From the Perspective of Gods and Buddhas, the Most Important Thing Is One's Heart
(Clearwisdom.net) In the Shenlong Period (705-707 AD) of Emperor
Zhongzong in the Tang Dynasty, a Buddha statue was to be constructed in
Xiangyang, Hubei Province. Many people who believed in Buddha or Gods donated
money for the statue. The coordinator wrote down their names, and planned to
have the names engraved on a memorial stone as a record. There was an elderly woman who was very poor. She wanted to make a donation,
but she only had one dime, which had been given to her by her mother before she
was married. She had saved the dime for more than 60 years, and that was the
only money she had. Upon hearing that a Buddha statue was to be made, this old woman respectfully
carried this dime and walked a long way to donate it. However, the coordinator
turned her down saying that a dime could not be accepted since the amount was
too small to put on record. The old woman had no choice, but walked towards the
crucible where the metal for the Buddha statue was being melted. When nobody was
watching her, she threw the dime into the crucible. With respect, she bowed to
the crucible, calling the Buddha's name in her heart, and then left. Several days later, the Buddha statue was completed. When people looked
closely, they found that the dime from the old woman was right on the chest of
the Buddha statue. After a rich person saw that, he felt uncomfortable, and
suggested that the dime be removed using some tools. So someone cut the dime
from the statue. However, the next day, when people looked at the Buddha statue, they found
that the dime was still there. Several monks said, "This is indeed a
miracle. From the perspective of Gods and Buddhas, the most important thing is
one's heart. Because the heart of the old woman was so sincere, the dime is thus
in such a significant place." Since then, nobody dared to try to remove the
dime and it remained on the chest of the Buddha statue. (From Taiping Guangji) August 18, 2007
Chinese version available at
http://www.minghui.org/mh/articles/2007/8/22/161123.html
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