In the usually accepted sense,
of course, Buddhism is undoubtedly a religion. It is one of the major religions
of the world, and one of the oldest, being more than 2,500 years old. It is
followed by millions of people in Asia, and by growing numbers in Europe and
America. Buddhists can now be found in most countries, including South Africa,
Poland, the Czech Republic, Brazil, and Spain. Because it is so old, there are
many different forms of Buddhism, but the original teaching can still be found
if one makes a thorough investigation. The most authentic source of the teaching
of the Buddha is the Pāḷi Canon of the Theravāda school of Buddhism. However,
the Buddha warned us not just to rely on teachings handed down by tradition, but
to investigate the Dhamma and test it for ourselves. Buddhism is a practical
path that will lead the sincere seeker to inner realisation of universal truths.
Unless one practices the Buddha’s path, one cannot know the real Dhamma. Mere
academic knowledge of the teachings is useless unless it is applied in one’s
daily life.
The practical method that the
Buddha taught is called the Noble Eightfold Path. By following this path fully
one can gain insight knowledge, leading to attainment of the path and its
fruition, which means to realise nibbāna, the cessation of suffering. If one can
attain nibbāna, one will have no doubt about the real Dhamma, since one has
personally realised the goal of Buddhism. The eightfold path is a gradual path
that must be cultivated through training in morality, concentration, and
wisdom. As one practises, confidence in the power of mindfulness steadily grows,
but doubt is not completely eradicated until the first path and its fruition is
attained with the realisation of nibbāna. Before that life-changing experience,
however, one will attain the lower stage of insight knowledge — “Purity by
overcoming doubt” — which will confirm one’s faith in the importance of
practice. Even at this early stage, a meditator will gain firm confidence in the
true Dhamma, and will understand the need to develop the practice further. He or
she will no longer be content with outward forms of Buddhism.
The Noble Eightfold Path can be
divided into three trainings: morality, concentration, and wisdom. These should
be practised in parallel. To be perfect in morality before developing
concentration and insight is not feasible, but one should live by sound moral
principles.
The training in morality
consists of three aspects: right action, right speech, and right livelihood.
This means action, speech, and livelihood that are harmless. The aim of the
Buddha’s teaching is to realise the truth and gain inner peace, so one actions,
speech, and livelihood should reflect that aim — they should be peaceful and
honest. The manifestation of wisdom is seen in moral conduct, and the motivation
for moral conduct is wisdom, which understands the true nature and great value
of human existence.
Right Action
Any action that harms living
beings is not right action. To fulfil right action we must refrain from killing
or injuring living beings. Even the smallest insects do not wish to be killed.
If we kill mosquitoes, we defile the mind with hatred. We can take precautions
against getting bitten, but we should not destroy life.
Stealing is also not right
action. No one likes to have their property stolen. If we steal from others we
are defiling the mind with greed. All forms of stealing should be avoided,
including fraud, embezzlement, and breach of copyright. We should not take
anything that is not freely given to us, which is not rightfully our own
property, gained by our own skill and effort.
Sexual desire should be kept
within decent limits. Most human beings are very fond of sexual pleasure. To
attain nibbāna it is not necessary to become a monk or nun, renouncing sexual
pleasures entirely. However, one should avoid sex that harms or exploits others.
To practise meditation seriously with the aim of attaining nibbāna, one should
temporarily give up all sexual activity, speech, and thoughts.
Right Speech
Whatever we say has an effect on
others. If we tell deliberate lies then we are far away from the realisation of
truth. Even if we tell “white lies” or tease others, the mind will be impure.
Right speech is beneficial to others. Sometimes we may have to say things that
are hurtful to others, but we should be careful that our intention is always
good. Criticising and scolding others to humiliate or dominate them is not right
speech. However, parents and teachers, employers, and monks must admonish and
instruct others to maintain discipline. It is not a kindness to allow those
under one’s charge to do whatever they wish. Experienced workers will have to
train junior staff to avoid costly or dangerous mistakes, parents should teach
their children good manners, teachers should discipline their students, and
monks should instruct the laity in the Dhamma. This should be done with
impartiality, tolerance, and compassion.
Right speech is conducive to
harmony. Everyone has both vices and virtues. If we speak only about a person’s
faults to others they will suffer a loss of reputation. Slander and gossip are
very harmful in society. If we advise others about someone’s dishonesty to
protect them from harm, this is right speech, because the intention is good, but
if we just want to disparage others it is wrong speech.
