5p 1) Ananda put his palms together, bowed, and said to the Buddha,
"Having heard the Buddha’s unrestrained, greatly kind, true and actual
expression of Dharma that is pure in nature and wonderfully eternal, I
still have not understood the sequence for releasing the knots so that
when the six are untied, the one is gone also. I only hope you will be
compassionate, and once again empathize with this assembly and those of
the future, by offering us explanation of the Dharma to wash and rinse
away our deep-rooted defilements.
5p 2) Then, upon the lion’s throne, the Thus Come One straightened
his Nirvana robes, arranged his samghati sash, took hold of the table inlaid
with the seven gems, reached out onto the table and picked up an exquisitely
beautiful cloth given him by a god from the Suyama Heaven.
5p 3) Then, as the assembly watched, he tied it into a knot and showed
it to Ananda, asking, "What is this called?"
Ananda and the great assembly answered together, "It is called a knot."
Then the Thus Come One tied another knot in the beautiful cloth and
asked Ananda again, "What is this called?"
Ananda and the great assembly once again answered together, "It, too,
is called a knot."
He continued in this pattern until he had tied six knots in the
beautiful cloth. As he made each knot, he held it up to Ananda and asked,
"What is this called?"
And each time Ananda and the great assembly answered the Buddha in
the same way: "It is called a knot."
5p 4) The Buddha said to Ananda, "When I first tied the cloth, you
called it a knot. Since the beautiful cloth is basically a single strip
how could you give the same answer for the second and third time?"
5p 5) Ananda said to the Buddha, "World Honored One, this beautiful
cloth is just one piece, but the way I understand it, when the Thus
Come One makes one tie, it is called a knot. If he were to make a hundred
ties, they would be called a hundred knots. And so now that exactly six
knots—not five or seven—have been tied in the cloth, why does the Thus
Come One only allow me to speak of one knot and not of two or three?"
5p 6) The Buddha told Ananda, "You know that this precious cloth is
basically one strip, but when I made six ties in it, you said it had six
knots. Carefully consider the substance of the cloth: it remains unchanged
except for the knots in it.
5p 6) "What do you think? You identified the first knot I tied as number
one. Now I am ready to tie the sixth knot. Will you also call it number
one?
5p 7) "No, World Honored One. If there are six knots, the sixth knot
can never be called the first one. Even if I exhausted all my intelligence
and eloquence in life after life, I could reverse the sequence of these
six knots.
5p 7) The Buddha said, "So it is. The six knots are not identical.
Consider their origin: they are created from the one cloth and were tied
in a certain order. It would be impossible to scramble that sequence.
5p 8) "Your six sense organs are also like that. From what was identical,
decisive differences arise."
5p 9) The Buddha said to Ananda, "Assuming you did not want these six
knots and would like there to be just one cloth, how could you achieve
that end?"
Ananda said, "As long as these knots remain, dispute about what they
are and what they are not will arise. Their very existence will lead to
such distinctions as this knot not being that knot and that knot not being
this one. But if the Thus Come One were to untie them all right now, so
that none remained, then there would be no ‘this’ or ‘that.’ There would
not even be anything called ‘one,’ how much the less ‘six.’"
The Buddha said, "That is also what happens when the six sense
organs are freed: even the one is gone.
5p 10) "Because from beginningless time your mind and nature have been
insane and disturbed, you have created false knowledge and views. As that
falseness continues to arise without respite, perception becomes weary
and defilements arise.
5p 11) "Just like the whirling flowers that appeared when the eyes
grew tired of staring, these too are disturbances that arise without a
cause within the tranquil, essential brightness.
5p 12) "Everything in the world—the mountains, the rivers, the earth
itself, as well as birth, death, and Nirvana—is these flowers that appear
because of our being turned upside-down by insanity and weariness."
5p 13) Ananda said, "This weariness is the same as these knots. How
do we untie them?"
5p 13) The Thus Come One took hold of the knotted cloth, pulled on
its left end, and asked Ananda, "Is this the way to untie them?"
"No, World Honored One."
Then the Buddha pulled on the right end and again asked Ananda, "Is
this the way to untie them?"
"No, World Honored One."
5p 14) The Buddha said to Ananda, "Now I have pulled the cloth
left and right and still have not been able to undo the knots. What method
do you propose for untying them?"
