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2018 12 06 NH EN The Diamond Sutra & the practice of signlessness br Phap Luu

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    (Bell)
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    (Bell)
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    (Bell)
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    (Bell)
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    Dear respected Thay,
    dear noble community,
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    it's such a happiness to walk into a room
    so full of love.
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    My brother and I we just arrived
    a few minutes ago, and came in.
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    And to feel the sangha sitting in peace -
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    (fr.) La traduction, ça marche?
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    Pas encore.
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    Can we turn the volume
    up on the French?
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    So walking into this room and feel
    the energy of peace, of calm,
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    of deep aspiration to practice
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    is like walking into a kind of Pure Land.
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    (fr.) Ça va?
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    Là-bas ça va, mais, là-bas? Ça ne va pas.
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    We can just enjoy our breathing.
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    The beautiful thing about a smile
    is it doesn't require a translation.
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    So maybe if you like you can look around
    the room and smile to one another.
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    Just to appreciate the presence of
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    so many people who
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    come for the bodhisattva path.
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    Today's talk is about
    the path of the bodhisattvas.
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    How the Buddha taught of how
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    he takes good care of the bodhisattvas.
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    And by looking at each other
    and smiling to other bodhisattvas,
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    we take good care of each other.
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    Bring up that seed of caretaking.
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    And then our heart opens and we,
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    we water the seed of joy
    in the other person.
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    (fr.) Ça va? Okay, voilà.
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    So dear respected Thay,
    dear brothers and sisters,
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    today is the 6th of December
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    in the year 2018,
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    and we are gathered in
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    Loving Kindness temple,
    in New Hamlet,
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    for the last lay day Dharma talk
    of the Winter Retreat.
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    (fr.) N'est-ce pas?
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    There is a very wonderful book called
    The Diamond That Cuts Through Illusion.
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    And it's
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    Thay's teaching on the Vajracchedikā
    Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra,
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    or sometimes called The Diamond Sutra.
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    The diamond that cuts through illusion.
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    And I was preparing for this talk
    reading through this book,
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    and I remembered that it was one,
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    I think the first book of Thay's
    that I read all the way through.
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    Somebody had given it to me
    when I was a lay friend
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    practicing in a Vipassana center.
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    And it was like receiving
    a stroke of lighting.
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    I, and -
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    The sangha asks us
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    to look into this sutra today
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    as the last lay Dharma talk.
    Lay day Dharma talk.
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    So I practice getting in touch with
    the teaching in the Diamond Sutra.
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    But somehow I've forgotten that I -
    How important finding this book was to me,
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    and my study of Thay's teaching.
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    And so, actually
    I re-read it this morning.
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    (Laughter)
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    Sometimes it's like that.
    Because Thay is such a
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    profound teacher,
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    that sometimes I like to look
    in other places first.
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    Because I know when I read
    Thay's teaching, Thay's -
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    One thunderbolt after another.
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    And it is difficult to find areas that
    Thay doesn't go into,
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    that Thay doesn't reveal deeply.
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    So we are invited this morning
    to look into this teaching.
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    How many of you have ever read
    The Diamond Sutra?
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    Wow! Okay, not bad!
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    So I want to start to share
    a little bit about
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    the relationship of this teaching with
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    some other teachings
    we already had in this retreat.
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    So we've learned about mindful breathing,
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    we've going into
    the 14 mindfulness trainings.
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    So we know the Sutra on Mindful Breathing,
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    the Sutra on the Four
    Establishments of Mindfulness
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    are very old teachings of the Buddha.
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    Like the teachings that the Buddha
    gave later in his life.
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    At that time the sangha
    had grown quite large,
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    and it was not so easy
    as just going
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    to the Buddha website and
    registering for a retreat
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    to go study personally with the Buddha.
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    It's not so easy.
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    People only learned about the Buddha
    through word of mouth.
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    When the Buddha first came to
    a big city, to Rajgir,
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    which at that time was the capital
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    of that region of Magadha,
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    they spread the word
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    to all the women, and the parents,
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    'Please, take care! Hide your men!
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    Because the Buddha is coming,
    and wherever he goes,
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    many of the men become monks!'
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    (Laughter)
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    'Be careful!'
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    So the teaching of the Buddha
    in this day and age sometimes we forget
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    was very dependent on physically
    meeting the Buddha.
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    He didn't have a -
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    an iPhone, or a GPS transmitter,
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    so it is not easy to find
    where the Buddha is.
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    You had to ask.
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    So the early community,
    as it began to grow,
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    was surrounded by monks that
    had studied personally with the Buddha.
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    They had spent time living with him,
    walking with him,
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    going on alms round with him.
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    And so a lot of what they learned
    was just by watching him.
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    Watching how he talked,
    watching how he walked.
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    Listening directly to his teaching.
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    We are listening to a direct teaching now.
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    (Laughter)
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    From the Buddha himself.
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    So often times,
    when we talk about the Dharma,
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    we think about some book.
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    And when we study the Dharma,
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    we need to go buy that book
    and we need to read that book.
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    But that would be completely foreign
    to the sangha of the Buddha.
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    None of what the Buddha was teaching
    was being written down as far as we know
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    at that time. In fact,
    writing was considered a kind of
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    lower form of transmitting
    or communicating.
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    When something was -
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    When something was sacred,
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    then it would come directly
    from the mouth of a teacher.
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    So the teaching came orally.
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    Nowadays we are like -
    We've turned it upside down.
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    If something is written down,
    we take it as an authority,
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    but if it is said from spoken word we tend
    to question whether it's true or not.
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    So we suffer a lot.
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    And so, hopefully, in looking into
    The Diamond Sutra
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    we will be able to pierce through
    that veil of,
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    that veil of delusion.
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    Our practice is always to come back
    to the here and now,
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    to experience life as it is
    in the present moment.
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    That is a - Is there is something
    that we can call truth,
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    in the Plum Village tradition
    in the Buddhist teaching it is that.
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    It's that truth is found in life.
    Not in books,
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    not even in the words of people,
    what people tell us.
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    Even if that person is a very
    prominent spiritual teacher.
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    Thay always reminds us
    that we need to take the teaching
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    and apply it in our daily life.
    That is where we find truth.
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    So we walk the talk.
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    But we know that
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    studying the teachings
    can benefit our practice.
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    It can help us to break through
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    a view that we are holding on to tightly.
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    We can become aware of the ways in which
    our vision is limited.
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    Like the blinders on a horse.
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    We only see the way forward
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    so that we only continue to walk forward.
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    And much (inaudible) education
    in the modern world
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    is really how to get well-fitting blinders
    so that we do the things
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    that are expected of us.
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    That we get a job, that we make money,
    that we have a family, that we
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    so we can have a car, and a house,
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    and then we can go home
    and enjoy Christmas together.
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    And then we can yell at each other.
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    (Laughter)
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    And complain, and, yeah.
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    Because of all the problems we have
    making sure we have a house, and a car,
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    and a family, and a job, and money,
    and all those things.
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    So our current education system
    is designed like that,
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    to try to increase our capacity
    to obtain those things.
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    Those objects of desire.
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    So when the Buddha walked into Rajgir,
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    he cut through all of that
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    by his mindful step, his mindful gaze,
    his mindful speech.
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    And many young men
    who were very well-educated,
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    many of them who studied to become
    the spiritual leaders of their community,
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    prominent priests
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    who would take care of the spiritual needs
    of their community,
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    just by seeing the Buddha
    walking mindfully,
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    looking mindfully,
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    eating mindfully,
    speaking mindfully,
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    they cut through the veil
    of their delusion, those blinders they had
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    that were keeping them
    on the path that was accepted in society
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    for them to walk on.
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    And so that is why they warned people,
    'Please hide your son, hide your husband!'
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    People were afraid of what can happen
    when people remove those blinders,
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    when suddenly their view becomes
    very wide and open,
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    and they go beyond just the limited idea
    of who they are,
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    and what they are here for.
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    So this teaching of The Diamond Sutra
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    is part of the fruit of a tradition
    that developed
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    when the Buddha was
    no longer physically there
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    in the form of which we think of him
    as a human being walking on the Earth.
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    And for many centuries the monks,
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    in order to get in touch with
    the Dharma body of the Buddha,
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    without his physical presence,
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    had begun orally reciting
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    the teachings that the Buddha gave
    in many different situations.
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    Chanting them regularly,
    and then
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    teaching the young monks that came in
    also to chant them.
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    And so the teachings were passed on
    through this practice of oral recitation.
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    Also the precepts, we call the Vinaya,
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    it means the way of life
    of the monastic community,
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    was regularly chanted
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    and recited in that way.
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    And at some point,
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    people started to write them down
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    on palm leaves.
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    Can of like a cheat sheet.
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    But sometimes they forgot some passage
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    or maybe a monk would go
    to a very remote area,
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    and he wanted to make sure that
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    he would not be a -
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    In the midst of a large community, where
    there would be elders he could consult
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    when he forgot one passage of the sutra.
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    Maybe there was one text
    like the Dharmapada
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    which had very precise sayings
    and he wanted to remember them exactly.
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    So he started to write them down
    on palm leaves
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    so that he could bring them with him
    in his robe.
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    And whenever he forgot a line, he could
    take them out to remember that line.
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    So a kind of cheat sheet.
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    A new technology,
    very controversial.
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    Like the Internet.
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    And,
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    and this new form
    of transmitting the Dharma
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    brought in new issues in the community.
    Just like the Internet
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    has brought in new
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    wonderful things
    and also sometimes difficult things
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    into our monastic community.
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    So in the same way, writing also
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    did the same thing.
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    So we have to a little bit
    expand our view
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    to see ourselves in a time
    when we don't have books everywhere,
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    we don't have the telephone,
    or we don't have Internet.
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    And we deeply want to practice the Dharma.
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    We take refuge in the Buddha,
    in the Dharma, in the Sangha.
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    So we know the sangha is all around us.
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    At that time, the sangha was clearly
    the monastic community.
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    And the Dharma with how we
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    see the Buddha in ourselves.
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    Through studying the Dharma,
    we learn how to
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    reveal the nature of awakening
    already within us.
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    So keeping in touch with the Dharma
    is very important.