Right speech should have a
useful purpose. Talking to amuse others, inciting others to anger or greed, or
bragging about one’s own achievements, is not right speech. One should think
before speaking, just as one should think before spending money, otherwise one
will soon become poor in wisdom.
Right Livelihood
To earn a living one should do
some honest work. If one harms other living beings to earn a living, that is
wrong livelihood. A Buddhist should not sell alcohol, weapons, or pornography.
Any activities that increase the defilements of others should be avoided. Most
entertainment, advertising, and high-pressure selling are not right livelihood.
Remaining poor is better than making bad kamma.
The work that you do has a
powerful effect because you spend a lot of time working. If you want to attain
nibbāna in this life, try to choose a profession that alleviates suffering, then
you can make wholesome kamma for the whole day. A worker’s value to an employer
must be greater than his or her salary. To avoid being exploited, a worker must
acquire as much knowledge and skill as possible. Highly skilled workers are
always needed. Any fool can do a fool’s job.
Joy, peace, and happiness arise
in the mind. Disappointment, frustration, sorrow, and grief also arise in the
mind. Therefore learning to control the mind is the most important thing in
life. We need to distinguish between sensual happiness and spiritual happiness.
Sensual happiness arises when we get something. Spiritual happiness arises from
giving up something, or from contentment and gratitude with what one has
already. However, both are connected with feeling, and both lead to suffering
when they disappear. Nibbāna is not connected with feeling, and it does not
change or disappear. One who attains nibbāna gains unimaginable bliss that
cannot be destroyed by anyone, or any change of circumstances.
Nibbāna cannot be seen, heard,
smelt, tasted, nor touched, but it can be known by the mind. To realise nibbāna
the mind needs to be very well-trained, and deeply concentrated. The mind needs
to be turned inwards, away from the noise and bustle of worldly activity, to
focus attention on the activities and nature of the mind itself. To do this
effectively requires constant effort — if left unrestrained the mind will wander
here and there endlessly. One must make a constant effort to observe the mental
and physical processes occurring at every moment, then the restless and
undisciplined mind will gradually become steady. With practice, the mind becomes
tranquil, alert, and extremely pure. This purified and concentrated mind can
understand things as they really are. Then the truth of suffering gradually
becomes clear. As the truth of suffering becomes clearer, confidence in the
Dhamma will become firmer, and one will make a more determined effort to
practise meditation. It is like making fire by rubbing two sticks together.
Effort must be vigorous, continuous, and uninterrupted. As the sticks get
hotter, that is not the time to take a rest. One must strive harder still to
make fire.
Training in concentration
consists of right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration. Right
effort means strenuous effort to be mindful of each object appearing to one’s
mind. Right mindfulness means uninterrupted attention. Right concentration means
continuous awareness from moment to moment — though the objects themselves are
always changing, the mind repeatedly notes each new object, without missing
anything.
Wisdom means right thought and
right understanding. Right thought strives to purify the mind of defilements,
and to investigate the true nature of the body/mind process. Right understanding
or right view has two levels: mundane and supramundane. On attaining the path
and realising nibbāna for the first time, supramundane right view eradicates
self-view (sakkāya-diṭṭhi). After that realisation, the meditator becomes a Noble One
and escapes forever from rebirth in the lower realms. Self-view is deeply rooted
in all living beings, and cannot be removed unless one practises insight
meditation.
In the time of the Buddha, many
people gained realisation after meeting him or listening to his teaching, but
they had mature insight from practising meditation in previous lives. It is rare
to find anyone who can gain realisation in less than six weeks of intensive
meditation practice — most people take many months or years. However, any
intelligent person can gain mundane right understanding by practising insight
meditation to the lower levels of insight knowledge, and by making a careful
study of the Dhamma. After attaining this mundane right understanding one can
be called a practising Buddhist, as one is established on the path leading to
nibbāna. Practising Buddhists will have firm confidence in the Buddha, Dhamma,
and Saṅgha, the law of kamma, and the law of dependent origination. They will
appreciate the benefit of giving alms and doing other meritorious deeds, and
they will be free from three gross wrong views:
Belief in Almighty God
(Issarammaṇahetudiṭṭhi)
This extreme view holds that
everything is the creation of Almighty God. Those who hold it maintain that
everything that happens to a person is the will of Almighty God. As such, it
ignores the effect of a person’s own actions.
Not everyone who believes in God
holds this wrong view. Many believe that God creates living beings, but
nevertheless accept that whatever good or bad actions a person does will give a
result — “As a man sows, so shall he reap.” This view is partly right as it does
admit the importance of kamma. However, it is partly wrong because it does not
accept the importance of kamma in the matter of causing rebirth. Those who
maintain the fatalistic view that God alone is responsible for the happiness and
misery of humanity can never escape from suffering unless they renounce this
gross wrong view.
