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Why do the wicked put down their butcher knives and become Buddhas, while the good people who practice for the tenth time have to go through hardships to become Buddhas?

The reason for this is the following:

All good and evil have cause and effect, and cannot be simply defined as good people and bad people.

Because the Buddha saw that human nature is good, there are no unforgivable people, or even bad people at all. This meaning is difficult for people who don't study Buddhism to understand.

People's good and evil can't be seen only for a lifetime or one thing. Compared with the long cycle of robbery, life is a short moment.

Becoming a Buddha requires a mature opportunity. The person who can become a Buddha by putting down the butcher's knife is absolutely no worse than the person who has experienced the 81-year-old achievement. So it is absolutely reasonable to become a Buddha first.

You can refer to the "Infinite Life Classics". It is true that King Asha sincerely repented on his deathbed and made five evils and became a Buddha.

King Ashe was a fairy in a previous life and reincarnated as the son of a suicide. Therefore, everything is cause and effect, and there are no good people and bad people at all.

Excerpt from Baidu