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The Heart Sutra
"WAS COURSING IN THE DEEP PRAJNA PARAMITA"
This
line specifies the Dharma of the Bodhisattva Practice. "Coursing" and
"deep" relate to its quality. At one time, one thousand, two hundred
and fifty-five bhiksus attained ' the four fruits of the Arhat; they
practiced the Dharma of the Small Vehicle which leads to the end of
their birth and death allotment. What is the birth and death allotment?
It means every sentient being's body is merely a portion, or a part;
whether short, long or middle length, the life of sentient being must
end. One round of birth and death is referred to as allotment. Whoever
practices the Dharma of the Small Vehicle will have the conversion of
birth and death even after he/she has come to the end of the allotment
of birth and death. What is the conversion of birth and death?
Our
distorted thought pattern is the root of our failure to escape to
escape from the cycle of birth and death. One of the recognized
features of thought is to quiver and to move on, and the pattern and
its movement normally neither change nor become suspended as long as
there is consciousness. Every thought has its beginning, its duration
and its end. Due to feelings, perceptions, volitions and consciousness
every thought has its conversion into birth and death. The activity is
never suspended, and thus the conversion of birth and death takes
place, generated by feelings, perceptions, volitions and consciousness.
Every rise and fall of delusive thought marks the conversion of birth
and death. If our Dharma practice does not take us back to the truth,
we are not going to be able to end the conversion of birth and death
and that would hinder us from discerning the Buddha's point of view. To
practice Dharma correctly, one should endeavor to liberate one's
thought from delusion; the attainment and practice of truth are the
means to the attainment of Prajna. Without these, how can we say we are
coursing in the deep Prajnaparamita? To end the samsaric cycle, but not
the conversion of birth and death of thought is a wisdom that is
shallow. The Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara attained Truth, thereby
bringing the two kinds of birth and death to a complete halt. That is
the deep Prajna, the awe-inspiring wisdom: It is beyond discriminating
knowledge, has to be, since discrimination is one of the manifestations
of duality, or birth and death.
Paramita
is a Sanskrit term meaning virtue perfected to the level of
transcendence. In the context of Buddhist practice it means to traverse
the sea of Samsara, or the sea of birth and death, and reach Nirvana.
The words "coursing in the deep Prajnaparamita" attest to the
Bodhisattva's practice of all three kinds of wisdom, i.e., listening,
thinking and practice; thus he attained the radiant wisdom, or the
Ultimate. This paragraph offers description of correct Dharma practice
and its purpose is to provide guidance for the assembly, including
those who have attained partial understanding and insight.
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