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    And so how do we do that when the sangha
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    is going a little bit everywhere
    all over India?
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    So we can write it down
    so we can remember.
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    So the words themselves took on
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    a kind of sacred meaning.
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    First the oral word
    and then the written word.
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    Can we listen to
    the sound of the bell?
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    We come back to our body.
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    (Bell)
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    (Bell)
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    If we are a Christian,
    it is not difficult for us
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    to understand how the word
    becomes sacred.
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    If you read the Gospel of John,
    I think it says,
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    'In the beginning,
    there was the Word -
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    The Word is God
    and God is the Word.'
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    Logos.
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    The Greek word is logos.
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    Was God, and God is Logos.
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    If we are Muslim,
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    and we know that to recite the Koran
    in Arabic has a special importance.
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    A translation is only an approximation
    of the direct word of the God
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    as it was told to Muhammad.
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    In Arabic.
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    Also we know in the Jewish tradition
    there is a similar attitude.
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    Ultimately the name of God
    we cannot pronounce.
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    It is only an approximation.
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    Recently I was asked by the community
    to go to Abu Dhabi.
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    And we went in the mosque there,
    and they had
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    100 names of God.
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    So there are many names,
    like The Firm One, The Infinite One,
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    written in Arabic
    in beautiful thorough patterns
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    all in the wall, in the main prayer room
    in the mosque in Abu Dhabi.
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    But a the very top,
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    there is a very beautiful floral pattern
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    around empty tiles.
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    And the 100th name of God
    cannot be pronounced.
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    It is empty of form.
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    And at that time, in India,
    when the Buddha was teaching,
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    there was also this sense that
    the word had a sacred quality.
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    There were two young Brahmin men
    who came to the Buddha,
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    and were very concerned about
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    the future of the Buddha's teaching.
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    And they knew that in the Vedic tradition,
    they were trained to orally recite
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    the words of the Rigveda
    and other sacred texts,
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    to commit them to memory,
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    in order to approach
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    God, to approach
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    liberation.
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    And,
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    and because of their love
    of the Buddhist teaching,
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    they were monastic disciples
    of the Buddha,
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    they said, 'We need to do that!
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    Please Buddha, let us put your teachings
    into verse!'
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    Into the formal language
    that we now call Sanskrit,
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    so that future generations
    would benefit
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    and be able to remember it.
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    And the Buddha said, 'No!
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    You have misunderstood my teaching.'
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    I'm paraphrasing a little bit.
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    (Laughter)
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    He told them, 'My teachings should be
    taught in the common language,
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    in the vernacular,
    the language of the people.
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    The daily language that people use.'
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    So he refused them,
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    to give in to their fear
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    of the teachings disappearing.
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    It means that the Buddhist tradition
    continues through the realized practice
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    of living human beings.
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    Not through a word, or a text.
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    That is how the Buddha is offering us.
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    In our laziness sometimes to practice,
    we want to put up some text
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    as being the ultimate.
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    And if we want to discover God,
    we only have to look in there.
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    We only have to read that text
    and then we will find God,
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    we will find Awakening,
    we will find Liberation.
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    And the Buddha said, no,
    he didn't allow us to be that lazy.
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    So the Diamond Sutra
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    is arising after the teachings
    of the Buddha had began to be written down
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    for already a few hundred years.
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    And so, very quickly the monastic
    community started to depend on
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    these written teachings
    to get in contact with the Dharma,
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    rather than looking to
    their brothers around them.
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    Rather than taking refuge maybe
    in the elder brothers,
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    and their capacity to recite,
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    teach and put into practice the Dharma.
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    And instead they started to look for it
    in the words on a page.
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    That was where the true Dharma lived!
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    Not in my elder brother,
    or my elder sister.
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    They don't say it so explicitly, they just
    spend all their time studying the text.
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    And they don't spend very much time
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    taking refuge in the brothers and sisters
    in the Dharma.
  • 28:15 - 28:19
    And so, as a result of that phenomena,
  • 28:20 - 28:24
    and also the experience of reading
    the Buddhist teachings,
  • 28:25 - 28:27
    written down on these palm leaves
  • 28:28 - 28:31
    which soon became
    sacred objects in their own right,
  • 28:32 - 28:34
    then many monks,
  • 28:35 - 28:37
    and perhaps nuns,
  • 28:38 - 28:40
    began to
  • 28:42 - 28:47
    try to find a way to help
    the young monastics
  • 28:47 - 28:52
    to become free from that attachment
    to the written word,
  • 28:53 - 28:58
    to become free from the attachment to
    the form of the teaching.
  • 29:03 - 29:10
    And so, a whole form of literature we call
    prajñāpāramitā arose.
  • 29:11 - 29:19
    These are teachings that were written down
    and they spoke about how to
  • 29:23 - 29:27
    awaken to the highest understanding.
  • 29:28 - 29:30
    The understanding of the Buddha
  • 29:30 - 29:33
    which cannot be found in words,
  • 29:35 - 29:38
    but can only be lived and touched directly
  • 29:39 - 29:42
    in our life, in our practice.
  • 29:42 - 29:46
    And it is in that spirit that Thay founded
    Plum Village,
  • 29:47 - 29:50
    to create a community of practice,
  • 29:50 - 29:54
    to create a community
    where there is the living Dharma,
  • 29:55 - 29:57
    not just the Dharma
    that can be found in books.
  • 29:57 - 30:01
    Thay said, if you want to
    get a degree
  • 30:02 - 30:06
    in an Institute of High Buddhist Studies,
    then you can go to many universities
  • 30:06 - 30:08
    and do that.
  • 30:11 - 30:14
    But if you want to realize
    the living Dharma,
  • 30:15 - 30:18
    then you need a community of practice.
  • 30:19 - 30:23
    That is what the Buddha built,
    he built a beautiful sangha,
  • 30:23 - 30:26
    walking into Rajgir.
  • 30:33 - 30:36
    There is a beautiful scene, where
  • 30:36 - 30:38
    the Buddha walks into Rajgir,
  • 30:38 - 30:44
    and he is with Uruvela Kasyapa,
  • 30:45 - 30:48
    who was a very famous spiritual teacher.
  • 30:48 - 30:51
    He and his brothers they led a number of
  • 30:52 - 30:58
    kind of dreadlocked spiritual ascetics
    in that region.
  • 30:59 - 31:03
    And they worshiped this fire.
  • 31:03 - 31:06
    So we can take a word as a sacred,
  • 31:06 - 31:10
    we can also take fire,
    or some object in nature
  • 31:10 - 31:13
    and worship it as sacred, as the ultimate.
  • 31:13 - 31:16
    So they were part of a kind of
    fire worshiping cult.
  • 31:18 - 31:21
    And the Buddha came in and he -
  • 31:22 - 31:26
    And because Uruvela Kasyapa had
    a community of many people,
  • 31:26 - 31:28
    many disciples,
  • 31:28 - 31:30
    he was a little bit proud.
  • 31:32 - 31:35
    And so it took
    many teachings from the Buddha
  • 31:35 - 31:38
    before he realized
    that the Buddha actually
  • 31:38 - 31:42
    had awaken to a deeper understanding.
  • 31:44 - 31:50
    I'm not going into it now, but
    you can read it in the Vinaya.
  • 31:51 - 31:54
    Eventually, after many
  • 31:55 - 32:01
    times of seeing the Buddha
    prove his deep understanding,
  • 32:02 - 32:05
    Kasyapa eventually accepted him
    as his teacher.
  • 32:06 - 32:08
    It's kind of like
  • 32:08 - 32:11
    a monk suddenly
    showing up here in Plum Village,
  • 32:11 - 32:15
    and then, over the course of many weeks,
  • 32:16 - 32:21
    the eldest brothers and sisters
    and the community suddenly accept,
  • 32:21 - 32:23
    'You are now our teacher.'
  • 32:23 - 32:26
    You can imagine such a thing.
  • 32:27 - 32:31
    Sometimes in Plum Village in the past
    we had people come in a little bit
  • 32:33 - 32:36
    unstable mentally, and they believed
  • 32:36 - 32:39
    they would be the new teacher
    of the community.
  • 32:39 - 32:44
    But, unlike the Buddha, they didn't have
    that deep understanding, and so -
  • 32:46 - 32:49
    But sometimes that happened
    in a spiritual community.
  • 32:50 - 32:54
    So Uruvela Kasyapa was not quite sure.
    'The Buddha really
  • 32:54 - 32:56
    has a deep understanding?
  • 32:57 - 33:01
    My eye kept seeing my understanding
    is still deeper, still higher.'
  • 33:02 - 33:08
    But eventually, he could not - He saw
    a few wonderful actions of the Buddha
  • 33:08 - 33:14
    that he could not deny any longer
    the understanding of the Buddha,
  • 33:14 - 33:18
    and he accepted the Buddha as his teacher.
    And then, immediately after that,
  • 33:18 - 33:22
    all of his students,
    who probably already had realized
  • 33:22 - 33:27
    the Buddha's deep understanding,
    they became disciples as well right away.
  • 33:27 - 33:30
    And then his two brothers as well
    and their communities.
  • 33:31 - 33:33
    So very quickly the sangha
    became quite large,
  • 33:34 - 33:36
    and all these kind of
  • 33:36 - 33:40
    grungy looking dreadlocked ascetics,
    they shaved off their dreads,
  • 33:41 - 33:43
    and became,
  • 33:45 - 33:49
    they got a robe and a bowl
    and they started following the Buddha.
  • 33:50 - 33:54
    And so there was a very interesting scene,
    where the Buddha walks into Rajgir,
  • 33:54 - 33:58
    and the people are quite confused,
    because they never heard of the Buddha.
  • 33:58 - 34:02
    But everyone knows about Uruvela Kasyapa,
    he is a very famous spiritual teacher,
  • 34:03 - 34:08
    he is all over YouTube, and, you know,
    many people are buying his books,
  • 34:09 - 34:14
    and you can see all over the airports,
    and anyway, you know what I mean.
  • 34:14 - 34:16
    (Laughter)
  • 34:16 - 34:19
    And so, when the Buddha came in,
    people are quite confused,
  • 34:19 - 34:22
    because they saw Uruvela Kasyapa
    and the Buddha, and they said,
  • 34:22 - 34:25
    'Is the Buddha the student
    of Uruvela Kasyapa?
