into people's homes, villages and towns, sweeping away his very footprints. Everyone curses such a disciple, calling him a "Thief within the Dharma." All sentient beings avert their eyes, not wishing to see him.
A disciple of the Buddha who breaks the precepts is no different from an animal or a wooden stump. Hence, if a disciple intentionally violates the correct precepts, he commits a secondary offense.
44. Failure to Honor the Sutras and Moral Codes
A disciple of the Buddha should always singlemindedly receive, observe, read and recite the Mahayana sutras and moral codes. He should copy the sutras and moral codes onto bark, paper, fine cloth, or bamboo slats and not hesitate to use his own skin as paper, draw his own blood for ink and his marrow for ink solvent, or split his bones for use as pens. He should use precious gems, priceless incense and flowers and other precious things to make and adorn covers and cases to store the sutras and codes.
Hence, if he does not make offerings to the sutras and moral codes, in accordance with the Dharma, he commits a secondary offense.
45. Failure to Teach Sentient Beings
A disciple of the Buddha should develop a mind of Great Compassion. Whenever he enters people's homes, villages, cities or towns, and sees sentient beings, he should say aloud, "You sentient beings should all take the Three Refuges and receive the Ten [Major Bodhisattva) Precepts." Should he come across cows, pigs, horses, sheep and other kinds of animals, he should concentrate and say aloud, "You are now animals; you should develop the Bodhi Mind." A Bodhisattva, wherever he goes, be it climbing a mountain, entering a forest, crossing a river, or walking through a field should help all sentient beings develop the Bodhi Mind.
If a disciple of the Buddha does not wholeheartedly teach and rescue sentient beings in such a manner, he commits a secondary offense.
46. Preaching in an Inappropriate Manner
A disciple of the Buddha should always have a mind of Great Compassion to teach and transform sentient beings. Whether visiting wealthy and aristocratic donors or addressing Dharma gatherings, he should not remain standing while explaining the Dharma to laymen, but should occupy a raised seat in front of the lay assembly.
A Bhiksu serving as Dharma instructor must not be standing while lecturing to the Fourfold Assembly. During such lectures, the Dharma Master should sit on a raised seat amidst flowers and incense, while the Fourfold Assembly must listen from lower seats. The Assembly must respect and follow the Master like filial sons obeying their parents or Brahmans worshipping fire. If a Dharma Master does not follow these rules while preaching the Dharma, he commits a secondary offense.
47. On Regulations Against the Dharma
A disciple of the Buddha who has accepted the precepts of the Buddhas with a faithful mind, must not use his high official position (as a king, prince, official, etc.) to undermine the moral code of the Buddhas. He may not establish rules and regulations preventing the four kinds of lay disciples from joining the Order and practicing the Way, nor may he prohibit the making of Buddha or Bodhisattva images, statues and stupas, or the printing and distribution of sutras and codes. Likewise, he must not establish rules and regulations placing controls on the Fourfold Assembly. If highly placed lay disciples engage in actions contrary to the Dharma, they are no different from vassals in the service of [illegitimate] rulers.
A Bodhisattva should rightfully receive respect and offerings from all. If instead, he is forced to defer to officials, this is contrary to the Dharma, contrary to the moral code.
Hence, if a king or official has received the Bodhisattva precepts with a wholesome mind, he should avoid offenses that harm the Three Jewels. If instead, he intentionally commits such acts, he is guilty of a secondary offense.
48. On Destroying the Dharma
A disciple of the Buddha who becomes a monk with wholesome intentions must not, for fame or profit, explain the precepts to kings or officials in such a way as to cause monks, nuns or laymen who have received the Bodhisattva precepts to be tied up, thrown into prison or forcefully conscripted. If a Bodhisattva acts in such a manner, he is no different from a worm in a lion's body, eating away at the lion's flesh. This is not something a worm living outside the lion can do. Likewise, only disciples of the Buddhas can bring down the Dharma -- no externalist or demon can do so.
Those who have received the precepts of the Buddha should protect and observe them just as a mother would care for her only child or a filial son his parents. They must not break the precepts.
If a Bodhisattva hears externalists or evil-minded persons speak ill of, or disparage, the precepts of the Buddhas, he should feel as though his heart were pierced by three hundred spears, or his body stabbed with a thousand knives or thrashed with a thousand clubs. He would rather suffer in the hells himself for a hundred eons than hear evil beings disparage the precepts of the Buddha. How much worse it would be if the disciple were to break the precepts himself or incite others to do so! This is indeed an unfilial mind! Hence, if he violates the precepts intentionally, he commits a secondary offense.
The preceding nine precepts should be studied and respectfully observed with utmost faith.
