Thus
I have heard, at one time, the Buddha dwelt at Shravasti, in the Jeta Grove, in
the Garden of the Benefactor of Orphans and the Solitary, together with a gathering
of great Bhikshus, twelve hundred fifty in all, and with all of the Bodhisattvas,
thirty-eight thousand in all.
At that time, the World Honored One led the
great assembly on a walk toward the south. Suddenly they came upon a pile of bones
beside the road. The World Honored One turned to face them, placed his five limbs
on the ground, and bowed respectfully.
Ananda put his palms together and
asked the World Honored One, 'The Tathagatha is the Great Teacher of the Triple
Realm and the compassionate father of beings of the four kinds of births. He has
the respect and reverence of the entire assembly. What is the reason that he now
bows to a pile of dried bones?"
The Buddha told Ananda, "Although
all of you are my foremost disciples and have been members of the Sangha for a
long time, you still have not achieved far-reaching understanding. This pile of
bones could have belonged to my ancestors from former lives. They could have been
my parents in many past lives. That is the reason I now bow to them." The
Buddha continued speaking to Ananda. "These bones we are looking at can be
divided into two groups. One group is composed of the bones of men, which are
heavy and white in color. The other group is composed of the bones of women, which
are light and black in color."
Ananda said to the Buddha, "World
Honored One, when men are alive in the world they adorn their bodies with robes,
belts, shoes, hats and other fine attire, so that they clearly assume a male appearance.
When women are alive, they put on cosmetics, perfumes, powders, and elegant fragrances
to adorn their bodies, so that they clearly assume a female appearance. Yet, once
men and women die, all that is left are their bones. How does one tell them apart?
Please teach us how you are able to distinguish them."
The Buddha answered
Ananda, "If when men are in the world, they enter temples, listen to explanations
of Sutras and Vinaya texts, make obeisance to the Triple Jewel, and recite the
Buddha's names, then when they die their bones will be heavy and white in color.
Most women in the world have little wisdom and are saturated with emotion. They
give birth to and raise children, feeling that this is their duty. Each child
relies on its mother's milk for life and nourishment, and that milk is a transformation
of the mother's blood. Each child drinks one thousand two hundred gallons of its
mother's milk. Because of this drain on the mother's body whereby the child takes
milk for its nourishment, the mother becomes worn and haggard and so her bones
turn black in color and are light in weight."
When Ananda heard these
words, he felt a pain in his heart as if he had been stabbed and wept silently.
He said to the World Honored One, "How can one repay one's mother's kindness
and virtue?"
The Buddha told Ananda, "Listen well, and I will explain
it for you in detail. The fetus grows in its mother's womb for ten lunar months.
What bitterness she goes through while it dwells there! In the first month of
pregnancy, the life of the fetus is as precarious as a dewdrop on grass: how likely
that it will not last from morning to evening but will evaporate by mid-day!
"During the second lunar month, the embryo congeals like curds. In the third
month it is like coagulated blood. During the fourth month of pregnancy the fetus
begins to assume a slightly human form. During the fifth month in the womb, the
child's five limbs-two legs, two arms, and a head--start to take shape. In the
sixth lunar month of pregnancy, the child begins to develop the essences of the
six sense faculties: the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and mind. During the seventh
month, the three hundred sixty bones and joints are formed, and the eighty-four
thousand hair pores are also complete. In the eight lunar month of the pregnancy
the intellect and the nine apertures are formed. By the ninth month the fetus
has learned to assimilate the different nutrients of the foods it eats. For example,
it can assimilate the essence of peaches, pears, certain plant roots and the five
kinds of grains.
"Inside the mother's body, the solid internal organs,
used for storing, hang downward, while the hollow internal organs, used for processing,
spiral upward. These can be likened to three mountains which arise from the face
of the earth. We can call these mountains Mount Sumeru, Karma Mountain, and Blood
Mountain. These analogous mountains come together and form a single range in a
pattern of upward peaks and downward valleys. So, too, the coagulation of the
mother's blood from her internal organs forms a single substance, which becomes
the child's food.
