| fēi | shì | xiū | xíng | lù |
shàng | kǔ |
| 非 | 是 | 修 | 行 | 路 | 上 | 苦, |
| shēng | shēng | shì | shì | yè | lì | zǔ |
| 生 | 生 | 世 | 世 | 业 | 力 | 阻; |
| héng | xīn | xiāo | yè | xiū | xīn | xìng |
| 横 | 心 | 消 | 业 | 修 | 心 | 性, |
| yǒng | dé | rén | shēn | shì | fó | zǔ |
| 永 | 得 | 人 | 身 | 是 | 佛 | 祖。 |
| yī | jiǔ | jiǔ | sì | nián |
jiǔ | yuè | shí | wǔ | rì |
| 一 | 九 | 九 | 四 | 年 | 九 | 月 | 十 | 五 | 日 |
Cause and Effect[3]
‘Tis not that the journey of cultivation is painful,
Karma from generation upon generation is blocking you.
Steel your will,
eliminate karma,
cultivate xinxing,
And become a Buddha who keeps forever the human body.
September 15, 1994
[3]
The term used in the Chinese text here, yinguo, has the sense of preordained fate, or causality, stemming from conduct at an earlier time or in a previous life.
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