image-17.jpg Hello, friends.
We turn a new page in our book and come across a familiar story: a gem, hidden inside a poor man's robe, makes him both rich and poor at the same time. This new chapter explores this parable in depth, along with other themes, and includes some interesting comments and interpretations by Reeves. It may be slightly longer than some of the earlier chapters, but nothing too intimidating.
Reading Assignment: Chapter 11 – Great Treasure is Very Near
Please read at your leisure, and when you're ready to share, come back here and let us know your thoughts. Do you feel we're circling the same topic, or are we discovering new facets of the Dharma Flower Sutra? Was the rich friend wise in the way he tried to help his friend? Do you also feel the poor man was too dumb, as Reeves says, to realize he had a gem all along? Is there something in this chapter that speaks to your own practice and life?
Last Saturday we had our Zoom meeting, and it was, as always, a wonderful gathering. If you’d like to watch the recording, you can find it on the Study Page. There is also a handout there with examples of traditional early Buddhist texts that are useful for understanding descriptions of arhats and nirvana that existed even before the Lotus Sutra was composed.
Enjoy the reading—I look forward to hearing your reflections on this chapter.
with metta, and in gassho
sat lah
We turn a new page in our book and come across a familiar story: a gem, hidden inside a poor man's robe, makes him both rich and poor at the same time. This new chapter explores this parable in depth, along with other themes, and includes some interesting comments and interpretations by Reeves. It may be slightly longer than some of the earlier chapters, but nothing too intimidating.
Reading Assignment: Chapter 11 – Great Treasure is Very Near
Please read at your leisure, and when you're ready to share, come back here and let us know your thoughts. Do you feel we're circling the same topic, or are we discovering new facets of the Dharma Flower Sutra? Was the rich friend wise in the way he tried to help his friend? Do you also feel the poor man was too dumb, as Reeves says, to realize he had a gem all along? Is there something in this chapter that speaks to your own practice and life?
Last Saturday we had our Zoom meeting, and it was, as always, a wonderful gathering. If you’d like to watch the recording, you can find it on the Study Page. There is also a handout there with examples of traditional early Buddhist texts that are useful for understanding descriptions of arhats and nirvana that existed even before the Lotus Sutra was composed.
Enjoy the reading—I look forward to hearing your reflections on this chapter.
with metta, and in gassho
sat lah




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