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What do the four sentences in Buddhist scriptures mean?
1, lies in leisure, cultivates its mind, and is as quiet as Xumishan.

Interpretation: If people want to achieve positive results and reach the great wisdom realm of the awakened one, they must choose a quiet and leisurely place, practice their own hearts, live with peace of mind above all laws, and be unmoved by their own actions, just like a magnificent mountain. Xumishan means the king of the mountains.

2. The root of all sentient beings is bland and blinded by interest.

Interpretation: All beings sink into the world, making Huigen dull and obsessed with the joy brought by desire, leading to blindness. This means that the world has been infected by many bad factors in the secular world and lost its real ability to distinguish. Instead, we regard some wrong pursuits as correct struggles.

3, the knife and staff are not added, the poison can not be harmed, if people curse, the mouth is blocked.

Interpretation: The advantage of practicing Buddhism is that soldiers are invulnerable and poisons are invulnerable. If the population is abusive, don't refute it. Because Buddhism is a way to persuade people to do good, it can influence all beings in a universal way and make people put down their butcher knives without hurting each other. Some people abuse, don't let this atmosphere, it's just because the practice of Buddhism has not spread to each other.

4, selling meat to live, dazzling woman, if this is the case, don't get close.

Interpretation: Don't be close to those who sell meat by killing and those who sell women by humble means. Buddhists pay attention to the equality of all beings. People and animals are creatures and should be equal. No one has the right to decide each other's life and death, so people who hurt their own lives are by no means good people. People who engage in female sex trade for a living are shameless and should stay away.

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Distribution history

This sutra originated very early and spread well. According to scholars' research, it was produced around the first century BC, but some scholars believe that it was produced in the second to third centuries BC from the linguistic point of view. It is a Mahayana classic that came out very early.

Its name is mentioned in Nirvana Sutra and Youposai Sutra. , and it is quoted in "Great Wisdom", and relatives in the world wrote especially Roland shed (discussion, personal biography, formula. There are two Chinese versions). It has been widely popular in ancient India and Nepal for a long time. So far, more than 40 Sanskrit manuscripts have been found in Kashmir, Nepal, China, Xinjiang and Tibet.