The Sutra of Causes and Effects of Actions
Shakyamuni Buddha
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The Sutra of the Causes and Effects of Actions (in
Sogdian). Edited by D.N. MacKenzie. (Taken from the
Oxford University Press edition). One
Chapter
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Namo Buddha, namo Dharma, namo Sangha! Thus have I heard:
Once
the Buddha was at Sravasti town, in the garden of Jeta, with
many monks (sramana) and countless bodhisattvas and gods (devas),
and they were with countless other worlds in company. The
Chief Sovereign of the World (Lokajyestha) was expounding
the Law and the assembly was listening with pure minds.
Thereupon Ananda, on account of these human beings, addressed
the Buddha thus:
Chief of the World, now I see that each creature is
born alike among people. There are handsome and ugly, strong
and weak, rich and poor, happy and sad, noble and base, and
their voices are not alike and their words diverse. There
is the person who at one hundred years does not die and there
is the one who dies at thirty; there is the one, not yet of
full age, dies in the womb. There is the person who is handsome
but poor, and there is the base and ugly, but who is rich;
then there is the noble and strong without dignity and without
rank, and there is the weak with dignity and rank, but unhappy.
There is the person whose life is long and who is happy, and
there is the one whose life is short. Then there is the person
who does good and gets into trouble and the one who does evil
and gains success. There is the person with white lips and
squinting eyes and there is the black person with attractive
eyes. There is the person who has many sons and daughters
and there is the one who is alone and solitary, childless
and orphaned. There is the person who goes out, wandering
and straying and numbed with cold, and there is the person
who thirsts and hungers, and the one who stays at home and
eats and puts on clothes at will. There is the person who
in their youth is poor and needy and in their old age is rich.
There is the one who is true and just, and without fault or
sin suffers imprisonment and is confined in prison. There
is the parent who is compassionate towards the child and the
child who is respectful of its parent, and there are such
children who always fight and quarrel. There are those who
make their life and sustenance from everything without stint;
and there is the one who has no house of their own and always
stays in anothers house. There is the person who dwells
in desert country like a wild beast; there is the person who
is always settled, with joy, and there is the one who endures
servitude, from evil; there is one who is intelligent and
clever, and one who is stupid and ignorant. There is the person
who makes efforts and then gains, and there is the one who
does not seek and the thing comes itself. There is the rich
person, but greedy and mean, there is the poor person who
is generous; there is the one who speaks gentle and fine words
and there is the one who speaks words as if they were pricking
with thorns. There is the person dear to all, and with whom
all have dealings, and there is the one who is hateful to
all, so that they avoid them. There is the person who is compassionate
towards all living beings, and there is the person who likes
killing. There are those who seek and find and rejoice; and
there is the one whom people chase out. There are the mothers-in-law
and daughters-in-law who hate one another, and brothers
wives dear to each other. There is the person who likes to
hear the word of the Law and there is the person who hears
the sutra and sleep comes upon them. There is the one who
understands neither law nor rule, and there is the one who
has love for the doctrine; and there are also those like both
animals and other beings of different forms. Now, O
Lord, expound to us the causes and the effects so that this
great gathering may hear with pure minds and may go sincerely
towards good actions.
Then the Buddha spoke to Ananda thus, This question
that you are asking--it is all on account of a previous existence,
in which every ones mind was not alike and equal. Therefore,
in consequence, the retribution is of a thousand and a myriad
separate and different minds. Thus the person who in this
world is handsome comes from a patient mind, and the ugly
comes from amid anger; the needy come from meanness. The height
and noble comes from prayer and service, and the lowly and
base comes from pride. The great and tall person comes from
honor and respect and the short-legged person comes on account
of contempt. The person who hinders the bright splendor of
the Buddha is born black and thin; and the one who tastes
the food of the fast is born deprived of food. The person
who is too sparing of fire and light is born infirm; the one
in whose eyes fault always appears is born night-blind. The
person who slanders the Law is born dumb; and the person who
does not want to hear the Law is born deaf. The one who likes
to gnaw bones is born gap-toothed; and the one who makes perfume
of the Buddha a foul perfume is born with obstructed nostrils. The
person who angles fish is born hare-lipped. The person who
touches the image of the Buddha with his garment is born red.
