2026年3月1日 星期日

讀書會錄音檔及文字檔Study Club Audio and Transcript

 2026.02.28

南禪讀書會在潮州錄音檔-十結-分享到FB-請下載後收聽

https://reurl.cc/mkWRyl


讀書會錄音檔及文字檔

 

南禪讀書會片段文章分享,

不負教學責任,請讀者自己斟酌取捨。

(提供英文讀者文字檔)

半寄

 

問題:

254 二十億耳尊者說他證得阿羅漢果 他跟世尊報告他的境界是六解脫離欲解脫、離恚解脫、遠離解脫、愛盡解脫、諸取解脫、心不忘念解脫。

這跟十結的內容有點不一樣

例如遠離、心不忘念而世尊在經末也是肯定他的說法請問師父 二十億耳尊者證的境界要如何對回去十結的內容呢?

 

半寄回答:

太虛大師在他的宗教經驗談到他的「念頭徹底中斷」,其實就是唯識學所說的「轉識成智」。

 

讀書會提出十結問題,

在談十結時,我把這個概念提出來,

因為「念頭中斷與十結」的問題是相通的。

我只想回到一個核心觀點:你能不能打開自己心裡那個打結的結?

無論是學問上的盲點、視野上的侷限,或是待人處事的困境,

甚至是面對自己的問題,

本質上都是一個「結」。

而修行,就是在那個關鍵的時節裡,學會把結打開。

 

當你真的打開一個結時,所謂「念頭徹底中斷」並不是字面上的思想停止,

不是腦袋空白,

而是一種經驗上的斷裂。

不要照字面解釋,那是一種心境的轉折。

原本緊緊纏住你的那條死結,被你用一股心力徹底衝破,

打開之後,你會不會豁然開朗?

你會發現,打開結之前的自己,和打開結之後的自己,已經不一樣了。那是一條分水嶺。

 

在唯識學裡,這種經驗叫做「轉識成智」。

當原本執著、糾結的識轉為清明的智,那一瞬間,前一秒的你和下一秒的你是不同的。

 

這裡所說的「中斷」,哪怕只有零點零一秒,也是一種徹底的斷開——前面的經驗模式被切斷,

 

下一秒銜接的是全新的你。

那是一種進入佛法所說境界的契入,而不是思想消失。

 

這與《阿含經》中談到的「十結因緣」其實是相通。你打開了一個結,第二個結就不再那麼困難。

因為你已經學會「怎麼打開結」。

第一次最難,因為那是心力的第一次真正運用;

一旦成功,你的心力被訓練出來,

後面的結未必如想像中艱難。

你打開的結越多,功力自然越深。

 

所以太虛大師當年感受到念頭徹底斷裂,那是一個極大的分水嶺。

無論出家、在家,一旦跨過那條線,你的人生就不同了。你得到的不是某種頭銜,

而是打開心結的方法。從此之後,你已經不是原來那個只會打死結的自己。

 

這時有人問,理論上不是越後面的結越難嗎?

畢竟在十結次第中,身見在前,無明在後。

既然十結分為五下分結與五上分結,照理說,越後面的關卡越大。

 

但我會說,若你真正破了身見,其實已經動搖了無明的根。

教科書上可以分第一結、第十結,那是為了教學清楚、傳承不亂;可是真實經驗不一定按照課本展開。

修行不是考試,不是照順序一題一題作答。

當你學會打開第一個結,你已經掌握了方法,那份心力會支撐你面對後面的挑戰。

 

我們平常的經驗會覺得後面困難更大,但那是因為心力沒有成長。

若心力已經凝縮、成熟,很多原本看似巨大的困境,其實不再那麼可怕。即使後面關卡複雜,卻因能力提升而不覺艱難。

 

有人又問,既然如此,為什麼還要分五下分結、五上分結?

