Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Everyone knows that Jigong is a living Buddha, but why does he always eat wine and meat without rules? Why?

Everyone knows that Jigong is a living Buddha, but why does he always eat wine and meat without rules? Why?

Master Jigong showed that he had also left the deeds of eating and drinking meat, but he was incomparable to ordinary people, and he was robbed infinitely. Jigong practiced all his life, with boundless merits, boundless Buddhism and a compassionate heart. Qi Huangong's drinking and eating meat is just a cover-up, and he doesn't really make a living by eating meat and drinking. Master Jigong once said: "Drinking into five is like wearing intestinal poison. If I have the ability, I can eat meat casually. " Jigong once got drunk with magic power, sprayed wine in his mouth like a spring, put out the fire from a distance, and the fire went out. Spit out the meat you eat and the livestock will come back to life. He has great skills and the spirit of going to hell. He is not afraid of bitter retribution, which is hard to bear. He wants to go forward without flinching. Master Jigong constantly made a vow to be reincarnated in the world, accepting the evil deeds and bitter reports of all beings and going through hardships. Life after life, in order to put an end to all causes and effects, we are willing to take the risk of life and death without seeking happiness for ourselves, hoping that all beings can get rid of suffering. This is the spiritual embodiment of Mahayana Bodhisattva. If you have the ability and compassion to help the public, it is really a blessing to all beings. You might as well learn the behavior of the master who helps others. If you don't have this ability, don't follow suit for fear of being hit by mistake.

The world only knows that "the wine and meat pass through the intestines, and the Buddha pays attention to it", but I don't know that there is a saying "If the world learns from me, it will be like a demon"! Jigong's eating meat can become attached to animals. The monks who crossed over in the Yin Dynasty only suffered from eating meat. Jigong showed that eating meat was for disfigurement, but there was no greed. It is a tragic allusion to say that "the wine and meat pass through the intestines, and the Buddha pays attention to it". It is said that when Zhang attacked Chongqing in the Ming Dynasty, which is now Chengdu, he was stationed in a temple outside the city and forced the monks inside to eat meat. At that time, a monk named Broken Mountain said that I would eat meat as long as I didn't kill the city after the siege. As a result, Zhang promised him. So I said this while eating at the broken mountain. He broke the precepts of thousands of people's lives.