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Refuge
An Introduction to the
Buddha, Dhamma, & Sangha
by
Thanissaro Bhikkhu (Geoffrey DeGraff)
Copyright © 2001 Thanissaro Bhikkhu
For free distribution only.
You may print copies of this work for your personal use.
You may re-format and redistribute this work for use on
computers and computer networks,
provided that you charge no fees for its distribution or
use.
Otherwise, all rights reserved.
Third edition, revised, 2001
They go to many a refuge,
to mountains, forests,
parks, trees, and shrines:
people threatened with danger.
That's not the secure refuge,
that's not the highest refuge,
that's not the refuge,
having gone to which,
you gain release
from all suffering and stress.
But when, having gone for refuge
to the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha,
you see with right discernment
the four Noble Truths --
stress,
the cause of stress,
the transcending of stress,
and the Noble Eightfold Path,
the way to the stilling of stress:
That's the secure refuge,
that, the highest refuge,
that is the refuge,
having gone to which,
you gain release
from all suffering and stress.
-- Dhammapada, 188-192
Contents
Preface
I. Introduction
· Going
for Refuge
II. Readings
· Buddha
· Dhamma
· Basic
Principles
· Generosity
· Virtue
· Heaven
·
Drawbacks
·
Renunciation
·
The Four Noble Truths
·
Liberation
· Sangha
III. Essays
· Buddha
·
The Meaning of the Buddha's
Awakening
· Dhamma
·
Life Isn't Just Suffering
·
No-self or Not-self?
· Nibbana
· Sangha
· The
Economy of Gifts
·
Summary
· A
Refuge in Skillful Action
Glossary
Abbreviations
Preface
This book is a short introduction to the basic
principles of Buddhism: the Buddha, the Dhamma (his teachings),
and Sangha (the community of his noble disciples), also known as
the Triple Gem or the Triple Refuge. The material is divided
into three parts: (I) an introductory essay on the meaning of
refuge and the act of going for refuge; (II) a series of
readings drawn from the earliest Buddhist texts illustrating the
essential qualities of the Triple Gem; and (III) a set of essays
explaining aspects of the Triple Gem that often provoke
questions in those who are new to the Buddha's teachings. This
last section concludes with an essay that summarizes, in a more
systematic form, many of the points raised in the earlier parts
of the book.
The readings on Dhamma form the core of the
book, organized in a pattern -- called a graduated discourse
(anupubbi-katha) -- that the Buddha himself often used when
introducing his teachings to new listeners. After beginning with
the joys of generosity, he would describe the joys of a virtuous
life, followed by the rewards of generosity and virtue to be
experienced here and, after death, in heaven; the drawbacks of
sensual pleasures, even heavenly ones; and the rewards of
renunciation. Then, when he sensed that his listeners were
inclined to look favorably on renunciation as a way to true
happiness, he would discuss the central message of his teaching:
the four noble truths.
My hope is that this introduction will help
answer many of the questions that newcomers bring to Buddhism,
and will spark new questions in their minds as they contemplate
the possibility of developing within their own lives the
qualities of refuge exemplified by the Triple Gem.
Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Metta Forest Monastery
Valley Center, CA 92082-1409
U.S.A.
I. Introduction
Going for Refuge
The act of going for refuge marks the point
where one commits oneself to taking the Dhamma, or the Buddha's
teaching, as the primary guide to one's life. To understand why
this commitment is called a "refuge," it's helpful to look at
the history of the custom.
In pre-Buddhist India, going for refuge meant
proclaiming one's allegiance to a patron -- a powerful person or
god -- submitting to the patron's directives in hopes of
receiving protection from danger in return. In the early years
of the Buddha's teaching career, his new followers adopted this
custom to express their allegiance to the Buddha, Dhamma, and
Sangha, but in the Buddhist context this custom took on a new
meaning.
Buddhism is not a theistic religion -- the
Buddha is not a god -- and so a person taking refuge in the
Buddhist sense is not asking for the Buddha personally to
intervene to provide protection. Still, one of the Buddha's
central teachings is that human life is fraught with dangers --
from greed, anger, and delusion -- and so the concept of refuge
is central to the path of practice, in that the practice is
aimed at gaining release from those dangers. Because the mind is
the source both of the dangers and of release, there is a need
for two levels of refuge: external refuges, which provide models
and guidelines so that we can identify which qualities in the
mind lead to danger and which to release; and internal refuges,
i.e., the qualities leading to release that we develop in our
own mind in imitation of our external models. The internal level
is where true refuge is found.
Although the tradition of going to refuge is
an ancient practice, it is still relevant for our own practice
today, for we are faced with the same internal dangers that
faced people in the Buddha's time. We still need the same
protection as they. When a Buddhist takes refuge, it is
essentially an act of taking refuge in the doctrine of karma:
It's an act of submission in that one is committed to living in
line with the principle that actions based on skillful
intentions lead to happiness, while actions based on unskillful
intentions lead to suffering; it's an act of claiming protection
in that, by following the teaching, one hopes to avoid the
misfortunes that bad karma engenders. To take refuge in this way
ultimately means to take refuge in the quality of our own
intentions, for that's where the essence of karma lies.
The refuges in Buddhism -- both on the
internal and on the external levels -- are the Buddha, Dhamma,
and Sangha, also known as the Triple Gem. They are called gems
both because they are valuable and because, in ancient times,
gems were believed to have protective powers. The Triple Gem
outdoes other gems in this respect because its protective powers
can be put to the test and can lead further than those of any
physical gem, all the way to absolute freedom from the
uncertainties of the realm of aging, illness, and death.
The Buddha, on the external level, refers to
Siddhattha Gotama, the Indian prince who renounced his royal
titles and went into the forest, meditating until he ultimately
gained Awakening. To take refuge in the Buddha means, not taking
refuge in him as a person, but taking refuge in the fact of his
Awakening: placing trust in the belief that he did awaken to the
truth, that he did so by developing qualities that we too can
develop, and that the truths to which he awoke provide the best
perspective for the conduct of our life.
The Dhamma, on the external level, refers to
the path of practice the Buddha taught to this followers. This,
in turn, is divided into three levels: the words of his
teachings, the act of putting those teachings into practice, and
the attainment of Awakening as the result of that practice. This
three-way division of the word "Dhamma" acts as a map showing
how to take the external refuges and make them internal:
learning about the teachings, using them to develop the
qualities that the Buddha himself used to attain Awakening, and
then realizing the same release from danger that he found in the
quality of Deathlessness that we can touch within.
The word Sangha,
on the external level, has two senses: conventional and ideal.
In its ideal sense, the Sangha consists of all people, lay or
ordained, who have practiced the Dhamma to the point of gaining
at least a glimpse of the Deathless. In a conventional sense,
Sangha denotes the communities of ordained monks and nuns. The
two meanings overlap but are not necessarily identical. Some
members of the ideal Sangha are not ordained; some monks and
nuns have yet to touch the Deathless. All those who take refuge
in the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha become members of the Buddha's
four-fold assembly (parisa) of followers: monks, nuns,
male lay devotees, and female lay devotees. Although there's a
widespread belief that all Buddhist followers are members of the
Sangha, this is not the case. Only those who are ordained are
members of the conventional Sangha; only those who have glimpsed
the Deathless are members of the ideal Sangha. Nevertheless, any
followers who don't belong to the Sangha in either sense of the
word still count as genuine Buddhists in that they are members
of the Buddha's parisa.
When taking refuge in the external Sangha, one
takes refuge in both senses of the Sangha, but the two senses
provide different levels of refuge. The conventional Sangha has
helped keep the teaching alive for more than 2,500 years.
Without them, we would never have learned what the Buddha
taught. However, not all members of the conventional Sangha are
reliable models of behavior. So when looking for guidance in the
conduct of our lives, we must look to the living and recorded
examples provided by the ideal Sangha. Without their example, we
would not know (1) that Awakening is available to all, and not
just to the Buddha; and (2) how Awakening expresses itself in
real life.
On the internal level, the Buddha, Dhamma, and
Sangha are the skillful qualities we develop in our own minds in
imitation of our external models. For instance, the Buddha was a
person of wisdom, purity, and compassion. When we develop
wisdom, purity, and compassion in our own minds, they form our
refuge on an internal level. The Buddha tasted Awakening by
developing conviction, persistence, mindfulness, concentration,
and discernment. When we develop these same qualities to the
point of attaining Awakening too, that Awakening is our ultimate
refuge. This is the point where the three aspects of the Triple
Gem become one: beyond the reach of greed, anger, and delusion,
and thus totally secure.
II. Readings
'Indeed, the Blessed One
[the Buddha] is worthy and rightly self-awakened, consummate in
knowledge and conduct, well-gone, an expert with regard to the
cosmos, unexcelled as a trainer for those people fit to be
tamed, the Teacher of divine and human beings, awakened,
blessed.'
'The Dhamma is well-expounded by the
Blessed One, to be seen here and now, timeless, inviting
verification, pertinent, to be realized by the wise for
themselves.'
'The Sangha of the Blessed One's disciples
who have practiced well... who have practiced
straight-forwardly... who have practiced methodically... who
have practiced masterfully -- in other words, the four types of
noble disciples when taken as pairs, the eight when taken as
individual types -- they are the Sangha of the Blessed One's
disciples: worthy of gifts, worthy of hospitality, worthy of
offerings, worthy of respect, the incomparable field of merit
for the world.'
A X.92
Buddha
[The Buddha speaks:] I lived
in refinement, utmost refinement, total refinement. My father
even had lotus ponds made in our palace: one where red-lotuses
bloomed, one where white lotuses bloomed, one where blue lotuses
bloomed, all for my sake. I used no sandalwood that was not from
Varanasi. My turban was from Varanasi, as were my tunic, my
lower garments, and my outer cloak. A white sunshade was held
over me day and night to protect me from cold, heat, dust, dirt,
and dew.
I had three palaces: one for the cold season,
one for the hot season, one for the rainy season. During the
four months of the rainy season I was entertained in the
rainy-season palace by minstrels without a single man among
them, and I did not once come down from the palace. Whereas the
servants, workers, and retainers in other people's homes are fed
meals of lentil soup and broken rice, in my father's home the
servants, workers, and retainers were fed wheat, rice, and meat.
Even though I was endowed with such fortune,
such total refinement, the thought occurred to me: "When an
untaught, run-of-the-mill person, himself subject to aging, not
beyond aging, sees another who is aged, he is horrified,
humiliated, and disgusted, oblivious to himself that he too is
subject to aging, not beyond aging. If I -- who am subject to
aging, not beyond aging -- were to be horrified, humiliated, and
disgusted on seeing another person who is aged, that would not
be fitting for me." As I noticed this, the [typical] young
person's intoxication with youth entirely dropped away.
Even though I was endowed with such fortune,
such total refinement, the thought occurred to me: "When an
untaught, run-of-the-mill person, himself subject to illness,
not beyond illness, sees another who is ill, he is horrified,
humiliated, and disgusted, oblivious to himself that he too is
subject to illness, not beyond illness. And if I -- who am
subject to illness, not beyond illness -- were to be horrified,
humiliated, and disgusted on seeing another person who is ill,
that would not be fitting for me." As I noticed this, the
healthy person's intoxication with health entirely dropped away.
Even though I was endowed with such fortune,
such total refinement, the thought occurred to me: "When an
untaught, run-of-the-mill person, himself subject to death, not
beyond death, sees another who is dead, he is horrified,
humiliated, and disgusted, oblivious to himself that he too is
subject to death, not beyond death. And if I -- who am subject
to death, not beyond death -- were to be horrified, humiliated,
and disgusted on seeing another person who is dead, that would
not be fitting for me." As I noticed this, the living person's
intoxication with life entirely dropped away.
A III.38
The Quest for Awakening
Before my Awakening, when I
was still an unawakened Bodhisatta, being subject myself to
birth, aging, illness, death, sorrow, and defilement, I sought
[happiness in] what was subject to birth, aging, illness, death,
sorrow, and defilement. The thought occurred to me: "Why am I,
being subject myself to birth... defilement, seeking what is
subject to birth... defilement? What if I... were to seek the
unborn, unaging, unailing, undying, sorrowless, undefiled,
unsurpassed security from bondage: Unbinding."
So at a later time, when I was still young,
black-haired, endowed with the blessings of youth in the first
stage of life, I shaved off my hair and beard -- though my
parents wished otherwise and were grieving with tears on their
faces -- and I put on the ochre robe and went forth from the
home life into homelessness.
Having gone forth in search of what might be
skillful, seeking the unexcelled state of sublime peace, I went
to where Alara Kalama was staying and, on arrival, said to him:
"I want to practice in this doctrine and discipline."
When this was said, he replied to me, "You may
stay here. This doctrine is such that a wise person can soon
enter and dwell in his own teacher's knowledge, having realized
it for himself through direct knowledge."
I quickly learned the doctrine. As far as mere
lip-reciting and repetition, I could speak the words of
knowledge, the words of the elders, and I could affirm that I
knew and saw -- I, along with others.
I thought: "It isn't through mere conviction
alone that Alara Kalama declares, 'I have entered and dwell in
this Dhamma, having realized it directly for myself.' Certainly
he dwells knowing and seeing this Dhamma." So I went to him and
said, "To what extent do you declare that you have entered and
dwell in this Dhamma?" When this was said, he declared the
dimension of nothingness.
I thought: "Not only does Alara Kalama have
conviction, persistence, mindfulness, concentration, and
discernment. I, too, have conviction, persistence, mindfulness,
concentration, and discernment. Suppose I were to endeavor to
realize for myself the Dhamma that Alara Kalama declares he has
entered and dwells in..." So it was not long before I entered
and dwelled in that Dhamma, having realized it for myself
through direct knowledge. I went to him and said, "Friend
Kalama, is this the extent to which you have entered and dwell
in this Dhamma, having realized it for yourself through direct
knowledge?"
"Yes..."
"This is the extent to which I, too, have
entered and dwell in this Dhamma, having realized it for myself
through direct knowledge."
"It is a gain for us, a great gain for us,
that we have such a companion in the holy life... As I am, so
are you; as you are, so am I. Come friend, let us now lead this
community together."
In this way did Alara Kalama, my teacher,
place me, his pupil, on the same level with himself and pay me
great honor. But the thought occurred to me, "This Dhamma leads
not to disenchantment, to dispassion, to cessation, to stilling,
to direct knowledge, to Awakening, nor to Unbinding, but only to
reappearance in the dimension of nothingness." So, dissatisfied
with that Dhamma, I left.
M 26
"Now, Aggivessana, these
three similes -- spontaneous, never before heard -- appeared to
me. Suppose there were a wet, sappy piece of timber lying in the
water, and a man were to come along with an upper fire-stick,
thinking, 'I'll light a fire. I'll produce heat.' Now what do
you think? Would he be able to light a fire and produce heat by
rubbing the upper fire-stick in the wet, sappy timber lying in
the water?"
"No, Master Gotama..."
"So it is with any priest or contemplative who
does not live withdrawn from sensuality in body and mind, and
whose desire, infatuation, urge, thirst, and fever for
sensuality is not relinquished and stilled within him: Whether
or not he feels painful, racking, piercing feelings due to his
striving [for Awakening], he is incapable of knowledge, vision,
and unexcelled self-awakening...
"Then a second simile -- spontaneous, never
before heard -- appeared to me. Suppose there were a wet, sappy
piece of timber lying on land far from water, and a man were to
come along with an upper fire-stick, thinking, 'I'll light a
fire. I'll produce heat.' Now what do you think? Would he be
able to light a fire and produce heat by rubbing the upper
fire-stick in the wet, sappy timber lying on land?"
"No, Master Gotama..."
"So it is with any priest or contemplative who
lives withdrawn from sensuality in body only, but whose desire,
infatuation, urge, thirst, and fever for sensuality is not
relinquished and stilled within him: Whether or not he feels
painful, racking, piercing feelings due to his striving, he is
incapable of knowledge, vision, and unexcelled self-awakening...
"Then a third simile -- spontaneous, never
before heard -- appeared to me. Suppose there were a dry,
sapless piece of timber lying on land far from water, and a man
were to come along with an upper fire-stick, thinking, 'I'll
light a fire. I'll produce heat.' Now what do you think? Would
he be able to light a fire and produce heat by rubbing the upper
fire-stick in the dry, sapless timber lying on land?"
"Yes, Master Gotama..."
"So it is with any priest or contemplative who
lives withdrawn from sensuality in body and mind, and whose
desire, infatuation, urge, thirst, and fever for sensuality is
relinquished and stilled within him: Whether or not he feels
painful, racking, piercing feelings due to his striving, he is
capable of knowledge, vision, and unexcelled self-awakening...
"I thought: 'Suppose that I, clenching my
teeth and pressing my tongue against the roof of my mouth, were
to beat down, constrain, and crush my mind with my awareness'...
So, just as if a strong man, seizing a weaker man by the head or
the throat or the shoulders would beat him down, constrain and
crush him, in the same way I beat down, constrained, and crushed
my mind with my awareness. As I did so, sweat poured from my
armpits. But although tireless persistence was aroused in me,
and unmuddled mindfulness established, my body was aroused and
uncalm because of the painful exertion. But the painful feeling
that arose in this way did not invade my mind or remain.
"I thought: 'Suppose I were to become absorbed
in the trance of non-breathing.' So I stopped the in-breaths and
out-breaths in my nose and mouth. As I did so, there was a loud
roaring of winds coming out my earholes, just like the loud roar
of winds coming out of a smith's bellows... So I stopped the
in-breaths and out-breaths in my nose and mouth and ears. As I
did so, extreme forces sliced through my head, just as if a
strong man were slicing my head open with a sharp sword...
Extreme pains arose in my head, just as if a strong man were
tightening a turban made of tough leather straps around my
head... Extreme forces carved up my stomach cavity, just as if a
butcher or his apprentice were to carve up the stomach cavity of
an ox... There was an extreme burning in my body, just as if two
strong men, grabbing a weaker man by the arms, were to roast and
broil him over a pit of hot embers. But although tireless
persistence was aroused in me, and unmuddled mindfulness
established, my body was aroused and uncalm because of the
painful exertion. But the painful feeling that arose in this way
did not invade my mind or remain.
"Devas, on seeing me, said, 'Gotama the
contemplative is dead.' Other devas said, 'He isn't dead, he's
dying.' Others said, 'He's neither dead nor dying, he's an
arahant, for this is the way arahants live.'
"I thought: 'Suppose I were to practice going
altogether without food.' Then devas came to me and said, 'Dear
sir, please don't practice going altogether without food. If you
go altogether without food, we'll infuse divine nourishment in
through your pores, and you will survive on that.' I thought,
'If I were to claim to be completely fasting while these devas
are infusing divine nourishment in through my pores, I would be
lying.' So I dismissed them, saying, 'Enough.'
"I thought: 'Suppose I were to take only a
little food at a time, only a handful at a time of bean soup,
lentil soup, vetch soup, or pea soup.' So I took only a little
food at a time, only handful at a time of bean soup, lentil
soup, vetch soup, or pea soup. My body became extremely
emaciated. Simply from my eating so little, my limbs became like
the jointed segments of vine stems or bamboo stems... My
backside became like a camel's hoof... My spine stood out like a
string of beads... My ribs jutted out like the jutting rafters
of an old, run-down barn... The gleam of my eyes appeared to be
sunk deep in my eye sockets like the gleam of water deep in a
well... My scalp shriveled and withered like a green bitter
gourd, shriveled and withered in the heat and the wind... The
skin of my belly became so stuck to my spine that when I thought
of touching my belly, I grabbed hold of my spine as well; and
when I thought of touching my spine, I grabbed hold of the skin
of my belly as well... If I urinated or defecated, I fell over
on my face right there... Simply from my eating so little, if I
tried to ease my body by rubbing my limbs with my hands, the
hair -- rotted at its roots -- fell from my body as I rubbed...
"I thought: 'Whatever priests or
contemplatives in the past have felt painful, racking, piercing
feelings due to their striving, this is the utmost. None have
been greater than this. Whatever priests or contemplatives in
the future... in the present are feeling painful, racking,
piercing feelings due to their striving, this is the utmost.
None is greater than this. But with this racking practice of
austerities I have not attained any superior human state, any
distinction in knowledge or vision worthy of the noble ones.
Could there be another path to Awakening?'
"I thought: 'I recall once, when my father the
Sakyan was working, and I was sitting in the cool shade of a
rose-apple tree, then -- quite withdrawn from sensuality,
withdrawn from unskillful mental qualities -- I entered and
remained in the first jhana: rapture and pleasure born from
withdrawal, accompanied by directed thought and evaluation.
Could that be the path to Awakening?' Then, following on that
memory, came the realization: 'That is the path to Awakening...
So why am I afraid of that pleasure that has nothing to do with
sensuality, nothing to do with unskillful mental qualities?' I
thought: 'I am no longer afraid of that pleasure... but it is
not easy to achieve that pleasure with a body so extremely
emaciated...' So I took some solid food: some rice and porridge.
Now five monks had been attending on me, thinking, 'If Gotama,
our contemplative, achieves some higher state, he will tell us.'
But when they saw me taking some solid food -- some rice and
porridge -- they were disgusted and left me, thinking, 'Gotama
the contemplative is living luxuriously. He has abandoned his
exertion and is backsliding into abundance.'
"So when I had taken solid food and regained
strength, then -- quite withdrawn from sensuality, withdrawn
from unskillful mental qualities, I entered and remained in the
first jhana: rapture and pleasure born from withdrawal,
accompanied by directed thought and evaluation. But the pleasant
feeling that arose in this way did not invade my mind or remain.
