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Everyone Can Be a Buddha
Amitabha Buddhist Society of Singapore, 25 September 2000
Greetings everyone: today, several groups of practitioners
from mainland China, the US, and Taiwan are scheduled to leave Singapore,
so I would like to change the topic of this mornings talk and express
my appreciation for everyones support in organizing groups to make
these frequent visits possible. You have not been here long, only a week or two, but
you have seen our conditions for learning and practice. Not everything
has been satisfactory, for doing everything perfectly is very difficult.
During the time of Buddha Shakyamuni, there were numerous diverse religious
groups as well as differences of opinions within the Sangha itself; hence,
their Buddhist community was also imperfect. The Buddha said it was actually
a great performance, that they were all manifestations of Buddhas and
Bodhisattvas. Some played negative roles, like Devadatta, while others
played positive roles; but those who are unawakened did not realize this.
From this example, we can see how Buddhas guide sentient beings with both
positive and negative examples. The Buddha taught in this way, as did the saints from
various religions. As Confucius often said, "Every group of three
people has a teacher we can learn from." When we include ourselves
in a group of three, there would be one person who is more virtuous and
one who is less virtuous. We emulate the former and observe the latter
to see if we have the same faults. If we do, we quickly correct them.
In this way, we learn from both. The same applies to situations, either
good or bad as both can help us to learn. Likewise, we make use of favorable
or unfavorable conditions and relationships with others to help us achieve
attainment in our practice of virtue. Confucius said, "A benevolent
person has no enemy. " This is even truer in Buddhism. We listen to people from various religions. For example,
last night at the Singapore Buddhist Lodge, we attended the lecture given
by a Sikh Elder, Mr. Harban Singh. Are there any real differences between
the Sikh or other religious teachings and the educational teachings of
Confucius or Buddha Shakyamuni? Problems exist today because we do not
listen to one another - we envy one another, we surmise and jump to the
wrong conclusions. These lead to misunderstandings, conflicts, and even
wars among ethnic and religious groups. What were the causes? People did
not communicate. If we have frequent visits and exchanges of ideas, there
would be mutual understanding. (As Mr. Singh elaborated on Sikh beliefs,
we also explained that we view Buddhism as an education rather than a
religion.) If everyone communicated like this, our problems would cease. Last night, practitioners asked Mr. Singh some good questions.
One person asked, what was a Sikhs highest goal in cultivation?
He wisely replied that the highest goal is to become one with God. Buddhists
do not speak of God but of perfect Enlightenment, to become one with ones
mind and True Nature. What Buddhist practitioners call mind and True Nature,
religious followers call God. The words are different, but the meaning
is the same. He explained that God created everything. Buddhism does
not mention God in this context. Rather, we believe, as explained in the
Flower Adornment Sutra: "Everything arises from the mind and
changes according to our perceptions." We speak in terms of mind
and consciousness; others speak about God. When others ask us the ultimate
goal of our practice, we explain that it is to become Buddhas, for our
bodies and minds to combine with all sentient beings throughout the universe
to become one entity. We are speaking of the same thing. Religions say that the saints from all religions, who
we call the founders of religions, are messengers or embodiments of God.
This is correct. The God they speak of is what we call the True-Nature.
We want to be logical, mindful, and free of prejudices in our communication
with all religious groups. We know that all sentient beings in the universe share
a common life entity that Buddhists call the Dharma-body: "All Buddhas
from all space and time share one Dharma-body." Thus, among religions,
there are no contradictions or conflicts but peaceful coexistence and
equality. When our minds reach the equal and non-discriminatory state,
we become Buddhas and we no longer have wandering discriminatory thoughts
or attachments. When such thoughts and attachments are present, the mind
is not in the state of equality. To explain further, all the saints in this world and
beyond are manifestations of God. But what about us mortal beings? We
are also embodiments of God! To use religious terms, everything created
by God is his manifestation. In Buddhist terms, everything in the universe
is the manifestation of the Dharma-body, which is the mind and consciousness.
