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Buddhism's Sacred Scripture: The Sutra of the Lotus of the Wonderful Dharma, Chapter 3 P3/4
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Shariputra, if there are
living beings who are
inwardly wise in nature,
and who attend the Buddha,
the World-Honored One,
hear the Dharma
(true teaching),
believe and accept it, and
put forth diligent effort,
desiring to escape quickly
from the threefold world
and seeking
to attain nirvana,
they shall be called [those
who ride] the vehicle
of the voice hearer.
They are like those sons
who left the burning house
in the hope of
acquiring goat-carts.
If there are living beings
who attend the Buddha,
the World-Honored One,
hear the Dharma,
believe and accept it, and
put forth diligent effort,
seeking wisdom
that comes of itself,
taking solitary delight in
goodness and tranquility,
and profoundly
understanding
the causes and conditions
of all phenomena,
they shall be called those
who ride the vehicle
of the pratyekabuddha
(lone Buddha).
They are like the sons
who left the burning house
in the hope of
acquiring deer-carts.
If there are living beings
who attend the Buddha,
the World-Honored One,
hear the Dharma,
believe and accept it, and
put forth diligent effort,
seeking comprehensive
wisdom, the insight
of the Tathagata, powers
and freedom from fear,
who pity and comfort
countless living beings,
bring benefit to heavenly
and human beings,
and save them all,
they shall be called those
who ride the Great Vehicle.
Because the bodhisattvas
seek this vehicle, they are
called mahasattvas
(great saint).
They are like the sons
who left the burning house
in the hope of
acquiring ox-carts.
Shariputra, that rich man,
seeing that his sons
had all gotten out of
the burning house safely
and were
no longer threatened,
recalled that his wealth
was immeasurable and
presented each of his sons
with a large carriage.
And the Tathagata
does likewise.
He is the father
of all living beings.
When he sees that
countless thousands of
millions of living beings,
through the gateway
of the Buddha's teaching,
can escape the pains
of the threefold world,
the fearful and perilous road,
and gain the delights
of nirvana,
the Tathagata at that time
has this thought:
I possess measureless,
boundless wisdom,
power, fearlessness,
the storehouse of the
Dharma of the Buddhas.
These living beings
are all my sons.
I will give
the Great Vehicle
to all of them equally
so that there will not be
those who gain extinction
by themselves,
but that all may do so
through the extinction
of the Tathagata.
To all the living beings
who have escaped from
the threefold world
he then gives
the delightful gifts
of the meditation,
emancipation, and
so forth, of the Buddhas.
All these are uniform
in characteristics,
uniform in type,
praised by the sages,
capable of producing
pure, wonderful,
supreme delight.
Shariputra, that rich man
first used three types
of carriages
to entice his sons,
but later he gave them
just the large carriage
adorned with jewels,
the safest, most
comfortable kind of all.
Despite this,
that rich man was
not guilty of falsehood.
The Tathagata
does the same, and
he is without falsehood.
First he preaches
the three vehicles
to attract and guide
living beings, but later
he employs just
the Great Vehicle
to save them. Why?
The Tathagata possesses
measureless wisdom,
power, freedom from fear,
the storehouse
of the Dharma.
He is capable of giving
to all living beings
the Dharma
of the Great Vehicle.
But not all of them are
capable of receiving it.
Shariputra, for this reason
you should understand
that the Buddhas employ
the power of
expedient means.
And because they do so,
they make distinctions
in the one Buddha vehicle
and preach it as three."
The Buddha, wishing
to state his meaning
once more, spoke
in verse form, saying:
Suppose
there was a rich man
who had a large house.
This house was very old,
and decayed
and dilapidated as well.
The halls, though lofty,
were in dangerous condition
beams and rafters
were slating and askew,
foundations and steps
were crumbling.
Walls were
cracked and gaping
and the plaster
had fallen off of them.
The roof thatch was
in disrepair or missing,
the tips of the eaves
had dropped off.
The fences surrounding it
were crooked or collapsed
and heaped rubbish
was piled all around.
Some five hundred persons
lived in the house.
Kites, owls, hawks,
eagles, crows, magpies,
doves, pigeons, lizards,
snakes, vipers, scorpions,
centipedes and millipedes,
newts and ground beetles,
weasels, raccoon dogs,
mice, rats, hordes
of evil creatures scurried
this way and that.