The one who plucks pigs bristles is born with greenish
hair; the one who pierces the ears of living beings is born
with pierced ears. The person who puts the image of the Buddha
in that porch where there is smoke is born black; the one
who sees their teacher and does not rise is born paralyzed.
The one who goes out of the house of Buddha and turns his
back to the image of the Buddha is born hunch-backed. The
one who sees the Buddha and does not pay homage but merely
taps his forehead from afar has a dent in his forehead; the
person who sees his master or parents and lowers and turns
away his head is born with a short neck. Then the person who
has heart pains, it is because he pricks living beings. The
person who has no eyebrows, it is because he harms the three
jewels and takes anothers wealth unjustly. The person
who in winter gives cold food, is born ill with asthma; the
person who kills the babies of flying birds is childless and
the one who nourishes living beings has numerous children.
The person who is compassionate is born long-lived, and the
one who kills living beings is born short-lived. The one who
gives gifts is born rich. The one who gives a gift of horse
and carriage to the three jewels has many horses and carriages.
Then the person who reads and asks about the sutra is born
intelligent; but the stupid person comes from an animal existence.
The person who cannot stay in his place comes from among the
apes; the one who binds the hands and feet of living beings
is born paralyzed in hand and foot. The person who is of evil
passions comes from snakes and scorpions; the one who keeps
the precepts (sila) is complete in the six kinds of organ,
but the person who breaks the precepts is incomplete in the
six kinds of organ. The unclean person comes from the existence
of pigs; the person who likes song and dance comes from among
actors. The one who is greedy comes from dogs; the one who
eats alone, their neck is goiterous. The one who castrates
living beings has incomplete pudenda; the one who on one side
abuses his superior has a short tongue. The one who seduces
the spouse of another, after dying falls among the geese,
and a person who commits incest will fall into the existence
of sparrows.
One who is sparing with the sutra and knowledge and does
not expound it, after dying is born as an insect in the earth
or wood. The person who likes falconry and archery, after
dying is born in the desert of the north; one who likes to
hunt, after dying is born as a jackal or wolf. The person
who likes hairpins and flowers is born in the existence of
a hoopoe; one who likes long garments is born a long-tailed
insect. One who eats lying down is born in the existence of
a pig; one who likes colored clothes is born as a mottled
bird. One who imitates the voice of a person in ridicule is
born as a parrot; one who likes slandering is born a venomous
snake. One who torments persons unjustly is born a pond-water
insect; one who always likes bearing evil rumors is born an
owl. One who likes to utter evil portents is born in the existence
of a fox; one who frightens people so that they are distressed
is born as a deer or gazelle. One who enters the vihara wearing
clogs is born an animal with whole hooves; and one who likes
to break wind is born a stinking insect. One who gives a person
measured food is born a woodpecker; one who steals the water
of the ordained is born a fish or a turtle. One who soils
the earth of the ordained is born an insect in excrement;
one who steals ordained persons property is born as
a mule or donkey. The person who by force demands something
on loan from an ordained person is born a pigeon. One who
abuses the ordained is born an insect in the neck of an ox;
one who eats the vegetables of the community of ordained persons
is born an earthworm; whoever consumes the property of ordained
persons is born a long-lived insect, which itself
goes into the fire. One who enters the vihara with bone hair-pins
stuck on his head is born as a long-beaked bird. One who at
home smears white on his face and adorns it, and enters the
vihara is born a red-beaked crow. One who enters the vihara
with colored clothes is born a yellow bird; if a husband with
his wife lie the night in the vihara, he is born a pigeon.
The person who sits upon the stupa of the vihara is born a
camel. One who enters the chamber of the Buddha with boots
or shoes is born a frog. One who in the place where the Law
is uttered, has done another thing is born as a singing bird.
He who defiles pure nuns will fall into the iron hell where
a myriad wheels with knives will descend on his body and cut
it all up.
