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[阿弥陀经疏钞讲记·净公上人]阿弥陀经疏钞演义第

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[阿弥陀经疏钞讲记·净公上人]阿弥陀经疏钞演义 第二四0集


阿弥陀经 疏钞演义  (第二四0集)  1984/12  
台湾景美华藏图书馆  档名:01-03-240
  请看《阿弥陀经 疏钞演义会本》,第四六四页:
  演【是心是佛者,是亦二义。】
  「是」字也有两个意思。
  演【一、心即应佛,故名是心是佛,即疏文所谓向闻佛本是无,心净故有,便谓条然有异,故言即是应佛,心外无佛也。】
  「是心是佛」也有两个意思,一个就是佛的应化身。心本来没有相,虽然没有相,它能随缘现相,现出来的相就叫做应身佛。为什么叫应身?感应而现的。像我们这个大磬,大磬没有声音,你敲的时候它就有声音,敲得重,声音就大,敲得轻,声音就小。你这个敲就是感,它这个音声就是应;你不敲,不敲就没有声音。佛也是如此,众生没有感的时候,佛不现身,佛没有身相;众生有感,佛就现相,他的回应一样。这正是《楞严经》上所说的,「随众生心,应所知量」,众生的心不同,所以佛现的相就不一样。九法界的众生有感,佛就现九法界身,就像《普门品》所说的,「应以佛身而得度者,即现佛身而为说法」,现是应现。决不是佛有心,佛说「他求我,我得赶快去」,他有这个心,那叫妄心,不是真心,真心没有念。因为他没有念,所以他才有应,而且应得很快速,什么原因?因为真心遍一切处,无所不在。所以他的应现是「当处出生,随处灭尽」,没有来去的。我们念佛人往生西方,阿弥陀佛从西方极乐世界来迎接我们,是不是这么回事?不是的。佛怎么会从那么远的地方到这里来?佛的相立刻就在眼前,为什么?阿弥陀佛的法身尽虚空遍法界,我们这个地方一有感,佛马上就有应。古人说「生则决定生,去则实不去」,就是因为没有去来,这是很奇妙,我们凡夫常识达不到,所以是不可思议的境界,这是真实的。心能现相,能现一切相,这是应佛。「是心是佛」,这个心就是应佛,心外无佛,佛外亦无心,这是第一个意思。
  演【二、心即果佛,故名是心是佛,即疏文所谓亦无佛之因也。初是应佛,二是果佛,此约即应即果释是也。】
  禅家常说:明心见性,见性成佛。「果佛」是自己,自己心性的一切障碍都除尽,性德圆满现前的时候,就叫成佛。心就是佛,佛就是心,这是自己成的佛。前面「应佛」是他佛,随众生心想生而现的应身佛。自佛、他佛都是「是心是佛」的意思。
  钞【今谓此经一心持名,繇此一心,终当作佛,从因至果,名之曰作。】
  莲池大师跟我们讲解真正的意思就在这个地方,前面是引用《观经》做一个大前提,这个才说到这部经上要说的紧要的开示。本经主张的是『一心持名』,注意这个一心,「一心」就是没有杂念、没有怀疑,就是大势至菩萨讲的「净念」,净念就是一心,所谓不怀疑、不夹杂。这句话非常重要,是本宗修行的关键,你要是明白了、做到了,那就心想佛时是心就作佛。就像《观经》上所讲的「是心即是三十二相、八十随形好」,当下就是。当下就是,我们自己没有办法发现,为什么?因为时间太短暂,到第二念、第三念,妄想又来了,佛又作不成,原因在这个地方。假如一心持名能相续,念念相续而不间断,作佛就非常明显了。能够不退转,你这佛就一直做下去,就不会退堕到六道。不但六道不退堕,连小乘、大乘也不作,他作佛去了。关键在这一句,所以这一句非常重要,就是一心称念。
  『繇此一心,终当作佛,从因至果』,这个话意味深长,只要能保持一心,从因至果就是不间断,就是相续。信、愿、一心称念,这是因,只要把这个因保持,念念不失去,第一个阶段你得到的是功夫成片。功夫成片是念佛三昧里面最浅的功夫,古大德也把这个境界叫做一心不乱,是一心不乱浅的。一心不乱有浅深次第,也分很多等级。经上常讲的九品,把事一心分作九个等级,这是第一个,初等,就是功夫成片。所谓功夫成片,就是我们信愿持名能降伏烦恼,没有断,把烦恼伏住,这就是初级的事一心,这个功夫就能往生,烦恼伏住就能往生。可见得净宗修持比其他法门容易;其他法门这个功夫不能成就,一定要断烦恼才能出三界;烦恼不断,没有出三界的道理。小乘三果,那很了不起,见惑已经断掉,思惑断了一半,出不了三界,还是在人间天上往来的修行。但是他决定不堕三恶道,一定要到思惑断尽,见思烦恼断尽,这才能超越六道轮回,这是很难很难的。究竟怎样难,大家自己试试看就晓得,你不试,你不知道难处,你这一试验才晓得一品烦恼都断不掉!见思烦恼,先断见惑再断思惑,见惑里面第一个身见,身见是什么?把这个身体当作我,起心动念这就是我,你试试看,什么时候你真正做到无我,无我才把身见断掉,真难!然后回过头来再看净宗,你才晓得它容易,才知道诸佛菩萨为什么要赞叹这个法门。这个法门容易,只要伏住,初品的事一心,中国人俗话讲的功夫成片,功夫成片这个名词经上确实没有,这就是事一心最浅的,生凡圣同居土;事一心深的,上品的事一心,见思烦恼断尽,生方便有余土,那就不一样了。净土的殊胜不在上面二土,就在凡圣同居土,非常特殊,跟十方诸佛世界的凡圣同居土迥然不同,所以才能普度众生。
  一心持名,从因至果,就是相续不断,这个叫『作』。最明显的就是大势至菩萨所说的,大势至菩萨确实从因至果,就是一心持名,他没有用第二个法门,就是一句佛号念到底,从初发心一直到圆成佛道,然后普度众生,就这么一个简简单单的方法,这是真正不可思议,是心作佛。「是心作佛,是心是佛」,在大势至菩萨境界里看得真清楚、真明白。
  钞【即此一心,全体是佛,非因非果,名之曰是。】
  演【即此一心,全体是佛四句,一心即真如法性身也。】
  大乘佛法常说一心、真心、本性、真如、法界、法身,这一大堆的名词都是说一桩事情。一桩事情,佛为什么说这么多名词?这是佛教学方法的殊胜,破我们的执著,告诉我们名词、名相是假的,只要体会它表达真正的意思,不要去执著名相,不要去执著言语,这都是假的,都没有意义的,你要从假名、言词里去体会它的真实义,这是教学方法的善巧。不像我们世间这名词还要统一,统一是什么?统一一种执著,统一一种成见,这个麻烦,佛是打破我们的成见、执著,这是跟世间法不一样的地方。所以一桩事情,佛是用许多的方法来说明,用许多的名词、术语来说明。
  然后我们晓得,一心就是真如,一心就是法身,真心、本性、法身,哪里还有什么修、什么证?《坛经》里面,六祖处处点醒我们决定不能执著,他在见性的时候,他说:「何期自性,本来清净。」清净心里面如果有修有证,那就叫二法。他对印宗法师讲「佛法是不二法,二就不是佛法」,二就迷了,一就是觉悟了。这个一,如果一是对二执一,那还是迷,有一就有二,那还是落在二法里。这个一是绝对的一,不是相对的一;相对的一,那是迷。我们凡夫读《坛经》,读了他这一句还是迷,不是他的境界。这个话怎么引起?印宗听说他是从黄梅得法来的,想打听五祖平常说法有没有说解脱、禅定,六祖告诉他:「禅定、解脱是二法,佛法是不二法。」这是点醒他,你还是在心外求法,这个二就是心外求法。
  一心不好懂,为什么?我们看一心,就有一个念头「这是一心」,有一个境界、有一个观念,早就不是一心了。真正是一心,这里头决定没有一念,那就是一心持名,那叫老实念佛。有很多人到我这里来问长问短,我是一句话总答覆,都不老实,都不是一心,乱心在念佛。他要是一心念,他哪里有问题?绝对不会有问题。一心念,他真的就老实,他不会问人。不要说是我,他不问了,阿弥陀佛在那里坐著,他也不问,他一句话没有了;还有起心动念都是不老实,都是乱心,不是一心。所以这里头要细心去领会,一心里头没有修、没有证,修证是二法,二法就不是佛法,哪来的修证?
  演【不涉程途。】
  佛在经上讲,西方极乐世界距离我们这里十万亿佛国土,这叫「程途」,程是路程,路途遥远。一心里面没有远近、没有大小,大小是二法,远近是二,总而言之,二法就不是佛法;不是佛法就不是一心,一心就是佛法。由此可知,我们心里有二念,有二念就不是真心,真心里头决定没有二念,这是修行迷悟的关键。悟的人怎么悟的?迷的人怎么迷的?关键就在此地。由此可知,诸佛菩萨在经论里常讲,乱心不能成就。「从因至果」完全是自己的事情,佛菩萨帮不上忙,一定要靠自己。阿弥陀佛慈悲到极处,还是你自己要伏住烦恼,他才帮得上忙;你的烦恼伏不住,阿弥陀佛再慈悲也帮不上忙。这比起其他法门真的是容易多了,其他法门你必须见思烦恼断掉,佛菩萨才能帮得上忙;见思烦恼没断,帮不上忙。阿弥陀佛只要你伏住,不必断,伏住就帮上忙。可见得基本的功夫一定要靠自己,靠别人是靠不住的,这个要知道。一心就是真心、本性,哲学里面讲的宇宙的本体,这里头没有修证、没有远近(程途就是远近)。
  演【全体是佛。】
  「佛」是觉的意思,换句话说,一心的全体就是觉。他要不觉,众生有感,他怎么会有应?有觉才有应。觉不是知,这里头有差别,觉是真实的智慧,般若智慧。释迦牟尼佛当年在世的时候,讲经说法四十九年,讲般若的时间就占二十二年,几乎占他弘法利生时间的一半。大家知道般若讲空,空就什么都没有了,这三岁小孩都懂,何必要讲二十二年?他老人家讲的这个空,空就是有,有就是空,空有是一桩事情,不是二桩事情。这就把我们讲糊涂了,愈讲愈不好懂。这才费二十二年的时间,让我们真正明了空有是一桩事情。「空」是根本智,「有」是后得智,般若的总纲领是「般若无知,无所不知」,无知是空,无所不知是有。无知跟有知都叫做觉,所以那个觉不是我们现在观念当中的觉。我们现在观念当中的觉是从意识里生的;佛所讲的觉是离开心意识,是自性里本来具足的,那才叫做正觉,不是修来的。全体是觉,全体是佛,全体都能现相。
  演【若言是因,对果言因,既无当果,因是谁因。】
  因果是二法,二法就不是佛法。自性里说不上果,说不上果,哪来的因?所以因果也没有了。诸位要晓得,证得究竟位,因果没有了,这在净土是到常寂光净土这个境界。实报以下都有因果,他有相,有相就有因果。实报土的相,佛在经上说,有生无灭;方便土、同居土现的相是有生有灭。我们今天看到的现象,这一切万象都是有生有灭的,实报土有生无灭,常寂光土没有生也没有灭,生灭都没有。这是讲常寂光的境界,讲到究竟圆满,所以因果也没有。
  演【若言是果,对因言果,既无前因,果是谁果。故名是也】
  因果也没有,究竟是什么?不得已说了一句话,「唯是一心」,或者说唯是一觉、唯是一佛。这些话都是很勉强、很不得已而说出来的,决定不能执著,听了决定不能起心动念。这叫「是」,是心是佛。
  我说这一段,我自己感觉到说得很明白,说得很清楚了。恐怕诸位听了还是懵懵懂懂的,还是听不清楚。确实难懂,难在什么地方?我们可以说,不讲过去,过去都忘掉了,讲这一生,从生下来到今天都没有这经验,都没有这个常识,突然听到这个境界,真是堕入五里雾中,有这个现象。这个现象也是正常的,必须有相当的功夫去历练,历练就是念佛,念到心清净的时候,你就能体会到一点意思,这就是宇宙人生的真相。
  疏【又此一心,即定中之定故。】
  钞【定中定者,以定散判之。】
  定的反面就是散乱,跟散乱对立的这一边就是定。
  钞【修余少善福者,散善也;一心不乱者,定善也。】
  什么叫『散善』?什么叫『定善』?实在讲,修行关键在心,心散,修什么法门都是散漫的;心定,修一切法都是定的。这在《普贤行愿品》里面显示的最为清楚,普贤行,从礼敬到回向,跟凡夫所修的有什么两样?我们见到佛像恭恭敬敬顶礼三拜,普贤菩萨见到佛像也顶礼三拜,这不都是一样的吗?为什么我们修的顶礼三拜不叫做礼敬诸佛,他的顶礼三拜叫礼敬诸佛?事上一样,心不一样。我们心量很小,有分别执著,看到这是佛像才拜,看到那个不是佛像就不拜了。有分别执著,心不广。普贤菩萨的心没有分别执著,他的心是广大的,尽虚空遍法界就是他一心。普贤菩萨的心就是我们此地讲的一心不乱,一心不乱就是普贤心,用一心不乱修一切法都是普贤行。这才晓得我们本宗跟普贤菩萨的关系是何等的密切。
