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vor 1 Jahr

Listening helps!


In China, there was a Buddhist teacher who taught throughout the
country. He was very respected, his wisdom was legendary, many
people attended his talks. As a monk of his monastery he was
popular, many brothers listened to him.


When he was about to leave for another reading tour, a novice
(aspiring monk) approached him and asked if he could accompany
him. Since the two men were about the same age, and the travels
were exhausting him more and more, the teacher agreed, and
together they traveled. At each lesson the Buddhist student now
sat in the auditorium, soon he knew every interpretation of the
teacher, every sentence was well known to him, he listened again
and again to the words of this master.


The brothers used the evenings to talk about what had happened,
to further deepen the contents of the teaching speeches. Often
the teacher noticed that the disciple already knew his lectures
almost by heart, that also his argumentation and his expression
improved constantly, he was taken with the novice. In the teacher
grew the realization that the student had reached the end of his
training, that he had also become a master by "listening". This
filled the teacher with deep joy.


One morning, as the two of them were leaving for another course
in the dining hall of a temple, the teacher said to the novice,
"I want you to give the lecture today, you have heard my words
often enough now, you will surely do the job as well as I have"!


So it was! The novice did his job well, the people listened to
him with pleasure, he could "reach" the visitors with his
lecture, the Buddha's teaching came easily and loosely over his
lips. After the lecture, those present approached him, praised
his calm manner, his lecture was a success.


From then on, the teacher and the disciple took turns in giving
further lectures, and the novice became better and better in his
lectures.


Back in their temple, the teacher went to his abbot, he explained
to him that the novice could now also spread the teachings on his
own, that he was now qualified to be a monk.


The novice was soon ordained as a monk because of the
intercession.


A short time later, he was preparing for his own first lecture
tour when a novice approached him and asked if he could accompany
him.


As long as one talks oneself, one learns nothing


- Marie Freifrau Ebner von Eschenbach - writer - 1830 to 1916


In reality there are only the atoms and the void


- Democritus - Greek philosopher - 460 to 370 B.C.


Copyright: https://shaolin-rainer.de


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