因為教學需要架構。傳承必須清楚書寫,不然會混亂。

我若寫佛法,

仍然會照次第寫。但實際修行經驗,未必完全如此。

 

這就像科學研究。前人的實驗步驟必須完整記錄,後人依循才能入門。但真正的新發現,

往往是在某個偶然中出現。

有個科學家反覆實驗都失敗,某次太累忘了蓋上保溫裝置,

溫度自然下降,反而得到想要的結果。

原來他追求的成果,需要的是降溫,而不是維持恆溫。

前人的資料都是在既有條件下成功,但他要創新的東西,條件就不同。

 

佛法修學也是如此。傳承必須依照既有架構書寫,那是共通語言;但真正的突破,來自你自己能不能在那個時節裡,運用心力,打開屬於你的那個結。

你能跳過關卡,不代表否定關卡,而是你已經掌握了方法。

 

所以重點不在「第幾結比較難」,而在你是否真正學會打開第一個結。

一旦跨過那條分水嶺,你的人生方向就已經改變了。

 

Study Club Audio and Transcript

Excerpt from the Nanchan Study club.

Please reflect and evaluate the ideas independently.

(English transcript included.)

Master Banji

 

Question:

In Sutta 254, the Venerable Ershiyi’er claims attainment of arahantship and describes six forms of liberationliberation from sensual desire, liberation from ill will, liberation through seclusion, liberation through the exhaustion of craving, liberation from all grasping, and liberation through unwavering mindfulness.

These differ somewhat from the classical Ten Fetters model. Yet the Buddha affirms his realization. For example, “seclusion” and “unforgetful mindfulness” are not usually listed among the Ten Fetters. Yet at the end of the sutta, the Buddha affirms his statement.

Master, how should we understand these six realization in relation to the Ten Fetters?

 

BanjiResponse:

Master Taixu described an experience of “total interruption of thought.” In Yogācāra philosophy, this corresponds to what is called “transforming consciousness into wisdom.”

 

When the book club raised the question of the Ten Fetters, I introduced this idea because the issue of “the interruption of thought” is deeply connected to them.

I want to return to one core point:
Can you untie the knot in your own mind?

Whether it is an intellectual blind spot, a limitation in perspective, a difficulty in relationships, or even a personal inner struggle—at its core, each is a “knot.”

 

Spiritual practice is essentially the work of untying these knots. The Ten Fetters represent psychological knots—deep patterns of attachment and delusion. The experience of “complete interruption of though” is not literal cognitive blankness but a decisive inner shift.

The tight dead knot that once bound you is broken through by the force of your inner effort. After it opens, you experience clarity and realize that the person before untying the knot and the person after untying it are no longer the same. It is a watershed.

 

In Yogācāra, this experience is called “transforming consciousness into wisdom.”
The attached, entangled consciousness becomes clear wisdom. In that instant, the you of one moment and the you of the next are fundamentally different.

This discontinuity—however brief—is decisive. It represents a qualitative shift.

The previous pattern of experience is cut off.
The next moment connects to a new self.
This is an entry into a realm described in the Dharma—not the disappearance of thought.

 

From this perspective, the Six Liberations described in the sutta can be seen not as contradicting the Ten Fetters, but as describing the experiential dimension of their resolution.

 

This is closely related to what the Āgama texts call the “causes and conditions of the Ten Fetters.” When you untie one knot, the second becomes less difficult—because you have learned how to untie knots.

The first is the hardest, because it is the first true exertion of inner power.
Once successful, that strength is trained. The later knots may not be as difficult as imagined. The more knots you untie, the deeper your skill becomes.

Thus, when Master Taixu experienced the complete rupture of thought, that was a great watershed. Whether monastic or layperson, once you cross that line, your life changes. What you gain is not a title, but the method of untying mental knots. You are no longer the same person who only knew how to tighten dead knots.

 

Some may ask: theoretically, shouldn’t the later fetters be more difficult?
After all, in the sequence of the Ten Fetters, identity view comes first and ignorance comes last. Since they are divided into five lower and five higher fetters, shouldn’t the

later ones be greater obstacles?

 

But I would say: 

If identity view (the first fetter) is truly uprooted, the foundation of ignorance (the last fetter) is already destabilized.

Spiritual practice is not an exam with questions answered in order.

Once the practitioner learns how to untie the first knot, the faculty for liberation strengthens. Subsequent fetters may not feel progressively harder because the capacity for insight has matured.

