16. Shakya Muni and the
Prodigal Son.
A great trouble with us is
that we do not believe in half the good that we are born with. We are just like
the only son of a well-to-do, as the author of
Saddharma-pundarika-sutra1 tells us, who, being forgetful of his rich
inheritance, leaves his home and leads a life of hand-to-mouth as a coolie. How
miserable it is to see one, having no faith in his noble endowment, burying the
precious gem of Buddha-nature into the foul rubbish of vices and crimes,
wasting his excellent genius in the exertion that is sure to disgrace his name,
falling a prey to bitter remorse and doubt, and casting himself away into the
jaw of perdition. Shakya Muni, full of fatherly love towards all beings, looked
with compassion on us, his prodigal son, and used every means to restore the
half-starved man to his home. It was for this that he left the palace and the
beloved wife and son, practised his self-mortification and prolonged
Meditation, attained to Enlightenment, and preached Dharma for forty-nine
years; in other words, all his strength and effort were focussed on that single
aim, which was to bring the prodigal son to his rich mansion of Buddha-nature.
He
taught not only by words,
but by his own actual example, that man has Buddha-nature, by the unfoldment of
which he can save himself from the miseries of life and death, and bring
himself to a higher realm than gods. When we are Enlightened, or when Universal
Spirit awakens within us, we open the inexhaustible store of virtues and
excellencies, and can freely make use of them at our will.
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