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Buddhism: The Lotus Sutra
CHAPTER XVII.
INDICATION OF THE MERITORIOUSNESS OF JOYFUL ACCEPTANCE.
Thereupon the Bodhisattva Mahasattva Maitreya said to the Lord (Buddha): O
Lord, one who, after hearing this Dharmaparyaya being preached,
joyfully I accepts it, be that person a young man of good family or
a young lady, how much merit, O Lord, will be produced by such a
young man or young lady of good family?
And on that occasion the Bodhisattva Mahasattva Maitreya uttered
this stanza:
1. How great will be the merit of him who, after the extinction of
the great Hero, shall hear this exalted Sutra and joyfully accept
it?
And the Lord (Buddha) said to the Bodhisattva Mahasattva Maitreya: If any
one, Agita, either a young man of good family or a young lady, after
the complete extinction of the Tathagata, hears the preaching of
this Dharmaparyaya, let it be a monk or nun, a male or female lay
devotee, a man of ripe understanding or a boy or girl; if the hearer
joyfully accepts it, and then after the sermon rises up to go
elsewhere, to a monastery, house, forest, street, village, town, or
province, with the motive and express aim to expound the law such as
he has understood, such as he has heard it, and according to the
measure of his power, to another person, his mother, father,
kinsman, friend, acquaintance, or any other person; if the latter,
after hearing, joyfully accepts, and, in consequence, communicates
it to another; if the latter, after hearing, joyfully accepts, and
communicates it to another; if this other, again, after hearing,
joyfully accepts it, and so on in succession until a number of fifty
is reached; then, Agita, the fiftieth person to hear and joyfully
accept the law so heard, let it be a young man of good family or a
young lady, will have acquired an accumulation of merit connected
with the joyful acceptance, Agita, which I am going to indicate to
thee. Listen, and take it well to heart; I will tell thee.
It is, Agita, as if the creatures existing in the four hundred
thousand Asankhyeyas of worlds, in any of the six states of
existence, born from an egg, from a womb, from warm humidity, or
from metamorphosis, whether they have a shape or have not, be they
conscious or unconscious, neither conscious nor unconscious,
footless, two-footed, four-footed, or many-footed, as many beings as
are contained in the world of creatures,-(as if) all those had
flocked together to one place. Further, suppose some man appears, a
lover of virtue, a lover of good, who gives to that whole body the
pleasures, sports, amusements, and enjoyments they desire, like, and
relish. He gives to each of them all Gambudvīpa for his pleasures,
sports, amusements, and enjoyments; gives bullion, gold, silver,
gems, pearls, lapis lazuli, conches, stones (?), coral, carriages
yoked with horses, with bullocks, with elephants; gives palaces and
towers. In this way, Agita, that master of munificence, that great
master of munificence continues spending his gifts for fully eighty
years. Then, Agita, that master of munificence, that great master of
munificence reflects thus: All these beings have I allowed to sport
and enjoy themselves, but now they are covered with wrinkles and
grey-haired, old, decrepit, eighty years of age, and near the term
of their life. Let me therefore initiate them in the discipline of
the law revealed by the Tathagata, and instruct them. Thereupon,
Aota, the man exhorts all those beings, thereafter initiates them in
the discipline of the law revealed by the Tathagata, and makes them
adopt it. Those beings learn the law from him, and in one moment,
one instant, one bit of time, all become Srotaapannas, obtain the
fruit of the rank of Sakridagamin and of Anagamin, until they become
Arhats, free from all imperfections, adepts in meditation, adepts in
great meditation and in the meditation with eight emancipations.
Now, what is thine opinion, Agita, will that master of munificence,
that great master of munificence, on account of his doings, produce
great merit, immense, incalculable merit? Whereupon the Bodhisattva
Mahasattva Maitreya said in reply to the Lord (Buddha): Certainly, Lord;
certainly, Sugata; that person, Lord, will already produce much
merit on that account, because he gives to the beings all that is
necessary for happiness; how much more then if he establishes them
in Arhatship!
This said, the Lord (Buddha) spoke to the Bodhisattva Mahasattva Maitreya as
follows: I announce to thee, Agita, I declare to thee; (take) on one
side the master of munificence, the great master of munificence, who
produces merit by supplying all beings in the four hundred thousand
Asanikhyeyas of worlds with all the necessaries for happiness and by
establishing them in Arhatship; (take) on the other side the person
who, ranking the fiftieth in the series of the oral tradition of the
law, hears, were it but a single stanza, a single word, from this
Dharmaparyaya and joyfully accepts it; if (we compare) the mass of
merit connected with the joyful acceptance and the mass of merit
connected with the charity of the master of munificence, the great
master of munificence, then the greater merit will be his who,
ranking the fiftieth in the series of the oral tradition of the law,
after hearing were it but a single stanza, a single word, from this
Dharmaparyaya, joyfully accepts it. Against this accumulation of
merit, Agita, this accumulation of roots of goodness connected with
that joyful acceptance, the former accumulation of merit connected
with the charity of that master of munificence, that great master of
munificence, and connected with the confirmation in Arhatship, does
not fetch the 1/100 part, not the 1/100,000, not the 1/10,000,000
not the 1/1000,000,000 not the 1/1000 x 10,000,000 not the 1/100,000
x 10,000,000, not the 1/100,000 x 10,000 x 10,000,000 part; it
admits of no calculation, no counting, no reckoning, no comparison,
no approximation, no secret teaching. So immense, incalculable,
Agita, is the merit which a person, ranking the fiftieth in the
series of the tradition of the law, produces by joyfully accepting,
were it but a single stanza, a single word, from this Dharmaparyaya;
how much more then (will) he (produce), Agita, who hears this
Dharmaparyaya in my presence and then joyfully accepts it? I
declare, Agita, that his accumulation of merit shall be even more
immense, more incalculable.
