|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Buddhism's Sacred Scripture: The Sutra of the Lotus of the Wonderful Dharma, Chapter 2 P1/3
|
|
|
|
|
Buddha or
Buddha Gautama,
also known as
Shakyamuni Buddha,
was a great
spiritual Master from
ancient India.
Born as Prince
Siddhārtha Gautama
in 5th century BC,
he would have naturally
inherited the vast wealth
of a kingdom.
However,
the prince one day left
the palace life in search
of spiritual knowledge.
After years of
contemplative seeking,
the Buddha attained
enlightenment
under the Bodhi tree.
He then shared
the merits of his practice
by providing a method
for other sentient beings
to be freed from the cycle
of death and rebirth.
The rich treasury
of Buddha’s spiritual
teachings on universal
truths are studied and
revered to this day
for their deep wisdom
and compassion.
Today we would like to
share with you
the sage teachings
of the Buddha –
chapter two
of The Sutra of the Lotus
of the Wonderful Dharma,
also known as
the Lotus Sutra.
It’s our pleasure
to have you with us
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples
here on
Supreme Master Television.
Join us again
next Wednesday
for part 2 of
“Buddhism’s
Sacred Scripture:
The Sutra of the Lotus of
the Wonderful Dharma,
Chapter 2.”
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home
is up next
after Noteworthy News.
We wish you
much love and kindness
in the days ahead.
Thank you
for your gentle presence
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Join us again
next Wednesday
for part 3 of
“Buddhism’s
Sacred Scripture:
The Sutra of the Lotus of
the Wonderful Dharma,
Chapter 2.”
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television for
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home,
coming up next after
Noteworthy News.
May Heaven
grace your life
with everlasting love
and harmony.
We appreciate
your loving company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Up next is Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home, right
after Noteworthy News.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
Farewell for now.
The Sutra of the Lotus
of the Wonderful Dharma
(Lotus Sutra)
Chapter Two:
Expedient Means
At that time
the World-Honored One
calmly arose
from his samadhi
(the internal state of
imperturbability achieved
through meditation)
and addressed Shariputra,
saying: "The wisdom
of the Buddhas
is infinitely profound
and immeasurable.
The door to this wisdom
is difficult to understand
and difficult to enter.
Not one
of the voice-hearers
or pratyekabuddhas
(self-awakened Buddhas)
is able to comprehend it.
What is the reason for this?
A Buddha
has personally attended
a hundred, a thousand,
ten thousand, a million,
a countless number
of Buddhas
and has fully carried out
an immeasurable number
of religious practices.
He has exerted himself
bravely and vigorously,
and his name
is universally known.
He has realized the Dharma
that is profound
and never known before,
and preaches it
in accordance with
what is appropriate,
yet his intention
is difficult to understand.
Shariputra, ever since
I attained Buddhahood
I have
through various causes
and various similes
widely expounded
my teachings
and have used
countless expedient means
to guide living beings
and cause them
to renounce attachments.
Why is this? Because
the Tathagata (Buddha)
is fully possessed by
both expedient means and
the paramita of wisdom.
Shariputra, the wisdom
of the Tathagata is
expansive and profound.
He has
immeasurable mercy,
unlimited eloquence,
power, fearlessness,
concentration, emancipation,
and samadhis,
and has deeply entered
the boundless and
awakened to the Dharma
(true teaching)
never before attained.
Shariputra,
the Tathagata knows
how to make various
kinds of distinctions
and to expound
the teachings skillfully.
His words are soft
and gentle and delight
the hearts of the assembly.
Shariputra, to sum it up:
the Buddha has fully
realized the Dharma
(true teaching) that is
limitless, boundless,
never attained before.
But stop, Shariputra,
I will say no more. Why?
Because what
the Buddha has achieved
is the rarest and most
difficult-to-understand
Dharma (true teaching).
The true entity
of all phenomena
can only be understood
and shared
between Buddhas.
This reality consists of
the appearance, nature,
entity, power, influence,
inherent cause, relation,
latent effect,
manifest effect,
and their consistency
from beginning to end."
At that time
the World-Honored One,
wishing to state
his meaning once more,
spoke in verse form, saying:
The hero of the world
is unfathomable.
Among heavenly beings
or the people of the world,
among all living beings,
none can understand
the Buddha.
