Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Take off the cassock and tell fortune _ fortune.

Take off the cassock and tell fortune _ fortune.

Did the Buddha tell his disciples to take off their robes?

Master Jing Bo: Did the Buddha say that he would make his disciples undress?

Q: According to Buddhist scriptures, the demon king Papman told the Buddha that in the last days of Buddhism, I wore your clothes and ruined your Buddhism. The Buddha wept silently. But now there is a version. The Buddha told Papman that I asked my disciples to take off their robes and meet people. I have done it all my life. Is there such a saying?

Master Jing Bo: We don't know about "taking off the cassock". Don't just make it up, but come up with evidence. As for wearing your clothes and eating your food, it is well-founded.

From this point of view, we should be alert that monks should take responsibility, not eat to death in this dress. I don't think misleading others is allowed. A temple that maximizes benefits is probably also very terrible. So we don't want to say more, because I think "teaching by example is more important than teaching by example". If we talk too much, people will think that we are exaggerating and exaggerating.

First of all, we should live a simple life, a lonely life, rather than a life of maximizing benefits, because this will bring trouble, which we have been vigilant about. This is the case now and will be the case in the future. Even though it may be better in the future, we will still put "spreading the law is a housework" in the first place. Why should we build such a big temple if we don't preach dharma? It's dangerous to collect money alone! Money is certainly not the happiest, unhappy in spirit and without faith. Isn't that nonsense?

Master profile: Master Jing Bo, born in 1963, abbot of Gokurakuji, Harbin. 1986 became a monk in Gokurakuji, Harbin. /kloc-0 was admitted to China Buddhist College in September, 1988, and/kloc-0 obtained a master's degree in Buddhism in September, 1995, and stayed as a teacher. On August 1 day, 2002, he returned to Kazakhstan and became the abbot of Gokurakuji in Harbin and the dean of Gokurakuji Buddhist College. In 2003, he left the faculty of China Buddhist College and returned to Gokurakuji, Harbin to teach Buddhism. He is currently a deputy to the National People's Congress, vice president of the Chinese Buddhist Association, president of the Heilongjiang Buddhist Association, and president of the Harbin Buddhist Association.