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Buddhism's Sacred Scripture: The Sutra of the Lotus of the Wonderful Dharma, Chapter 3 P4/4
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I tell you, Shariputra,
you and the others
are all my children,
and I am a father to you.
For repeated kalpas
you have burned
in the flames
of manifold sufferings,
but I will save you all
and cause you to escape
from the threefold world.
Although earlier
I told you that you
had attained extinction,
that was only the end
of birth and death,
it was not true extinction.
Now what is needed
is simply that you acquire
Buddha wisdom.
If there are bodhisattvas
here in this assembly,
let them with a single mind
listen to the true Dharma
of the Buddhas.
Though the Buddhas,
the World-Honored Ones,
employ expedient means,
the living beings
converted by them
are all bodhisattvas.
If there are persons
of little wisdom
who are deeply attached
to love and desire,
because they are that way,
the Buddha preaches
for them
the rule of suffering.
Then the living beings
will be glad in mind,
having gained what
they never had before.
The rule of suffering
which the Buddha preaches
is true and never varies.
If there are living beings
who do not understand
the root of suffering,
who are deeply attached
to the causes of suffering
and cannot for a moment
put them aside,
because they are that way,
the Buddha uses
expedient means
to preach the way.
As to the cause
of all suffering,
it has its root
in greed and desire.
If greed and desire
are wiped out, it will
have no place to dwell.
To wipe out all suffering –
this is called the third rule.
For the sake of this rule,
the rule of extinction,
one practices the way.
And when one escapes
from the bonds of suffering
this is called
attaining emancipation.
By what means
can a person
attain emancipation?
Separating oneself from
falsehood and delusion –
this alone may be called
emancipation.
But if a person
has not truly been able to
emancipate himself
from everything,
then the Buddha will say
he has not achieved
true extinction,
because such a person
has not yet gained
the unsurpassed way.
My purpose
is not to try to cause them
to reach extinction.
I am the Dharma King,
free to do as I will
with the Dharma.
To bring peace and safety
to living beings –
that is the reason
I appear in the world.
I say to you, Shariputra,
this Dharma seal of mine
I preach because
I wish to bring benefit
to the world.
You must not recklessly
transmit it wherever
you happen to wander.
If there is someone
who hears it,
responds with joy
and gratefully accepts it,
you should know that
person is an avivartika
(non-regressing
bodhisattva).
If there is someone
who believes and accepts
the Dharma of this sutra,
that person has already seen
the Buddhas of the past,
has respectfully
offered alms to them and
listened to this Dharma.
If there is someone
who can believe
what you preach then
that person has seen me,
and has also seen you
and the other monks
and the bodhisattvas.
This Lotus Sutra
is preached for those
with profound wisdom.
If persons of shallow
understanding hear it,
they will be perplexed
and fail to comprehend.
As for all the voice-hearers
and pratyekabuddhas
(lone Buddhas),
in this sutra
there are things that are
beyond their powers.
Even you, Shariputra,
in the case of this sutra
were able to gain entrance
through faith alone.
How much more so, then,
the other voice-hearers.
Those other voice-hearers
it is because
they have faith
in the Buddha's words
that they can
comply with this sutra,
not because of
any wisdom of their own.
Also, Shariputra,
to persons who are
arrogant or lazy or taken up
with views of the self,
do not preach this sutra.
Those with the shallow
understandings
of ordinary persons,
who are deeply attached
to the five desires,
cannot comprehend it
when they hear it.
Do not preach it to them.
If a person fails
to have faith but instead
slanders this sutra,
immediately he will
destroy all the seeds
for becoming a Buddha
in this world.
Or perhaps he will scowl
with knitted brows and
harbor doubt or perplexity.
Listen and I will tell you
the penalty
this person must pay.
Whether the Buddha is
in the world or has already
entered extinction,
if this person
should slander a sutra
such as this,
or on seeing those
who read, recite, copy
and uphold this sutra,
should despise, hate, envy,
or bear grudges
against them, the penalty
this person must pay
listen, I will tell you now:
When his life
comes to an end he will
enter the Avichi hell,
be confined there
for a whole kalpa,
and when the kalpa ends,
be born there again.
He will keep
repeating this cycle
for a countless number
of kalpas.
Though he may emerge
from hell, he will fall
into the realm of beasts,
becoming a dog or jackal,
his form lean and scruffy,
dark, discolored,
with scabs and sores,
something for men
to make sport of.
Or again he will be hated
and despised by men,
constantly plagued by
hunger and thirst,
his bones and flesh
dried up,
in life undergoing
torment and hardship,
in death buried beneath
the tiles and stones.
Because he cut off
the seeds of Buddhahood
he will suffer this penalty.
If he should
become a camel or be born
in the shape of a donkey,
his body will constantly
bear heavy burdens and
have the stick or whip
laid on it.
He will think only
of water and grass and
understand nothing else.
Because
he slandered this sutra,
this is the punishment
he will incur.