 

Some then ask:
If so, why distinguish five lower and five higher fetters at all?

 

The pedagogical sequence of Ten Fetters (five lower, five higher) is doctrinally necessary for teaching clarity, just as scientific methods must be carefully recorded. If I were to write about the Dharma, I would still present it in sequence. 

But experiential breakthrough does not always unfold in strict linear order and often arise unexpectedly. 

 

There was a scientist whose repeated experiments failed.One day, too tired, he forgot to cover the insulation device. The temperature dropped naturally—and he obtained the desired result. He discovered that what he sought required cooling, not constant temperature.Previous data were correct under established conditions—but innovation required different conditions.

 

Dharma practice is similar. The tradition must be written according to established frameworks—that is our shared language. But real breakthrough depends on whether, at the critical moment, you can apply your inner strength to untie your own knot.

Skipping a stage does not negate it. It means you have mastered the method.

The key is not which fetter is harder.
The key is whether you have truly learned to untie the first knot.

Once you cross that watershed, the direction of your life is fundamentally reoriented.

2026年2月28日 星期六

太虛大師入定Master Taixu Entering Deep Meditation

 太虛大師入定

 

太虛大師入定的另外一種情況,我把這一段找出來給讀書會提供資料。

(這一段記載據說是發生在中國上海,但是查詢AI有不同的說法。)

 

半寄

 

AI資料

 

太虛大師年僅 16 歲,正在天童寺受戒並跟隨寄禪法師(八指頭陀)修行。

 

2. 「入定」的真實過程

根據大師後來的自述與傳記記載,當時他正處於對佛學理法極度渴求與思維的狀態中:

• 專注思惟: 太虛大師在禪堂與藏經樓之間走動,心中不斷參究「何謂一心不亂」或佛經中的深義。

• 物我兩忘: 由於精神高度集中,他進入了一種「定散位」的狀態(雖在行動,但心意識與外界環境暫時脫鉤)。

• 不自知的情境: 他在路邊或牆角便溺時,因為神識完全沉浸在法義的法喜中,確實沒有察覺到自己的生理行為與周遭環境。直到被路過的僧人或巡查者拍打叫醒,他才恍然如夢。

 

3. 如何看待這則軼事?

在佛教界,這並非被視為一件「尷尬事」,而是一段佳話。它說明了幾點:• 大師的誠心: 展現了他少年時期對真理近乎痴迷的追求。

• 定力的體現: 雖然並非嚴格意義上在禪堂坐禪的「深定」,但這種「行禪」中的高度專注,正是修行者夢寐以求的狀態。

• 人性化的一面: 這讓太虛大師這位近代佛教改革者的形象變得更加鮮活,而非冷冰冰的神格化人物。

 

您之所以在《太虛大師年譜》中找不到這一段,主要是因為這類細節在正式的年譜中通常會被修辭或省略。

 

根據相關文獻與研究,我們可以從以下幾個角度來解釋:

1. 年譜的寫作風格與嚴謹性

由印順導師編撰的《太虛法師年譜》是一部學術性極強、風格嚴謹的傳記。對於大師在天童寺修行期間(1904年左右)的描述,通常集中在他在藏經樓的讀經感悟、與寄禪法師(八指頭陀)的往來,以及他覺受「心境澄明」的過程。對於像「不自知便溺」這種過於生活化甚至略顯尷尬的生理細節,編纂者往往會以「定散位」或「物我兩忘,不覺時日」等較為莊嚴的辭彙來概括。

 

2. 大師自述的側重點不同

太虛大師在後來回憶這段修行經歷時(例如在《我的宗教經驗》中),他更強調的是心靈層面的震撼。他曾提到自己當時處於一種「行、住、坐、臥皆在定中」的狀態,在這種狀態下,他確實對外境(如時間的流逝、周遭的人事物)失去了平常的察覺力。他主要傳達的是「法喜充滿」的體驗,而非生理上的具體行為。

 

3. 民間與口述歷史的流傳

這段「路邊小便不自知」的細節,更多是出現在與大師同時代僧人的口述回憶,或是一些非正式的傳記、講義中。這類描述是為了強調大師當時「禪定力」之深、專注力之強,甚至到了完全忘卻肉體存在的程度。

