| Confucius once said, "When there
are three people walking, my teacher is bound to be among them.
I select their good points and follow them. I take their bad points
and change them in myself." From these words, we know that
Confucius was a devoted scholar who was one of a kind. He was
also
a great educator who was in a class by himself. He was also a great
statesman without equal. From these words, we also know that
Confucius
was humble and not careless. He never became conceited and arrogant.
Why do I say this? Because he said that if there were three people,
then he would have two teachers: one would be a teacher for him
to emulate, and the other would be a teacher he wouldn't want
to
emulate. This is to select the good and follow it: If someone has good points, I will learn from him. If he has
bad points, I will change them in myself and not imitate him. Those
who are good can be our models, and we can emulate them. Those
who
are not good can be an example of what we should avoid. So if we
can take this principle as our motto in being people, we will be
at ease wherever we are. The ancients had this kind of humble and
courteous virtue. Thus, it is not without reason that later generations
have honored them as sages.
Someone also said, "All people are my teachers." Everyone
is my teacher. "I am a teacher for all people." I am also
everyone's teacher. Everyone is my professor, and I am also everyone's
professor. We learn from each other and rub off on each other. "I
always teach myself." I constantly act as my own teacher. Every
day, we should briefly reflect on what we have done that day. "Were
the things that I did today appropriate? Were they reasonable? Did
I do anything unreasonable?" We should frequently examine ourselves.
Thus Zengzi said, "I daily examine myself on three points--
whether, in transacting business for others, I may have been not
faithful; whether, in intercourse with friends, I may have been
not sincere; whether I may have not mastered and practiced the instructions
of my teacher."
Zengzi said of himself that he was not a very intelligent person.
So the Classic of Filiality (Xiaojing) says, "Zhongni (Confucius)
was seated and Zengzi was attending upon him. The Master said, "The
ancient kings had the highest virtue and the essentials of the Way.
If these are used among the people, they will dwell in harmony and
no resentment will arise between the ruler and his subjects. Did
you know this?' Zengzi rose from his seat and said, ?eng is not
smart. How could he know this?'" He stood up and respectfully
said to his Teacher, Confucius, "I, Seng, am very dull-witted.
I'm not able to know about the highest virtue and the essentials
of the Way of the ancient kings." If the people can use this,
then they will be in harmony and there will be no enmity between
the government and the people. This is the great Dharma for governing
a nation, cultivating oneself, and regulating the family. Zengseng
said he was not intelligent enough to understand it. Then Confucius
said, "We received our body, hair, and skin from our parents
and dare not harm them. This is the beginning of filiality."
The Analects say, "A superior person attends to the foundation.
Once the foundation is established, the Way comes forth. Are not
filiality and fraternal respect the foundation of a person?"
A superior person studies the fundamental principles. He devotes
his attention to the fundamental principles. "Once the foundation
is established, the Way comes forth." When the foundation is
established, then the roots will be deep and strong, and the leaves
and branches will flourish. The coming forth of the Way is also
the coming forth of the root, the establishing of the foundation.
"Are not filiality and fraternal respect the foundation of
a person?" We must trace back to the source and know what we
should pay attention to in our human life. What are the roots that
people should seek? Filiality and fraternal respect. We should be
filial to our parents and respectful to our elders. This is the
most important human obligation. The most important matter is not
finishing our studies and making a lot of money. We must fulfill
our obligations of filiality and fraternal respect--this is our
top priority. If we are not filial to our parents, then we are said
to have forgotten our roots. People who forget their roots basically
don't understand what it means to be human. Therefore, our foremost
human obligation is to be filial to our parents.
In the West, in English there isn't a very obvious explanation
of what it means to be filial to one's parents. Being filial to
parents means repaying their kindness, the fundamental kindness
which ought to be repaid. Our bodies were given to us by our parents.
Therefore, we must protect our bodies, making sure that our thoughts
are wholesome, our bodies are healthy, our ideas are healthy, our
conduct is healthy, and we are healthy all-around. We cannot harm
our bodies. That means we cannot use our bodies, given by our parents,
to do things that break the law or go against the rules of etiquette.
We have to follow the rules, do things in the proper way, and be
true and honest people.
What is the human foundation? It is humaneness, righteousness,
the Way, virtue, loyalty, and filiality. From the time of our birth,
the concept of filial piety should be instilled in each of us and
we should pay attention to it. If you can be filial, Lord God will
be pleased. If you can be filial, the Bodhisattvas will be pleased.
If you can be filial, the Buddhas will be pleased. If you can be
filial, your parents won't get mad at you for sure. If you can be
filial, you certainly won't compete for advantages against your
brothers and sisters. Filial piety is the spirit of heaven and earth
and the human foundation.
We should be loyal to our country. To be loyal to the country,
we have to be public-spirited and unselfish, perfectly fair and
just. We should cherish and protect our own country and not think
about invading other countries in thought after thought. If we only
protect our own country, then we are being loyal. If we invade other
countries, then we are not being loyal. Why is this? If you invade
another country, you have to use the lives and wealth of your own
country to fight, make war, and kill others. There is a saying,
"If war is waged over a piece of land, the slaughtered will
fill the wilds. If war is waged over a city, the slaughtered will
fill the city." If you fight over land, the ground will be
covered with corpses. If you attack a city and massacre the people
inside it, the city will be filled with the dead. This is known
as "using the country's resources to devour people's flesh."
It's the same as eating people! "Death is insufficient punishment
for this crime." Ah! This is a capital crime. If you commit
this capital crime, you are not being loyal to your own country,
and you are not being wise in your dealings with other countries.
We should always maintain a kind and compassionate attitude and
cherish all people. We ought to be benevolent towards everyone.
We should take stock of what we do. We should do fewer things to
benefit ourselves and not do anything that harms others. We have
to develop and expand the qualities of humaneness, righteousness,
the Way, virtue, loyalty, and filiality--these are the basic requirements
for being a person. We should establish this human foundation. Once
we do that, we will be healthy all our lives. We'll be healthy in
body and happy in spirit. It won't be the case that we're worried
and afflicted to the point that our hair turns white, our eyes grow
blurry, and our ears go deaf. It won't be that even when it's all
over, we still don't wake up--we're still as puzzled as ever, having
spent our entire lives in muddled confusion. |