  散心修一切行都属於散善,散善总归在福报。为什么说是福报?不能出三界,不能了生死,所修的果报是在三界六道里面享福,这叫散善。散心所修就是杂乱心所修,说得更清楚、更明白一点,就是妄想分别执著没有断,所修的一切善法统统叫散善,果报是六道里面有漏的福报。一心不乱不一样了,下面还有详细说明,一心是定,定中定,定中定是自性本定。佛在《楞严经》里面换一个名字叫首楞严大定,首楞严大定就是此地讲的定中定,也就是一心不乱里面讲的理一心。一心是定,不乱是慧,一心不乱是定就是慧、慧就是定,一心就不乱,不乱就是一心。但是你要晓得,不乱是慧,一心是定,定就是慧,慧就是定。由此可知,很多人误会以为念佛的人只修一点定,完全没有智慧,他搞错了,他不知道定心起作用就是慧。念佛人确实是「定慧等持」,这句佛号里面有圆满的大定、有圆满的般若,很多人不知道,不肯修学,当面错过。他为什么错过?少善根、福德。
  演【一心不乱名定者,心缘一境,无有异念,故言定善。】
  这句话使我们当头棒喝,我们念佛就不晓得把心定在一个境界上,口里念阿弥陀佛,心缘许多境界,怎么能成就!精神意志不能集中,用散乱心念佛不能成就,用散乱心参禅、用散乱心研教也不能成就。古德强调要一门深入,道理就在此地。一门深入就是心缘一个境界,容易成功,不需要很长的时间,心就收了。我们佛法讲求这个原则,儒家教学也不例外,孟子说「学问之道无他,求其放心而已」,放心是什么?散乱心,这个心都放在外头,学问是什么?把放在外面这个心收回来,把它归一,就是这个意思。「心缘一境」,就是孟子所讲的收放心,俗话讲「收心」,就是这个意思。只要缘一境,这就是定,这样所修一切是善法,那都叫定善。为什么?心定,心定修一切善法就是定善;心散,修一切善法是散善。散善叫福德,定善叫功德,功德跟福德差别就在此地。定善修的是功德,散善修的是福德,为什么?他没有定、没有慧,他有福报。福报有三种,第一种是财富,第二种是聪明智慧,第三种是健康长寿。功德就不一样,功德得禅定开智慧,智慧开了,断烦恼破无明,那个完全不一样了。
  钞【又以一心而分定散,事一心者,定善中之散善也;理一心者,定善中之定善也。】
  这里面讲「定中定者」,就是指理一心。换句话说,实实在在就是讲定功的浅深而已。定功浅的,这是散善;定功深的,那是定善,这是又更深一个层次的比较。假设我们把一心分作事、理二种,事一心当中有九品,理一心之中也有九品。性定圆满现前,那是理一心的上上品,上上品的理一心就是成佛了,上中品的是等觉,上下品的就是十地菩萨。圆教十住位是理一心的下品,因为十信位是属於事一心,初住以上则是属於理一心。理一心的菩萨一共有四十一个位次,上面还有佛的位次,总共四十二个位次。四十二个位次都是理一心,为什么有四十二?理一心浅深程度不同。
  演【事一心者,犹未离六识,故为定中散;理一心者,则是常住真心,故为定中定。】
  没有离开心意识,这是「事一心」;完全离开心意识,那就属於「理一心」。换句话说,事一心是意识心当家做主,理一心是真心,是自性当家做主,这就是用心不一样。普贤菩萨所用的心是真心、是自性,也就是本经上讲的理一心,这叫普贤行。大小乘圣者,别教三贤位的菩萨都还是六识起作用,所以纵然得到甚深的禅定,还是在事一心。莲池大师讲的定中散、定中定是这样区别的。
  疏【又此一心,即菩萨念佛三昧故。】
  演【即菩萨念佛者,以有凡夫念佛三昧,二乘念佛三昧,今是菩萨念佛三昧故。】
  由此可知,念佛三昧是一个总称,里面境界很复杂,层次很多,不是说一个念佛三昧就涵盖一切,那就错误了,念佛三昧也有浅深广狭不同。凡夫的念佛三昧就是常讲的功夫成片,法喜充满,念佛念得很欢喜,念到精神饱满,念到自在快乐,这是凡夫的念佛三昧。有没用处?有。有什么用处?带业往生,生凡圣同居土。这几乎是每个人都可以做到,古德讲万修万人去,就是说这个。二乘念佛三昧是上品的事一心不乱,菩萨念佛三昧是理一心不乱,这是不难区别。
  钞【或疑佛说菩萨念佛三昧经,其间并无信愿往生等语,惟言正念诸法实相,是名念佛,似与此经意义相戾。今谓彼专主理,此兼理事。理一心者,念而无念,即实相也。盖彼以无念正入,此以有念巧入,作用稍别,究竟不殊,是故同名念佛三昧。】
  大师这一段的开示讲得非常巧妙,如果不是过来人就没有办法讲得这样简单明了,这话是过来人说的。《大藏经》里面有一部经叫《佛说菩萨念佛三昧经》,因为这个地方讲到「菩萨念佛三昧」,《菩萨念佛三昧经》上跟我们此地讲的不一样,这就容易引起怀疑,引起争论。因为《菩萨念佛三昧经》里面没有说「信愿持名」,只说『正念诸法实相』,这叫念佛。初看好像跟净土宗讲的完全不相应,可是现在我们听到这个话已经是比较容易接受,为什么?因为阿弥陀佛的名号就是诸法实相的代名词,念这一句阿弥陀佛就是念诸法实相,这有什么两样?其实没有两样。这是我们在净土教里面下这么多年的功夫才明了;没有在这里面下过功夫的人,他还是执著在理事不能圆融的状况之下,就很难接受了。
  『今谓彼专主理』,《菩萨念佛三昧经》完全是从理上说的,我们这个经多半从事上说的,经确实有两大类不同。一般讲,说事的经好像很浅,讲故事,好懂、很浅,说理的经就很深很玄,很不好懂,这是浅人的看法。深的人看法跟我们浅人看法恰恰颠倒,讲理的经好懂,讲事的经不好懂。讲事的经,事里有理,理要是讲不清楚,这事谁相信?台中李老师告诉我,他一生最怕讲的经就是《阿弥陀经 》、《地藏经》,最难讲的,都讲的事。有人问:事怎么来的?为什么有这事?那就麻烦了。《楞严经》讲理,《金刚经》讲理,讲理的经好讲,容易懂。事的经非常难讲,因为它有很深的理,理要不透彻,事就讲不圆,没有办法叫人相信。理讲不圆,能讲一分,他可以信一分,讲二分,他可以信二分,它很有趣味。讲事的经要不是完全透彻,就没有办法叫人接受,无法叫人相信。
  难易差别,我们也要了解。净宗是出了名的难信易行,修很容易,理太深,经上都说这是如来果地上的境界,唯佛与佛方能究竟。只有成了佛,对於净土的理才能彻底圆满的了解。九法界有情众生,九法界包括等觉菩萨,要靠自己的力量都没有办法把它讲圆满,这里头包括等觉菩萨,才晓得这个理之深广不可思议。这样深的经典,我们今天在此地也讲了,大家在这里也听了,好像不难,其实真难!我们哪有能力讲,不但没有能力讲,听的能力也没有,说听的能力都是诸佛威神加持,离开诸佛菩萨的加持,菩萨都说不出,何况我们凡夫!我们能说,大家能听,听了欢喜,都是佛力加持,佛本愿威神的加持。自己过去修积善根、福德,现在缘成熟,蒙佛加持,这叫二力法门。佛加持我们,善根深的人能感觉得出,善根差一点、业障厚一点的人感觉不出来;虽然感觉不出来,佛还是在加持你。所有一切法门,最容易得佛力加持的就是这个法门,因为你修学这个法门,没有一尊佛不欢喜,佛欢喜当然就帮助你、体恤你,希望你在这一生当中圆满成就,道理就在此地。
  一般世间人,凡是学佛的佛教徒,没有一个不是天天求佛菩萨保佑,其实大多数人都在打妄想,佛菩萨凭什么保佑你?凭你磕几个响头,供几根香蕉水果,佛就保佑你,哪有这么便宜的事情!真念佛,真发愿求生,你不求佛菩萨保佑,佛菩萨统统都来保佑你,为什么?这是诸佛菩萨最欢喜见到的一桩事情。你修学其他大乘佛法,未必感应到一切诸佛的护念,当然也有诸佛菩萨护念,少数,很少,与那个法门相应的,就有感应道交。
  净宗念佛法门是一切诸佛都感应,《弥陀经》里面六方佛,你就看到了,六方佛是罗什大师翻得简略,玄奘大师的译本是十方佛。念佛法门是一切诸佛都赞叹,一切诸佛都弘扬,一切诸佛都巴不得众生接受这个法门,修学这个法门。你真的信受奉行,没有一尊佛不欢喜,就是没有一尊佛不保佑你,确实不相同!你要是头脑冷静一点,长时间去观察,你看看念佛的跟修学其他法门的人,将来的成就,我们看不到,我们只看现在,从哪里看?俗话常讲相随心转,你就看他的相状,念佛人跟学其他的法门不一样,念佛人显得愈来愈有福报,愈来愈有智慧,愈来愈健康。你从这个地方去观察,就能体会到佛菩萨加持的力量不一样,这都是佛力加持的。一切经论都与佛菩萨有感应道交,是一部分的,唯独这个法门与佛菩萨感应是全体的,一尊佛都不漏的。真的知道这个法门好处的人不多。夏莲居老居士会集大经之后,他有一个偈子说明这是「佛云难信诚难信,万亿人中一二知」,那个话说的一点都不假,我们今天遇到这个法门,真叫大幸,真是不容易。
  我自己初学佛的时候,对於《华严》、《法华》是非常仰慕。《法华经》上用的功夫比较少,这是遇到善知识缘分不一样,我到台中就是想跟李老师学《法华经》的,我带了二十多种注解,我的材料很丰富,带到台中,台中李老师一看摇头,他说太麻烦了,我要单独找时间来教你一个人,找不出这么多的时间,他说:我现在正在讲《楞严经》,你学《楞严经》好了,我就少费力气。我说也好,《楞严》跟《法华》分量也差不多,这个经在大乘经的地位上也相彷佛,古人讲:「开智慧的楞严,成佛的法华」,我说好,我就接受了。接受老师跟他学《楞严》。当时我手上没有搜集《楞严》的参考资料,在台湾能找得到两个本子,圆瑛法师的《讲义》,孙仲霞居士的《直解》,那是庆芳书局印的,只有这两种本子。到台中之后,一面听经、一面找参考资料,这是得力於香港佛经流通处智开法师帮我很大的忙,他在香港真是全心全力替我搜集,一年当中搜集了十几种,都是《楞严经》的名注。《楞严经》的注解以后自己各方搜集,大概也有三十种,这是参考资料,学经。这个修学就是「缘」真正是决定成败的关键,一门深入,一心深入,这就一定有成就。
  『此兼理事』,本经有理、有事。理一心讲到最高的境界是念而无念,那就是实相。无念是什么?无念是一心,一心就是实相、就是真相。一心是理,念是事,事不碍理,理不碍事,就是《华严经》上讲的理事无碍,在这个经里面完全显示出来了。彭际清讲《无量寿经》即是中本《华严》,《阿弥陀经 》就是小本《华严》,我是把这个事实搞清楚了,再把《华严经》舍掉,来专心、专注在这个经上。这个经不但是《华严》的精华,也是《楞严》、《法华》的精华,这部经是三部大经的精华。我念精华录多好,我何必去惹麻烦搞那么多东西?费时间、费精神。这是为什么古来大德到晚年统统都舍弃,一门深入都来念阿弥陀佛了,就是这么个道理。年轻的时候,为什么搞那么多?无知!《地藏经》上讲的「刚强难化,业障深重」。老师虽然苦口婆心的教,依旧是阳奉阴违,到自己真的搞清楚、搞明白,才感谢老师,才后悔莫及。当年要是听老师的话,就少走很多冤枉路,自己的成就比现在一定提升很多个层次。因为自己的经历、时间浪费在这许多大经大论,耽误很多时间,不晓得专攻、专精的利益。
  我今天也是苦口婆心的劝人,我是过来人,几个人相信?几个人肯听?不肯听、不相信,我也了解,为什么?当年老师教我,我也是这样的!所以你们学习的心理,我怎会不知道?这个路我走过来的。肯信、肯听的人有福;不肯听、不肯信,那要走一些冤枉路。那个路要真能走回来,好幸运!走不回来,永远迷失,大概占百分之九十九,都回不来了。回来的太少,我很幸运打个转还回来了,才有这么一点小成就。如果没有回来,就完了。回不来的多,回来的少。我能回头,实在讲真正得力於《楞严》跟《华严》。从这两部经里面晓得净宗就是大经的精华,是大经的精要,跟大经完全没有两样,而且比大经是更简单、更容易让我们抓住全经的纲领,依照这个方法来修行,这才能很短的时间得到真正殊胜的利益。此兼理事,就是《华严经》上讲的理事无碍。
  『盖彼以无念正入,此以有念巧入』。正入好,正入难!为什么?见思烦恼念掉了,尘沙烦恼断了,无明也破一品,这才入了。为什么念佛是巧入?我们烦恼一品不要断,只要伏就入了。入了都一样,你正入,花那么长的时间,花那么多的精神;我这个巧入,不要用那么多时间,也不要用那么多精神,我们得到的效果相同。作用不一样,方法巧妙不一样,『究竟不殊』,所得的功德利益完全相同,『是故同名念佛三昧』。这个我们真的要好好去想一想,细心去体会莲池大师的苦口婆心。所以我说这不是过来人说不出,体会不到。好,我们念佛回向。