Thereupon Ananda addressed the Buddha thus: As the
Buddha has explained, one who may be at fault in anything
concerning ordained persons, it is very serious. If it be
so, how then will the donor (danapati) enter the vihara for
worship and for reverence and prayer? The Buddha said
to Ananda, The person who enters the monastery (samaharama),
may have a mind of two kinds: one with good thoughts, the
other with evil thoughts. Now the person who enters with good
thoughts is such that, if that person sees the Buddha, he
pays homage; if he sees an ordained person, he pays respect,
asks for an explanation of the sutra and precepts, begs forgiveness,
does not spare his wealth and strives for the three jewels;
he does not spare himself or his life and supports the great
Law. When such a person walks one step, paradise comes to
him, reaching him itself, and he has the same retribution
as Jodiga (Jyotiska) and is called an altogether eminent person.
But the person with evil thoughts is such that when he enters
the vihara, he will beg something from the sramanas, seek
out the sins of the ordained and cause them torment, eat the
food of the sramanas and have no shame of them. When such
a person dies, he falls into the hell of heated iron lumps,
where there is cauldron and furnace, the mountain of knives
and trees of swords, and there is no place anywhere which
he will not reach; such a person is an entirely inferior one.
The Buddha said to Ananda, Later such a time will come--tell
the disciples that they should take good heed of the Three
Jewels and not be at fault and strive in good deeds and not
make a retiring mind, for those who believe the words of the
Buddha--when Matreiya Buddha shall go out into the world--will
at once find salvation, have no doubt of it.
The Buddha said, Those who do violence to people and
confiscate their clothes fall into the hell of glaciers and
are reborn among silk-worms, which are continually boiled
and skinned. After death, the person who does not wish to
light a lamp for the Buddha image and the sutra falls into
the dark black hell in the middle of the mountain of the iron
enclosure (Cakravala). One who kills and cuts up living beings
falls into the hell of the mountain of knives and the trees
of swords. The person who is the hunter of game and both shoots
with the bow and trains a falcon and dog, falls into the hell
of the iron tree. (It is a great sin to be a hunter.) One
who has illicit desires falls into the hell of brazen columns,
and falls into the hell of iron beds. He who has many wives
falls into the hell of iron millstones; she who has many husbands
falls into the hell of ferocious snakes. One who cooks chickens
falls into the hell of burning ash. One who with boiling water
skins living beings falls into the hell of boiling cauldrons.
One who castrates living beings falls into the hell of stone
spikes. One who is a drinker of beer falls into the hell of
brass. One who is an eater of meat falls into the hell of
excrement. One who eats raw fish falls into the hell of the
forest of knives and the tree of swords. If the stepmother
slanders the son of the first mother she falls into the hell
of the fire-chariot. One who is deceitful and brings trouble
and turmoil falls into the hell of the iron plowshare. One
who is abusive falls into the hell of tongue pulling out.
One who is a liar falls into the hell of iron nails. One who
slaughters animals and sacrifices them to a god, falls into
the hell of iron pestles. She who is a sorceress and speaks
demonic words and makes fools of other people and takes their
property, falls into the hell of the mountain of flesh. The
sorceress who shuts her eyes and with lies says, I shall
go up so as to summon the souls, falls into the hell
of cutting through the waste. He who is a sorcerer so as to
teach other people to kill and to slaughter animals to ask
favors of the great god, of the spirit of the five roads,
of the local god and of the queens, and all those
who are deceivers and make fools of people, after dying they
fall into the hell of cutting with axes, where the demons
of hell begin to chop them up and iron-beaked birds peck out
their eyes. One who is a soothsayer and also a magician, who
examines good and bad fortune for people and does the fifth
star and other actions, saying So that I may remove
evil portent, and makes fools of ignorant people and
takes much of their property, and speaks falsely of good and
evil and causes trouble, after dying falls into the iron hell,
in nets; many birds gather and eat his flesh down to the bones
and marrow and this person endlessly suffers an evil punishment.
He who is a physician and cannot make people better, and by
fraud and lies takes the property of others, falls into the
hell of burning iron, where the fire is lit on all his body.
The person who breaks and damages the stupa of the vihara
and is opposed to the ordained and is not perfect with mother
and father, after dying both falls into the worst hell (avici)
and reaches everywhere in the eight kalpas, and thereafter
goes out; if that person then meets with a good counselor
(kalyanamitra), he will produce a thought of a bodhisattva,
but if one does not meet the one, then accordingly he falls
back into hell.
