deliver all living creatures from torment
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ǔ D ù zh ò ngsh ē ng, refers to the public camp disturbance, such as drowning in the sea, Buddhism, Taoism with compassion for the mind, great magic power, do their best to rescue them in order to land on the other side. It comes from the Sutra of Buddha's infinite longevity.
The origin of Idioms
"The Buddhist doctrine of limitless longevity" says: "the universal desire to get rid of all living beings.".
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attributive to describe Buddhist children. Example: Zhang Liujin's body can be changed and transformed, no matter how big it is, no matter how big it is, no matter how connected it is, and he is called the teacher of heaven and man. Feng Menglong's warning to the world in Ming Dynasty (Volume 40)
deliver all living creatures from torment
why break a butterfly on the wheel - shā jī yān yòng niú dāo
All the people go back to the sea - zhòng liú guī hǎi
Drilling mountains and blocking seas - zuàn shān sāi hǎi