With the stilling of directed thought and evaluation, I entered
and remained in the second jhana: rapture and pleasure born of
composure, unification of awareness free from directed thought
and evaluation -- internal assurance... With the fading of
rapture I remained in equanimity, mindful and alert, and
physically sensitive of pleasure. I entered and remained in the
third jhana, of which the Noble Ones declare, 'Equanimous and
mindful, he has a pleasurable abiding.'... With the abandoning
of pleasure and pain -- as with the earlier disappearance of
elation and distress -- I entered and remained in the fourth
jhana: purity of equanimity and mindfulness, neither pleasure
nor pain. But the pleasant feeling that arose in this way did
not invade my mind or remain.
"When the mind was thus concentrated,
purified, bright, unblemished, rid of defilement, pliant,
malleable, steady, and attained to imperturbability, I directed
it to the knowledge of recollecting my past lives. I recollected
my manifold past lives, i.e., one birth, two... five, ten...
fifty, a hundred, a thousand, a hundred thousand, many eons of
cosmic contraction, many eons of cosmic expansion, many eons of
cosmic contraction and expansion: 'There I had such a name,
belonged to such a clan, had such an appearance. Such was my
food, such my experience of pleasure and pain, such the end of
my life. Passing away from that state, I re-arose there. There
too I had such a name, belonged to such a clan, had such an
appearance. Such was my food, such my experience of pleasure and
pain, such the end of my life. Passing away from that state, I
re-arose here.' Thus I remembered my manifold past lives in
their modes and details.
"This was the first knowledge I attained in
the first watch of the night. Ignorance was destroyed; knowledge
arose; darkness was destroyed; light arose -- as happens in one
who is heedful, ardent, and resolute. But the pleasant feeling
that arose in this way did not invade my mind or remain.
"When the mind was thus concentrated,
purified, bright, unblemished, rid of defilement, pliant,
malleable, steady, and attained to imperturbability, I directed
it to the knowledge of the passing away and reappearance of
beings. I saw -- by means of the divine eye, purified and
surpassing the human -- beings passing away and re-appearing,
and I discerned how they are inferior and superior, beautiful
and ugly, fortunate and unfortunate in accordance with their
kamma: 'These beings -- who were endowed with bad conduct of
body, speech, and mind, who reviled the noble ones, held wrong
views and undertook actions under the influence of wrong views
-- with the break-up of the body, after death, have re-appeared
in the plane of deprivation, the bad destination, the lower
realms, in hell. But these beings -- who were endowed with good
conduct of body, speech and mind, who did not revile the noble
ones, who held right views and undertook actions under the
influence of right views -- with the break-up of the body, after
death, have re-appeared in the good destinations, in the
heavenly world.' Thus -- by means of the divine eye, purified
and surpassing the human -- I saw beings passing away and
re-appearing, and I discerned how they are inferior and
superior, beautiful and ugly, fortunate and unfortunate in
accordance with their kamma.
"This was the second knowledge I attained in
the second watch of the night. Ignorance was destroyed;
knowledge arose; darkness was destroyed; light arose -- as
happens in one who is heedful, ardent, and resolute. But the
pleasant feeling that arose in this way did not invade my mind
or remain.
"When the mind was thus concentrated,
purified, bright, unblemished, rid of defilement, pliant,
malleable, steady, and attained to imperturbability, I directed
it to the knowledge of the ending of the mental effluents
(asava). I discerned, as it was actually present, that 'This
is stress... This is the origination of stress... This is the
cessation of stress... This is the way leading to the cessation
of stress... These are effluents... This is the origination of
effluents... This is the cessation of effluents... This is the
way leading to the cessation of effluents.' My heart, thus
knowing, thus seeing, was released from the effluent of
sensuality, released from the effluent of becoming, released
from the effluent of ignorance. With release, there was the
knowledge, 'Released.' I discerned that 'Birth is ended, the
holy life fulfilled, the task done. There is nothing further for
this world.'
"This was the third knowledge I attained in
the third watch of the night. Ignorance was destroyed; knowledge
arose; darkness was destroyed; light arose -- as happens in one
who is heedful, ardent, and resolute. But the pleasant feeling
that arose in this way did not invade my mind or remain."
M 36
Through the round of many
births
without reward,
without rest,
seeking the house builder.
Painful is birth again
and again.
House builder, you're seen!
You will not build a house again.
All your rafters broken,
the ridge pole destroyed,
gone to the Unformed, the mind
has attained the end of craving.
Dhp 153-54
The Buddha's Passing Away
Now at that time Subhadda
the Wanderer was staying in Kusinara. He heard that 'Tonight, in
the last watch of the night, the total Unbinding of Gotama the
contemplative will take place.' Then this thought occurred to
him, 'I have heard the elder wanderers, teachers of teachers,
saying that only once in a long, long time do Tathagatas --
worthy ones, rightly self-awakened -- appear in the world.
Tonight, in the last watch of the night, the total Unbinding of
Gotama the contemplative will take place. Now there is a doubt
that has arisen in me, but I have faith that he could teach me
the Dhamma in such a way that I might abandon that doubt.'
So he went to the Mallan Sal Tree grove and,
on arrival, said to Ven. Ananda, 'I have heard the elder
wanderers, teachers of teachers, saying that only once in a
long, long time do Tathagatas -- worthy ones, rightly
self-awakened -- appear in the world. Tonight, in the last watch
of the night, the total Unbinding of Gotama the contemplative
will take place. Now there is a doubt that has arisen in me, but
I have faith that he could teach me the Dhamma in such a way
that I might abandon that doubt. It would be good, Ven. Ananda,
if you would let me see him.'
When this was said, Ven. Ananda said to him,
'Enough, friend Subhadda. Do not bother the Blessed One. The
Blessed One is tired.'
For a second time... For a third time,
Subhadda the Wanderer said to Ven. Ananda, '...It would be good,
Ven. Ananda, if you would let me see him.'
For a third time, Ven. Ananda said to him,
'Enough, friend Subhadda. Do not bother the Blessed One. The
Blessed One is tired.'
Now, the Blessed One heard the exchange
between Ven. Ananda and Subhadda the Wanderer, and so he said to
Ven. Ananda, 'Enough, Ananda. Do not stand in his way. Let him
see the Tathagata. Whatever he asks me will all be for the sake
of knowledge, and not to be bothersome. And whatever I answer
when asked, he will quickly understand.'
So Ven. Ananda said to Subhadda the Wanderer,
'Go ahead, friend Subhadda. The Blessed One gives you his
leave.'
Then Subhadda went to the Blessed One and
exchanged courtesies, and after the exchange of courtesies sat
to one side. As he was sitting there, he said to the Blessed
One, 'Lord, these priests and contemplatives, each with his
group, each with his community, each the teacher of his group,
an honored leader, well-regarded by people at large -- i.e.,
Purana Kassapa, Makkhali Gosala, Ajita Kesakambalin, Pakudha
Kaccayana, Sañjaya Belatthaputta, and the Nigantha Nathaputta:
Do they all have direct knowledge as they themselves claim, or
do they all not have direct knowledge, or do some of them have
direct knowledge and some of them not?'
'Enough, Subhadda. Put this question aside. I
will teach you the Dhamma. Listen, and pay close attention. I
will speak.'
'Yes, lord,' Subhadda answered, and the
Blessed One said, 'In any doctrine and discipline where the
noble eightfold path is not found, no contemplative of the
first... second... third... fourth order [stream-winner,
once-returner, non-returner, arahant ] is found. But in any
doctrine and discipline where the noble eightfold path is
found, contemplatives of the first... second... third... fourth
order are found. The noble eightfold path is found in
this doctrine and discipline, and right here there are
contemplatives of the first... second... third... fourth order.
Other teachings are empty of knowledgeable contemplatives. And
if the monks dwell rightly, this world will not be empty of
Arahants.
At age twenty-nine I went
forth,
seeking what might be skillful,
and since my going forth
more than fifty years have past.
Outside of the realm
of methodical Dhamma,
there is no contemplative.
And no contemplative of the second... third...
fourth order. Other teachings are empty of knowledgeable
contemplatives. And if the monks dwell rightly, this world will
not be empty of Arahants.'
Then Subhadda the Wanderer said, 'Magnificent,
lord, magnificent! In many ways has the Blessed One made the
Dhamma clear -- just as if one were to place upright what has
been overturned, to reveal what has been hidden, to point out
the way to one who is lost, or to set out a lamp in the darkness
so that those with eyes might see forms. I go to the Blessed One
for refuge, and to the Dhamma and to the community of monks. Let
me obtain the going forth in the Blessed One's presence, let me
obtain admission.'
'Anyone, Subhadda, who has previously belonged
to another sect and who desires the going forth and admission in
this doctrine and discipline must first undergo probation for
four months. If, at the end of four months, the monks feel so
moved, they give him the going forth and admit him to the monk's
state. But I know distinctions among individuals in this
matter.'
'Lord, if that is so, I am willing to undergo
probation for four years. If, at the end of four years, the
monks feel so moved, let them give me the going forth and admit
me to the monk's state.'
Then the Blessed One said to Ven. Ananda,
'Very well then, Ananda, give Subhadda the going forth.'
'Yes, lord,' Ananda answered.
Then Subhadda said to Ven. Ananda, 'It is a
gain for you, Ananda, a great gain, that you have been anointed
here in the Teacher's presence with the pupil's anointing.'
Then Subhadda the Wanderer received the going
forth and the admission in the Blessed One's presence. And not
long after his admission -- dwelling alone, secluded, heedful,
ardent, and resolute -- he in no long time reached and remained
in the supreme goal of the holy life, for which clansmen rightly
go forth from home into homelessness, knowing and realizing it
for himself in the here and now. He knew: 'Birth is ended, the
holy life fulfilled, the task done. There is nothing further for
the sake of this world.' And thus Ven. Subhadda became another
one of the Arahants, the last of the Blessed One's face-to-face
disciples...
Then the Blessed One addressed the monks, 'I
exhort you, monks: All processes are subject to decay. Bring
about completion by being heedful.' Those were the Tathagata's
last words.
Then the Blessed One entered the first jhana.
Emerging from that he entered the second. Emerging from that, he
entered the third... the fourth... the dimension of the
infinitude of space... the dimension of the infinitude of
consciousness... the dimension of nothingness... the dimension
of neither perception nor non-perception... the cessation of
perception and feeling.
Then Ven. Ananda said to Ven. Anuruddha, "The
Blessed One, sir, has entered total Unbinding."
"No, friend, the Blessed One has not entered
total Unbinding. He has attained the cessation of perception and
feeling."
Then emerging from the cessation of perception
and feeling, the Blessed One entered the dimension of neither
perception nor non-perception... the dimension of nothingness...
the dimension of the infinitude of consciousness... the
dimension of the infinitude of space... the fourth jhana... the
third... the second... the first jhana. Emerging from the first
jhana he entered the second... the third... the fourth jhana.
Emerging from the fourth jhana, he entered total Unbinding in
the interim...
When the Blessed One had attained total
Unbinding, Sakka, ruler of the gods, uttered this stanza:
How inconstant are
compounded things!
Their nature: to arise and pass away.
They disband as they are arising.
Their total stilling
is bliss.
D 16
Dhamma
Basic Principles
Phenomena are preceded
by the heart,
ruled by the heart,
made of the heart.
If you speak or act with a corrupted heart,
then suffering follows you --
as the wheel of the cart,
the track of the ox that pulls it.
Phenomena are preceded by the heart,
ruled by the heart,
made of the heart.
If you speak or act with a calm, bright heart,
happiness follows you,
like a shadow that never leaves.
Dhp 1-2
Heedfulness: the path to the
Deathless;
Heedlessness: the path to death.
The heedful do not die;
The heedless are as if
already dead.
Knowing this as a true distinction,
those wise in heedfulness
rejoice in heedfulness,
enjoying the range of the noble ones.
Dhp 21-22
There are these five facts
that one should reflect on often, whether one is a woman or a
man, lay or ordained. Which five?
"I am subject to aging, have not gone beyond
aging"...
"I am subject to illness, have not gone beyond
illness"...
"I am subject to death, have not gone beyond
death"...
"I will grow different, separate from all that
is dear and appealing to me"...
"I am the owner of my actions (kamma), heir to
my actions, born of my actions, related through my actions, and
have my actions as my arbitrator. Whatever I do, for good or for
evil, to that will I fall heir"...
These are the five facts that one should
reflect on often, whether one is a woman or a man, lay or
ordained.
Now, based on what line of reasoning should
one often reflect... that "I am subject to aging, have not gone
beyond aging"? There are beings who are intoxicated with a
[typical] youth's intoxication with youth. Because of that
intoxication with youth, they conduct themselves in a bad way in
body... in speech... and in mind. But when they often reflect on
that fact, that youth's intoxication with youth will either be
entirely abandoned or grow weaker...
Now, based on what line of reasoning should
one often reflect... that "I am subject to illness, have not
gone beyond illness"? There are beings who are intoxicated with
a [typical] healthy person's intoxication with health. Because
of that intoxication with health, they conduct themselves in a
bad way in body... in speech... and in mind. But when they often
reflect on that fact, that healthy person's intoxication with
health will either be entirely abandoned or grow weaker...
Now, based on what line of reasoning should
one often reflect... that "I am subject to death, have not gone
beyond death"? There are beings who are intoxicated with a
[typical] living person's intoxication with life. Because of
that intoxication with life, they conduct themselves in a bad
way in body... in speech... and in mind. But when they often
reflect on that fact, that living person's intoxication with
life will either be entirely abandoned or grow weaker...
Now, based on what line of reasoning should
one often reflect... that "I will grow different, separate from
all that is dear and appealing to me"? There are beings who feel
desire and passion for the things they find dear and appealing.
Because of that passion, they conduct themselves in a bad way in
body... in speech... and in mind. But when they often reflect on
that fact, that desire and passion for the things they find dear
and appealing will either be entirely abandoned or grow
weaker...
Now, based on what line of reasoning should
one often reflect... that "I am the owner of my actions (kamma),
heir to my actions, born of my actions, related through my
actions, and have my actions as my arbitrator. Whatever I do,
for good or for evil, to that will I fall heir"? There are
beings who conduct themselves in a bad way in body... in
speech... and in mind. But when they often reflect on that fact,
that bad conduct in body, speech, and mind will either be
entirely abandoned or grow weaker...
Now, a noble disciple considers this: "I am
not the only one subject to aging, who has not gone beyond
aging. To the extent that there are beings -- past and future,
passing away and re-arising -- all beings are subject to aging,
have not gone beyond aging." When he/she often reflects on this,
the [factors of the] path take birth. He/she sticks with that
path, develops it, cultivates it. As he/she sticks with that
path, develops it and cultivates it, the fetters are abandoned,
the latent tendencies destroyed. (Similarly with each of the
other contemplations.)
A V.57
The non-doing of any
evil,
the performance of what is skillful,
the cleansing of one's own mind:
This is the Buddhas' teaching.
Not disparaging, not injuring,
restraint in line with the Patimokkha,
moderation in food,
dwelling in seclusion,
commitment to the heightened mind:
This is the Buddhas' teaching.
Dhp 183, 185
I do not see any one quality
by which unarisen skillful qualities arise, and arisen
unskillful qualities subside, like friendship with admirable
people. When a person is friends with admirable people, unarisen
skillful qualities arise, and arisen unskillful qualities
subside.
A I.72
Now what, TigerPaw
(Byagghapajja), is friendship with admirable people? There is
the case where a lay person, in whatever town or village he may
dwell, spends time with householders or householders' sons,
young or old, who are advanced in virtue. He talks with them,
engages them in discussions. He emulates consummate conviction
[in the principle of kamma] in those who are consummate in
conviction, consummate virtue in those who are consummate in
virtue, consummate generosity in those who are consummate in
generosity, and consummate discernment in those who are
consummate in discernment. This is called friendship with
admirable people.
A VIII.54
A female noble disciple who
grows in terms of these five types of growth grows in the noble
growth, grasps hold of what is essential, what is excellent in
the body. Which five? She grows in terms of conviction, in terms
of virtue, in terms of learning, in terms of generosity, in
terms of discernment. Growing in terms of these five types of
growth, the female noble disciple grows in the noble growth,
grasps hold of what is essential, what is excellent in the body.
Growing in conviction and
virtue
discernment, generosity, and learning,
a virtuous female lay disciple
such as this
takes hold of the essence within herself.
S XXXVII.34
'Kamma should be known. The
cause by which kamma comes into play should be known. The
diversity in kamma should be known. The result of kamma should
be known. The cessation of kamma should be known. The path of
practice for the cessation of kamma should be known.' Thus it
has been said. Why was it said?
Intention, I tell you, is kamma. Intending,
one does kamma by way of body, speech, and intellect.
And what is the cause by which kamma comes
into play? Contact...
And what is the diversity in kamma? There is
kamma to be experienced in purgatory, kamma to be experienced in
the realm of common animals, kamma to be experienced in the
realm of the hungry shades, kamma to be experienced in the human
world, kamma to be experienced in the celestial worlds...
And what is the result of kamma? The result of
kamma is of three sorts, I tell you: that which arises right
here and now, that which arises later [in this lifetime], and
that which arises following that...
And what is the cessation of kamma? From the
cessation of contact is the cessation of kamma...
And what is the way leading to the cessation
of kamma? Just this noble eightfold path: right view, right
resolve, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right
effort, right mindfulness, right concentration.
Now when a noble disciple discerns kamma in
this way, the cause by which kamma comes into play in this way,
the diversity of kamma in this way, the result of kamma in this
way, the cessation of kamma in this way, and the path of
practice leading to the cessation of kamma in this way, then he
discerns this penetrative holy life as the cessation of kamma.
A VI.63
The Buddha: How do you
construe this, Rahula: What is a mirror for?
Rahula: For reflection, sir.
The Buddha: In the same way, Rahula, bodily
acts, verbal acts, and mental acts are to be done with repeated
reflection.
Whenever you want to perform a bodily act, you
should reflect on it: 'This bodily act I want to perform --
would it lead to self-affliction, to the affliction of others,
or to both? Is it an unskillful bodily act, with painful
consequences, painful results?' If, on reflection, you know that
it would lead to self-affliction, to the affliction of others,
or to both; it would be an unskillful bodily act with painful
consequences, painful results, then any bodily act of that sort
is absolutely unfit for you to do. But if on reflection you know
that it would not cause affliction... it would be a skillful
bodily act with happy consequences, happy results, then any
bodily act of that sort is fit for you to do.
(Similarly with verbal acts and mental acts.)
While you are performing a bodily act, you
should reflect on it: 'This bodily act I am doing -- is it
leading to self-affliction, to the affliction of others, or to
both? Is it an unskillful bodily act, with painful consequences,
painful results?' If, on reflection, you know that it is leading
to self-affliction, to affliction of others, or both... you
should give it up. But if on reflection you know that it is
not... you may continue with it.
(Similarly with verbal acts and mental acts.)
Having performed a bodily act, you should
reflect on it... If, on reflection, you know that it led to
self-affliction, to the affliction of others, or to both; it was
an unskillful bodily act with painful consequences, painful
results, then you should confess it, reveal it, lay it open to
the Teacher or to a knowledgeable companion in the holy life.
Having confessed it... you should exercise restraint in the
future. But if on reflection you know that it did not lead to
affliction... it was a skillful bodily act with happy
consequences, happy results, then you should stay mentally
refreshed and joyful, training day and night in skillful mental
qualities.
(Similarly with verbal acts.)
Having performed a mental act, you should
reflect on it... If, on reflection, you know that it led to
self-affliction, to the affliction of others, or to both; it was
an unskillful mental act with painful consequences, painful
results, then you should feel horrified, humiliated, and
disgusted with it. Feeling horrified... you should exercise
restraint in the future. But if on reflection you know that it
did not lead to affliction... it was a skillful mental act with
happy consequences, happy results, then you should stay mentally
refreshed and joyful, training day and night in skillful mental
qualities.
Rahula, all the priests and contemplatives in
the course of the past who purified their bodily acts, verbal
acts, and mental acts, did it through repeated reflection on
their bodily acts, verbal acts, and mental acts in just this
way.
All the priests and contemplatives in the
course of the future... All the priests and contemplatives at
present who purify their bodily acts, verbal acts, and mental
acts, do it through repeated reflection on their bodily acts,
verbal acts, and mental acts in just this way.
Therefore, Rahula, you should train yourself:
'I will purify my bodily acts through repeated reflection. I
will purify my verbal acts through repeated reflection. I will
purify my mental acts through repeated reflection.' Thus you
should train yourself.
That is what the Blessed One said. Pleased,
Ven. Rahula delighted in the Blessed One's words.
M 61
These five things are
welcome, agreeable, pleasant, and hard to obtain in the world.
Which five? Long life... beauty... pleasure... status... rebirth
in heaven... Now, I tell you, these five things are not to be
obtained by reason of prayers or wishes. If they were to be
obtained by reason of prayers or wishes, who here would lack
them? It is not fitting for the noble disciple who desires long
life to pray for it or to delight in doing so. Instead, the
noble disciple who desires long life should follow the path of
practice leading to long life. In so doing, he will attain long
life, either human or divine. (Similarly with beauty, pleasure,
status, and rebirth in heaven.)
A V.43
I have heard that at one
time the Blessed One was staying in Savatthi at Jeta's Grove,
Anathapindika's monastery. Then a certain deva, in the far
extreme of the night, her extreme radiance lighting up the
entirety of Jeta's Grove, approached the Blessed One. On
approaching, having bowed down to the Blessed One, she stood to
one side. As she was standing there, she addressed him with a
verse.
