4 Vows and the Heart Sutra

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  • pinoybuddhist
    Member
    • Jun 2010
    • 462

    4 Vows and the Heart Sutra

    I often start my morning zazen by chanting the Heart Sutra and end by reciting the Four Bodhisattva Vows. While saying the Four Vows this morning it occurred to me: who is it that says the vows? Who vows to liberate all beings, end all delusions, and all that jazz? And this was what came up (no doubt riffing on the Heart Sutra):

    "Beings are numberless - I vow to free them"
    No numberless beings to be freed, and no one to free them

    "Delusions are inexhaustible - I vow to end them"
    No inexhaustible delusions to end, and no one to end them

    "Dharma gates are boundless - I vow to enter them"
    "No boundless Dharma gates to be entered, and no one to enter them

    "The Buddha way is unsurpassable - I vow to realize it"
    No unsurpassable Buddha way, and no one to realize it
  • Taigu
    Blue Mountain White Clouds Hermitage Priest
    • Aug 2008
    • 2710

    #2
    Re: 4 Vows and the Heart Sutra

    Who are you?

    Without beliefs, ideas, stripped of everything...

    then, you may get a kind of answer.

    As to all sentient beings...they have never been apart from my-your skinbag from the very start.

    Making a vow is real. Real. REAL.



    respectfully


    gassho


    Taigu


    PS: before rewriting the four vows, have a nice tip to Syria ( my beloved country), North Korea, the next door neighbour house, and watch and see suffering. Its real. It hurts.
    What do you make of all this???????????????????????????????????????????
    And yes, there isn't anybody from the start.

    My choice... looking into the broken pieces of this world.

    Comment

    • Rimon
      Member
      • May 2010
      • 309

      #3
      Re: 4 Vows and the Heart Sutra

      Originally posted by Taigu

      Making a vow is real. Real. REAL.
      Sometimes, when I recite the Bodhisatva bows, it hurts inside, shaken by the thoughts of all the suffering in the world. A very few times, my heart is full of joy and I say to myself: "I can do it." Sometimes is "I don't know". Most of the times, it is just reciting.

      When is it more real? I don't know.

      Gassho

      Rimon
      Rimon Barcelona, Spain
      "Practice and the goal of practice are identical." [i:auj57aui]John Daido Loori[/i:auj57aui]

      Comment

      • Jundo
        Treeleaf Founder and Priest
        • Apr 2006
        • 40372

        #4
        Re: 4 Vows and the Heart Sutra

        This happened to be the subject of the last two talks during the monthly Zazenkai ...

        THE FOUR VOWS ...
        http://www.justin.tv/treeleafzen/b/307460454

        THE HEART SUTRA
        http://www.justin.tv/treeleafzen/b/304740652

        The rest of this month's Zazenkai ...
        viewtopic.php?f=11&t=4628

        As Taigu points out eloquently, there are no sentient being to save, no separate "you" to save them ... nor delusions nor Dharma gates nor a Buddha way ...

        ... so you had better strive to save those suffering beings, avoid greed anger and ignorance, learn and live by the Buddha's way.

        All At Once As One. So many Koans on just how to live so.

        Don't drown in Emptiness.

        Don't get caught in a mere intellectual understanding of Emptiness either.

        Gassho, Jundo
        ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

        Comment

        • AlanLa
          Member
          • Mar 2008
          • 1405

          #5
          Re: 4 Vows and the Heart Sutra

          I recite my Bodhisattva vows at the end of all my weekly zazen sessions and I realize something new about them (application, meaning, etc.) all the time, and then I move on from that real realization on to the rest of my real day. It all fits.
          AL (Jigen) in:
          Faith/Trust
          Courage/Love
          Awareness/Action!

          I sat today

          Comment

          • pinoybuddhist
            Member
            • Jun 2010
            • 462

            #6
            Re: 4 Vows and the Heart Sutra

            As to all sentient beings...they have never been apart from my-your skinbag from the very start.

            Making a vow is real. Real. REAL.
            Its real. It hurts.
            What do you make of all this???????????????????????????????????????????
            And yes, there isn't anybody from the start.

            As Taigu points out eloquently, there are no sentient being to save, no separate "you" to save them ... nor delusions nor Dharma gates nor a Buddha way ...

            ... so you had better strive to save those suffering beings, avoid greed anger and ignorance, learn and live by the Buddha's way.

            All At Once As One. So many Koans on just how to live so.

            Don't drown in Emptiness.

            Don't get caught in a mere intellectual understanding of Emptiness either.

            Gassho, Jundo
            Thank you Taigu and Jundo.

            Gassho _/|_

            Comment

            • Kyonin
              Treeleaf Priest / Engineer
              • Oct 2010
              • 6749

              #7
              Re: 4 Vows and the Heart Sutra

              That's exactly what happens to me.

              Every morning I recite the Heart Sutra. Sometimes I realize something new about it, like a safe falling on my head. Sometimes I just go through it and my mind can't connect.

              After zazen I say the Verse of Atonement and the Four Vows and there is always some new meaning and understanding.

              It's impressive how much meaning can one find on so few words.

              Originally posted by AlanLa
              I recite my Bodhisattva vows at the end of all my weekly zazen sessions and I realize something new about them (application, meaning, etc.) all the time, and then I move on from that real realization on to the rest of my real day. It all fits.
              Hondō Kyōnin
              奔道 協忍

              Comment

              • Jinyu
                Member
                • May 2009
                • 768

                #8
                Re: 4 Vows and the Heart Sutra

                Originally posted by Rimon
                Sometimes, when I recite the Bodhisatva bows, it hurts inside, shaken by the thoughts of all the suffering in the world.
                Thank you immensely to share this Rimon... it has a big meaning to me! So true, so true!

                deep deep gassho,
                Jinyu
                Jinyu aka Luis aka Silly guy from Brussels

                Comment

                • RichardH
                  Member
                  • Nov 2011
                  • 2800

                  #9
                  Re: 4 Vows and the Heart Sutra

                  Those vows also make me aware that everything awful out there, is in here. There is no destructive impulse, no violent or perverse element, out there that is not also in me, at least in potential. So there can be a sense of weight and responsibility, not for the actions of others, but for what we are made of in that way.

                  Comment

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