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 樓主| 發表於 2016-11-12 18:34:38 | 只看該作者

[AjahnChah]ATreeintheForest

选摘自《无量香光网文章集锦》

[Ajahn Chah]A Tree in the Forest


A Tree in the Forest
PART 2
by Ajahn Chah

CONTENT
1 Part 2
2 A Hundred of Everything
3 Ants' Nest
4 Apple Orchard
5 Apples
6 Bamboo Shoots
7 Big Stick, Little Stick
8 Blind Person
9 Body and Its Charms
10 Boiled Rice
11 Brick Oven
12 Bridge
13 Buddha Statue
14 Building a House and Dyeing Cloth
15 Cars
16 Cat
17 Chicken in a Coop
18 Child
19 Crooked Tree
20 Dirty Tray
21 Downstairs, Upstairs
22 Drops of Water
23 Duck
24 Earthworm
25 Excrement Odor
26 Expensive Object
27 External Sore
28 Falling from a Tree
29 Falling Leaves
30 Farmer and Mother
31 Football
32 Friends
33 Fruit in Hand
34 Fruit Tree
35 Garbage Can
36 Going Astray
37 Going Into Town
38 Good Digestion
39 Grand Central Station
40 Hair in Your Soup
41 Hair that Hides a Mountain
42 Hall
43 Handful of Mud
44 Hen or Rooster?
45 Herbal Medicine
46 Host and Guests
47 Hot Iron Ball
48 Hot Iron Bar and Candy
49 Hotel
50 Householder
51 Ignorant Child
52 Infant
53 Itchy Head
54 Key
55 Lead for Gold
56 Leaving an Old Friend
57 Light Switch and Bowl
58 Lizard
59 Lost Something
60 Lotus Leaf
61 Lotuses
62 Lump of Ice
63 Mango
64 Market Lady
65 Meat
66 Meat Between Your Teeth
67 Millipede
68 Millipede and Chicken
69 Money, Wax, and Chicken Dung
70 Monkey
71 Nest of Red Ants
72 Old Granny
73 Old Liar
74 Old Rag
75 Paddy Worker
76 Party Revelers
77 Pedal Sewing Machine
78 Piece of Cake
79 Planting Fruit Trees
80 Poisonous Injection
81 Precious Pen
82 Raging Tiger
83 Red-Hot Coal and Bird
84 Restless Monkey
85 Rivers and Streams
86 Rope
87 Sand and Salt
88 School boy
89 Spillway
90 Splinter in Your Foot
91 Stubborn Horse
92 Stump
93 Sweet Dessert
94 Sweet Mango
95 Sweet Papayas
96 Tape Recorder
97 Thief and Boxer
98 Thieves and Murderers
99 Tightly Woven Net
100 Tree
101 Trees Growing Outward
102 Vanity
103 Vine
104 Vulture
105 Water in an Urn
106 Water Buffalo
107 Well and Orchard
108 Wooden Log
109 Sweet Papayas
PART 2   
"All the teachings are merely similes and comparisons, means to help the mind see the truth."

Similes
A Hundred of Everything  
People only think about the pleasure of acquiring and don't consider the trouble involved. When I was a novice I used to talk to the lay people about the happiness of wealth and possessions, having servants and so on - a hundred male servants, a hundred female servants, a hundred cows, a hundred buffaloes . . . a hundred of everything. The lay people really liked that. But can you imagine looking after a hundred buffaloes, or a hundred cows, not to mention the two hundred servants? Would that be fun? People do not consider this side of things. They have the desire to possess, to have the cows, the buffaloes and the servants, hundreds of them. But I say fifty buffaloes would be too much. Just twining the rope for all those brutes would already be one big headache! But people don't consider this. They just want to acquire as much as they can.
Ants' Nest  
When we sit in meditation we want the mind to become peaceful, but it doesn't. We don't want to think, but we think. It's like a person who is sitting on an ants' nest. The ants just keep on biting him. Why? Because when the mind is in the world, then even though a person is sitting still with his eyes closed, all he sees is the world. Pleasure, sorrow, anxiety, confusion, they all arise, because he still hasn't realized Dhamma. If the mind is like this, the meditator can't endure the worldly dhammas, he can't investigate. It's just the same as if he were sitting on an ants' nest. The ants are going to bite because he's right on their home. So what should he do? He should look for a way to get rid of them.
Apple Orchard  
If you ask people why they were born, they probably would have a lot of trouble answering, because they're sunk in the world of the senses and sunk in becoming. For example, suppose we had an orchard of apple trees that we were particularly fond of. That's becoming for us if we don't reflect with wisdom. How so? Suppose our orchard contained a hundred apple trees and we considered them to be our trees. We'd then be born as a worm in every single one of them, and we'd bore into every one of them. Even though our human body may still be back at the house, we'd wend out tentacles into every one of those trees. It's becoming because of our clinging to the idea that those trees are our own, that that orchard is our own. If someone were to take an axe and cut on of the trees down, we would die along with the tree. We'd get furious and would have to go and set things straight. We'd fight and even kill over it. The quarrelling is the birth. We are born right at the point where we consider anything to be our own, born from the becoming. Even if we had a thousand apple trees, if someone were to cut down just one, it would be like cutting the owner down. Whatever we cling to, we are born right there, we exist right there.
Apples  
You can begin doing away with selfishness through giving. If people are selfish they do not feel good about themselves. And yet people tend to be very selfish without realizing how it affects them. You can experience this at any time. Notice it when you are hungry. If you get a couple of apples and then the opportunity arises to share them with someone else, a friend, for instance, you think it over. Really, the intention to give is there, but you only want to give away the smaller one. To give the big one, well, it would be a shame. It's hard to thin straight. You tell your friend to go ahead and take one but then you say, "Take this!" and give him the smaller one. This is one form of selfishness, but people don't often notice it. Have you ever seen this? In giving, you really have to go against the grain. Even though you want to give the smaller fruit, you must force yourself to give the bigger one. Of course once you've given it to your friend, it feels so good. Training the mind by going against the grain in this way requires self-discipline. You must know how to give and how to give up and not nurture your selfishness. This is called going against the grain in a correct way.
Bamboo Shoots  
No matter how much you like something you should reflect that it's uncertain. Like bamboo shoots: they may seem to be so delicious but you must tell yourself "not sure!" If you want to test out if it's sure or not, try eating them every day. Eventually you'll complain: "This doesn't taste so good anymore!" Then you'll prefer another kind of food and be sure that food is delicious. But you'll find out later that's "not sure" too. Everything is just "not sure."
Big Stick, Little Stick  
People aren't able to see themselves outside of their problems because of wrong view. They're like the man who throws away a small stick and picks up a bigger one, thinking that the bigger stick will be lighter.
Blind Person  
To know the taste of Dhamma, you will have to put the teaching into practice yourself. The Buddha didn't talk about the fruits of the practice in much detail because it's something one can't convey in words. It would be like trying to describe the different colors to someone who has been blind from birth. You couldn't do it. You could try, but it wouldn't serve much purpose.
Body and Its Charms  
We are deluded by the body and its charms, but really it is foul. Suppose we didn't take a bath for a week. Could we bear to be close to each other? We'd really smell bad. When we sweat a lot, such as when we are working hard together, the smell is awful. We go back home and rub ourselves down with soap and water, and the fragrance of the soap replaces our bad body odor. Rubbing sweet-smelling soap on the body may make it seem fragrant, but actually the bad smell of the body is still there, temporarily suppressed. When the smell of the soap is gone, the smell of the body comes back again. Now we tend to think the body is beautiful, delightful and strong. We tend to think that we will never age, get sick or die. We are charmed and fooled by the body and so we are ignorant of the true refuge within ourselves. The true place of refuge is the mind.
Boiled Rice  
The teachings of the Buddha can help us to solve our problems, but first we must practice and develop wisdom. It's like wanting to have boiled rice. We must first build a fire, wait until the water comes to a boil, and let the rice cook for as long as it needs to. We just can't throw rice into a pot of water and have boiled rice right away.

Brick Oven  
If some sensation makes an impression on the mind, don't simply disregard it. It's like baking bricks. Have you ever seen a brick oven? They build a fire up about two or three feet in front of the oven so that all the smoke gets drawn into it, and none is left outside. All the heat then goes into the oven and the job gets done quickly. People who practice the Dhamma should be like a brick oven. All their feelings will then be drawn inwards to be turned into Right View. Seeing sights, hearing sounds, smelling odors, tasting flavors, and so on, the mind draws everything inwards. Feelings thus become experiences which give rise to wisdom.
Bridge  
Let your mind be like a bridge which is steady, and not like the water that rises and falls underneath it.
Buddha Statue  
Enlightenment does not mean to become dead like a Buddha statue. An enlightened person still thinks, however he knows that the thinking process is impermanent, unsatisfactory, and empty. Through practice we can see these things clearly. We need to investigate suffering and stop its causes. If not, wisdom can never arise. We must see things exactly as they are - feelings are just feelings, thoughts are just thoughts. This is the way to end all our problems.
Building a House and Dyeing Cloth  
Only wanting to make merit without developing virtue is like building a beautiful house without preparing the area first. It wouldn't be long before the house would collapse. Or it's like wanting to dye a piece of cloth without washing it first. Most people do it like that. Without looking at the cloth, they dip it into the dye straight away. If the cloth is dirty, dyeing it makes it come out even worse than before. Think about it. Would dyeing a dirty old rag look good?
Yet this is how people are. They just want to perform good deeds, but don't want to give up wrongdoing. They still haven't understood that it is only when the mind is free of impurities that the mind can be peaceful. You have to look into yourself, look at the faults in your actions, speech and thoughts. Where else are you going to practice but in your actions, speech and thoughts?
Cars  
All religions are like different cars all moving in the same direction. People who don't see it like that have no light in their hearts.
Cat  
If defilements arise, you have to do something about them. Defilements are like a cat. If you give it as much food as it wants, it will constantly be coming around to look for more. But if one day it scratches you and you decide not to feed it anymore, it will finally not come around. Oh, yes, it will still come around meowing at first, but if you remain firm it will finally stop doing so. It's the same with the different defilements of your mind. If you do not feed them, they will not come around to disturb you again and again, and your mind will be at peace.
Chicken in a Coop  
As the mind develops calm, it is held in check by that calm, just like a chicken that is put in a coop. Once inside the coop, the chicken is unable to wander outside, but it is still able to walk around within the confines of the coop. The action of walking to and fro doesn't lead to any great harm because the chicken is always inside the coop. Some people don't want to experience any feelings or thoughts when they meditate, but thoughts and feelings do arise. The awareness that is present when the mind is calm, however, keeps the mind from getting agitated. This means that whenever there are thoughts or sensations walking around in the mind, they do so within the coop of calm, and so cannot cause you any harm or disturbance.
Child  
If you don't oppose and resist your mind, you just follow its moods. This is not right practice. It would be like indulging a child's every whim. Will that child be a good child? If the parents give their child everything it wishes is that good? Even if they do so at first, by the time it can speak they may start to spank it occasionally because they're afraid it'll end up spoiled and helpless. The training of your mind must be like this. Don't indulge its whims.

