Teachings by Dharma Master Cheng Yen
Translated by Dharma as Water Dev. Dept, Tzu Chi USA
Dear Tzu Chi Bodhisattvas,
Tzu Chi has now been established for fifty-nine years. Over the course of nearly six decades, we have witnessed Tzu Chi’s journey from thirty housewives saving fifty cents a day in bamboo banks to leaving charitable footprints across 136 countries and regions worldwide, bringing hope to suffering sentient beings and vitality to our wounded Earth.
In May, the Buddha’s birthday, Mother’s Day, and Tzu Chi Day converged as one. The Buddha Day Ceremony began at the Jing Si Hall in Hualien and was held simultaneously across forty-five countries and regions worldwide, with nearly two hundred thousand people celebrating together. This spirit of gratitude—remembering the source of the well we drink from—honors the Fourfold Grace: the grace of the Buddha, our parents, teachers, and all sentient beings. This transcends religious, national, and racial barriers, as everyone sincerely remembers the Fourfold Grace with reverent hearts. At Lumbini Garden, the Buddha’s birthplace, and Bodh Gaya, where the Buddha attained enlightenment, Tzu Chi volunteers from Singapore and Malaysia overcame all difficulties to lead local volunteers in reverently paying respect to the Buddha and purifying their hearts. These magnificent Buddha Bathing scenes demonstrated our firm commitment to “spreading the Dharma and benefiting sentient beings” as an offering back to the Buddha’s homeland.
In particular, at the Buddha Day Ceremony at Taipei’s Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, central and local government leaders and distinguished guests from home and abroad attended, led by over five hundred monastics. More than twenty thousand people, undaunted by wind and rain, united in remembering the Fourfold Grace with steadfast hearts, praying for themselves, society, and the world. Through the global livestream, we witnessed the monastics’ unified and dignified bearing, which touched people’s hearts. I was deeply moved and grateful for this convergence of conditions, praying that everyone can appreciate the Buddha’s virtues, understand the Buddha’s heart, and join together in blessing the entire world.
I am grateful that this year, nineteen countries and regions from around Asia and the Pacific, along with twenty-six countries and regions from Europe, the Americas, and Africa, held Buddha Day Ceremonies, together creating these solemn and magnificent gatherings. In some outdoor locations, despite light rain falling from the sky, people of all ages wore raincoats and respectfully chanted the Buddha’s name in unison. Each gentle rainfall was like sweet Dharma rain, nourishing hearts and washing away dust. In Africa, volunteers arranged simple Buddha bathing altars using locally available fresh flowers, fruits, and eco-friendly bowls. Volunteers guided participants in proper ceremony procedures, and beyond bathing the Buddha, they also washed the feet of elders as an act of filial piety, united in remembering the Fourfold Grace.
As we reverently pay respect to the Buddha and remember the Fourfold Grace, we must also face the natural disasters caused by imbalances in the four elements with vigilance and piety. Since the beginning of this year, the Palisades and Eaton wildfires in Los Angeles destroyed over sixteen thousand buildings, becoming the most devastating natural disaster in U.S. history. On March 28, a magnitude 7.7 earthquake in Myanmar nearly destroyed the country’s second-largest city, with nearly four thousand people losing their lives. In the face of nature’s power, humans are so small. At this moment, we must unite our strength and manifest the spirit of great love, with the determination of small ants climbing Mount Sumeru. By gathering everyone’s kind thoughts and good deeds, accompanied by great love, we can relieve people’s suffering.
The global Buddha Day Ceremonies also featured chanting from the Sutra of Infinite Meanings, with everyone reciting in unison: “The Dharma is like water, which can wash away defilements. Whether water comes from a well, a pond, a stream, a river, a brook, a channel, or a great ocean, it can wash away all defilements.” We hope this will inspire everyone to cleanse the dust from their hearts. Only when we bring purity to people’s hearts can society be harmonious. With this auspicious energy, favorable weather and a stable climate will prevail, and the world can be free from disasters.
“For Buddha’s teachings, for sentient beings”–this is the direction I have faithfully followed throughout my life, dedicating my entire life to my master’s teachings. I am grateful to all of you bodhisattvas for gathering the energy of love and walking the Bodhisattva Path together. I hope that everyone will embody the spirit of fireflies, seizing karmic conditions to recruit more bodhisattvas. Through love and kindness, we can bring harmony to the world and illuminate the dark corners of our planet, praying that the true Buddha Dharma will abide forever in this world.
I sincerely bless all of you bodhisattva-volunteers: may everyone be safe and peaceful, may each day be auspicious, may you always be filled with Dharma joy, and may you cultivate both blessings and wisdom!
Founder of Buddhist Tzu Chi Foundation, Dharma Master Cheng Yen; June 4, 2025