Fatalism (Pubbekatahetudiṭṭhi)
This extreme view holds that
everything is the result of previous kamma. This view is also partly right
because some effects are the result of kamma from a previous life. However, it
denies the importance of present actions, knowledge, and free will. Those who
hold it maintain that liberation from suffering will come in due course to all
without the need for any effort. This gross wrong view is also a serious
obstruction to the realisation of the path and its fruition.
The Theory of No Cause
(Ahetukadiṭṭhi)
This extreme view holds that
there is no cause for anything. Everything is the result of blind chance. This
view is completely wrong as it denies past kamma, and present effort too.
Obviously, no one holding this view would ever strive for, let alone attain, the
path and its fruition.
Buddhism is a practical way
leading to the arising of right view. When one rightly understands human
existence as it really is, then one will gain firm confidence in the Buddha’s
enlightenment. One will understand that freedom from suffering can be gained
only by training the mind to abandon craving, which is the cause of suffering.
Once right view becomes firmly established, one will dedicate one’s life to the
practice of the path leading to liberation from the cycle of
existence.
Not all Buddhists hold right
views. Right view implies more than superficial adherence to Buddhism. One must
follow the Dhamma, aspiring to realise nibbāna. If one aspires only for success
in this life, lacking faith in future existences, one is still “one-eyed” and
attached to wrong views.
The word “Buddha” means
“Awakened” or “Enlightened.” It does not mean a particular individual, but a
state of human perfection. In the infinite past there have been many Fully
Enlightened Ones, or Buddhas, and there will be more in the future too, but
their appearance is extremely rare. The most recent Buddha was born Siddhattha
Gotama, a prince of the Sakyan Clan in Northern India. His birthplace was at
Lumbini, in modern Nepal, close to the Indian border. His father’s palace was at
Kapilavatthu on the Indian side of the border.
As a young man he was deeply
moved by the suffering of human existence. Though he was happily married with a
new-born son, at the age of twenty-nine he renounced his luxurious life to
search for liberation from suffering. He practised asceticism for six years
before deciding that fasting and self-mortification were useless. After taking
normal meals to regain his strength, he attained enlightenment at the age of
thirty-five by sitting the whole night with the resolute determination.
Thereby he became the Buddha, the Awakened One.
For the remaining forty-five
years of his life he wandered throughout Northern India, teaching the Dhamma
that he had realised, and gathering many disciples from all social classes. At
the age of eighty he passed away and was not reborn again anywhere. The Buddha
is not in heaven looking after his faithful followers, and he has not gone
anywhere. A fire that ceases to burn has not gone anywhere, it has just gone
out. The Buddha’s final passing away is called his parinibbāna. This expression
can be applied only to Buddhas, Pacceka Buddhas, and Arahants, since it means
the complete cessation of suffering without any remainder. An Arahant is a
disciple of the Buddha who has attained enlightenment by following his teaching.
A Pacceka Buddha also gains enlightenment by his own efforts and, like an
Arahant, is fully liberated from suffering, but he lacks the total perfection of
a Fully Enlightened One who has unique abilities to teach others.
The enlightenment of a Buddha is
always the same, no matter in which era he is born. Enlightenment is the
realisation of the Four Noble Truths: the truth that life is suffering, that the
cause of suffering is craving, that the cessation of craving — nibbāna — is the
cessation of suffering, and that the only way to nibbāna is the practice of the
Noble Eightfold Path: right view, right thought, right action, right speech,
right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right
concentration.
A Buddha is not a god, nor a
messenger of God, but a human being. He has no power to save anyone from
suffering, except by teaching them the Dhamma. Living beings can save themselves
only if they follow the Buddha’s advice and gain insight knowledge by their own
efforts. Though the Buddha had many supernatural powers, he relied mostly on
instruction, and prohibited his disciples from exhibiting psychic powers.
Psychic powers are a product of deep concentration, but for liberation from
suffering only insight knowledge is essential. The Buddha’s psychic powers
enabled him to know a person’s past lives, spiritual potential, and present
thoughts, so he was extremely skilful in guiding and instructing others in the
Dhamma. On some occasions he did not teach the Dhamma to certain individuals
because he knew that they were not yet ready to understand it. On other
occasions, when disciples were unable to make progress in meditation, the Buddha
used his psychic powers in various ways to inspire them in their practice, but
in every case they had to gain the realisation of Dhamma for
themselves.