Ananda said to the Buddha, "World Honored One, you must untie the knots
from their center. Then they will come undone."
5p 15) The Buddha said to Ananda, "So it is, so it is. If you want
to undo them, you have to untie them from the center.
5p 15) "Ananda, the Buddha Dharma I explain arises from causes and
conditions. But that does not imply grasping at the mixing and uniting
of coarse, worldly appearances. The Thus Come One understands all worldly
and world-transcending dharmas and knows their fundamental causes and what
conditions bring them into being.
5p 16) "This is so to the extent that I know how many drops of rain
fall in as many worlds away from here as there are dust motes in the Ganges.
The same is true of all the things you can see: Why the pine is straight,
why the brambles are twisted, why the goose is white, why the crow is black--I
understand all these reasons.
5p 17) "Therefore, Ananda, you can select whichever one of the six
sense-organs you wish. If the knots of the sense-organs are removed, then
the defiling phenomena disappear of themselves and all falseness ceases
to be. If what remains is not the truth, then where do you expect to find
the truth?"
5p 18) "Ananda, I now ask you, can the six knots beautiful cloth be
untied simultaneously and released all at once?"
"No, World Honored One. As the knots were originally made in sequence,
now they must be untied in sequence. The substance of the six knots is
the same, but they were not made simultaneously, and so now when they are
undone, how could they be untied simultaneously?"
5p 19) The Buddha said, "Releasing the six sense-organs is the same
way.
When the sense-organ begins to be released, one realize the emptiness
of people first. When the nature of that emptiness is fully understood,
then one is released from dharmas. Once one is freed from dharmas, neither
kind of emptiness will arise.
5p 20) "That is called the Patience with Non-Production that Bodhisattvas
attain by means of samadhi."
5p 20) Upon receiving the Buddha’s instruction, Ananda and the great
assembly gained wisdom and awareness that was perfectly penetrating and
free of doubt and delusion.
5p 20) All at the same time, they placed their palms together, and
bowed at the Buddha’s feet. Ananda then said to the Buddha, "Today our
bodies and minds are illumined, and we are happily free from obstruction.
5p 21) "We have understood the meaning of the ending of the six and
the one. Still, we have not yet progressed to fundamental, perfect penetration.
5p 21) "World Honored One, we who have drifted and floundered
our way through eon after eon, homeless and alone, had no idea, we
never imagined that we could meet the Buddha in such a close relationship.
We are like lost infants who have suddenly found their compassionate mother.
5p 22) If because of this encounter we realize the Way, [it will not
have been in vain]. If we treat these secret instructions with our former
mode of understanding, it will be the same as if we hadn’t even heard them.
5p 23) "We only wish the Greatly Compassionate One will bestow upon
us the profound secret as the Thus Come One’s final instruction." After
saying this Ananda prostrated himself, withdrew, and silently anticipated
the Buddha’s hidden transmission.
5p 23) Then the World Honored One told all those in the assembly who
were great Bodhisattvas and great Arhats with their outflows extinguished,
"All of you Bodhisattvas and Arhats who are born from within my Dharma
and have attained the stage beyond study, I now ask you: When you first
brought forth your resolve and became enlightened to the eighteen realms,
which one of these brought perfect penetration? Through which expedient
did you enter samadhi?
5p 25) "Kaundinya, with the others of the first five Bhikshus, arose
from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s feet, and said to the Buddha, "When
I was in the Deer Park and the Pheasant Garden, I observed the Thus Come
One immediately after his accomplishment of the Way. Upon hearing the Buddha’s
voice, I understood the Four Truths.
5p 26) "The Buddha is questioning us Bhikshus. As I was the first to
understand, the Thus Come One certified me and named me Ajnata. His
wonderful sound was both secret and all-pervasive. It was through sound
that I became an Arhat.
5p 27) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I have been certified
to it, sound is the foremost means."
5p 28) Upanishad arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s feet, and
said to the Buddha, "I also saw the Buddha when he first accomplished the
Way. I learned to contemplate the attributes of impurity until I grew to
loathe it and came to understand that the nature of all forms is unclean.
Bare bones and fine dust all return to emptiness, and so both emptiness
and forms are done away with. With this realization, I accomplished the
path beyond study.
5p 30) "The Thus Come One certified me and named me Upanishad. Objects
of form came to an end, and wonderful form was both secret and all-pervasive.
