Phụ lục
BẢN DỊCH
TIẾNG ANH CỦA UPASAKA CHU CH’AN
CƯ SĨ TRÚC THIỀN (JOHN BLOFELD)
THE SUTRA OF FOURTY-TWO SECTIONS
SPOKEN BY THE BUDDHA
Jointly translated in the Later
Han Dynasty by the monks Kasyapa Matanga and Gobharana from Central
India.
When the World-Honoured had
become Enlightened, he reflected thus: “To abandon desire and rest in perfect
quietude is the greatest of victiries. To remain in a state of complete
abstraction is to overcome the ways of all the evil ones: In the Royan Deer Park, he expounded
the Doctrine of Four Noble Truths converting Kaundinya and four others, and
thus manifesting the fruit of the way. There were frequently monks who voiced
their doubts and asked the Buddha to resolve them, so the World-Honoured taught
and commanded them, until, one by one, they became Enlightened and, bringing
their hands together in respectful agreement, prepared to follow the sacred
commands.
1/ The Buddha said: “Those who
taking leave of their families and adopting the homeless life, know the nature
of their minds and reach to what is fundamental, thus breaking away (from the
phenomenal and attaining to) the unphenomenal, are called Sramana. They
constantly observe the two hundred and fifty precepts, entering into and
abiding in perfect quietude. By Working their way through the four stages of
progress, they become Arhans, who possess the powers of levitation and
transformation, as well as the ability to prolong their lives for many aeons
and to reside or move about anywhere in heavens or earth. Below them come the
Anagamins who, at the end of a long life, ascend in spirit to the nineteen
heavens and become Arhans. Then come the Sakridagamins who must ascend one step
and be reborn once more before becoming Arhans. There are also the Srota-apanas
who cannot become Arhans until they have passed through nine rounds of birth
and death. One who has put an end to his longing and desires is like a man who,
having no further use for his limbs (Lit. having cut off his limbs), never uses
them again”.
2/ The Sramana who, having left
home, puts an end to his desires and drives away his longings, knowing the
source of his own mind, penetrates to the profound principles of Buddhahood. He
awakes to the non-phenomenal, cliging to nothing within and seeking for nothing
from without. His mind is not shackled with dogmas, nor is he enmeshed by
karma. Pondering nothing and doing nothing, praising nothing and manifesting
nothing, without passing through all the successive stages, he (never the less)
reaches the loftiest of all, this is what is meant by “The Way”.
3/ The Buddha said: “He who has
shorn his locks and beard to become a Sramana and has accepted the Doctrine of
the Way, abandons everything of worldly value and is satisfied by the food he
obtains by begging, eating but once a day. If there is a tree under which to
rest, he desires nothing else. Longings and desires are what make men stupid
and darken their minds.
4/ The Buddha said: “There are
ten things by which being do good and ten by which they do evil. What are they.
Three are performed with the body, four with the mouth and three with the mind.
The evils performed with the body are killing, stealing, and unchaste deeds,
those with the mouth are duplicity, slandering lying and idle talk, those with
the mind are covetousness, anger and foolishness. These ten are not in keeping
with the holy. Way and are called the ten evil practice. Putting a stop to all
of them is called performing the ten virtuous practices”.
5/ The Buddha said: “If a man
has all kinds of faults and does not regret them, in the space of a single
heartbeat retribution will suddenly fall upon him and, as water returning to
the sea, will gradually become deeper and wider. (But), if a man has faults
and, becoming aware of them, changers for better, retribution will melt away
into nothingness of its on accord, as the danger of fever gradually abates once
perspiration has set in.
6/ The Buddha said: “If an evil
man, on hearing of what is good, comes and creates a disturbance, you should
hold your peace. You must not angrily upbraid him, then he who has come to
curse you will merely harm himself”.
7/ The Buddha said: “There was
one who heard that I uphold the Way and practice great benevolence and
compassion. On this account, he came to scold me, but I remained silent and did
not retort. When he had finished scolding me. I said: “Sir, if you treat
another with courtesy and he does not accept it, does not the courtesy rebound
to you. He replied that it does and I continued: Now you have just cursed me
and I did not accept your cursed me, so the evil which you yourself did has now
returned and fallen upon you. For a sound accords with the noise that produced
it and the reflection accords with the form. In the end there will be no
escape, so take care lest you do what is evil”
8/ The Buddha said: “An evil man
may wish to injure the Virtuous Ones and, raising his head, spit towards
heaven, but the spittle, far from reaching heaven, will return and descend upon
himself. An unruly wind may raise the dust, but the dust does not go elsewhere,
it remains to contaminate the wind. Virtue cannot be destroyed, while evil
inevitably destroys itself”.