The Buddha was also subject to
the law of kamma. On several occasions he had to endure illness, injury,
hardship, and abuse as a result of previous bad kamma. However, his mind was
unaffected and he bore such hardships with perfect equanimity. Though a Buddha
can be injured by someone with a strong malicious intent, it is impossible for
any living being to kill a Buddha. He will only die when his natural life-span
comes to an end. If a disciple asks him to, a Buddha can extend his natural
life-span to a certain extent by using his powers of concentration, but in the
absence of such a request a Buddha will die at the end of his natural life-span,
since he has no attachment to existence at all. When suffering from a disease,
the Buddha could recover his health more quickly by the use of suitable
medicine, or by listening to the recitation of the Dhamma by a
disciple.
The Buddha never acted or spoke
without clear awareness, or without any purpose. Even when he smiled, his
personal attendant, Venerable Ānanda, knew that there was some reason for it. On
being asked by Venerable Ānanda the reason for his smiling the Buddha would
usually tell a story of a previous life relating to the place they were passing.
Venerable Ānanda would remember such discourses perfectly and relate them to
other disciples on suitable occasions.
The speech of the Buddha was
without defect. There are six kinds of speech:
- True, beneficial, and pleasing to others. This speech the Buddha used on many occasions.
- True, beneficial, but not pleasing to others. This speech the Buddha used whenever it was necessary to correct those who were deviating from the path.
- True, not beneficial, but pleasing to others. This speech the Buddha did not use.
- True, not beneficial, and not pleasing to others. This speech the Buddha did not use.
- False, not beneficial, but pleasing to others. This speech the Buddha did not use.
- False, not beneficial, and not pleasing to others. This speech the Buddha did not use.
False speech is never beneficial
in the ultimate sense, though one may gain short-term benefits from lying. Thus
there are only six types of speech altogether.
The Buddha had fully developed
all knowledge and wisdom. Whatever he wished to know he could realise
immediately, just by turning his attention to it. Even in his last days, though
his physical health was deteriorating, there was no change in the clarity of his
memory or the sharpness of his intellect. Some of his disciples surpassed him in
longevity, health, etc., and they sometimes received offerings when the Buddha
did not, but in regard to wisdom and psychic powers no one could surpass
him.
He received lavish offerings
from kings and millionaires, but never deviated from his simple and austere life
style. His daily routine was extraordinarily demanding, leaving only an hour or
two for sleep, but he maintained it throughout most of his forty-five-year
mission. He spent a few brief periods in solitude when conditions were
unfavourable for preaching the Dhamma.
The Buddha usually travelled by
foot, walking great distances with his disciples or sometimes alone to propagate
the Dhamma. His disciples travelled alone to convey the Dhamma to distant parts
of India, far from the Ganges valley where the Buddha spent most of his life.
During the Buddha’s lifetime, the communities of monks and nuns flourished. Many
ordained and lay disciples attained enlightenment, and some novices as young as
seven attained Arahantship. Several kings were devoted followers and supported
the Saṅgha liberally.
At the age of eighty, the Buddha
passed away. Ten pagodas (cetiyas) were built by devotees from different parts of the Ganges
valley to contain the Buddha’s relics and the ashes from his funeral pyre. After
the Buddha’s demise, the Dhamma thrived in India for at least five hundred
years. During the time of Emperor Asoka, about three hundred years after the
Buddha’s passing, it spread to Sri Lanka where it became firmly established, and
has remained up to the present day.
Devout Buddhists worship the
Buddha and symbols representing him such as bodhi trees, historical
sites, Buddha images, and cetiyas, but the Buddha discouraged blind devotion. The best way to
honour him is to practise his teaching. Admonishing Vakkali, who was slavishly
devoted to him, he said, “Whoever sees the Dhamma sees me; whoever does not see
the Dhamma, does not see me.” (Vakkali Sutta,
S.iii.119)
So the right attitude is one of
respect, love, and gratitude, rather than false piety, which is akin to
superstition and fear.
The Buddha taught for forty-five
years. Judging from the huge number of discourses found in the Pāḷi texts, there
cannot have been many days when he was not teaching something. Even when he was
not giving discourses, he taught by living a noble life totally free from any
immoral thoughts, words, and deeds. This is the most effective way to teach the
Dhamma, because it is not just a refined philosophy, but a practical way of
life. The Buddha was supremely happy and always willing to share his deep wisdom
with others. Even while lying on his deathbed, when Subhadda wanted to question
him, the Buddha told Venerable Ānanda not to keep him away.