During the tenth month of pregnancy, the body of the fetus
is completed and ready to be born. If the child is extremely filial, it will emerge
with palms joined together in respect and the birth will be peaceful and auspicious.
The mother will remain uninjured by the birth and will not suffer pain. However,
if the child is extremely rebellious in nature, to the extent that it is capable
of commiting the five rebellious acts, then it will injure its mother's womb,
rip apart its mother's heart and liver, or get entangled in its mother's bones.
The birth will feel like the slices of a thousand knives or like ten thousand
sharp swords stabbing her heart. Those are the agonies involved in the birth of
a defiant and rebellious child.
To explain more clearly, there are ten types
of kindness bestowed by the mother on the child:
The first is the kindness
of providing protection and care while the child is in the womb.
The second
is the kindness of bearing suffering during the birth.
The third is the kindness
of forgetting all the pain once the child has been born.
The fourth is the
kindness of eating the bitter herself and saving the sweet for the child.
The fifth is the kindness of moving the child to a dry place and lying in the
wet herself.
The sixth is the kindness of suckling the child at her breast
and nourishing and bringing up the child.
The seventh is the kindness of
washing away the unclean.
The eighth is the kindness of always thinking of
the child when it has travelled far.
The ninth is the kindness of deep care
and devotion.
The tenth is the kindness of ultimate pity and sympathy.
1. THE KINDNESS OF PROVIDING PROTECTION AND CARE WHILE THE CHILD IS IN THE WOMB
The causes and conditions from accumulated
kalpas grows heavy,
Until in this life the child ends up in
its mother's womb.
As the months
pass, the five vital
organs develop;
Within seven weeks the six sense
organs
start to grow.
The mother's body becomes as heavy as
a mountain;
The stillness and movements of the fetus
are like a kalpic wind disaster.
The mother's fine clothes no longer
hang properly,
And so her mirror
gathers dust.
2. THE KINDNESS OF BEARING SUFFERING DURING BIRTH
The
pregnancy lasts for ten lunar months
And culminates in difficult labor at
the
approach of the birth.
Meanwhile, each morning the mother is
seriously ill
And during every day is drowsy and sluggish.
Her fear
and agitation are difficult
to describe;
Grieving and tears fill her
breast.
She painfully tells her family
That she is only afraid that
death
will overtake her.
3. THE KINDNESS OF FORGEITING ALL THE PAIN
ONCE THE CHILD HAS BEEN BORN
On the day the compassionate mothers bears
the child,
Her five organs all open wide,
Leaving her totally exhausted
in body
and mind.
The blood flows as from a slaughtered
lamb;
Yet, upon hearing that the child is
healthy,
She is overcome with redoubling
joy,
But after the joy, the grief returns,
And the agony wrenches her
very insides,
4. THE KINDNESS OF EATING THE BITTER HERSELF AND SAVING THE
SWEET FOR THE CHILD
The kindness of both parents is profound
and deep,
Their care and devotion never cease.
Never resting, the mother saves
the
sweet for the child,
And without complaint she swallows the
bitter herself.
Her love is weighty and her emotion
difficult to bear;
Her kindness is deep and so is her
compassion.
Only wanting the
child to get its fill,
The compassionate mother doesn't speak
of her
own hunger.
5. THE KINDNESS OF MOVING THE CHILD TO A DRY PLACE AND LYING
IN THE WET HERSELF
The mother is willing to be wet
So that the child
can be dry.
With her two breasts she satisfies its
hunger and thirst;
Covering it with her sleeve, she protects
it from the wind and cold.
In kindness, her head rarely rests
on the pillow,
And yet she does
this happily,
So long as the child is comfortable,
The kind mother seeks
no solace for herself.
6. THE KINDNESS OF SUCKUNG THE CHILD AT HER BREAST
AND NOURISHING AND BRINGING UP THE CHILD
The kind mother is like the great
earth.
The stern father is like the encompassing
heaven
One covers
from above' the other supports
from below.