9/ The Buddha said: “Listen
avidly to and cherish the Way. The Way will certainly be hard to reach.
Maintain your desire to accept it humbly, for the Way is mighty indeed”.
10/ The Buddha said: “Observe
those who bestow (knowledge of) the Way. To help them is a great joy and many
blessings can thus be obtained: “A Sramana asked: “Is there any limit to such
blessings?”. The Buddha replied: “They are like the fire of a torch from which
hundreds and thousands of people light their own torches. The (resulting) light
eats up the darkness and that torch is the origin of it all. Such is the nature
of those blessings”.
11/ The Buddha said: “To bestow
food on a hundred bad men is not equal to bestowing food on one good one.
Bestowing food on a thousand good men is not equal to bestowing food on one who
observes the five precepts. Bestowing food on ten thousands who observes the
five precepts, is not equal to bestowing food on one Srota-apana. Bestowing
food on a million Srota-apana is not equal to bestowing food on one
Sakrdagamin. Bestowing food on ten million is not equal to bestowing food on
one Anagamin. Bestowing food on a hundred million Anagamin is not equal to
bestowing food on one Arhan. Bestowing food on a thousand million Arhans is not
equal to bestowing food on one Pratyeka Buddha. Bestowing food on ten thousands
million Pratyeka Buddha is not equal to bestowing food on one of the Buddhas of
the Triple World. Bestowing food on a hundred thousand million Buddhas of the
Triple World is not equal to bestowing food on one who ponders nothing, does
nothing, practices nothing and manifests nothing”.
12/ The Buddha said: “There are
twenty things which are hard for human being.
It is hard to practice charity
when one is poor.
It is hard to study the Way when
occupying a position of great authority.
It is hard to surrender life at
the approach of inevitable death.
It is hard to get an opportunity
of reading the sutras.
It is hard to be born directly
into Buddhist surroundings.
It is hard to bear lust and
desire (without yielding to them)
It is hard to see something
attractive without desiring it.
It is hard to bear insult
without making an angry reply.
It is hard to have power and not
to pay regard reply to it.
It is hard to come into contact
with things and yet remain unafleected by them.
It is hard to study widely and
investigate everything thoroughly.
It is hard to overcome
selfishness and sloth.
It is hard to avoid making light
of not having studied (the Way) enough.
It is hard to keep the mind evenly
balanced.
It is hard to refrain from
defining things as being something or not being something.
It is hard to come into contact
with clear perception (of the Way)
It is hard to perceive one’s own
nature and (though such perception) to study the Way.
It is hard to help others
towards Enlightenment according to their various needs.
It is hard to see the end (of
the Way) without being moved.
It is hard to discard
successfully (the shackles that bind us to the wheel of life and death) as
opportunities present Themselves”.
13/ A Sramana asked the Buddha:
“By what method can we attain the knowledge of how to put a stop life (in the
phenomenal sphere) and come in contact with the Way”. The Buddha answered: “By
purifying the mind and preserving the will (to struggle onwards) you can come
in contact with the Way just as, when a mirror is wipes, the dust falls off and
the brightness remains. By eliminating desires and seeking for nothing (else),
you should be able to put a stop to life (in the phenomenal sphere).
14/ A Sramana asked the Buddha:
“What is goodness and what is greatness”. The Buddha replied: “To follow the
Way and hold to what is true is good. When the will is in conformity with the
Way, that is greatness”.
15/ A Sramana asked the Buddha:
“What is great power and what is the acme of brilliance”. The Buddha answered:
“To be able to bear insult (without retort) implies great power. He that does
not cherish cause for resentment, but remains calm and firm equally (under all
circumstances) and who bears all things without indulging in abuse will
certainly be honoured by men. The acme of brilliance is reached when the mind
is utterly purged of impurities and nothing false or foul remains (to besmirch)
its purity. When there is nothing, from before the formation of heaven and
earth until now or in any of the ten quarters of the universe which you have
not seen, heard and understood, when you have attained to a knowledge of
everything, that may be called brilliance”.
16/ Men who cherish longings and
desires are those who have not perceived the Way. Just as, if clear water be
stirred up with the hand, none of those looking into it will perceive their
reflections, so men in whose minds filth has been stirred up by longings and
desires will not perceive the Way You Sramana must abandon longings and
desires. When the filth of longing and desires has been entirely cleared away,
then only will you be able to perceive the Way.
17/ The Buddha said: “With those
who have perceived the Way, it is thus. Just as, when one enters a dark house
with a torch, the darkness is dissipated and only light remains, so, by
studying the Way and perceiving the truth, ignorance is dissipated and insight
remains for ever”.
