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...Do you know where it
will end? Or will you just keep on learning like this?
... Or is there an end to it?... That's okay but it's
the external study, not the internal study. For the
internal study you have to study these eyes, these ears,
this nose, this tongue, this body and this mind. This is
the real study. The study of books is just the external
study, it's really hard to get it finished.
When the eye sees form
what sort of things happens? When ear, nose, and tongue
experience sounds, smells and tastes, what takes place?
When the body and mind come into contact with touches
and mental states, what reactions take place? Are there
still greed, aversion and delusion there? Do we get lost
in forms, sounds, smells, tastes, textures and moods?
This is the internal study. It has a point of
completion.
If we study but don't
practice we won't get any results. It's like a person
who raises cows. In the morning he takes the cow out to
eat grass, in the evening he brings it back to its pen
-- but he never drinks the cow's milk. Study is alright,
but don't let it be like this. You should raise the cow
and drink it's milk too. You must study and practice as
well to get the best results.
Here, I'll explain it
further. It's like a person who raises chickens, but he
doesn't get the eggs. All he gets is the chicken dung!
This is what I tell people who raise chickens back home!
Watch out you don't become like that! This means we
study the scriptures but we don't know how to let go of
defilements, we don't know how to "push" greed, aversion
and delusion from our mind. Study without practice,
without this "giving up," brings no results. This is why
I compare it to someone who raises chickens but doesn't
collect the eggs, he just collects the dung. It's the
same thing.
Because of this, the
Buddha wanted us to study the scriptures, and then to
give up evil actions through body, speech and mind; to
develop goodness in our deeds, speech and thoughts. The
real worth of mankind will come to fruition through our
deeds, speech and thoughts. But if we only talk well,
without acting accordingly, it's not yet complete. Or if
we do good deeds but the mind is still not good, this is
still not complete. The Buddha taught to develop fine
deeds, fine speech and fine thoughts. This is the
treasure of mankind. The study and the practice must
both be good.
The Eightfold Path of
the Buddha, the path of practice, has eight factors.
These eight factors are nothing other than this very
body: two eyes, two ears, two nostrils, one tongue and
one body. This is the path. And the mind is the one who
follows the path. Therefore both the study and the
practice exist in our body, speech and mind.
Have you ever seen
scriptures which teach about anything other than the
body, the speech and the mind? The scriptures only teach
about this; nothing else. Defilements are born here. If
you know them they die right here. So you should
understand that the practice and the study both exist
right here. If we study just this much we can know
everything. It's like our speech: to speak one word of
Truth is better than a lifetime of wrong speech. Do you
understand? One who studies and doesn't practice is like
a ladle of soup pot. It's in the pot every day but it
doesn't know the flavor of the soup. If you don't
practice, even if you study till the day you die, you
won't know the taste of Freedom!
Copyright © 1991 The
Sangha, Wat Pah Nanachat
Copyright © 1999 Wat
Pah Nanachat
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