  • 34:25 - 34:28
    Or is Uruvela Kasyapa
    the student of the Buddha?'
  • 34:28 - 34:31
    They did not know.
  • 34:31 - 34:33
    And then,
  • 34:33 - 34:39
    at that moment, Kasyapa begins to fan
    the Buddha.
  • 34:40 - 34:43
    And it is at that moment that the people
    know that, 'Ah!
  • 34:43 - 34:47
    Uruvela Kasyapa has now become
    the student of the Buddha.'
  • 34:47 - 34:54
    And through that gesture, he recognizes
    he is now studying with the Buddha.
  • 34:56 - 35:01
    There are all kinds of beautiful teachings
    like this in the Buddhist teachings.
  • 35:03 - 35:06
    Maybe we can listen
    to another sound of the bell.
  • 35:06 - 35:07
    (Bell)
  • 35:11 - 35:17
    (Bell)
  • 35:29 - 35:33
    So looking around us,
    as a monk,
  • 35:34 - 35:37
    a few hundred years before the Common Era,
  • 35:38 - 35:42
    maybe in the northwest of India,
  • 35:43 - 35:49
    and seeing how our monastic brothers
    and sisters are now
  • 35:50 - 35:55
    spending much of their time reading
    the sutras in written form rather than,
  • 35:56 - 36:01
    in addition to reciting them but how this
    reading is now taking on a new importance,
  • 36:02 - 36:04
    and seeing how -
  • 36:06 - 36:10
    Yes, because when we live together
    as monastics,
  • 36:12 - 36:15
    we come to understand each other
    pretty deeply.
  • 36:16 - 36:21
    We are not very blinded by
    the insights of our brothers and sisters.
  • 36:23 - 36:26
    I think Thay Pháp Dung
    gave the talk last week.
  • 36:26 - 36:29
    He told me he came up with a new line,
  • 36:29 - 36:32
    'It's hard to live with people
    who understand us.'
  • 36:32 - 36:34
    (Laughter)
  • 36:35 - 36:40
    It is very easy to come for a week,
    or two weeks, or even a few months,
  • 36:40 - 36:43
    but then when people
    start to understand us, oh!
  • 36:44 - 36:48
    It becomes a little bit difficult.
    Because they always seem to be looking at
  • 36:48 - 36:50
    those things that we don't want
    to look at in ourselves!
  • 36:50 - 36:52
    (Laughter)
  • 36:53 - 36:57
    So I think something like that
    happened as well in those monasteries.
  • 36:57 - 37:00
    And the monks looked around,
    and they said,
  • 37:00 - 37:03
    'Mmm, wow! He knows a lot
    about the Dharma!'
  • 37:04 - 37:08
    He can teach the Abhidharma,
    the highest form of the Dharma,
  • 37:08 - 37:16
    where everything becomes atomic particles
    of the teachings of the Buddha,
  • 37:21 - 37:25
    'But he still slurps a lot
    when he eats his food,
  • 37:26 - 37:28
    and he
  • 37:29 - 37:32
    smells really bad,
  • 37:33 - 37:36
    walks unmindfully.'
  • 37:38 - 37:43
    So this attachment to knowledge
    became a virtue in itself.
  • 37:45 - 37:47
    And even though the Buddha
    taught very clearly
  • 37:47 - 37:51
    that knowledge, along with afflictions,
    are the main obstacles,
  • 37:51 - 37:54
    the main hindrances to awakening,
  • 37:54 - 37:59
    but the community became
    a little bit attached to its knowledge.
  • 38:00 - 38:04
    And the monasteries become a kind of
    ivory towers
  • 38:05 - 38:09
    guarding the sacred
    teachings of the Dharma,
  • 38:11 - 38:15
    no longer very concerned with
    the life of the common people.
  • 38:16 - 38:22
    So that the teaching that the Buddha gave
    about not putting my teaching in verse
  • 38:22 - 38:25
    but teaching in the language
    of the common people,
  • 38:26 - 38:30
    although the monks would be very able
    to recite that teaching,
  • 38:31 - 38:35
    but that is not how they were living
    so much some of them.
  • 38:37 - 38:42
    And so, as a monk living in that time,
    and trying to renew Buddhism,
  • 38:42 - 38:44
    what do you do?
  • 38:45 - 38:47
    How do you deal with the situation?
  • 38:47 - 38:52
    How can you use this written form,
    this new written form
  • 38:53 - 38:55
    as an skillful way
  • 38:56 - 39:00
    to help people to
    get beyond the attachment
  • 39:00 - 39:03
    to the words that the Buddha taught?
  • 39:03 - 39:07
    How can you help
    to cut through the delusion
  • 39:07 - 39:12
    that the words themselves are the Dharma?
  • 39:13 - 39:17
    That the words themselves
    are the teaching that the Buddha offered?
  • 39:18 - 39:25
    So out of that deep wish, deep hope
    to renew Buddhism
  • 39:27 - 39:33
    came these new texts called
    the prajñāpāramitā texts.
  • 39:35 - 39:37
    How can we
  • 39:38 - 39:41
    get the insight that brings us
    to the other shore?
  • 39:43 - 39:47
    We don't just sit down
    in the same shore with that insight.
  • 39:47 - 39:52
    It has to bring us to the other shore,
    it means we have to walk the talk.
  • 39:52 - 39:55
    We cannot just hold on to our knowledge
  • 39:56 - 40:03
    in a way of getting offerings,
    of getting status, getting respect.
  • 40:09 - 40:13
    And so these teachings of prajñāpāramitā
    they became quite lengthy.
  • 40:15 - 40:20
    And there were many texts we don't know
    exactly where they were written.
  • 40:20 - 40:23
    We don't have that much information.
  • 40:23 - 40:28
    We didn't have somebody making a video
    of the Dharma talks
  • 40:28 - 40:34
    on the early prajñāpāramitā with the date
    written on the board.
  • 40:34 - 40:38
    So it's very difficult for us
    to know exactly when,
  • 40:38 - 40:44
    we have to use different means
    to try to place the exact location
  • 40:45 - 40:47
    where these texts where composed.
  • 40:49 - 40:54
    But the internal evidences from the text
    suggest what I'm sharing is that
  • 40:54 - 40:59
    there was a response to the increasing
    scholastic nature of monastic life.
  • 41:00 - 41:04
    So how can we recreate
    through the form of a text
  • 41:04 - 41:09
    the experience of
    being near the Buddha?
  • 41:10 - 41:12
    How can we recreate
  • 41:13 - 41:20
    in the written form, the kind of awakening
    that is experienced
  • 41:21 - 41:25
    by someone directly witnessing
    how the Buddha walked,
  • 41:25 - 41:30
    how the Buddha talked, how the Buddha ate,
    and how the Buddha taught?
  • 41:30 - 41:37
    That is the aspiration of these monastics
    who composed these prajñāpāramitā texts.
  • 41:38 - 41:43
    And they knew full well that
    the danger also came with that.
  • 41:43 - 41:48
    Which is that people would start to
    take these new texts and make them
  • 41:49 - 41:52
    holy and sacred.
  • 41:57 - 42:00
    So somehow we have to build into it,
  • 42:02 - 42:04
    the teaching that allows us to see
  • 42:05 - 42:08
    that the words themselves
    are only representations,
  • 42:08 - 42:12
    they are not the deep teaching.
  • 42:16 - 42:20
    Okay, so we are going to start
    to look into this a little bit.
  • 42:21 - 42:27
    And I'm just going to really what is
    the most essential part of the teaching.
  • 42:28 - 42:32
    And I hope you have a chance
    to read the rest for yourself.
  • 42:33 - 42:36
    "This is what I heard one time
  • 42:36 - 42:41
    when the Buddha was staying
    in the monastery in Anathapindika’s park
  • 42:41 - 42:47
    in the Jeta Grove near Shravasti with
    a community of 1,250 bhikshus,
  • 42:48 - 42:51
    fully ordained monks.
  • 42:54 - 42:58
    That day, when it was time
    to make the round for alms,
  • 42:58 - 43:01
    the Buddha put on his sanghati robe
  • 43:02 - 43:08
    and, holding his bowl, went into the city
    of Shravasti to seek almsfood,
  • 43:10 - 43:12
    going from house to house.
  • 43:13 - 43:15
    When the almsround was completed,
  • 43:15 - 43:18
    he returned to the monastery
    to eat the midday meal.
  • 43:19 - 43:23
    Then he put away his sanghati robe
    and his bowl, washed his feet,
  • 43:24 - 43:27
    arranged his cushion, and sat down."
  • 43:31 - 43:35
    So the teaching of the sutra
    is happening in Shravasti,
  • 43:36 - 43:40
    a place where the Buddha
    spent many of his rain's retreats,
  • 43:40 - 43:44
    not far from modern-day Nepal.
  • 43:47 - 43:52
    And there was a monastery
    that had been founded there.
  • 43:56 - 43:59
    We may have heard of Anathapindika,
  • 43:59 - 44:02
    in our Chanting Book we have
    a wonderful discourse on
  • 44:03 - 44:08
    The Teachings to Be Given to the Sick,
    which Shariputra offers to Anathapindika
  • 44:08 - 44:13
    when he is passing away. He was
    a very loved lay disciple of the Buddha
  • 44:13 - 44:17
    who lives a very simple life
  • 44:17 - 44:20
    and he was called Anathapindika,
  • 44:20 - 44:24
    it wasn't the name
    that he was given at birth,
  • 44:25 - 44:31
    but it's a name that means
    'the one who gives to the poor'.
  • 44:32 - 44:34
    Anatha are those who -
  • 44:34 - 44:37
    An-atha, it means
    'those who don't have wealth',
  • 44:37 - 44:41
    and pindika is 'food', a kind of like
    almsfood.
  • 44:42 - 44:45
    So he was known as the one
    who was always offering food
  • 44:45 - 44:49
    for people who were poor,
    who didn't have food to eat.
  • 44:51 - 44:55
    The legend is that he payed for
    the Jeta Grove by laying
  • 44:55 - 45:02
    coins of gold on every part of the park.