The authentic teachings of the
Buddha are preserved in the Pāḷi Canon. The Buddha’s teachings were first handed
down through the generations from teacher to pupil, with different groups of
monks learning different portions of the canon by heart. After several hundred
years, when it was feared that some lesser-known teachings would be lost, the
entire Pāḷi Canon was committed to writing on palm-leaf manuscripts. This first
happened in Sri Lanka about five hundred years after the Buddha’s
parinibbāna.
The canon is now organised into
three collections (Piṭaka) (lit. baskets): the Vinaya Piṭaka, the Suttanta
Piṭaka, and the Abhidhamma Piṭaka. The Suttanta are the discourses of the Buddha
and his leading disciples to monks, wanderers, lay people, and celestial beings.
The Vinaya Piṭaka contains the rules and regulations for monks, nuns, and
novices. The Abhidhamma is a Buddhist psychology, which analyses the five groups
of material phenomena, feelings, perceptions, mental formations, and
consciousness that make up a living being. Wholesome and unwholesome states are
enumerated and classified. The Abhidhamma collates teachings found in the
Suttanta Piṭaka. Some teachings in the Suttanta Piṭaka also follow the
Abhidhamma method.
The Suttanta Piṭaka is divided
into five groups (nikāya): the Long Discourses (Dīghanikāya), the Middle Length Sayings
(Majjhimanikāya), the Kindred Sayings (Saṃyuttanikāya), the Gradual Sayings
(Aṅguttaranikāya), and the Short Discourses (Khuddakanikāya).
The three books of the Long
Discourses contain thirty-four discourses. Three key discourses in this
collection are the Mahāsatipaṭṭhāna Sutta on the practice of insight
meditation, the Mahāparinibbāna Sutta, which describes the last few months of
the Buddha’s life and his final instructions to the monks, and the Siṅgāla or
Siṅgālovāda Sutta, a discourse on a lay person’s code of conduct.
The three books of the Middle
Length Sayings contain one hundred and fifty-two discourses. Some are as long,
or even longer than the long discourses. This collection contains many
discourses on fundamental Buddhist doctrines such as kamma and rebirth. Lay
Buddhists should read the following important discourses:-
- The »» Cūḷasīhanāda Sutta — the Shorter Lion’s Roar Discourse on the uniqueness of the Dhamma. (Sutta 11)
- The »» Mahāsihanāda Sutta — the Longer Lion’s Roar Discourse on the uniqueness of the Buddha. (12)
- The »» Alagaddūpama Sutta — the Simile of the Snake on grasping the Dhamma skilfully. (22)
- The »» Cūḷasaccaka Sutta — a debate on the doctrine of not-self, which shows that since mind and matter are beyond our control they are not-self. (35)
- The »» Mahātaṇhāsaṅkhaya Sutta — another important discourse on not-self, refuting the idea that consciousness ‘transmigrates’ between existences. (38)
- The Sāleyyaka Sutta on the courses of conduct leading to heaven or hell. (41)
- The Apaṇṇaka Sutta — the Incontrovertible Teaching on choosing the right spiritual path. (60)
- The »» Devadūta Sutta on the divine messengers. (130)
- The »» Cūḷakammavibhaṅga Sutta on the analysis of the results of kamma. (135)
- The Dakkhiṇavibhaṅgasutta on the analysis of gifts. (Sutta 142)
The five volumes of the Kindred
Sayings are arranged according to subject matter, such as discourses on the six
sense bases, discourses on feelings, or on the five aggregates.
The Gradual Sayings are arranged
numerically: from the Book of Ones to the Book of Elevens. The numerical method
makes it easier to memorise the teachings. The Book of Ones begins by praising
the Buddha’s leading disciples who are the foremost among their colleagues for
one reason or another.
The collection of short
discourses consists of twenty books, including the Dhammapada, the Suttanipāta,
The Elders Verses, the Jātaka Stories, and the Milinda Pañha. The latter was not
written until the first century B.C., but it was included in the Canon at the
Sixth Buddhist Council held in 1955 to preserve its valuable teachings for
posterity.
The Pāḷi texts alone add up to
about fifty volumes, but there are also many commentaries and Subcommentaries.
Since there is such an extensive literature, one can hardly expect the average
lay person to read it all. Fortunately, learned monks have written excellent
books in English summarising the essential teachings. One could rely only on
such books, but some discourses such as those mentioned above should be read in
full. If any particular point is still not clear, one should discuss it with a
learned monk.