Nothing exists outside the mind-consciousness. By deeply understanding
this principle, we reach the state of seeing our true-nature, which also
means having no obstruction in understanding all phenomena of the universe.
We then reach the state of not encountering any hindrances at all as auspicious
peace and harmony pervades the universe. Originally, human beings of all diverse nationalities,
races, and religions, and other sentient beings coexisted peacefully.
For all are part of the same family. Like parents, children and siblings
who have respect and non-discriminatory unconditional love for one another.
To love all beings is to love ourselves. Thus, in Buddhism it is said:
"Unconditional compassion for all others, as we are all one entity".
Who really understands this truth? Buddha Shakyamuni understood, Dharma-body
Bodhisattvas understood, and as we learn about the founders of religions,
these saints understood. In Buddhism, we learn ten guiding principles for relating
to others and circumstances. These are the Four All-embracing Methods
and the Six Paramitas. How do husbands and wives get along? By practicing
the Four All-embracing Methods and the Six Paramitas. In this way, spouses
and families would live together harmoniously, society and nations would
be stable and prosperous, and the world would be peaceful. Why are we
unable to practice the Four All-embracing Methods and the Six Paramitas?
Because, we lack the right learning and cultivation. We cannot blame ourselves
for we did not receive such an education. In the past, Confucius, Buddha Shakyamuni, great sages,
and virtuous people dedicated their lives to teaching people and enabling
them to understand the true reality of life and the universe. The Four
All-embracing Methods and the Six Paramitas are actually virtuous qualities
of our True Natures, what the True Natures are supposed to be; they are
natural qualities not opinions of the Buddha. We are at fault if we cannot
practice these principles with understanding, for we are going against
our True Nature. We have lost our consciences, the intuitive ability to
know right from wrong. We originally had this ability in our True Nature.
Thus, by nature we are the same as Buddhas. In religious terms, we are
the same as God. However, we are now different because we have lost our
True Natures. Why do we have so many adversaries and where do they
come from? They come from misunderstandings. Once we thoroughly understand
the true reality, we would no longer have adversaries for they cannot
exist when the mind returns to its originally sincere, pure, non-discriminatory,
awakened and compassionate state. Even if someone physically hurt us,
like King Kalis dismemberment of the Buddha in one of his former
lifetimes, would we as enlightened or awakened people harbor any hatred?
No! An awakened, understanding person would know that the other party
had misunderstood and would therefore be very caring. Ill intentions and
bad behavior arise from a lack of understanding. Both the ancient Chinese and the saints teach "open
communication." In managing the country, a government that understands
and governs well will be supported by the people. How can a family be
united? By having open and honest communication, and by not hiding anything,
a family is assured of prospering. So, we must understand this major principle
of open communication. Misunderstanding results from a lack of interaction and
communication. Discord between spouses is also the result of the lack
of communication and of having secrets. Wives and husbands lie to one
another and eventually the family is torn apart. A family in which the
siblings are suspicious, envious and distrustful of each other will decline.
Last night, Mr. Singh told us two stories about honesty.
In one story, a thief was asked who he was. He honestly replied, "Im
a thief." The guard did not believe a real thief would say this and
allowed him to enter the palace. The thief gathered many valuable items,
but before he left, he remembered that a saint had told him that it was
wrong to steal. He realized what he was doing was wrong, put down the
belongings and left empty handed. Buddhism and Confucianism both speak of sincerity. We
read in Confucianism of the sincere and honest mind. We read in Buddhism,
that sincerity means the true mind. The essential nature of the Bodhi
mind is utmost sincerity. What is the true mind? It is the presence of
sincerity and the absence of deceit. It is to be honest even after making
a mistake. This is how we will reach Enlightenment and become Buddhas.
However, we will not accomplish our goals if we do not admit our mistakes
and even try to conceal the truth. Even with good cultivation, we will
remain mired in reincarnation that we alone have created. With utmost
sincerity, reincarnation will disappear; with an illusory mind reincarnation
manifests. We learn from the sutras that reincarnation is an illusory
realm manifested from wandering discriminatory thoughts and attachments.