Crooked Tree  
The essence of our practice is to watch intention and examine the mind. You must have wisdom. Don't discriminate. Don't get upset with others if they are different. Would you get upset at a small and crooked tree in the forest for not being tall and straight like some of the others? That would be silly. Don't judge other people. There are all varieties. No need to carry the burden of wishing to change them all. If you want to change anything, change your ignorance to wisdom.

Dirty Tray  
Many people contend that since the mind is inherently pure, since we all have Buddha nature, it's not necessary to practice. But this is like taking something clean, like this tray, for example, and then I come and drop some dung on it. Will you say that this tray is originally clean, and so you don't have to do anything to clean it now?
Downstairs, Upstairs  
We invent names for the sake of study, but actually nature is just as it is. For example, we are sitting here downstairs on this stone floor. The floor is the base. It's not moving or going anywhere. Upstairs is what has risen out of this floor. Upstairs is like everything that we see in our minds: form, feeling, memory, and thinking. They don't really exist in the way we presume they do. They are merely the conventional mind. As soon as they arise, they pass away again. They don't really exist in themselves.
Drops of Water  
Keep your precepts. At first you'll make mistakes. When you realize it, stop, come back and establish your precepts again. Maybe you'll go astray and make another mistake. When you realize it, re-establish yourself. If you practice like this, your mindfulness will improve and become more consistent, just like the drops of water falling from a kettle. If we tilt the kettle just a little bit, the water drips out slowly - plop! . . .plop! . . . plop! If we tilt the kettle a little bit more, the drops fall faster - plop, plop, plop! If we tilt the kettle even further, the water doesn't drip anymore but turns into a steady stream. Where do the plops go? They don't go anywhere. They simply change into a steady stream of water. This is how your increasing mindfulness will be.
Duck  
However much we want the body to go on living for a long, long time, it won't do that. Wanting it to do so would be as foolish as wanting a duck to be a chicken. When we see that that's impossible, that a duck has to be a duck, that a chicken has to be a chicken, and that the body has to be the body and get old and die, then we will find strength and energy when we have to face the changes of the body.
Earthworm  
Some people come and ask me whether a person who's come to realize impermanence, suffering, and non-self would want to give up doing things altogether and become lazy. I tell them that's not so. On the contrary, one becomes more diligent, but does things without attachment, performing only actions that are beneficial." And then they say, "If everyone practiced the Dhamma, nothing could be done in the world, and there'd be no progress. If everyone became enlightened, nobody would have children and humanity would become extinct." But this is like an earthworm worrying that it would run out of dirt, isn't it?
Excrement Odor  
No matter where you go in the world there is suffering. There is no escape from it as long as your mind is in the world. It would be like trying to escape the odor of a big pile of excrement by moving over to a smaller one. In big piles or little ones, the odor of excrement is exactly the same wherever you go.

Expensive Object  
Suppose we come to possess a very expensive object. The minute it comes into our possession our mind changes: "Now where can I keep it? If I leave it here somebody might steal it." We worry ourselves into a state, trying to find a place to keep it. This is suffering. And when did it arise? It arose as soon as we understood that we had obtained something. That's where the suffering lies. Before we had obtained that object there was no suffering. It hadn't yet arisen because there was no object yet for the mind to cling to. The self is the same. If we think in terms of my self then everything around us becomes mine. And confusion follows. If there is no I and my then there is no confusion.
External Sore  
People wonder why they have so many problems when they start cutting down on their desires. They can't figure out why they have to suffer so much. It was easier before, when they satisfied their desires, because then they were at peace with them. But that's just like a man who has an infection inside his body but only treats the sore outside on his skin.
Falling from a Tree  
If we divide up the Paticcasamuppada as it is in the scriptures, we say Ignorance gives rise to Volitional Activities, Volitional Activities give rise to Consciousness, Consciousness gives rise to Mind and Matter, Mind and Matter give rise to the six Sense Bases, the Sense Bases give rise to Sense Contact, Sense Contact gives rise to Feeling, Feeling gives rise to Wanting, Wanting gives rise to Clinging, Cling gives rise to Becoming, Becoming gives rise to Birth, Birth gives rise to Old Age, Sickness, Death and all forms of sorrow. But in truth, when we come into contact with something we don't like, there is immediate suffering. The mind passes through the chain of the Paticcasamuppada so rapidly that we can't keep up.
It's like falling from a tree. Before we can realize what's happening - thud! - we've already hit the ground. Actually we pass by many twigs and branches on the way down, but it all happens so fast that we aren't able to count them nor remember them as we fall. It's the same with the Paticcasamuppada. The immediate suffering that we experience is the result of going through the whole chain of the Paticcasamuppada. This is why the Buddha exhorted his disciples to investigate and know fully their own mind, so that they could catch themselves before they hit the ground.
Falling Leaves  
Our lives are like the breath, like the leaves that grow and fall. When we really understand about growing and falling leaves, we can then sweep the paths every day and have great happiness in our lives on this ever-changing earth.
Farmer and Mother  
Wherever you are still lacking in your practice that's where you apply yourself. Place all your attention on that point. While sitting, lying down or walking, watch right there. It's just like a farmer who hasn't yet finished his field. Every year he plants rice, but this year he still hasn't gotten his planting finished, so his mind is always stuck on that. His mind can't rest happily because he knows his work is not yet finished. Even when he's with friends, he can't relax. He's all the time nagged by the thought of his unfinished field. Or it's like a mother who leaves her baby upstairs in the house while she goes to feed the animals below. She's always got her baby on her mind, for fear something might happen to it. Even though she may be doing other things, her baby is never far from her thoughts. It's just the same for us in our practice. We should never forget it. Even though we may be doing other things, our practice should never be far from our thoughts. It should constantly be with us, day and night. It has to be like this if we're really going to make progress.
Football  
Even though simply listening to the Dhamma might not lead to realization, it is beneficial. There were, in the Buddha's time, those who did realize the Dhamma, even became arahants, while listening to a discourse. They could be compared to a football. When a football gets air pumped into it, it expands. Now the air in that football is all pushing to get out, but there's no hole for it to do so. As soon as a needle punctures the football, however, all the air comes rushing out. This is the same as the minds of those disciples who were enlightened while listening to the Dhamma. As soon as they heard the Dhamma and it hit the right spot, wisdom arose. They immediately understood and realized the true Dhamma.
Friends  
The Buddha didn't want us to follow this mind. He wanted us to train it. If it goes one way, go the other way. In other word, whatever the mind wants, don't let it have. It's like having been friends with someone for years, but we finally reach a point where our ideas are no longer the same. We no longer understand each other. In fact, we even argue too much and so we split up and go our separate ways. That's right, don't follow your mind. Whoever follows his mind follows its likes and desires and everything else. This means that that person has not yet practiced at all.
Fruit in Hand  
It's of great importance to practice the Dhamma. If we don't practice it, then all our knowledge is only superficial knowledge, just the outer shell of it. It's as if we have some sort of fruit in our hand, but we don't eat it. Even though we have that fruit in our hand, we get no benefit from it. Only through the actual eating of the fruit will we really know its taste.
Fruit Tree  
A tree matures, blossoms, and fruit appear and ripen. They then rot and the seeds go back into the ground to become new fruit trees. The cycle starts once more. Eventually there are more fruit which ripen and fall, rot, sink into the ground as seeds, and grow once more into trees. This is how the world is. It doesn't go very far. It just revolves around the same old things. Our lives these days are the same. Today we are simply doing the same old things we've always done. We think too much. There are so many things for us to get interested in, but none of them leads to true completion.
Garbage Can  
Sometimes teaching is hard work. A teacher is like a garbage can that people throw their frustrations and problems into. The more people you teach the bigger the garbage disposal problem. Don't worry. Teaching is a wonderful way to practice Dhamma. The Dhamma can help all those who genuinely apply it in their lives. Those who teach grow in patience and in understanding.

Going Astray  
People think that doing this and memorizing that, studying such-and-such, will cause suffering to end. But it's just like a person who wants a lot of things. He tries to amass as much as possible, thinning if he gets enough his suffering will get less. It's like trying to lighten your load by putting more things on your back. This is how people think, but thinking is astray of the true path, just like one person going northward and another going southward, and yet believing that they are going in the same direction.

Going Into Town  
Some people get confused because these days it seems like there are so many teachers and so many different systems of meditation. But it's just like going into town. One can approach the town from many directions. Whether you walk one way or another, fast or slow, it's all the same. Often the different systems of meditation differ outwardly only. There's one essential point that all good practice must eventually come to - not clinging. In the end, you must let go of all meditation systems, even the teacher himself. If a system leads to relinquishment, to not clinging, then it is correct practice.
Good Digestion  
Don't be in a hurry to get rid of your defilements. You should first patiently get to know suffering and its causes well, so that you can then abandon them completely, just as it's much better for your digestion if you chew your food slowly and thoroughly.
Grand Central Station  
When it comes to practice, all that you really need to make a start are honesty and integrity. You don't have to read the Tipitaka to have greed, hatred and delusion. They are all already in your mind, and you don't have to study books to have them. Let the knowing spread from within you, and you will be practicing rightly. If you want to see a train, just go to the central station. You don't have to travel the entire Northern Line, Southern Line, Eastern and Western Lines to see all the trains. If you want to see trains, every single one of them, you'd be better off waiting at Grand Central Station. That's where they all terminate. Some people tell me that they want to practice but don't know how, or that they're not up to studying the scriptures, or that they're getting old, so that their memory's not so good any more. Just look right here, at Grand Central Station. Greed arises here, anger arises here, delusion arises here. Just sit here and you can watch all these things arise. Practice right here, because right here is where you're stuck, and right here is where the Dhamma will arise.
Hair in Your Soup  
Why does the body attract you and you get attached to it? Because your body-eye sees and not your heart-eye. The real nature of our body is that it is not clean, not pretty, but impermanent and decaying. See the body like a hair in your soup. Is it pretty? See clearly that the body is nothing but earth, fire, water and air - nobody there. You only fall down when you want to make it beautiful.
Hair that Hides a Mountain  
Our opinions, attachments, and desires are like a hair that can hide a whole mountain from our view, because they can keep us from seeing the most simple and obvious things. We get so caught up in our ideas, our self, our wants, that we can't see how things really are. And that's when even a hair can keep us from seeing a whole mountain. If we're attached to even a subtle desire, then we can't see that which is true, that which is always very obvious.
Hall  
We are only visitors to this body. Just like this hall here, it's not really ours. We are simply temporary tenants, like the rats, lizards and geckos that live in it, but we don't realize this. Our body is the same. Actually the Buddha taught there is no abiding self within this body, but we believe it to be our self, as really being us. This is wrong view.
Handful of Mud  
If you grab a handful of mud and squeeze it, it will ooze through your fingers. People who suffer are the same. When suffering has a squeeze on them, they, too, try to seek a way out.

Hen or Rooster?  
Teaching people with different levels of understanding is very difficult. Some people have certain set ideas. You tell them the truth and they say it's not true: "I'm right, you're wrong!" There's no end to this. If you don't let go there will be suffering. It's like the four men who go into the forest and hear a rooster crowing. One of them wonders if it is a rooster or a hen. Three of them decide it's a hen, but the curious one insists it's a rooster. "How could a hen crow like that?" he asks. They answer, "Well, it has a mouth, doesn't it?" They argue and get really upset, but in the end they are all wrong. Whether you say a hen or a rooster, they're only names. We say a rooster is like this, a hen is like that. This is how we get stuck in the world! Actually if you just say that there's really no hen and no rooster, then that's the end of it.
Herbal Medicine  
The theory of Dhamma is like a textbook on herbal medicine, and going out to look for the plants is like the practice. Having studied the book, we know what it says about herbal medicine, but we do not know what the actual herbs look like. All we have are some sketches and names. But if we already have the textbook on herbal medicine, we can then go looking for the plants themselves, and do so often enough so that we can recognize them easily when we see them. In this way we give the textbook value.
The reason we were able to recognize the various herbs is because we studied the textbook. The textbook on herbal medicine was our teacher. The theory of Dhamma has this kind of value. However, if we depend completely on practice and do not take time to learn, then it would be like going out looking for herbal plants without having first done some study. Without knowing what we were looking for, we would not succeed in finding any. So both theory and practice are important.
Host and Guests  
Your mind is like the owner of a house and the feelings are like the guests that come and go. But have only one chair in your house so you can see each guest clearly. See the moods and emotions that come to bother you, then let them go. Keep mindfulness in every posture. If you just follow your moods, you won't see them.
Hot Iron Ball  
The cultivators of old saw that there is only the arising and ceasing of dhammas. There is no abiding entity. They contemplated from all angles and saw that there was nothing stable. While walking or sitting, they saw things in this way. Wherever they looked, there was only suffering. It's just like a big iron ball which has just come out of a blast furnace. It's hot all over. If you touch the top, it's hot. If you touch the sides, they're hot. If you touch the bottom, it's hot, too. There isn't any place on it which is cool.
Hot Iron Bar and Candy  
It is unlikely that we can really affect the state of mind of a dying person very much, either positively or adversely. It's like if I took a hot iron bar and poked you in the chest with it, and then I held out a piece of candy with my other hand. How much could the candy distract you? We should treat dying people with love and compassion and look after them as best we can, but if we don't turn it inwards to contemplate our own inevitable death, there is little real benefit for us.

