Listening to the Dharma: A Treasure Greater Than Gold

This ancient Buddhist narrative reveals a timeless truth: the value of spiritual wisdom far outweighs any material wealth. It is a powerful reminder to cherish the opportunity to hear and practice the true teachings.

The story begins with the aunt of Shakyamuni Buddha. Out of deep love and devotion, she wove a magnificent robe for him, intricately threaded with gold. It was a labor of heart, an offering fit for an enlightened one.

Yet when she presented it, the Buddha gently advised her to give the robe instead to the entire monastic community—the Sangha.

This puzzled her. The garment was made especially for him. Why give it away?

The Buddha explained with compassion:

“The Field of Merit provided by the Sangha is vast and boundless. Offer it to them, and the virtue you gain will be immeasurable. To give to the Sangha is to give to me.”

Moved by this wisdom, she offered the robe to the monks. Out of humility, none dared to accept it—except Bodhisattva Maitreya, the future Buddha.

Wearing the golden robe, Maitreya went into the city to receive alms. His majestic presence, radiant in that resplendent garment, astonished the townspeople. They were mesmerized—so much so that they forgot to offer him food.

Among them was a master bead-stringer. Captivated, he invited Maitreya to his home for a meal. Afterward, he requested a Dharma discourse.

The artisan listened with such joy and absorption that he forgot everything—including an urgent commission from a wealthy patron who had paid him generously to craft a wedding ornament worth one hundred thousand coins.

When the client’s messengers arrived repeatedly to collect the finished piece, they found him entirely engrossed in listening to the teachings. Enraged, the wealthy man demanded back his jewels and the full down payment.

The artisan’s wife was devastated. Facing such a financial loss, she scolded him bitterly:

“By simply finishing that order, you would have earned a great fortune. Instead, you threw it all away listening to philosophy!”

The artisan felt a wave of regret wash over him.

Sensing this inner turmoil, Maitreya gently asked, “Will you come with me to the monastery?”

The artisan nodded.

Back at the monastery, Maitreya posed a question to the venerable Arhats:

“Which carries greater merit: listening to the Dharma with a joyful heart, or earning a great fortune?”

One by one, the senior monks affirmed that nothing can compare to the merit of hearing the true teachings.

Venerable Kaundinya declared:

“Receiving ten thousand pounds of gold cannot compare to offering even a single bowl of food to a virtuous practitioner. And listening to the Dharma with pure faith—even for a moment—surpasses that merit by hundreds of millions of times.”

Four other Arhats repeated this profound truth.

Finally, Maitreya asked Venerable Aniruddha why this was so.

Aniruddha replied:

“In a past life, I offered just one bowl of food to a Pratyekabuddha. Because of that single offering, for ninety-one world cycles I was reborn as a Heavenly Emperor and a human King, enjoying peace and prosperity. In this life, I was born into the same clan as the Buddha, and came into this world with a natural treasure field forty li wide.”

Hearing this, the bead-stringer felt his regret dissolve. Joy filled his heart. He understood the treasure he had received was far beyond the hundred thousand coins he had lost.

This ancient story is far more than a tale. It invites us to reflect deeply on the power of the Dharma.

Listening to the Truth is not merely an intellectual exercise.
It opens the heart.
It awakens wisdom.
It strengthens the willpower needed to transform our deepest flaws and afflictions.

Material wealth is limited and fleeting.
The merit gained from receiving the Dharma is limitless, enduring, and life-changing.

And yet the opportunity to listen does not always come easily. Conditions shift. Circumstances change. None of us can guarantee the next moment of life, much less another chance to sit peacefully and hear teachings that can liberate us from suffering.

When the causes and conditions ripen—when the Dharma reaches our ears—we must listen wholeheartedly.

We must not assume tomorrow will come.
We must not assume our hearts are already pure.
We must not assume we know enough.

The greatest freedom comes only when we break the cycle of birth and death and attain effortless liberation. Every moment of listening, every spark of understanding, moves us closer to that awakening.

This story encourages us to treasure every opportunity to hear the teachings, to recognize that spiritual wisdom is the greatest wealth of all, and to remember that even a moment of true Dharma listening can bring blessings far beyond the measure of gold.

In this Dharma-ending age, we are truly blessed that an ancient Buddha has come into our world to reveal the authentic, uncorrupted Dharma. The recorded discourses of H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III guide practitioners through a clear and progressive path of cultivation, offering incisive teachings that encompass the essence of the twelve divisions of the Tripitaka and the ten divisions of the esoteric scriptures. Nothing is diluted or lost—each teaching preserves the profound meaning of both the exoteric and esoteric Dharma. These discourses illuminate an extraordinary range of topics, from the principles of the Trikaya and the Four Wisdoms of a Buddha to the supreme vajra Dharma of the highest division. They reveal the true realization of the Great Perfection of Ultimate Wisdom, and through the Xian Liang Buddha Wisdom Great Perfection Dharma, disciples may even personally witness the rainbow-body state on the very day the Dharma is transmitted. In both theory and practice, the teachings of H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III stand complete, perfect, and unparalleled—an immeasurable blessing in this age of fading Dharma.

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