SOUTH of Savatthi is a great river, on the banks of which lay a hamlet of   five hundred houses. Thinking of the salvation of the people, the World-honored   One resolved to go to the village and preach the doctrine. Having come to the   riverside he sat down beneath a tree, and the villagers seeing the glory of his   appearance approached him with reverence; but when he began to preach, they   believed him not.
      When the world-honored Buddha had left Savatthi Sariputta felt a desire to   see the Lord and to hear him preach. Coming to the river where the water was   deep and the current strong, he said to himself: "This stream shall not prevent   me. I shall go and see the Blessed One, and he stepped upon the water which was   as firm under his feet as a slab of granite. When he arrived at a place in the   middle of the stream where the waves were high, Sariputta's heart gave way, and   he began to sink. But rousing his faith and renewing his mental effort, he   proceeded as before and reached the other bank.
      The people of the village were astonished to see Sariputta, and they asked   how he could cross the stream where there was neither a bridge nor a ferry.   Sariputta replied: "I lived in ignorance until I heard the voice of the Buddha.   As I was anxious to hear the doctrine of salvation, I crossed the river and I   walked over its troubled waters because I had faith. Faith. nothing else,   enabled me to do so, and now I am here in the bliss of the Master's   presence."
      The World-honored One added: "Sariputta, thou hast spoken well. Faith like   thine alone can save the world from the yawning gulf of migration and enable men   to walk dryshod to the other shore." And the Blessed One urged to the villagers   the necessity of ever advancing in the conquest of sorrow and of casting off all   shackles so as to cross the river of worldliness and attain deliverance from   death. Hearing the words of the Tathagata, the villagers were filled with joy   and believing in the doctrines of the Blessed One embraced the five rules and   took refuge in his name.