
mountain wrote:Gabe,
Perhaps you have a Theravada practice and a Mahayana heart. Thats wonderful to have such ideas. I am a devotee of Kuan Yin. At the end of each meditation session I recite the six sylable mantra and dedicate the merit to all sentient beings.
John
gabrielbranbury wrote:Im wondering If any Theravada practitioners find anything about this "prayer" that you think is out of line with the Pali Suttas.
gabrielbranbury wrote:"May the virtue in my acting thus go towards the alleviation of the suffering of all beings. My personality throughout my existences, my possessions, and the virtue of my actions of body speech and mind; may I give them up without regard to myself for the benefit of all beings."
gabrielbranbury wrote:"Just as the earth and other elements are functional in many ways to the infinite number of beings inhabiting limitless space and time, so may I become that which pacifies all beings situated throughout space and time so long as all have not attained to peace."
Peter wrote:Nothing incompatable here. Just as long as you include yourself in "all beings". The suttas teach that trying to benefit others at the expense of oneself is ultimately untenable.gabrielbranbury wrote:"Just as the earth and other elements are functional in many ways to the infinite number of beings inhabiting limitless space and time, so may I become that which pacifies all beings situated throughout space and time so long as all have not attained to peace."
This bit seems out of line with the suttas. Even the Buddha Gotama himself did not do this. He certainly didn't exhort his followers to do this.
Outside the walls they stand,
& at crossroads.
At door posts they stand,
returning to their old homes.
But when a meal with plentiful food & drink is served,
no one remembers them:
Such is the kamma of living beings.
Thus those who feel sympathy for their dead relatives
give timely donations of proper food & drink
— exquisite, clean —
[thinking:] "May this be for our relatives.
May our relatives be happy!"
And those who have gathered there,
the assembled shades of the relatives,
with appreciation give their blessing
for the plentiful food & drink:
"May our relatives live long
because of whom we have gained [this gift].
We have been honored,
and the donors are not without reward!"
For there [in their realm] there's
no farming,
no herding of cattle,
no commerce,
no trading with money.
They live on what is given here,
hungry shades
whose time here is done.
As water raining on a hill
flows down to the valley,
even so does what is given here
benefit the dead.
As rivers full of water
fill the ocean full,
even so does what is given here
benefit the dead.
"He gave to me, she acted on my behalf,
they were my relatives, companions, friends":
Offerings should be given for the dead
when one reflects thus
on things done in the past.
For no weeping,
no sorrowing
no other lamentation
benefits the dead
whose relatives persist in that way.
But when this offering is given, well-placed in the Sangha,
it works for their long-term benefit
and they profit immediately.
In this way the proper duty to relatives has been shown,
great honor has been done to the dead,
and monks have been given strength:
The merit you've acquired
isn't small.
Didnt he say somewhere "One who sees the Dhamma, sees me. One who sees me, sees the Dhamma."?
tiltbillings wrote:Didnt he say somewhere "One who sees the Dhamma, sees me. One who sees me, sees the Dhamma."?
One who sees the Dhamma sees me, one who sees the me sees the Dhamma. SN iii 120/ 22.87.
Peter wrote:
Nothing incompatable here. Just as long as you include yourself in "all beings". The suttas teach that trying to benefit others at the expense of oneself is ultimately untenable.Just as long as you include yourself in "all beings".
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