View Single Post
Old 01-13-2011, 12:34 PM   #8
strmini

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
459
Senior Member
Default
Hello Friends!
I really appreciate all your views. This is one of my favorite disclosures of Lord Buddha. Each and every time I read it I get inspired and feel lot of faith on Lord Buddha. It is truly magnificent the way Lord Buddha has explained the matter using simple examples.
"Another way to look at it is to compare practice to a bottle of medicine a doctor leaves for his patient. On the bottle is written detailed instructions on how to take the medicine, but no matter how many hundred times the patient reads the directions, he is bound to die if that is all he does. He will gain no benefit from the medicine. And before he dies he may complain bitterly that the doctor wasn't any good, that the medicine didn't cure him! He will think that the doctor was a fake or that the medicine was worthless, yet he has only spent his time examining the bottle and reading the instructions. He hasn't followed the advice of the doctor and taken the medicine.

However, if the patient actually follows the doctor's advice and takes the medicine regularly as prescribed, he will recover. And if he is very ill, it will be necessary to take a lot of medicine, whereas if he is only mildly ill, only a little medicine will be needed to finally cure him. The fact that we must use a lot of medicine is a result of the severity of our illness. It's only natural and you can see it for yourself with careful consideration.

Doctors prescribe medicine to eliminate disease from the body. The teachings of the Buddha are prescribed to cure disease of the mind, to bring it back to its natural healthy state. So the Buddha can be considered to be a doctor who prescribes cures for the ills of the mind. He is, in fact, the greatest doctor in the world.

Mental ills are found in each one of us without exception. When you see these mental ills, does it not make sense to look to the Dhamma as support, as medicine to cure your ills? Traveling the path of the Buddha-Dhamma is not done with the body. You must travel with the mind to reach the benefits."


from 'Fragments of a Teaching', page 2

http://www.amaravati.org/abmnew/inde...rticle/368/P1/
Thank you very much for mentioning this. I have read the book of Ven Ajhan Cha’s ‘The tree in a forest’. All the stories and examples given there are incredibly amazing. Ven Ajhan Cha is a True Maha Sangha of our era.

Red Thread, Thank you very much for the kind appreciation..

Kaarine Alejandra ,Cloud, Srivijaya I agree with all your views. Metta to all.
Jayam
strmini is offline


 

All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:23 PM.
Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Design & Developed by Amodity.com
Copyright© Amodity