The commentaries,
Subcommentaries, and later works like the Visuddhimagga and the Milinda Pañha
should not be overlooked. The Dhammapada commentary is especially valuable since
it gives the background to each verse. The Visuddhimagga is a compendium of
meditation methods for concentration and insight. The Milinda Pañha — the Debate
of King Milinda — clears away many misunderstandings with lucid illustrations
and similes.
Before building one’s own house,
one should be quite sure that one really does have sufficient skill and
knowledge, otherwise one should employ an architect and a builder. The Buddha’s
teachings can help us to build a good character, but we need to study them in
depth. If we are unable to do this, we should rely on someone who has, otherwise
we will waste this precious human existence without accumulating sufficient
merit for a happy life after death. Those learned in the Dhamma are like
architects, while meditation teachers are like builders. Every Buddhist who
wants to enjoy the fruits of the teaching should understand how to build good
character. Building character requires strict self-discipline and
self-restraint.
Freedom and liberation are two
quite distinct, though not mutually exclusive, conditions. In the West, we
regard freedom as a fundamental human right: religious freedom, freedom of
speech, freedom of artistic expression, freedom of the press, and so on. The
media, in particular, fiercely defend their freedom to say anything at all about
anyone. It seems that there is no respect at all for others’ privacy any more.
However, even though we might have almost complete freedom to act or speak as we
wish, it does not make us free — at least not in the Buddhist sense. Freedom in
the Buddhist sense means to be free from desire, not free to indulge in
it.
In many countries, there is much
less political and social freedom than there is in the United Kingdom. The
people are restrained by the society they live in from doing or saying what they
want, but this does not mean they are any less free than we are. Some of them
might even be totally liberated in the Buddhist sense. Those who hold the reigns
of power in such countries might think that they are free to do whatever they
like; and this might be so — in the mundane sense — but in the Buddhist sense
they are very far indeed from freedom, held firmly in the grip of
ill-will.
It seems that a certain amount
of hardship is not always a bad thing since it can turn people’s minds inwards
to focus on the suffering of the human condition. It was only after the Second
World War had shattered the rural tranquillity of Burma that there was a
dramatic upsurge in the practice of meditation. The harsh realities of war
pressed home the message of the Buddha in a way that the constant daily
preaching of the monks was unable to do.
I am not advocating that a
totalitarian regime is conducive to spiritual development. It is not. People
need the freedom to think, to read, and to communicate with others outside of
their own society and culture to broaden their understanding. An oppressive and
introverted society robs people of their ability to reflect compassionately on
the suffering of others because they are too engrossed in their own problems.
All I am saying is that freedom and liberation are not the same
thing.
It is paradoxical that to attain
liberation one needs a great deal of discipline and self-restraint. In the first
twenty-five years of his dispensation, the Buddha did not lay down any
regulations for the monks since all were either enlightened or well on the way
towards it, thus they were restrained by mindfulness and wisdom. However, when
less mature individuals joined the Saṅgha, regulations had to be laid down. By
the time of the Buddha’s demise, a total of 227 training precepts had been laid
down for the monks, and 311 for the nuns. Even novice monks have to follow 75
training rules in addition to the ten precepts. All monks must be restrained in
eating, speaking, and controlling their sense faculties.
This body of training rules is
called the Pāṭimokkha. The etymology of the word ‘Pāṭimokkha’ is given in the
Visuddhimagga as “It liberates (mokkheti) the one who
guards it (pāti), thus it is called Pāṭimokkha.” One who is ordained has to
follow so many rules that some may wonder, “How can anyone possibly find freedom
under such a restrictive code of discipline?” Some misguided teachers advocate
relaxing many rules of discipline to suit modern living conditions. That might
make it easier for monks to manage their affairs, and lay supporters might also
find it easier if they don’t have to provide the daily needs of the monks. Yet,
the Buddha’s way is not the easy way, at least not in the conventional sense —
it requires constant vigilance, strenuous effort, steadfast mindfulness, and
diligent sense-restraint. When one fully practises restraint, the mind becomes
pure and free from stress. If one can live a blameless life, though it takes
vigilant effort and great wisdom to do so, there will be no conflict and one
will be free in the Buddhist sense.
Everyone wants freedom to do
whatever they want, but rather fewer want liberation, at least not once they
find out what is entailed in gaining it. It is a question of spiritual
perfections (pāramī), those who have them will strive, those who haven’t will
always find some excuse not to. The following simile illustrates the importance
of the perfections.