"Many devas and humans
beings
give thought to protective charms,
desiring well-being.
Tell, then, the highest protective charm."
[The Buddha:]
"Not consorting with fools,
consorting with the wise,
homage to those deserving of homage:
This is the highest protective charm.
Living in a civilized land,
having made merit in the past,
directing oneself rightly:
This is the highest protective charm.
Broad knowledge, skill,
well-mastered discipline,
well-spoken words:
This is the highest protective charm.
Support for one's parents,
assistance to one's wife and children,
consistency in one's work:
This is the highest protective charm.
Giving, living in rectitude,
assistance to one's relatives,
deeds that are blameless:
This is the highest protective charm.
Avoiding, abstaining from evil;
refraining from intoxicants,
being heedful of the qualities of the mind:
This is the highest protective charm.
Respect, humility,
contentment, gratitude,
hearing the Dhamma on timely occasions:
This is the highest protective charm.
Patience, composure,
seeing contemplatives,
discussing the Dhamma on timely occasions:
This is the highest protective charm.
Austerity, celibacy,
seeing the Noble Truths,
realizing Unbinding:
This is the highest protective charm.
A mind that, when touched
by the ways of the world,
is unshaken, sorrowless, dustless, secure:
This is the highest protective charm.
Everywhere undefeated
when acting in this way,
people go everywhere in well-being:
This is their highest protective charm."
Sn II.4
Generosity
These are the five rewards
of generosity: One is dear and appealing to people at large, one
is admired by good people, one's good name is spread about, one
does not stray from the rightful duties of the householder, and
with the break-up of the body at death, one reappears in a good
destination, in the heavenly worlds.
A V.35
What the miser fears,
that keeps him from giving,
is the very danger that comes
when he doesn't give.
S I.32
No misers go
to the world of the devas.
Those who don't praise giving
are fools.
The enlightened
expresse their approval for giving
and so finds ease
in the world beyond.
Dhp 177
If beings knew, as I know,
the results of giving and sharing, they would not eat without
having given, nor would the stain of miserliness overcome their
minds. Even if it were their last bite, their last mouthful,
they would not eat without having shared, if there were someone
to receive their gift. But because beings do not know, as I
know, the results of giving and sharing, they eat without having
given. The stain of miserliness overcomes their minds.
Iti 26
Now on that occasion
Princess Sumana -- with an entourage of 500 ladies-in-waiting
riding on 500 carriages -- went to where the Buddha was staying.
On arrival, having bowed down, she sat to one side. As she was
sitting there, she said to the Blessed One, "Suppose there were
two disciples of the Blessed One, equal in conviction, virtue,
and discernment, but one was a giver of alms and the other was
not. At the break-up of the body, after death, they would
reappear in a good destination, in the heavenly world. Having
become devas, would there be any distinction, any difference
between the two?"
"Yes, there would," said the Blessed One. "The
one who was a giver of alms, on becoming a deva, would surpass
the other in five areas: in divine life span, divine beauty,
divine pleasure, divine status, and divine power..."
"And if they were to fall from there and
reappear in this world: Having become human beings, would there
be any distinction, any difference between the two?"
"Yes, there would," said the Blessed One. "The
one who was a giver of alms, on becoming a human being, would
surpass the other in five areas: in human life span, human
beauty, human pleasure, human status, and human power..."
"And if they were to go forth from home into
the homeless life of a monk: Having gone forth, would there be
any distinction, any difference between the two?"
"Yes, there would," said the Blessed One. "The
one who was a giver of alms, on going forth, would surpass the
other in five areas: He would often be asked to make use of
robes; it would be rare that he wouldn't be asked. He would
often be asked to take food... to make use of shelter... to make
use of medicine; it would be rare that he wouldn't be asked. His
companions in the holy life would often treat him with pleasing
actions... pleasing words... pleasing thoughts... and present
him with pleasing gifts, and rarely with unpleasing..."
"And if both were to attain arahantship, would
there be any distinction, any difference between their
attainments of arahantship?"
"In that case, I tell you that there would be
no difference between the two as to their release."
"It is awesome, lord, and astounding. Just
this is reason enough to give alms, to make merit, in that it
benefits one as a deva, as a human being, and as a monk."
A V.31
Virtue
There are these five gifts,
five great gifts -- original, long-standing, traditional,
ancient, unadulterated, unadulterated from the beginning -- are
not open to suspicion, will never be open to suspicion, and are
unfaulted by knowledgeable contemplatives and priests. Which
five?
There is the case where a noble disciple,
abandoning the taking of life, abstains from taking life. In
doing so, he gives freedom from danger, freedom from animosity,
freedom from oppression to limitless numbers of beings. In
giving freedom from danger, freedom from animosity, freedom from
oppression to limitless numbers of beings, he gains a share in
limitless freedom from danger, freedom from animosity, and
freedom from oppression...
Abandoning taking what is not given
(stealing), he abstains from taking what is not given...
Abandoning illicit sex, he abstains from
illicit sex...
Abandoning lying, he abstains from lying...
Abandoning the use of intoxicants, he abstains
from taking intoxicants. In doing so, he gives freedom from
danger, freedom from animosity, freedom from oppression to
limitless numbers of beings. In giving freedom from danger,
freedom from animosity, freedom from oppression to limitless
numbers of beings, he gains a share in limitless freedom from
danger, freedom from animosity, and freedom from oppression...
This is the fifth gift, the fifth great gift -- original,
long-standing, traditional, ancient, unadulterated,
unadulterated from the beginning -- that is not open to
suspicion, will never be open to suspicion, and is unfaulted by
knowledgeable contemplatives and priests.
A VIII.39
Cleansing with regard to the
body, Cunda, is threefold; cleansing with regard to speech is
fourfold; and cleansing with regard to the mind, threefold. And
how is cleansing with regard to the body threefold? There is the
case where a certain person, abandoning the taking of life,
abstains from the taking of life. He dwells with his rod laid
down, his knife laid down, scrupulous, merciful, compassionate
for the welfare of all living beings. Abandoning the taking of
what is not given, he abstains from taking what is not given. He
does not take the ungiven property of another, whether in a
village or in the wilderness, with thievish intent. Abandoning
sensual misconduct, he abstains from sensual misconduct. He does
not get sexually involved with those who are protected by their
mothers, their fathers, their brothers, their sisters, their
relatives, or their Dhamma; those with husbands, those who
entail punishments, or even those crowned with flowers by
another man. This is how cleansing with regard to the body is
threefold.
And how is cleansing with regard to speech
fourfold? There is the case where a certain person, abandoning
false speech, abstains from false speech. When he has been
called to a town meeting, a group meeting, a gathering of his
relatives, his guild, or of the royalty [i.e., a court
proceeding], if he is asked as a witness, 'Come and tell, good
man, what you know': If he doesn't know, he says, 'I don't
know.' If he does know, he says, 'I know.' If he hasn't seen, he
says, 'I haven't seen.' If he has seen, he says, 'I have seen.'
Thus he doesn't consciously tell a lie for his own sake, for the
sake of another, or for the sake of any reward. Abandoning
divisive speech, he abstains from divisive speech. What he has
heard here he does not tell there to break those people apart
from these people here. What he has heard there he does not tell
here to break these people apart from those people there. Thus
reconciling those who have broken apart or cementing those who
are united, he loves concord, delights in concord, enjoys
concord, speaks things that create concord. Abandoning abusive
speech, he abstains from abusive speech. He speaks words that
are soothing to the ear, that are affectionate, that go to the
heart, that are polite, appealing & pleasing to people at large.
Abandoning idle chatter, he abstains from idle chatter. He
speaks in season, speaks what is factual, what is in accordance
with the goal, the Dhamma, and the Vinaya. He speaks words worth
treasuring, seasonable, reasonable, circumscribed, connected
with the goal. This is how cleansing with regard to speech is
fourfold.
And how is cleansing with regard to the mind
threefold? There is the case where a certain person is not
covetous. He does not covet the property of another, thinking,
"O, if only what belongs to another were mine!" He is not
malevolent at heart or destructive in his resolves. He thinks,
"May these beings -- free from animosity, free from oppression,
and free from trouble -- look after themselves with ease." He
has right views and an unperverted outlook. He believes, "There
is what is given, what is offered, what is sacrificed. There are
fruits and results of good and bad actions. There is this world
and the next world. There is mother and father. There are
spontaneously reborn beings; there are priests and
contemplatives who, living rightly and practicing rightly,
proclaim this world and the next after having directly known and
realized it for themselves." This is how cleansing with regard
to the mind is threefold.
A X.176
There are these five
benefits in being virtuous, in being consummate in virtue. Which
five? There is the case where a virtuous person, consummate in
virtue, through not being heedless in his affairs amasses a
great quantity of wealth... His good name is spread about...
When approaching an assembly of nobles, priests, householders,
or contemplatives, he does so unabashed and with assurance... He
dies without becoming delirious... With the break-up of the
body, after death, he reappears in a good destination, in the
heavenly world. These are the five benefits in being virtuous,
in being consummate in virtue.
D 16
This is to be done by one
skilled in aims
who wants to break through to the state of peace:
Be capable, upright, and straightforward,
easy to instruct, gentle, and not proud,
content and easy to support,
with few duties, living lightly,
with peaceful faculties, masterful,
modest, and no greed for supporters.
Do not do the slightest thing
that the wise would later censure.
Think: Happy and secure,
may all beings be happy at heart.
Whatever beings there may be,
weak or strong, without exception,
long, large,
middling, short,
subtle, blatant,
seen & unseen,
near & far,
born & seeking birth:
May all beings be happy at heart.
Let no one deceive another
or despise anyone anywhere,
or through anger or irritation
wish for another to suffer.
As a mother would risk her life
to protect her child, her only child,
even so should one cultivate
a limitless heart
with regard to all beings.
With good will for the entire cosmos,
cultivate a limitless heart:
above, below, & all around,
unobstructed, without enmity or hate.
Whether standing, walking,
sitting, or lying down,
as long as one is alert,
one should be resolved on this mindfulness.
This is called a sublime abiding here & now.
Not taken with views,
but virtuous & consummate in vision,
having subdued desire for sensual pleasures,
one never again will lie in the womb.
Sn I.8
Heaven
Blinded this world --
how few here see clearly!
Just as birds that have escaped from a net are few,
few are the people who make it to heaven.
Dhp 174
The Buddha: "Suppose that a
Universal Monarch possessed the seven treasures [the treasure of
a divine wheel, the treasure of an ideal jewel, the treasure of
an ideal elephant, the treasure of an ideal horse, the treasure
of an ideal wife, the treasure of an ideal steward, and the
treasure of an ideal counselor] and the four forms of prowess
[he is surpassingly attractive, he has a surpassingly long life,
he is surpassingly free from illness, and he loves his subjects
and is loved by them]. Now what do you think? Would he...
experience pleasure and joy?"
The monks: "Yes, lord."
Then, taking a small stone, the size of his
hand, the Blessed One said, "What do you think? Which is larger,
this small stone that I have taken, the size of my hand, or the
Himalayas, king of mountains?"
"It is minuscule, the small stone... It does
not count beside the Himalayas, the king of mountains. It is not
even a small fraction. There is no comparison."
"In the same way, the pleasure and joy that
the Universal Monarch experiences on account of his seven
treasures and four forms of prowess do not count beside the
pleasures of heaven. They are not even a small fraction. There
is no comparison."
M 129
Drawbacks
Now what is the allure of
sensuality? There are, monks, these five strings of sensuality.
Which five? Forms cognizable via the eye -- agreeable, pleasing,
charming, endearing, fostering desire, enticing. Sounds
cognizable via the ear... Aromas cognizable via the nose...
Flavors cognizable via the tongue... Tactile sensations
cognizable via the body -- agreeable, pleasing, charming,
endearing, fostering desire, enticing. Now whatever pleasure or
joy arises in dependence on these five strings of sensuality,
that is the allure of sensuality.
And what is the drawback of sensuality? There
is the case where, on account of the occupation by which a
clansman makes a living -- whether checking or accounting or
calculating or plowing or trading or cattle tending or archery
or as a king's man, or whatever the occupation may be -- he
faces cold; he faces heat; being harassed by mosquitoes, flies,
wind, sun, and creeping things; dying from hunger and thirst.
Now this drawback in the case of sensuality,
this mass of stress visible here and now, has sensuality for its
reason, sensuality for its source, sensuality for its cause, the
reason being simply sensuality.
If the clansman gains no wealth while thus
working and striving and making effort, he sorrows, grieves and
laments, beats his breast, becomes distraught: 'My work is in
vain, my efforts are fruitless!' Now this drawback too in the
case of sensuality, this mass of stress visible here and now,
has sensuality for its reason...
If the clansman gains wealth while thus
working and striving and making effort, he experiences pain and
distress in protecting it: 'How shall neither kings nor thieves
make off with my property, nor fire burn it, nor water sweep it
away nor hateful heirs make off with it?' And as he thus guards
and watches over his property, kings or thieves make off with
it, or fire burns it, or water sweeps it away, or hateful heirs
make off with it. And he sorrows, grieves and laments, beats his
breast, becomes distraught: 'What was mine is no more!' Now this
drawback too in the case of sensuality, this mass of stress
visible here and now, has sensuality for its reason...
Furthermore, it is with sensuality for the
reason, sensuality for the source, sensuality for the cause, the
reason being simply sensuality, that kings quarrel with kings,
nobles with nobles, priests with priests, householders with
householders, mother with child, child with mother, father with
child, child with father, brother with brother, sister with
sister, brother with sister, sister with brother, friend with
friend. And then in their quarrels, brawls, and disputes, they
attack one another with fists or with clods or with sticks or
with knives, so that they incur death or deadly pain. Now this
drawback too in the case of sensuality, this mass of stress
visible here and now, has sensuality for its reason...
Furthermore, it is with sensuality for the
reason, sensuality for the source... that (men), taking swords
and shields and buckling on bows and quivers, charge into battle
massed in double array while arrows and spears are flying and
swords are flashing; and there they are wounded by arrows and
spears, and their heads are cut off by swords, so that they
incur death or deadly pain. Now this drawback too in the case of
sensuality, this mass of stress visible here and now, has
sensuality for its reason...
Furthermore, it is with sensuality for the
reason, sensuality for the source... that (men), taking swords
and shields and buckling on bows and quivers, charge slippery
bastions while arrows and spears are flying and swords are
flashing; and there they are splashed with boiling cow dung and
crushed under heavy weights, and their heads are cut off by
swords, so that they incur death or deadly pain. Now this
drawback too in the case of sensuality, this mass of stress
visible here and now, has sensuality for its reason, sensuality
for its source, sensuality for its cause, the reason being
simply sensuality.
And what is the emancipation from sensuality?
Whatever is the subduing of passion and desire, the abandoning
of passion and desire for sensuality, that is the emancipation
from sensuality.
M 13
Which do you think is
greater: the tears you have shed while transmigrating and
wandering this long time -- crying and weeping from being joined
with what is displeasing, from being separated from what is
pleasing -- or the water in the four great oceans?... This is
the greater: The tears you have shed... Why is that? From an
inconceivable beginning comes transmigration. A beginning point
is not evident, although beings hindered by ignorance and
fettered by craving are transmigrating and wandering on. Long
have you thus experienced stress, experienced pain, experienced
loss, swelling the cemeteries -- long enough to become
disenchanted with all conditioned things, enough to become
dispassionate, enough to be released.
S XV.3
Renunciation
Janussoni: I hold that there
is no one who, subject to death, is not afraid or in terror of
death.
The Buddha: There are those who, subject to
death, are afraid and in terror of death. And there are those
who, subject to death, are not afraid or in terror of death.
And who is the person who, subject to death,
is afraid and in terror of death? There is the case of the
person who has not abandoned passion, desire, fondness, thirst,
fever, and craving for sensuality. When he comes down with a
serious disease, the thought occurs to him, "O, those beloved
sensual pleasures will be taken from me, and I will be taken
from them!" He grieves and is tormented, weeps, beats his
breast, and grows delirious...
Furthermore, there is the case of the person
who has not abandoned passion, desire, fondness, thirst, fever,
and craving for the body. When he is touched by a serious
disease, the thought occurs to him, "O, my beloved body will be
taken from me, and I will be taken from my body!" He grieves and
is tormented, weeps, beats his breast, and grows delirious...
Furthermore, there is the case of the person
who has not done what is good, has not done what is skillful,
has not given protection to those in fear, and instead has done
what is evil, savage, and cruel. When he comes down with a
serious disease, the thought occurs to him, "...After death I am
headed for the destination of those who have done what is evil,
savage, and cruel." He grieves and is tormented, weeps, beats
his breast, and grows delirious...
Furthermore, there is the case of the person
in doubt and perplexity, who has not arrived at certainty with
regard to the True Dhamma. When he comes down with a serious
disease, the thought occurs to him, "How doubtful and perplexed
I am! I have not arrived at any certainty with regard to the
True Dhamma!" He grieves and is tormented, weeps, beats his
breast, and grows delirious. This is another person who, subject
to death, is afraid and in terror of death.
And who is the person who is not afraid or in
terror of death? There is the case of the person who has
abandoned passion, desire, fondness, thirst, fever, and craving
for sensuality... who has abandoned passion, desire, fondness,
thirst, fever, and craving for the body... who has done what is
good, what is skillful, has given protection to those in fear,
and has not done what is evil, savage, or cruel... who has no
doubt or perplexity, who has arrived at certainty with regard to
the True Dhamma. When he comes down with a serious disease... he
does not grieve, is not tormented, does not weep or beat his
breast or grow delirious. This is another person who, subject to
death, is not afraid or in terror of death.
A IV.184
Now at that time, Ven.
Bhaddiya Kaligodha, on going to a forest, to the foot of a tree,
or to an empty dwelling, would repeatedly exclaim, "What bliss!
What bliss!" Many monks heard him... repeatedly exclaim, "What
bliss! What bliss!" and on hearing him, the thought occurred to
them, "There's no doubt but that Ven. Bhaddiya Kaligodha is not
enjoying the holy life, for when he was a householder he enjoyed
royal pleasures, so that now, on recollecting them, he is
exclaiming, "What bliss! What bliss!" They went to the Blessed
One... and told him... and he told a certain monk, "Come, monk.
In my name, call Bhaddiya, saying, "The Teacher calls you, my
friend."
"Yes, lord," the monk answered...
Then Ven. Bhaddiya went to where the Blessed
One was staying and, on arrival, having bowed down, sat to one
side. As he was sitting there, the Blessed One said to him, "Is
it true, Bhaddiya that, on going to a forest, to the foot of a
tree, or to an empty dwelling, you repeatedly exclaim, "What
bliss! What bliss!"
"Yes, lord."
"What do you have in mind that you repeatedly
exclaim, "What bliss! What bliss!"
"Before, when I was a householder, maintaining
my reign, I had guards posted within and without the royal
apartments, within and without the city, within and without the
countryside. But even though I was thus guarded, thus protected,
I dwelled in fear -- agitated, distrustful, and afraid. But now,
on going alone to a forest, to the foot of a tree, or to an
empty dwelling, I dwell without fear, unagitated, confident, and
unafraid -- unconcerned, unruffled, my wants satisfied, with my
mind like a wild deer. This is what I have in mind that I
repeatedly exclaim, "What bliss! What bliss!"
Ud II.10
The Four Noble Truths
Now this, monks, is the
noble truth of stress: Birth is stressful, aging is stressful,
death is stressful; sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and
despair are stressful; association with the unbeloved is
stressful, separation from the loved is stressful, not getting
what is wanted is stressful. In short, the five aggregates for
sustenance are stressful.
And this, monks, is the noble truth of the
origination of stress: the craving that makes for further
becoming -- accompanied by passion and delight, relishing now
here and now there -- i.e., craving for sensual pleasure,
craving for becoming, craving for non-becoming.
And this, monks, is the noble truth of the
cessation of stress: the remainderless fading and cessation,
renunciation, relinquishment, release and letting go of that
very craving.
And this, monks, is the noble truth of the way
leading to the cessation of stress: precisely this Noble
Eightfold Path -- right view, right intention, right speech,
right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness,
right concentration.
Vision arose, insight arose, discernment
arose, knowledge arose, illumination arose within me with regard
to things never heard before: 'This is the noble truth of
stress'...'This noble truth of stress is to be
comprehended'...'This noble truth of stress has been
comprehended'...
'This is the noble truth of the origination of
stress'...'This noble truth of the origination of stress is to
be abandoned'...'This noble truth of the origination of stress
has been abandoned'...
'This is the noble truth of the cessation of
stress'...'This noble truth of the cessation of stress is to be
directly experienced'...'This noble truth of the cessation of
stress has been directly experienced'...
'This is the noble truth of the way leading to
the cessation of stress'...'This noble truth of the way leading
to the cessation of stress is to be developed'...'This noble
truth of the way leading to the cessation of stress has been
developed.'
And, monks, as long as this knowledge and
vision of mine -- with its three rounds and twelve permutations
concerning these four noble truths as they actually are -- was
not pure, I did not claim to have directly awakened to the
unexcelled right self-awakening... But as soon as this knowledge
and vision of mine -- with its three rounds and twelve
permutations concerning these four noble truths as they actually
are -- was truly pure, then did I claim to have directly
awakened to the unexcelled right self-awakening... The knowledge
and vision arose in me: 'Unshakable is my release. This is the
last birth. There is now no further becoming.'
