7p 1 "Ananda, each of these categories of beings is replete with
all twelve kinds of upside-down states, just as pressing on one's eye produces
a variety of flower-like images.
7p 1 "With the inversion of wonderful perfection, pure understanding
of the true mind becomes glutted with false and random thoughts.
7p 2 "Now, as you cultivate towards certification to the samadhi of
Buddha, you will go through three gradual stages in order to get rid of
the basic cause of these random thoughts.
7p 2 "They work in just the way that hot water mixed with the ashes
of incense clease a vessel that has held poisonous honey. Afterwards, such
a vessel can be used to store sweet dew.
7p 3 "What are the three gradual stages? The first is to correct one's
habits by getting rid of the aiding causes; the second is to truly cultivate
to cut out the very essence of karmic offenses; the third is to increase
one's vigor to prevent the manifestation of karma.
7p 4 "What are aiding causes? Ananda, the twelve categories of
beings in this world are not in complete in themselves, but depend on four
kinds of eating; that is, eating by portions, eating by contact, eating
by thought, and eating by consciousness. Therefore, the Buddha said that
all beings must eat to live.
7p 5 "Ananda, all beings can live if they eat what is fresh, and they
will die if they take poison. Beings who seek samadhi should refrain from
eating five pungent plants of this world.
7p 5 "If these five are eaten cooked, they increase one's sexual
desire; if they are eaten raw, they increase one's anger.
7p 6 "Therefore, even if people in this world who eat pungent
plants can expound the twelve divisions of the Sutra canon, the gods and
immortals of the ten directions will stay far away from them because they
smell so bad. However, after they eat these things the hungry ghosts will
hover around and kiss their lips. Being always in the presence of ghosts,
their blessings and virtue will dissolve as the days go by, and they will
experience no lasting benefit.
7p 8 "People who eat pungent plants and also cultivate samadhi
will not be protected by the Bodhisattvas, gods, immortals, or good spirits
of the ten directions; therefore, the tremendously powerful demon kings,
able to do as they please, will appear in the body of a Buddha and speak
Dharma for them, denouncing the precepts and praising lust, rage, and delusion.
7p 11 "When their lives end, these people will join the retinue of
demon kings. When they use up their blessings as demons, they will fall
into the unintermittent hell.
7p 13 "Ananda, those who cultivate for Bodhi should never eat the five
pungent plants. This is the first of the gradual stages of cultivation.
7p 13 "What is the essence of karmic offenses? Ananda, beings who want
to enter samadhi must first firmly uphold the pure precepts.
7p 14 "They must sever thoughts of lust, not partake of wine or meat,
and eat cooked rather than raw foods. Ananda, if cultivators do not sever
lust and killing, it will be impossible for them to transcend the Triple
Realm.
7p 15 "You should look upon lustful desire as upon a poisonous snake
or a resentful bandit. First hold to the Hearers’ Four or Eight Parajikas
in order to control your physical activity; then cultivate the Bodhisattva's
pure regulations in order to control your mental activity.
7p 16 "When the precepts are successfully upheld, one will not create
karma that leads to mutual rebirth and mutual killing in this world. If
one does not steal, one will not be indebted, and one will not have to
pay back past debts in this world.
7p 18-19 "If people who are pure in this way cultivate samadhi, they
will naturally be able to contemplate the extent of the worlds of the ten
directions with the physical body given them by their parents; without
need of the Heavenly Eye, they will perceive the Buddhas speaking Dharma
and receive in person the sagely instruction. Obtaining great spiritual
penetrations, they will roam through the ten directions, gain clarity regarding
past lives, and will not encounter difficulties and dangers.
7p 19 "This is the second of the gradual stages of cultivation.
7p 20 "What is the manifestation of karma? Ananda, such people as these,
who are pure and who uphold the precepts, do not have thoughts of greed
and lust, and so they do not become dissipated in the pursuit of the six
external defiling sense-objects.
7p 20-21 "Because they do not pursue them, they turn around to their
own source. Without the conditions of the defiling objects, there is nothing
for the sense-organs to match themselves with, and so they reverse their
flow, become one unit, and are no longer confined to six individual functions.