18/ The Buddha said: “My
Doctrine implies thinking of that which is beyond thought, performing that
which is beyond performance, sparking of that which is beyond words and
practicing that which is beyond practice. Those who can come up to this,
progress, while the stupid regress. The way which can be expressed in words stops
short, there is nothing which can be grasped. If you are wrong by so much as
the thousandth part of a hair, you will lose (the Way) in a flash”.
19/The Buddha said: “Regard
heaven and earth and consider their impermanence. Regard the word and consider
its impermanee. Regard spiritual awakening as Bodhi. This sort of knowledge
leads to speedy Enlightenment”.
20/ The Buddha said: “You should
ponder on the fact that, though each of the four elements of which the body is
made up has a name, thay none of them (constitute any part of) the real self.
In fact, the self is non-existent, like a mirage”.
21/ The Buddha said: “There are
people who following the dictates of their feelings and desires, seek to make a
name for themselves, but, by the time that name resounds, they are already
dead. Those who hunger for an name that shall long be remembered in the world
and who do not study the way strive vainly and struggle for empty forms. Just
as burning incense, though others preceive its pleasant smell, is itself being burnt
up, so (desires) bring the danger of fire which can burn up your bodies in
their train.
22/ The Buddha said: “Wealth and
beauty, to a man who will not relinquish them, are like a knife covered with
honey which, even before he has had the pleasure of eating the honey, cuts the
tongue of the child that licks it.
23/ The Buddha said: “People who
are tied to their wives, children and homes are worse off than prisoners. A
prisoners will be released sooner or later, but wives and children have no
thought of betaking themselves off. Why fear to rid yourselves immediately of
the longing for physical beauty (otherwise), you are tamely submitting to the
jaws of a tiger and deliberately allowing yourselves to drown in the quicksand
into which you have fallen thus meriting the name of “simple fellows”. If you
can reach the point (of abandoning such things), you will rise from the dust
and become Arhans”.
24/ The Buddha said: “Of all
longings and desires, there is none stronger than sex. Sex as a desire has no
equal. Rely on the universal Oneness. No one under heaven is able to become a
follower of the Way if he accepts dualism.
25/ The Buddha said: “Those who
(permit themselves) longings and desires are like a man who walks in the teeth
of the wind carrying a torch. Inevitably, his hands will be burnt.
26/ The gods bestowed the jade
girl upon me, hoping to shake my determination. I said: “O akin bag, full of
every kind of filth. For what have you come here. Go, I do not need you. Then
the gods prayed me profound reverence and, as they asked me to expound the way,
I enlightened them and they became Srota-apanas as a result”.
27/ The Buddha said: “Those who
follow the Way are like a piece of wood in the water, which floats along,
touching neither bank, and which is neither picked up bay men, intercepted by
the gods, hindered by floating scum, nor rots upon the way. I am prepared to
undertake that such a piece of wood will certainly reach the sea. If those who
study the Way are not misled by their feelings and desires, not disturbed by
any sort of depravity and, if they earnestly advance towards the unphenomenal,
I am prepared to undertake that they will certainly attain to the way.
28/ The Buddha said: “Be careful
not to depend on your own intelligence, it is not to be trusted. Take care not
to come in contacts with physical attractions, such contacts result in
calamities. Only when you have reached the stage of Arhan can you depend on
your own intelligence.
29/ The Buddha said: “Take care
to avoid looking on the beauty of women and do not converse with them. If you
do (have occasion to) converse with them, control the thoughts which run
through your minds. When I was like the lotus which remains unsullied by the
mud (from which it grows). Think of old women as of your mother, of those older
than yourselves as of your elder sisters, of those younger than yourselves as
of your sisters, and of very young ones as your daughters. Dwell on thoughts of
enlightenment and banish all evil ones”.
30/ The Buddha said: “Those who
follow the Way are like straw which must be preserved from fire. A follower of
the Way who experiences desire must put a distance between himself and (the
object of his) desire”.
31/ The Buddha said: There was
one who indulged his sexual passions unceasingly but who wished, of his own
accord, to put an end to his evil actions. I said him: “To put an a stop to
these evil actions will not be so good as to put a stop to (the root of the
evil) in your mind. The mind is like Kung Ts’ao. If Kung Ts’ao desists, his
followers will stop also. If mineral depravities continuous, what is the use of
putting an end to evil actions”. I then repeated this verse for him: “Desire
springs from your thoughts. Thought springs from discernment (of matter). When
the two minds are both stilled, there is neither from nor action. I added that
this verse was first spoken by Kasyapa Buddha.
32/ The Buddha said: “The
sorrows of men come from their longings and desires. Fear comes from these
sorrows. If freedom from desire is attained, what (cause for) prief and fear
will remain.
