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


The Craft of the Heart - Foreword
 
{返回 Ajahn Lee Dhammadharo 文集}
{返回网页版}
点击:2123

Foreword

This book, Ajaan Lee's first, is like a catalog: In it, he gives the full range of his teachings on the practice of the Buddha's craft, from the observance of the five precepts to the attainment of total liberation. Thus the different parts are written for different people at different stages in the practice, and the reader is advised to read, not judgmentally, but judiciously — taking whatever is useful for his or her own practice, and leaving the rest for others.

The structure of the book, with its two over-lapping parts, is explained by the fact that the two parts were originally written and published separately, Part II appearing in 1936 as The Training of the Heart, and Part I the following year as Precepts for Laypeople. In 1939 Ajaan Lee revised and expanded both parts, putting them into their present form as self-sufficient but complementary halves of a single volume. Later, in the early 1950's, he revised the book once more, this final revised version being the one translated here.

Although Ajaan Lee's teachings continued to develop over the course of later years, the basic outlines remained constant. Most of his later teachings are simply elaborations on themes already given in this book. One of these later developments, though, deserves special mention here: It concerns the question of how a beginner should get started in practicing meditation. Ajaan Lee's eventual solution to this question, given in his book, Keeping the Breath in Mind: Method II, can briefly be stated as follows: Start right in developing the factors of Jhana by (1) being clearly aware of each breath, (2) evaluating and adjusting the breath so that it is as comfortable and satisfying as possible, and (3) letting this comfortable sensation spread, along with a sense of present awareness, throughout the entire body. If an individual meditator had trouble sticking with step (1), Ajaan Lee might recommend some of the methods given in this book — the repetition of the word "buddho" in conjunction with the breath, the contemplation of the basic properties of the body, etc. — but these methods were regarded as ancillary to the central practice of keeping the breath in mind.

Yet even though Ajaan Lee's later teachings developed new perspectives on some of the individual themes contained in this book, none of his later writings have its scope or completeness. For this reason it remains to this day one of his most popular and esteemed works.

But for all its scope, it is only a preliminary guide — a map or a mirror — for the true craft of the heart lies, not within its covers, but within the reader.

To quote from one of Ajaan Lee's later sermons: "What does discernment come from? You might compare it with learning to become a potter, a tailor, or a basket weaver. The teacher will start out by telling you how to make a pot, sew a shirt or a pair of pants, or weave different patterns, but the proportions and beauty of the object you make will have to depend on your own powers of observation. Suppose you weave a basket and then take a good look at its proportions, to see if it's too short or too tall. If it's too short, weave another one, a little taller, and then take a good look at it to see if there's anything that still needs improving, to see if it's too thin or too fat. Then weave another one, better-looking than the last. Keep this up until you have one that's as beautiful and well-proportioned as possible, one with nothing to criticize from any angle. This last basket you can take as your standard. You can now set yourself up in business. What you've done is learn from your own actions. As for your earlier efforts, you needn't concern yourself with them any longer. Throw them out. This is a sense of discernment that arises of its own accord, an ingenuity and a sense of judgment that come not from anything your teachers have taught you, but from observing and evaluating on your own what you yourself have done."

Hopefully this book will be of help to all those who hope to master the craft of the heart.

Thanissaro Bhikkhu (Geoffrey DeGraff)

Metta Forest Monastery
PO Box 1409
Valley Center, CA 92082 U.S.A.

 


{返回 Ajahn Lee Dhammadharo 文集}
{返回网页版}
{返回首页}

上一篇:The Craft of the Heart - Introduction
下一篇:The Craft of the Heart - Contents
 The Craft of the Heart - The Two Th..
 Food for Thought - The Honest Truth..
 The Craft of the Heart - The Path t..
 The Craft of the Heart - On The Lev..
 The Skill of Release - The Treasure..
 The Skill of Release - Beginning Co..
 The Craft of the Heart - The Four F..
 The Autobiography of a Forest Monk..
 Food for Thought - Serving A Purpos..
 The Craft of the Heart - The Path t..
全文 标题
 
【佛教文章随机阅读】
 药师琉璃光七佛本愿功德经释义 序[栏目:吴立民居士]
 楞伽经白话解卷二 一切佛语心品第二 第五章 离心离想观如幻之二[栏目:楞伽经白话解]
 轮回是要我们学会负责任![栏目:法忍法师]
 妙法莲华经 化城喻品第七[栏目:白话佛经]
 阿含道性(下)[栏目:杨郁文教授]
 请问往生极乐世界是否指神识去西方极乐世界?[栏目:答疑解惑·净空法师问答]
 心经广义 第二章 破诸相 第五节 智得并空[栏目:冯达庵居士]
 圣者言教 第十四课(七)时时自省发心才与解脱相应[栏目:圣者言教]
 皈命念佛的功德[栏目:仁焕法师]
 唯识学存在论及若干难题评析[栏目:林国良教授]


{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