VII. Conclusion
The Buddha said, "All of you disciples! These are the Forty-eight Secondary Precepts that you should observe. Bodhisattvas of the past have recited them, those of the future will recite them, those of the present are now reciting them.
"Disciples of the Buddha! You should all listen! These Ten Major and Forty-eight Secondary Precepts are recited by all Buddhas of the Three Periods of Time -- past, present, and future. I now recite them as well."
VIII. Epilogue
The Buddha continued: "Everyone in the Assembly -- kings, princes, officials, Bhiksus, Bhiksunis, laymen, laywomen and those who have received the Bodhisattva precepts -- should receive and observe, read and recite, explain and copy these precepts of the eternal Buddha Nature so that they can circulate without interruption for the edification of all sentient beings. They will then encounter the Buddhas and receive the teachings from each one in succession. Lifetime after lifetime, they will escape the Three Evil Paths and the Eight Difficulties and will always be reborn in the human and celestial realms."
I have concluded a general explanation of the precepts of the Buddhas beneath this Bodhi Tree. All in this Assembly should singlemindedly study the Pratimoksa precepts and joyfully observe them.
These precepts are explained in detail in the exhortation section of the "Markless Celestial King" chapter.
At that time, the Bodhisattvas of the Three Thousand World System (cosmos) sat listening with utmost reverence to the Buddha reciting the precepts. They then joyously received and observed them.
As Buddha Sakyamuni finished explaining the Ten Inexhaustible Precepts of the "Mind-Ground Dharma Door" chapter, (which Vairocana Buddha had previously proclaimed in the Lotus Flower Treasury World), countless other Sakyamuni Buddhas did the same.
As Sakyamuni Buddha preached in ten different places, from the Mahesvara Heaven Palace to the Bodhi Tree, for the benefit of countless Bodhisattvas and other beings, all the countless Buddhas in the infinite lands of the Lotus Treasury World did the same.
They explained the Buddha's Mind Treasury (the Thirty Minds), Ground Treasury, Precept Treasury, Infinite Actions and Vows Treasury, the Treasury of the Ever-Present Buddha Nature as Cause and Effect of Buddhahood. Thus, all the Buddhas completed their expositions of the countless Dharma Treasuries.
All sentient beings throughout the billions of worlds gladly receive and observe these Teachings.
The characteristics of the Mind-Ground are explained in greater detail in the chapter "Seven Forms of Conduct of the Buddha Floral Brilliance King."
IX. Verses of Praise
The sages with great samadhi and wisdom
Can observe this teaching;
Even before reaching Buddhahood
They are blessed with five benefits:
First, the Buddhas of the Ten Directions
Always keep them in mind and protect them.
Secondly, at the time of death
They hold correct views with a joyous mind.
Third, wherever they are reborn,
The Bodhisattvas are their friends.
Fourth, merits and virtues abound as
The Paramita of Precepts is accomplished.
Fifth, in this life and in succeeding ones,
Observing all precepts, they are filled with
merits and wisdom.
Such disciples are sons of the Buddha.
Wise people should ponder this well.
Common beings clinging to marks and self
Cannot obtain this teaching.
Nor can followers of the Two Vehicles,
abiding in quietude,
Plant their seeds within it.
To nurture the sprouts of Bodhi,
To illuminate the world with wisdom,
You should carefully observe
The True Mark of all dharmas:
Neither born nor unborn,
Neither eternal nor extinct,
Neither the same nor different,
Neither coming nor going.
In that singleminded state
The disciple should diligently cultivate
And adorn the Bodhisattva's practices and deeds
In sequential order.
Between the teachings of study and non-study,
One should not develop thoughts of discrimination.
This is the Foremost Path --
Also known as Mahayana.
All offenses of idle speculation and meaningless debate
Invariably disappear at this juncture;
The Buddha's omniscient wisdom
Also arises from this.
Therefore, all disciples of the Buddha
Should develop great resolve,
And strictly observe the Buddha's precepts
As though they were brilliant gems.
All Bodhisattvas of the past
Have studied these precepts;
Those of the future will also study them.
Those of the present study them as well.
This is the path walked by the Buddhas,
And praised by the Buddhas.
I have now finished explaining the precepts,
The body of immense merit and virtue.
I now transfer them all to sentient beings;
May they all attain Supreme Wisdom;
May the sentient beings who hear this Dharma
All attain Buddhahood.
X. Verses of Dedication
In the Lotus Treasury World,
Vairocana explained an infinitesimal part of the Mind-Ground Door,
Transmitting it to the Sakyamunis:
Major and minor precepts are clearly delineated,
All sentient beings receive immense benefits.