Thus, it was through the attributes of forms that I became an Arhat. The
Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I have been certified to it,
forms
are the foremost means."
5p 30) The pure youth, Exalted by Fragrance, arose from his seat, bowed
at the Buddha’s feet, and said to the Buddha, "I heard the Thus Come One
teach me to contemplate attentively all conditioned phenomena.
5p 31) "I then left the Buddha and dwelt quietly in a pure abode. I
observed that when the Bhikshus lit ‘sinking’ incense, its fragrant scent
quietly entered my nostrils. I contemplated this fragrance: it did not
come from the wood; it did not come from emptiness; it did not come from
the smoke, and it did not come from the fire. There was no place it came
from and no place it went to. Because of that, my discriminating mind was
dispelled, and I attained the absence of outflows.
5p 32) "The Thus Come One certified me and called me Exalted by Fragrance.
Defiling scents suddenly vanished, and the wonderful fragrance was both
secret and all-pervasive. It was through the adornment of fragrance that
I became an Arhat.
"The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I have been certified
to it, being exalted by fragrances are the foremost means."
5p 33) The two Dharma-Princes, Medicine King and Superior Medicine,
and five hundred Brahma gods in the assembly arose from their seats, bowed
at the Buddha’s feet, and said to the Buddha, From beginningless eons until
now, we have been good doctors for the world. Our mouths have tasted many
herbs, wood, metals, and stones of the Saha world, a hundred and eight
thousand flavors. We know in detail the bitter, sour, salty, bland, sweet,
and pungent flavors, and the like, in all their combinations and inherent
changes. We have a thorough knowledge of whether they are cooling or warming,
poisonous or non-poisonous.
5p 35) "While serving the Thus Come One we came to know that the nature
of flavors is neither empty nor existent, nor of the body or of the
mind, nor apart from body or the mind. We became enlightened by discriminating
among flavors.
5p 35) "The Thus Come One sealed and certified us brothers and named
us Bodhisattvas Medicine King and Superior Medicine. Now in the assembly
we are Dharma Princes who have ascended to the Bodhisattva level due to
having become enlightened by means of flavors.
5p 36) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As we have been
certified to it, the cause of flavors is the foremost means."
5p 36) Bhadrapala and sixteen awakened lords who were his companions,
arose from their seats, bowed at the Buddha’s feet, and said to the Buddha:
5p 37) "We first heard the Dharma and left the home life under King
of Awesome Sound Buddha. Once, when it was time for the Sangha to bathe,
I followed the custom and entered the bathhouse. Suddenly I awakened to
the fact that water does not wash away the dust, nor does it cleanse the
body. And in that moment I became peaceful and attained the state of there
being nothing at all.
5p 38) "To this day, I have never forgotten that experience. Having
left home with the Buddha, I have advanced beyond study. The Buddha named
me Bhadrapala. Wonderful touch was revealed, and I reached the level of
being a disciple of the Buddha.
5p 39) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I have been certified
to it, touch is the foremost means."
5p 39) Mahakashyapa, Bhikshuni Purple-golden Light and others arose
from their seats, bowed at the Buddha’s feet, and said to the Buddha:
5p 40) "In a past eon in this region, I drew near to the Buddha named
Sun, Moon, and Lamp, who was then in the world. I heard the Dharma from
him and cultivated and studied with him. After that Buddha entered tranquility,
I made offerings to his sharira and lit lamps to continue his light. Bhikshuni
Purple-Golden-Light gilded the Buddha’s image. From that time on, in life
after life, my body has always been perfect and has shone with a purple-golden
light. The Bhikshuni Purple-Golden Light, and others make up my retinue,
and we all brought forth the resolve for Bodhi at the same time.
5p 42) "I contemplated that the world’s six sense-objects change and
decay; they are but empty stillness. Based on this, I cultivated tranquility.
Now my body and mind can pass through hundreds of thousands of eons as
though they were a finger-snap.
5p 42-43) "Based on the emptiness of dharmas, I accomplished Arhatship.
The World Honored One says that I am foremost in dhuta ascetic practices.
Wonderful Dharma brought me awakening and understanding, and I put
an end to all outflows. The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I
have been certified to it, dharmas are the foremost means."
