Staying or going is not important, but our thinking
is. So all of you, please work together, cooperate and live in harmony.
This should be the legacy you create here at Wat Pah Nanachat Bung
Wai, the International Forest Monastery of Bung Wai District. Don't
let it become Wat Pah Nanachat Woon Wai, the International
Forest Monastery of Confusion and Trouble2. Whoever comes to stay here should be helping create this legacy.
The way I see it, the lay people are providing robes material, almsfood,
the dwelling place, and medicines in appropriate measure. It's true
that they are simple country folk, but they support you out of their
faith as best they can. Don't get carried away with your ideas of
how you think they should be, such as, "Oh, I try to teach
these lay people, but they do make me upset. Today is the observance
day, and they came to take precepts. Then tomorrow they'll go casting
their fishing nets. They'll drink their whiskey. They do these things
right out there where anyone can see. Then the next observance day,
they'll come again. They'll take the precepts and listen to the Dharma
talk again, and then they'll go to put out their nets again, kill
animals again, and drink again."
You can get pretty upset thinking like this. You'll think that your
activities with the lay people don't bring any benefit at all. Today
they take the precepts, and tomorrow they go cast the fishing nets.
A monk without much wisdom might get discouraged and feel he's failed,
thinking his work bears no fruit. But it's not that his efforts have
no result; it's those lay people who get no result. Of course there
is some good result from making efforts at virtue. So when there is
such a situation and we start to suffer over it, what should we do?
We contemplate within ourselves to recognize that our good intentions
have brought some benefit and do have meaning. It's just that the
spiritual faculties of those people aren't developed. They aren't
strong yet. That's how it is for now, so we patiently continue to
advise them. If we just give up on such people, they are likely to
become worse than they are now. If we keep at it, they may come to
maturity one day and recognize their unskillful actions. Then they
will feel some remorse and start to be ashamed of doing such things.
Right now, they have the faith to support us with material offerings,
giving us our requisites for living. I've considered this: it's quite
a big deal. It's no small thing. Donating our food, our dwellings,
the medicines to treat our illnesses, is not a small thing. We are
practicing for the attainment of Nibbāna. If we don't have any
food to eat, that will be pretty difficult. How would we sit in meditation?
How would we be able to build this monastery?
We should recognize when people's spiritual faculties are not yet
mature. So what should we do? We are like someone selling medicine.
You've probably seen or heard them driving around with their loudspeakers
touting the different medicines they have for different maladies.
People who have bad headaches or poor digestion might come to buy3.
We can accept money from those who buy our medicine; we don't take
money from someone who doesn't buy anything. We can feel glad about
the people who do buy something. If others stay in their houses and
don't come out to buy, we shouldn't get angry with them for that.
We shouldn't criticize them.
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