  • 45:03 - 45:07
    Because the prince Jeta,
    he loved so much that forest
  • 45:07 - 45:09
    and he didn't want to sell it.
    And he said,
  • 45:09 - 45:15
    'I will only sell it if you can lay
    coins of gold across the entire park.'
  • 45:15 - 45:19
    So that's a legend,
    I don't know if that really happened,
  • 45:19 - 45:23
    but that's just to show how much
    Anathapindika loved the Buddha.
  • 45:23 - 45:28
    He was willing to give up everything
    he had in order to provide a place
  • 45:28 - 45:32
    for the Buddha to teach,
    for the monks and nuns to live.
  • 45:36 - 45:40
    So the Buddha passed many rain's retreats
    in Shravasti.
  • 45:46 - 45:51
    And we have the Buddha going on almsround.
    Sometimes we forget that the Buddha went
  • 45:51 - 45:55
    just like the other monks and nuns,
    to go on service on food.
  • 45:55 - 45:58
    Or to receive food from the lay friends.
  • 45:59 - 46:03
    It could be very easy for the Buddha,
    he had many disciples, 1,250 monks,
  • 46:03 - 46:08
    'Please go, can you go
    get my food for me today?
  • 46:09 - 46:13
    I'm a little bit lazy.
    I have to give many Dharma talks,
  • 46:13 - 46:16
    would you mind to bring my food for me?'
  • 46:17 - 46:20
    We wonder why do we always have
    that information.
  • 46:20 - 46:23
    But it is to show the humility,
    and also the freedom.
  • 46:23 - 46:28
    Because by offering - Sometimes when we
    become a teacher in a spiritual community
  • 46:28 - 46:31
    we can become a slave of our disciples.
  • 46:32 - 46:38
    They want to wash our clothes for us,
    they want to cook wonderful food for us,
  • 46:39 - 46:42
    and then we think, 'Oh! it's so lovely
    in the monastery.
  • 46:42 - 46:44
    I don't want to go out anymore!'
  • 46:44 - 46:47
    It is like the Pure Land,
    my personal Pure Land.
  • 46:47 - 46:51
    But the Buddha saw that
    if he wanted to maintain his freedom,
  • 46:51 - 46:53
    he could continue to go on almsround,
  • 46:54 - 46:56
    and then receive food
    from even the poorest person,
  • 46:56 - 46:59
    even the people who
    never heard of the Buddha.
  • 46:59 - 47:04
    He would just come like any other beggar
    to their door and receive almsfood.
  • 47:09 - 47:13
    And then, "At that time,
    the Venerable Subhuti stood up,
  • 47:13 - 47:17
    bared his right shoulder,
    put his knee on the ground,
  • 47:17 - 47:22
    and, folding his palms respectfully,
    said to the Buddha,
  • 47:23 - 47:28
    'World-Honored One,
    it is rare to find someone like you.
  • 47:29 - 47:34
    You always support and show
    special confidence in the Bodhisattvas."
  • 47:44 - 47:48
    So to bare your right shoulder
    is a sign of respect.
  • 47:48 - 47:54
    So we know the monks they had robes
    they put over their shoulders.
  • 47:57 - 48:00
    But nowadays, when we see Theravadan monks
  • 48:00 - 48:03
    we often see that
    their right shoulder is bare.
  • 48:03 - 48:07
    And that is a part of the tradition,
    it's respectful to show the right shoulder
  • 48:07 - 48:09
    in that culture.
  • 48:09 - 48:12
    When Buddhism came to China,
  • 48:13 - 48:18
    the Chinese were scandalized
    by somebody showing their shoulder.
  • 48:18 - 48:24
    In Chinese culture, that's very
    inappropriate.
  • 48:25 - 48:31
    So in that way Buddhism always adapted
    to the culture in which it took root.
  • 48:31 - 48:36
    And that is why we have robes that -
    You don't see my shoulder.
  • 48:37 - 48:41
    So I'm wearing a robe
    that is Chinese style robe.
  • 48:42 - 48:46
    We cover the shoulder.
    That is considered more respectful.
  • 48:49 - 48:53
    He puts his knee on the ground.
  • 48:54 - 48:57
    So we don't know that at that time
  • 48:57 - 49:02
    the monks practiced touching the Earth
    in the way that we do today.
  • 49:03 - 49:06
    But they put their knee on the ground
  • 49:07 - 49:10
    in order to show their respect
    for someone.
  • 49:13 - 49:17
    And they fold their palms.
    () it means like this, join the palms,
  • 49:17 - 49:20
    respectfully.
  • 49:26 - 49:30
    “World-Honored One,
    it is rare to find someone like you.
  • 49:30 - 49:34
    You always support and show
    special confidence in the Bodhisattvas."
  • 49:36 - 49:42
    So this ideal of a Bodhisattva
    was part of what
  • 49:45 - 49:49
    inspired the young monastics at that time
  • 49:49 - 49:53
    to go deeper in their practice.
  • 49:54 - 49:58
    A bodhisattva is a kind of awakened being.
  • 49:58 - 50:01
    It could be translated as
  • 50:02 - 50:05
    someone who is bent on awakening.
  • 50:05 - 50:07
    They are
  • 50:10 - 50:11
    leaning towards awakening.
  • 50:18 - 50:22
    In Pali, we have many references
    to the bodhisatta,
  • 50:23 - 50:26
    which is the Buddha before his awakening.
  • 50:27 - 50:31
    And 'satta' can be translated as
    'being', but it can also be translated as
  • 50:31 - 50:34
    kind of like 'attachment'.
  • 50:34 - 50:39
    Like you are drawn towards awakening.
  • 50:41 - 50:46
    But in Sanskrit it was translated as
    'sattva', which is very clearly 'being'.
  • 50:47 - 50:54
    So it lost that ambiguity.
    Bodhisattva, awakened being.
  • 50:59 - 51:04
    So this ideal of a bodhisattva
    was a kind of revolution
  • 51:04 - 51:07
    within the Buddhist community.
  • 51:07 - 51:10
    Because up into that point,
  • 51:11 - 51:15
    it was very clear, one became a bhikshu
    or a bhikshuni
  • 51:15 - 51:19
    in order to attain arhatship,
    it means, perfection.
  • 51:20 - 51:23
    And it is very clear that
    to become an arhat
  • 51:23 - 51:27
    one had to become
    a bhikshu or a bhikshuni.
  • 51:27 - 51:31
    So the monastics had a kind of
  • 51:32 - 51:34
    monopoly on awakening.
  • 51:35 - 51:36
    (Laughter)
  • 51:38 - 51:42
    And the Bodhisattvayana, which is
    usually how we find it,
  • 51:42 - 51:48
    it means, the vehicle or the path
    of a bodhisattva,
  • 51:48 - 51:52
    suddenly burst through that monopoly
  • 51:53 - 52:00
    and allowed both monastics and lay people
    to be on the bodhisattva path.
  • 52:01 - 52:05
    So this is a path that can be taken
    not only by monastics,
  • 52:05 - 52:08
    but also by lay practitioners.
  • 52:09 - 52:11
    The Bodhisattvayana.
  • 52:13 - 52:18
    Usually we talk about Mahayana,
    you probably heard the term Mahayana,
  • 52:19 - 52:21
    the great vehicle,
  • 52:21 - 52:25
    but more often in that time
    what later became called the Mahayana
  • 52:25 - 52:28
    was called the Bodhisattvayana,
    it means,
  • 52:28 - 52:32
    the path, the vehicle, of awakened beings.
  • 52:35 - 52:38
    And the prajñāpāramitā texts are
  • 52:38 - 52:42
    teaching us the way of the bodhisattva.
  • 52:42 - 52:45
    What is the way to wake up
  • 52:45 - 52:49
    to walk the talk, to the lived awakening.
  • 52:52 - 52:55
    So Subhuti is pointing out to the Buddha,
  • 52:55 - 52:59
    "You always support and show
    special confidence in the Bodhisattvas."
  • 53:04 - 53:08
    That means, when there is somebody
    who has that deep aspiration,
  • 53:08 - 53:10
    we feel very
  • 53:11 - 53:14
    inspired also to help them on their path.
  • 53:14 - 53:18
    When we see somebody who does kind things
    to another person,
  • 53:18 - 53:21
    we don't care whether they are Catholic,
    whether they are Muslim,
  • 53:21 - 53:25
    whether they are Jewish, whether
    they are monastic or they are lay,
  • 53:25 - 53:28
    we just want to help that person,
    we want to support them,
  • 53:28 - 53:31
    we feel inspired
    to help them in their path.
  • 53:32 - 53:35
    When we are generous,
    when our generosity is not
  • 53:36 - 53:41
    transactional, it is based on
    just giving only just to give,
  • 53:42 - 53:47
    we want to help someone
    to continue to do that.
  • 53:49 - 53:51
    We are coming into the Christmas season,
  • 53:51 - 53:55
    and sometimes we feel like,
    'Well, I have to give a present to my mum,
  • 53:56 - 53:58
    to my niece, to my nephew, to my -
  • 53:58 - 54:01
    That brother, if I don't give
    a present to that brother,
  • 54:01 - 54:04
    then he is going to get mad at me.'
  • 54:04 - 54:06
    So our generosity is based on a form.
  • 54:07 - 54:11
    What is expected from us socially.
  • 54:11 - 54:15
    Maybe we give a lot
    to our son or our daughter,
  • 54:19 - 54:21
    but that is also,
  • 54:21 - 54:25
    that is was is expected from us. If we are
    a mother or a father it is expected
  • 54:26 - 54:30
    that we give to our son or daughter.
    But can we give to somebody
  • 54:31 - 54:34
    who is very,
    is living in poverty on the street?
  • 54:35 - 54:39
    Can we open our heart to somebody
    who has killed somebody?
  • 54:39 - 54:41
    Somebody who has stolen?
  • 54:41 - 54:44
    Maybe somebody who is causing great harm.
  • 54:45 - 54:49
    Do we have enough generosity in our heart
    to offer our time, our presence,
  • 54:49 - 54:51
    to that person?
  • 54:52 - 54:57
    That is the path of the bodhisattva.
    We don't rely only on form.
