I vow not to kill.
By not killing life, the Buddha seed grows. Transmit the life of Buddha and do not kill.
I vow not to take what is not given.
The self and objects are such, two yet one. The gate of liberation stands open.
I vow not to misuse sexuality.
Let the three wheels of self, objects, and action be pure. With nothing to desire, one goes along together with the Buddhas.
I vow to refrain from false speech.
The
Dharma Wheel turns from the beginning. There is neither surplus nor
lack. The sweet dew saturates all and harvests the truth.
I vow not to sell the wine of delusion.
Originally pure, don't defile. This is the great awareness.
I vow not to slander.
In
the Buddha Dharma, go together, appreciate, realize, and actualize
together. Don't permit fault-finding. Don't permit haphazard talk. Do
not corrupt the way.
I vow not to praise self at the expense of others.
Buddhas
and Ancestors realize the vast sky and the great earth. When they
manifest the noble body, there is neither inside nor outside in
emptiness. When they manifest the Dharma body, there is not even a bit
of earth on the ground.
I vow not to be avaricious.
One
phrase, one verse--that is the ten thousand things and one hundred
grasses. One dharma, one realization--is all Buddhas and Ancestors.
Therefore, from the beginning, there has been no stinginess at all.
I vow not to harbor ill will.
Not negative, not positive, neither real nor unreal. There is an ocean of illuminated clouds and an ocean of ornamented clouds.
I vow not to abuse the three treasures.
To
expound the Dharma with this body is foremost. Virtue returns to the
ocean of reality. It is unfathomable--we just accept it with respect and
gratitude.
Berkeley Zen Center, Buddhist Texts
The Ethical Precepts of Zen Buddhism: Links, Bibliography, Resources, Quotes, Notes. By Mike Garofalo.
How to Live a Decent Life: Advice from Wise Persons
Ethics, Values, Character
Buddhism
The
Bodhisattva Warriors. The Origin, Inner Philosophy, History and
Symbolism of the Buddhist Martial Art within India and China. By Shifu
Nagaboshi Tomio (Terence Dukes). Boston, MA, Weiser Books, 1994.
Index, bibliography, extensive notes, 527 pages. ISBN: 0877287856.
The
Spiritual Legacy of the Shaolin Temple: Buddhism, Daoism, and the
Energetic Arts. By Andy James. Foreword by Dr. Jerry Alan Johnson.
Summerville, MA, Wisdom Publications, 2004. 179 pages. I SBN:
0861713524.
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