Accumulating Virtue Brings Blessings While Losing Virtue Brings Misfortune
By Qingyan
(Clearwisdom.net) Chen Gongcai was a man of outstanding literary
talent. One day in a dream, a divine being told him that he was the
"Number-One Scholar in Being Drunk," and he would continue to pass
imperial exams at different levels. After waking up, he felt puzzled, so he told
other people about this dream. One person said, "Isn't the (Chinese)
character 'drunk' made up of two parts, Xin and You, and when combined, Xin and
You indicate a specific year in the Chinese Lunar Calendar? It probably means
that you will become the Number-One Scholar on the highest imperial exam in the
year of Xinyou." Later, Chen Gongcai indeed passed the provincial exam in the year of Xinyou,
but he did not pass the imperial exam in the capital. Therefore, he decided that
the dream he had was not accurate. However, he encountered that divine being again in a dream on another night.
This time, the divine being told him that predestination is certain, but the
person himself decides whether he or she will have blessings or misfortune. For
example, an emperor favors a minister and grants him with a high official
position and riches, but this minister is not loyal to the emperor. Couldn't the
emperor take away the rank and wealth granted to him? If some ministers become
vicious and petulant, monopolize power and assign unfair penalties to citizens
while relying on the emperor's favor, couldn't the same action be taken against
them? Predestination is in fact similar to the law in the human world. The five
things that you did after passing the provincial exam and your acceptance of a
bribe made you lose too much virtue. How could you blame Heaven for depriving
you of blessings and wealth? If from today, you do good deeds, accumulate
virtue, and improve your moral integrity, you may be able to spend your
remaining years in contentment. Otherwise, Heaven might even take away your
life. After hearing this, Chen Gongcai woke up with a start and began to weep and
kowtow to show gratitude. After that, he repented and became benevolent. He
tried to do good deeds and accumulate virtue. In the end, he spent his remaining
years in contentment and died a natural death. September 19, 2006
Chinese version available at
http://minghui.org/mh/articles/2006/9/21/138214.html
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