The devatideva Buddha spoke thus, The person who is
big of body, stinking and angry , who is freed from anger
only with difficulty, comes from the existence of a camel.
One who likes to walk and eats much and does not no satiety
comes from the existence of a horse. One who walks in both
cold and hot and has no pity comes from the existence of an
ox. The person whose voice is high and who knows no shame
and things much and does not know right from wrong comes from
the existence of a donkey. The person who eats meat and is
fearless comes from the existence of a lion. The person whose
body is long and eyes round, who prefers to wander in wild
country, and hates his spouse and children, comes from the
existence of a tiger. The person who has long hair on his
body and small eyes and does not like to stay in one place
comes from the existence of a flying bird. The person with
evil passions and without love, who likes to kill small animals,
comes from the existence of a fox. The person who is brave
and valiant, with few desires, and no love of their spouse
and children, comes from the existence of a wolf. The
one who does not like ornate clothes, who watches thieves,
has little sleep and much anger, comes from the existence
of a dog. The person who likes looking and speech, who likes
sensuality, who does not fix their intentions, and who becomes
disturbed at beauty, comes from the existence of a sparrow.
The person who loves the company of other people and who speaks
much comes from the existence of a mynah bird. The person
who has red eyes and short teeth, spits when speaking and
wraps his body when lying down to sleep, comes from the existence
of a snake. The person who likes to be alone and is greedy
for food and whose sleep at night is short comes from the
existence of a wild cat. The person who breaks walls and commits
theft, who is greedy for riches and shows rancor, and has
neither close nor distant relatives, comes from the existence
of a mouse.
Then the devatideva Buddha spoke thus, The person who
breaks and damages the stupa of the vihara, and conceals and
spends the wealth of the Three Jewels, falls into the avici
hell. The person who praises himself much and takes himself
to be better than (or, raises himself above) everything, after
dying arrives at the three evil ways. When the person is freed
from that, accordingly acquires the existence of an animal,
or a slave-woman, or a slave, and always goes about covered
with heavy loads, being a porter for all people; this person
always go about erect, but loses the condition of a human
being. But, although such an evil action is done, if the person
then listens to the sutra, his body will be freed from evil
reproach and from such a sin, and he attains good praise.
The one who breaks and damages the stupa of the vihara, and
conceals and spends the wealth of the three jewels, falls
into the avici hell. When freed from the punishment of hell,
the person acquires the existence of an animal and becomes
both pigeon and sparrow and goose and duck and parrot and
green sparrow and fish and turtle and monkey and
gazelle and deer. Likewise, when reborn human, he becomes
a eunuch or a female body or bisexual or sexless or a prostitute.
The person who is irascible and of venomous nature acquires
the existence of a snake or lion or tiger or wolf or bear
or wild car or falcon or hawk; and then when later is born
human, becomes a pig- or chicken-fancier or a butcher or hunter
or trapper or prison warden. One who is stupid and does not
understand the rule and the Law and does not ask or inquire
or go (to learn) acquires the existence of an elephant or
ox or sheep or water buffalo or louse or flea or mosquito
or gadfly or even an ant; and later, when born human becomes
both blind and deaf and mute and hunch-backed and crippled
and incomplete in all limbs and cannot receive the Law. The
person who is proud and contemptuous is born an insect in
dung and becomes both horse and donkey and camel and dog,
and when later is born human, becomes a slave-woman or a slave,
or poor, a beggar, despised by all. The person who is a judge
and greedy and seized the property of others, after dying
falls into the hell of the mountain of flesh, and for a hundred
years myriad men cut from his flesh and eat it. The person
who keeps other persons standing before them excessively,
after dying acquires the existence of an elephant, which is
so stiff that it cannot lie down. The person who breaks the
fast by eating food at night, when he dies acquires the existence
of a hungry ghost (preta) and for a hundred myriad years does
not know food; and when walking, fire issues from every joint.
The person who prefers to keep people naked, after dying acquires
the existence of the cold animals. One who eats the remains
of the fast of people or takes them home, after dying falls
into the hell of the earth of hot iron, and when later acquires
the existence of a person, has the illness of an obstructed
throat and is short-lived. The person who pays homage to the
Buddha and does not bring his head to the ground, after dying
falls into the hell of hanging head down, and later when he
acquires the existence of a human all make a fool of him.