  • 54:58 - 55:02
    If people yell at us and slander us,
    they say,
  • 55:02 - 55:05
    'Why do you help that person,
    why do you give to that person?
  • 55:05 - 55:10
    Look at what they are doing!
    They are the living incarnation of evil!'
  • 55:11 - 55:14
    We don't care, because
    that is part of our path,
  • 55:15 - 55:19
    we are not dependent on the form
    in our way of giving.
  • 55:19 - 55:22
    And so, when you see someone like that,
  • 55:24 - 55:27
    you feel inspired, and
    the Buddha felt inspired
  • 55:27 - 55:32
    to give them special attention,
    special confidence.
  • 55:38 - 55:43
    “World-Honored One, if sons and daughters
    of good families
  • 55:43 - 55:48
    want to give rise to the highest,
    most fulfilled, awakened mind,
  • 55:48 - 55:55
    what should they rely on and what
    should they do to master their thinking?”
  • 55:57 - 56:00
    If sons and daughters of good families
  • 56:01 - 56:06
    want to give rise to the highest,
    most fulfilled, awakened mind,
  • 56:07 - 56:13
    what should they rely on and what
    should they do to master their thinking?
  • 56:14 - 56:17
    This is what everybody wants to know!
  • 56:19 - 56:22
    This is what we all want to know
    when we come to Plum Village!
  • 56:24 - 56:28
    Just tell me, can I buy it
    in the bookstore?
  • 56:28 - 56:30
    (Laughter)
  • 56:34 - 56:39
    It is some special ring I can wear,
    or maybe some special incense I can burn
  • 56:41 - 56:44
    that is going to give me the highest,
    most fulfilled awakening?
  • 56:44 - 56:46
    Just tell me, please, and I'll buy it!
  • 56:47 - 56:51
    Even if it is sold on Amazon!
  • 56:51 - 56:53
    (Laughter)
  • 56:54 - 56:57
    Everybody is coming because
    they want this awakening,
  • 56:57 - 57:01
    they want to be happy, in every moment
    of their life their want to be free!
  • 57:01 - 57:04
    So what can we do
  • 57:06 - 57:09
    to give rise to this highest,
    most fulfilled, awakened mind?
  • 57:10 - 57:14
    Where should we rely on? What should
    they do to master their thinking?
  • 57:15 - 57:19
    So everybody is waiting with bated breath
    to find out
  • 57:19 - 57:21
    what it is.
  • 57:23 - 57:28
    The Buddha replied, "Well said, Subhuti.
    What you have said is absolutely correct.
  • 57:29 - 57:34
    The Tathagata always supports and shows
    special confidence in the Bodhisattvas.
  • 57:37 - 57:40
    Please, listen with all of your attention,
  • 57:40 - 57:43
    and the Tathagata will respond
    to your question."
  • 57:50 - 57:52
    Thank you for listening
    with all your attention.
  • 57:54 - 57:57
    "'If daughters and sons
    of good families want to give rise
  • 57:57 - 58:02
    to the highest, most fulfilled, awakened
    mind, they should rely on the following
  • 58:03 - 58:06
    and master their thinking
    in the following way.'
  • 58:07 - 58:12
    The Venerable Subhuti said, 'Lord,
    we are so happy to hear your teachings.'
  • 58:14 - 58:20
    The Buddha said to Subhuti,
    'This is how the Bodhisattva Mahasattvas
  • 58:20 - 58:22
    master their thinking:
  • 58:24 - 58:27
    ‘However many species
    of living beings there are
  • 58:29 - 58:37
    – whether born from eggs, from the womb,
    from moisture, or spontaneously;
  • 58:38 - 58:41
    whether they have form
    or do not have form;
  • 58:43 - 58:47
    whether they have perceptions
    or do not have perceptions;
  • 58:49 - 58:51
    or whether it cannot be said of them
  • 58:51 - 58:55
    that they have perceptions
    or that they do not have perceptions,
  • 58:56 - 59:01
    we must lead all these beings
    to the ultimate nirvana
  • 59:02 - 59:05
    so that they can be liberated.
  • 59:07 - 59:13
    And yet, when this innumerable,
    immeasurable, infinite number of beings
  • 59:13 - 59:20
    has become liberated, we do not,
    in truth, think
  • 59:20 - 59:23
    that a single being
    has been liberated.
  • 59:25 - 59:28
    Why is this so?
  • 59:28 - 59:33
    If, Subhuti, a bodhisattva
    holds on to the idea
  • 59:33 - 59:41
    that a self, a person, a living being,
    or a life span exists,
  • 59:41 - 59:45
    that person is not
    an authentic bodhisattva.'"
  • 59:50 - 59:53
    Maybe we can listen
    to a sound of the bell.
  • 59:53 - 59:54
    (Bell)
  • 59:57 - 60:04
    (Bell)
  • 60:21 - 60:27
    So in the Sanskrit, it says,
  • 60:28 - 60:33
    Whatever beings -yeah? - sattvaha,
    it says living beings,
  • 60:35 - 60:43
    that are born from an egg, from a womb,
    from moisture, or spontaneously,
  • 60:44 - 60:48
    whether they have form
    or they have no form;
  • 60:49 - 60:52
    whether they have perceptions
    or they don't have perceptions;
  • 60:53 - 60:57
    whether they neither have perceptions
    nor non-perceptions;
  • 61:03 - 61:10
    all these I would lead to nirvana
    without remainder, ultimate nirvana.
  • 61:12 - 61:16
    And even when these immeasurable,
    innumerable beings
  • 61:17 - 61:20
    are thus liberated,
  • 61:21 - 61:24
    not any single living being,
  • 61:25 - 61:28
    we do not think that
    any single living being
  • 61:29 - 61:32
    has been liberated.
    Why is that?
  • 61:35 - 61:40
    Subhuti, it is not said of a bodhisattva
  • 61:41 - 61:47
    that he has the perception of a being.
    Why is that?
  • 61:48 - 61:53
    A bodhisattva, we cannot call someone
    a bodhisattva
  • 61:54 - 61:59
    who has the perception of a self,
    the perception of a being,
  • 62:00 - 62:05
    the perception of a life, a life span,
    and the perception of a person.
  • 62:08 - 62:11
    So these four areas.
  • 62:11 - 62:15
    [ātman]
  • 62:17 - 62:19
    A self.
  • 62:19 - 62:21
    [self]
  • 62:25 - 62:29
    [sattva]
  • 62:32 - 62:34
    A being.
  • 62:34 - 62:36
    [being]
  • 62:37 - 62:39
    A living being.
  • 62:39 - 62:42
    [(living being)]
  • 62:50 - 62:52
    [jīva]
  • 62:53 - 62:55
    A life.
  • 62:56 - 62:58
    [life]
  • 62:58 - 63:00
    Or a life span.
  • 63:01 - 63:04
    [life span]
  • 63:07 - 63:09
    And the pudgala.
  • 63:09 - 63:13
    [pudgala]
  • 63:13 - 63:16
    Which is just a person.
  • 63:16 - 63:19
    [person]
  • 63:23 - 63:25
    So the text is saying that
  • 63:25 - 63:32
    as long as we, in our thinking,
    give rise to the idea of a self,
  • 63:33 - 63:36
    of a living being, of a life span,
    or a person,
  • 63:38 - 63:42
    then we cannot be called a true,
    we cannot be called a bodhisattva.
  • 63:43 - 63:48
    We cannot be called someone who is on
    the bodhisattva path.
  • 63:56 - 63:59
    It seems like a contradiction, right?
  • 63:59 - 64:07
    So we are, we need to give rise to
    the aspiration to lead all living beings.
  • 64:07 - 64:09
    And the Buddha is quite specific.
  • 64:10 - 64:13
    You know, those born from the eggs
    those born from the womb,
  • 64:14 - 64:19
    so all the reptiles,
    and the fish, and the amphibians,
  • 64:21 - 64:24
    born from eggs, then all those
    born from a womb,
  • 64:25 - 64:28
    then those born from moisture.
  • 64:28 - 64:34
    Sometimes the insects, they have
    such a small eggs
  • 64:34 - 64:36
    that they don't call them eggs.
  • 64:36 - 64:41
    They seem to be born spontaneously
    from moisture, but even bacteria, mold,
  • 64:42 - 64:44
    living things.
  • 64:46 - 64:51
    So you can imagine that, as a bodhisattva
    we have to lead mold to nirvana.
  • 64:51 - 64:52
    (Laughter)
  • 64:57 - 65:01
    And even though we have to lead mold
    to nirvana,
  • 65:01 - 65:03
    (Laughter)
  • 65:03 - 65:07
    we cannot think that any mold
    has been lead to nirvana.
  • 65:08 - 65:12
    So I'm bringing this
    to its natural extension.
  • 65:13 - 65:16
    We cannot only think of
  • 65:17 - 65:19
    even just living beings.
  • 65:20 - 65:23
    How about the very stones
    beneath our feet?
  • 65:27 - 65:29
    It has a kind of life,
  • 65:29 - 65:32
    if we look deeply.
  • 65:34 - 65:40
    We also use to dividing up the world
    between the inanimate and the animate,
  • 65:40 - 65:43
    the non-living and the living.
  • 65:44 - 65:47
    And the Buddha is just pointing that out.
  • 65:49 - 65:54
    So first of all, we have to learn
    how to understand
  • 65:55 - 66:00
    when we define ourselves and others
    in terms of a self.
  • 66:02 - 66:08
    So in what way do we say, this is me,
    this is mine, this is myself?
  • 66:10 - 66:13
    We think, I can extend my hand,
  • 66:13 - 66:15
    so that must be me.
  • 66:15 - 66:19
    But I cannot extend the brother's hand.
  • 66:20 - 66:22
    So that must be not me.
  • 66:23 - 66:27
    So we rely on this
    very simplistic understanding
  • 66:27 - 66:29
    of what is me and what is not me.
  • 66:30 - 66:33
    But if I look more deeply,
    I see that when
  • 66:33 - 66:36
    I practice and I live
    together with my brother,
  • 66:36 - 66:40
    then he knows the right time
    to invite the bell
  • 66:41 - 66:43
    in the Dharma talk.
