Teachings by Dharma Master Cheng Yen
Translated by Dharma as Water Dev. Dept, Tzu Chi USA
Tzu Chi has been around for sixty years; this is quite an achievement. What is even more remarkable is how causes and conditions have brought everyone’s energy together.
Among the countries Tzu Chi has been established in, Taiwan and Canada are very far apart, separated by over 12,000 kilometers. However, I believe that “our natures are similar.” It is just that as volunteers, you have your careers, while I have my missions. Thus, I became a monastic, and you formed families. Everyone has formed their own families, yet we are also part of the same family, carrying out our missions together. The spirit of our missions is to work “for the Buddha’s teachings and for all sentient beings.”
Tzu Chi does not discriminate between religions. We carry the spirit of the Buddha, but we respect all religions; there are no distinctions in names. In different countries, different cultures produce different names for religions, so people will say, “I am Catholic, you are Protestant, and he is Muslim…” When we bring them all together, they are all forms of “faith.” What all faiths share in common is one broad and open path—love. The love that brings everyone together is “great love.”
You all uphold the Tzu Chi spirit of great love and have established the Tzu Chi Great Love Garden. This garden has become a spiritual training ground, nurturing many Bodhisattvas. I am very happy. Even though each person has their own career or profession, in this training ground, we all share a common aspiration.
In modern families, those who are studying have their studies to attend to, and those who are working have work to attend to. It is not easy for them to spend time together. But now, with this large expanse of land, everyone’s hearts are connected. This harmonious vitality and affection between people manifests when they meet.
In the Buddhist teachings, Bodhisattvas are referred to as “awakened sentient beings.” All people have an awakened nature, but many have lost their way. They work under the assumption that “you are you,” “he is he,” and “I am I.” In this way, people are not connected by any sentiment. If there are any connections between people, they are due to possessiveness and disputes; our hearts are not united. Tzu Chi, on the other hand, brings together causes and conditions so that everyone shares a common goal—love. What is even more special is that we all have the same teacher and follow the same path. Everyone listens to me, so when doing things, there is no conflict. We work together harmoniously to do good deeds.
In modern society, people often say that life and work are very stressful. In the Great Love Garden, people can adopt a flower bed and find one or two days each week to relax. They can step on the earth and look at the trees. They can pick some fruit and tend to the flowers and plants. They can experience this vitality and feel the joy of cultivating the land. Hearing about the joy people feel from cultivating the land is a form of enjoyment for me. When people come back and share about their “enjoyment,” I feel as if I were there myself, and though I think, “That is the life for me,” I know I was meant to do other things.
I remember when I went to Hsinchu, I also saw a joyful garden area that the elderly had adopted.
Elderly people cannot squat down easily, and getting up after squatting is also difficult. So, Tzu Chi volunteers built frames. They raised the vegetable beds so that the elderly could stand and plant or sit and harvest. They even brought tall chairs for weeding. People can sit facing each other, and they can talk. They do not gossip about family matters. Their shared topics of conversation are always loving and about not wanting me to worry.
In life, those who toil work arduously, while those who enjoy leisure are bored with their idleness. Busy people have no free time, while idle people have no joy. What is the most joyful thing in life? Volunteering for Tzu Chi. It is not something we do for ourselves, but for the world; we work to benefit the world and to do things worthy of praise from all people. Creating blessings for people benefits society. These acts are like footprints we leave behind. We must walk the right path, create blessings for society, and do things that carry meaning.
I take inventory of my life every day and feel that my life is rich in value. My disciples have gone to distant places. First, they built their careers and stabilized their families. Now they have also carried out Tzu Chi’s missions. Our missions are like a large family that invites everyone to cultivate the fields together. What is important is that we have Bodhisattva companions. All of the companions we work with are Bodhisattvas.
The Buddha came to this world for one great cause—to teach the Bodhisattva Way and guide sentient beings to recognize the path of enlightenment. The teachings say, “To learn is to awaken.” We are now in the “stage of learning,” learning to be Bodhisattvas. We must “learn” with a childlike heart, letting go of habitual tendencies and eliminating discursive thoughts. And we must learn the Buddha’s teachings with a pure mind. Learning the Buddha’s teachings cannot be done without practicing the Bodhisattva Path. We must let go of the worries in our hearts and learn from heaven and earth and the human world. We must learn “gratitude, respect, and love”—this is practicing the Bodhisattva Path.
A person may feel, “He has been very good to me. I must be grateful.” Or, “Why should I be grateful to you? I do not know if you have been good to me.” In Tzu Chi, the best phrase is “gratitude.” When I see people, I always say, “I am grateful.” When we learn to be grateful to each other, society will be harmonious, and the human world will be at peace.
To bring about a pure land in this world, we must first bring purity to people’s hearts. You bring purity to your own heart, and I bring purity to my own heart. When the ground of our hearts is pure and clean, we can naturally create blessings for people. This path we are walking is the right one, but we must recognize the impermanence of life so that we can be courageous and diligent. Several of my Canadian disciples, who are close to my heart, have already left and then returned to this world. They are my hope for the future. I am getting older; one day I will also pass away, but I will be sure to return very quickly.
When I return, there will be older brothers and sisters; the Tzu Chi aunts and uncles will care for me, guide me onto the Bodhisattva Path, and pass on the spirit. I hope that everyone will form aspirations and make vows to continue in the Tzu Chi family, lifetime after lifetime, generation after generation.
Compiled from Master Cheng Yen’s teachings at a gathering with volunteers from Canada on October 12, 2025