We have failed to transcend this illusory state in countless lifetimes
throughout infinite eons because we have not severed our wandering discriminatory
thoughts and attachments. Today, fortunately, we have encountered Buddhism and
the teachings of saints from many religions. After carefully absorbing
what we have heard, our problem lies in whether we can practice the teachings.
By following them, we would transcend to a higher level in this lifetime
or as we have learned from many religions, we would become a saint, not
to become God, but to become one with God, to possess the virtues and
conduct of saints. Look around at our chaotic and unstable world. Yesterday,
I had lunch with Mr. Huang, the director of the London Buddhist Library,
and his wife before they left Singapore. He told me that London has become
very unsafe. Children kill their parents; students kill their teachers
or classmates. Similar worrisome occurrences are taking place in the United
States as well. There are frequent strikes in the transportation and communication
industries disrupting peoples lives. Moral concepts are in a steep
decline in western societies and there is an urgent need for the education
of morality and ethics. Mr. Huang has edited a series of textbooks that are used
in government run schools. He will send a copy of the textbooks to us.
This first series is for elementary schools. He wants to continue
with another series for secondary schools and a third one for universities.
Moral education is urgently needed. The British government and the Prince
of Wales welcomed the introduction of these textbooks and actively support
this project. When I asked him if there was an inter-faith organization
in Europe, he replied that they have one that is similar to the Inter-religious
Organization here in Singapore. I asked if it was possible to communicate
with them in the hope that these organizations might begin a dialogue.
We could invite them to visit Singapore or the nine major religious groups
in Singapore could visit them. The purpose of the lunch with Mr. Huang
yesterday was primarily to discuss this idea. It is hoped that all the
religious leaders can communicate and meet often to find ways to save
this world from disasters, eliminate racial prejudices and conflicts,
and abolish religious misunderstanding and wars. This is the way to nurture
a stable and prosperous society, and to bring true peace to the world.
This work is urgently needed now. Somebody asked, since there is only one God, why are
there so many religions? This is a very good question that many others
have also asked. We can better understand this by looking at history and
geography. Modern technology has advanced greatly from its inception approximately
one hundred years ago when aviation did not even exist. It would take
a few months for people to travel by steamship from China to America and
more than twenty days from Shanghai to Singapore. Two hundred years ago, it took three or four months to
sail from China to America and without favorable winds the trip could
last six months. Because transportation and communication were inconvenient
and slow, people had limited contact with one another. The ancient Chinese
had a saying that if someone visited the provincial capitol, they were
considered to have seen the world. That was because people were completely
isolated from one another throughout their lives and most never even left
their town. Written communication primarily relied on asking friends or
relatives to pass on a letter until it reached it recipient, which usually
took weeks. Before the Chinese War of Resistance against the Japanese
invasion, I lived in Anhui, China and my father worked in Fujian Province.
We had mail delivery, but it usually took two and sometimes even three
weeks for a letter to be delivered. An improvement over times past, but
it was still very slow. In that same amount of time, God can manifest
in many forms to teach different races. I believe that this adaptation
among various races with different cultures and historical backgrounds
resulted in different religions. Likewise, Buddha Shakyamuni taught sentient beings according
to individual needs and circumstances. Buddhas do not have a fixed way
of teaching and neither does God. They match their teaching to beings
needs. We read of the thirty-two manifestations of Great Compassion Bodhisattva
in the "Universal Door Chapter." To those who can be liberated
through the manifestation of a Buddha, they will appear and teach as a
Buddha. Similarly, to those who can be liberated as Christians, they will
appear and teach as Jesus. And for those who can be liberated as Sikhs,
they will appear and teach as a Sikh. The form he or she appears in will
be the same as that of the group. During our last visit to Malaysia, we visited a Burmese
temple and saw twenty-some statues of Buddha Shakyamuni. Each had different
features. The first statue we saw had Indian features. The features of
the second Buddha were Nepalese. We also saw statues with Chinese, Japanese
and Korean features. This illustrates that wherever Buddha Shakyamuni
manifests, he assumes the same features as the local people and adapts
to local conditions, so they will feel comfortable with him. Thus, he
has no fixed form. The teaching given to any particular group must be adapted
to their capacity while according with the true reality. In religion,
the true reality at its highest level is to be one with God. We are now
witnessing this as we listen to lecturers from the different religions.