  • 66:44 - 66:47
    And so somehow, even though he is not me,
  • 66:47 - 66:52
    and yet there is some capacity to be able
    to invite the bell at the appropriate time.
  • 66:53 - 66:56
    There is a kind of understanding.
  • 66:56 - 66:58
    And so, when we see that,
  • 66:59 - 67:02
    we see that actually this body,
    the limit of this body
  • 67:02 - 67:06
    is not the limit of who we are.
  • 67:08 - 67:10
    There is not only the,
  • 67:11 - 67:15
    this body which we can move
    and animate which is
  • 67:17 - 67:19
    ourselves.
  • 67:20 - 67:23
    But we are made up
    of many non-self elements.
  • 67:25 - 67:30
    When we look into the orchid,
    we can see that
  • 67:31 - 67:35
    the orchid is on the platform.
  • 67:35 - 67:38
    We do not say that
    the orchid is up in the sky.
  • 67:41 - 67:46
    We do not say that the orchid is in
    the earth that is surrounding New Hamlet.
  • 67:48 - 67:51
    But if we look deeply, we can see that
    the sun is in the orchid.
  • 67:52 - 67:58
    Without the sun, there would be no
    photosynthesis
  • 67:59 - 68:02
    for the plant to generate
  • 68:03 - 68:08
    the branch that comes up
    to offer these flowers to us.
  • 68:09 - 68:12
    If there is no earth,
  • 68:12 - 68:18
    then there is no nutriments to provide
    the minerals that the plant needs to grow.
  • 68:20 - 68:24
    And we know that there is also the farmer,
    the one who grew the orchid,
  • 68:24 - 68:29
    the one who transported it here.
    All these elements, we can say,
  • 68:29 - 68:32
    non-orchid elements
    are present in the orchid.
  • 68:33 - 68:38
    And we are also made of no-self elements.
    We are made up of our friends,
  • 68:38 - 68:45
    of our parents, of countless generations
    of ancestors. They are all in us.
  • 68:46 - 68:52
    And when we see that, then we become free
    from this idea of a self, of an atman.
  • 68:54 - 69:00
    So that way of dividing up the world,
    that dualistic way of seeing things,
  • 69:00 - 69:03
    then suddenly falls away.
  • 69:03 - 69:08
    And we see that this body is not me,
    it is not mine, it is not myself.
  • 69:09 - 69:11
    I'm not limited by this body.
  • 69:12 - 69:15
    And we see that we are also present
    in all things, and
  • 69:15 - 69:18
    all things are also present in us.
  • 69:18 - 69:21
    So the mold is not separate from me.
  • 69:23 - 69:27
    The stones are not separate from me.
    The deer are not separate.
  • 69:28 - 69:31
    But we actually inter-are.
  • 69:31 - 69:35
    So this is a deep teaching of the Buddha
    on interbeing.
  • 69:37 - 69:40
    And when we look at the world in that way,
  • 69:40 - 69:44
    we become free from our ideas
    about ourselves,
  • 69:45 - 69:50
    we practice what Thay called
    the deep ecology.
  • 69:51 - 69:55
    He said, the Diamond Sutra is
    the earliest teaching on deep ecology,
  • 69:57 - 70:00
    because we see that we are not separate
    from Mother Earth.
  • 70:01 - 70:04
    That all of our efforts
  • 70:04 - 70:08
    to raise up human beings,
  • 70:10 - 70:12
    to make them comfortable,
  • 70:13 - 70:16
    so they always have enough food to eat,
  • 70:16 - 70:19
    so the always have enough places to live,
  • 70:20 - 70:23
    so they are warm enough,
    so they get to go on a vacation
  • 70:23 - 70:25
    once a year,
  • 70:27 - 70:30
    that that all has come
    at a price.
  • 70:32 - 70:36
    And that price is our attachment
    to our idea about ourselves.
  • 70:37 - 70:43
    Ourselves as a person, who is
    separated from other living beings,
  • 70:44 - 70:47
    like animals, the plants, the minerals.
  • 70:48 - 70:52
    So we exploit the Earth, we think of
    the Earth as something separate from us
  • 70:53 - 70:56
    that we can dig in,
    that we can extract oil from,
  • 70:58 - 71:01
    and we don't think about
    all the consequences
  • 71:01 - 71:04
    that that has on ourselves,
    on our well-being,
  • 71:04 - 71:07
    because we don't see it as ourselves.
  • 71:07 - 71:10
    We see ourselves as something separate
    from the Earth.
  • 71:12 - 71:16
    We treat animals with great cruelty,
  • 71:16 - 71:19
    raising them in horrible conditions
  • 71:21 - 71:23
    to be slaughtered
  • 71:23 - 71:26
    to serve our appetite.
  • 71:26 - 71:29
    Because we think that they are not us.
  • 71:29 - 71:33
    Of course, we say we would never do that
    for human beings.
  • 71:34 - 71:37
    I remember when I was a young practitioner
    and I read
  • 71:40 - 71:42
    a saying from Mahatma Gandhi,
  • 71:42 - 71:47
    which was, 'If you want to understand
    the nature of a civilization
  • 71:48 - 71:51
    look at how it treats its animals'.
  • 71:52 - 71:56
    If you want to understand
    the nature of a civilization
  • 71:56 - 72:00
    look at how it treats its animals.
  • 72:02 - 72:06
    Does it hide its animals away
    when they are going to be slaughtered,
  • 72:07 - 72:10
    or mistreated, or killed?
  • 72:13 - 72:18
    So when we look deeply, there are
    structures that had been created
  • 72:18 - 72:20
    in the human mind,
  • 72:20 - 72:25
    which have split us off from
    that which is also ourselves.
  • 72:25 - 72:29
    That have removed us from Mother Earth.
  • 72:29 - 72:32
    And the Buddha is trying
    to point those out.
  • 72:32 - 72:34
    What is the source
    of those wrong perceptions?
  • 72:35 - 72:40
    What are those ideas which separate us
    from our connection to the Earth?
  • 72:43 - 72:45
    (Bell)
  • 72:49 - 72:55
    (Bell)
  • 73:05 - 73:10
    "We must lead all these beings
    to the ultimate nirvana
  • 73:10 - 73:13
    so that they can be liberated."
  • 73:13 - 73:16
    This is a very radical statement.
  • 73:17 - 73:20
    The early Buddhist community
  • 73:21 - 73:24
    was mainly concerned with its,
  • 73:24 - 73:27
    with its own attainment of nirvana.
  • 73:29 - 73:31
    You became a monk or a nun
  • 73:31 - 73:34
    because you wanted to become
    an arhat, a perfected one.
  • 73:34 - 73:39
    You wanted to attain the nirvana
    that the Buddha taught.
  • 73:43 - 73:47
    And that led to attachment
    to these kind of ideas,
  • 73:47 - 73:52
    the idea about a self, even though
    the teaching of non-self was there,
  • 73:53 - 73:58
    but ¡wow!, the monks
    tend to have a very big self.
  • 73:58 - 74:01
    A very big non-self.
  • 74:04 - 74:07
    And they can have a very
    strong idea that
  • 74:10 - 74:13
    they are sattvas, they are living beings,
  • 74:14 - 74:17
    but the stones, the minerals,
  • 74:17 - 74:22
    those things that are not living,
    those things we don't need to care about.
  • 74:22 - 74:25
    What we need to take care of
    is only the living beings.
  • 74:26 - 74:30
    Or they have an idea,
    'I'm an important person.
  • 74:34 - 74:38
    These animals, these plants,
    they are not
  • 74:39 - 74:42
    they are not so important.
  • 74:42 - 74:45
    What is important is
    my own attainment of nirvana.'
  • 74:46 - 74:49
    So when we look deeply into this statement
  • 74:49 - 74:54
    we see we break through
    these very limited concepts of nirvana.
  • 74:54 - 74:56
    And we see that
  • 74:57 - 75:01
    awakening is something
    that can be experienced by all.
  • 75:03 - 75:05
    That is possible for -
  • 75:05 - 75:10
    When we no longer see the separation
    between me and not me,
  • 75:12 - 75:16
    we see that the wood that I'm sitting on
    is not separate from me,
  • 75:17 - 75:20
    when I see that the stones
    are not separate from me,
  • 75:20 - 75:25
    they become part of my path to awakening.
  • 75:25 - 75:28
    They are not separate.
  • 75:28 - 75:29
    And so,
  • 75:30 - 75:33
    taking care of the stones
    is taking care of myself.
  • 75:34 - 75:37
    Taking care of the trees
    is taking care of myself.
  • 75:38 - 75:42
    Taking care of the cows, the sheep,
  • 75:42 - 75:46
    taking care of, even of the mosquitoes,
  • 75:47 - 75:50
    is taking care of myself.
  • 75:51 - 75:55
    The brothers we become very expert
    at capturing mosquitoes
  • 75:55 - 75:58
    and putting them back outside
    so they can be free.
  • 76:01 - 76:07
    And the Buddha, one of the reasons he had
    us wear a robe and not walk around naked
  • 76:07 - 76:09
    was to protect us from mosquitoes.
  • 76:10 - 76:13
    Also, you know, is a little bit -
  • 76:13 - 76:15
    Even in the Buddha's time,
    to walk around naked
  • 76:15 - 76:17
    was a little bit extreme.
  • 76:17 - 76:19
    (Laughter)
  • 76:19 - 76:23
    So we don't have to kill the mosquitoes,
    but we can be protected,
  • 76:24 - 76:28
    we take care of ourselves but in a way
    that is not harming other living beings,
  • 76:29 - 76:31
    or even the stones themselves.
  • 76:32 - 76:36
    We know that if we've ever thrown
    something at a stone, or you throw a stone
  • 76:37 - 76:41
    at another stone or something hard,
    and then you look at it.
  • 76:41 - 76:43
    What do you see?
  • 76:44 - 76:50
    A kind of like white, powdery bit
    at the impact.
  • 76:51 - 76:53
    That is a kind of suffering.
  • 76:55 - 76:59
    We tend to think of suffering only
    in terms of the human nervous system.
  • 76:59 - 77:02
    That is a very limited view.
  • 77:02 - 77:05
    But now we start to extend that
    to include
  • 77:06 - 77:08
    the suffering of animals.