7p 21 "All the lands of the ten directions then become as brilliantly
clear and pure as a moon suspended in crystal.
7p 22 "Their bodies and minds are blissful as they experience the equality
of wonderful perfection, and they attain great peace.
7p 22 "The secret perfection and pure wonder of all the Thus Come Ones
appear before them.
7p 22 "These people then obtain Patience with the Non-existence of
Beings and Dharmas. They thereupon gradually cultivate according to their
practices, until they reside securely in the sagely positions.
7p 23 "This is the third of the gradual stages of cultivation.
7p 23 "Ananda, these good people's emotional love and desire are withered
and dry, the sense-organs and sense objects no longer mesh, and so the
residual habits do not continue to arise.
7p 24 "Recognizing that the attachments of the mind are false,
they use only wisdom. That wisdom shines throughout the ten directions,
and this initial wisdom is called the Stage of Dry Wisdom.
7p 25 "Although the habits of desire are initially dried up, they still
have not merged with Dharma-water that flows from the Thus Come Ones.
7p 25 "Then, with this mind centered on the middle, they enter the
flow where wonderful perfection reveals itself. From the truth of that
wonderful perfection there repeatedly arise wonders of truth. They always
dwell in the wonder of faith, until all false thinking is completely eliminated
and the Middle Way is totally true. This is called the Mind that Resides
in Faith.
7p 27 "When true faith is clearly understood, then perfect penetration
is total, and the three aspects of skandhas, places, and realms are no
longer obstructions. Then all their habits throughout innumerable
eons of past and future, during which they abandon bodies and receive bodies,
appear to them now in the present moment. These good people can remember
everything and forget nothing. This is called the Mind that Resides in
Mindfulness.
7p 28 "When the wonderful perfection is completely true, that essential
true brings about a transformation. They go beyond the beginningless habits
to reach the one essential brightness. Relying solely on this essential
brightness, they progress toward true purity. This is called the Mind of
Vigor.
7p 29 "The essence of the mind reveals itself as total wisdom; this
is called the Mind that Resides in Wisdom.
7p 29 "As the wisdom and brightness are held steadfast, a profound
stillness pervades everywhere. The stage at which the majesty of this stillness
becomes constant and solid is called the Mind that Resides in Samadhi.
7p 32 "The light of samadhi emits brightness. When the essence of the
brightness enters deeply within, they only advance and never retreat. This
is called the Mind that is Irreversible.
7p 32 "When the progress of their minds is secure, and they hold their
minds and protect them without loss, they connect with the life-breath
of the Thus Come Ones of the ten directions. This is called the Mind that
Protects the Dharma.
7p 33 "Protecting their light of enlightenment, they can use this wonderful
force to return to the Buddha's light of compassion and to come back to
stand firm with the Buddha. It is like two mirrors that are set facing
one another, so that between them the exquisite images inter-reflect and
enter into one another layer upon layer. This is called the Mind that Makes
Transferences.
7p 34 "With this secret interplay of light, they obtain the Buddha's
eternal solidity and unsurpassed wonderful purity. Dwelling in the unconditioned,
they know no loss or dissipation. This is called the Mind that Resides
in Precepts.
7p 34 "Abiding in the precepts with self-mastery, they can roam throughout
the ten directions, going anywhere they wish. This is called the Mind that
Resides in Vows.
7p 35 "Ananda, these good people use proper expedients to bring forth
those ten minds. The essence of these minds becomes dazzling, and their
ten functions interconnect to a point of single-mindedness. That is called
the Dwelling of Bringing Forth the Resolve.
7p 36 "The discoveries made by that mind are like pure crystal within
which can be seen pure gold. Based on those previous wonderful minds, they
step up to this level called the Dwelling of the Ground of Regulation.
7p 37 "When the mind on that ground connects with wisdom, both become
bright and comprehensive. Traversing the ten directions then without obstruction
is called the Dwelling of Cultivation.
7p 37 "When their conduct is the same as the Buddhas' and they connect
with the Buddha’s spirit, then, like the body-between-skandhas searching
for a father and mother, they penetrate the darkness with a hidden communication
and enter the lineage of the Thus Come One. That is called the Dwelling
of Noble Birth.