S LVI.11
The First Truth
I have heard that on one
occasion the Blessed One was staying at Varanasi, in the Game
Refuge at Isipatana. There he addressed the group of five monks:
'Physical form, monks, is not the self. If
physical form were the self, this physical form (body) would not
lend itself to dis-ease. One could get physical form to be like
this and not be like that. But precisely because physical form
is not the self, it lends itself to dis-ease. And one cannot get
physical form to be like this and not be like that.
'Feeling is not the self... Perception is not
the self... Mental fabrications are not the self...
'Consciousness is not the self. If
consciousness were the self, this consciousness would not lend
itself to dis-ease. One could get consciousness to be like this
and not be like that. But precisely because consciousness is not
the self, it lends itself to dis-ease. And one cannot get
consciousness to be like this and not be like that.
'How do you construe thus, monks -- Is
physical form constant or inconstant?' -- 'Inconstant, Lord.' --
'And whatever is inconstant: Is it easeful or stressful?' --
'Stressful, Lord.' -- 'And is it right to assume with regard to
whatever is inconstant, stressful, subject to change, that "This
is mine. This is my self. This is what I am"?' -- 'No, Lord.'
'...Is feeling constant or inconstant?... Is
perception constant or inconstant?... Are mental fabrications
constant or inconstant?...
'Is consciousness constant or inconstant?' --
'Inconstant, Lord.' -- 'And whatever is inconstant: Is it
easeful or stressful?' -- 'Stressful, Lord.' -- 'And is it right
to assume with regard to whatever is inconstant, stressful,
subject to change, that "This is mine. This is my self. This is
what I am"?' -- 'No, Lord.'
'Thus, monks, any physical form whatsoever --
past, future, or present; internal or external; blatant or
subtle, common or sublime, far or near: every physical form --
is to be seen as it actually is with right discernment as: "This
is not mine. This is not my self. This is not what I am."
'Any feeling whatsoever... Any perception
whatsoever... Any mental fabrications whatsoever...
'Any consciousness whatsoever -- past, future,
or present; internal or external; blatant or subtle, common or
sublime, far or near: every consciousness -- is to be seen as it
actually is with right discernment as: "This is not mine. This
is not my self. This is not what I am."
'Seeing thus, the instructed noble disciple
grows disenchanted with the body, disenchanted with feeling,
disenchanted with perception, disenchanted with mental
processes, and disenchanted with consciousness. Disenchanted, he
grows dispassionate. Through dispassion, he is released. With
release, there is the knowledge, "Released." He discerns that
"Birth is ended, the holy life fulfilled, the task done. There
is nothing further for this world."'
That is what the Blessed One said. Glad at
heart, the group of five monks delighted at his words. And while
this explanation was being given, the hearts of the group of
five monks, through not clinging (not being sustained), were
released from the mental fermentations.
S XXII.59
The Second and Third Truths
If this sticky, uncouth
craving
overcomes you in the world,
your sorrows grow like wild grass
after rain.
If, in the world, you overcome
this sticky, uncouth craving,
sorrows roll off you,
like water beads
off a lotus.
Dhp 335-336
If its root remains
undamaged and strong,
a tree, even if cut,
will grow back.
So too if latent craving
is not rooted out,
this suffering returns
again
&
again.
Dhp 338
And what is the noble method
that is rightly seen and rightly ferreted out by discernment?
There is the case where a noble disciple notices:
When this is, that is.
From the arising of this comes the arising of that.
When this isn't, that isn't.
From the cessation of this comes the
cessation of that.
In other words:
From ignorance as a requisite condition come
fabrications.
From fabrications as a requisite condition comes consciousness.
From consciousness as a requisite condition comes name-and-form.
From name-and-form as a requisite condition come the six sense
media.
From the six sense media as a requisite condition comes contact.
From contact as a requisite condition comes feeling.
From feeling as a requisite condition comes craving.
From craving as a requisite condition comes clinging/sustenance.
From clinging/sustenance as a requisite condition comes
becoming.
From becoming as a requisite condition comes birth.
From birth as a requisite condition, then old age and death,
sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and despair come into play.
Such is the origination of this entire mass of stress and
suffering.
Now from the remainderless fading and
cessation of that very ignorance comes the cessation of
fabrications. From the cessation of fabrications comes the
cessation of consciousness. From the cessation of consciousness
comes the cessation of name-and-form. From the cessation of
name-and-form comes the cessation of the six sense media. From
the cessation of the six sense media comes the cessation of
contact. From the cessation of contact comes the cessation of
feeling. From the cessation of feeling comes the cessation of
craving. From the cessation of craving comes the cessation of
clinging/sustenance. From the cessation of clinging/sustenance
comes the cessation of becoming. From the cessation of becoming
comes the cessation of birth. From the cessation of birth, then
old age and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and
despair all cease. Such is the cessation of this entire mass of
stress and suffering.
This is the noble method that is rightly seen
and rightly ferreted out by discernment.
A X.92
Stress and suffering have
birth as their prerequisite,
conviction has stress and suffering as its prerequisite,
joy has conviction as its prerequisite,
rapture has joy as its prerequisite,
serenity has rapture as its prerequisite,
pleasure has serenity as its prerequisite,
concentration has pleasure as its prerequisite,
knowledge and vision of things as they actually are present has
concentration as its prerequisite,
disenchantment has knowledge and vision of things as they
actually are present as its prerequisite,
dispassion has disenchantment as its prerequisite,
release has dispassion as its prerequisite,
knowledge of ending has release as its prerequisite.
S XII.23
The Fourth Truth
Monks, what is the noble
eightfold path? Right view, right resolve, right speech, right
action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right
concentration.
And what is right view? Knowledge with regard
to stress, knowledge with regard to the origination of stress,
knowledge with regard to the cessation of stress, knowledge with
regard to the way of practice leading to the cessation of
stress: This is called right view.
And what is right resolve? Being resolved on
renunciation, on freedom from ill will, on harmlessness: This is
called right resolve.
And what is right speech? Abstaining from
lying, from divisive speech, from abusive speech, and from idle
chatter: This is called right speech.
And what is right action? Abstaining from
taking life, from stealing, and from unchastity. This is called
right action.
And what is right livelihood? There is the
case where a noble disciple, having abandoned dishonest
livelihood, keeps his life going with right livelihood: This is
called right livelihood.
And what is right effort? There is the case
where a monk generates desire, endeavors, arouses persistence,
upholds and exerts his intent for the sake of the non-arising of
evil, unskillful qualities that have not yet arisen... for the
sake of the abandoning of evil, unskillful qualities that have
arisen... for the sake of the arising of skillful qualities that
have not yet arisen...(and) for the maintenance, non-confusion,
increase, plenitude, development, and culmination of skillful
qualities that have arisen: This is called right effort.
And what is right mindfulness? There is the
case where a monk remains focused on the body in and of itself
-- ardent, alert, and mindful -- putting aside greed and
distress with reference to the world. He remains focused on
feelings in and of themselves... the mind in and of itself...
mental qualities in and of themselves -- ardent, alert, and
mindful -- putting aside greed and distress with reference to
the world. This is called right mindfulness.
And what is right concentration? There is the
case where a monk... enters and remains in the first jhana...
the second jhana... the third jhana... the fourth jhana: purity
of equanimity and mindfulness, neither pleasure nor pain. This
is called right concentration.
S XLV.8
Right View
Then Anathapindika the
householder went to where the wanderers of other persuasions
were staying. On arrival he greeted them courteously. After an
exchange of friendly greetings and courtesies, he sat to one
side. As he was sitting there, the wanderers said to him, 'Tell
us, householder, what views the contemplative Gotama has.'
'Venerable sirs, I don't know entirely what
views the Blessed One has.'
'Well, well. So you don't know entirely what
views the contemplative Gotama has. Then tell us what views the
monks have.'
'I don't even know entirely what views the
monks have.'
'So you don't know entirely what views the
contemplative Gotama has or even that the monks have. Then tell
us what views you have.'
'It wouldn't be difficult for me to expound to
you what views I have. But please let the venerable ones expound
each in line with his position, and then it won't be difficult
for me to expound to you what views I have.'
When this had been said, one of the wanderers
said to Anathapindika the householder, 'The cosmos is
eternal. Only this is true; anything otherwise is worthless.
This is the sort of view I have.'
Another wanderer said to Anathapindika,
'The cosmos is not eternal. Only this is true; anything
otherwise is worthless. This is the sort of view I have.'
Another wanderer said, 'The cosmos is
finite...'...'The cosmos is infinite...'...'The soul and the
body are the same...'...'The soul is one thing and the body
another...'...'After death a Tathagata exists...'...'After death
a Tathagata does not exist...'...'After death a Tathagata both
does and does not exist...'...'After death a Tathagata neither
does nor does not exist. Only this is true; anything
otherwise is worthless. This is the sort of view I have.'
When this had been said, Anathapindika the
householder said to the wanderers, 'As for the venerable one who
says, "The cosmos is eternal. Only this is true; anything
otherwise is worthless. This is the sort of view I have," his
view arises from his own inappropriate attention or in
dependence on the words of another. Now this view has been
brought into being, is fabricated, willed, dependently
originated. Whatever has been brought into being, is fabricated,
willed, dependently originated, that is inconstant. Whatever is
inconstant is stress. This venerable one thus adheres to that
very stress, submits himself to that very stress.' (Similarly
for the other positions.)
When this had been said, the wanderers said to
Anathapindika the householder, 'We have each and every one
expounded to you in line with our own positions. Now tell us
what views you have.'
'Whatever has been brought into being, is
fabricated, willed, dependently originated, that is inconstant.
Whatever is inconstant is stress. Whatever is stress is not me,
is not what I am, is not my self. This is the sort of view I
have.'
'So, householder, whatever has been brought
into being, is fabricated, willed, dependently originated, that
is inconstant. Whatever is inconstant is stress. You thus adhere
to that very stress, submit yourself to that very stress.'
'Venerable sirs, whatever has been brought
into being, is fabricated, willed, dependently originated, that
is inconstant. Whatever is inconstant is stress. Whatever is
stress is not me, is not what I am, is not my self. Having seen
this well with right discernment as it actually is present, I
also discern the higher escape from it as it actually is
present.'
When this had been said, the wanderers fell
silent, abashed, sitting with their shoulders drooping, their
heads down, brooding, at a loss for words. Anathapindika the
householder, perceiving that the wanderers were silent,
abashed... at a loss for words, got up and left.
A X.93
There is the case where an
uninstructed, run-of-the-mill person... does not discern what
ideas are fit for attention, or what ideas are unfit for
attention. This being so, he does not attend to ideas fit for
attention, and attends instead to ideas unfit for attention...
This is how he attends inappropriately: 'Was I in the past? Was
I not in the past? What was I in the past? How was I in the
past? Having been what, what was I in the past? Shall I be in
the future? Shall I not be in the future? What shall I be in the
future? How shall I be in the future? Having been what, what
shall I be in the future?' Or else he is inwardly perplexed
about the immediate present: 'Am I? Am I not? What am I? How am
I? Where has this being come from? Where is it bound?'
As this person attends inappropriately in this
way, one of six kinds of view arises in him: The view I have
a self arises in him as true and established, or the view
I have no self... or the view It is by means of self that
I perceive self... or the view It is by means of self
that I perceive not-self... or the view It is by means of
not-self that I perceive self arises in him as true and
established, or else he has a view like this: This very self
of mine -- the knower that is sensitive here and there to the
ripening of good and bad actions -- is the self of mine that is
constant, everlasting, eternal, not subject to change, and will
endure as long as eternity. This is called a thicket of
views, a wilderness of views, a contortion of views, a writhing
of views, a fetter of views. Bound by a fetter of views, the
uninstructed run-of-the-mill person is not freed from birth,
aging, and death, from sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, and
despair. He is not freed from stress, I say.
The well-taught noble disciple... discerns
what ideas are fit for attention, and what ideas are unfit for
attention. This being so, he does not attend to ideas unfit for
attention, and attends instead to ideas fit for attention... He
attends appropriately, This is stress... This is the origin
of stress... This is the cessation of stress... This is the way
leading to the cessation of stress. As he attends
appropriately in this way, three fetters are abandoned in him:
identity-view, doubt, and grasping at precepts and practices.
M 2
Kaccayana: 'Lord, "Right
view, right view," it is said. To what extent is there right
view?'
The Buddha: 'By and large, Kaccayana, this
cosmos is supported by (takes as its object) a polarity, that of
existence and non-existence. But when one sees the origination
of the cosmos as it actually is with right discernment,
"non-existence" with reference to the cosmos does not occur to
one. When one sees the cessation of the cosmos as it actually is
with right discernment, "existence" with reference to the cosmos
does not occur to one.
'By and large, Kaccayana, this cosmos is in
bondage to attachments, clingings (sustenances), and biases. But
one such as this does not get involved with or cling to these
attachments, clingings, fixations of awareness, biases, and
latent tendencies; nor is he resolved on "my self." He has no
uncertainty or doubt that, when there is arising, only stress is
arising; and that when there is passing away, stress is passing
away. In this, one's knowledge is independent of others. It is
to this extent, Kaccayana, that there is right view.'
S XII.15
Right Mindfulness & Concentration
Visakha: Now what is
concentration, what qualities are its themes, what qualities are
its requisites, and what is its development?
Sister Dhammadinna: Singleness of mind is
concentration; the four frames of reference [ = the objects of
right mindfulness] are its themes; the four right exertions [ =
right effort] are its requisites; and any cultivation,
development, and pursuit of these qualities is its development.
M 44
Mindfulness of in-and-out
breathing, when developed and pursued, brings the four frames of
reference to their culmination. The four frames of reference,
when developed and pursued, bring the seven factors for
Awakening to their culmination. The seven factors for Awakening,
when developed and pursued, bring clear knowing and release to
their culmination.
Now how is mindfulness of in-and-out breathing
developed and pursuedso as to bring the four frames of reference
to their culmination?
There is the case where a monk, having gone to
the wilderness, to the shade of a tree, or to an empty building,
sits down folding his legs crosswise, holding his body erect,
and setting mindfulness to the fore. Always mindful, he breathes
in; mindful he breathes out.
(1) Breathing in long, he discerns that he is
breathing in long; or breathing out long, he discerns that he is
breathing out long. (2) Or breathing in short, he discerns that
he is breathing in short; or breathing out short, he discerns
that he is breathing out short. (3) He trains himself to breathe
in sensitive to the entire body, and to breathe out sensitive to
the entire body. (4) He trains himself to breathe in calming
bodily fabrication, and to breathe out calming bodily
fabrication.
(5) He trains himself to breathe in sensitive
to rapture, and to breathe out sensitive to rapture. (6) He
trains himself to breathe in sensitive to pleasure, and to
breathe out sensitive to pleasure. (7) He trains himself to
breathe in sensitive to mental fabrication, and to breathe out
sensitive to mental fabrication. (8) He trains himself to
breathe in calming mental fabrication, and to breathe out
calming mental fabrication.
(9) He trains himself to breathe in sensitive
to the mind, and to breathe out sensitive to the mind. (10) He
trains himself to breathe in satisfying the mind, and to breathe
out satisfying the mind. (11) He trains himself to breathe in
steadying the mind, and to breathe out steadying the mind. (12)
He trains himself to breathe in releasing the mind, and to
breathe out releasing the mind.
(13) He trains himself to breathe in focusing
on inconstancy, and to breathe out focusing on inconstancy. (14)
He trains himself to breathe in focusing on dispassion
(literally, fading), and to breathe out focusing on
dispassion. (15) He trains himself to breathe in focusing on
cessation, and to breathe out focusing on cessation. (16) He
trains himself to breathe in focusing on relinquishment, and to
breathe out focusing on relinquishment.
Now, on whatever occasion a monk breathing in
long discerns that he is breathing in long; or breathing out
long, discerns that he is breathing out long; or breathing in
short, discerns that he is breathing in short; or breathing out
short, discerns that he is breathing out short; trains himself
to breathe in... and... out sensitive to the entire body; trains
himself to breathe in... and... out calming bodily fabrication:
On that occasion the monk remains focused on the body in
and of itself -- ardent, alert, and mindful -- subduing greed
and distress with reference to the world. I tell you, monks,
that this -- the in-and-out breath -- is classed as a body among
bodies, which is why the monk on that occasion remains focused
on the body in and of itself -- ardent, alert, and mindful --
putting aside greed and distress with reference to the world.
On whatever occasion a monk trains himself to
breathe in... and... out sensitive to rapture; trains himself to
breathe in... and... out sensitive to pleasure; trains himself
to breathe in... and... out sensitive to mental fabrication;
trains himself to breathe in... and... out calming mental
fabrication: On that occasion the monk remains focused on
feelings in and of themselves -- ardent, alert, and mindful
-- subduing greed and distress with reference to the world. I
tell you, monks, that this -- close attention to in-and-out
breaths -- is classed as a feeling among feelings, which is why
the monk on that occasion remains focused on feelings in and of
themselves -- ardent, alert, and mindful -- putting aside greed
and distress with reference to the world.
On whatever occasion a monk trains himself to
breathe in... and... out sensitive to the mind; trains himself
to breathe in... and... out satisfying the mind; trains himself
to breathe in... and... out steadying the mind; trains himself
to breathe in... and... out releasing the mind: On that occasion
the monk remains focused on the mind in and of itself --
ardent, alert, and mindful -- subduing greed and distress with
reference to the world. I don't say that there is mindfulness of
in-and-out breathing in one of confused mindfulness and no
alertness, which is why the monk on that occasion remains
focused on the mind in and of itself -- ardent, alert, and
mindful -- putting aside greed and distress with reference to
the world.
On whatever occasion a monk trains himself to
breathe in... and... out focusing on inconstancy; trains himself
to breathe in... and... out focusing on dispassion; trains
himself to breathe in... and... out focusing on cessation;
trains himself to breathe in... and... out focusing on
relinquishment: On that occasion the monk remains focused on
mental qualities in and of themselves -- ardent, alert, and
mindful -- subduing greed and distress with reference to the
world. He who sees clearly with discernment the abandoning of
greed and distress is one who oversees with equanimity, which is
why the monk on that occasion remains focused on mental
qualities in and of themselves -- ardent, alert, and mindful --
putting aside greed and distress with reference to the world.
This is how mindfulness of in-and-out
breathing is developed and pursued so as to bring the four
frames of reference to their culmination.
And how are the four frames of reference
developed and pursued so as to bring the seven factors for
Awakening to their culmination?
(1) On whatever occasion the monk remains
focused on the body in and of itself -- ardent, alert,
and mindful -- putting aside greed and distress with reference
to the world, on that occasion his mindfulness is steady and
without lapse. When his mindfulness is steady and without lapse,
then mindfulness as a factor for Awakening becomes
aroused. He develops it, and for him it goes to the culmination
of its development.
(2) Remaining mindful in this way, he
examines, analyzes, and comes to a comprehension of that quality
with discernment. When he remains mindful in this way,
examining, analyzing, and coming to a comprehension of that
quality with discernment, then analysis of qualities as a
factor for Awakening becomes aroused. He develops it, and for
him it goes to the culmination of its development.
(3) In one who examines, analyzes, and comes
to a comprehension of that quality with discernment, unflagging
persistence is aroused. When unflagging persistence is aroused
in one who examines, analyzes, and comes to a comprehension of
that quality with discernment, then persistence as a
factor for Awakening becomes aroused. He develops it, and for
him it goes to the culmination of its development.
(4) In one whose persistence is aroused, a
rapture not-of-the-flesh arises. When a rapture not-of-the-flesh
arises in one whose persistence is aroused, then rapture
as a factor for Awakening becomes aroused. He develops it, and
for him it goes to the culmination of its development.
(5) For one who is enraptured, the body grows
calm and the mind grows calm. When the body and mind of an
enraptured monk grow calm, then serenity as a factor for
Awakening becomes aroused. He develops it, and for him it goes
to the culmination of its development.
(6) For one who is at ease -- his body calmed
-- the mind becomes concentrated. When the mind of one who is at
ease -- his body calmed -- becomes concentrated, then
concentration as a factor for Awakening becomes aroused. He
develops it, and for him it goes to the culmination of its
development.
(7) He oversees the mind thus concentrated
with equanimity. When he oversees the mind thus concentrated
with equanimity, equanimity as a factor for Awakening
becomes aroused. He develops it, and for him it goes to the
culmination of its development.
(Similarly with the other three frames of
reference: feelings, mind, and mental qualities.)
This is how the four frames of reference are
developed and pursued so as to bring the seven factors for
Awakening to their culmination.
And how are the seven factors for Awakening
developed and pursued so as to bring clear knowing and release
to their culmination? There is the case where a monk develops
mindfulness as a factor for Awakening dependent on
seclusion... dispassion... cessation, resulting in
relinquishment. He develops analysis of qualities as a
factor for Awakening...persistence as a factor for
Awakening...rapture as a factor for Awakening...serenity
as a factor for Awakening...concentration as a factor for
Awakening..equanimity as a factor for Awakening dependent
on seclusion... dispassion... cessation, resulting in
relinquishment.
This is how the seven factors for Awakening
are developed and pursued so as to bring clear knowing and
release to their culmination.
M 118
[On attaining the fourth
level of jhana] there remains only equanimity: pure and bright,
pliant, malleable and luminous. Just as if a skilled goldsmith
or goldsmith's apprentice were to prepare a furnace, heat up a
crucible, and, taking gold with a pair of tongs, place it in the
crucible. He would blow on it periodically, sprinkle water on it
periodically, examine it periodically, so that the gold would
become refined, well-refined, thoroughly refined, flawless, free
from dross, pliant, malleable and luminous. Then whatever sort
of ornament he had in mind -- whether a belt, an earring, a
necklace, or a gold chain -- it would serve his purpose. In the
same way, there remains only equanimity: pure and bright,
pliant, malleable, and luminous. He (the meditator) discerns
that 'If I were to direct equanimity as pure and bright as this
toward the dimension of the infinitude of space, I would develop
the mind along those lines, and thus this equanimity of mine --
thus supported, thus sustained -- would last for a long time.