  • 77:08 - 77:12
    Even as short as the past few fifty years,
  • 77:13 - 77:18
    people have believed, many scientists
    believed that animals did not suffer pain
  • 77:19 - 77:22
    in a way that can be compared
    to human beings.
  • 77:24 - 77:29
    That is a way of justifying
    doing studies on animals.
  • 77:29 - 77:33
    You can treat them however you want
    as long as they don't suffer
  • 77:33 - 77:36
    in the way that human beings suffer.
  • 77:36 - 77:40
    So we have to be careful when our mind
    is caught in these perceptions
  • 77:41 - 77:45
    we can use it to justify hurting.
  • 77:45 - 77:49
    We can use it to justify
    creating suffering.
  • 77:50 - 77:55
    And it doesn't take much deep looking
    to then go and extend that understanding
  • 77:55 - 77:58
    to the stones, to the minerals.
  • 77:59 - 78:02
    Then, when we look in -
    We hear about climate change,
  • 78:03 - 78:07
    or we experience this pretty warm
    December right now,
  • 78:08 - 78:11
    then we know that maybe
    we haven't been taking good care
  • 78:11 - 78:14
    of our mineral brothers and sisters.
  • 78:17 - 78:19
    Maybe in our greed to
  • 78:20 - 78:24
    have electricity, to have power,
  • 78:25 - 78:27
    to produce,
  • 78:28 - 78:32
    we extract minerals from the Earth,
  • 78:32 - 78:36
    and then release the remains
    into the atmosphere.
  • 78:38 - 78:42
    So this is all connected.
    This is coming from human desire.
  • 78:42 - 78:45
    So in early teachings, we have
  • 78:45 - 78:47
    the teachings on
  • 78:48 - 78:51
    too much craving leads to suffering.
  • 78:52 - 78:56
    And so here, in the Diamond Sutra
    we're going into what is it that we crave?
  • 78:56 - 79:00
    What is it that leads us to have a kind of
    wrong perceptions
  • 79:00 - 79:03
    that bring about the suffering?
  • 79:03 - 79:07
    And so the insight of the Diamond Sutra
    is that these four -
  • 79:07 - 79:11
    That when we look deeply into
    our perceptions, we can find these four
  • 79:11 - 79:14
    somewhere there at the bottom.
  • 79:15 - 79:18
    Our ideas about ourselves.
  • 79:19 - 79:22
    Our ideas about living beings
    separated from
  • 79:23 - 79:26
    non living beings.
  • 79:28 - 79:33
    One of our long term lay practitioners,
    in Upper Hamlet,
  • 79:33 - 79:38
    he has dedicated his life
    to building sanghas that
  • 79:39 - 79:42
    live near fracking operations
    in the United Kingdom,
  • 79:44 - 79:48
    so that they can put their bodies there
    in a non-violent way
  • 79:49 - 79:53
    to shine light on what we are doing
    to Mother Earth
  • 79:53 - 79:56
    when we get caught
    in this kind of perception.
  • 79:57 - 80:01
    The Earth, that is not a living being.
  • 80:02 - 80:07
    So if we inject chemicals into the earth
    in order to produce more oil, produce more
  • 80:10 - 80:14
    other products that we have
    a lot of craving for, that is no problem.
  • 80:15 - 80:18
    And then we don't look at the suffering,
    we don't look at the water
  • 80:18 - 80:21
    that comes out of the tap
    that you can light on fire.
  • 80:24 - 80:27
    So sometimes, when we are
    on the bodhisattva path
  • 80:28 - 80:30
    we need to put our own body
  • 80:30 - 80:34
    in the way, in order to help people
    to look deeply into -
  • 80:36 - 80:40
    Encourage others
    to practice looking deeply.
  • 80:41 - 80:44
    Sometimes, that is why some of us
    become monks and nuns.
  • 80:45 - 80:49
    We want to deal with our own suffering,
    but we also have an aspiration,
  • 80:49 - 80:53
    we know sometimes we need to be,
    go a little bit outside of the norm
  • 80:54 - 80:58
    in order to help each other to look
    deeply into what is really going on.
  • 81:03 - 81:07
    We are attached to
    the idea of a life span, jīva.
  • 81:10 - 81:15
    We have the kind of thinking, 'Ah! Now it
    is this time in my life for me to do this.
  • 81:16 - 81:19
    And when I get old, I will be like that.
  • 81:20 - 81:24
    When I get old, I will travel.
    I will have a bucket list
  • 81:24 - 81:28
    and I will go to all those countries
    and do all those things.'
  • 81:31 - 81:34
    Thay often told the story
  • 81:34 - 81:36
    of Frederic, a business man,
  • 81:37 - 81:39
    whose wife came to Plum Village.
  • 81:45 - 81:47
    He told his son,
  • 81:48 - 81:53
    'Son, what do you want for Christmas?'
  • 81:56 - 82:00
    And the son was not sure what he
    really wanted for Christmas.
  • 82:00 - 82:03
    He had to think about it.
    And when he thought,
  • 82:03 - 82:06
    he shared with his father,
    'Daddy, I want to be with you.
  • 82:08 - 82:10
    I want to be with you.'
  • 82:11 - 82:15
    Because Frederic was head
    of a large company, and he was so busy!
  • 82:18 - 82:21
    He could buy his son
    anything that he wants.
  • 82:23 - 82:27
    Anything that he imagines. But all his son
    wanted was just to spend more time
  • 82:27 - 82:29
    with his father.
  • 82:31 - 82:34
    And even when his wife
  • 82:36 - 82:38
    was sick,
  • 82:40 - 82:45
    then he could not- I'm sorry, not his wife
    it was his son, his son got sick,
  • 82:46 - 82:48
    and he could not
  • 82:48 - 82:53
    he could not be there, he could not leave
    work to go to the hospital to be there
  • 82:53 - 82:59
    with him. He had to ask his wife
    to represent him, to be present for him.
  • 83:00 - 83:06
    And he told his wife, 'Very soon I will be
    able to transmit all my responsibilities
  • 83:06 - 83:10
    in the company to someone else.
    So just in few years,
  • 83:11 - 83:16
    we will have so much free time!
    Just bear with me for this moment.'
  • 83:17 - 83:20
    And then, very soon after
    he told his wife that,
  • 83:20 - 83:23
    he was killed in a car accident.
  • 83:26 - 83:31
    And so all his hopes, his dreams
    to spend more time with his son,
  • 83:32 - 83:34
    to spend more time with his family,
  • 83:35 - 83:38
    they never had a chance to be realized.
  • 83:40 - 83:44
    And we all live that reality.
  • 83:44 - 83:49
    We live our life, we think, 'Oh! After I'm
    in Plum Village, I will go there,
  • 83:49 - 83:54
    I will do that'. But we don't know
    what will happen even in the next moment.
  • 83:56 - 84:01
    And so, when we learn to live happily,
    to dwell happily in the present moment,
  • 84:01 - 84:05
    without basing our thinking
    on these perceptions,
  • 84:06 - 84:09
    we no longer have fear.
  • 84:12 - 84:14
    We no longer
  • 84:14 - 84:18
    place our hopes and our dreams
    in some future time
  • 84:19 - 84:21
    when we will do this,
    or we will do that.
  • 84:21 - 84:24
    'I promise you! Just next year
    I will do that!
  • 84:24 - 84:27
    We will have enough time to do it.'
  • 84:27 - 84:31
    We learn to come back to ourselves,
    come back to the present moment,
  • 84:31 - 84:34
    and to really enjoy all the wonders
    of life that are here and now,
  • 84:35 - 84:37
    fully present for us.
  • 84:38 - 84:40
    Within us and around us.
  • 84:41 - 84:47
    So, mastering our thinking is learning how
    to dwell happily in the present moment.
  • 84:48 - 84:52
    Remembering all the good conditions
    for happiness that are already here.
  • 84:54 - 84:57
    That is how a bodhisattva
    masters her thinking.
  • 84:59 - 85:02
    And even though we have that teaching,
  • 85:02 - 85:04
    oftentimes we forget.
  • 85:04 - 85:07
    And we still hope, and we plan,
  • 85:07 - 85:09
    and it is not that planning is bad,
  • 85:11 - 85:14
    but we do it in a joyful way
    in the present moment.
  • 85:14 - 85:17
    And we are happy to let go of our plan.
  • 85:18 - 85:20
    We are happy to let go of it,
  • 85:20 - 85:23
    because we know that our happiness
    doesn't depend on that.
  • 85:24 - 85:29
    Our happiness doesn't depend on going
    to see that person for Christmas,
  • 85:30 - 85:33
    or being with our family for Christmas.
  • 85:34 - 85:38
    Or doing that thing, or getting that job,
    or getting that promotion.
  • 85:39 - 85:44
    But it is realized right here
    and right now with our mindful breathing,
  • 85:45 - 85:49
    with our mindful step,
    with the community of practice around us.
  • 85:51 - 85:53
    And we don't have to
  • 85:54 - 85:57
    become some important person
  • 85:59 - 86:03
    who is respected, who is respectable.
  • 86:06 - 86:10
    Sometimes our greatest teacher can be
    a homeless person in the street.
  • 86:12 - 86:15
    They can give us a wisdom that we need.
  • 86:15 - 86:18
    And that was the insight that the Buddha
    was trying to
  • 86:19 - 86:23
    give to people by living humbly himself,
    by begging for his food,
  • 86:24 - 86:28
    putting himself as the lowest
    in society.
  • 86:30 - 86:34
    Not riding around in fancy,
    on fancy elephants.
  • 86:36 - 86:38
    Some of his disciples,
    when they became monks,
  • 86:39 - 86:42
    they thought, 'Well, I'm a monk. But I can
    continue to ride around on an elephant
  • 86:42 - 86:44
    like I did before.'
  • 86:44 - 86:48
    That is why we have the precept about
    not riding in luxurious vehicles.
  • 86:48 - 86:50
    (Laughter)
  • 86:50 - 86:54
    Most of us don't think about
    riding an elephant as a luxurious vehicle,
  • 86:54 - 86:58
    but at that time, it was
    a sign of royalty.
  • 87:00 - 87:03
    So how can we learn to recognize these,
  • 87:03 - 87:06
    when our thinking is based
    on these perceptions?