5p 43-44) Aniruddha arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s
feet, and said to the Buddha, "When I first left home, I was fond of sleeping
all the time. The Thus Come One scolded me and said I was no better than
an animal. When I heard the Buddha’s scolding, I wept and upbraided myself.
For seven days I did not sleep, and I lost the sight in both my eyes.
5p 44-45) "The World Honored One taught me the Vajra Samadhi
of the Delightful Seeing, which Illumines and is Bright. Without using
my eyes, I could contemplate the ten directions with true and penetrating
clarity, just as if I were looking at a piece of fruit in the palm of my
hand. The Thus Come One certified me as having attained Arhatship.
5p 45) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I have been certified
to it, returning the seeing back to its source is the foremost means."
5p 45) Kshudrapanthaka arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s feet,
and said to the Buddha:
5p 48) "I am deficient in the ability to memorize and do not have much
innate intelligence. When I first met the Buddha, I heard the Dharma and
left the home life. But, when I tried to remember one line of a verse by
the Thus Come One, I spent a hundred days remembering the first part and
forgetting the last, or remembering the last and forgetting the first.
5p 50) "The Buddha pitied my dullness and taught me to relax
and to regulate my breath. I contemplated my breath thoroughly to the subtle
point in which arising, dwelling, decay, and ceasing happen in every moment.
5p 51) "My mind suddenly attained vast non-obstruction, until my outflows
were ended and I accomplished Arhatship. Beneath the Buddha’s seat I was
sealed and certified as being beyond study.
5p 52) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I have been certified
to it, turning the breath back to emptiness is the foremost means."
5p 53) Gavampati arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s feet, and
said to the Buddha, "I created an offense that resulted in mouth karma
in a past eon. I slighted a Shramana, and in life after life I’ve had this
cow-cud sickness.
5p 54-55) "The Thus Come One taught me the mind-ground
Dharma-door of the purity of a single flavor. My thoughts ended, I entered
samadhi, and learned by contemplating flavors—how they have no substance
and are not things. As a result my mind transcended all worldly outflows.
5p 55) "Internally my body and mind were liberated and externally I
abandoned the world. I left the three realms of existence far behind, just
like a bird released from its cage. I separated from filth and wiped out
defilements, and so my Dharma eye became pure, and I accomplished Arhatship.
The Thus Come One personally certified me as having ascended to the stage
beyond study.
5p 56) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I have been certified
to it, returning flavor and turning awareness around is the foremost means."
5p 56) Pilindavatsa arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s feet,
and said to the Buddha:
5p 57) "When I first resolved to follow the Buddha and enter the Way,
I often heard the Thus Come One explain how there is nothing in this world
that brings happiness. Once, when I was on alms rounds in the city, I was
reflecting on this Dharma-door and did not notice a poisonous thorn on
the road until it had pricked my foot. My mind was aware of the strong
physical pain, but although my awareness experienced the pain, I was also
aware that in my pure heart there was neither pain nor awareness of it.
5p 58) "I also thought, ‘Is it possible for one body to have two awarenesses?’
Having reflected on this for a short while, my body and mind became
suddenly empty. After twenty-one days, my outflows disappeared and I accomplished
Arhatship. The Buddha personally certified me and confirmed that I had
realized the level beyond study.
5p 59) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I have been certified
to it, purifying the awareness and forgetting the body is the foremost
means."
5p 59 Subhuti arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s feet, and
said to the Buddha, "From distant eons until now, my mind has been unobstructed.
I remember as many of my past lives as there are sand grains in the Ganges.
From the beginning, in my mother’s womb, I knew emptiness and tranquility,
to the extent that the ten directions became empty and I caused beings
to be certified to the nature of emptiness.
5p 60) "Having received the Thus Come One’s revelation that the enlightened
nature is true emptiness and that the nature of emptiness is perfect and
bright, I attained Arhatship. I suddenly entered into the Thus Come
One’s sea of magnificent, bright emptiness. My knowledge and views became
identical with the Buddhas. I was certified as being beyond study. In the
liberation of the nature of emptiness, I am unsurpassed.
5p 61) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I have been certified
to it, all phenomena enter into nothingness until nothingness and
what becomes nothingness both disappear. Turning dharmas back to the void
is the foremost means."