(Similarly with the dimensions of the infinitude of
consciousness, nothingness, and neither perception nor
non-perception.)'
He discerns that 'If I were to direct
equanimity as pure and bright as this toward the dimension of
the infinitude of space and to develop the mind along those
lines, that would be fabricated. (Similarly with the dimensions
of the infinitude of consciousness, nothingness, and neither
perception nor non-perception.)' He neither fabricates nor wills
for the sake of becoming or un-becoming. This being the case, he
is not sustained by anything in the world (does not cling to
anything in the world). Unsustained, he is not agitated.
Unagitated, he is totally unbound right within. He discerns that
'Birth is ended, the holy life fulfilled, the task done. There
is nothing further for this world.'
M 140
Liberation
There is that dimension
where there is neither earth, nor water, nor fire, nor wind;
neither dimension of the infinitude of space, nor dimension of
the infinitude of consciousness, nor dimension of nothingness,
nor dimension of neither perception nor non-perception; neither
this world, nor the next world, nor sun, nor moon. And there, I
say, there is neither coming, nor going, nor stasis; neither
passing away nor arising: without stance, without foundation,
without support (mental object). This, just this, is the end of
stress.
Ud VIII.1
Where water, earth, fire,
and wind have no footing:
There the stars do not shine,
the sun is not visible,
the moon does not appear,
darkness is not found.
And when a sage, a worthy one, through sagacity
has known (this) for himself,
then from form and formless,
from pleasure and pain,
he is freed.
Ud I.10
Aggivessana Vacchagotta:
'But, Venerable Gotama the monk whose mind is thus released:
Where does he reappear?'
Buddha: '"Reappear," Vaccha, doesn't apply.'
'In that case, Venerable Gotama, he does not
reappear.'
'"Does not reappear," Vaccha, doesn't apply.'
'...both does and does not reappear.'
'...doesn't apply.'
'...Neither does nor does not reappear.'
'...doesn't apply.'...
'At this point, Venerable Gotama, I am
befuddled; at this point, confused. The modicum of clarity
coming to me from your earlier conversation is now obscured.'
'Of course you're befuddled, Vaccha. Of course
you're confused. Deep, Vaccha, is this phenomenon, hard to see,
hard to realize, tranquil, refined, beyond the scope of
conjecture, subtle, to-be-experienced by the wise. For those
with other views, other satisfactions, other aims, other
teachers, it is difficult to know. That being the case, I will
now put some questions to you. Answer as you see fit. How do you
construe this, Vaccha: If a fire were burning in front of you,
would you know that, "This fire is burning in front of me"?'
'...yes...'
'And suppose someone were to ask you, Vaccha,
"This fire burning in front of you, dependent on what is it
burning?" Thus asked, how would you reply?'
'...I would reply, "This fire burning in front
of me is burning dependent on grass and timber as its
sustenance."'
'If the fire burning in front of you were to
go out, would you know that, "This fire burning in front of me
has gone out"?'
'...yes...'
'And suppose someone were to ask you, "This
fire that has gone out in front of you, in which direction from
here has it gone? East? West? North? Or south?" Thus asked, how
would you reply?'
'That doesn't apply, Venerable Gotama. Any
fire burning dependent on a sustenance of grass and timber,
being unnourished -- from having consumed that sustenance and
not being offered any other -- is classified simply as "out."'
'Even so, Vaccha, any physical form by which
one describing the Tathagata would describe him: That the
Tathagata has abandoned, its root destroyed, like an uprooted
palm tree, deprived of the conditions of existence, not destined
for future arising. Freed from the classification of form,
Vaccha, the Tathagata is deep, boundless, hard-to-fathom, like
the sea. "Reappears" does not apply. "Does not reappear" does
not apply. "Both does and does not reappear" does not apply.
"Neither reappears nor does not reappear" does not apply.
'Any feeling... Any perception... Any mental
fabrication...
'Any [act of] consciousness by which one
describing the Tathagata would describe him: That the Tathagata
has abandoned... Freed from the classification of consciousness,
Vaccha, the Tathagata is deep, boundless, hard-to-fathom, like
the sea.'
M 72
Sangha
The Rewards of the Contemplative Life
There is the case where a
Tathagata appears in the world, worthy and rightly
self-awakened. He teaches the Dhamma admirable in its beginning,
admirable in its middle, admirable in its end. He proclaims the
holy life both in its particulars and in its essence, entirely
perfect, surpassingly pure.
A householder or householder's son, hearing
the Dhamma, gains conviction in the Tathagata and reflects:
'Household life is confining, a dusty path. The life gone forth
is like the open air. It is not easy living at home to practice
the holy life totally perfect, totally pure, like a polished
shell. Suppose I were to go forth?'
So after some time he abandons his mass of
wealth, large or small; leaves his circle of relatives, large or
small; shaves off his hair and beard, puts on the saffron robes,
and goes forth from the household life into homelessness.
When he has thus gone forth, he lives
restrained by the rules of the monastic code, seeing danger in
the slightest faults. Consummate in his virtue, he guards the
doors of his senses, is possessed of mindfulness and presence of
mind, and is content...
Now, how does a monk guard the doors of his
senses? On seeing a form with the eye, he does not grasp at any
theme or variations by which -- if he were to dwell without
restraint over the faculty of the eye -- evil, unskillful
qualities such as greed or distress might assail him. (Similarly
with the ear, nose, tongue, body, and intellect.)
And how is a monk possessed of mindfulness and
alertness? When going forward and returning, he acts with
alertness. When looking toward and looking away... when bending
and extending his limbs... when carrying his outer cloak, his
upper robe, and his bowl... when eating, drinking, chewing, and
tasting... when urinating and defecating... when walking,
standing, sitting, falling asleep, waking up, talking, and
remaining silent, he acts with alertness.
And how is a monk content? Just as a bird,
wherever it goes, flies with its wings as its only burden; so
too is he content with a set of robes to provide for his body
and alms food to provide for his hunger. Wherever he goes, he
takes only his barest necessities along.
He seeks out a secluded dwelling: a forest,
the shade of a tree, a mountain, a glen, a hillside cave, a
charnel ground, a jungle grove, the open air, a heap of straw.
After his meal, returning from his alms round, he sits down,
crosses his legs, holds his body erect, and brings mindfulness
to the fore. He purifies his mind from greed, ill will, sloth
and torpor, restlessness and anxiety, and uncertainty. As long
as these five hindrances are not abandoned within him, he
regards it as a debt, a sickness, a prison, slavery, a road
through desolate country. But when these five hindrances are
abandoned within him, he regards it as unindebtedness, good
health, release from prison, freedom, a place of security.
Seeing that they have been abandoned within him, he becomes
glad, enraptured, tranquil, sensitive to pleasure. Feeling
pleasure, his mind becomes concentrated.
Quite withdrawn from sensuality, withdrawn
from unskillful mental qualities, he enters and remains in the
first jhana: rapture and pleasure born from withdrawal,
accompanied by directed thought and evaluation. He permeates and
pervades, suffuses and fills this very body with the rapture and
pleasure born from withdrawal. Just as if a skilled bathman or
bathman's apprentice would pour bath powder into a brass basin
and knead it together, sprinkling it again and again with water,
so that his ball of bath powder -- saturated, moisture-laden,
permeated within and without -- would nevertheless not drip;
even so, the monk permeates... this very body with the rapture
and pleasure born of withdrawal. There is nothing of his entire
body unpervaded by rapture and pleasure born from withdrawal.
This is a reward of the contemplative life, visible here and
now, more excellent than the previous ones and more sublime.
Furthermore, with the stilling of directed
thought and evaluation, he enters and remains in the second
jhana: rapture and pleasure born of composure, unification of
awareness free from directed thought and evaluation -- internal
assurance. He permeates and pervades, suffuses and fills this
very body with the rapture and pleasure born of composure. Just
like a lake with spring-water welling up from within, having no
inflow from the east, west, north, or south, and with the skies
supplying abundant showers time and again, so that the cool
fount of water welling up from within the lake would permeate
and pervade, suffuse and fill it with cool waters, there being
no part of the lake unpervaded by the cool waters; even so, the
monk permeates... this very body with the rapture and pleasure
born of composure. There is nothing of his entire body
unpervaded by rapture and pleasure born of composure. This, too,
is a reward of the contemplative life, visible here and now,
more excellent than the previous ones and more sublime.
And furthermore, with the fading of rapture,
he remains in equanimity, mindful & alert, and physically
sensitive of pleasure. He enters and remains in the third jhana,
of which the Noble Ones declare, 'Equanimous and mindful, he has
a pleasurable abiding.' He permeates and pervades, suffuses and
fills this very body with the pleasure divested of rapture. Just
as in a lotus pond, some of the lotuses, born and growing in the
water, stay immersed in the water and flourish without standing
up out of the water, so that they are permeated and pervaded,
suffused and filled with cool water from their roots to their
tips, and nothing of those lotuses would be unpervaded with cool
water; even so, the monk permeates... this very body with the
pleasure divested of rapture. There is nothing of his entire
body unpervaded with pleasure divested of rapture. This, too, is
a reward of the contemplative life, visible here and now, more
excellent than the previous ones and more sublime.
And furthermore, with the abandoning of
pleasure and stress -- as with the earlier disappearance of
elation and distress -- he enters and remains in the fourth
jhana: purity of equanimity and mindfulness, neither-pleasure
nor stress. He sits, permeating the body with a pure, bright
awareness. Just as if a man were sitting covered from head to
foot with a white cloth so that there would be no part of his
body to which the white cloth did not extend; even so, the monk
sits, permeating the body with a pure, bright awareness. There
is nothing of his entire body unpervaded by pure, bright
awareness. This, too, is a reward of the contemplative life,
visible here and now, more excellent than the previous ones and
more sublime...
With his mind thus concentrated, purified, and
bright, he directs it to the knowledge of the ending of the
mental fermentations. Just as if there were a pool of water in a
mountain glen -- clear, limpid, and unsullied -- where a man
with good eyesight standing on the bank could see shells,
gravel, and pebbles, and also shoals of fish swimming about and
resting, and it would occur to him, 'This pool of water is
clear, limpid, and unsullied. Here are these shells, gravel, and
pebbles, and also these shoals of fish swimming about and
resting.' In the same way, the monk discerns, as it is actually
present, that 'This is stress... This is the origination of
stress... This is the cessation of stress... This is the way
leading to the cessation of stress... These are mental
fermentations... This is the origination of fermentations...
This is the cessation of fermentations... This is the way
leading to the cessation of fermentations.' His heart, thus
knowing, thus seeing, is released from the fermentations of
sensuality, becoming, and ignorance. With release, there is the
knowledge, 'Released.' He discerns that 'Birth is ended, the
holy life fulfilled, the task done. There is nothing further for
this world.' This, too, is a reward of the contemplative life,
visible here and now, more excellent than the previous ones and
more sublime. And as for another visible fruit of the
contemplative life, higher and more sublime than this, there is
none.
D 2
Aids to Awakening
Then Ven. Assaji, arising
early in the morning, taking his robe and bowl, entered Rajagaha
for alms: gracious in the way he approached and departed, looked
forward and behind, drew in and stretched out his arm; his eyes
downcast, his every movement consummate. Sariputta the wanderer
saw Ven. Assaji going for alms in Rajagaha: gracious... his eyes
downcast, his every movement consummate. On seeing him, the
thought occurred to him: "Surely, of those in this world who are
arahants or have entered the path to arahantship, this is one.
What if I were to approach him and question him: 'On whose
account have you gone forth? Who is your teacher? Of whose
Dhamma do you approve?'"
But then the thought occurred to Sariputta the
wanderer: "This is the wrong time to question him. He is going
for alms in the town. What if I were to follow behind this monk
who has found the path for those who seek it?"
Then Ven. Assaji, having gone for alms in
Rajagaha, left, taking the alms he had received. Sariputta the
wanderer approached him and, on arrival, having exchanged
friendly greetings and courtesies, stood to one side. As he
stood there he said, "Your faculties are bright, my friend, your
complexion pure and clear. On whose account have you gone forth?
Who is your teacher? Of whose Dhamma do you approve?"
"There is, my friend, the Great Contemplative,
a son of the Sakyans, gone forth from a Sakyan family. I have
gone forth on account of that Blessed One. That Blessed One is
my teacher. It is of that Blessed One's Dhamma that I approve."
"But what is your teacher's teaching? What
does he proclaim?"
"I am new, my friend, not long gone forth,
only recently come to this doctrine and discipline. I cannot
explain the doctrine in detail, but I can give you the gist in
brief."
Then Sariputta the wanderer spoke thus to the
Ven. Assaji:
Speak a little or a lot,
but tell me just the gist.
The gist is what I want.
What use is a lot of rhetoric?
Then Ven. Assaji gave this
Dhamma exposition to Sariputta the Wanderer:
Whatever phenomena arise
from cause:
their cause
& their cessation.
Such is the teaching of the Tathagata,
the Great Contemplative.
Then to Sariputta the Wanderer, as he heard
this Dhamma exposition, there arose the dustless, stainless
Dhamma eye: Whatever is subject to origination is all subject
to cessation.
Mv I 23 5
Then Mahapajapati Gotami
[the first nun, and the Buddha's foster mother] approached the
Blessed One and on arrival, having bowed down, stood to one
side. As she was standing there, she said, "It would be good if
the Blessed One would teach me the Dhamma in brief so that I,
having heard the Dhamma, might dwell alone, secluded, heedful,
ardent, and resolute."
"...Gotami, the qualities of which you may
know, 'These qualities lead to dispassion, not to passion; to
being unfettered and not to being fettered; to self-effacement
and not to self-aggrandizement; to modesty and not to ambition;
to contentment and not to discontent; to seclusion and not to
entanglement; to the arousing of persistence and not to
laziness; to being unburdensome and not to being burdensome':
You may definitely hold, 'This is the Dhamma, this is the Vinaya,
this is the Teacher's instruction.'"
[According to the commentaries, Mahapajapati
Gotami gained arahantship soon after receiving this
instruction.]
Cv X 5
Sister Sona on Aging
Ten children I bore
from this physical heap.
Then weak from that, aged,
I went to a nun.
She taught me the Dhamma:
aggregates, sense spheres, elements.
Hearing the Dhamma,
I cut off my hair and ordained.
Having purified the divine eye
while still a probationer,
I know my previous lives,
where I lived in the past.
I develop the theme-less meditation:
well-focused singleness.
I gain the liberation of immediacy --
from lack of clinging, unbound.
The five aggregates, comprehended,
stand like a tree with its root cut through.
I spit on old age.
There is now no further becoming.
Thig V.8
Punna on Death
Punna: "Lord, I am going to
live in the Sunaparanta country."
The Buddha: "Punna, the Sunaparanta people are
fierce. They are rough. If they insult and ridicule you, what
will you think?"
"...I will think, 'These Sunaparanta people
are civilized, very civilized, in that they don't hit me with
their hands.' That is what I will think..."
"But if they hit you with their hands...?"
"...I will think, 'These Sunaparanta people
are civilized, very civilized, in that they don't hit me with a
clod'..."
"But if they hit you with a clod...?"
"...I will think, 'These Sunaparanta people
are civilized, very civilized, in that they don't hit me with a
stick'..."
"But if they hit you with a stick...?"
"...I will think, 'These Sunaparanta people
are civilized, very civilized, in that they don't hit me with a
knife'..."
"But if they hit you with a knife...?"
"...I will think, 'These Sunaparanta people
are civilized, very civilized, in that they don't take my life
with a sharp knife'..."
"But if they take your life with a sharp
knife...?"
"...I will think, 'There are disciples of the
Blessed One who -- horrified, humiliated, and disgusted by the
body and by life -- have sought for an assassin, but here I have
met my assassin without searching for him.' That is what I will
think..."
"Good, Punna, very good. Possessing such calm
and self-control you are fit to dwell among the Sunaparantans.
Now it is time to do as you see fit."
Then Ven. Punna, delighting and rejoicing in
the Blessed One's words, rising from his seat, bowed down to the
Blessed One and left, keeping him on his right side. Setting his
dwelling in order and taking his robe and bowl, he set out for
the Sunaparanta country and, after wandering stage by stage, he
arrived there. There he lived. During that Rains retreat he
established 500 male and 500 female lay followers in the
practice, while he realized the three knowledges. At a later
time, he attained total (final) Unbinding.
M 145
Sister Patacara on Awakening
Washing my feet, I noticed
the water.
And in watching it flow from high to low,
my heart was composed
like a fine thoroughbred steed.
Then taking a lamp, I entered the hut,
checked the bedding,
sat down on the bed.
And taking a pin, I pulled out the wick:
Like the flame's unbinding
was the liberation of awareness.
Thig V.10
III. Essays
Buddha
The Meaning of the Buddha's Awakening
The two crucial aspects of the Buddha's
Awakening are the what and the how: what he
awakened to and how he did it. His Awakening is special in that
the two aspects come together. He awakened to the fact that
there is an undying happiness, and that it can be attained
through human effort. The human effort involved in this process
ultimately focuses on the question of understanding the nature
of human effort itself -- in terms of skillful kamma and
dependent co-arising -- what its powers and limitations are, and
what kind of right effort (i.e., the Noble Path) can take one
beyond its limitations and bring one to the threshold of the
Deathless.
As the Buddha described the Awakening
experience in one of his discourses, first there is the
knowledge of the regularity of the Dhamma -- which in this
context means dependent co-arising -- then there is the
knowledge of nibbana. In other passages, he describes the three
stages that led to insight into dependent co-arising: knowledge
of his own previous lifetimes, knowledge of the passing away and
rebirth of all living beings, and finally insight into the four
Noble Truths. The first two forms of knowledge were not new with
the Buddha. They have been reported by other seers throughout
history, although the Buddha's insight into the second knowledge
had a special twist: He saw that beings are reborn according to
the ethical quality of their thoughts, words, and deeds, and
that this quality is essentially a factor of the mind. The
quality of one's views and intentions determines the experienced
result of one's actions.
This insight had a double impact on his mind.
On the one hand, it made him realize the futility of the round
of rebirth -- that even the best efforts aimed at winning
pleasure and fulfillment within the round could have only
temporary effects. On the other hand, his realization of the
importance of the mind in determining the round is what led him
to focus directly on his own mind in the present to see how the
processes in the mind that kept the round going could be
disbanded. This was how he gained insight into the four noble
truths and dependent co-arising -- seeing how the aggregates
that made up his "person" were also the impelling factors in the
experience of the world at large, and how the whole show could
be brought to cessation. With its cessation, there remained the
experience of the unconditioned, which he also termed nibbana
(Unbinding), consciousness without surface or feature, the
Deathless.
When we address the question of how other
"enlightenment" experiences recorded in world history relate to
the Buddha's, we have to keep in mind the Buddha's own dictum:
First there is the knowledge of dependent co-arising, then there
is the knowledge of nibbana. Without the first -- which includes
not only an understanding of kamma, but also of how kamma leads
to the understanding itself -- no realization, no matter how
calm or boundless, that doesn't result from these sorts of
understanding can count as an Awakening in the Buddhist sense.
True Awakening necessarily involves both ethics and insight into
causality.
As for what the Buddha's Awakening means for
us now, four points stand out.
1) The role that kamma plays in the Awakening
is empowering. It means that what each of us does, says, and
thinks does matter -- this, in opposition to the sense of
futility that can come from reading, say, world history,
geology, or astronomy and realizing the fleeting nature of the
entire human enterprise. The Awakening lets us see that the
choices we make in each moment of our lives have consequences.
The fact that we are empowered also means that we are
responsible for our experiences. We are not strangers in a
strange land. We have formed and are continuing to form the
world we experience.This helps us to face the events we
encounter in life with greater equanimity, for we know that we
had a hand in creating them, and yet at the same time we can
avoid any debilitating sense of guilt because with each new
choice we can always make a fresh start.
2) The Awakening also tells us that good and
bad are not mere social conventions, but are built into the
mechanics of how the world is constructed. We may be free to
design our lives, but we are not free to change the underlying
rules that determine what good and bad actions are, and how the
process of kamma works itself out. Thus cultural relativism --
even though it may have paved the way for many of us to leave
our earlier religious orientations and enter the Buddhist fold
-- has no place once we are within that fold. There are certain
ways of acting that are inherently unskillful, and we are fools
if we insist on our right to behave in those ways.
3) As the Buddha says at one point in
describing his Awakening, "Ignorance was destroyed; knowledge
arose; darkness was destroyed; light arose -- as happens in one
who is heedful, ardent, and resolute." In other words, he gained
liberating knowledge through qualities that we can all develop:
heedfulness, ardency, resolution. If we are willing to face the
implications of this fact, we realize that the Buddha's
Awakening is a challenge to our entire set of values. The fact
that the Unconditioned can be attained forces us to re-evaluate
any other goals we may set for ourselves, any worlds we may want
to create, in our lives. On an obvious level, it points out the
spiritual poverty of a life devoted to wealth, status, or
sensual pursuits; but it also forces us to take a hard look at
other more "worthwhile" goals that our culture and its
sub-cultures tend to exalt, such as social acceptance,
meaningful relationships, stewardship of the planet, etc. These,
too, will inevitably lead to suffering. The interdependence of
all things cannot be, for any truly sensitive mind, a source of
security or comfort. If the Unconditioned is available, and it's
the only trustworthy happiness around, the most sensible course
is to invest our efforts and whatever mental and spiritual
resources we have in its direction.
