Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - How did Friar Sand offend Guanyin Bodhisattva when he was named as an arhat after studying the scriptures?

How did Friar Sand offend Guanyin Bodhisattva when he was named as an arhat after studying the scriptures?

The first one was eating several generations of Tang Priest, which delayed the great cause of learning the scriptures. Anyone who has seen The Journey to the West knows that Friar Sand is a general who rolls a curtain to subdue demons. He practiced like a demon in the quicksand river. As a result, when the Tang Priests passed by, they were all eaten by him, and the heads they ate were made into necklaces. When the Monkey King came to Liushahe to protect Tang Priest, there were nine skeletons on his necklace, all of which were Tang Priest's previous lives. You say how much this guy has delayed learning the scriptures!

The second is that when Guanyin found him, he jumped at Guanyin directly and was stopped by Mubai. Guanyin asked him if he agreed, but he refused directly, thinking that this matter might not be able to delay his great cause of practice under such circumstances. After being protected by Guanyin, I am waiting for the Buddhist scriptures here. However, this knot is in Guanyin's heart, so when the Buddhist scriptures are successful, it's time to pay off the old scores, right? That's why he was named Lohan.

The third is to kill people without authorization. Monks are merciful, and you can't kill anything unless you have to, because it's against killing, and Guanyin doesn't allow it. In the process of learning the scriptures, all the monsters he killed were the men of Liu Er's macaque. Do you know who Liu Er's macaque is? People have backgrounds. Offending people with backgrounds will not lead to good results, will it? This is why Friar Sand is called Little Arhat.

Friar Sand, a conscientious man, could have been an emissary or a Buddha, but because he didn't realize the importance of human feelings, he couldn't achieve much by his own cultivation. Buddhism is like this, and so is reality, don't you think?