A Buddhist Reading: The Marriage Feast in Jambunanda
There was a man in Jambunanda who was to be married the next day, and he
thought, "Would that the Buddha, the Blessed One, might be present at the
wedding."
And the Blessed One passed by his house and met him, and when he read the
silent wish in the heart of the bridegroom, he consented to enter. When the
Holy One appeared with the retinue of his many bhikkhus, the host whose
means were limited received them as best he could, saying: "Eat, my Lord,
and all thy congregation, according to your desire."
While the holy men ate, the meats and drinks remained undiminished, and
the host, thought to himself: "How wondrous is this! I should have had
plenty for all my relatives and friends. Would that I had invited them all."
When this thought was in the host's mind, all his relatives and friends
entered the house; and although the hall in the house was small there was
room in it for all of them. They sat down at the table and ate, and there
was more than enough for all of them.
The Blessed One was pleased to see so many guests full of good cheer and
he quickened them and gladdened them with words of truth, proclaiming the
bliss of righteousness: "The greatest happiness which a mortal man can
imagine is the bond of marriage that ties together two loving hearts. But
there is a greater happiness still: it is the embrace of truth. Death will
separate husband and wife, but death will never affect him who has espoused
the truth."
"Therefore be married unto the truth and live with the truth in holy
wedlock. The husband who loves his wife and desires for a union that shall
be everlasting must be faithful to her so as to be like truth itself, and
she will rely upon him and revere him and minister unto him. And the wife
who loves her husband and desires a union that shall be everlasting must be
faithful to him so as to be like truth itself; and he will place his trust
in her, he will provide for her. Verily, I say unto you, their children
will become like unto their parents and will bear witness to their
happiness.
"Let no one be single, let every one be wedded in holy love to the truth.
And when Mara, the destroyer, comes to separate the visible forms of your
being, you will continue to live in the truth, and you will partake of the
life everlasting, for the truth is immortal."
There was no one among the guests but was strengthened in his spiritual
life, and recognized the sweetness of a life of righteousness; and they took
refuge in the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha

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Best Regards,
Evelyn
(to reply to me personally, remove 'sox')
Bud - 27 Aug 2005 16:12 GMT
> There was no one among the guests but was strengthened in his spiritual
> life, and recognized the sweetness of a life of righteousness;
Thank you for inviting us to your feast, Evelyn.
Betty Harris - 27 Aug 2005 17:10 GMT
You probably believe the Dalai Lama sh.ts gold coins, too.
Anthony Shipley - 28 Aug 2005 02:32 GMT
>You probably believe the Dalai Lama sh.ts gold coins, too.
You could have phrased that a lot more delicately!
Does your deity sh.t gold coins?
--
2 + 2 = 5 for sufficiently large values of 2.
Karen - 28 Aug 2005 06:08 GMT
It's funny how you can "plonk" someone and forget all about what led to them
being plonked until something else comes up and someone responds to them.
Than you say to yourself "My, the silence has been good since I plonked
them!" :-)
BTW Anthony, I'll bet she really couldn't have phrased it more delicately.
Delicacy requires a mindset of consideration that seems to be a difficult
place for some to reach.
Karen
> >You probably believe the Dalai Lama sh.ts gold coins, too.
>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> --
> 2 + 2 = 5 for sufficiently large values of 2.
Bud - 29 Aug 2005 01:34 GMT
> It's funny how you can "plonk" someone and forget all about...
Heh, just for a moment I thought, "To whom is he replying?", then
remembered that I too had plonked good ol' what's-her-name. LOL!
Evelyn Ruut - 28 Aug 2005 02:45 GMT
> You probably believe the Dalai Lama sh.ts gold coins, too.
has he eaten any?

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Best Regards,
Evelyn
(to reply to me personally, remove 'sox')
A R Pickett - 28 Aug 2005 15:52 GMT
> "Betty Harris" wrote >
> > You probably believe the Dalai Lama sh.ts gold coins, too.
>
> has he eaten any?
Marvelous, Evelyn! (still giggling)
All my best wishes to your son and his bride for every future happiness!

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A R Pickett aka Woodstock
"Sometimes the facts threaten the truth"
Amos Oz, prize winning Israeli author
Read my book reviews at:
http://www.booksnbytes.com/reviews/_idx_ws_all_byauth.html
Remove lower case "e" to respond
Evelyn Ruut - 28 Aug 2005 15:52 GMT
>> "Betty Harris" wrote >
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> All my best wishes to your son and his bride for every future happiness!
Thank you so much.... all of you. Full report on the event to follow!
Just leaving now.

Signature
Best Regards,
Evelyn
(to reply to me personally, remove 'sox')
> "Sometimes the facts threaten the truth"
>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>
> Remove lower case "e" to respond