4) Even for those who are not ready to make
that kind of investment, the Awakening assures us that happiness
comes from developing qualities within ourselves that we can be
proud of, such as kindness, sensitivity, equanimity,
mindfulness, conviction, determination, and discernment. Again,
this is a very different message from the one we pick up from
the world telling us that in order to gain happiness we have to
develop qualities we can't take any genuine pride in:
aggressiveness, self-aggrandizement, dishonesty, etc. Just this
much can give an entirely new orientation to our lives and our
ideas of what is worthwhile investment of our time and efforts.
The news of the Buddha's Awakening sets the
standards for judging the culture we were brought up in, and not
the other way around. This is not a question of choosing Asian
culture over American. The Buddha's Awakening challenged many of
the presuppositions of Indian culture in his day; and even in
so-called Buddhist countries, the true practice of the Buddha's
teachings is always counter-cultural. It's a question of
evaluating our normal concerns -- conditioned by time, space,
and the limitations of aging, illness, and death -- against the
possibility of a timeless, spaceless, limitless happiness. All
cultures are tied up in the limited, conditioned side of things,
while the Buddha's Awakening points beyond all cultures. It
offers the challenge of the Deathless that his contemporaries
found liberating and that we, if we are willing to accept the
challenge, may find liberating ourselves.
Dhamma
Life Isn't Just Suffering
You've probably heard the rumor that Buddhism
is pessimistic, that "Life is suffering" is the Buddha's first
noble truth. It's a rumor with good credentials, spread by
well-respected academics and meditation teachers alike, but a
rumor nonetheless. The real truth about the noble truths is far
more interesting. The Buddha taught four truths -- not one --
about life: There is suffering, there is a cause for suffering,
there is an end of suffering, and there is a path of practice
that puts an end to suffering. These truths, taken as a whole,
are far from pessimistic. They're a practical, problem-solving
approach -- the way a doctor approaches an illness, or a
mechanic a faulty engine. You identify a problem and look for
its cause. You then put an end to the problem by eliminating the
cause.
What's special about the Buddha's approach is
that the problem he attacks is the whole of human suffering, and
the solution he offers is something human beings can do for
themselves. Just as a doctor with a surefire cure for measles
isn't afraid of measles, the Buddha isn't afraid of any aspect
of human suffering. And, having experienced a happiness that's
totally unconditional, he's not afraid to point out the
suffering and stress inherent in places where most of us would
rather not see it -- in the conditioned pleasures we cling to.
He teaches us not to deny that suffering and stress, or to run
away from it, but to stand still and face up to it. To examine
it carefully. That way -- by understanding it -- we can ferret
out its cause and put an end to it. Totally. How confident can
you get?
A fair number of writers have pointed out the
basic confidence inherent in the four noble truths, and yet the
rumor of Buddhism's pessimism persists. I wonder why. One
possible explanation is that, in coming to Buddhism, we
sub-consciously expect it to address issues that have a long
history in our own culture. By starting out with suffering as
his first truth, the Buddha seems to be offering his position on
a question with a long history in the West: is the world
basically good or bad?
According to Genesis, this was the first
question that occurred to God after he had finished his
creation: had he done a good job? So he looked at the world and
saw that it was good. Ever since then, people in the West have
sided with or against God on his answer, but in doing so they
have affirmed that the question was worth asking to begin with.
When Theravada -- the only form of Buddhism to take on
Christianity when Europe colonized Asia -- was looking for ways
to head off what it saw as the missionary menace, Buddhists who
had received their education from the missionaries assumed that
the question was valid and pressed the first noble truth into
service as a refutation of the Christian God: look at how
miserable life is, they said, and it's hard to accept God's
verdict on his handiwork.
This debating strategy may have scored a few
points at the time, and it's easy to find Buddhist apologists
who -- still living in the colonial past -- keep trying to score
the same points. The real issue, though, is whether the Buddha
intended for his first noble truth to be an answer to God's
question in the first place and -- more importantly -- whether
we're getting the most out of the first noble truth if we see it
in that light.
It's hard to imagine what you could accomplish
by saying that life is suffering. You'd have to spend your time
arguing with people who see more than just suffering in life.
The Buddha himself says as much in one of his discourses. A
brahman named Long-nails (Dighanakha) comes to him and announces
that he doesn't approve of anything. This would have been a
perfect time for the Buddha, if he had wanted, to chime in with
the truth that life is suffering. Instead, he attacks the whole
notion of taking a stand on whether life is worthy of approval.
There are three possible answers to this question: (1) nothing
is worthy of approval, (2) everything is, and (3) some things
are and some things aren't. If you take any of these three
positions, you end up arguing with the people who take either of
the other two positions. And where does that get you?
The Buddha then teaches Long-nails to look at
his body and feelings as instances of the first noble truth:
they're stressful, inconstant, and don't deserve to be clung to
as self. Long-nails follows the Buddha's instructions and, in
letting go of his attachment to body and feelings, gains his
first glimpse of the Deathless, of what it's like to be totally
free from suffering.
The point of this story is that trying to
answer God's question, passing judgment on the world, is a waste
of time. And it offers a better use for the first noble truth:
looking at things, not in terms of "world" or "life," but simply
identifying suffering so that you can comprehend it, let it go,
and attain release. Rather than asking us to make a blanket
judgment -- which, in effect, would be asking us to be blind
partisans -- the first noble truth asks us to look and see
precisely where the problem of suffering lies.
Other discourses make the point that the
problem isn't with body and feelings in and of themselves. They
themselves aren't suffering. The suffering lies in clinging to
them. In his definition of the first noble truth, the Buddha
summarizes all types of suffering under the phrase, "the five
aggregates of clinging": clinging to physical form (including
the body), feelings, perceptions, thought constructs, and
consciousness. However, when the five aggregates are free from
clinging, he tells us, they lead to long-term benefit and
happiness. Of course, by "happiness" he isn't here referring to
the arts, food, travel, sports, family life, or any of the other
sections of the Sunday newspaper. He's talking about the solid
well-being that comes when we treat the aggregates as factors in
the path to the Deathless. The aggregates in themselves are
neutral. The role they play in leading to true happiness or
suffering lies in whether or not we cling.
So the first noble truth, simply put, is that
clinging is suffering. It's because of clinging that
physical pain becomes mental pain. It's because of clinging that
aging, illness, and death cause mental distress. How do we
cling? The texts list four ways: the clinging of sensual
passion, the clinging of views, the clinging of precepts and
practices, and the clinging of doctrines of the self. It's rare
that a moment passes in the ordinary mind without some form of
clinging. Even when we abandon a particular form of clinging,
it's usually because it gets in the way of another form. We may
abandon a puritanical view because it interferes with sensual
pleasure; or a sensual pleasure because it conflicts with a view
about what we should do to stay healthy. Our views of who we are
may expand and contract depending on which of our many senses of
"I" is feeling the most pain, expanding into a sense of cosmic
oneness when we feel confined by the limitations of our small
mind-body complex, shrinking into a small shell when we feel
wounded from identifying with a cosmos so filled with cruelty,
thoughtlessness, and waste. When the insignificance of our
finite self becomes oppressive again, we may jump at the idea
that we have no self, but then that becomes oppressive.
So our minds jump from clinging to clinging
like a bird trapped in a cage. And when we realize we're
captive, we naturally search for a way out. This is where it's
so important that the first noble truth not say that
"Life is suffering," for if life were suffering, where would we
look for an end to suffering? We'd be left with nothing but
death and annihilation. But when the actual truth is that
clinging is suffering, we simply have to look to see precisely
where clinging is and learn not to cling.
This is where we encounter the Buddha's great
skill as a strategist: He tells us to take the clingings we'll
have to abandon and transform them into the path to their
abandoning. We'll need a certain amount of sensory pleasure --
in terms of adequate food, clothing, and shelter -- to find the
strength to go beyond sensual passion. We'll need right view --
seeing all things, including views, in terms of the four noble
truths -- to undermine our clinging to views. And we'll need a
regimen of the five ethical precepts and the practice of
meditation to put the mind in a solid position where it can drop
its clinging to precepts and practices. Underlying all this,
we'll need a strong sense of self-responsibility and
self-discipline to master the practices leading to the insight
that cuts through our clinging to doctrines of the self.
So we start the path to the end of suffering,
not by trying to drop our clingings immediately, but by learning
to cling more strategically. In other words, we start where we
are and make the best use of the habits we've already got. We
progress along the path by finding better and better things to
cling to, and more skillful ways to cling, in the same way you
climb a ladder to the top of a roof: grab hold of a higher rung
so that you can let go of a lower rung, and then grab onto a
rung still higher. As the rungs get further off the ground, you
find that the mind grows clearer and can see precisely where its
clingings are. It gets a sharper sense of which parts of
experience belong to which noble truth and what should be done
with them: the parts that are suffering should be comprehended,
the parts that cause of suffering -- craving and ignorance --
should be abandoned; the parts that form the path to the end of
suffering should be developed; and the parts that belong to the
end of suffering should be verified. This helps you get higher
and higher on the ladder until you find yourself securely on the
roof. That's when you can finally let go of the ladder and be
totally free.
So the real question we face isn't God's
question, passing judgment on how skillfully he created life or
the world. It's our question: how skillfully are we
handling the raw stuff of life? Are we clinging in ways that
serve only to continue the round of suffering, or are we
learning to cling in ways that will reduce suffering so that
ultimately we can grow up and won't have to cling. If we
negotiate life armed with all four noble truths, realizing that
life contains both suffering and an end to suffering, there's
hope: hope that we'll be able to sort out which parts of life
belong to which truth; hope that someday, in this life, we'll
come to the point where we agree with the Buddha, "Oh. Yes. This
is the end of suffering and stress."
* * *
No-self or Not-self?
One of the first stumbling blocks that
Westerners often encounter when they learn about Buddhism is the
teaching on anatta, often translated as no-self. This
teaching is a stumbling block for two reasons. First, the idea
of there being no self doesn't fit well with other Buddhist
teachings, such as the doctrine of kamma and rebirth: If there's
no self, what experiences the results of kamma and takes
rebirth? Second, it doesn't fit well with our own
Judeo-Christian background, which assumes the existence of an
eternal soul or self as a basic presupposition: If there's no
self, what's the purpose of a spiritual life? Many books try to
answer these questions, but if you look at the Pali Canon -- the
earliest extant record of the Buddha's teachings -- you won't
find them addressed at all. In fact, the one place where the
Buddha was asked point-blank whether or not there was a self, he
refused to answer. When later asked why, he said that to hold
either that there is a self or that there is no self is to fall
into extreme forms of wrong view that make the path of Buddhist
practice impossible. Thus the question should be put aside. To
understand what his silence on this question says about the
meaning of anatta, we first have to look at his teachings on how
questions should be asked and answered, and how to interpret his
answers.
The Buddha divided all questions into four
classes: those that deserve a categorical (straight yes or no)
answer; those that deserve an analytical answer, defining and
qualifying the terms of the question; those that deserve a
counter-question, putting the ball back in the questioner's
court; and those that deserve to be put aside. The last class of
question consists of those that don't lead to the end of
suffering and stress. The first duty of a teacher, when asked a
question, is to figure out which class the question belongs to,
and then to respond in the appropriate way. You don't, for
example, say yes or no to a question that should be put aside.
If you are the person asking the question and you get an answer,
you should then determine how far the answer should be
interpreted. The Buddha said that there are two types of people
who misrepresent him: those who draw inferences from statements
that shouldn't have inferences drawn from them, and those who
don't draw inferences from those that should.
These are the basic ground rules for
interpreting the Buddha's teachings, but if we look at the way
most writers treat the anatta doctrine, we find these ground
rules ignored. Some writers try to qualify the no-self
interpretation by saying that the Buddha denied the existence of
an eternal self or a separate self, but this is to
give an analytical answer to a question that the Buddha showed
should be put aside. Others try to draw inferences from the few
statements in the discourse that seem to imply that there is no
self, but it seems safe to assume that if one forces those
statements to give an answer to a question that should be put
aside, one is drawing inferences where they shouldn't be drawn.
So, instead of answering "no" to the question
of whether or not there is a self -- interconnected or separate,
eternal or not -- the Buddha felt that the question was
misguided to begin with. Why? No matter how you define the line
between "self" and "other," the notion of self involves an
element of self-identification and clinging, and thus suffering
and stress. This holds as much for an interconnected self, which
recognizes no "other," as it does for a separate self. If one
identifies with all of nature, one is pained by every felled
tree. It also holds for an entirely "other" universe, in which
the sense of alienation and futility would become so
debilitating as to make the quest for happiness -- one's own or
that of others -- impossible. For these reasons, the Buddha
advised paying no attention to such questions as "Do I exist?"
or "Don't I exist?" for however you answer them, they lead to
suffering and stress.
To avoid the suffering implicit in questions
of "self" and "other," he offered an alternative way of dividing
up experience: the four Noble Truths of stress, its cause, its
cessation, and the path to its cessation. Rather than viewing
these truths as pertaining to self or other, he said, one should
recognize them simply for what they are, in and of themselves,
as they are directly experienced, and then perform the duty
appropriate to each. Stress should be comprehended, its cause
abandoned, its cessation realized, and the path to its cessation
developed. These duties form the context in which the anatta
doctrine is best understood. If you develop the path of virtue,
concentration, and discernment to a state of calm well-being and
use that calm state to look at experience in terms of the Noble
Truths, the questions that occur to the mind are not "Is there a
self? What is my self?" but rather "Am I suffering stress
because I'm holding onto this particular phenomenon? Is it
really me, myself, or mine? If it's stressful but not really me
or mine, why hold on?" These last questions merit
straightforward answers, as they then help you to comprehend
stress and to chip away at the attachment and clinging -- the
residual sense of self-identification -- that cause it, until
ultimately all traces of self-identification are gone and all
that's left is limitless freedom.
In this sense, the anatta teaching is not a
doctrine of no-self, but a not-self strategy for shedding
suffering by letting go of its cause, leading to the highest,
undying happiness. At that point, questions of self, no-self,
and not-self fall aside. Once there's the experience of such
total freedom, where would there be any concern about what's
experiencing it, or whether or not it's a self?
* * *
Nibbana
We all know what happens when a fire goes out.
The flames die down and the fire is gone for good. So when we
first learn that the name for the goal of Buddhist practice,
nibbana (nirvana), literally means the extinguishing of a fire,
it's hard to imagine a deadlier image for a spiritual goal:
utter annihilation. It turns out, though, that this reading of
the concept is a mistake in translation, not so much of a word
as of an image. What did an extinguished fire represent to the
Indians of the Buddha's day? Anything but annihilation.
According to the ancient Brahmins, when a fire
was extinguished it went into a state of latency. Rather than
ceasing to exist, it became dormant and in that state -- unbound
from any particular fuel -- it became diffused throughout the
cosmos. When the Buddha used the image to explain nibbana to the
Indian Brahmins of his day, he bypassed the question of whether
an extinguished fire continues to exist or not, and focused
instead on the impossibility of defining a fire that doesn't
burn: thus his statement that the person who has gone totally
"out" can't be described.
However, when teaching his own disciples, the
Buddha used nibbana more as an image of freedom. Apparently, all
Indians at the time saw burning fire as agitated, dependent, and
trapped, both clinging and being stuck to its fuel as it burned.
To ignite a fire, one had to "seize" it. When fire let go of its
fuel, it was "freed," released from its agitation, dependence,
and entrapment -- calm and unconfined. This is why Pali poetry
repeatedly uses the image of extinguished fire as a metaphor for
freedom. In fact, this metaphor is part of a pattern of fire
imagery that involves two other related terms as well.
Upadana, or clinging, also refers to the sustenance a fire
takes from its fuel. Khandha means not only one of the
five "heaps" (form, feeling, perception, thought processes, and
consciousness) that define all conditioned experience, but also
the trunk of a tree. Just as fire goes out when it stops
clinging and taking sustenance from wood, so the mind is freed
when it stops clinging to the khandhas.
Thus the image underlying nibbana is one of
freedom. The Pali commentaries support this point by tracing the
word nibbana to its verbal root, which means "unbinding." What
kind of unbinding? The texts describe two levels. One is the
unbinding in this lifetime, symbolized by a fire that has gone
out but whose embers are still warm. This stands for the
enlightened arahant, who is conscious of sights and sounds,
sensitive to pleasure and pain, but freed from passion,
aversion, and delusion. The second level of unbinding,
symbolized by a fire so totally out that its embers have grown
cold, is what the arahant experiences after this life. All input
from the senses cools away and he/she is totally freed from even
the subtlest stresses and limitations of existence in space and
time.
The Buddha insists that this level is
indescribable, even in terms of existence or nonexistence,
because words work only for things that have limits. All he
really says about it -- apart from images and metaphors -- is
that one can have foretastes of the experience in this lifetime,
and that it's the ultimate happiness, something truly worth
knowing.
So the next time you watch a fire going out,
see it not as a case of annihilation, but as a lesson in how
freedom is to be found in letting go.
Sangha
The Economy of Gifts
According to the Buddhist monastic code, monks
and nuns are not allowed to accept money or even to engage in
barter or trade with lay people. They live entirely in an
economy of gifts. Lay supporters provide gifts of material
requisites for the monastics, while the monastics provide their
supporters with the gift of the teaching. Ideally -- and to a
great extent in actual practice -- this is an exchange that
comes from the heart, something totally voluntary. There are
many stories in the texts that emphasize the point that returns
in this economy -- it might also be called an economy of merit
-- depend not on the material value of the object given, but on
the purity of heart of the donor and recipient. You give what is
appropriate to the occasion and to your means, when and wherever
your heart feels inspired. For the monastics, this means that
you teach, out of compassion, what should be taught, regardless
of whether it will sell. For the laity, this means that you give
what you have to spare and feel inclined to share. There is no
price for the teachings, nor even a "suggested donation." Anyone
who regards the act of teaching or the act of giving requisites
as a repayment for a particular favor is ridiculed as mercenary.
Instead, you give because giving is good for the heart and
because the survival of the Dhamma as a living principle depends
on daily acts of generosity.
The primary symbol of this economy is the alms
bowl. If you are a monastic, it represents your dependence on
others, your need to accept generosity no matter what form it
takes. You may not get what you want in the bowl, but you
realize that you always get what you need, even if it's a
hard-earned lesson in doing without. One of my students in
Thailand once went to the mountains in the northern part of the
country to practice in solitude. His hillside shack was an ideal
place to meditate, but he had to depend on a nearby hilltribe
village for alms, and the diet was mostly plain rice with some
occasional boiled vegetables. After two months on this diet, his
meditation theme became the conflict in his mind over whether he
should go or stay. One rainy morning, as he was on his alms
round, he came to a shack just as the morning rice was ready.
The wife of the house called out, asking him to wait while she
got some rice from the pot. As he was waiting there in the
pouring rain, he couldn't help grumbling inwardly about the fact
that there would be nothing to go with the rice. It so happened
that the woman had an infant son who was sitting near the
kitchen fire, crying from hunger. So as she scooped some rice
out of the pot, she stuck a small lump of rice in his mouth.
Immediately, the boy stopped crying and began to grin. My
student saw this, and it was like a light bulb turning on in his
head. "Here you are, complaining about what people are giving
you for free," he told himself. "You're no match for a little
kid. If he can be happy with just a lump of rice, why can't
you?" As a result, the lesson that came with his scoop of rice
that day gave my student the strength he needed to stay on in
the mountains for another three years.
For a monastic the bowl also represents the
opportunity you give others to practice the Dhamma in accordance
with their means. In Thailand, this is reflected in one of the
idioms used to describe going for alms: proad sat, doing
a favor for living beings. There were times on my alms round in
rural Thailand when, as I walked past a tiny grass shack,
someone would come running out to put rice in my bowl. Years
earlier, as lay person, my reaction on seeing such a bare, tiny
shack would have been to want to give monetary help to them. But
now I was on the receiving end of their generosity. In my
new position I may have been doing less for them in material
terms than I could have done as a lay person, but at least I was
giving them the opportunity to have the dignity that comes with
being a donor.
For the donors, the monk's alms bowl becomes a
symbol of the good they have done. On several occasions in
Thailand people would tell me that they had dreamed of a monk
standing before them, opening the lid to his bowl. The details
would differ as to what the dreamer saw in the bowl, but in each
case the interpretation of the dream was the same: the dreamer's
merit was about to bear fruit in an especially positive way.
The alms round itself is also a gift that goes
both ways. On the one hand, daily contact with lay donors
reminds the monastics that their practice is not just an
individual matter, but a concern of the entire community. They
are indebted to others for the right and opportunity to
practice, and should do their best to practice diligently as a
way of repaying that debt. At the same time, the opportunity to
walk through a village early in the morning, passing by the
houses of the rich and poor, the happy and unhappy, gives plenty
of opportunities to reflect on the human condition and the need
to find a way out of the grinding cycle of death and rebirth.
For the donors, the alms round is a reminder
that the monetary economy is not the only way to happiness. It
helps to keep a society sane when there are monastics
infiltrating the towns every morning, embodying an ethos very
different from the dominant monetary economy. The gently
subversive quality of this custom helps people to keep their
values straight.
