Crime of indulgence
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi à NSH à NYU à nzu à, which means to be good and far away from evil. It comes from the biography of Jia Yi in Hanshu.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Examples
I have a taste of Chen Rong, filial piety, benevolence and faith, no learning, no official. When the villagers see it, they all want to indulge in the crime, but they don't know why. Tang lvwen's tomb list of Mr. Chen in Guangling
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Jia Yi in the book of Han Dynasty, "however, those who say" Li Yun "and" Li Yun "are more noble than those who have not sprouted, and they start to teach in Weihe, which makes the people and the Japanese reconcile themselves to good deeds and avoid crimes without knowing it."
Idiom explanation
Turn to the good and away from the evil.
Crime of indulgence
full of ideas for state policy agnosia - jīng shén mǎn fù
recall one 's sufferings in the old society and contrast them with the happiness in the new - yì kǔ sī tián
to manufacture a perfect cart begins from the simple spokeless wheel - dà lù zhuī lún
understand thoroughly the truth of all things on earth and handle affairs successfully accordingly - kāi wù chéng wù
heal the wounded and rescue the dying - jiù sǐ fú shāng