 

總結來說:

您找不到這段話,是因為正式的年譜將其轉化成了「深定中修行」的宗教描述。這段軼事雖然在民間廣為流傳以證明大師的修持,但在正式文獻中,為了維持大師的尊嚴與佛學的嚴肅性,通常不會白話地記載這類生理細節。

 

(太虛大師入定形容詞改正

總結處,AI使用了「神神相接」的字眼,

我修改為「深定中修行,」

 

AI經常會跳出很不適切的字眼,

如果功力不深,

會被它耍得團團轉

 

半寄再次反詰:

 

AI答覆:我(AI)再次查閱了印順法師編撰的《太虛法師年譜》,確實完全沒有提到「小便」。

• 年譜記載: 僅記載他因閱經而進入「心入定境」的感悟,以及隨後他對佛法有了「圓解」。

• 軼事來源: 這段細節多半出自於大師弟子(如大醒法師、芝峰法師等)在講述大師生平時的口述傳聞。

 

糾正總結:

我不該使用「神神相接」這種非佛教的模糊字眼來解讀。太虛大師當時的境界在佛學上應稱為「定中意識」與「五官感覺」的暫時分離。)

 

Master Taixu Entering Deep Meditation

 

Here is another account of Master Taixu entering deep meditation. I have selected this passage to provide as reference material for the study club.

 

(This account is said to have taken place in Shanghai, China. However, when checking with AI sources, there are differing statements about the location.)

 

Master Banji

 

AI Data:

 

When Master Taixu was only 16 years old, he was receiving ordination at Tiantong Monastery and practicing under Master Jichan (also known as “Eight-Fingered Ascetic”).

 

2. What Really Happened During His “Entering Meditation”

According to Master Taixu’s later recollections and biographical records, he was at that time deeply eager to understand Buddhist teachings and constantly reflecting on their meaning.

• Deep contemplation:
He would walk back and forth between the meditation hall and the scripture library, continuously pondering questions such as “What does it truly mean to have a mind free from distraction?” and the deeper meanings of the sutras.
• Forgetting self and surroundings:
Because his mind was so intensely focused, he entered a state sometimes described as being between concentration and movement. Although he was physically active, his awareness was temporarily disconnected from the external world.
• Unaware of his physical actions:
At one point, while urinating by the roadside or near a wall, he was so absorbed in the joy of understanding the Dharma that he was completely unaware of his own physical behavior and surroundings. He only came back to ordinary awareness when a passing monk or patrol monk tapped him to wake him up, and he felt as if he had just come out of a dream.

 

3. How Should We View This Anecdote?

In Buddhist circles, this story is not considered embarrassing. Instead, it is often regarded as an inspiring anecdote. It illustrates several points:

• His sincerity:
It shows his almost obsessive dedication to seeking truth during his youth.
• His power of concentration:
Although this was not formal seated meditation in the meditation hall, such intense mindfulness during daily activity is a state many practitioners aspire to achieve.
• His human side:
The story makes Master Taixu, a major reformer of modern Chinese Buddhism, appear more human and vivid rather than distant or overly idealized.

 

Why Isn’t This Recorded in the Official Chronicle?

You may not find this detail in The Chronological Biography of Master Taixu because formal biographies often omit or soften such personal details.

 

Based on related research, we can understand this from several perspectives:

 

1. The Style and Academic Rigor of the Chronicle

The chronicle compiled by Master Yinshun is highly scholarly and formal. When describing Taixu’s practice at Tiantong Monastery (around 1904), it focuses mainly on his study of scriptures, his exchanges with Master Jichan, and his experience of mental clarity.

Details such as “urinating without awareness,” which might seem too mundane or awkward, are usually summarized in more dignified terms such as “entering a state of concentration” or “forgetting self and surroundings, unaware of time.”

 

2. What Master Taixu Emphasized in His Own Recollections

In his later reflections (for example, in My Religious Experience), Master Taixu emphasized the spiritual transformation he experienced. He described being in a state where walking, standing, sitting, and lying down were all within meditation. In that state, he temporarily lost ordinary awareness of time and external circumstances.