Hotel  
We are all born with nothing, and we die with nothing. Our house is like a hotel and so is our body. We'll have to move out of them both one day and leave them behind.
Householder  
What is the mind? The mind doesn't have any form. That which receives impressions, both good and bad, we call mind. It is like the owner of a house. The owner stays at home while visitors come to see him. He is the one who receives the visitors. Who receives sense impressions? What is it that perceives? Who lets go of sense impressions? That is what we call mind. But people can't see it. They think themselves around in circles. "What is the mind, what is the brain?" Don't confuse the issue like that. What is that which receives impressions? Some impressions it likes and some it doesn't like. Who is that? Is there one who likes and dislikes? Sure there is, but you can't see it. That is what we call mind.

Ignorant Child  
Actually, you know, we human beings, the way we do things, the way we live, the way we are, are really like little children. A child doesn't know anything. If an adult observes the actions of a child, the way it plays and jumps around, its actions don't seem to serve much purpose. If our mind is untrained, it is like a child. We speak without awareness and act without wisdom. We may degenerate but not know it. A child is ignorant and so it just plays as children do. Our ignorant mind is the same. That is why the Buddha taught us to train this mind of ours.
Infant  
See like and dislike arising from sense contact, and do not attach to them. Don't be anxious for quick results or instant progress. An infant has to crawl first before he learns to walk and run. Be determined in practicing virtue and keep on meditating.
Itchy Head  
If we don't know how to handle suffering when it arises, we won't be able to get any relief from it. It's just as if we have an itch on our head and we scratch our leg! If it's our head that's itchy, then we're obviously not going to get any relief by scratching our leg.

Key  
If we take the precepts simply out of tradition, then even though the master teaches the truth, our practice will be deficient. We may be able to study the teachings and repeat them, but we have to practice them if we really want to understand. If we do not develop the practice, this may well be an obstacle to our penetrating to the heart of Buddhism, and we will not get to the heart of Buddhism, and we will not get to understand the essence of the Buddhist religion.
The practice is like a key to a trunk. If we have the right key in our hand, no matter how tight or strong the lock may be, when we take the key and turn it, the lock falls open. If we have no key, we won't be able to open the lock, and we will never know what is inside the trunk.

Lead for Gold  
The arahant is really different from ordinary people. The things that seem true and valuable to us are false and worthless to an arahant. Trying to interest an arahant in worldly things would be like offering lead in exchange for gold. We think, "Here is a whole pile of lead, so why won't he want to trade his piece of gold which is so much smaller?"
Leaving an Old Friend  
Greed, hatred and delusion are the causes of all our suffering. We must learn to overcome them and free ourselves from their control. This is very hard to do. It is like having the Buddha tell us to leave a friend we have known and loved from the time we were still children. It is not easy to make the separation.
Light Switch and Bowl  
It is necessary to have concentration firmly established in our practice before wisdom can arise. To concentrate the mind can be likened to turning on a light switch, and wisdom to the light that appears as a result. If there were no switch, there would be no light. Likewise, concentration is like an empty bowl, and wisdom is like the food that you put in it. If there were no bowl, there would be no place to put the food.
Lizard  
The sutra gives us the simile of a certain man trying to catch a lizard which had run into a termite mound. The mound had six holes in it. Now if the lizard had run in there, how could the man catch it? He would have to close off five of the holes, and leave just one hole open. Then he would have to sit and guard that hole. When the lizard ran out - bop! - he got it. Observing the mind is like this. Closing off the eyes, the ears, the nose, the tongue and the body, one leaves only the mind. To close off means to restrain the five senses, leaving only the mind to be observed. Meditation is the same as catching the lizard.

Lost Something  
If you understand that good and bad, right and wrong, all lie within you, then you won't have to go looking for them somewhere else. Just look for them where they arise. If you don't, it'd be like losing something in one place and then going to look for it in another. If you lose something here, you must look for it here. Even if you don't find it at first, keep looking where you dropped it. But, usually, you lose it here, then go looking over there. When will you ever find it? Good and bad actions lie within you. One day you're bound to see it. Just keep looking right here.
Lotus Leaf   
The Buddha said that the Enlightened Ones were far from defilements. This doesn't mean that they ran away from defilements. They did not. Defilements were there. He compared it to a lotus leaf in a pond of water. The leaf and the water exist together. They are in contact but the leaf doesn't become wet. The water can be compared to defilements and the lotus leaf to the enlightened mind. The mind of one who practices doesn't run anywhere. It stays right where it is. Good and evil, happiness and unhappiness right and wrong they all arise, and he knows them all. The meditator simply knows them, but does not allow them to wet his mind. In other words, he does not cling to any of them.

Lotuses  
We can compare the mind to lotuses in a pond. Some of the lotuses are still stuck in the mud, some have grown through the mud but are still underwater, some have reached the surface of the water, and some have opened in the sun. Which lotus do you want to be? If you want to be below the surface, be careful - the fish and turtles will bite!
Lump of Ice v
How does the body decline? Consider a lump of ice. Originally it was simply water. We then freeze it and it becomes ice for awhile, and then it melts and turns into water again. We can see how the ice declines much the same as the body. We all, without exception, are lumps of deterioration. When we are born we bring this inherent nature of dissolution with us. We can't avoid it. At birth we bring old age, sickness and death along with us. Right now the lump is hard, just like the lump of ice. But look at the body closely. It's ageing every day. It declines just like the lump of ice, following the way of nature. Soon, like the lump of ice, the body will melt away and be all gone, too.
Mango  
We speak of wisdom and concentration as separate things, but in essence they are one and the same. They arise fro the same place but take different directions. It's like a mango. A mango is first small and green. It then grows larger and larger until it is ripe. The small mango, the large one and the ripe one are the same mango, not different mangoes. Only its conditions have changed. In Dhamma practice, one condition is called concentration, and the later condition is called wisdom, but in actuality samadhi and pa??a are both the same thing, just like the mango.
Market Lady   
Don't be disappointed if you don't see quick results in your practice. What is important is simply to continue your practice with determination and perseverance. Don't give up so readily, like a market lady who wants to sell her goods and doesn't give up. She keeps on yelling, "Coconu-u-u-ts, rice c-a-a-akes! Get your coconuts and rice cakes here!" She's determined to sell them and won't give up until she does.

Meat  
All that people want these days is money. They think that if they just get enough of it, everything will be all right. So they spend all their time looking for money. They don't look for goodness. This is like wanting meat, but not wanting salt to preserve it. You just leave the meat around the house to rot. Those who want money should know not only how to find it, but also how to look after it. If you want meat, you can't expect to buy it and then just leave it lying around the house. It'll just go rotten. Goodness arises from a cause. Whenever we create good actions, goodness arises in the mind. If we understand causes in this way, we can create those causes and the results will naturally follow. But people don't usually create the right causes. They want goodness so much and yet they don't work to bring it about. This kind of thinking is wrong, and the result of wrong thinking is rotten results - just turmoil and confusion.

Meat Between Your Teeth  
It's hard to give up sensual pleasure. Consider sensual pleasure like eating some meat which gets stuck between your teeth. When you get it out, you feel some relief for a while. Maybe you even think that you won't eat any more meat. But when you see it again, you can't resist it. You eat some more and it gets stuck, you have to pick it out again, which gives some relief once more, until you eat some more meat. That's all there is to it. Sensual pleasures are just like this. When the meat gets stuck in your teeth, there's discomfort. You take a toothpick and pick it out and experience some relief. There's nothing more to it than this with sensual desire.
Millipede  
If many people live together, as we do here in the monastery, they can still practice comfortably if their views are in harmony. It's not true to say that there will be disharmony just because there are many of us. Just look at a millipede. A millipede has many legs, doesn't it? Just looking at it you'd think it would have difficulty walking, but actually it doesn't. It has its own order and rhythm. In our practice it's the same. If we practice properly, even if we number in the hundreds or thousands, no matter how many we are, we will live in harmony.

Millipede and Chicken  
Westerners are very "clever" and can't accept many principles of Dhamma. I once asked some learned people if they had ever seen a millipede. It has many legs, but how fast can it run? Can it outrun a chicken? No! Yet a chicken has only two legs. How come this animal with so many legs can't even keep up with a chicken?

Money, Wax, and Chicken Dung  
Rules and conventions are established to make things more convenient, that's all. Let's take money, for example. In olden times, people used materials and goods to barter as money. But they were difficult to keep, so they started to use coins and notes. Perhaps in the future we'll have a new royal decree saying only lumps of wax can be used as money throughout the country, or chicken dung. Then people would start fighting and killing each other over wax or chicken dung. This is just the way it is. What we use for money is simply a convention that we have set up. It is money because we have decided it to be so, but in reality what is money? Nobody can say. When there is a popular agreement about something, then a convention comes about to fulfill the need. The world is just conventions.
But it is difficult to get ordinary people to understand this. Our money, house, family, our children and relatives are simply conventions that we have invented, and we really believe they are all ours, but seen in the light of Dhamma, they don't belong to us. It's when we think that they do that we suffer.

Monkey  
When we know that it is the nature of the mind to be constantly changing, we will understand it. We have to know when the mind is thinking good and bad, that it's changing all the time. If we understand this, then even while we are thinking we can be at peace. For example, suppose at home you had a pet monkey. Monkeys don't stay still for long. They like to jump around and grab onto things. That's how monkeys are. Now you come to the monastery and see the monkey here. This monkey doesn't stay still either, does it? It jumps around, too, but it doesn't bother you. Why doesn't it bother you? Because you are raising a monkey yourself so you know what they're like. If you know just one monkey, no matter how many provinces you go to, no matter how many monkeys you see, you won't be bothered by them, because you're someone who understands monkeys. If we understand monkeys, then we won't become like a monkey. If we don't understand monkeys, we may become like one ourselves. When we see it reaching for this and that, we shout, "Hey!" We get angry. But if we understand the nature of monkeys, we'll then see that the monkey at home and the monkey at the monastery are just he same. Why should we get annoyed by them? When we see what monkeys are like, that's enough. We can be at peace.

Nest of Red Ants  
Sensual pleasure is like a nest full of red ants. We take a piece of wood and poke at the nest until the ants come running out, crawling down the wood and into our faces, biting our eyes and ears. And yet we still don't see the difficulty we are in. In the teaching of the Buddha, it is said that if we've seen the harm of something, no matter how good it may seem to be, we know that it's harmful. Whatever we haven't yet seen the harm of, we just think it's good. If we haven't yet seen the harm of anything, we can't get out of it.
Old Granny  
Most people wait until they get old before they start going to a monastery and start practicing the Dhamma. Why do they leave it till they get old? It's like old grandma. You say, "Hey, Granny, let's go to the monastery!" "Oh, you go ahead," she answers. "My ears aren't so good anymore." You see what I mean? When she had good ears what was she listening to? Finally if she does go to the temple, she listens to the sermon but hasn't got an idea of what's being said. Don't wait until you're all used up before you start thinking of practicing the Dhamma.

Old Liar  
Our habits try to deceive us over and over again, but if we remain aware of it, we will eventually be able to ignore them altogether. It's like having an old person come around and tell us the same old lies time after time. When we realize what he's up to, we won't believe him any longer. But it takes a long time before we realize it, because deception is always there.