And further, Agita, if a young man of good family or a young lady,
with the design to hear this discourse on the law, goes from home to
a monastery, and there hears this Dharmaparyaya for a single moment,
either standing or sitting, then that person, merely by the mass of
merit resulting from that action, will after the termination of his
(present) life, and at the time of his second existence when he
receives (another) body, become a possessor of carriages yoked with
bullocks, horses, or elephants, of litters, vehicles yoked with
bulls, and of celestial aerial cars. If further that same person at
that preaching sits down, were it but a single moment, to hear this
Dharmaparyaya, or persuades another to sit down or shares with him
his seat, he will by the store of merit resulting from that action
gain seats of Indra, seats of Brahma, thrones of a Kakravartin. And,
Agita, if some one, a young man of good family or a young lady, says
to another person: Come, friend, and hear the Dharmaparyaya of the
Lotus of the True Law, and if that other person owing to that
exhortation is persuaded to listen, were it but a single moment,
then the former will by virtue of that root of goodness, consisting
in that exhortation, obtain the advantage of a connection with
Bodhisattvas who have acquired Dharanī. He will become the reverse
of dull, will get keen faculties, and have wisdom; in the course of
a hundred thousand existences he will never have a fetid mouth, nor
an offensive one; he will have no diseases of the tongue, nor of the
mouth; he will have no black teeth, no unequal, no yellow, no
ill-ranged, no broken teeth, no teeth fallen out; his lips will not
be pendulous, not turned inward, not gaping, not mutilated, not
loathsome; his nose will not be flat, nor wry; his face will not be
long, nor wry, nor unpleasant. On the contrary, Agita, his tongue,
teeth, and lips will be delicate and wellshaped; his nose long; his
face perfectly round; the eyebrows well-shaped; the forehead
well-formed. He will receive a very complete organ of manhood. He
will have the advantage that the Tathagata renders sermons
intelligible to him and soon come in connection with Lords, Buddhas.
Mark, Agita, how much good is produced by one's inciting were it but
a single creature; how much more then by him who reverentially
hears, reverentially reads, reverentially preaches, reverentially
promulgates the law!
And on that occasion the Lord (Buddha) uttered the following stanzas:
2. Listen how great the merit is of one who, the fiftieth in the
series (of tradition), hears a single stanza from this Sutra and
with placid mind joyfully adopts it.
3. Suppose there is a man in the habit of giving alms to myriads of
kotis of beings, whom I have herebefore indicated by way of
comparison'; all of them he satisfies during eighty years.
4. Then seeing that old age has approached for them, that their brow
is wrinkled and their head grey (he thinks): Alas, how all beings
come to decay! Let me therefore admonish them by (speaking of) the
law.
5. He teaches them the law here on earth and points to the state of
Nirvana hereafter. 'All existences' (he says) 'are like a mirage;
hasten to become disgusted with all existence.'
6. All creatures, by hearing the law from that charitable person,
become at once Arhats, free from imperfections, and living their
last life.
7. Much more merit than by that person will be acquired by him who
through unbroken tradition shall hear were it but a single stanza
and joyfully receive it. The mass of merit of the former is not even
so much as a small particle of the latter's.
8. So great will be one's merit, endless, immeasurable, owing to
one's hearing merely a single stanza, in regular tradition; how much
more then if one hears from face to face!
9. And if somebody exhorts were it but a single creature and says:
Go, hear the law, for this Sutra is rare in many myriads of kotis of
Ęons;
10. And if the creature so exhorted should hear the Sutra even for a
moment, hark what fruit is to result from that action. He shall
never have a mouth disease;
11. His tongue is never sore; his teeth shall never fall out, never
be black, yellow, unequal; his lips never become loathsome;
12. His face is not wry, nor lean, nor long; his nose not flat; it
is well-shaped, as well as his forehead, teeth, lips, and round
face.
13. His aspect is ever pleasant to men; his mouth is never fetid, it
constantly emits a smell sweet as the lotus.
14. If some wise man, to hear this Sutra, goes from his home to a
monastery and there listen, were it but for a single moment, with a
placid mind, hear what results from it.
15. His body is very fair; he drives with horsecarriages, that wise
man, and is mounted on elevated carriages drawn by elephants and
variegated with gems.
16. He possesses litters covered with ornaments and carried by
numerous men. Such is the blessed fruit of his going to hear
preaching.
17. Owing to the performance of that pious work he shall, when
sitting in the assembly there, obtain seats of Indra, seats of
Brahma, seats of kings.
from Buddhism: The
Lotus Sutra