One who pays homage to the Buddha and does not join his hands
falls into the land of the border countries and has much trouble
and misery, and no success at all. One who hears the sound
of the bell and does not rise and make namo Buddha
acquires the existence of a snake, which is long of body,
and little insects constantly eat it and nibble it. One who
pays homage to the Buddha with hands crossed falls into the
hell of tying arms behind the back, and when he acquires the
existence of a human meets, unjustly, evil misfortune. But
the person who joins hands properly, and brings the five members
of the body to the ground, and with a pure mind pays homage
to the Buddha, is born always a great chief and noble, who
receives much happiness. The person who is irascible and irritable
about food comes from the existence of madness. When a man
looks unlawfully at the wife of another his eye will be squinting.
The person, who because of his spouse abuses his mother and
father, falls into the hell of cutting out tongues. When someone
who adds water to liquor and sells it to others dies, he is
born an insect in water, and when later born human, is dropsical,
with impeded breath such that he dies.
Then the Buddha spoke further to Ananda thus, These
many kinds of things that I have explained are all because
the person commits the following ten kinds of misdeed (in
the first degree, the person falls into hell; in the second,
among animals, and in the lowest, into the existence of pretas).
1. For the sin of killing, the person falls both into hell
and into the existence of animals and pretas; then, when later
born human, acquires two kinds of retribution: one is that
the person is short-lived, and the other is that the person
is sickly. 2. The person who commits theft falls both into
hell and into the existence of animals and pretas, and when
born human acquires two kinds of retribution: one is that
the person is born poor and needy and the other is that the
persons possessions are united with those of others
so that he cannot act at will.
3. The person who practices unlawful desire falls both into
hell and into the existence of animals and pretas, and when
born human acquires two kinds of retribution: one is that
the persons spouse is debauched and the other is that
there is always quarreling and disputing with the persons
spouse, so that matters do not go (or the persons spouse
does not behave) as the person would like.
4. One who speaks lies falls both into hell and into the
existence of animals and pretas; and when later is born human
acquires two kinds of retribution: one is that whatsoever
the person does, everything is subject to damage and calumny
and the other is that people constantly injure the person
with lies.
5. One who is deceitful and two-tongued falls both into hell
and into the existence of animals and pretas; and when later
is born human acquires two kinds of retribution: one is that
he encounters relatives who torment him and the other is that
he is attached to irritable relatives.
6. He who is evil-tongued and abusive falls both into hell
and into the existence of animals and pretas, and when later
is born human acquires two kinds of retribution: the first
is that the person always hears evil noises and the second
is that whatever the person says, there is always quarreling
and dispute.
7. The person who uses ornate words falls both into hell
and into the existence of animals and pretas; and when born
human acquires two kinds of retribution: the first is that
even though the person speaks the truth, nobody believes him
and the other is that whatever the person says, he is completely
unable to bring it to an end.
8. The person who is greedy suffers both hell and the existence
of animals and pretas, and when born human acquires two kinds
of retribution: one is that the person is always insatiably
greedy for possessions and the other is that whatever the
person seeks and gets, it is not at all as his heart desires.
9. The person who is irascible suffers both hell and the
existence of animals and pretas; and when born human acquires
two kinds of retribution: one is that people seek the persons
faults and shortcomings and the other that they always cause
the person pain and suffering.
10. The person who has heretical views suffers both hell
and the existence of animals and pretas; and when born as
human, acquires two kinds of retribution: one is that deception
is always born in the persons heart. Now O child of
the Buddha, these ten kinds of misdeed are the cause of all
kinds of evil of the way.
And then among the great assembly there was a man who had
committed the ten kinds of misdeed. When he heard from the
devatideva these infernal punishments and retributions he
began to weep and lament; and he spoke thus to the devatideva
Buddha: Chief of the World, what sort of good deed should
I now do, that I may be delivered from this evil? The
Buddha said to him, Arrange the minds of all people
and all of you, united together, practice piety and good deeds.