Old Rag  
If we see everything as uncertain, then their value fades away. All things become insignificant. Why should we hold onto things that have no value? We should treat things as we do an old rag that we keep only to wipe our feet with. We see all sensations as equal in value because they all have the same nature, that of being uncertain.
Paddy Worker  
Practice consistently and not in spurts like the way some people work in their rice paddy. At first they work very hard and then they stop. They don't even bother to pick up their tools. They just walk off and leave them behind. Later on when the soil has all caked up, they remember their work and do a bit more, only to leave it again shortly afterwards. Doing things this way you'll never get a decent paddy. Our practice is the same.

Party Revelers  
People go through life blindly, ignoring death like revelers at a party feasting on fine foods. They ignore that later they will have to go to the toilet, so they do not bother to find out where there is one. When nature finally calls, they have no idea where to g and are in a mess.

Pedal Sewing Machine  
When we sit in meditation, we only watch the breath. We don't try to control it. If we force our breath to be too long or too short, we won't feel balanced and our mind won't become peaceful. We must just let our breathing happen naturally. It's like using a pedal sewing machine. We can't force the pedal. We push it up and down and let it go naturally. If we force it, the sewing won't be smooth and easy. So before we actually start to sew anything, we first practice pedaling the machine to get our co-ordination right, then the machine can do its work naturally. Watching the breath is similar. We don't get concerned over how long or short, weak or strong it is. We just note it. We simply let it be natural and follow it.

Piece of Cake  
If you still have happiness and still have suffering, you are someone who is still not yet full. It's as if you're eating a piece of your favorite cake, but before you can finish eating it, it falls out of your hand. You regret the loss, don't you? When you feel the loss, you suffer, don't you? So you need to throw away both happiness and suffering. They're only food for those who are not yet full. In truth, happiness is suffering in disguise, but in such a subtle form that you don't see it. If you cling to happiness, it's the same as clinging to suffering, but you don't despair, don't lose yourself in it. See that happiness and suffering have the same equal value.
Planting Fruit Trees  
Our practice can be likened to planting fruit trees. As with fruit trees, it's possible to get fruit quickly by taking a cutting and planting it, but the tree won't be long-lasting or resilient. Another way is to take a seed and cultivate the tree right from the seed. In this way it will be strong and enduring. This is the same with our practice.
Poisonous Injection  
There are two kinds of suffering: ordinary suffering and extra-ordinary suffering: ordinary suffering is the suffering that is the inherent nature of all conditioned phenomena. Extra-ordinary suffering is the kind that creeps in from the outside. Let's see how they differ by using the following example: Suppose you are sick and go to see a doctor. The doctor decides to give you an injection. When the needle pierces the skin, there is some pain, which is only natural. When the needle is withdrawn, the pain disappears. This is like the, ordinary kind of suffering. It's no problem; everybody experiences it. The extra-ordinary kind of suffering is the suffering that arises from grasping onto things. This is like having an injection with a syringe filled with poison. This is no longer an ordinary kind of pain. It is the pain which ends in death.
Precious Pen  
If you don't understand what peace is, you'll never be able to find it. For example, suppose you had a very expensive pen which you usually carry in the right front picket of your shirt. But one day you put it somewhere else and forgot. Later when you reach for the pen in its usual place, it's not there. You get a fright. You think you've lost it. You get a fright because of wrong understanding. You don't see the truth of the matter and so you suffer as a result. Whatever you do, you can't stop regretting having lost your precious pen: "Such a shame! I spent so much money on it and now it's gone!" But then you remember, "Oh, of course! When I went to bathe I put the pen in the back pocket of my pants!" The moment you remember this you already feel better, even if you still haven't seen the pen. You no longer worry about it. And as you're walking along, you run your hand over your back pocket, and there it is. Your mind was deceiving you all along. The worry came from your ignorance. Now, seeing your pen again, you are beyond doubt, beyond worry. This sort of peace comes from seeing the cause of the problem, the cause of suffering. As soon as you remember that the pen was in your back pocket, your suffering ended. Knowing the truth brings peace.

Raging Tiger  
This heart of ours is like a raging tiger that lives in a cage. If it can't get what it wants, it growls and makes trouble. It must be tamed with meditation. Our defilements are also like a raging tiger. This tiger we should put in a solid cage made of mindfulness, energy, patience, and endurance. We then don't feed it its habitual desires, and it'll slowly starve to death.

Red-Hot Coal and Bird  
The household life is easy and difficult at the same time. It's easy to understand what to do, but difficult to do it. It's as if you were holding a piece of red-hot coal in your hand and came to me complaining about it. I'd tell you to simply let go of it, but you'd refuse saying, "I want it to be cold." Well, either you drop it, or you must learn to be very, very patient. "How can I just drop it?" you ask, "how can I just drop my family?" Just drop them in your heart. Let go of your attachment to them. Of course you still have obligations to your family. You are like a bird that has laid eggs. You have the responsibility to sit on them and look after them after they have hatched. Just don't think in terms of can I just drop my family?" Just drop them in your heart. Let go of your attachment to them. Of course you still have obligations to your family. You are like a bird that has laid eggs. You have the responsibility to sit on them and look after them after they have hatched. Just don't think in terms of my family. This kind of thinking is just another cause of suffering. Don't think either that your happiness depends upon whether you're living alone or with others. Just live with the Dhamma and find true happiness.
Restless Monkey  
The mind out of control is like a restless monkey jumping here and there senselessly. You have to learn to control it. See the real nature of the mind: impermanent, unsatisfactory, and empty. Don't just follow it as it jumps around. Learn to master it. Chain it down and let it wear itself out and die. Then you have a dead monkey, and you're finally at peace.

Rivers and Streams  
When people enter the stream of Dhamma, it's the one Dhamma. Even though they may come from different places, they harmonize, they merge. Just like the rivers and streams that flow to the sea . . . once they enter the sea, they all have the same taste and color. It's the same with people.
Rope  
Trying to end suffering without first understanding the cause is like pulling on a rope that's stuck. You just pull the end of the rope over here. The other end of the rope is still stuck over there so it never comes. What to do to make it come? It does not come free because you never seek out the source, the root. You just get lost in pulling on this end. What is it stuck on? It must be stuck on something, and that's why it doesn't come. Go to the source, untie the knot, and be free.

Sand and Salt  
Problems occur because people cling to conventions and what they suppose things to be. If you look closely, in the absolute sense, however, you will see that things don't really exist. Our house, our family, our money are simply conventions that we have invented. Seen in the light of Dhamma, they don't belong to us. Even this body is not really ours, and just because we suppose it to be so doesn't make it so.
It would be like taking a handful of sand and agreeing to call it salt. Would that make it salt? Well, yes, it would, but in name only and not in reality. You still wouldn't be able to cook with it, because no matter what you call it, it's still sand. Supposing sand to be salt doesn't make it so.

School boy   
Practicing Dhamma is like a child learning to write. At first he doesn't write nicely – big, long loops and squiggles. He writes like a child. After a while the writing improves through practice. Practicing the Dhamma is like this. At first you are awkward, sometimes calm, sometimes not. You don't really know what's what. Some people get discouraged. But don't slacken off. Live with effort, just like the schoolboy. As he gets older he writes better and better. From writing badly he grows to write beautifully, all because of the practice from childhood.
Spillway  
When you make a dam, you must make a spillway, too. Then when the water rises too high, the water can flow off safely. When it's full to the brim, you open your spillway. You have to have a safety valve like this. Understanding impermanence is the safety valve of the Noble Ones. If you also have this safety valve, you will also be at peace.

Splinter in Your Foot  
The Buddha taught us to escape from suffering using wisdom. For example, suppose you had a splinter embedded in your foot. Sometimes you step on a stone that presses on the splinter, and it really hurts. So you feel around your foot. But not finding anything, you shrug it off and walk on a bit more. Eventually you again step on something else, and the pain is there again. This happens many times. What is the cause of that pain? The cause is that splinter in your foot. Whenever the pain arises, you may take a look and feel around a bit, but not seeing the splinter, you let it go. The pain recurs again and again until the desire to take it out is constantly with you. Finally it reaches a point where you make up your mind once and for all to get that splinter out – because it hurts! Our effort in the practice must be like this. Wherever it huts, wherever there's friction, we must investigate. We must confront the problem head on and not just shrug it off. Just take the splinter out of your foot. Wherever your mind gets stuck you must take note. As you look into it, you will know it, see it and experience it as it is.
Stubborn Horse  
The mind is as stubborn as a horse and as hard to train. What do you do when you've got a horse that's stubborn? Don't feed it for a while and it will soon come around again. And when it listens to your command, feed it a little. We can train the mind in the same way. With right effort, wisdom will arise.
Stump  
You should get at the root causes of things. It's like you are going for a walk and you trip over a stump. So you get a hatchet and cut it, but it grows back and you trip over it again. So you cut it again. But it keeps n growing back. You'd better get a tractor and plow it up. But don't put it off. It's like saying to yourself, "Should I go today? Should I . . . ? Maybe I'll go tomorrow . . . ?" Then the next day, "Should I go, or shouldn't I?" And you keep on doing this day after day until you die and you never go anywhere. You've got to think, "Go!" and that's it!
Sweet Dessert  
Practice is a matter of directly looking at the mind. This is wisdom. When you have examined and understood the mind, then you have the wisdom to know the limitations of concentration or books. If you have practiced and understood not0clinging, you can then return to the books. They will be like a sweet dessert. They can help you to teach others. Or you can go back to practicing absorption, because now you have the wisdom to know not to hold onto anything.

Sweet Mango  
Dhamma is in your mind, not in the forest. Don't believe others. Just listen to your own mind. You don't have to go and look anywhere else. Wisdom is in yourself, just like a sweet ripe mango is already in a young green one.
Sweet Papayas  
Defilements can be useful if used skillfully. It's like taking chicken and buffalo dung and putting them into the ground to help make our papaya trees grown. Dung is filthy stuff, but when the trees give fruit, the papayas are so nice and sweet. Whenever doubt arises, for example, look at it, investigate right there. This will help your practice grow and bear sweet fruit.

Tape Recorder
If listening to Dhamma makes your heart peaceful, that's good enough. You don't need to make an effort to remember anything. Some of you may not believe this, but if your heart is peaceful and you just listen to what is being said, letting it pass by while contemplating continuously, then you'll be like a tape recorder. After some time, when you turn on, everything will be there. Have no fear that there won't be anything. As soon as you turn on your tape recorder, everything will be there.
Thief and Boxer  
People who have wrong understanding practice meditation like a thief who, after having got caught, hires a clever lawyer to get him out of trouble. Once he is out, however, he starts stealing again. Or they are like a boxer who gets beaten up, nurses his wounds, and then goes to fight again which only brings him fresh wounds. And this cycle goes on endlessly. The purpose of meditation is more than just calming ourselves from time to time, getting ourselves out of trouble, but seeing and uprooting the causes which make us not calm to begin with.
Thieves and Murderers  
Your body and mind are like a gang of thieves and murderers. They keep trying to drag you into the fire of greed, hatred, and delusion. They cheat you through the pleasures of the senses. They call in sweet melodic voices from the other side of the door, saying, "Oh, come here, please come here." And when you open the door, they shoot you.
Tightly Woven Net  
Know and watch your heart. It's pure but emotions come to color it. So let your mind be like a tightly woven net to catch emotions and feelings that come, and investigate them before you react.

Tree  
Fostering the practice of Buddhism can be likened to a tree. A tree has roots, a trunk, branches and leaves. Every single leaf and branch, including the trunk, depends on the roots to absorb nutriment and send it up to them. A tree is dependent on the roots for sustenance. We are the same. Our actions and our speech are like the trunk, branches, and twigs. The mind is like the root, which absorbs nutriment and sends it out to sustain them, which in turn bears fruit. Whatever state the mind is in, be it based in wrong view or right view outwardly through our actions and speech. So nurturing Buddhism through the practical application of the Teachings is very important.

Trees Growing Outward  
Does anyone order the trees to grow the way they do? They can't talk nor can they move around, and yet they grow away from obstacles. Wherever it's cramped and growing will be difficult, they bend outwards. Trees by nature don't know anything. They act on natural laws, yet they do know enough to grow away from danger, to incline toward a suitable place. People are like this. We want to transcend suffering, and if that which we like and that which we don't like are
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板凳
 樓主| 發表於 2016-11-12 18:35:35 | 只看該作者
suffering, we should then not go so close to them, not be cramped by them. When we incline toward the Buddha, suffering will lessen and eventually come to a complete end.

