From the last words of Shakyamuni Buddha
by Rev. Mas Kodani - Los Angeles Senshin Buddhist Temple
“Make of yourself a light. Rely upon yourself: do
not depend upon anyone else. Make my teachings your light. Rely upon them: do
not depend upon any other teaching.
Consider your body: Think of its impurity. Knowing that both its pain and its
delights are alike causes of suffering, how can you indulge in its desires?
Consider your “self”; think of its transiency; how can you fall into delusion
about it and cherish pride and selfishness, knowing that they must all end in
inevitable suffering? Consider all substances; can you find among them any
enduring ‘self’? Are they not all aggregates that sooner or later will break
apart and be scattered? Do not be confused by the universality of suffering, but
follow my teaching, even after my death, and you will be rid of pain. Do this
and you will indeed be my disciples.”
“The point of the teachings is to control your own mind. Keep your mind from
greed, and you will keep your behavior right, your mind pure and your words
faithful. By always thinking about the transiency of your life, you will be able
to resist greed and anger, and will be able to avoid all evils.”
“If you find your mind tempted and so entangled in greed, you must suppress and
control the temptation; be the master of your own mind.”
“A man’s mind may make him a Buddha, or it may make him a beast. Misled by
error, one becomes a demon; enlightened, one becomes a Buddha. Therefore,
control your mind and do not let it deviate from the right path.”
“You should respect each other, follow my teaching and refrain from disputes;
you should not, like water and oil, repel each other, but should, like milk and
water, mingle together.
Study together, learn together, practice my teachings together. Do not waste
your mind and time in idleness and quarreling. Enjoy the blossoms of
Enlightenment in their season and harvest the fruit of the right path.”
“My disciples, my last moment has come, but do not forget that death is only the
end of the physical body. The body born from parents and was nourished by food;
just as inevitable are sickness and death.
But the true Buddha is not a human body: - it is Enlightenment. A human body
must die, but the Wisdom of Enlightenment will exist forever in the truth of the
Dharma, and in the practice of the Dharma. He who sees merely my body does not
truly see me.