[无量香光 · 显密文库 · 手机站]
fowap.goodweb.net.cn
{返回首页}


The Goat That Laughed and Wept
 
{返回 Jataka Tales of the Buddha 文集}
{返回网页版}
点击:1480

Matakabhatta Jataka: The Goat That Laughed and Wept (Jat 18)  

One day, while the Buddha was staying in Jetavana, some bhikkhus asked him if there was any benefit in sacrificing goats, sheep, and other animals as offerings for departed relatives.

"No, bhikkhus," replied the Buddha. "No good ever comes from taking life, not even when it is for the purpose of providing a Feast for the Dead." Then he told this story of the past.

Long, long ago, when Brahmadatta was reigning in Baranasi, a brahman decided to offer a Feast for the Dead and bought a goat to sacrifice. "My boys," he said to his students, "take this goat down to the river, bathe it, brush it, hang a garland around its neck, give it some grain to eat, and bring it back."
"Yes, sir," they replied and led the goat to the river.

While they were grooming it, the goat started to laugh with a sound like a pot smashing. Then, just as strangely, it started to weep loudly.

The young students were amazed at this behavior. "Why did you suddenly laugh," they asked the goat, "and why do you now cry so loudly?"

"Repeat your question when we get back to your teacher," the goat answered.

The students hurriedly took the goat back to their master and told him what had happened at the river. Hearing the story, the master himself asked the goat why it had laughed and why it had wept.

"In times past, brahman," the goat began, "I was a brahman who taught the Vedas like you. I, too, sacrificed a goat as an offering for a Feast for the Dead. Because of killing that single goat, I have had my head cut off 499 times. I laughed aloud when I realized that this is my last birth as an animal to be sacrificed. Today I will be freed from my misery. On the other hand, I cried when I realized that, because of killing me, you, too, may be doomed to lose your head five hundred times. It was out of pity for you that I cried."

"Well, goat," said the brahman, "in that case, I am not going to kill you."

"Brahman!" exclaimed the goat. "Whether or not you kill me, I cannot escape death today."

"Don't worry," the brahman assured the goat. "I will guard you."

"You don't understand," the goat told him. "Your protection is weak. The force of my evil deed is very strong."

The brahman untied the goat and said to his students, "Don't allow anyone to harm this goat." They obediently followed the animal to protect it.

After the goat was freed, it began to graze. It stretched out its neck to reach the leaves on a bush growing near the top of a large rock. At that very instant a lightning bolt hit the rock, breaking off a sharp piece of stone which flew through the air and neatly cut off the goat's head. A crowd of people gathered around the dead goat and began to talk excitedly about the amazing accident.

A tree deva[5] had observed everything from the goat's purchase to its dramatic death, and drawing a lesson from the incident, admonished the crowd: "If people only knew that the penalty would be rebirth into sorrow, they would cease from taking life. A horrible doom awaits one who slays." With this explanation of the law of kamma the deva instilled in his listeners the fear of hell. The people were so frightened that they completely gave up the practice of animal sacrifices. The deva further instructed the people in the Precepts and urged them to do good.

Eventually, that deva passed away to fare according to his deserts. For several generations after that, people remained faithful to the Precepts and spent their lives in charity and meritorious works, so that many were reborn in the heavens.

The Buddha ended his lesson and identified the Birth by saying, "In those days I was that deva."


{返回 Jataka Tales of the Buddha 文集}
{返回网页版}
{返回首页}

上一篇:The Straw Worth More Than Gold
下一篇:The Traders of Seriva
 The Traders of Seriva
 Prince Five-weapons
 The Straw Worth More Than Gold
 The Queens Necklace
 The Miserly Treasurer
 The Virtuous Wife
 A Good Friend
 The Goat That Laughed and Wept
 The Great Monkey King
 The Sixteen Dreams
全文 标题
 
【佛教文章随机阅读】
 僧宝论47、守培法师《<大学解释>自序》 (第七章 禅人眼看世界 之六)[栏目:僧宝论·明贤法师]
 改变自己[栏目:远凡法师·禅的世界]
 读“一宿觉”公案的思考[栏目:月悟法师]
 与香有关的人物与故事[栏目:佛教常用器物]
 万法无常如秋云,众生生死如观戏[栏目:索达吉堪布·微教言]
 《佛说弥勒上生经》讲记 14[栏目:印海法师]
 请开示三大阿僧祇劫圆满成佛[栏目:学佛学经·净空法师问答]
 相应11经 常童子经[栏目:相应部 6.梵天相应]
 无门直指 第十七节 不可错认[栏目:程叔彪居士]
 护人名节,子孙显贵[栏目:心念与命运·第3册]


{返回首页}

△TOP

- 手机版 -
[无量香光·显密文库·佛教文集]
教育、非赢利、公益性的佛教文化传播
白玛若拙佛教文化传播工作室制作
www.goodweb.net.cn Copyrights reserved
(2003-2015)
站长信箱:yjp990@163.com