Vanity  
Worldly people usually speak out of vanity. For example, suppose there was a certain person whom you hadn't seen for a long time, and then one day you happen to meet on the train: "Oh, I'm so glad to see you! I was just thinking to look you up!" Actually it's not so. You hadn't even thought of him at all, but you just say so at the time out of gladness. And so it becomes a lie. Yes, it's lying out of heedlessness. This is a refined form of lying, and people tend to speak like this. This, too, is a defilement which we should practice to get rid of.
Vine  
A growing child is like a growing vine. A vine will grow and attach itself to the nearest tree. It won't follow some other tree or form, and it's from that tree that it will get its shape and direction. If the tree is growing straight and upwards, the vine, too, will grow straight and upwards. If the tree is growing crooked and sideways, so will the vine. Understand that your teaching of a child really comes more from how you are and what the child sees than from anything you say. So your practice is not just your own, but also for your children . . . and others around you.

Vulture  
Many people who have studied on a university level and attained graduate degrees and worldly success find that there is still s something missing in their lives. Although they think high thoughts and are intellectually sophisticated, their hearts are still filled with pettiness and doubt. It's like a vulture: it flies high, but what does it feed on?

Water in an Urn  
If we keep on contemplating in meditation, energy will come to us. This is similar to the water in an urn. We put in water and keep it topped up. We keep on filling the urn with water so that the larvae which live in the water don't die. Making effort and doing our everyday practice is just like this. We must keep it topped up.

Water Buffalo  
Our thinking follows sense objects and pursues them wherever they go. Yet not any one of the sense objects is substantial. They are all impermanent, unsatisfactory, and empty. When they arise, observe them and see what happens. It is like looking after a buffalo in a rice paddy. When someone looks after a buffalo, he lets it walk around freely, but he keeps an eye on it. If the buffalo goes near the rice plants, he yells at it and the buffalo backs off. If it doesn't obey, it gets to feel the hard end of a stick. The person watching the buffalo can't doze off either, or he'll get up finding the rice plants all eaten away.
The mind is like the buffalo, and the rice plants are like the sense objects. The one who knows is the owner. When observing the mind, the one who knows notices everything. It sees how the mind is when it follows sense objects, and how it is when it doesn't follow them. When the one who knows observes the mind like this, wisdom will arise. When the mind meets an object, it'll grab hold, just like the buffalo will bite on a rice plant when it sees one. So wherever the mind goes, you must watch it. When it goes near the rice plants, shout at it. If it will not obey you, just give it the stick.

Well and Orchard  
You'll have to work to find peacefulness in the world. It's like reaching water for a well – it's there but you have to dig for it. Or like an orchard that's already planted – the fruit are there, but you have to pick them. They won't just fall into your mouth.

Wooden Log  
One can't separate samatha and vipassana. Samatha is tranquility, vipassana is contemplation. In order to contemplate, one must be tranquil, and in order to be tranquil, one must contemplate to know the mind. Wanting to separate them would be like picking up a log of wood in the middle and wanting only one end of the log to come up. Both of its ends must come up at the same time. You can't separate them. In our practice, it isn't necessary to talk of samatha or vipassana. Just call it the practice of Dhamma, that's enough.

Sweet Papayas  
If you don't understand the truth of suffering and how to get rid of it, all the factors of the path will be wrong – wrong speech and action, and wrong practice of concentration. It would be like wanting to travel to a certain village. You make a mistake and take the wrong road, but you find it comfortable to travel on and so continue walking in the wrong direction. No matter how comfortable and convenient the road may be, however, it won't take you to where you want to go. With even a little intuitive wisdom we will be able to see clearly through the ways of the world. We will come to understand that everything in the world is a teacher. Trees and vines, for example, can reveal the nature of reality to us. With wisdom there is no need to question anyone, no need to study. WE can learn enough from Nature to be enlightened.

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地板
 樓主| 發表於 2016-11-12 18:36:56 | 只看該作者

嘉兴藏第24册No.B137赵州和尚语录

嘉兴藏第 24 册 No. B137 赵州和尚语录




  赵州和尚语录卷下  并对机勘弁偈颂等

  师因在室坐禅次主事报和尚云大王来礼拜大王礼拜了左右问烈土王来为什么不起师云你不会老僧者里下等人来出三门接中等人来下禅床接上等人来禅床上接不可唤大王作中等下等人也恐屈大王大王欢喜再三请入内供养。

  师因问周员外你还梦见临济也无员外竖起拳师云那边见外云者边见师云什么处见临济员外无对师问周员外什么处来云非来非去师云不是老鸦飞来飞去。

  师示众云才有是非纷然失心还有答话分也无后有僧举似洛浦洛浦扣齿又举侣云居云居云何必僧举似师师云南方大有人丧身失命僧云请和尚举师才举僧便指傍僧云者个师僧吃却饭了作什么语话。

  师因看金刚经次僧便问一切诸佛及诸佛阿耨菩提皆从此经出如何是此经师云金刚般若波罗蜜经如是我闻一时佛在舍卫国僧云不是师云我自理经也不得。

  因僧辞去师云阇梨出外忽有人问还见赵州否你作么生祗对云只可道见师云老僧是一头驴你作么生见无语。

  师问新到从什么处来云南方来师云还知有赵州关么云须知赵州关者师叱云者贩私盐汉又云兄弟赵州关也难过云如何是赵州关师云石桥是。

  有僧从雪峰来师云上座莫住此间老僧者里只是避难所在佛法尽在南方云佛法岂有南北师云直饶你从云居雪峰来也只是个担板汉云未审那边事如何师云你因什么夜来尿床云达后如何师云又是阿屎。

  示众云我此间有出窟师子亦有在窟师子只是难得师子儿时有僧弹指对之师云是什么云师子儿师云我唤作师子儿是是罪过你更行趯踏。

  问新到离什么处云离雪峰师云雪峰有什么言句示人云和尚寻常道尽十方世界是沙门一只眼你等诸人向什么处阿师云阇梨若回寄个锹子去。

  师因舍衣俵大众次僧便问和尚总舍却了用个什么去师召云湖州子僧应诺师云用个什么。

  师示众云未有世界早有此性世界坏时此性不坏僧问如何是此性师云五蕴四大云此犹是坏如何此性师云四大五蕴。

  定州有一座主到师问习何业云经律论不听便讲师举手示之还讲得者个么座主茫然不知师云直饶你不听便讲得也只是个讲经论汉若是佛法未在云和尚即今语话莫便是佛法否师云直饶你问得答得总属经论佛法未在无语。

  师因问一行者从什么处来云北院来师云那院何似者院行者无对有僧在边立师令代行者语僧代云从那院来师笑之师又令文远代之文远云行者还是不取师语话。

  师问座主所习何业云讲维摩经师云维摩经步步是道场座主在什么处无对师令全益代座主语全益云只者一问可识道场么师云你身在道场里心在什么处速道取云和尚不是觅学人心师云是云只者一问一会是什么师云老僧不在心所里法过眼耳鼻舌身意而知解云既不在心数里和尚为什么觅师云为你道不得云法过眼耳鼻舌身意而不解作么生道不得师云吃我涕唾。

  师问僧你曾看法华经么云曾看师云经中道纳衣在空闲假名阿练若诳惑世间人你作么生会僧拟礼拜师云你披纳衣来否云披来师云莫或我云如何得不或去师云自作活计莫取老僧语。

  师问座主所习何业云讲维摩经师云那个是维摩祖父云某甲是师云为什么却为儿孙传语无对。

  师一日上堂僧才出礼拜师乃合掌珍重又一日僧礼拜师云好好问云如何是禅师云今日天阴不畣话。

  问新到从何方来云无方面来师乃转背僧将坐具随师转师云大好无方面。

  问新到从什么处来云南方来师云三千里外逢莫戏云不曾师云摘杨花摘杨花。

  丰干到五台山下见一老人干云莫是文殊也无老人云不可有二文殊也干便礼拜老人不见有僧举似师师云丰干只具一只眼师乃令文远作老人我作丰干师云莫是文殊也无岂有二文殊也师云文殊文殊。

  师问二新到上座曾到此间否云不曾到师云吃茶去又问那一人曾到此间否云曾到师云吃茶去院主问和尚不曾到教伊吃茶去即且致曾到为什么教伊吃茶去师云院主院主应喏师云吃茶去。

  师到云居云居云老老大大何不觅个住处师云什么处住得云居云前面有古寺基师云与么即和尚自住取师又到茱萸茱萸云老老大大何不觅个住处去师云什么处住得茱萸云老老大大住处也不识师云三十年弄马骑今日却被驴扑师又到茱萸方丈上下观瞻茱萸云平地吃交作什么师云只为心粗。

  师一日将拄杖上茱萸法堂上东西来去萸云作什么师云探水萸云我者里一滴也无探个什么师将杖子倚壁便下去台山路上有一婆子要问僧僧问台山路向什么处去云蓦直去僧才行婆云又与么去也师闻后便去问台山路向什么处去云蓦直去师才行婆云又与么去也师便归举似大众云婆子今日被老僧勘破了也。

  师见僧来挟火示之云会么僧云不会师云你不得唤作火老僧道了也师挟起火云会么云不会师却云此去舒州有投子山和尚你去礼拜问取因缘相契不用更来不相契却来其僧便去才到投子和尚处投子乃问近离什么处云离赵州特来礼拜和尚投子云赵州老人有何言句僧乃具举前话投子乃下禅床行三五步却坐云会么僧云不会投子云你归举似赵州其僧却归举似师师云还会么云未会师云也不教多也。

  洞山问僧什么处来云掌鞋来山云自解依他云依他山云他还指阇梨也无无对师代云若允即不违普化吃生菜临济见云普化大似一头驴普化便作驴啼临济便休去普化云临济小厮儿只具一只眼师代云但与本分草料。

  保寿问胡钉教莫便是胡钉教否云不敢保云还钉得虚空么云请打破虚空来保寿便打却云他后有多口阿师与你点破在胡钉教后举似师师云你因什么被他打云不知过在什么处师云只者一缝上不奈何更教他打破钉教便会师代云且钉者一缝师问新到离什么处云雪峰来师云雪峰有什么言句示人云雪峰寻常道尽十方世界都来是沙门一只眼你诸人向什么处阿师云你若回寄阇梨一个锹子去。

  师因行路次见一婆子问和尚住什么处师云赵州东院西师举向僧云你道使那个西字一僧云东西字一僧云依栖字师云汝两人总作得盐铁判官。

  师与侍郎游园见兔走过侍郎问和尚是大善知识兔子见为什么走师云老僧好杀。

  师因见僧扫地次遂问与么扫还得净洁也无云转扫转多师云岂无拨尘者也云谁是拨尘者师云会么云不会师云问取云居去其僧乃去问云居如何是拨尘者云居云者瞎汉。

  师问僧你在此间多少时也云七八年师云还见老僧么云见师云我作一头驴你作么生见云入法界见师云我将为你有此一着枉吃了如许多饭僧云请和尚道师云因什么不道向草料里见。

  师问菜头今日吃生菜熟菜菜头提起一茎菜师云知恩者少负恩者多。

  有俗行者到院烧香师问僧伊在那里烧香礼拜我又共你在者里语话正与么时生在那头僧云和尚是什么师云与么即在那头也云与么已是先也师笑之。

  师与小师文远论义不得占胜占胜者输糊饼师云我有一头驴远云我是驴纣师云我是驴粪远云我是粪中虫师云你在彼中作么远云我在彼中过夏师云把将糊饼来。

  师因入内回路上见一幢子无一截僧问云幢子一截上天去也入地去也师云也不上天也不入地云向什么处去师云扑落也。

  师坐次一僧才出礼拜师云珍重僧伸问次师云又是也。

  师因在檐前立见燕子语师云者燕子喃喃地招人言语僧问未审他还甘也无师云依俙似曲才堪听又被风吹别调中。

  有僧辞去师云什么处去云闽中去师云闽中大有兵马你须回避云向什么处回避师云恰好。

  有僧上参次见师衲衣盖头坐次僧便退师云阇梨莫道老僧不祗对。

  师问僧从什么处来云南方来师云共什么人为伴云水牯牛师云好个师僧因什么与畜生为伴云不异故师云好个畜生云争肯师云不肯且从还我伴来。

  师问僧堂中还有祖师也无云有师云唤来与老僧洗脚。

  堂中有二僧相推不肯作第一座主事白和尚师云总教他作第二座云教谁作第一座师云装香着云装香了也师云戒香定香。

  师问僧离什么处云离京中师云你还从潼关过么云不历师云今日捉得者贩私盐汉。

  因送亡僧师云只是一个死人得无量人送又云许多死汉送一个生汉时有僧问是心生是身生师云身心俱不生云者个作什么师云死汉。

  有僧见猫儿问云某甲唤作猫儿未审和尚唤作什么师云是你唤作猫儿。

  因镇州大王来访师侍者来报师云大王来师云大王万福侍者云未在方到三门下师云又道大王来也。

  因上东司召文远文远应喏师云东司上不可与你说佛法也。

  因在殿上过乃唤侍者侍者应喏师云好一殿功德侍者无对。

  师因到临济方始洗脚临济便问如何是祖师西来意师云正值洗脚临济乃近前侧聆师云若会便会不会更莫啖啄作么临济拂袖去师云三十年行脚今日为人错下注脚。

  师因到天台国清寺见寒山拾得师云久响寒山拾得到来只见两头水牯牛寒山拾得便作牛斗师云叱叱寒山拾得咬齿相看师便归堂二人来堂内问师适来因缘作么生师乃呵呵大笑。

  一日二人问师什么处去来师云礼拜五百尊者二人云五百头水牯牛聻尊者师云为什么作五百头水牯牛去山云苍天苍天师呵呵大笑。

  师行脚时见二庵主一人作ㄚ角童师问讯二人殊不顾来日早晨ㄚ角童将一铛饭来放地上分作三分庵主将席子近前坐ㄚ角童亦将席近前相对坐亦不唤师师乃亦将席子近前坐ㄚ童目顾于师庵主云莫言侵早起更有夜行人师云何不教诏这行者庵主云他是人家男女师云洎合放过ㄚ童便起顾视庵主云多口作么ㄚ童从此入山不见。