Above all, the economy of gifts symbolized by
the alms bowl and the alms round allows for specialization, a
division of labor, from which both sides benefit. Those who are
willing can give up many of the privileges of home life and in
return receive the free time, the basic support, and the
communal training needed to devote themselves fully to Dhamma
practice. Those who stay at home can benefit from having
full-time Dhamma practitioners around on a daily basis. I have
always found it ironic that the modern world honors
specialization in almost every area -- even in things like
running, jumping, and throwing a ball -- but not in the Dhamma,
where it is denounced as "dualism," "elitism," or worse. The
Buddha began the monastic order on the first day of his teaching
career because he saw the benefits that come with
specialization. Without it, the practice tends to become limited
and diluted, negotiated into the demands of the monetary
economy. The Dhamma becomes limited to what will sell and what
will fit into a schedule dictated by the demands of family and
job. In this sort of situation, everyone ends up poorer in
things of the heart.
The fact that tangible goods run only one way
in the economy of gifts means that the exchange is open to all
sorts of abuses. This is why there are so many rules in the
monastic code to keep the monastics from taking unfair advantage
of the generosity of lay donors. There are rules against asking
for donations in inappropriate circumstances, from making claims
as to one's spiritual attainments, and even from covering up the
good foods in one's bowl with rice, in hopes that donors will
then feel inclined to provide something more substantial. Most
of the rules, in fact, were instituted at the request of lay
supporters or in response to their complaints. They had made
their investment in the merit economy and were interested in
protecting their investment. This observation applies not only
to ancient India, but also to the modern-day West. On their
first contact with the Sangha, most people tend to see little
reason for the disciplinary rules, and regard them as quaint
holdovers from ancient Indian prejudices. When, however, they
come to see the rules in the context of the economy of gifts and
begin to participate in that economy themselves, they also tend
to become avid advocates of the rules and active protectors of
"their" monastics. The arrangement may limit the freedom of the
monastics in certain ways, but it means that the lay supporters
take an active interest not only in what the monastic teaches,
but also in how the monastic lives -- a useful safeguard to make
sure that teachers walk their talk. This, again, insures that
the practice remains a communal concern. As the Buddha said,
Monks, householders are very
helpful to you, as they provide you with the requisites of
robes, alms food, lodgings, and medicine. And you, monks, are
very helpful to householders, as you teach them the Dhamma
admirable in the beginning, admirable in the middle, and
admirable in the end, as you expound the holy life both in its
particulars and in its essence, entirely complete, surpassingly
pure. In this way the holy life is lived in mutual dependence,
for the purpose of crossing over the flood, for making a right
end to suffering and stress.
Iti 107
Periodically, throughout the history of
Buddhism, the economy of gifts has broken down, usually when one
side or the other gets fixated on the tangible side of the
exchange and forgets the qualities of the heart that are its
reason for being. And periodically it has been revived when
people are sensitive to its rewards in terms of the living
Dhamma. By its very nature, the economy of gifts is something of
a hothouse creation that requires careful nurture and a
sensitive discernment of its benefits. I find it amazing that
such an economy has lasted for more than 2,600 years. It will
never be more than an alternative to the dominant monetary
economy, largely because its rewards are so intangible and
require so much patience, trust, and discipline in order to be
appreciated. Those who demand immediate return for specific
services and goods will always require a monetary system.
Sincere Buddhist lay people, however, have the chance to play an
amphibious role, engaging in the monetary economy in order to
maintain their livelihood, and contributing to the economy of
gifts whenever they feel so inclined. In this way they can
maintain direct contact with teachers, insuring the best
possible instruction for their own practice, in an atmosphere
where mutual compassion and concern are the medium of exchange;
and purity of heart, the bottom line.
Summary
A Refuge in Skillful Action
Is human action real or illusory? If real, is
it effective? If it is effective, does one have a choice in what
one does? If one has a choice, can one choose to act in a way
that will lead to genuine happiness? If so, what is that way?
These are questions that lie at the heart of the way we conduct
our lives. The way we answer them will determine whether we look
for happiness through our own abilities, seek happiness through
outside help, or abandon the quest for a higher-than-ordinary
happiness altogether.
These questions were precisely the ones that
led Siddhattha Gotama -- the Bodhisatta, or Buddha-to-be -- to
undertake his quest for Awakening. He felt that there was no
honor, no value in life, if true happiness could not be found
through one's own efforts. Thus he put his life on the line to
see how far human effort could go. Eventually he found that
effort, skillfully applied, could lead to an Awakening to the
Deathless. The lessons he learned about action and effort in the
course of developing that skill, and which were confirmed by the
experience of his Awakening, formed the basis of his doctrine of
kamma (in Sanskrit: karma). This doctrine lies at the
heart of his teaching, and forms the essence of the Triple
Refuge. Put briefly, it states that action is real, effective,
and the result of one's own choice. If one chooses to act
skillfully and works to develop that skill, one's actions can
lead to happiness, not only on the ordinary sensory level, but
also on a level that transcends all the dimensions of time and
the present. To understand this doctrine and get a sense of its
full implications, we must first have some background on how the
Buddha arrived at it. This will help us to see how kamma can act
as a refuge, and what kind of refuge it provides.
Background
People often believe that the Buddha simply
picked up the doctrine of kamma from his environment, but
nothing could be further from the truth. Northern India at his
time was a place of great intellectual activity, and -- as
science made new advances and called many of the old,
established beliefs into question -- all of the great
philosophical and religious issues of human life were up for
grabs. The foremost science at that time was astronomy. New,
precise observations of planetary movements, combined with new
advances in mathematics, had led astronomers to conclude that
time was measured in eons, incomprehensibly long cycles that
repeat themselves endlessly. Philosophers of the time tried to
work out the implications of this vast temporal frame for the
drama of human life and the quest for ultimate happiness. These
philosophers fell into two broad camps: those who conducted
their speculations within the traditions of the Vedas, orthodox
religious and ritual texts; and other, unorthodox groups, called
the Samanas (contemplatives), who questioned the authority of
the Vedas.
By the time of Siddhattha Gotama, philosophers
of the Vedic and Samana schools had developed widely differing
views of the laws of nature and how they affected the pursuit of
true happiness. Their main points of disagreement were two:
1) Personal identity.
Most Vedic and Samana philosophers assumed that a person's
identity extended beyond this lifetime, eons before birth back
into the past, and after death on into the future. There was
some disagreement, however, as to whether one's identity from
life to life would change or remain the same. The Vedas had
viewed rebirth in a positive light, but by the time of Prince
Siddhattha the influence of the newly discovered astronomical
cycles had led those who believed in rebirth to regard the
cycles as pointless and confining, and release as the only
possibility for true happiness. There was, however, a Samana
school of hedonist materialists, called Lokayatans, who denied
the existence of any identity beyond death and insisted that
happiness could be found only by indulging in sensual pleasures
here and now.
2) Action and causality.
The ancient Vedas had formulated a doctrine of
kamma, or action, which stated that correctly performed actions
played a causal role in providing for one's happiness in the
life after death. The primary actions recognized by these texts,
though, were ritualistic: ritually performed sacrifices, often
involving the slaughter of animals, and gifts to priests. To be
effective, the ritual actions had to be correctly performed.
This concern for correct performance led the Vedists to compose
ritual manuals prescribing in minute detail the proper things to
do and say in the course of their rituals. They even included
special chants and spellsto compensate for any inadvertent
mistakes in the course of a particular ritual, so great was
their conviction that the quality of an act depend on its
physical expression.
The Samana schools rejected the Vedic
teachings on kamma, but for a variety of different reasons. One
set of Samana schools, called the Ajivakas, asserted that an
individual's actions were not in the least bit responsible for
the course of his/her life. One branch of the Ajivakas taught
that all action in the cosmos is illusory, as the only truly
existing things are the unchanging substances of which the
cosmos is made. Thus there is no such thing as right or wrong,
good or evil, for in the ultimate sense there is no such thing
as action.
Another branch of the Ajivakas taught that
action was real but totally subject to fate: deterministic
causal laws that left no room for free will. Thus they insisted
that release from the round of rebirth came only when the round
worked itself out. Peace of mind could be found by accepting
one's fate and patiently waiting for the cycle, like a ball of
string unwinding, to come to its end. Although these two
positions derived from two very different pictures of the
cosmos, they both led to the same conclusion: good and evil were
illusory social conventions, human beings were not responsible
for their acts, and human action had no role in shaping one's
experience of the cosmos.
The Lokayatans came to a similar conclusion,
but for different reasons. They agreed with the Vedists that
physical action was real, but they maintained that it bore no
results. There was no way to observe any invariable cause-effect
relationship between events, they said; as a result, all events
were spontaneous and self-caused. This meant that human actions
had no consequences, and thus there were no such things as good
and evil because no action could have a good or evil effect on
anything else. They concluded that one could safely ignore moral
rules in one's pursuit of sensual pleasure, and would be a fool
to deny oneself immediate gratification of one's desires
whenever the opportunity appeared.
Another school, the Jains, accepted the Vedic
premise that one's actions shaped one's experience of the
cosmos, but they differed from the Vedas in the way they
conceived of action. All action, according to them, was a form
of violence. The more violent the act, the more it produced
effluents, conceived as sticky substances that bound the soul to
the round of rebirth. Thus they rejected the Vedic assertion
that ritual sacrifice produced good kamma, for the violence
involved in killing the sacrificial animals was actually a form
of very sticky bad kamma. In their eyes, the only way to true
happiness was to try to escape the round of kamma entirely. This
was to be done by violence against themselves: various forms of
self-torture that were supposed to burn away the effluents, the
"heat" of pain being a sign that the effluents were burning. At
the same time, they tried to create as little new kamma as
possible. This practice would culminate in total abstinence from
physical action, resulting in suicide by starvation, the theory
being that if old kamma were completely burned away, and no new
kamma created, there would be no more effluents to bind the soul
to the cosmos. Thus the soul would be released.
Despite the differences between the Vedic and
Jain views of action, they shared some important similarities:
Both believed that the physical performance of an action, rather
than the mental attitude behind it, determined its kammic
result. And, both saw kamma as acting under deterministic,
linear laws. Kamma performed in the present would not bear fruit
until the future, and the relationship between a particular
action and its result was predictable and fixed.
These divergent viewpoints on the nature of
action formed the backdrop for the Bodhisatta's quest for
ultimate happiness. On the one side stood the Ajivakas and
Lokayatans, who insisted for various reasons that human action
was ineffective: either non-existent, chaotic, or totally
pre-determined. On the other side stood the Vedic and Jain
thinkers, who taught that physical action was effective, but
that it was subject to deterministic and linear laws, and could
not lead to true happiness beyond the round of rebirth. The
Buddha's position on kamma broke from both sides of the issue,
largely because he approached the question from a radically new
direction.
The Principle of Skillful Action
Instead of arguing from abstract science, the
Bodhisatta focused directly on the level of immediate experience
and explored the implications of truths that both sides
overlooked. Instead of fixing on the content of the views
expressed, he considered the actions of those who were
expressing the views. If views of determinism and total chaos
were followed to their logical end, there would be no point in
purposeful action, and yet the proponents of both theories
continued to act in purposeful ways. If only physical acts bore
consequences, there would be no point in teaching a proper
understanding of the nature of action -- for the mental act of
understanding, right or wrong, would have no consequences -- and
yet all sides agreed that it was important to understand reality
in the right way. The fact that each side insisted that the
other used unskillful forms of observation and argumentation to
advance its views implied that mental skills were crucial in
determining the truth. Thus the Bodhisatta looked directly at
skillful mental action in and of itself, followed its
implications in developing knowledge itself as a skill -- rather
than as a body of facts -- and found that those implications
carried him all the way to release.
The most basic lesson he learned was that
mental skills can be developed. As one of the Pali discourses
notes, he found that thoughts imbued with passion, aversion, and
delusion were harmful; thoughts devoid of these qualities were
not harmful; and he could shepherd his thoughts in such a way to
avoid harm. The fact that he could develop this skill meant that
mental action is not illusory, that it actually gives results.
Otherwise, there would be no such thing as skill, for no actions
would be more effective than others. The fact of skillfulness
also implies that some results are preferable to others, for
otherwise there would be no point in trying to develop skills.
In addition, the fact that it is possible to learn from mistakes
in the course of developing a skill -- so that one's future
actions may be more skillful -- implies that the cycle of
action, result, and reaction is not entirely deterministic. Acts
of perception, attention, and intention can actually provide new
input as the cycle goes through successive turns.
The important element in this input is
attention. Anyone who has mastered a skill will realize that the
process of attaining mastery requires attention to three things:
(1) to pre-existing conditions, (2) to what one is doing in
relation to those conditions, and (3) to the results that come
from one's actions. This threefold focus enables one to monitor
one's actions and adjust them accordingly. In this way,
attention to conditions, actions, and effects allows the results
of an action to feed back into future action, thus allowing for
refinement in one's skill.
In the first stage of his practice, the
Bodhisatta refined the skillfulness of his mind until it reached
a state of jhana, or concentrated mental absorption, marked by
perfect equanimity and mindfulness. The question that occurred
at that point was how much further the principle of skillful
action could be applied. Did intentional action directly or
indirectly explain all experience in the world, or only some of
it? If all of it, could the same principle be used to gain
escape from the suffering inherent in the world, or were the
Jains right in saying that action could only keep one bound to
the cycle of suffering?
As the texts tell us, the Bodhisatta's first
attempt to answer these questions was to direct his mind -- now
stable, bright, clear, and malleable -- to knowledge of previous
lifetimes. If it were true that he had been born before, his
actions from past lives might explain experiences in this life
-- such as the circumstances into which he was born -- for which
no actions in this life could account. He found that he could
indeed remember previous lives, many thousands of them: what he
had been born as, where, what his experience of pleasure and
pain, how he had died and then experienced rebirth as something
else.
This first insight, however, did not fully
answer his question. He needed to know if kamma was indeed the
principle that shaped life, not only in terms of the narrative
of his own lives, but also as a cosmic principle effecting the
lives of all beings. So he directed his mind to knowledge of the
passing away and arising of beings throughout the cosmos, and
found that he could indeed see beings dying and gaining rebirth,
that the pleasure and pain of their new lives was shaped by the
quality of their kamma, and the kamma in turn was dependent on
the views that gave rise to it. Right views -- believing that
good kamma, based on skillful intentions, gave rise to happiness
-- lay behind good kamma, while wrong views -- not believing
these principles -- lay behind bad.
Even this second insight, however, didn't
fully answer his question. To begin with, there was no guarantee
that the visions providing this knowledge were true or complete.
And, even if they were, they did not tell whether there was a
form of right view that would underlie a level of skillful kamma
that would lead, not simply to a pleasant rebirth within the
cycle of rebirth, but to release from the cycle altogether.
Here was where the Bodhisatta turned to look
again at the events in the mind, in and of themselves in the
present, and in particular at the process of developing of
skillfulness, to see if it offered any clues as to what a right
view leading out of the cycle of rebirth might be. As we noted
above, the process of skillfulness implies two things: a
non-linear principle of cause and effect, involving feedback
loops to allow for greater skillfulness; and the fact that some
results are preferable to others. The Bodhisatta used these
principles, in their most basic form, to divide experience into
four categories based on two sets of variables: cause and effect
on one hand, and stress and its cessation on the other. He then
dropped the categories in which the first two knowledges had
been expressed. In other words, he dropped the sense of "self"
and "others" in which the narrative of the first knowledge had
been expressed; and the sense of "beings" inhabiting a "world"
in which the cosmology of the second knowledge had been
expressed. In his place, he analyzed experience in categories
empty of those concepts, simply in terms of the direct
experience of stress, its cause, its cessation, and the path of
mental factors leading to its cessation.
In the first round of this new insight, he was
able to identify each of these categories: stress, in ultimate
terms, was attachment to anything that might be identified as a
"self." The cause of stress was craving, which in turn was based
on ignorance about the true nature of stress. The cessation of
stress was the total abandoning of craving, while the path to
the cessation of stress was a cluster of eight factors: right
view, right resolve, right speech, right action, right
livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right
concentration. In the second round of this insight, he realized
the duties that had to be performed with regard to each of these
categories. Stress was to be comprehended, its cause abandoned,
its cessation realized, and the path developed. He then pursued
those duties until the mental powers of the path were so fully
developed that stress was totally comprehended. This meant that
there were no more objects on which craving could land, and so
it was naturally abandoned. Thus in the third round of this
insight he realized that the duties with regard to all four
truths had been fulfilled. At that point there was nothing
further for the mind to do -- there was nothing more it could
do in these terms. Right view and concentration -- the mental
qualities lying at the heart of the path -- had done such a
thorough job of ferreting out stress and craving that, as their
final act, they detected the subtle stress and craving inherent
in the act of right view and right concentration themselves.
Thus, as its final act, the mind let go even of these path
factors, just as a carpenter would let go of his tools when they
had finished their job.
As a result, all present mental input into the
processes of experience naturally came to a halt in a state of
non-fashioning. This state opened onto an experience of total
liberation, called Unbinding (nibbana; in Sanskrit,
nirvana). Realizing that this Unbinding was the total
cessation of suffering and of the processes of death and rebirth
as generated in the mind, the Bodhisatta, now the Buddha, knew
that his questions had been answered. Skillful action, based on
right view in the form of the four categories based around
stress -- which he termed the four noble truths -- could indeed
bring about a total happiness free from the limitations of
birth, aging, illness, and death.
The Teaching of Right View
The texts tell us that the Buddha spent the
first seven weeks after his Awakening experiencing that
happiness and freedom. Then he decided to teach the way to that
happiness to others. His teachings were based on the three
insights that had led to his own experience of Awakening.
Because right view lay at the heart of his analysis of kamma and
the way out of kamma, his teachings focused in particular on the
two forms of right view that he learned in the course of those
insights: the form he learned in the second insight, which led
to a favorable rebirth; and the form he learned in the third
insight, which led out from the cycle of death and rebirth once
and for all.
The first level of right view the Buddha
termed mundane right view. He expressed it in these terms:
There is what is given, what
is offered, what is sacrificed. There are fruits and results of
good and bad actions. There is this world and the next world.
There is mother and father. There are spontaneously reborn
beings; there are priests and contemplatives who, faring rightly
and practicing rightly, proclaim this world and the next after
having directly known and realized it for themselves.
M 117
This passage means that
there is merit in generosity; that the moral qualities of good
and bad are inherent in the universe, and not simply social
conventions; that there is life after death; that one has a true
moral debt to one's parents; and that there are people who have
lived the renunciate's life properly in such a way that they
have gained true and direct knowledge of these matters. These
beliefs form the minimum prerequisite for following the path of
skillful action that will lead to happy results within the cycle
of rebirth. Thus this might be termed right view for the purpose
of a happy rebirth.
The second level of right view, which the
Buddha termed transcendent right view, he expressed simply as:
Knowledge in terms of
stress, knowledge in terms of the origination of stress,
knowledge in terms of the cessation of stress, knowledge in
terms of the way of practice leading to the cessation of stress.
D 22
In other words, this level
of right view consists of knowledge in terms of the four noble
truths, and might be called right view for the purpose of
escaping from rebirth altogether.
Just as the third insight grew out of the
first two insights, the second level of right view grows out of
the first. Its purpose is impossible to fathom if taken outside
of the context of mundane good and bad kamma and their good and
bad results. Together, the two levels of right view provide a
complete and complementary picture of the nature of kamma as
viewed from two different perspectives. The first level views
kamma as a cosmic principle at work in the narrative of each
individual's many lives. The second form views kamma as a
principle at work in the present moment, approached from a frame
of mind empty of the categories of self and other, being and
non-being, which lie at the essence of narratives and
cosmologies.
To see how these two levels of right view
complement one another in shaping the form and content of the
Buddha's teachings, we can look at his most common mode of
presenting his teachings: the "graduated discourse" (anupubbi-katha),
beginning with the principle of good and bad kamma and
gradually building up through the topics of generosity, virtue,
heaven, drawbacks, and renunciation, ending with the topic of
the four noble truths. There were several reasons for this
gradual approach, but primarily they came down to the fact that
the four truths were too abstract to appear immediately
relevant, and the goal of escape from rebirth made no sense
unless viewed in the proper context. The role of the graduated
discourse was to provide that sense of relevance and context.
Starting with the first level of right view,
the Buddha would describe good actions under two main
categories: generosity and virtue. Together, the two categories
could be stretched to cover almost any type of good physical,
verbal, or mental deeds. For example, generosity covers not only
the giving of material gifts, but also generosity with one's
time, knowledge, gratitude, and forgiveness. Virtue begins with
the five precepts -- against killing, stealing, illicit sex,
lying, and taking intoxicants -- includes prohibitions against
five forms of wrong livelihood -- selling slaves, intoxicants,
poisons, weapons, and animals to be killed for food -- and goes
on to cover abstention from all forms of harmful behavior. Thus
good behavior, taken under the categories of generosity and
virtue, means both refraining from harmful behavior and
performing actions that are beneficial.
Having described good actions, the Buddha
would describe their rewards, as results of the cosmic principle
of kamma. The rewards here include both those visible in this
world and those to be anticipated in the next. The Buddhist
texts contain glowing descriptions both of the sense of
well-being in the immediate present that results from good
actions, and of the exquisite pleasures that rebirth in heaven
entails. Implicit in these descriptions is the dark side of the
principle of kamma: the inherent punishments that come from bad
behavior, again both in this world and in the next: in the
various levels of hell and other lower births -- such as a
common animal -- and again in this world on one's return to the
human state.
However -- because finite actions can't
produce infinite results -- the rewards of kamma, good or bad,
are not eternal. This point led naturally to the next topic in
the discourse: the drawbacks of the cycle of rebirth as a whole.