5p 62) Shariputra arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s feet,
and said to the Buddha, "From distant eons until the present, my mind and
views have been pure. In this way I have undergone as many births as there
are sand grains in the Ganges. At one glance I am able to understand all
the various transformations and changes of both what is worldly and what
is world-transcending without any obstruction.
5p 62) "Once I met the Kashyapa brothers on the road, and walked
along with them. They spoke about causes and conditions, and I awakened
to the boundlessness of my mind.
5p 64) "I followed the Buddha and left the home life. My seeing-awareness
became bright and perfect, I obtained great fearlessness and became an
Arhat. As one of the Buddha’s elder disciples, I am born from the Buddha’s
mouth, transformationally born from the Dharma.
5p 65) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. As I have been certified
to it, for the mind and the seeing to emit light and for the light to radiate
throughout both knowing and seeing is the foremost means."
5p 65) Universal Worthy Bodhisattva arose from his seat, bowed at the
Buddha’s feet, and said to the Buddha, "I have been a Dharma Prince with
as many Thus Come Ones as there are sand grains in the Ganges. The Thus
Come Ones of the ten directions tell their disciples who have the roots
of a Bodhisattva to cultivate the Universal Worthy conduct, which is named
after me.
5p 66-67) "World Honored One, I use my mind to listen and
distinguish the knowledge and views of beings.
In other regions as many realms away as there are sand grains in the
Ganges, for each being who resolves to practice the conduct of Universal
Worthy, I immediately mount my six-tusked elephant and create hundreds
of thousands of reduplicated bodies which go to those places. Although
their obstacles may be so heavy that they cannot see me, I secretly rub
their crowns, protect and comfort them, and help them succeed.
5p 67) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. The basic cause
I speak of is listening with the mind, distinguishing at ease, and emitting
light. This is the foremost means."
5p 68) Sundarananda arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s feet,
and said to the Buddha, "When I first left home and followed the Buddha
to enter the Way, I received the complete precepts, but my mind was always
too scattered for samadhi, and I could not attain the state of having no
outflows. The World Honored One taught Kaushthila and me to contemplate
the white spot at the tip of our noses.
5p 69) "From the first, I contemplated intently. After three weeks,
I saw that when I inhaled and exhaled, the breath in my nostrils looked
like smoke. Internally my body and mind became bright, and externally
I perfectly understood that the world was like crystal, empty and pure.
The smoky appearance gradually disappeared, and the breath in my nostrils
became white.
5p 70) "My mind opened and my outflows were ended. Every inhalation
and exhalation of breath was transformed into light which illumined the
ten directions, and I attained Arhatship. The World Honored One predicted
that in the future I would obtain Bodhi.
5p 70) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. I did it by means
of the disappearance of the breath, until eventually the breath emitted
light and the light completely extinguished my outflows. That is the foremost
means."
5p 71) Purnamaitreyaniputra arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s
feet, and said to the Buddha, "For vast eons I have possessed unobstructed
eloquence. When I discuss suffering and emptiness I penetrate deeply into
ultimate reality. In the same way, I feel no fear as I give subtle, wonderful
instruction to the assembly concerning the secret Dharma doors of as many
Thus Come Ones as there are sand grains in the Ganges.
5p 72) "The World Honored One knew that I had great eloquence, and,
using his sound to turn the Dharma wheel, taught me to propagate the Dharma.
I joined the Buddha to help him turn the Dharma wheel. I accomplished Arhatship
due to his lion’s roar. The World Honored One certified me as being foremost
in speaking Dharma.
5p 73) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. I used the sounds
of Dharma to subdue demons and adversaries and to melt away my outflows.
That is the foremost means."
5p 73-74) Upali arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s
feet, and said to the Buddha, "I followed the Buddha in person when
he fled the city and left the home life. I observed the Thus Come One endure
six years of diligent asceticism. I watched the Thus Come One subdue all
the demons, and adherents of external paths and become liberated from all
outflows based on worldly desire and greed.
5p 79) "I based myself on the Buddha’s teaching of precepts, encompassing
the three thousand awesome deportments and the eighty thousand subtle aspects
until both my karma of the nature and karma of restraint became pure. My
body and mind became tranquil, and I accomplished Arhatship.
5p 84-85) "In the Thus Come One’s assembly, I record the rules
governing discipline. The Buddha himself certified my mind’s upholding
of the precepts and my genuine cultivation of them. I am considered a leader
of the assembly.