33/ The Buddha said: “Those who
follow the Way are like one who has to fight ten thousand and who, putting on
his armour, steps cut of the gate. His thoughts may be timorous and his
resolution weak, or he may (even) get-half-way to the battle ground and then
turn round and flee. Again, he may join battle and be slain. On the other hand,
he may gain the victory and return. The Sramana who studies the Way must have a
resolute mind and zealously build up his courage, fearing nothing that lies
before him and destroying all the demons (of temptation that stand in his way),
that he may obtain the fruit (of diligently studying) the Way”.
34/ One night, a Sramana was
intoning “The Sutra of the Teachings Bequeathed by Kasyapa Buddha”. The sound
of his voice was mournful, for he thought repentantly of his back-sillings,
born of desire. The Buddha asked him: “What did you do before you became a
monk”. “I used to like playing the lute”, he replied. “What happened” said the
Buddha, “when you loosened the strings”. They made no sound”. “And when you
pulled them taut”. “The sound were brief”. “And you how was it when they were
neither taut nor loose”. “The all the sound were normal” replied the Sramana.
To this the Buddha said: “It is the same with a Sramana studying the Way. If
his mind properly adjusted, he can attain to it, but if he forces himself
towards it, his mind will become weary and, on account of the weariness of his
mind, his thoughts will become irritable. With such irritable thoughts will
become irritable. With such irritable thoughts, his actions will retrogress
and, with such retrogression, evil will enter his mind. But if he studies
quietly and happily, he will not lose the Way”.
35/ The Buddha said: “If a man
smelts iron until all impurities have been eliminated (before proceeding to)
make implements with it, the implements will be of fine quality. If one who
studies the Way first purges his heart of all fool influences, his actions will
then become pure”.
36/ The Buddha said: “It is hard
for one to leave the grasser for of incarnation and be born a human being.
It is a hard for such a one to
escape being a woman and be born a man.
It is a hard for such a one to
be born with all his organs in perfect condition.
It is a hard for such a one to
be born in central country.
It is a hard for such a one to
directly into Buddhist surroundings.
It is a hard for such a one to
come in contact with the Way.
It is a hard for such a one to
cultivate faith in his mind.
It is a hard for such a one to
attain to the Bodhi-heart.
It is a hard for such a one to
attain to (the state where) nothing is practiced and nothing manifested”.
37/The Buddha said: “A disciple
living thousands of miles a ways from me will, if he constantly cherishes and
ponders on my precepts attain the fruit (of studying) the Way: but one who is
in immediate contact with me, though he sees me constantly, will ultimately
fail to do so if he does not follow my precepts”.
38/ The Buddha said: “How long
is the span of a man’s life?”. “It is but a few days” was the answer. The
Buddha said: “You have not understood”. And asked another Sramana who replies:
“It is (like) the time taken to eat (a single meal). To this the Buddha replied
in the same way and asked a third: “How long is the span of a man’s life?”. “It
is (like the time taken by a (single) breath”. Was the reply “Excellent” said
the Buddha, “You understand the Way”.
39/ The Buddha said: “Those who
study the Way of the Buddha should believe and follow all that is said by the
Buddha. Just as, when you eat honey (you find that), every drop of it is sweet
so is it with many words”.
40/ The Buddha said: “A Sramana
studying the Way should not be as an ox turning the millstone which, though it
performs the necessary actions with its body, does not concentrate on them with
its mind. If the Way is followed in the mind, of what use are actions”.
41/ The Buddha said: “Those who
follow the Way like an ox bearing a heavy load and walking through deep mud. If
feels so weary that it does not dare to look to left or right and, only on
emerging from the mud, can it revive itself by resting. A Sramana should regard
feelings and desires more seriously than (the ox regards) the mud. Only by
controlling his mind and thinking of the Way can he avoid sorrow”.
42/
The Buddha said: “I look upon the state of kings and princes as upon the dust
which blows through a crack. I look upon ornaments of gold and jewels as upon
rubble. I look upon garments of the finest silk as upon small nut. I look upon
the Anavatapta as upon oil for smearing the feet (on the other hand). I look
upon expedient methods (leading to the truth) as upon spending heaps of jewels.
I look upon the supreme vehicle as upon a dream of a bundant wealth. I look
upon the Buddha’s way as upon all the splendours which confront the eye. I look
upon dhyana meditation as upon the pillar of Mount Sumeru. I look upon Nirvana
as upon waking at daybreak from a night’s sleep. I look upon heresy erected as
upon six dragons dancing. I look upon the universal, impartial attitude (of the
Buddha) as upon the Absolute Reality. I look upon conversion (to the Way) as
upon the changes undergone by a tree (due to the action of the) four seasons.