The truths and principles are the same; just the words and presentations
are different. Beginners and those with lower abilities and understanding
are taught how to change from bad to good. Those with higher abilities
and understanding are taught how to change from having delusion to being
awakened. The ultimate goal is to help all beings change from being ordinary
beings to becoming sages. These three main guiding principles in Buddhism
are present in all religions. Previously, people were not aware of this because they
did not associate with one another. In their conceit and arrogance, each
thought that their religion was the best and that all other teachings
were improper and inferior. Now that we are communicating, we realize
that all are equal. All is one, not two. Hence, we not only come together,
we are like sisters and brothers who have a shared mission. We cannot
continue to think only in terms of a small geographical area. In the past,
religious teachers would spend their entire lives within this narrow scope,
but no longer. Today, we must think globally. If we think only in terms
of my district, my religion or my group, we will not survive. Such narrow-minded
and selfish thinking leads to misunderstandings, conflicts, wars and ultimately
the Third World War - nuclear war. Our world would be destroyed. We have to expand our thinking. In our lectures, we have
encouraged practitioners to care about our world. Is this enough? No!
Now we hear of the possibility of interplanetary wars. We need to expand
our hearts further, to think not only of our planet Earth but also of
the infinite planets throughout the universe. Mahayana Buddhism teaches
us that our minds can encompass the universe. Only in this way, can our
problems be truly solved. If Buddhist practitioners cannot think this
broadly, and do not have this mind capacity, how can they become Buddhas?
This mind capacity is the Bodhi mind, the true mind. Originally, our minds
were this all-encompassing. Where do all the sentient beings in the universe come
from? They manifested from our True Nature. Thus, it is said in Buddhism:
"Nothing exists outside the mind. The mind is not excluded from anything."
Once our the capacity of the mind is extended, higher spiritual realms
will materialize, and all resentment and hatred will dissolve. Some practitioners
have asked me how to cultivate the Paramita of Patience. Upon reaching
this higher spiritual state in practice, the Paramita of Patience is non-existent
because is there no attachment to the form of patience. With the severing
of wandering discriminatory thoughts and attachments, all greed, anger,
ignorance, arrogance, right and wrong are all non-existent. In this state,
we reach the realm of inconceivable liberation described in the Flower
Adornment Sutra, that of absolute ultimate liberation. It is the highest
enjoyment in life. It is the life and enjoyment of a Dharma-body Bodhisattva.
What is Dharma-body? It is the state in which we unite our bodies and
minds with those of all the beings throughout the universe. In that state,
we are the Dharma-body for we change from ordinary beings into sages and
our every thought will no longer be just of this earth but of all sentient
beings in the universe. The Buddha taught us in the Infinite Life Sutra
to: "dwell in the wisdom of true reality." Only when we attain
the aforementioned state will we dwell in true wisdom. In this state,
our benefit is "to receive the teaching and uncover the true reality."
This is also the ultimate enjoyment in human life that Mr. Dong-Mei Fang,
a Professor of philosophy, spoke of. Benefiting others is to "bring
all sentient beings true benefits." In other words, loving-kindness
that is the sincere, non-discriminatory, unselfish great caring for all
sentient beings. All sentient beings include plants, animals, as well
as inanimate objects, and can be expanded to include all natural phenomena.
This happens because everything arises from the gathering of affinities
and conditions. The term "sentient being" has vast meanings.