At one time there was a very
wealthy man who had six
sons.¹ When he knew that his death was approaching, he called his sons to
divide his wealth among them. Most of his wealth was in the form of diamonds,
gold, and silver, which was buried deep in the ground somewhere. To each son he
gave a map showing the way to find his share of the buried treasure. The
remainder of his wealth was in the form of land, livestock, grain, farming
implements, and household property. This wealth he also divided into six parts
and gave an equal portion to each son. In due course the father passed away,
leaving his sons to manage their own inheritance.
The first son was greedy. From
the time of receiving the map he had a strong desire to get the rest of the
treasure. Before long he had found the buried treasure and dug it up, even
though he had to leave the comfort of his home for many days and endure great
hardship. He thus became a very wealthy man.
The second son was strong and
very industrious. He was not the least afraid of hard work. Before long, he too
found the buried treasure and dug it up, though it was buried deep in the
ground.
The third son was of an
obsessive nature. From the time of receiving the map he couldn’t think of
anything else. He wondered what it was his father had buried for him, how much
there might be and where it was hidden. He was unable to think about anything
else, even forgetting to eat properly and look after the farm because he
couldn’t stop thinking about the buried treasure. So, in a short time, he too
found the treasure, though it was hidden in an unexpected place, and he dug it
up, thus becoming a very wealthy man.
The fourth son was wise. He
reasoned that his father had become wealthy due to his skill in trading and
shrewd investment. He realised that he would later have sons to inherit his own
wealth, so he decided that he should find the treasure and invest it for his
family’s future. He found the treasure, and by constructing suitable machinery
he was soon able to dig it up, thus becoming very wealthy.
The fifth son was a good man. He
managed the farm well and looked after his family. He traded honestly and
therefore had quite sufficient to live on. Sometimes he thought of the buried
treasure and longed to get it, but he was so busy with the farm and his family
that he never had any time to go looking for treasure. His family never went
hungry and the farm prospered, but he did not become wealthy like his
brothers.
The sixth son was a fool. He was
delighted to inherit such a lot of wealth. He just enjoyed himself, eating,
drinking, and dancing, and sold something whenever he had to pay off his
gambling debts. He kept company with other lowlifes and soon lost all his
property, but he thought, “It doesn’t matter, I still have lots of buried
treasure.” However, in the end, he didn’t even have enough money to buy a spade,
and in any case he didn’t know where to look, for he had lost the map, and he
had not been farsighted enough to memorise it.
The meaning of the simile is
this. The very wealthy man is the Buddha. The map refers to Dhamma teachings:
the silver treasure is the attainments of jhāna and psychic powers; the gold
treasure is the attainment of insight knowledge into the three characteristics
of impermanence, suffering, and not-self. The diamond treasure is the attainment
of the holy stages of the Path, its Fruition, and nibbāna. The land, livestock,
grain, farming implements, and household property refer to the wholesome deeds
of charity, morality, meditation, reverence, service, learning and teaching the
Dhamma, etc.
The first son refers to someone
with the Iddhipāda of Chanda. Iddhipāda means the faculty or basis of success.
One who has these faculties will succeed in his aims. Chanda is a strong and
fervent desire to achieve the spiritual goal. It is compared to greed
(lobha) only
because it has a similar characteristic — that of sticking to its object, but
ethically they are poles apart. Greed is desire for sensual enjoyments, whilst
chanda is the desire to be free from unwholesome human tendencies. It is the
desire for knowledge, wisdom, and virtue. It is wholesome ambition, enthusiasm,
or willingness to overcome obstacles.
The second son refers to someone
with Viriya Iddhipāda — the faculty of energy or effort. It is not ordinary
effort. A man may be extremely strong and brave, and not the least afraid of
hardship, yet when it comes to wholesome practices concerned with the
attainment of nibbāna he might be weak-willed. Viriya is mental effort, one who
has it is not discouraged when he has to endure unpleasant feelings due to lack
of food, lack of sleep, or long hours of meditation. It is moral courage, and
means that one has the confidence of one’s convictions.
The third son refers to someone
with Citta Iddhipāda. This is like the obsession of the chemist or computer
programmer who is in search of knowledge. One with this faculty thinks
constantly about profound dhammas like the doctrine of causality (Paṭiccasamuppāda) and
strives to root out the seeds of craving from his own mind. It is spiritual
intelligence.
The fourth son refers to someone
with Vimaṃsa Iddhipāda. This is a synonym for wisdom or discretion. It
investigates mental and physical phenomena to understand their true nature. It
looks beneath the surface of things to penetrate their intrinsic
unsatisfactoriness. To the superficial person, sensual pleasures seem
desirable, and he makes constant efforts to obtain them, but to the wise they
are fraught with danger.