Places that stank
of excrement overflowed
in streams of filth
where dung beetles and
other creatures gathered.
Foxes, wolves and jackals
gnawed and trampled
in the filth
or tore apart dead bodies,
scattering bones
and flesh about.
Because of this,
packs of dogs
came racing to the spot
to snatch and tear,
driven by hunger and fear,
searching everywhere
for food, fighting,
struggling and seizing,
baring their teeth,
snarling and howling.
That house was
fearful, frightening,
so altered was its aspect.
In every part of it there
were goblins and trolls,
yakshas (nature spirits)
and evil spirits
who feed on human flesh
or on poisonous creatures.
The various evil birds
and beasts
bore offspring,
hatched and nursed them,
each hiding and
protecting its young,
but the yakshas
outdid one another
in their haste
to seize and eat them.
And when they had
eaten their fill,
their evil hearts
became fiercer than ever;
the sound of their
wrangling and contention
was terrifying indeed.
Kumbhanda demons
crouched on clumps of earth
or leaped one or two feet
off the ground,
idling, wandering
here and there,
amusing themselves
according to their whims.
Again there were demons
with large tall bodies,
naked in form,
black and emaciated
constantly living there,
who would cry out in
loud ugly voices, shouting
and demanding food.
There were other demons
whose throats
were like needles,
or still other demons
with heads like the head
of an ox, some
feeding on human flesh,
others devouring dogs.
Their hair
like tangled weeds,
cruel, baleful, ferocious,
driven by
hunger and thirst,
they dashed about
shrieking and howling.
The yakshas
and starving spirits
and the various evil birds
and beasts
hungrily pressed forward
in all directions,
peering out at the windows.
Such were the perils
of this house,
threats and terrors
beyond measure.
This house, old and rotting,
belonged to a certain man
and that man
had gone nearby
and he had not been out
for long when a fire
suddenly broke out
in the house.
In one moment
from all four sides
the flames rose up
in a mass.
Ridgepoles, beams,
rafters, pillars
exploded with a roar,
quivering, splitting,
broke in two and
came rumbling down
as walls and partitions
collapsed.
The various
demons and spirits
lifted their voices
in a great wail,
the hawks, eagles
and other birds,
the kumbhanda demons,
were filled with
panic and terror,
not knowing how to escape.
The evil beasts
and poisonous creatures
hid in their holes and dens,
and the pishacha demons,
who were also living there,
because they had done
so little that was good,
were oppressed
by the flames
and attacked one another.
Foul smoke swirled
and billowed up,
filling the house
on every side.
The centipedes
and millipedes,
the poisonous snakes
and their kind,
scorched by the flames,
came scurrying out
of their lairs, whereupon
the kumbhanda demons
pounced on them
and ate them.
In addition,
the starving spirits,
the fire raging about
their heads,
hungry, thirsty,
tormented by the heat,
raced this way and that
in terror and confusion.
Such was the state
of that house, truly
frightening and fearful;
malicious injury,
the havoc of fire –
many ills, not just one,
afflicted it.
At this time
the owner of the house
was standing
outside the gate when
he heard someone say,
"A while ago
your various sons,
in order to
play their games,
went inside the house.
They are very young
and lack understanding
and will be wrapped up
in their amusements."
When the rich man
heard this,
he rushed in alarm
into the burning house,
determined
to rescue his sons
and keep them from
being burned by the flames.
He urged his sons
to heed him,
explaining the many
dangers and perils,
the evil spirits
and poisonous creatures,
the flames
spreading all around,
the multitude of sufferings
that would follow
one another without end,
the poisonous snakes,
lizards and vipers,
as well as
the many yakshas
and kumbhanda demons,
the jackals, foxes
and dogs, hawks, eagles,
kites, owls, ground beetles
and similar creatures
driven and tormented
by hunger and thirst,
truly things to be feared.
His sons could not stay
in such a perilous place,
much less
when it was all on fire!
But the sons
had no understanding
and although they heard
their father's warnings,
they continued engrossed
in their amusements,
never ceasing their games.
At that time the rich man
thought to himself:
My sons may behave
in this manner, adding
to my grief and anguish.
In this house at present
there is not a single joy,
and yet my sons,
wrapped up in their games,
refuse to heed
my instructions and will
be destroyed by the fire!
Then it occurred to him
to devise
some expedient means,
and he said to his sons,
"I have many kinds of
rare and marvelous toys,
wonderful
jeweled carriages,
goat-carts, deer-carts,
carts drawn by big oxen.