5p 85) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. I disciplined the
body until it attained ease and comfort. Then I disciplined the mind until
it attained penetrating clarity. After that, both body and mind experienced
keen and thorough absorption. That is the foremost means."
5p 86) Mahamaudgalyayana arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s
feet, and said to the Buddha, "Once when I was out on the road doing alms
rounds, I met the three Kashyapa brothers—Uruvilva, Gaya, and Nadi—who
proclaimed for me the Thus Come One’s profound principle of causes
and conditions. I immediately brought forth the resolve and obtained a
great understanding.
5p 87) "The Thus Come One accepted me, I was spontaneously clad in
the kashaya and my hair and beard fell out by themselves. I roamed the
ten directions, having no impeding obstructions. My spiritual penetrations,
which are esteemed as unsurpassed, and I accomplished Arhatship.
5p 88) "Not only the World Honored One, but the Thus Come Ones of the
ten directions praise my spiritual powers as being perfectly clear and
pure, masterful, and fearless.
5p 88) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. By means of unrelenting
attention to the profound, the light of my mind was revealed, just as water
becomes clear when the mud settles. Eventually my mind became pure and
lustrous. That is the foremost means."
5p 89) Ucchushma came before the Buddha, put his palms together, bowed
at the Buddha’s feet, and said to him, "I can still remember how many eons
ago I was filled with excessive greed and desire. The Buddha named King
of Emptiness was in the world, and he said that people with too much lustful
desire turn into a raging mass of fire. He taught me to contemplate the
coolness and warmth found throughout my entire body.
5p 90-91) "A spiritual light coalesced inside me and transformed
my thoughts of excessive lust into the fire of wisdom. After that, all
the Buddhas referred to me by the name Fire-Head.
5p 91) "Due to the strength of this Fire-light Samadhi, I accomplished
Arhatship. I made a great vow that when any Buddha accomplishes the Way,
I will be a powerful knight and personally subdue the demons’ enmity.
5p 91-92) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration.
I used attentive contemplation of the effects of heat in my body and mind
until it became unobstructed and penetrating and all my outflows were consumed.
I produced a blazing brilliance and ascended to enlightenment. That is
the foremost means."
5p 92) The Bodhisattva Maintaining the Earth arose from his seat, bowed
at the Buddha’s feet, and said to the Buddha, "I remember when Universal
Light Thus Come One appeared in the world in the past. I was a Bhikshu
who continually worked on making level the major roads, ferry-landings,
and the dangerous spots in the ground, where the disrepair might hinder
or harm horse carriages. I did everything from building bridges to hauling
sand.
5p 93) "Throughout the appearance of limitless Buddhas in the world
I was diligent in this hard labor. If there were people waiting by the
walls and gates of the cities who needed someone to carry their goods,
I would carry them all the way to their destination, set the things down,
and leave without taking any recompense.
5p 94) "When the Buddha Vipashyin appeared in the world, there was
widespread famine. I would carry people on my back, and no matter how far
the distance, I would accept only one small coin. If there was an ox-cart
stuck in the mud, I would use my spiritual strength to push the wheels
out and resolve the hardship.
5p 95) "Once a king asked the Buddha to attend a vegetarian feast.
At that time, I served the Buddha by leveling the road for him as he went.
Vipashyin Thus Come One rubbed my crown and said, ‘You should level your
mind-ground, then everything else in the world would be level.’
5p 95) "Immediately my mind opened up and I saw how the particles of
earth composing my own body were no different from all the particles of
earth that made up the world. These particles of dust do not conflict with
our nature, to the point that not even the blade of a sword could harm
it.
5p 96) "Within the Dharma-nature I awakened to the patience with the
non-production of dharmas and accomplished Arhatship. My mind has returned
and I have now entered the ranks of the Bodhisattvas. Hearing that Thus
Come One proclaim the Wonderful Lotus Flower, the level of the Buddha’s
knowledge and vision, I have already been certified as having understood
and am a leader in the assembly.
5p 97) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. Upon attentive contemplation
of the body and the environment, I saw that these two defiling dusts are
exactly the same. Fundamentally everything is the Treasury of the Thus
Come One, but then falseness arises and creates the defiling dust. When
the defiling dust is eliminated, wisdom is perfected, and one accomplishes
the unsurpassed Way. That is the foremost means."