7p39 "Since they ride in the womb of the Way, they are heirs to
enlightenment just as a mature fetus has developed all human features.
That
is called the Dwelling that is Endowed with Skill-in-Means.
7p 39 "Their physical appearances become those of Buddhas and their
minds the same as well. That is called Dwelling in the Proper Mind.
7p 39-40 "United in body and mind, they grow and mature day by day.
That is called Dwelling in Irreversibility.
7p 40 "With the efficacious appearance of ten bodies, which are simultaneously
perfected, they are Dwelling as a Pure Youth.
7p 40-41 "Completely developed, they leave the womb and become sons
of the Buddha. That is Dwelling as a Dharma Prince.
"Reaching the fullness of adulthood, they are like a chosen prince
to whom a mighty king turns over the affairs of state. Eventually that
eldest son of the kshatriya king will be ceremoniously anointed on the
crown of the head. That is called Dwelling in Anointing the Crown of the
Head.
7p 42 "Ananda, after these good men have become sons of the Buddha,
they are replete with the limitlessly many wonderful virtues of the Thus
Come Ones, and they comply and accord with beings throughout the ten directions.
That is called the Conduct of Happiness.
7p 44 "Being well able to accommodate all beings is called the
Conduct of Benefiting.
7p 44 "Enlightening themselves and enlightening others without putting
forth any resistance is called the Conduct Free of Anger.
7p 46 "Then they undergo birth in various forms continuously to the
bounds of the future. Practicing that equally throughout the three periods
of time and pervading the ten directions is called the Conduct Continued
Endlessly.
7p 46-47 "When everything is equally in accord, one never makes mistakes
among the various Dharma doors. That is called 'he Conduct of Freedom from
Deluded Confusion.
7p 47 "Then within what is identical, myriad differences appear. Yet
within the different appearances, an identity can be perceived. That is
called the Conduct of Wholesome Manifestation.
7p 48 "That continues until it includes all particles of dust that
fill up empty space throughout the ten directions. In each and every mote
of dust there appear the worlds of the ten directions. And yet the appearance
of dust motes and the appearance of worlds do not interfere with one another.
That is called the Conduct of Non-Attachment.
7p 49 "Everything that appears before one becomes a foremost
paramita. That is called the Conduct of Veneration.
7p 49 "With such perfect fusion, one can model oneself after all the
Buddhas of the ten directions. That is called the Conduct Based on Wholesome
Dharmas.
7p 50 "As each and every one of those becomes pure and without outflows,
they merge into a singular truth, unconditioned, that is the essence of
the nature. That is called the Conduct of Reality.
7p 50 "Ananda, when these good men replete with spiritual penetrations
have done the Buddha's work and are totally pure and absolutely true, they
can remain distant from obstacles and calamities. Then they take beings
across without being attached to the idea of taking them across. They direct
the unconditioned mind toward the path of Nirvana. That is called the Transference
of Saving and Protecting Living Beings, while apart from the Appearance
of Living Beings.
7p 52 "Destroying what should be destroyed and remaining far removed
from what should be left behind is called the Transference of Indestructibility.
7p 53 "Fundamental Enlightenment is profound indeed, an enlightenment
on a level with the Buddhas' enlightenment. That is called the Transference
of Sameness with All Buddhas.
7p 53 "When absolute truth is discovered, their level is like the level
of Buddhas. That is called the Transference of Reaching all Places.
7p 54 "Worlds and Thus Come Ones include one another without
any obstruction. That is called the Transference of a Treasury of Inexhaustible
Merit and Virtue.
7p 55-56 "Since their level is like the Buddhas’, each and every cause
they create at that level is pure. Based on the dispersing of such causes,
they go straight down the path to Nirvana. That is called the Transference
of the Good Roots of Following what is Basically Identical.
7p 56 "When true roots are set down, then all beings in the ten
directions are my own nature. Not a single being is lost, as this nature
is successfully perfected. That is called the Transference of Following
the Impartial Contemplation of all Beings.
7p 57 "Being identical with all dharmas yet apart from all phenomena,
they are not attached to either the identity or the separation. That is
called the Transference of the Appearance of True Suchness.