They are outside the gate
right now
you must come out
and see them!
I have fashioned these carts
explicitly for you.
You may enjoy
whichever you choose,
play with them as you like!
When the sons heard this
description of the carts,
at once they vied with
one another in dashing
out of the house,
till they reached
the open ground,
away from
all peril and danger.
When the rich man saw
that his sons had escaped
from the burning house
and were standing
in the crossroads,
he seated himself
on a lion seat,
congratulating himself
in these words:
"Now I am content
and happy.
These sons of mine
have been very difficult
to raise.
Ignorant, youthful,
without understanding,
they entered
that perilous house
with its many
poisonous creatures and
its goblins to be feared.
The roaring flames
of the great fire
rose up on all four sides,
yet those sons of mine
still clung to their games.
But now I have saved them,
caused them
to escape from danger.
That is the reason,
good people,
I am content and happy."
At that time the sons,
seeing their father
comfortably seated,
all went to where he was
and said to him:
"Please give us
the three kinds of
jeweled carriages
you promised us earlier.
You said if
we came out of the house
you'd give us
three kinds of carts
and we could choose
whichever we wished.
Now is the time
to give them to us!"
The rich man was
very wealthy and
had many storehouses.
With gold, silver,
lapis lazuli, seashells,
agate, and other
such precious things
he fashioned large carriages
beautifully adorned and
decorated, with railings
running around them
and bells
hanging from all sides.
Ropes of gold
twisted and twined,
nets of pearls
stretched over the top,
and fringes
of golden flowers
hung down everywhere.
Multicolored decorations
wound around and
encircled the carriages,
soft silks and gauzes
served for cushions,
with fine felts of
most wonderful make
valued at
thousands or millions,
gleaming white and pure,
to spread over them.
There numerous
grooms and attendants
to accompany
and guard them.
These wonderful carriages
the man presented
to each of his sons alike.
The sons at that time
danced for joy, mounting
the jeweled carriages,
driving off in all directions,
delighting and amusing
themselves freely
and without hindrance.
I say this to you,
Shariputra –
I am like this rich man.
I, most venerable
of the sages,
am the father of this world
and all living beings
are my children.
But they are
deeply attached to
worldly pleasures and
lacking in minds of wisdom.
There is no safety
in the threefold world;
it is like a burning house,
replete with
a multitude of sufferings,
truly to be feared,
constantly beset
with the grief and pains
of birth, old age,
sickness and death,
which are like fires
raging fiercely
and without cease.
The Tathagata
has already left
the burning house of
the threefold world and
dwells in tranquil quietude
in the safety
of forest and plain.
But now
this threefold world
is all my domain,
and the living beings in it
are all my children.
Now this place is beset
by many pains and trials.
I am the only person
who can rescue
and protect others,
but though
I teach and instruct them,
they do not believe
or accept my teachings,
because, tainted by desires,
they are deeply immersed
in greed and attachment.
So, I employ
an expedient means,
describing to them
the three vehicles,
causing all living beings
to understand the pains
of the threefold world,
and then I set forth
and expound a way
whereby they can escape
from the world.
If these children of mine
will only determine
in their minds to do so,
they can acquire all
the three understandings
and the six
transcendental powers,
can become
pratyekabuddhas
(lone Buddhas)
or bodhisattvas
who never regress.
I say to you, Shariputra,
for the sake of living beings
I employ these
similes and parables
to preach
the single Buddha vehicle.
If you and the others
are capable of believing
and accepting my words,
then all of you are certain
to attain the Buddha way.
This vehicle is subtle,
wonderful, foremost
in purity;
throughout all worlds
it stands unsurpassed.
The Buddha delights in
and approves it,
and all living beings
should praise it, offer it
alms and obeisance.
There are immeasurable
thousands of millions of
powers, emancipations,
meditations, wisdoms,
and other attributes
of the Buddha.
But if the children
can obtain this vehicle,
it will allow them
day and night
for unnumbered kalpas
(a period of 432 million
mortal years) to
find constant enjoyment,
to join the bodhisattvas
and the multitude
of voice-hearers
in mounting
this jeweled vehicle
and proceeding directly
to the place of practice.
For these reasons, though
one should seek diligently
in the ten directions,
he will find
no other vehicles
except when
the Buddha preaches them
as an expedient means.
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