  • 87:06 - 87:09
    When we look for approval from others,
  • 87:09 - 87:13
    how much of it is based
    on an idea of a self? Of a person?
  • 87:15 - 87:19
    We want to be appreciated,
    we want to be recognized.
  • 87:21 - 87:26
    We treat human beings well but we don't
    treat Mother Earth in a respectful way.
  • 87:28 - 87:32
    In Thay's commentary, we can read
  • 87:32 - 87:37
    that he loved to get out of the city
    and to go into the countryside.
  • 87:39 - 87:44
    And Thay said, because in the city,
    you have to, when you go to pee
  • 87:45 - 87:49
    you have to go into
    very smelly bathrooms, very
  • 87:51 - 87:54
    dirty, very unpleasant.
  • 87:54 - 87:58
    But in the countryside, you can go
    and you can pee anywhere you want.
  • 88:00 - 88:04
    But then, after a while,
    when Thay started to look deeply,
  • 88:04 - 88:08
    he felt very ashamed when he would go
    and pee behind a tree.
  • 88:09 - 88:12
    Because the tree was
    such a beautiful, sacred thing,
  • 88:12 - 88:14
    how could you pee on it?
  • 88:14 - 88:16
    (Laughter)
  • 88:16 - 88:19
    But then he - So he tried to go
    somewhere else,
  • 88:19 - 88:22
    but there would always be a bush or a tree
    somewhere, everywhere,
  • 88:23 - 88:26
    and then he realized, what would he do?
    He has to pee somewhere!
  • 88:28 - 88:33
    And then, one day he had the insight
    which is that peeing is also sacred.
  • 88:33 - 88:35
    (Laughter)
  • 88:36 - 88:39
    That he was caught in the idea
    that peeing
  • 88:40 - 88:43
    is something profane.
  • 88:43 - 88:47
    That by peeing on it
    he is disrespecting Mother Earth.
  • 88:47 - 88:52
    But we know when we pee we are returning
    our nutrients back to the earth.
  • 88:55 - 88:58
    So we can see that the tree is sacred,
  • 88:58 - 89:02
    and when we pee next to it
    it is also a sacred act.
  • 89:02 - 89:07
    That is the insight we get from freeing
    ourselves from this kind of perception.
  • 89:09 - 89:14
    We see we are not damaging the tree,
    we are not causing suffering to the tree.
  • 89:15 - 89:18
    So we pee in such a way, that
    we can bring happiness and joy
  • 89:18 - 89:21
    to us and to the tree.
  • 89:22 - 89:27
    We have to learn to recognize suffering.
    That is why it is the first noble truth.
  • 89:27 - 89:29
    And that suffering
    is not only in ourselves,
  • 89:29 - 89:32
    we need to recognize
    the suffering of fracking.
  • 89:33 - 89:37
    The suffering of not taking care of
  • 89:38 - 89:40
    the animals.
  • 89:43 - 89:47
    That is why in Plum Village
    we eat vegetarian, it's very easy for us,
  • 89:47 - 89:52
    because we know, we know how animals
    are treated when they are used for meat,
  • 89:52 - 89:55
    or to produce dairy products.
  • 89:55 - 89:59
    Now with the Internet, if you don't know,
    you can find out very quickly.
  • 90:00 - 90:02
    It is not difficult.
  • 90:03 - 90:06
    And so when we get in touch
    with that suffering,
  • 90:06 - 90:09
    and we really practice deeply
    the teaching of the Diamond Sutra,
  • 90:09 - 90:12
    we want to lead all beings to nirvana.
  • 90:14 - 90:19
    Then we become free from the idea
    that that cow, that that chicken
  • 90:19 - 90:22
    is separate from me.
  • 90:22 - 90:24
    That the tree is separate from me,
  • 90:24 - 90:27
    that the oil deep in the earth
    is separate from me.
  • 90:27 - 90:31
    That we are all part of one organism,
    Mother Earth.
  • 90:31 - 90:36
    And Mother Earth is also part of
    a beautiful family of brothers and sisters
  • 90:37 - 90:39
    going around our Sun.
  • 90:40 - 90:46
    And that the Sun is also part of
    a beautiful Cosmos, the Milky Way,
  • 90:46 - 90:52
    universe, galaxy,
    and that beyond that,
  • 90:52 - 90:57
    the whole universe of many hundreds
    of millions of galaxies.
  • 90:59 - 91:03
    And when we look in that way,
    we see that we are not alone.
  • 91:05 - 91:07
    So that teaching
  • 91:08 - 91:11
    that we see that no one single being
    has been saved
  • 91:11 - 91:14
    is another way of saying we are not alone.
  • 91:15 - 91:18
    We break through
    the barrier of loneliness.
  • 91:19 - 91:25
    And we see that this body,
    these feelings, these perceptions,
  • 91:25 - 91:28
    these mental formations,
    and this consciousness
  • 91:28 - 91:31
    are not me. They are not mine.
  • 91:32 - 91:34
    They are not a separate self.
  • 91:37 - 91:41
    We become free from all those concepts.
  • 91:42 - 91:45
    And then we can begin the true work
  • 91:46 - 91:48
    of liberation
  • 91:49 - 91:53
    knowing that not any single being
    has been liberated.
  • 91:54 - 91:57
    That is how we master our thinking.
  • 91:57 - 92:00
    That is how we set our mind.
  • 92:04 - 92:05
    (Bell)
  • 92:09 - 92:16
    (Bell)
  • 92:26 - 92:28
    So,
  • 92:28 - 92:31
    so we didn't get very far today
  • 92:32 - 92:35
    in the sutra, but I think that
  • 92:36 - 92:39
    we get to touch the essence.
  • 92:39 - 92:42
    We cannot be caught in words.
  • 92:43 - 92:47
    Many times in the Diamond Sutra
    we will hear something like,
  • 92:48 - 92:54
    'When the Tathagata speaks of signs,
    there are no signs being talked about.
  • 92:56 - 93:01
    Subhuti, what is called Buddhadharma
    is everything that is not Buddhadharma."
  • 93:06 - 93:10
    When the Buddha talks about the highest,
    most fulfilled awakened mind,
  • 93:10 - 93:15
    there is nothing that can be called
    the highest, most fulfilled awakened mind.
  • 93:15 - 93:19
    That is why it is called the highest,
    most fulfilled awakened mind.
  • 93:20 - 93:24
    That is the refrain that we see often
    in the Diamond Sutra.
  • 93:24 - 93:28
    And it seems like, 'What sense
    do we make of that?'
  • 93:30 - 93:35
    And that is also to help us
    break through this barrier
  • 93:35 - 93:37
    of perception.
  • 93:38 - 93:41
    Of getting caught in a perception.
  • 93:42 - 93:45
    Thay talked about one Zen master
  • 93:46 - 93:49
    that when he -
    Because everyone keeps saying,
  • 93:50 - 93:52
    Buddha, Buddha, so much,
    Buddha this and Buddha that
  • 93:52 - 93:56
    that he got so sick and he said,
    'I have to go to the stream outside
  • 93:56 - 93:58
    and wash my mouth out,
    it's like saying a filthy word.
  • 93:58 - 94:01
    If you say the Buddha one more time.'
  • 94:01 - 94:04
    And he is trying to point out
    that tendency we have
  • 94:04 - 94:08
    to idolize, whether it is the word,
    whether it's a person,
  • 94:09 - 94:11
    whether it's a concept.
  • 94:13 - 94:17
    And so when we talk about the highest,
    most fulfilled awakened mind,
  • 94:18 - 94:21
    we can start repeating it and
    it loses all of its meaning.
  • 94:25 - 94:27
    And so when the Buddha says,
  • 94:28 - 94:32
    'What I call the highest,
    most fulfilled awakened mind,
  • 94:32 - 94:35
    that is not the highest,
    most fulfilled awakened mind.'
  • 94:35 - 94:40
    It means that it is not the word,
    highest, most fulfilled awakened mind,
  • 94:40 - 94:42
    it is not that phrase.
  • 94:43 - 94:46
    It is much more than that.
    It can only be realized.
  • 94:49 - 94:54
    That is why I just call it
    highest, most fulfilled awakened mind.
  • 94:54 - 94:58
    But you need to realize it yourself.
    You need to touch it by breaking through
  • 94:59 - 95:03
    and freeing yourself from these
    wrong perceptions.
  • 95:04 - 95:08
    So I invite you to continue your study
    of the Diamond Sutra.
  • 95:09 - 95:16
    And as you go out, and be back
    to your family, back to your friends,
  • 95:18 - 95:24
    you can really have a chance to sit
    and look deeply at them in that way.
  • 95:25 - 95:28
    You think, 'That is my mother,
    that is my father.
  • 95:28 - 95:31
    That is my son, that is my daughter,
    that is my husband.'
  • 95:32 - 95:37
    And because your ideas of husband, and
    father, and mother, and son and daughter
  • 95:38 - 95:41
    have become a view,
  • 95:42 - 95:44
    a perception,
  • 95:44 - 95:47
    maybe you don't really see them
    as they are,
  • 95:47 - 95:51
    as this wondrous manifestation
  • 95:52 - 95:58
    of beauty, of understanding,
    as well as of suffering,
  • 95:59 - 96:02
    of pain, of ignorance.
  • 96:08 - 96:11
    But with the help of this teaching,
  • 96:11 - 96:14
    you can sit and look at them,
    and really look at them.
  • 96:15 - 96:19
    Look them in the eye.
    You don't have to say anything.
  • 96:19 - 96:21
    You can smile.
  • 96:22 - 96:25
    That is a smile of a bodhisattva.
  • 96:26 - 96:30
    So I wish you well
    on your path of practice,
  • 96:31 - 96:35
    and thank you for being together
    on the bodhisattva path.
  • 96:40 - 96:41
    (Bell)
  • 96:45 - 96:52
    (Bell)
  • 97:06 - 97:12
    (Bell)
  • 97:28 - 97:34
    (Bell)
  • 97:56 - 97:59
    (Small bell)
Title:
2018 12 06 NH EN The Diamond Sutra & the practice of signlessness br Phap Luu
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
01:38:03

English subtitles

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