Or he will be born
as a jackal
who comes to the village,
body all scabs and sores,
having only one eye,
by the boys
beaten and cuffed,
suffering grief and pain,
sometimes
to the point of death.
And after he has died
he will be born again
in the body of a serpent,
long and huge in size,
measuring
five hundred yojanas,
deaf, witless, without feet,
slithering along
on his belly,
with little creatures
biting and feeding on him,
day and night
undergoing hardship,
never knowing rest.
Because
he slandered this sutra,
this is the punishment
he will incur.
If he should
become a human being,
his faculties will
be blighted and dull,
he will be puny, vile,
bent, crippled, blind,
deaf, hunchbacked.
The things he says
people will not believe,
the breath from his mouth
will be constantly foul,
he will be possessed
by devils, poor and lowly,
ordered around by others,
plagued by many ailments,
thin and gaunt,
having no one to turn to.
Though he attached
himself to others, they
would never think of him;
though he might
gain something,
he would at once
lose or forget it.
Though he might practice
the art of medicine
and by its methods
cure someone's disease,
the person
would grow sicker
from some other malady
and perhaps in the end
would die.
If he himself
had an illness,
no one would aid
or nurse him, and though
he took good medicine,
it would only make
his condition worse.
If others should
turn against him,
he would find himself
plundered and robbed.
His sins would be such
that they would bring
unexpected disaster on him.
A sinful person
of this sort will
never see the Buddha,
the king of the many sages,
preaching the Dharma
(true teaching),
teaching and converting.
A sinful person of this sort
will constantly be born
amid difficulties, crazed,
deaf, confused in mind,
and never will hear
the Dharma (true teaching).
For countless kalpas
numerous as Ganges sands
he will at birth
become deaf and dumb,
his faculties impaired,
will constantly
dwell in hell,
strolling in it as though
it were a garden,
and the other evil paths
of existence
he will look on
as his own home.
Camel, donkey, pig, dog –
these will be the forms
he will take on.
Because
he slandered this sutra,
this is the punishment
he will incur.
If he should become
a human being, he will
be deaf, blind, dumb.
Poverty, want,
all kinds of decay
will be his adornment;
water blisters, diabetes,
scabs, sores, ulcers,
maladies such as these
will be his garments.
His body
will always smell bad,
filthy and impure.
Deeply attached
to views of self,
he will grow
in anger and hatred;
aflame with
licentious desires,
he will not spurn
even birds or beasts.
Because
he slandered this sutra,
this is the punishment
he will incur.
I tell you, Shariputra,
if I were to describe
the punishments
that fall on persons
who slander this sutra,
I could exhaust a kalpa
and never come to the end.
For this reason
I expressly say to you,
do not preach this sutra
to persons
who are without wisdom.
But if there are those
of keen capacities,
wise and understanding,
of much learning
and strong memory,
who seek the Buddha way,
then to persons
such as this
it is permissible
to preach it.
If there are persons
who have seen
hundreds and thousands
and millions of Buddhas,
have planted
many good roots
and are firm and deeply
committed in mind, then
to persons such as this
it is permissible
to preach it.
If there are persons
who are diligent,
constantly cultivating
a compassionate mind,
not begrudging life or limb,
then it is permissible
to preach it.
If there are persons
who are respectful,
reverent with minds
set on nothing else,
who separate themselves
from common folly
to live alone among
mountains and waters, then
to persons such as this
it is permissible
to preach it.
Again, Shariputra,
if you see a person who
thrusts aside evil friends
and associates with
good companions, then
to a person such as this
it is permissible
to preach it.
If you see
a son of the Buddha
observing the precepts,
clean and spotless
as a pure bright gem,
seeking
the Great Vehicle Sutra,
then to a person
such as this
it is permissible
to preach it.
If a person is
without anger,
upright and gentle
in nature, constantly
pitying all beings,
respectful and reverent
to the Buddhas, then
to a person such as this
it is permissible
to preach it.
Again,
if a son of the Buddha
in the midst
of the great assembly
should with a pure mind
employ various causes
and conditions,
similes, parables,
and other expressions
to preach the Dharma
in unhindered fashion,
to a person such as this
it is permissible
to preach it.
If there are monks who,
for the sake of
comprehensive wisdom,
seek the Dharma
in every direction,
pressing palms together,
gratefully accepting,
desiring only to accept
and embrace the sutra
of the Great Vehicle
and not accepting
a single verse
of the other sutras,
to persons such as this
it is permissible
to preach it.
If a person,
earnest in mind,
seeks this sutra as though
he were seeking
the Buddha's relics,
and having gained and
gratefully accepted it,
that person shows
no intention
of seeking other sutras
and has never once
given thought
to the writings of the
non-Buddhist doctrines,
to a person such as this
it is permissible
to preach it.
I tell you Shariputra,
if I described
all the characteristics
of those who seek
the Buddha way,
I could exhaust a kalpa
and never be done.
Persons of this type
are capable of believing
and understanding.
Therefore for them
you should preach
the Lotus Sutra of
the Wonderful Dharma.
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