No happiness within the cycle is permanent; even the most
refined heavenly pleasures must end when the force of one's good
kamma ends, and one is forced to return to the rough and tumble
of lower realms of being. The changeablility of the mind lying
behind the creation of kamma means that the course of an
individual's life through the realms of rebirth is not
necessarily ever upward. In fact, as the Buddha saw from his
remembrance of his own lives, the course leading from one
rebirth to another is filled with aimless ups and downs, like a
stick thrown into the air: sometimes landing on this end,
sometimes on the other end, sometimes in the middle. The amount
of suffering and stress suffered in the course of these many
throws is more than can be measured.
These considerations led naturally to the next
topic of the discourse: renunciation. Having realized the
fleeting nature of even the most refined pleasures in the round
of rebirth, the sensitive listener would be prepared to look
favorably on the idea of renouncing any aspiration for happiness
within the round, and cultivating the path to release. The texts
compare this mental preparation to the act of washing a cloth so
that it would be ready to take dye. This was when the Buddha
would take the listener beyond the level of mundane right view
and broach the transcendent level.
The texts describing the steps of the
graduated discourse describe this step simply as "the teaching
special to the Buddhas: stress, its origination, its cessation,
and the path," i.e., the four noble truths. However, the four
noble truths are simply one out of three interrelated versions
of transcendent right view taught in the texts: (1) this/that
conditionality (idappaccayata), (2) dependent co-arising
(paticca samuppada), and (3) the four noble truths (ariya
sacca). In order to gain a full picture of the Buddha's
teachings on the nature of kamma, we should look at all three.
The most basic version of right view is simply
the causal principle of feedback loops that the Buddha found in
the process of developing skillful action. He called this
principle "this/that conditionality" because it explains
experience in terms that are immediately present to awareness --
events that can be pointed to in the mind as "this" or "that" --
rather than principles hidden from awareness. He expressed this
principle in a simple-looking formula:
" (1) When this is, that is.
(2) From the arising of this comes the arising
of that.
(3) When this isn't, that isn't.
(4) From the stopping of this comes the
stopping of that. "
A X.92
Of the many possible ways of interpreting this
formula, only one does justice both to the way the formula is
worded and to the complex, fluid manner in which specific
examples of causal relationships are described in the texts.
That way is to view the formula as the interplay of two causal
principles: one diachronic, acting over time; and the
other synchronic, acting in a single instant of time. The
two principles combine to form a non-linear pattern. The
diachronic principle -- taking (2) and (4) as a pair -- connects
events over time; the synchronic principle -- (1) and (3) --
connects objects and events in the present moment. The two
principles intersect, so that any given event is influenced by
two sets of conditions: input from the past and input from the
present.
Although each principle seems simple, their
interaction makes their consequences very complex. To begin
with, every act has repercussions in the present moment together
with reverberations extending into the future. Depending on the
intensity of the act, these reverberations can last for a very
short or a very long time. Thus every event takes place in a
context determined by the combined effects of past events coming
from a wide range in time, together with the effects of present
acts. These effects can intensify one another, can coexist with
little interaction, or can cancel one another out. Thus, even
though it is possible to predict that a certain type of act will
tend to give a certain type of result -- for example, acting on
anger will lead to pain -- there is no way to predict when or
where that result will make itself felt.
The complexity of the system is further
enhanced by the fact that both causal principles meet at the
mind. Through its views and intentions, the mind keeps both
principles active. Through its sensory powers, it is affected by
the results of the causes it has set in motion. This allows for
the causal principles to feed back into themselves, as the mind
reacts to the results of its own actions. These reactions can
form positive feedback loops, intensifying the original input
and its results, much like the howl in a speaker placed next to
the microphone feeding into it. They can also create negative
feedback loops, counteracting the original input, in the same
way that a thermostat turns off a heater when the temperature in
a room is too high, and turns it on again when it gets too low.
Because the results of actions can be immediate, and the mind
can react to them immediately, these feedback loops can
sometimes quickly spin out of control; at other times, they may
provide skillful checks on one's behavior. For example, a man
may act out of anger, which gives him an immediate sense of dis-ease
to which he may react with further anger, thus creating a
snowballing effect. On the other hand, he may come to understand
that the anger is causing his dis-ease, and so immediately
attempt to stop it. However, there can also be times when the
results of his past actions may obscure his present dis-ease, so
that he doesn't immediately react to it at all. This means that,
although there are general patterns relating habitual acts to
their results, there is no set one-for-one, tit-for-tat,
relationship between a particular action and its results.
Instead, the results are determined by the entire context of the
act, shaped by the actions that preceded or followed it, and by
one's state of mind at the time of acting or experiencing the
result.
In this way, the combination of two causal
principles -- influences from the past interacting with those in
the immediate present -- accounts for the complexity of causal
relationships on the level of immediate experience. However, the
combination of the two principles also opens the possibility for
finding a systematic way to break the causal web. If causes and
effects were entirely linear, the cosmos would be totally
deterministic, and nothing could be done to escape from the
machinations of the causal process. If they were entirely
synchronic, there would be no relationship from one moment to
the next, and all events would be arbitrary. The web could break
down totally or reform spontaneously for no reason at all.
However, with the two modes working together, one can learn from
causal patterns observed from the past and apply one's insights
to disentangling the same causal patterns acting in the present.
If one's insights are true, one can then gain freedom from those
patterns. This allows for escape from the cycle of kamma
altogether by developing kamma at a heightened level of skill by
pursuing the noble eightfold path.
In addition, the non-linearity of this/that
conditionality explains why heightened skillfulness, when
focused on the present moment, can succeed in leading to the end
of the kamma that has formed the experience of the entire
cosmos. All non-linear processes exhibit what is called scale
invariance, meaning that the behavior of the process on any one
scale is similar to its behavior on smaller or larger scales. To
understand, say, the large-scale pattern of a particular
non-linear process, one need only focus on its behavior on a
smaller scale that is easier to observe, and one will see the
same pattern at work. In the case of kamma, one need only focus
on the process of kamma in the immediate present, in the course
of developing heightened skillfulness, and the large-scale
issues over the expanses of space and time will become clear as
one gains release from them.
Dependent Co-arising
The teaching on dependent co-arising helps to
provide more detailed instructions on this point, showing
precisely where the cycle of kamma provides openings for more
skillful present input. In doing so, it both explains the
importance of the act of attention in developing heightened
skillfulness, and acts as a guide for focusing attention on
present experience in appropriate ways.
Dependent co-arising shows how the cosmos,
when viewed in the context of how it is directly experienced by
a person developing skillfulness, is subsumed entirely under
factors immediately present to awareness: the five aggregates of
form, feeling, perception, mental fabrication, and
consciousness, and the six sense media -- i.e., the five senses
plus the mind. The standard list of causal factors runs as
follows: the suffering and stress of aging, illness, and death
depend on birth; birth in turn depends on becoming; and so on
down through clinging, craving, feeling, sensory contact, the
six senses, name and form (mental and physical phenomena),
sensory consciousness, mental fabrications, and ignorance.
Although the list reads like a linear pattern, the precise
definitions of the terms show that it is filled with many
feedback loops. Because it is non-linear, it thus functions on
several scales: "birth," for instance, refers both to the birth
of a physical organism and to the birth of a sense of being in
the mind.
Included in this list is the Buddha's ultimate
analysis of kamma and rebirth. For instance, the nexus of kamma,
clinging, becoming, and birth accounts for the realm in which
birth takes place. Kamma (covered under the factors of name and
form) gives rise to the five aggregates, which form the objects
for craving and clinging. Once there is clinging, there is a
"coming-into-being" in any of three realms: the sensual realm,
the realm of form, and the formless realm. These realms refer
not only to levels of being on the cosmic scale, but also to
levels of mental states. Some mental states are concerned with
sensual images, others with forms, and still others with
formless abstractions. The relationship between birth and
becoming can be compared to the process of falling asleep and
dreaming. As drowsiness leads the mind to lose contact with
waking reality, a dream image of another place and time will
appear in it. The appearance of this image is called becoming.
The act of entering into this image and taking on a role or
identity within it -- and thus entering the world of the dream
and falling asleep -- is birth. The commentaries to the Pali
texts maintain that precisely the same process is what enables
rebirth to follow the death of the body. At the same time, the
analogy between falling asleep and taking birth explains why
release from the cycle of becoming is called Awakening.
Once there is birth in a particular realm, the
nexus of name-and-form with consciousness accounts for the
arising and survival of the active organism within that realm.
Without consciousness, the mental and physical organism would
die. Without the mental and physical organism, consciousness
would have no place to land and develop. This nexus also
explains the feedback loops that can lead to skillful action.
"Name" includes the sub-factors of attention, intention,
feeling, perception, and contact, which are precisely the
factors at work in the process of kamma and its result. The
first lesson of skillfulness is that the essence of an action
lies in the intention motivating it: an act motivated by the
intention for greater skillfulness will give results different
from those of an act motivated by greed, aversion, or delusion.
Intention, in turn, is influenced by the appropriateness or
inappropriateness of the act of attention to one's
circumstances. The less an act of attention is clouded by
delusion, the more clearly it will see things in appropriate
terms. The combination of attention and intention in turn
determines the quality of the feeling and the physical events
("form") that result from the act. The more skilled the action,
the more refined these results will be. Perceptions arise with
regard to those results, some more appropriate than others. The
act of attention selects which ones to focus on, thus feeding
back into another round in the cycle of action. Underlying the
entire cycle is the fact that all its factors are in contact
with consciousness.
This interplay of name, form, and
consciousness provides an answer to the quandary of how the
stress and suffering inherent in the cycle of action can be
ended. If one tried simply to stop the cycle through a direct
intention, the intention itself would count as kamma, and thus
as a factor to keep the cycle going. This double bind can be
dissolved, however, if one can watch as the contact between
consciousness and the cycle naturally falls away. This requires,
not inaction, but more and more appropriate attention to the
process of kamma itself. When one's attention to and mastery of
the process becomes fully complete, there occurs a point of
equipoise called "non-fashioning" (atammayata), in which
the contact between the processes of kamma and consciousness --
still fully conscious -- naturally becomes disengaged. One
modern teacher has compared this disengagement to that of a
fruit naturally falling, when fully ripened, from the tree. This
is how the cycle of action comes to an end in the moment of
Awakening.
As this analysis shows, the most important
obstacle to release is the ignorance that keeps attention from
being fully perceptive. As the Buddha traced the element of
ignorance that underlay the processes of mental fabrication, he
found that it came down to ignorance of the four noble truths:
the identity of the truths, the duties appropriate to each, and
the mastery of those duties. When this ignorance is fully
overcome, the craving that keeps the cycle going will have
nothing to fasten on, for all its possible objects are seen for
what they are: suffering and stress. With no place to land,
craving disappears, and the cycle can come to an end.
The Four Noble Truths
Because knowledge in terms of the four noble
truths is what ends ignorance and craving, the Buddha most often
expressed transcendent right view in their terms. These truths
focus the analysis of kamma directly on the question of stress
and suffering: issues at the heart of the narratives that people
make of their own life experiences. As the Buddha noted in his
second insight, his memory of previous lives included his
experience of pleasure and pain in each life, and most people --
when recounting their own lives -- tend to focus on these issues
as well. The four truths, however, do not stop simply with tales
about stress: they approach it from the problem-solving
perspective of a person engaged in developing a skill. What this
means for the meditator trying to master heightened skillfulness
is that these truths cannot be fully comprehended by passive
observation. Only by participating sensitively in the process of
developing skillful powers of mindfulness, concentration, and
discernment -- and gaining a practical feel for the relationship
of cause and effect among the mental factors that shape that
process -- can one eradicate the ignorance that obstructs the
ending of kamma. Thus, only through developing skillfulness to
the ultimate degree can the cycle be brought to equilibrium and,
as a result, disband.
The Knowledge of Unbinding
The truth of the Buddha's understanding of the
processes of kamma -- as informed by this/that conditionality,
dependent co-arising, and the four noble truths -- was confirmed
by the knowledge of Unbinding that followed immediately on his
mastery of heightened skillfulness. He found that when
skillfulness is intentionally brought to a point of full
consummation, as expressed in the direct awareness of this/that
conditionality, it leads to a state of non-fashioning that opens
to a level of consciousness in which all experience of the
cosmos has fallen away. When one's experience of the cosmos
resumes after the experience of Awakening, one sees clearly that
it is composed entirely of the results of old kamma; with no new
kamma added to the process, all experience of the cosmos will
eventually run out -- or, in the words of the texts, "will grow
cold right here." This discovery confirmed the basic premise
that kamma not only plays a role in shaping experience of the
cosmos, it plays the primary role. If this were not so, then
even when kamma was ended there would still remain the types of
experience that came from other sources. But because none of the
limitations of the cosmos -- time, space, etc. -- remain when
all present kamma disbands, and none resume after all old kamma
runs out, kamma must be the factor accounting for all experience
of those limitations. This fact implies that even the limiting
factors that one encounters in terms of sights, sounds, etc.,
are actually the fruit of past kamma in thought, word, and deed
-- committed not only in this, but also in many preceding
lifetimes. Thus, even though the Buddha's development of
heightened skillfulness focused on the present moment, the
resulting Awakening gave insights that encompassed all of time.
Faith in the Principle of Kamma
From this discussion it should become clear
why kamma, as an article of faith, is a necessary factor in the
path of Buddhist practice. The teaching on kamma, in its
narrative and cosmological forms, provides the context for the
practice, giving it direction and urgency. Because the cosmos is
governed by the laws of kamma, those laws provide the only
mechanism by which happiness can be found. But because good and
bad kamma, consisting of good and bad intentions, simply
perpetuate the ups and downs of experience in the cosmos, a way
must be found out of the mechanism of kamma by mastering it in a
way that allows it to disband in an attentive state of
non-intention. And, because there is no telling what sudden
surprises the results of one's past kamma may still hold in
store, one should try to develop that mastery as quickly as
possible.
In its "empty" mode -- i.e., focusing on the
process of action, without referring to questions of whether or
not there is a self or a being behind the processes -- the
teaching on kamma accounts for the focus and the terms
of analysis used in the practice. It also accounts for the
mental qualities needed to attain and maintain that level
of focus and analysis.
In terms of focus, the principle of scale
invariance means that the complexities of kamma can be mastered
by giving total attention to phenomena in and of themselves in
the immediate present. These phenomena are then analyzed in
terms of the four noble truths, the terms used in observing and
directing the experience of developing the qualities of skillful
action. The most immediate skillful kamma that can be observed
on this level is the mastery of the very same mental qualities
that are supporting this refined level of focus and analysis:
mindfulness, concentration, and discernment, together with the
more basic qualities on which they are based. Thus, these mental
qualities act not only as supports to the focus and analysis,
but also as their object. Ultimately, discernment becomes so
refined that the focus and analysis take as their object the act
of focusing and analyzing, in and of themselves. The cycle of
action then short-circuits as it reaches culmination, and
Unbinding occurs.
It is entirely possible that a person with no
firm conviction in the principle of kamma can follow parts of
the Buddhist path, including mindfulness and concentration
practices, and gain positive results from them. For instance,
one can pursue mindfulness practice for the sense of balance,
equanimity, and peace it gives to one's daily life, or for the
sake of bringing the mind to the present for the purpose of
spontaneity and "going with the flow." The full practice of the
path, however, is a skillful diverting of the flow of the mind
from its habitual kammic streams to the stream of Unbinding. As
the Buddha said, this practice requires a willingness to
"develop and abandon" to an extreme degree. The developing
requires a supreme effort aimed at full and conscious mastery of
mindfulness, concentration, and discernment to the point of
non-fashioning and on to release. A lack of conviction in the
principle of kamma would undercut the patience and commitment,
the desire, persistence, intent, and refined powers of
discrimination needed to pursue concentration and discernment to
the most heightened levels, beyond what is needed for a general
sense of peace or spontaneity. The abandoning involves
uprooting the most deeply buried forms of clinging and
attachment that maintain bondage to the cycle of rebirth. Some
of these forms of clinging -- such as views and theories about
self-identity -- are so entrenched in the narrative and
cosmological modes in which most people function that only firm
conviction in the benefits to be had by abandoning them will be
able to pry them loose. This is why the Buddha insisted
repeatedly that conviction in the fact of his Awakening
necessarily involves conviction in the principle of kamma, and
that both forms of conviction are needed for the full mastery of
the kamma of heightened skillfulness leading to release.
There are many well-known passages in the
Canon where the Buddha asks his listeners not to accept his
teachings simply on faith, but these remarks were directed to
people just beginning the practice. Beginners need only accept
the general principles of skillful action on a trial basis,
focusing on the input that their intentions are putting into the
causal system at the present moment, and exploring the
connection between skillful intentions and favorable results.
The more complex issues of kamma come into play at this level
only in forcing one to be patient with the practice. Many times
skillful intentions do not produce their favorable results
immediately, aside from the sense of well-being -- sometimes
clearly perceptible, sometimes barely -- that comes with acting
skillfully. Were it not for this delay, the principle of kamma
would be self-evident, no one would dare act on unskillful
intentions, and there would be no need to take the principle on
faith. The complexity of this/that conditionality is the major
cause of the confusion and lack of skill with which most people
live their lives. The ability to master this process takes time.
As one progresses on the path, however -- and
as the process of developing skillfulness in and of itself
gradually comes to take center stage in one's awareness -- the
actual results of developing skillfulness should give greater
and greater reason for conviction in the principle of kamma.
Except in cases where people fall into the trap of heedlessness
or complacency, these results can spur and inspire one to hold
to the principle of kamma with the increasing levels of
firmness, focus, and refinement needed for Awakening.
This, then, is the sense in which kamma, or
intentional action, forms the basic refuge for the person on the
path. On the one hand, as a doctrine, it provides guidance to
the proper path of action, and encouragement to muster the
energy needed to follow the path. On the other hand, as the
actual principle by which skillful action is brought to a pitch
of non-fashioning on the threshold of the Deathless, it provides
the mechanism by which human effort and action can bring about
the ultimate in genuine happiness.
Glossary
Arahant: A
"worthy one" or "pure one;" a person whose mind is free of
defilement and thus is not destined for further rebirth. A title
for the Buddha and the highest level of his noble disciples. The
lower three levels of disciples are, in descending order: non-returners,
those whose minds are freed from sensuality and will be reborn
in the highest levels of heaven, there to attain nibbana, never
again to return to this world; once-returners, those who will be
reborn in this world once more before attaining nibbana; and
stream-winners, those who have had their first glimpse of
nibbana, leading them to abandon three fetters that bind them to
the round of rebirth -- self-identity views, doubt, and
attachment to precepts and practices -- and who are destined to
be reborn at most only seven more times.
Asava:
Fermentation; effluent. Four qualities -- sensuality, views,
becoming, and ignorance -- that "flow out" of the mind and
create the flood of the round of death and rebirth.
Bodhisatta (Bodhisattva):
"A being (striving for) Awakening;" the term used
to describe the Buddha from his first aspiration to become a
Buddha until the time of his full Awakening.
Deva: Literally,
"shining one." An inhabitant of the heavenly realms.
Dhamma (Dharma):
Event; phenomenon; the way things are in and of themselves;
their inherent qualities; the basic principles underlying their
behavior. Also, principles of human behavior, qualities of mind,
both in a neutral and in a positive sense. By extension,
"Dhamma" is used also to denote any doctrine that teaches such
things. Thus the Dhamma of the Buddha denotes both his teachings
and the direct experience of the quality of nibbana at which
those teachings are aimed.
Jhana: Mental
absorption. A state of strong concentration focused in a single
sensation or mental notion.
Kamma (Karma):
Intentional acts that results in states of becoming and rebirth.
Nibbana (Nirvana):
Literally, the "unbinding" of the mind from
passion, aversion, and delusion, and from the entire round of
death and rebirth. As this term also denotes the extinguishing
of a fire, it carries connotations of stilling, cooling, and
peace. "Total nibbana" in some contexts denotes the experience
of Awakening; in others, the final passing away of an arahant.
Pali: The canon
of texts preserved by the Theravada school and, by extension,
the language in which those texts are composed.
Patimokkha: Basic
code of monastic discipline, composed of 227 rules for monks and
310 rules for nuns.
Sangha: On the
conventional (sammati) level, this term denotes the
communities of Buddhist monks and nuns; on the ideal (ariya)
level, it denotes those followers of the Buddha, lay or
ordained, who have attained at least their first glimpse of
nibbana.
Tathagata:
Literally, "one who has become real (tatha-agata)," or
one who is "really gone (tatha-gata)"; an epithet used in
ancient India for a person who has attained the highest
religious goal. In Buddhism, it usually refers specifically to
the Buddha, although occasionally it also refers to any of his
disciples who have attained the Buddhist goal.
Vinaya: The
monastic discipline, whose rules and traditions comprise six
volumes in printed text. The Buddha's own term for the religion
he founded was "this Dhamma-Vinaya."
Abbreviations
A ...... Anguttara Nikaya
Cv ..... Cullavagga
D ...... Digha Nikaya
Dhp .... Dhammapada
Iti .... Itivuttaka
M ...... Majjhima Nikaya
Mv ..... Mahavagga
S ...... Samyutta Nikaya
Sn ..... Sutta Nipata
Thig ... Therigatha
Ud ...... Udana
References to D, M, and Iti
are to discourse. References to Dhp are to verse. References to
Mv and Cv are to chapter, section, and sub-section. References
to the remaining texts are to chapter (vagga, nipata, or
samyutta) and discourse.
Sabbe satta sada hontu
Avera sukha-jivino
Katam puñña-phalam
Sabbe bhagi bhavantu te.
May
all beings always live happily
Free from animosity
May all share in the blessings
Springing from the good I have done.
Revised: Tue
13-Apr-2004
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/modern/thanissaro/refuge.html |