The Buddha's power,
fearlessness, emancipation
and samadhis
and the Buddha's
other attributes
no one can reckon
or fathom.
Earlier, under the guidance
of countless Buddhas
he fully acquired and
practiced various ways,
profound, subtle
and wonderful doctrines
that are hard to see
and hard to understand.
For immeasurable millions
of kalpas (one kalpa is
a period of four hundred
and thirty two million
years of mortals)
he has been practicing
these ways until
in the place of practice
he achieved the goal.
I have already come to
see and know completely
this great goal and
recompense, the meaning
of these various natures
and characteristics.
I and the other Buddhas
of the ten directions
can now understand
these things.
This Dharma (true teaching)
cannot be described,
words fall silent before it.
Among the other
kinds of living beings
there are none who can
comprehend it, except
the many bodhisattvas
(spiritual practitioners)
who are firm
in the power of faith.
The many disciples
of the Buddhas in the past
have given offerings
to the Buddhas,
have already
cut off all outflows
and now are dwelling
in their last incarnation.
But even such persons
as they have not
the power needed.
Even if the whole world
were filled with men
like Shariputra,
though they exhausted
their thoughts and
pooled their capacities,
they could not fathom
the Buddha's knowledge.
Even if ten directions
were all filled with men
like Shariputra
or like the other disciples,
though they filled the lands
in the ten directions and
exhausted their thoughts
and pooled their capacities,
still they could not
understand it.
If pratyekabuddhas
(self-awakened Buddhas),
acute in understanding,
without outflows,
in their last incarnation,
should fill the worlds
in the ten directions,
as numerous as bamboos
in a grove,
though they should join
together with one mind
for a million
or for countless kalpas
(one kalpa is a period
of four hundred and
thirty two million years
of mortals),
hoping to conceive of
the Buddha's true wisdom,
they could not understand
the smallest part of it.
If bodhisattvas
(spiritual practitioners)
newly embarked
on their course
should give offerings
to numberless Buddhas,
completely mastering
the intent of
the various doctrines
and also able to preach
the Dharma (true teaching)
effectively, like so many
rice and hemp plants,
bamboos or reeds,
filling the lands
in the ten directions,
with a single mind,
with their
wonderful knowledge,
for kalpas (one kalpa is
a period of four hundred
and thirty two million
years of mortals)
numerous as Ganges sands
should all together
pool their thoughts
and capacities,
they could not understand
the Buddha's knowledge.
If bodhisattvas
who never regress,
their number
like Ganges sands,
with a single mind
should join in pondering
and seeking, they could not
understand it either.
I also announce to you,
Shariputra,
that this profound subtle
and wonderful Dharma
(true teaching)
without outflows,
incomprehensible,
I have now attained in full.
Only I understand
its characteristics,
and the Buddhas
of the ten directions
do likewise.
Shariputra, you should know
that the words
of the various Buddhas
never differ.
Toward the Dharma
preached by the Buddhas
you must cultivate
a great power of faith.
The World-Honored One
has long expounded
his doctrines and now
must reveal the truth.
I announce this
to the assembly
of voice-hearers
and to those
who seek the vehicle
of the pratyekabuddha
(self-awakened Buddha);
I have enabled people
to escape the bonds
of suffering
and to attain Nirvana
(the highest paradise).
The Buddha,
through the power
of expedient means,
has shown them
the teachings
of the three vehicles
prying living beings
loose from
this or that attachment
and allowing them
to attain release.”
At that time
among the great assembly
there were voice-hearers,
arhats (saints)
whose outflows
had come to an end,
Ajnata Kuandinya
and the others,
twelve hundred persons.
And there were monks,
nuns, laymen
and laywomen who
had conceived a desire
to become voice-hearers
or pratyekabuddhas
(self-awakened Buddha).
Each of these
had this thought:
Now for what reason does
the World-Honored One
so earnestly praise
expedient means and
state that the Dharma
(true teaching)
attained by the Buddha
is profound and difficult
to understand,
that it is very difficult to
comprehend the meaning
of the words he preaches,
that not one
of the voice-hearers
or pratyekabuddhas
(self-awakened Buddha)
can do so?
