13. The Theory of
Buddha-Nature adequately explains the Ethical States of Man.
This theory of
Buddha-nature enables us to get an insight into the origin of morality. The
first awakening of Buddha-nature within man is the very beginning of morality,
and man's ethical progress is the gradually widening expression of that nature
in conduct. But for it morality is impossible for man. But for it not only
moral culture or discipline, but education and social improvement must be
futile. Again, the theory adequately explains the ethical facts that the
standard of morality undergoes change in different times and places, that good
and bad are so inseparably knit together, and that the bad at times become good
all on a sudden, and the good grow bad quite unexpectedly. First, it goes
without saying that the standard of morality is raised just in proportion as
Buddha-nature or real self extends and amplifies itself in different times and
places. Secondly, since good is Buddha-nature actualized to a large extent, and
bad is also Buddha-nature actualized to a small extent, the existence of the
former presupposes that of the latter, and the mess of duality can never be got
rid of. Thirdly, the fact that the bad become good under certain circumstances,
and the good also become bad often unexpectedly, can hardly be explained by the
dualistic theory, because if good nature be so arbitrarily turned into bad and
bad nature into good, the distinction of good and bad nature has no meaning
whatever. According to the theory of Buddha-nature, the fact that the good
become bad or the bad become good, does not imply in the least a change of
nature, but the widening or the narrowing of its actualization. So that no
matter how morally degenerated one may be, he can uplift himself to a high
ethical plane by the widening of his self, and at the same time no matter how
morally exalted one may be, he can descend to the level of the brute by the
narrowing of his self. To be an angel or to be a devil rests with one's degrees
of enlightenment and free choice. This is why such infinite varieties exist
both among the good and the bad. This is why the higher the peak of
enlightenment the people climb, the more widely the vista of moral
possibilities open before them.
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