The kindness of parents is
such that
They know no hatred or anger toward
their offspring,
And are not displeased, even if the
child is born crippled.
After the
mother carries the child in
her womb and gives birth to it,
The parents
care for and protect it
together until the end of their days.
7. KINDNESS
OF WASHING AWAY THE UNCLEAN
Originally she had a pretty face and a
beautiful
body,
Her spirit was strong and vibrant.
Her eyebrows were like fresh
green
willows,
And her complexion would have put a
red rose to
shame.
But her kindness is so deep she will
forego a beautiful face.
Although washing away the filth injures
her constituion,
The kind
mother acts solely for the
sake of her sons and daughters
And willingly
allows her beauty to fade.
8. THE KINDNESS OF ALWAYS THINKING OF THE CHILD
WHEN IT HAS TRAVELLED FAR
The death of loved ones is difficult
to endure.
But separation is also painful.
When the child travels afar,
The
mother worries in her village.
From morning until night, her heart is
with her child,
And a thousand tears fall from her eyes.
Like the monkey
weeping silently in
love for her child,
Bit-by-bit her heart is broken.
9. THE KINDNESS OF DEEP CARE AND DEVOTION
How heavy is the parents'
kindness and
emotional concern!
Their kindness is deep and difficult
to
repay.
Willingly they undergo suffering on their
child's behalf.
If the child toils, the parents are
uncomfortable.
If they hear
that he has travelled afar,
They worry that at night he will have
to
lie in the cold.
Even a moment's pain suffered by
their sons or daughters
Will cause the parents sustained distress.
10. THE KINDNESS OF ULTIMATE
PITY AND SYMPATHY
The kindness of parents is profound and
important.
Their tender concern never ceases.
From the moment they awake each day,
their thoughts are with their children.
Whether the children are near
or far away,
the parents think of them often.
Even if a mother lives
for a hundred
years,
She will constantly worry about her
eighty-year-old
child!
Do you wish to know when such kindness
and love ends?
It
doesn't even begin to dissipate
until her life is over.
The Buddha told
Ananda, "When I contemplate living beings, I see that although they are born
as human beings, nonetheless, they are stupid and dull in their thoughts and actions.
They don't consider their parents' great kindness and virtue. They are disrespectful
and turn their backs on kindness and what is right. They lack humaneness and are
neither filial nor compliant.
For ten months while the mother is with child,
she feels discomfort each time she rises, as if she were lifting a heavy burden.
Like a chronic invalid, she is unable to keep her food and drink down. When the
ten months have passed and the time comes for the birth, she undergoes all kinds
of pain and suffering so that the child can be born. She is afraid of her own
mortality, like a pig or lamb waiting to be slaughtered. Then the blood flows
all over the ground. These are the sufferings she undergoes.
Once the child
is born, she saves what is sweet for him and swallows what is bitter herself.
She carries the child and nourishes it, washing away its filth. There is no toil
or difficulty that she does not willingly undertake for the sake of her child.
She endures both cold and heat and never even mentions what she has gone through.
She gives the dry place to her child and sleeps in the dump herself. For three
years she nourishes the baby with milk, which is transformed from the blood of
her own body.
Parents continually instruct and guide their children in the
ways of propriety and morality as the youngsters mature into adults. They arrange
marriages for them and provide them with property and wealth or deviseways to
get it for them. They take this responsibility and trouble upon themselves with
tremendous zeal and toil, never speaking about their care and kindness.
When
a son or daughter becomes ill, parents are worried and afraid to the point that
they may even grow ill themselves. They remain by the child's side providing constant
care, and only when the child gets well are the parents happy once again. In this
way, they care for and raise their children with the sustained hope that their
off-spring will soon grow to be mature adults.
How sad that all too often
the children are unfilial in return! In speaking with relatives whom they should
honor, the childre~n display no compliance. When they ought to be polite, they
have no manners. They glare at those whom they should venerate, and insult their
uncles and aunts. They scold their siblings and destroy any family feeling that
might have existed among them. Children like that have no respect or sense of
propriety.