If the Buddha preaches
but one doctrine
of emancipation,
then we too should be
able to attain this Dharma
(true teaching)
and reach the state of
Nirvana (Eternal Bliss).
We cannot follow the gist
of what he is saying now.
At that time Shariputra
understood the doubts
that were in the minds of
the four kinds of believers,
and he himself had not
fully comprehended.
So he addressed
the Buddha, saying,
“World-Honored One,
what causes and conditions
lead you to earnestly
praise expedient means,
the foremost device
of the Buddhas,
the profound, subtle
and wonderful Dharma
(true teaching) that is
difficult to understand?
From times past
I have never heard
this kind of preaching
from the Buddha.
Now the four kinds
of believers
all have doubts.
We beg that
the World-Honored One
earnestly praise this
Dharma (true teaching)
that is profound, subtle
and wonderful,
difficult to understand?”
At that time Shariputra,
wishing to state
his meaning once more,
spoke in verse from,
saying: Sun of wisdom,
great sage and
venerable one,
at long last
you preach this Dharma
(true teaching).
You yourself declare
you have attained power,
fearlessness, samadhis
(the internal state of
imperturbability achieved
through meditation),
concentration, emancipation,
and these other attributes,
and the Dharma
(true teaching) that is
beyond comprehension.
This Dharma (true teaching)
attained in
the place of practice
no one is capable of
questioning you about.
‘My intention is hard
to fathom, and
no one can question me.’
No one questions,
yet you yourself preach,
praising the path
you walk on.
Your wisdom is
very subtle and
wonderful, that which
all the Buddhas attain.
The arhats (saints) who
are without outflows and
those who seek Nirvana
(the highest paradise)
now have all fallen
into the net of doubt,
wondering for what reason
the Buddha preaches this.
Those who seek to
become pratyekabuddhas
(self-awakened Buddhas),
monks and nuns,
heavenly beings, dragons
and spirits, along with
the gandharvas (demigods)
and others,
look at one another,
filled with perplexity,
gazing upward
at the most honored
of two-legged beings.
What is the meaning
of all this?
I beg the Buddha
to explain it for us.
Among the assembly
of voice-hearers
the Buddha has said
I am foremost,
yet now I lack the wisdom
to solve these doubts
and perplexities.
Have I in fact grasped
the ultimate Dharma
(true teaching),
or am I still
on the path of practice?
The sons born
from the Buddha's mouth
press palms together,
gaze upward and wait.
We beg you to put forth
subtle and wonderful sounds
and at this time explain
to us how it really is.
The heavenly beings,
dragons, spirits,
and the others,
their numbers
like Ganges sands,
the bodhisattvas
(spiritual practitioners)
seeking to be Buddhas
in a great force
of eighty thousand,
as well as the
wheel-turning sage kings
come from ten thousands
of millions of lands,
all press their palms
and with reverent minds
wish to hear the teaching
of perfect endowment.”
At that time the Buddha
addressed Shariputra,
saying, "Stop, stop!
There is no need
to speak further.
If I speak of this matter,
then the heavenly
and human beings
throughout the worlds
will all be astonished
and doubtful."
Shariputra once more
spoke to the Buddha, saying,
"World-Honored One,
we beg you to preach!
We beg you to preach!
What is the reason?
Because this assembly
of countless hundreds,
thousands, ten thousands,
millions of asamkhyas
(infinitudes) of living beings
in the past
have seen the Buddhas;
their faculties are
vigorous and acute and
their wisdom is bright.
If they hear
the Buddha preach,
they will be capable of
reverent belief."
At that time Shariputra,
wishing to state
his meaning once more,
spoke in verse form, saying:
“Dharma King, none
more highly honored,
speak, we beg you,
without reserve!
In this assembly
of numberless beings
are those capable of
reverent belief.”
The Buddha repeated,
"Stop, Shariputra!
If I speak of this matter,
the heavenly
and human beings and
asuras (supernatural beings)
throughout the worlds
will all be astonished
and doubtful.
The monks who are
overbearingly arrogant
will fall into a great pit."
At that time
the World-Honored One
repeated what he had said
in verse form:
“Stop, stop,
no need to speak!
My Dharma is wonderful
and difficult to ponder.
Those who are
overbearingly arrogant
when they hear it
will never show
reverent belief.”