With sincere, pure, non-discriminatory, and compassionate love, we give
true benefits to all. We learn that the Infinite Life Sutra is
a good sutra, hard to encounter in infinite eons. It tells us of the "three
truths." If we can carefully study and contemplate its essence and
principles, and compare these with the philosophies and conduct of the
saints and sages, we realize that such philosophies and conduct are the
same as the teachings in the "Infinite Life Sutra." Although
the words and practice may differ, careful observation shows that the
principles are the same. This is why in Buddhism; we say that the saints
of all religions are manifestations of Buddhas and Bodhisattvas. Once we realize this, it will become easy for us to accomplish
the highest level of Mahayana Buddhist practice. That which is the first
of the Ten Great Vows of Universal Worthy Bodhisattva: "To equally
respect all beings and things." We respect all sentient beings the
same way we respect the Buddhas. Last night, Mr. Singh said that whenever
they visit any other religious place or group, including Buddhists, they
show their respect. When we walk into their temples, are we to do likewise?
Certainly. I have visited Sikh temples and paid my respects as they do,
by prostrating. Their followers respected me for doing so. Why? When I
respect them, they in turn will respect me. It is illogical to expect
otherwise. Christians called Jesus the "messenger of God."
We respect their Bible. But some of them call us disbelievers only because
they do not know or understand us. The Infinite Life Sutra says
that in the past, moral values were not properly taught so we cannot blame
those who have come later. As we communicate and they read about Buddhism,
they will understand us better. How can we help them? First, we need to
respect them and take the initiative. This is why every Sunday our Singapore
Buddhist Lodge invites representatives from religious groups to teach
us about their beliefs. Their response to our taking the initiative has
been very good. In less than a year, a Hindu group has invited us to lecture.
Islamic organizations have not only invited us to lecture but have held
a forum with us. Our contacts with the Catholics are even more frequent
and our venerables have also given lectures. They have now invited me
to lecture on the Rosary. I will not lecture on Buddhist sutras but on
their sacred texts. The Rosary is a prayer; a requirement for them like
our morning and evening ceremonies is for us. I have accepted their invitation
to lecture on the Rosary. Gradually we will meet with every religion. First, we
extend an invitation to them and in return, they invite us. Our sole hope
is that every religion will open its church, mosque, and temple doors
and welcome all the other religions to give teachings. This is an inevitable
evolution of the twenty-first century. Our world is no longer comprised
of small self-contained societies or locally restricted areas. Keeping
to ourselves is wrong and is no longer an option. The Buddha explained in the Lotus Sutra, that
we need to propagate Mahayana Buddhism in this Dharma-Ending Age. He already
knew that in this time period, society would be democratic and liberal.
While Theravada Buddhism is more conservative and was suitable for earlier
times, Mahayana Buddhism is better suited to our times. In this progressively
liberal age, even some countries that have had a monarchistic form of
government are turning to democratic constitutional governments. This
is their only option in the face of modern political and social changes.
This trend goes well with the propagation of Mahayana Buddhism. We wish
to introduce its principles and practice to every religion in the world.
I sincerely respect their sacred texts as I respect Mahayana sutras. Judaism upholds the Old Testament. Christianity upholds
the New Testament. Catholicism regards the Old and the New Testaments
as equally important. These three religions share a very close relationship.
In their worship of one God, a few differences abound. In Judaism, God
is worshipped as supreme to Mother Mary and Jesus. In Catholicism, Mother
Mary and Jesus are equally supreme as are God and Jesus in Christianity.
The three religions differ primarily in this aspect. Thus, this is like
one family being divided into three parts. These three primary religions
are like brothers with the other religions and Buddhism branching out
from them like cousins and the whole being one big family. Buddhism does not talk of brothers or cousins but of
one common life entity. As the Buddha said, "All sentient beings
by nature can become Buddhas." Buddhism provides us with a perfect
and complete explanation. It does not discriminate, saying that no one
is inferior to another, and that it regards all equally. It is stated
in the Infinite Life Sutra, "All will become Buddhas."
We need to work especially hard to seek the profound meanings within these
two phrases and achieve the state of mind of a Buddha. Only in this way,
can we truly become one entity with all Buddhas throughout all space and
time. Please consider this as my way to bid farewell to the
practitioners who have traveled so far to visit me, a small token from
me to all of you. Thank you. Source: Dallas Buddhist Association |