Children may be well taught, but if they are unfilial, they will
not heed the instructions or obey the rules. Rarely will they rely upon the guidance
of their parents. They are contrary and rebellious when interacting with their
brothers. They come and go from home without ever reporting to their parents.
Their speech and actions are very arrogant and they act on impulse without consulting
others. Such children ignore the admonishments and punishments set down by their
parents and pay no regard to their uncles' warnings. Yet, at the same time, they
are immature and always need to be looked after and protected by their elders.
As such children grow up, they become more and more obstinate and uncontrollable.
They are entirely ungrateful and totally contrary. They are defiant and hateful,
rejecting both family and friends. They befriend evil people and under their influence
soon adopt the same kinds of bad habits. They come to take what is false to be
true.
Such children may be enticed by others to leave their families and
run away to live in other towns, thus denouncing their parents and rejecting their
native town. They may become salesmen or crvil servants who languish in comfort
and luxury. They may marry in haste and that new bond provides yet another obstruction
which prevents them from returning home for long periods of time.
Or, in
going to live in other towns, these children may be incautious and find themselves
plotted against or accused of doing evil. They may be unfairly locked up in prison.
Or they may meet with illness and become enmeshed in disasters and hardships,
subject to the terrible pain of poverty, starvation, and emaciation. Yet no one
there will care for them. Being scorned and disliked by others, they will be abandoned
on the street. In such circumstances, their lives may come to an end. No one bothers
to try to save them. Their bodies swell up, rot, decay, and are exposed to the
sun and blown away by the wind. The white bones entirely disintegrate and scatter
as these children come to their final rest in the dirt of some other town. These
children will never again have a happy reunion with their relatives and kin. Nor
will they ever know how their ageing parents mourn for and worry about them. The
parents may grow blind from weeping or become sick from extreme grief and despair.
Constantly dwelling on the memory of their children, they may pass away, but even
when they become ghosts, their souls still cling to this attachment and are unable
to let it go.
Others of these unfilial children may not aspire to learning,
but instead become interested in strange and bizarre doctrines. Such children
may be villainous, coarse, and stubborn, delighting in practices that are utterly
devoid of benefit. They may become involved in fights and thefts, setting themselves
at odds with the town by drinking and gambling. As if their own debauchery were
not enough, they drag their brothers into it as well, to the further distress
of their parents.
If such children do live at home, they leave early in the
morning and do not return until late at night. Never do they ask about the welfare
of their parents or make sure that they don't suffer from heat or cold. They do
not inquire after their parents' well being in the morning or the evening, nor
even on the first and fifteenth of the lunar month. In fact, it never occurs to
these unfilial children to ever ask whether their parents have slept comfortably
or rested peacefully. Such children are simply not concerned in the least about
their parents' well being. When the parents of such children grow old and their
appearance becomes more and more withered and emaciated, they are made to feel
ashamed to be seen in public and are subjected to abuse and oppression.
Such
unfilial children may end up with a father who is a widower or a mother who is
a widow. The solitary parents are left alone in empty houses, feeling like guests
in their own homes. They may endure cold and hunger, but no one takes heed of
their plight. They may weep incessantly from morning to night, sighing and lamenting.
It's only right that children should provide for ageing parents with food and
drink of delicious flavours, but irresponsible children are sure to overlook their
duties. If they ever do attempt to help their parents out in any way, they feel
embarrassed and are afraid people will laugh at them. Yet, such offspring may
lavish wealth and food on their own wives and children, disregarding the toil
and weariness involved in doing so. Other unfilial offspring may be so intimidated
by their wives that they go along with all of their wishes. But when appealed
to by their parents and elders, they ignore them and are totally unfazed by their
pleas.