At that time
Shariputra once more
spoke to the Buddha, saying,
"World-Honored One,
we beg you to preach!
We beg you to preach!
In this assembly at present
the persons like myself
number in the hundreds,
thousands, ten thousands,
millions.
In age after age
we have already
attended the Buddhas
and received instruction.
People of this kind
are certain to be capable
of reverent belief.
Throughout the long night
they will gain peace
and rest and will
enjoy many benefits."
At that time Shariputra,
wishing to state
his meaning once more,
spoke in verse form, saying:
“Supremely honored
among two-legged beings,
we beg you to preach
this foremost Dharma
(true teaching).
I who am regarded as
the Buddha's eldest son
ask you to favor us
by preaching distinctions.
The countless members
of this assembly
are capable of according
reverent belief to this
Dharma (true teaching)
The Buddhas
have already in age
after age taught
and converted them
in this manner.
All with a single mind
and palms pressed together
desire to hear and receive
the Buddha's words.
I and the other
twelve hundred
of our group,
as well as the others who
seek to become Buddhas,
beg that for the sake
of this assembly
you will favor us
by preaching distinctions.
When we hear this
Dharma (true teaching)
we will be filled
with great joy.”
At that time
the World-Honored One
said to Shariputra,
"Three times you have
stated your earnest request.
How can I do other
than preach?
Now you must
listen attentively
and carefully ponder.
For your sake
I will now analyze
and explain the matter."
When he had spoken
these words, there were
some five thousand
monks, nuns, laymen
and laywomen
in the assembly
who immediately
rose from their seats,
bowed to the Buddha,
and withdrew.
What was the reason
for this?
These persons had roots
of guilt that were deep
and manifold,
and in addition they were
overbearingly arrogant.
What they had not attained
they supposed
they had attained, what
they had not understood
they supposed
they had understood.
And because
they had this failing,
they did not remain
where they were.
The World-Honored One
was silent and
did not try to detain them.
At this time the Buddha
said to Shariputra, "Now
this assembly of mine
is free of branches and
leaves, made up solely of
the steadfast and truthful.
Shariputra, it is well
that these persons
of overbearing arrogance
have withdrawn.
Now listen carefully and
I will preach for you."
Shariputra said, "So be it,
World-Honored One.
We are eager to listen!"
The Buddha said
to Shariputra,
"A wonderful Dharma
(true teaching)
such as this is preached
by the Buddhas,
the Tathagatas,
at certain times.
But like the blooming
of the udumbara
(a blue lotus that blooms
once every 3,000 years),
such times
come very seldom.
Shariputra,
you and the others
must believe me.
The words
that the Buddhas preach
are not empty or false.
What’s the best way
to help the world?
Meditate and elevate
yourself so that you can
help others as well.
That’s how you help.
Join us on
Supreme Master Television
on Monday, September 6,
for the conclusion of
the teleconference with
Supreme Master
Ching Hai titled
“The Truth about Merits:
How to Gain or Lose Them”
on Between Master
and Disciples.
Tune in to
Supreme Master Television
today for
the teleconference with
Supreme Master
Ching Hai titled
“The Truth about Merits:
How to Gain or Lose Them”
on Between Master
and Disciples.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Download by Subtitle
|
|
Arabic , Aulac , Bulgarian , Chinese , Croatian , Czech-Slovak , Dari , Dutch , English , French , German , Gujarati , Hebrew , Hindi , Hungarian , Indonesian , Italian , Japanese , Korean , Malay , Mongol , Mongolian , Persian , Polish , Portuguese , Punjabi , Romanian , Russian , Sinhalese , Slovenian , Spanish , Thai , Turkish , Urdu , Zulu ,
Bulgarian ,
Croatian ,
Dutch , Estonian , Greek , Gujarati ,
Indonesian ,
Mongolian , Nepalese ,
Norwegian , Polish , Punjabi ,
Sinhalese ,
Swedish , Slovenian , Tagalog , Tamil , Zulu
|
|
Scrolls Download |
|
MP3 Download |
|
|
|
|
MP4 download for iPhone(iPod ) |
|
|
Download Non Subtitle Videos
|
|
|
Download by Program
|
|
|
|
|
|
Download by Date
|
Sun |
Mon |
Tue |
Wed |
Thu |
Fri |
Sat |
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
|
|
|
|