1) You should know that these people have not merely cultivated the roots of virtue with one buddha, two buddhas, three, four, or five buddhas; they have cultivated all kinds of virtuous roots with hundreds of thousands, even countless numbers of buddhas. Upon hearing these passages, Subhuti, some will, in an instant, give rise to pure faith. The Tathagata fully knows and fully sees these beings as they attain such countless merits.
2) “Subhuti, what do you think? If a person were to fill a trichiliocosm with the seven jewels and give them away in charity, wouldn’t the merit attained by this person be great?”
Subhuti said, “Extremely great, World Honored One. Why? The nature of merit is empty; therefore the Tathagata says that this merit is great.”
The Buddha said: “But if a person comprehends and follows even a four-line verse of this sutra, and teaches it to others, this person’s merit would exceed that of the former example. Why? Subhuti, all buddhas and all of their teachings on unsurpassed complete enlightenment originate from this sutra. Subhuti, that which is called the Buddha Dharma is not the Buddha Dharma; therefore it is called the Buddha Dharma. ”
3) “Subhuti, now I tell you truthfully: If a good man or good woman
filled as many trichiliocosms as the grains of sand in all those Ganges
Rivers with the seven jewels, and gave them away in charity, wouldn’t
this merit be great?”
“Extremely great, World Honored
One.” The Buddha said to Subhuti: “If a good man or good woman is able
to comprehend and follow a four-line verse of this sutra and teach it to
others, their merit will be far greater.”
4) Furthermore,
Subhuti, wherever one teaches or recites so much as a four-line verse of
this sutra, that place should be venerated as a Buddha-shrine by
heavenly beings, human beings, and asuras in this world. How much more
so is the case where one can completely remember, comprehend, and follow
this sutra! Subhuti, you should know that such a person has achieved
the highest, rarest of accomplishments. Wherever this sutra is present,
it is as if the Buddha and the Buddha’s revered disciples were also
present.
5) Subhuti, if a
good man or good woman were to dedicate lifetimes as numerous as the
grains of sand in the Ganges River to charitable acts, and another
comprehended and followed even a four-line verse of this sutra and
taught it to others, the merits gained by the latter would far exceed
that of the former.
6) World Honored One, if someone who hears this sutra gives rise to pure
faith, and thus perceives the true nature of reality, we should know
that this person has achieved the most extraordinary virtue.
7) Subhuti, if in a
future time there are good men and women who are able to recite,
remember, comprehend, and follow this sutra, the Tathagata, with his
Buddha-wisdom, will clearly perceive and recognize each one of them as
they all achieve immeasurable and infinite virtues.
8) Subhuti, if a good man or good woman should renounce their life for
charity in the morning as many times as there are grains of sand in the
Ganges, and do likewise at noon and in the evening, continuing thus for
immeasurable hundreds of thousands of millions of kalpas; and if someone
else heard this teaching and gave rise to unwavering faith, the merit
of the latter would far exceed that of the former. How much more the
merit of those who transcribe, recite, remember, follow, and explain
this sutra to others!
9) In summary, Subhuti, this sutra carries inconceivable, immeasurable,
limitless virtue, and the Tathagata teaches it for the benefit of the
aspirants of the great vehicle, and the aspirants of the supreme
vehicle. The Tathagata will know and see those, who are able to recite,
remember, follow, and widely teach this sutra to others, as achieving
innumerable, immeasurable, limitless, and inconceivable virtues. They
carry on the work of the Tathagata in bringing beings to unsurpassed
complete enlightenment. Why? Subhuti, those who are content with
inferior teachings are attached to the views of a self, a person, a
sentient being, and a life span. Such people are not able to hear,
recite, remember, and explain this sutra to others. Subhuti, wherever
this sutra is present, all the heavenly and human beings and asuras in
all the worlds should come and make offerings. You should know that its
presence is equivalent to a pagoda that all should venerate and pay
homage to, by circumambulating or scattering flowers and incense around
its hearing grounds.
10) Furthermore, Subhuti, if there are good men or women who recite,
remember, comprehend, and follow this sutra, but are belittled by
others, it is because of their previous evil karma, which would cause
them to be reborn in the wretched destinies. But now, by enduring the
disparagement of others, this previous bad karma is eradicated, and they
will eventually attain unsurpassed complete enlightenment.
11) Subhuti, I remember that countless kalpas ago, before the time of
Dipankara Buddha, I have encountered 84,000 billion nayutas of buddhas,
made offerings to, and served all of them without fail. However, if
someone in the Dharma-ending age can recite, remember, comprehend, and
follow this sutra, this person’s virtue will be one hundred times, even a
hundred trillion times greater than mine when I made offerings to all
these buddhas. In fact, no such comparison either by calculation or
analogy is possible.
12) Subhuti, if a person were to accumulate the seven jewels into mounds
equivalent to all Mt. Sumerus in the worlds of a trichiliocosm and give
them away in charity, and another person recited, remembered, followed,
and taught this prajna paramita sutra or even a four-line verse of this
sutra to others, the merit of the former would not be a hundredth, or
even a billionth, of that of the latter. In fact, the merit of the
latter would be so great that no comparison, by calculation or by
analogy, could possibly be made.
13) Subhuti, if a person were to amass enough of the seven jewels to fill
countless worlds and give them away in charity, and if a good man or
good woman with the bodhisattva resolve takes as few as a four-line
verse of this sutra, recites, remembers, follows, and expounds it to
others, the latter’s merit would far exceed that of the former.
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