It may be the case that daughters were quite filial to their parents
before their own marriages, but that they become progressively rebellious after
they marry. This situation may be so extreme that if their parents show even the
slightest signs of displeasure, the daughters become hateful and vengeful toward
them. Yet they bear their husband's scolding and beatings with sweet tempers,
even though their spouses are outsiders with other surnames and family ties. The
emotional bonds between such couples are deeply entangled, and yet those daughters
hold their parents at a distance. They may follow their husbands and move to other
towns, leaving their parents behind entirely. They do not long for them and simply
cut off all communication with them. When the parents continue to hear no word
fromtheir daughters, they feel incessant anxiety. They become so fraught with
sorrow that it is as if they were suspended upside down. Their every thought is
of seeing their children, just as one who is. thirsty longs for something to drink.
Their kind thoughts for their offspring never cease.
The virtue of one's
parents' kindness is boundless and limitless. If one has made the mistake of being
unfilial, how difficult it is to repay that kindness!"
At that time,
upon hearing the Buddha speak about the depth of one's parents' kindness, everyone
in the Great Assembly threw themselves on the ground and began beating their breasts
and striking themselves until all their hairpores flowed with blood. Some fell
unconscious to the ground, while others stamped their feet in grief. It was a
long time before they could control themselves. With loud voices they lamented,
"Such suffering! What suffering! How painful! How painful! We are all offenders.
We are criminals who have never awakened, like those who travel in a dark night.
We have just now understood our offenses and our very insides are torn to bits.
We only hope that the World Honored One will pity us and save us. Please tell
us how we can repay the deep kindness of our parents!"
At that time
the Tathagata used eight kinds of profoundly deep and pure sounds to speak to
the assembly. "All of you should know this. I will now explain for you the
various aspects of this matter.
"If there were a person who carries
his father on his left shoulder and his mother on his right shoulder until his
bones were ground to powder by their weight as they bore through to the marrow,
and if that person were to circumambulate Mount Sumem for a hundred thousand kalpas
until the blood that flowed out from his feet covered his ankles, that person
would still not have repayed the deep kindness of his parents.
"If there
were a person who, during the period of a kalpa fraught with famine and starvation,
sliced the flesh off his own body to feed his parents and did this as many times
as there are dust motes as he passed through hundreds of thousands of kalpas,
that person still would not have repayed the deep kindness of his parents.
"If there were a person who, for the sake of his parents, took a sharp knife
and cut out his eyes and made an offering of them to the Tathagatas, and continued
to do that for hundreds of thousands of kalpas, that person still would not have
repayed the deep kindness of his parents.
"If there were a person who,
for the sake of his father and mother, used a sharp knife to cut out his heart
and liver so that the blood flowed and covered the ground and if he continued
in this way to do this for hundreds of thousands of kalpas, never once complaining
about the pain, that person still would not have repayed the deep kindness of
his parents.
"If there were a person who, for the sake of his parents,
took a hundred thousand swords and stabbed his body with them all at once so that
they enteredone side and came out the other, and if he continued in this way to
do this for hundreds of thousands of kalpas, that person still would not have
repayed the deep kindness of his parents.
"If there were a person who,
for the sake of his parents, beat his bones down to the marrow and continued in
this way to do this for hundreds of thousands of kalpas, that person still would
not have repayed the deep kindness of his parents.
"If there were a
person who, for the sake of his parents, swallowed molten iron pellets and continued
in this way to do this for hundreds of thousands of kalpas, that person still
would not have repayed the deep kindness of his parents."
At that time,
upon hearing the Buddha speak about the kindness and virtue of parents, everyone
in the Great Assembly wept silent tears and felt searing pain in their hearts.
They reflected deeply, simultaneously brought forth shame and said to the Buddha,
" World Honored One, how can we repay the deep kindness of our parents?"
The Buddha replied, "Disciples of the Buddha, if you wish to repay your
parents' kindness, write out this Sutra on their behalf. Recite this Sutra on
their behalf. Repent of transgressions and offenses on their behalf. For the sake
of your parents, make offerings to the Triple Jewel. For the sake of your parents,
hold the precept of pure eating. For the sake of your parents, practice giving
and cultivate blessings. If you are able to do these things, you are being a filial
child. If you do not do these things, you are a person destined for the hells."