7p58 "That which is thus is truly obtained, and there is no obstruction
throughout the ten directions. That is called the Transference of Unfettered
Liberation.
7p 58 "When the virtue of the nature is perfectly realized, the
boundaries of the Dharma Realm are destroyed. That is called the Transference
of the Limitlessness of the Dharma Realm.
7p 59 "Ananda, when these good men have completely purified these forty-one
minds, they further accomplish Four Kinds of Wonderfully Perfect Aiding
Practices.
7p 60 "The enlightenment of a Buddha is just about to become a function
of their own minds. It is on the verge of emerging but has not yet emerged,
and so it can be compared to the point just before wood ignites when it
is drilled to produce fire. That is called the Level of Heat.
7p 60 "They continue on with their own minds to tread where the Buddhas
tread, as if relying and yet not. It is as if they were climbing a lofty
mountain, to the point where their bodies are in space but there remains
a slight obstruction beneath them. That is called the Level of the Summit.
7p 61 "When the mind and the Buddha are two and yet the same,
they have well obtained the Middle Way. They are like someone who endures
something when it seems impossible to either hold it in or let it go. That
is called the Level of Patience.
7p 62 "When numbers and limits are gone, no such designations
as the Middle Way or as confusion and enlightenment are made. That is called
the Level of Being First in the World.
7p 63 "Ananda, these good men have successfully penetrated through
to Great Bodhi. Their enlightenment reaches through to the Thus Come Ones’.
They have fathomed the state of Buddhahood. That is called the Ground of
Happiness.
7p 63-64 "The differences enter into identity; even the notion of identity
is gone. That is called the Ground of Leaving Filth.
7p 64 "At the point of ultimate purity, brightness comes forth. That
is called the Ground of Emitting Light.
7p 65 "When the brightness becomes ultimate, enlightenment is full.
That is called the Ground of Blazing Wisdom.
7p 65 "No identity or difference can be attained. That is called the
Ground of Invincibility.'
7p 66 "With unconditioned True Suchness, the nature is spotless, and
brightness is revealed. That is called the Ground of Manifestation.
7p 66 "Coming to the farthest limits of True Suchness is called the
Ground of Traveling Far.
7p 67 "The single mind of True Suchness is called the Ground of Immovability.
7p 67 "Bringing forth the function of True Suchness is called the Ground
of Good Wisdom.
7p 68 "Ananda, all Bodhisattvas beyond this point have completed
their cultivation and have perfected their merit and virtue, and so this
Ground is called the Level of Cultivation.
7p 69 "Then a wonderful cloud of compassion hovers over the Sea of
Nirvana. That is called 'the Ground of the Dharma Cloud.
7p 69 "The Thus Come Ones counter the flow as the Bodhisattvas thus
reach this point through compliance with practice. Their enlightenment
is about to meet that of the Buddhas; it is therefore called Equal Enlightenment.
7p 70 "Ananda, the enlightenment which encompasses the Mind of Dry
Wisdom through to the culmination of Equal Enlightenment is awakening within
the Varja Mind. That constitutes the Level of Initial Dry Wisdom.
7p 71 "Thus there are totals of twelve single and grouped levels. At
last they reach Wonderful Enlightenment and accomplish the Unsurpassed
Way.
7p72 "At all these levels they use vajra contemplation of Ten Profound
Analogies for the ways in which things are like an illusion. In Shamatha
they use the Thus Come Ones' Vipashyana to cultivate them purely, to be
certified to them, and to gradually enter them more and more deeply.
7p 73-74 "Ananda, because they put to use the three means of advancement
throughout all of them, they are well able to accomplish the fifty-five
stages of the True Bodhi Path.
7p 74 "This manner of contemplation is called proper contemplation.
Contemplation other than this is called deviant contemplation."
7p 75 Then Dharma Prince Manjushri arose from his seat, and in the
midst of the assembly he bowed at the Buddha's feet and said to the Buddha,
"What is the name of this Sutra and how should we and all beings uphold
it?"
7p 75 The Buddha told Manjushri, "This Sutra is called Great Buddha
at the Crown, Syi Dan Dwo Bwo Da La, the Unsurpassed Precious Seal
and Pure, Clear, Ocean-like Eye of the Thus Come Ones of the Ten
Directions.