For the person who in this existence is a great mind-converter,
is a chief among all people, and whoever makes a vihara or
a vihara house, will in a future loka be a minister in the
royal assembly and a chief of the people, complete and intelligent
in everything that is desirable and pleasing to the persons
mind. The person too who in this existence arranges the minds
of people so that they practice all kinds of good deed will
be rich and fortunate in future loka and will do him honor
and regard the man with respect, and in the four directions
the way will be open to the person; all work that the person
begins will be successful. One who in the present existence
likes to light the lamp will be born in a future loka near
the sun and the moon and his bright splendor will always shine.
One who gives gifts and is compassionate and does not kill,
in whatever place that person is born, will be rich and fortunate
and will not only lack neither possessions nor riches in food
and clothing, but they will appear spontaneously. One too
who gives food, in whatever place the person is born, divine
food will appear spontaneously; the person will be complete
in beauty and strength, brilliant, intelligent, eloquent and
long-lived. If one gives a gift to an animal, accordingly
the person will acquire recompense a hundred-fold. If one
gives a gift to an ordained person who keeps the precepts,
the donor will acquire recompense a myriad-fold. But if the
person gives a gift to an ordained person, a master of the
Law, who expounds the law of the treasure of the secret of
the Great Vehicle of the Buddha, who opens the eyes of the
great assembly, the donor will acquire countless many recompenses.
How much more then, you may ask, will the person who gives
a gift to bodhisattvas and to the Buddhas acquire; how much
countless recompense the person will acquire! And if the person
gives a gift to these three kinds of people, he will acquire
recompense without end: if to the Buddhas, and secondly to
his mother and father, and thirdly to a sick man, he gave
a gift of one meal so great is his recompense. How much more
then, you may ask, one who gives always; how can this persons
reward be counted? Now the person who gives the ordained a
bath and shall wash their bodies, in whatever place the person
is born, will be handsome and food and clothing will be ready
and from people he will receive honor and respect. One too
who loves the sutra and shall read it and praises and exalts
it, in whatever place born, the persons voice is ornate
and excellent; whoever hears it rejoices in their heart. One
who keeps the precepts, in whatever place born, will be handsome
and among persons the very foremost. The person who digs wells
and sets jars of water on the roads so that the travelers
may drink, and shall plant trees so that persons may sit in
the shade, in whatever place born, the person will be a leader
of people and a hundred kinds of food and drink, according
to the persons desire, will come of themselves. The
person who loves to write the Law of the sutras and gives
it to people for them to read it, in whatever place born,
will be eloquent in explanation, and whatever Law the person
studies, when hearing it once, the person takes it all in
and understands it; the bodhisattvas always protect and watch
over the person and among all people the person will be the
very first and foremost. The one too who makes a bridge or
puts a boat for men to cross, then whatever place born, the
person will have the seven kinds of jewels entirely and all
people will praise and honor the person; where he goes and
arrives, all do him honor and regard him with respect.
Then the Buddha said to Ananda thus, The sutra and
the Law which I have expounded in every place, the causes
and the effects--exhort all living beings to read them and
act upon them so that they may be saved from evil. But the
person who hears this sutra and scorns and slanders it--as
for such a person, (even) in the present world, his tongue
falls to the ground.
Thereupon Ananda addressed the Buddha thus, O Chief
of the World, what name should be given to this sutra, and
how should we dispose our minds (towards it)?
The Buddha said to Ananda, Let the name of this sutra
be The Causes of the Retribution of Good and Evil, and let
its name also be The Sutra of Righteousness with the Desire
of Becoming a Bodhisattva, and let it be understood and kept
in that way.
Now when the Buddha had finished expounding this sutra, eight
myriad of divine men in that assembly disposed their minds
towards utmost complete enlightenment (annutara samyaksambodhi),
one thousand two hundred evil men abandoned their poisoned
minds and understood the previous loka; many were the pious
men who acquired the view of non-birth and received eternal
joy; many were the dead who were reborn in pure lands and
who assembled with the Buddha. Then the great assembly all
became joyful and they set out and began to practice piety
and good deeds and accepted the commandment of the Buddha
on their heads.
Namo Buddha, namo Dharma, namo Sangha.
The sutra in which the Buddha has expounded the causes and
effects of good and evil.
One chapter.
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