Buddhist Psalms of Shinran ShoninBuddhismAccepted by Some TraditionsJapaneseShareBuddhist Psalms 18S. Yamabe & L. Adams Beck (1921) - EnglishMoreVersion - 1 availableS. Yamabe & L. Adams Beck (1921)LanguageEnglishEspañol‹Buddhist Psalms 1Buddhist Psalms 2Buddhist Psalms 3Buddhist Psalms 4Buddhist Psalms 5Buddhist Psalms 6Buddhist Psalms 7Buddhist Psalms 8Buddhist Psalms 9Buddhist Psalms 10Buddhist Psalms 11Buddhist Psalms 12Buddhist Psalms 13Buddhist Psalms 14Buddhist Psalms 15Buddhist Psalms 16Buddhist Psalms 17Buddhist Psalms 18Buddhist Psalms 19›Wherein With Lamentation I Make My ConfessionBuddhist Psalms 18ListenPlay this chapter in spoken English.Save chapterListen to chapter327Though I seek my refuge in the true faith of the Pure Land, Yet hath not mine heart been truly sincere. Deceit and untruth are in my flesh, And in my soul is no clear shining. 328In their outward seeming are all men diligent and truth speaking, But in their souls are greed and eager and unjust deceitfulness, And in their flesh do lying and cunning triumph. 329Too strong for me is the evil of my heart. I cannot overcome it. Therefore is my soul like unto the poison of serpents, Even my righteous deeds, being mingled with this poison, must be named the deeds of deceitfulness. 330Shameless though I be and having no truth in my soul, Yet the virtue of the Holy Name, the gift of Him that is enlightened, Is spread throughout the world through my words being as I am. 331There is no mercy in my soul. The good of my fellow-man is not dear in mine eyes. If it were not for the Ark of Mercy, the divine promise of the Infinite Wisdom, How should I cross the Ocean of Misery? 332I, whose mind is filled with cunning and deceit as the poison of reptiles, am impotent to practise righteous deeds. If I sought not refuge in the gift of our Father, I should die the death of the shameless. 333It is a token of this evil age that in this world the priests, together with the people, In secret serve strange gods, While bearing the appearance of the devout sons of Buddha. 334Sad and corrupt is it that the priests and people, following after the superstitions of auspicious times and days, seek sooth-saying and festivals And worship the gods of heaven and earth. 335Though I have heard that the names of priest and monk are honourable, Yet now are they held as light as the five shameless precepts of Devadatta. 336Being of one accord with the many minds of the heathen, They bow in worship before devils, While yet wearing the robe of the Buddha. 337Sad and sorrowful is it that all the priests and people now in the land of Yamato should worship the devils of heaven and earth, in the name of the holy mysteries of the Buddha. 338It is a mark of the downward way of this evil age that men despise the name of priest or monk as a mean thing, considering them like unto slaves. 339May they yet bring offerings with homage unto the priests, even as you do unto Saliputra or Mahamonugalyayana, those two great servants of the Lord; though they are priests but in name and without discipline, for this is the time of degeneration and of the last days. 340Though sin hath no substance in itself, and is but the shadow of our illusion, and soul is in itself pure, yet in all this world is there no sincere man. 341Great sorrow is it that, in the wicked world of this age now so near its end, the high priests who are born in the palankin, and the monks who bear it now in Nara and Mount Hiyei, desire high secular rank as the greatest honour. 342That they consider the monk and nun as their slaves, and mock at the honourable title of priest and minister, even as at the mean name of slave, gives testimony that they despise the teaching of the Buddha. These sixteen psalms written above are written by me, Gutoku, with lamentation, to be a record. To me even the honourable priests and monks of the Central Temples seem now to be despised. ‹Previous chapterBuddhist Psalms 17Next chapterBuddhist Psalms 19›Similar passagesBy tradition and source labelFind similarCompare selectedCompare with similarAsk Deep ThoughtSelect passages to search for parallels.Tap any verse to select it, then compare selected passages or ask Deep Thought. Public domain