Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Doctrine of the Mean (Chapter 2, 3 and 4) By Hrukti Maat Pu-Lin Temple Master.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Doctrine of the Mean (Chapter 2, 3 and 4) By Hrukti Maat Pu-Lin Temple Master."— Presentation transcript:

1 Doctrine of the Mean (Chapter 2, 3 and 4) By Hrukti Maat Pu-Lin Temple Master

2 Introduction This the continuation discussion on the Confucian classic “The Doctrine of the Mean” The gist of the teaching is that Tao is the Center, the Harmony, the Mean, the moderation, etc. Therefore the cultivation of Tao is to achieve the Center, the Harmony, etc. The next 3 chapter continues the discussion

3 Translated Text Chapter 2: Confucius Said Confucius said, “Gentlemen sustain the Mean, Small-men oppose the Mean. The Gentlemen sustain the Mean by constantly focusing on the Center. Small-men oppose the Mean by having no consideration.” Chapter 3: Center and Mean Confucius said, “The Doctrine of the Mean is truly great. But people can rarely sustain.”

4 Translated Text Chapter 4: The Tao Confucius said, “The Tao cannot be achieved, now I understand; the intelligent ones have exceeded, and the foolish ones cannot attain. The Tao cannot flourish, now I understand; the virtuous ones have exceeded, and the immoral ones cannot attain. If a person does not eat or drink, it’s rare that the flavor can be known.”

5 Chapter 2 Confucius said, “Gentlemen sustain the Mean and the Small-men oppose the Mean.” – Gentlemen is referring to the people who aspire to the cultivation of Tao and thus achieve greatness by have great contributions to the world – Small-men refers to people who are self-serving and only look after self-interests – The Mean in this case refers to the Tao (the attribute of the Tao--Center and Harmony)

6 Chapter 2 “The Gentlemen sustain the Mean by constantly focusing on the Center” – A gentleman who cultivates the Tao constantly meditates on the Center (the First Treasure) – A gentleman who cultivates the Tao constantly act to create harmony amongst people – A gentleman who cultivates the Tao constantly deals with all affairs of the world with moderation

7 Chapter 2 “Small-men oppose the Mean by having no consideration.” – A person who does not cultivate the Tao has no concern for meditation – A person who does not cultivate has no consideration for the wellness of others – A person who does not cultivate has no considerations and follows only his senses to pursue sensual pleasures (results in transgression)

8 Chapter 3 Confucius said, “The Doctrine of the Mean is truly great. But people can rarely sustain.” – The Tao is the greatest of all spiritual pursue – The end result of the cultivation of Tao is the restoration of one’s divinity (the greatest achievement) – Ordinary people do not have the insight nor the faith to pursue the Tao – Even the few that aspired, will have encountered challenges and eventually given up

9 Chapter 4 Confucius said, “The Tao cannot be achieved, now I understand; the intelligent ones have exceeded, and the foolish ones cannot attain.” – Confucius is frustrated that few to none of his disciples can achieve the Tao – Those disciples who are intelligent, are too full of their egos and have disdain on the simple teaching of Tao – Those disciples who are less intelligent, are bewildered by spirituality and cannot comprehend teachings beyond the material manifests

10 Chapter 4 “The Tao cannot flourish, now I understand; the virtuous ones have exceeded, and the immoral ones cannot attain.” – Expanding beyond his school and talk about “flourish” the Tao to the world – The virtuous cultivators are blinded by their egocentric title of being virtuous and thus have no consideration for the Tao – The immoral ones simply do not care about spirituality and thus will not pursue the Tao

11 Chapter 4 “If a person does not eat or drink, it’s rare that the flavor can be known.” – No amount of explanation can replace the actual experience of enlightenment (just like no amount of explanation can replace the experience of eating or drinking) – Likewise, true enlightenment of Tao is something that a person must experience – If a person does not practice deeply, then the Tao can never be achieved

12 Summary Chapter 2 talked about the cultivator of Tao having right meditation and the application of Moderation on all events Chapter 3 talked about the greatness of Tao, and that only a very few will sustain Chapter 4 talked about the Ego being a hindrance to the cultivation of Tao and that only by deep practice will one truly experience enlightenment and achieved Tao

13 Conclusion Chapter 2, 3 and 4 are some of Confucius’ frustration that ordinary people simply do not have the capacity to cultivate the Tao One perspective is that people of his time are simply not ready for the Tao It took another 2,500 years of spiritual evolution for people of this world to be ready and the great flourish of Tao is at hand

14 Question


Download ppt "Doctrine of the Mean (Chapter 2, 3 and 4) By Hrukti Maat Pu-Lin Temple Master."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google