  师因看经次沙弥文远入来师乃将经侧视之沙弥乃出去师随后把住云速道速道文远云阿弥陀佛阿弥陀佛师便归方丈。

  因沙弥童行参师向侍者道教伊去侍者向行者道和尚教去师云沙弥童行得入门侍者在门外。

  师行脚时到一尊宿院才入门相见便云有么有么尊宿竖起拳头师云水浅船难泊便出去又到一院见尊宿便云有么有么尊宿竖起拳头师云能纵能夺能取能撮礼拜便出去。

  师一日拈数珠问新罗长老彼中还有者个也无云有师云何似者个云不似者个师云既有为什么不似无语师自代云不见道新罗大唐。

  问新到什么处来云南方来师竖起指云会么云不会师云动止万福不会。

  师行脚时问大慈般若以何为体慈云般若以何为体师便呵呵大笑而出大慈来日见师扫地次问般若以何为体师放下扫帚呵呵大笑而去大慈便归方丈。

  师到百丈百丈问从什么处来云南泉来百丈云南泉有何言句示人师云有时道未得之人亦须峭然去百丈叱之师容愕然百丈云大好峭然师便作舞而出。

  师到投子处对坐斋投子将蒸饼与师吃师云不吃不久下糊饼投子教沙弥度与师师接得饼却礼沙弥三拜投子默然。

  因僧写师真呈师师云若似老僧即打杀我若不似即烧却。

  师因与文远行次乃以手指一片地云这里好造一个巡铺子文远便去彼中立云把将公验来师便打一掴远云公验分明过。

  师问新到近离甚处云台山师云还见文殊也无僧展手师云展手颇多文殊谁睹云只守气急杀人师云不睹云中雁焉知沙塞寒。

  问远远投师请师一接师云孙宾门下因什么钻龟僧拂袖出去师云将为当荣折他双足。

  师与首座看石桥乃问首座是什么人造云李膺造师云造时向什么处下手无对师云寻常说石桥问着下手处也不知。

  有新罗院主请师斋师到门首问此是什么院云新罗院师云我与你隔海。

  问僧什么处来云云居来师云云居有什么言句云僧问灵羊挂角时如何云居云六六三十六师云云居师兄由在僧却问未审和尚尊意如何师云九九八十一。

  有一婆子日晚入院来师云作什么婆云寄宿师云者里是什么所在婆呵呵大笑而去。

  师出外逢见一个婆子提一个篮子师便问什么处去云偷赵州笋去师云忽见赵州又作么生婆子近前打一掌。

  师因见院主送生饭鸦子见便总飞去师云鸦子见你为什么却飞去院主云怕专甲师云是什么语话师代云为某甲有杀心在。

  师问僧什么处来云江西来师云赵州着在什么处僧无对。

  师从殿上过见一僧礼拜师打一棒云礼拜也是好事师云好事不如无。

  师因参潼关潼关问师云你还知有潼关么师云知有潼关云有公验者即得过无公验者不得过师云忽遇銮驾来时如何关云也须检点过云你要造反师到宝寿宝寿见师来遂乃背面而坐师便展坐具宝寿起立师便出去。

  师在南泉时泉牵一头水牯牛入僧堂内巡堂而转首座乃向牛背上三拍泉便休去师后将一束草安首座面前首座无对。

  有秀才见师乃赞叹师云和尚是古佛师云秀才是新如来。

  有僧问如何是涅槃师云我耳重僧再问师云我不害耳聋乃有颂腾腾大道者对面涅槃门但坐念无际来年春又春。

  有僧问生死二路是同是别师乃有颂道人问生死生死若为论双林一池水朗月耀乾坤唤他句上识此是弄精魂欲会个生死颠人说梦春。

  有僧问诸佛有难火焰里藏身和尚有难向什么处藏身师乃有颂渠说佛有难我说渠有灾但看我避难何处有相随有无不是说去来非去来为你说难法对面识得未。

  十二时歌

鸡鸣丑愁见起来还漏逗裙子褊衫个也无袈裟形相些些有裈无腰裤无口头上青灰三五斗北望修行利济人谁知变作不唧溜

平旦寅荒村破院实难论解斋粥米全无粒空对闲窗与隙尘唯雀噪勿人亲独坐时闻落叶频谁道出家憎爱断思量不觉泪沾巾

日出卯清净却翻为烦恼有为功德被尘幔无限田地未曾扫攒眉多称心少叵耐东村黑黄老供利不曾将得来放驴吃我堂前草

食时辰烟火徒劳望四邻馒头?子前年别今日思量空咽津持念少嗟叹频一百家中无善人来者秪道觅茶吃不得茶噇去又嗔

禺中巳削发谁知到如此无端被请作村僧屈辱饥凄受欲死胡张三黑李四恭敬不曾生些子适来忽尔到门头唯道借茶兼借纸

日南午茶饭轮还无定度行却南家到北家果至北家不推注苦沙盐大麦醋蜀黍米饭齑莴苣唯称供养不等闲和尚道心须坚固

日昳未者回不践光阴地曾闻一饱忘百饥今日老僧身便是不习禅不论义铺个破席日里睡想料上方兜率天也无如此日炙背

晡时申也有烧香礼拜人五个老婆三个瘿一双面子黑皴皴油麻茶实是珍金刚不用苦张筋愿我来年蚕麦熟罗睺罗儿与一文

日入酉除却荒凉更何守云水高流定委无历寺沙弥镇长有出格言不到口枉续牟尼子孙后一条拄丈粗楋藜不但登山兼打狗

黄昏戌独坐一间空暗室阳焰灯光永不逢眼前纯是金州漆钟不闻虚度日唯闻老鼠闹啾唧凭何更得有心情思量念个波罗蜜

人定亥门前明月谁人爱向里唯愁卧去时勿个衣裳着甚盖刘维那赵五戒口头说善甚奇怪任你山僧囊罄空问着都缘总不会

半夜子心境何曾得暂止思量天下出家人似我住持能有几土榻床破芦?老榆木枕全无被尊像不烧安息香灰里唯闻牛粪气

  见起塔乃有颂

本自圆成何劳叠石名邈雕镌与吾悬隔若人借问终不指画

  因见诸方见解异途乃有颂呵

赵州南石桥北观音院里有弥勒祖师遗下一只履直至如今觅不得

  因鱼鼓有颂

四大犹来造化功有声全贵里头空莫怪不与凡夫说只为宫商调不同

  因莲花有颂

奇异根苗带雪鲜不知何代别西天淤泥深浅人不识出水方知是白莲

  赵州和尚语录卷下(终)

  赵州真际禅师行状

  师即南泉门人也俗姓郝氏本曹州郝乡人也讳从谂镇府有塔记云师得七百甲子欤值武王微沐避地岨崃木食草衣僧仪不易师初随本师行脚到南泉本师先人事了师方乃人事南泉在方丈内卧次见师来参便问近离什么处师云瑞像院南泉云还见瑞像么师云瑞像即不见即见卧如来南泉乃起问你是有主沙弥无主沙弥师对云有主沙弥泉云那个是你主师云孟春犹寒伏惟和尚尊体起居万福泉乃唤维那云此沙弥别处安排师受戒后闻受业师在曹州西住护国院乃归院省觐到后本师令郝氏云君家之子游方已回其家亲属忻怿不已只候来日咸往观焉师闻之乃云俗尘爱网无有了期已辞出家不愿再见乃于是夜结束前迈其后自携瓶锡遍历诸方常自谓曰七岁童儿胜我者我即问伊百岁老翁不及我者我即教佗年至八十方住赵州城东观音院去石桥十里已来住持枯槁志效古人僧堂无前后架旋营斋食绳床一脚折以烧断薪用绳系之每有别制新者师不许也住持四十来年未尝赍一封书告其檀越因有南方僧来举问雪峰古涧寒泉时如何雪峰云瞪目不见底学云饮者如何峰云不从口入师闻之曰不从口入从鼻孔里入其僧却问师古涧寒泉时如何师云苦学云饮者如何师云死雪峰闻师此语赞云古佛古佛雪峰因此后不答话矣厥后因河北燕王领兵收镇府既到界上有观气象者奏曰赵州有圣人所居战必不胜燕赵二王因展筵会俱息交锋乃问赵之金地上士何人或曰有讲华严经大师节行孤邈若岁大旱咸命往台山祈祷大师未回甘泽如泻乃曰恐未尽善或云此去一百二十里有赵州观音院有禅师年腊高邈道眼明白佥曰此可应兆乎二王税驾观焉既届院内师乃端坐不起燕王遂问曰人王尊耶法王尊耶师云若在人王人王中尊若在法王法王中尊燕王唯然矣师良久中间问阿那个是镇府大王赵王应喏弟子(缘赵州属镇府以表知重之礼)师云老僧滥在山河不及趍面须臾左右请师为大王说法师云大王左右多争交老僧说法乃约令左右退师身畔时有沙弥文远高声云启大王不是者个左右大王乃问是什么左右对曰大王尊讳多和尚所以不敢说法燕王乃云请禅师去讳说法师云故知大王曩劫眷属俱是冤家我佛世尊一称名号罪灭福生大王先祖才有人触著名字便生嗔怒师慈悲非倦说法多时二王稽首赞叹珍敬无尽来日将回燕王下先锋使闻师不起凌晨入院责师傲兀君侯师闻之乃出迎接先锋乃问曰昨日见二王来不起今日见某甲来因何起接师云待都衙得似大王老僧亦不起接先锋聆师此语再三拜而去寻后赵王发使取师供养既届城门阖城威仪迎之入内师才下宝辇王乃设拜请师上殿正位而坐师良久以手斫额云阶下立者是何官长左右云是诸院尊宿并大师大德师云他各是一方化主若在阶下老僧亦起王乃命上殿是日斋筵将罢僧官排定从上至下一人一问一人问佛法师既望见乃问作什么云问佛法师云这里已坐却老僧那里问什么法二尊不并化(此乃语之词也)王乃令止其时国后与王俱在左右侍立国后云请禅师为大王摩顶受记师以手摩大王顶云愿大王与老僧齐年是时迎师权在近院驻泊获时选地建造禅宫师闻之令人谓王曰若动着一茎草老僧却归赵州其时窦行军愿舍果园一所直一万五千贯号为真际禅院亦云窦家园也师入院后海众云臻是时赵王礼奉燕王从幽州奏到命服镇府具威仪迎接师坚让不受左右舁箱至师面前云大王为禅师佛法故坚请师着此衣师云老僧为佛法故所以不着此衣左右云且看大王面师云又干俗官什么事乃躬自取衣挂身上礼贺再三师惟知应喏而已师住赵州二年将谢世时谓弟子曰吾去世之后焚烧了不用净淘舍利宗师弟子不同浮俗且身是幻舍利何生斯不可也今小师送拂子一枝与赵王传语云此是老僧一生用不尽底师于戊子岁十一月十日端坐而终于时窦家园道俗车马数万余人哀声振动原野赵王于时尽送终之礼感叹之泣无异金棺匿彩于俱尸矣莫不高营雁塔特竖丰碑谥号曰真际禅师光祖之塔后唐保大十一年孟夏月旬有三日有学者咨问东都东院惠通禅师赵州先人行化厥由作礼而退乃授笔录之具实矣。

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