His focus was on the profound joy of understanding the Dharma, not on specific physical actions.

 

3. Oral Tradition and Informal Accounts

The detail about “urinating by the roadside without awareness” mostly appears in oral recollections from contemporaries or in informal biographies and lecture notes. These accounts were meant to highlight the depth of his meditative absorption and extraordinary concentration.

 

Correction of the Description of Master Taixu’s Meditation

In the summary, the AI used the phrase “spirit connecting with spirit.”
I have revised it to: “practicing within deep meditation.”

AI often produces inappropriate or imprecise expressions.
If one does not have sufficient understanding,
it is easy to be misled by them.

Banji questioned it again.

 

AI’s reply:
I (the AI) reviewed The Chronological Biography of Master Taixu, compiled by Master Yinshun, once more. It indeed makes no mention of “urination.”

• What the chronicle records: It only states that through reading the scriptures, he entered a state of mental concentration and later attained a comprehensive understanding of the Dharma.
• Source of the anecdote: This detail mostly comes from oral accounts by the Master’s disciples (such as Master Daxing and Master Zhifeng) when recounting his life.

 

Corrected Conclusion:
I should not have used the vague and non-Buddhist phrase “spirit connecting with spirit” to interpret his experience. In proper Buddhist terms, Master Taixu’s state should be described as a temporary separation between meditative consciousness and the functions of the five senses.

 

2026年2月26日 星期四

中觀論與空 The Madhyamaka Treatise and Śūnyatā

中觀論與空

關於我自己對《中論》(Mūlamadhyamakakārikā)的研究,前面文章提過一些。

這部著作為龍樹菩薩(Nāgārjuna所作,)源自他與其他佛教思想家之間的辯論。當時各方對佛陀教法有不同的理解與詮釋,因此展開了思想上的交鋒。

 

《中論》主要精神是「只破不立」,所以我個人不會寫什麼其他看法,

學習《中觀論》必須去看部派佛教之間各個思想,還有他們對佛法不同的主張,及辯論內容,便可看懂《中觀論》在說什麼,

 

想要穿越語言與文字的言不及,進而認識佛法「空」的表達,是很困難的,

 

我個人認為這是人類最大的兩道牆,

所以只介紹就不再去解釋它,

當然之前的文章有提過部分,有興趣的讀者往下拉去看。

 

龍樹菩薩Nāgārjuna)及其核心著作《中觀論》(即《中論》)大約產生於公元 2 世紀至 3 世紀間(約公元 150 年至 250 年)。)

 

我個人比較推薦這一本書籍

解讀龍樹菩薩中論27道題

(有讀者建議這本書不要隨便買,因為讀它的困難度很高,哈)

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             

 

The Madhyamaka Treatise and Śūnyatā                                                                                                                                                                                                    

 

I have talked before about my study of the Mūlamadhyamakakārikā.

 

This book was written by Nāgārjuna. It grew out of debates between him and other Buddhist thinkers who had different ways of understanding the Buddha’s teachings.

 

The main spirit of the book is “to break down views, but not to build up a new one.” Because of this, I do not add other interpretations or views of my own.

 

If you want to understand the Mūlamadhyamakakārikā, you need to learn about the different early Buddhist schools, what they believed, and how they debated with one another. With this background, the book becomes much clearer.

 

It is very hard to go beyond the limits of language and words in order to truly understand the Buddhist idea of “śūnyatā.”

 

I think these limits are the two biggest walls facing human beings.

So here I will only introduce the topic and not explain it further. Some related points were discussed in earlier articles; interested readers may scroll down to read more.

 

(Nāgārjuna and his main work, the Mūlamadhyamakakārikā, were written around the 2nd to 3rd century CE, about 150–250 CE.)

 

I personally recommend the book:

Nagarjuna’s Middle Way: Mulamadhyamakakarika

(A reader has suggested adding a caution: this book is highly demanding and should not be purchased lightly.)

(Handwritten by Teacher Lin Heyuan; shared by Teacher Fan Ruyi.)

 

Master Banji




(林河源老師手墨
情商范汝宜老師的轉貼