THE DHARMA DISCOURSES OF CARDINAL MASTER CHŎNGSAN(CHŎNGSAN CHONGSA PŎBŎ)
Part Two: Dharma Discourses
Chapter Thirteen: The Fortune of the Way
29
29. The Master said, “‘One’s mental capacity is vast’ means having no obstructions in one’s mind. If one’s mind has no partiality toward either hatred or love, no limitations of national boundaries, no attachment to favorable or adverse conditions, and is not entrapped by suffering or happiness, then it is said that ‘one’s mental capacity is vast.’” The Master continued, “The great dharma that will save the whole world should be one that is accessible from all directions and applicable in all directions, through simultaneously surmounting the physical barriers of geography and the invisible barriers of mentality.”
THE DHARMA DISCOURSES OF CARDINAL MASTER CHŎNGSAN(CHŎNGSAN CHONGSA PŎBŎ)
Part Two: Dharma Discourses
Chapter Thirteen: The Fortune of the Way
29
29. The Master said, “‘One’s mental capacity is vast’ means having no obstructions in one’s mind. If one’s mind has no partiality toward either hatred or love, no limitations of national boundaries, no attachment to favorable or adverse conditions, and is not entrapped by suffering or happiness, then it is said that ‘one’s mental capacity is vast.’” The Master continued, “The great dharma that will save the whole world should be one that is accessible from all directions and applicable in all directions, through simultaneously surmounting the physical barriers of geography and the invisible barriers of mentality.”
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