5p 97) The Pure Youth Moonlight arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s
feet, and said to the Buddha, "I remember that long ago, beyond eons as
many as there are sand grains in the Ganges, there was a Buddha in the
world named Water-God, who taught all the Bodhisattvas to cultivate the
contemplation of water and enter samadhi.
5p 98) "I reflected upon how throughout the body the essence of water
is not in discord. I started with mucus, phlegm, saliva, marrow, and blood,
and went through to urine and excrement. As it circulated through my body,
the nature of water remained the same. I saw that the water in my body
was not at all different from that in the world outside, even that in royal
lands of floating banners with all their seas of fragrant waters.
5p 99) "At that time, when I first succeeded in the contemplation of
water, I could see only water. I still had not gotten beyond my physical
body.
5p 99) "I was a Bhikshu then, and once when I was in dhyana repose
in my room, a disciple of mine peeked in the window and saw only clear
water filling the entire room. He saw nothing else.
5p 100) "The lad was young, and not knowing any better, he picked up
a tile and tossed it into the water. It hit the water with a ‘plunk.’ He
gazed around and then left. When I came out of concentration, I was suddenly
aware of a pain in my heart, and I felt like Shariputra must have felt
when he met that cruel ghost.
5p 101) "I thought, ‘I am already an Arhat and have long since abandoned
conditions that bring on illness. Why do I suddenly have this pain in my
heart? Am I about to lose the position of non-retreat?’
5p 101-102) "Just then, the young lad came promptly to me and
related what had happened. I quickly said to him, ‘When you see the water
again, open the door, wade into the water, and remove the tile.’ The boy
was obedient, so when I re-entered samadhi, he again saw the water and
the tile as well, opened the door, and took it out. When I came out of
concentration, my body was as it had been before.
5p 102) "I encountered limitless Buddhas and cultivated in that way
until the coming of the Thus Come One, King of Masterful Penetrations of
Mountains and Seas. Then I finally had no body. My nature and the seas
of fragrant waters throughout the ten directions were identical with True
Emptiness, without any duality or difference. Now I am with the Thus Come
One and am known as a Pure Youth, and I have joined the assembly of Bodhisattvas.
5p 103) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. By means of the
nature of water, I penetrated through to the flow of a single flavor, obtained
patience with the non-production of dharmas, and reached the perfection
of Bodhi. That is the foremost means."
5p 104) The Dharma Prince Vaidurya Light arose from his seat, bowed
at the Buddha’s feet, and said to the Buddha, "I can still remember back
through eons as many as sand grains in the Ganges to the time of a Buddha
named Limitless Sound, who instructed the Bodhisattvas that fundamental
enlightenment is wonderful and bright. He taught them to contemplate this
world and all the beings’ physical bodies as being false conditions propelled
by the power of wind.
5p 104) "At that time, I contemplated the position of the world, and
I regarded the passage of time in the world. I reflected on the motion
and stillness of my body. I considered the arising of thoughts in my mind.
There was no difference among all these kinds of motion; they were all
the same.
5p 105) "I then understood that the nature of movement does not come
from anywhere, nor does it go anywhere. Every single material particle
throughout the ten directions and every deluded being is of the same empty
falseness.
5p 105-106) "Eventually the beings in each of the worlds
of the three-thousand-great-thousand world system were like so many mosquitoes
confined in a vessel, droning monotonously. Caught in those few square
inches, their hum built to a maddening crescendo. Not long after I encountered
the Buddha, I attained patience with non-existence of beings and dharmas.
5p 106) "My mind then opened, and I could see the country of the Buddha
Unmoving in the east. I became a Dharma Prince and served the Buddhas of
the ten directions. My body and mind emit a light that makes them completely
clear and translucent.
5p 107) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. I contemplated
the power of wind as lacking anything to rely on, awakened to the Bodhi-mind
and entered samadhi, meshing with the single, wonderful mind transmitted
by all the Buddhas of the ten directions. That is the foremost means."
5p 107) Treasury of Emptiness Bodhisattva arose from his seat, bowed
at the Buddha’s feet, and said to the Buddha, "The Thus Come One and I
attained boundless bodies when with the Buddha Samadhi-Light.
5p 108) "At that time I held in my hands four huge precious pearls,
which shone on Buddhalands as many as the motes of dust in the ten directions,
transforming them into emptiness.