The Buddha told Ananda, "If a person is not filial, when his life ends
and his body decays, he will fall into the Spaceless, Avici Hell. This great hell
is eighty thousand yojanas in circumference and is surrounded on all four sides
by iron walls. Above, it is covered over by nets, and the ground is also made
of iron. A mass of fire bums fiercely, while thunder roars and bright bolts of
lightning set things afire. Molten brass and iron fluids are poured over the offenders'
bodies. Brass dogs and iron snakes constantly spew out fire and smoke which burns
the offenders and broils their flesh and fat to a pulp.
"Oh, such suffering!
Difficult to take, difficult to bear! There are poles, hooks, spears, and lances,
iron halberds and iron chains, iron hammers, and iron awls. Wheels of iron knives
rain down from the air. The offender is chopped, hacked, or stabbed, and undergoes
these cruel punishments for kalpas without respite.
Then they enter the remaining
hells, where their heads are capped with fiery basins, while iron wheels roll
over their bodies, passing both horizontally and vertically until their guts are
ripped open and their bones and flesh are squashed to a pulp. Within a single
day, they experience myriad births and myriad deaths. Such sufferings are a result
of committing the five rebellious acts and of being unfilial when one was alive."
At that time, upon hearing the Buddha speak about the virtue of parents'
kindness, everyone in the Great Assembly wept sorrowfully and addressed the Tathagata,
"On this day, how can we repay the deep kindness of our parents?"
The Buddha said, "Disciples of the Buddha, if you wish to repay their kindness,
then for the sake of your parents print this Sutra. This is truly repaying their
kindness. If one can print one copy, then one will get to see one Buddha. If one
can print ten copies, then one will get to see ten Buddhas. If one can print one
hundred copies, then one will get to see one hundred Buddhas. If one can print
one thousand copies, then one will get to see one thousand Buddhas. If one can
print ten thousand copies, then one will get to see ten thousand Buddhas. This
is the power derived when good people print Sutras. All Buddhas will forever protect
such people with their kindness and can immediately cause the parents of such
people to be reborn in the heavens, to enjoy all kinds of happiness, and to leave
behind the sufferings of the hells."
At that time, Ananda and the rest
of the Great Assembly--the asuras, garudas, kinnaras, mahoragas, people, non-people,
and others, as well as the gods, dragons, yakshas, gandarvas, wheel-turning sage
kings, and all the lesser kings--felt all the hairs on their bodies stand on end
when they heard what the Buddha had said. They wept grievously and were unable
to stop themselves. Each one of them made a vow saying, "All of us, from
now until the exhaustion of the bounds of the future, would rather that our bodies
be pulverized into small particles of dust for a hundred thousand kalpas, than
to ever go against the Thus Come One's sagely teachings. We would rather that
our tongues be plucked out, so that they would extend for a full yojana, and that
for a hundred thousand kalpas an iron plough would run over them; we would rather
have a hundred-thousand bladed wheel roll freely over our bodies, than ever go
against the Tathagata's sagely teachings. We would rather that our bodies be ensnared
in an iron net for a hundred thousand kalpas, than ever go against the Tathagata's
sagely teachings. We would rather that for a hundred thousand kalpas our bodies
would be chopped, hacked, mutilated, and chiselled into ten million pieces so
that our skin, flesh, joints, and bones would be completely disintegrated, than
ever go against the Tathagata's sagely teachings."
At that time, Ananda,
with a dignity and a sense of peace, rose from his seat and asked the Buddha,
"World Honored One, what name shall this Sutra have when we accord with it
and uphold it?"
The Buddha told Ananda, "This Sutra is called THE
SUTRA ABOUT THE DEEP KINDNESS OF PARENTS AND THE DIFFICULTY OF REPAYING IT. Use
this name when you accord with it and uphold it."
At that time, the
Great Assembly, the gods, humans, asuras, and the others, hearing what the Buddha
has said, were completely delighted. They believed it, received it, and offered
up their conduct in accord with it, and then bowed and withdrew.
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