7p76 "It is also called The Cause for Saving a Relative, the Rescue
of Ananda and the Bhikshuni Nature, and the Attaining of the Bodhi Mind
and Entry into the Sea of Pervasive Knowledge.
7p 77 "It is also called The Thus Come Ones’ Secret Cause of Cultivation
that Brings Certification to the Complete Meaning.
7p 77 "It is also called The Great Expansive Means, the Wonderful Lotus
Flower King, the Dharani Mantra which is the Mother of all Buddhas of the
Ten Directions.
7p 78 "It is also called The Foremost Shurangama, Sections and Phrases
for Anointing the Crown of the Head, and All Bodhisattvas' Myriad Practices.
7p 78 "Thus should you respectfully uphold it."
7p 79 After that was said, Ananda and all in the great assembly immediately
received the Thus Come One's instruction in the secret seal, the meaning
of Bwo Da La, and heard these names for the complete meaning of this Sutra.
7p 79 They were suddenly enlightened to Dhyana, advanced in their cultivation
to the sagely position, and increased their understanding of the wonderful
principle. Their minds were focused and serene.
7p 80 Ananda cut off and cast aside six sections of subtle afflictions
in his cultivation of the mind in the Triple Realm.
7p 81 He arose from his seat, bowed at the Buddha's feet, places his
palms together respectfully, and said to the Buddha, "The Great, Awesome
and Virtuous World Honored One, whose compassionate sound knows no limit,
has well instructed beings as to their extremely subtle submersion
in delusion and has caused me on this day to become blissful in body and
mind and to obtain enormous benefit.
7p 82 "World Honored One, if the wonderful brightness of this truly
pure and wonderful mind is basically all-pervading, then everything on
the great earth, including the grasses and trees, the wriggling worms and
tiny forms of life are originally True Suchness and are themselves the
Thus Come One— true embodiments of Buddhahood.
7p 83 "Since the Buddhas’ embodiments are true and real, how can there
also be hells, hungry ghosts, animals, asuras, humans, gods, and other
paths of rebirth? World Honored One, do these paths exist naturally of
themselves, or are they created by beings' falseness and habits?
7p 84 "World Honored One, the Bhikshuni Precious Lotus Fragrance, for
example, received the Bodhisattva Precepts and then indulged in lustful
desire, recklessly saying that sexual acts did not involve killing or stealing
and they carried no karmic retribution. But after saying that, her female
organs caught fire, and then the raging blaze spread throughout all her
joints as she fell into the Unintermittent Hell alive.
7p 85 "And there were the Mighty King Crystal and the Bhikshu Good
Stars. Crystal exterminated the Gautama clan and Good Stars recklessly
said that all dharmas are empty. They both sank into the Unintermittent
Hell alive.
7p 88 "Are these hells fixed places, or do they arise spontaneously?
Is it that each individual undergoes whatever kind of karma he or she creates?
I only hope the Buddha will be compassionate and instruct those of us who
do not understand this. May he cause all beings who uphold the precepts
to receive this definitive instruction with joyful respect upon hearing
it and be careful not to transgress it."
7p 89 The Buddha said to Ananda, "What a good question! You want to
keep all living beings from adopting deviant views. You should listen attentively
now and I will explain this matter for you.
7p 90 "Actually, Ananda, all beings are fundamentally true and pure,
but because of their false views they give rise to the falseness of habits,
which are divided into an internal aspect and an external aspect.
7p 90 "Ananda, the internal aspect refers to what occurs inside living
beings. Because of love and defilement, they produce the falseness of emotions.
When these emotions accumulate without cease, they can create the fluids
of love.
7p 91 "That is why living beings' mouths water when they think about
delicious food. When they think about a deceased person, either with fondness
or with anger, tears will flow from their eyes. When they are greedy for
wealth, a current of lust will course through their hearts and their skin
will become lustrous. When their minds dwell on lustful conduct, spontaneous
secretions will come from the male or female organ.
7p 92 "Ananda, although the kinds of love differ, their flow and formation
is the same. With this moisture, one cannot ascend, but will naturally
fall. This is called the Internal Aspect.