5p 108) "In my mind there appeared a great, perfect mirror and from
it issued forth ten kinds of subtle, wonderful precious light that poured
out into the ten directions to the farthest bounds of emptiness.
5p 109) "All the royal lands adorned with banners were reflected in
this mirror and passed through my body. This interaction was totally unhindered,
because my body was like emptiness.
5p 109) "Because my mind had become completely compliant, I could enter
with ease as many countries as there are fine motes of dust and could do
the Buddha’s work on a wide scale.
5p 110) "I achieved this great spiritual power from contemplating in
detail how the four elements lack any reliance; how the arising and ceasing
of false thoughts is no different from emptiness; how all the Buddhalands
are basically the same. Once I realized this identity, I obtained patience
with the non-existence of beings and dharmas.
5p 111) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. I used the contemplation
of the boundlessness of emptiness to enter samadhi and attain wonderful
power and perfect clarity. That is the foremost means."
5p 111) Maitreya Bodhisattva arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha’s
feet, and said to the Buddha, "I remember when, as many eons ago as there
are fine motes of dust, a Buddha named Light of Sun, Moon and Lamp appeared
in the world. Under that Buddha I left the home life; yet I was deeply
committed to worldly fame and liked to associate with people of good families.
5p 115) "Then the World Honored One taught me to cultivate Consciousness-only
Concentration, and I entered that samadhi. For many eons I have made use
of that samadhi as I served as many Buddhas as there are sand grains in
the Ganges. My seeking for worldly name and fame ceased completely and
never recurred.
5p 116) "When Burning Lamp Buddha appeared in the world, I finally
accomplished the unsurpassed, wonderfully perfect Samadhi of Consciousness.
5p 116-117) "I went on until, to the ends of empty space, all
the lands of the Thus Come One, whether pure or defiled, existent or non-existent,
were transformations appearing from my own mind.
5p 117) "World Honored One, because I understand Consciousness Only,
limitless Thus Come Ones flow forth from this nature of consciousness.
Now I have received the prediction that I will be the next to take
the Buddha’s place.
5p 117-118) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. I intensely
contemplated the ten directions as originating only from consciousness.
When the consciousness is perfect and bright, one perfects wisdom that
perceives ultimate reality. One leaves behind reliance on others and attachment
to incessant calculating and attains the patience with the non-existence
of beings and dharmas. That is the foremost means."
5p 119) The Dharma Prince Great Strength, together with fifty-two
fellow- Bodhisattvas, arose from their seats, bowed at the Buddha's feet,
and said to the Buddha:
5p 120) "I remember when, as many eons ago as there are sand grains
in the Ganges River, a Buddha called Limitless Light appeared in the world.
During that same eon, there were twelve successive Thus Come Ones, the
last of whom was called Light Surpassing the Sun and the Moon Buddha. Those
Buddhas taught me the Buddha-recitation Samadhi:
5p 120-121) "Suppose there are two people, one of whom always
remembers the other, while the other has entirely forgotten about the first
one. Even if these two people were to meet or see each other, it would
be the same as not meeting or seeing each other.
5p 123) "On the other hand, if two people develop intense memories
for one another, then in life after life, they will be together like an
object and its shadow, and they will never be separated.
5p 124) "The Thus Come Ones of the ten directions are tenderly mindful
of living beings just like a mother remembering her son. But if the son
runs away, of what use is the mother's concern? However, if the son remembers
his mother in the same way that the mother remembers her son, then in life
after life mother and son will never be far apart.
5p 124) "If living beings remember the Buddha and are mindful of the
Buddha, they will certainly see the Buddha now and in the future.
5p 125) "Being close to the Buddha, even without the aid of expedients,
they will awaken by themselves.
5p 125) "That is like a person who, once perfumed by incense, carries
the fragrance on his body. That is called the adornment of fragrance and
light.
5p 125-126) "On the causal ground, I used mindfulness of
the Buddha to be patient with the non-arising of both beings and dharmas.
Now in this world I gather in all those who are mindful of the Buddha,
and I bring them back to the Pure Land.
5p 126) "The Buddha asks about perfect penetration. I would select
none other than gathering in the six sense faculties through continuous
pure mindfulness of the Buddha to obtain samadhi. That is the foremost
means."