The fifth son refers to the
average virtuous person, whether Buddhist or non-Buddhist, whether a monk or a
lay-person. He follows the precepts and fulfils his duties to family and
society. He pays his taxes and repays his debts. He honours his parents and the
monks, and gives alms whenever he can. However, he is not free in the Buddhist
sense, nor does he aspire to be. He thinks that enlightenment is only attainable
by others. He is content with his life and does not perceive that he is living
in a prison bounded by the four walls of old-age, sickness, suffering, and
death. When he makes a profit he is happy, when he makes a loss he is sad. When
people praise him, he is proud; but when they criticise him, he sulks. When a
child is born into the family he rejoices; when a relative dies, he grieves. He
is sunk in the mire of feelings and cannot pull himself free.
The sixth son refers to the
immoral person. He is lazy, he is indulgent, he is deceitful, he is foolish. He
does not keep the five precepts. He pays no respect to monks or to his parents.
He regards good people as fools if they pay due taxes and share their wealth
with others. He does not believe in life after death, in heaven or hell. When
oppressed by suffering due to his wrong-doing he seeks refuge in false teachers
and supplicates tree spirits to solve his problems for him. He is superstitious
and seeks out astrologers for guidance instead of monks learned in the Dhamma.
And he blames everybody but himself for his misfortune.
I presume that all of us would
prefer to be like one of the first four sons who became wealthy, though we might
confess to being more like the fifth, if not somewhat like the sixth. We should
reflect on this carefully. If just one of the four spiritual faculties is really
strong it will be enough to realise nibbāna in this very life. If they are only
weak then we should do something to make them stronger, shouldn’t we? We should
not be satisfied to be like the fifth son, let alone the sixth. One who pleads
that he or she will wait for Metteyya Buddha before striving for nibbāna has
weak faculties. One who plans to wait for Metteyya Buddha should consider just
how long that will be.
It is said that the life-span of
human beings is decreasing by one year every century; hence in the time of the
Buddha, twenty-five centuries ago it was one hundred years, whilst now it is
only about seventy-five years. It is further said that as morality declines
further, the life-span will reduce to ten years, before it starts to increase
again. Thus the turning-point will be sixty-five centuries from now. The
life-span in Metteyya’s time will be eighty-four thousand years, therefore we
will have to wait another eighty-four thousand and fifty-five centuries, or more
than eight million years, to meet Metteyya Buddha, if we are lucky enough to do
so. However, the Buddha’s dispensation will disappear long before the life-span
of human beings has reduced to ten years, so there is no guarantee that we shall
know right from wrong even if we are fortunate enough to be reborn as human
beings. Those who are still strongly attached to the worldly life should bear
this in mind.
Even if we do meet Metteyya
Buddha, if we haven’t ever practised meditation in earnest, our spiritual
faculties will still be weak. So even under Metteyya Buddha, we may not gain
penetrating knowledge. We will again rest content with the mundane wholesome
kammas of charity and so forth. Thus missing the opportunity to gain
enlightenment in Metteyya’s era as well as during Gotama’s
dispensation.
A true-life account may serve to
illustrate further the importance of the spiritual perfections.
A junior clerk working in the
Accountant General’s Office in Burma was a devotee of a well-known meditation
master. He had heard that his teacher would conduct a retreat nearby and was
very keen to attend. He asked his boss for leave, but was told that he could not
be spared, since they were far too busy. Bitterly disappointed, he resigned
himself to missing this precious opportunity. However, the more he thought about
it, the more determined he became to go. He reflected, “It is very rare to
practise with a great meditation master. I will go, whatever happens.” When the
time for the retreat came, he left a note on his desk and went for the retreat.
When he returned it was with some trepidation as he thought that he might be
dismissed. However, to his great surprise he found that he had been promoted.
His boss had recognised his good character and resolve, and decided that he was
the most suitable candidate for the job.
That is a true story about U Ba
Khin who later became a well-known meditation master, as well as Accountant
General of Burma. I do not promise that if you take leave to practise
meditation, you will get promotion. Perhaps you will, but you might lose your
job. That depends on your perfections. However, this story illustrates the right
attitude when one wants to practise wholesome deeds. Māra² will do his best to
thwart your good intentions and you must be prepared to confront him. It is not
easy to follow the path to liberation.
If one sincerely wishes to
attain liberation one should first gain a sound theoretical understanding of
insight meditation, and then practise it thoroughly. The Buddha’s Satipaṭṭhāna
Sutta begins, “This, monks, is the only path for the purification of beings, for
the transcendence of grief and lamentation, for the extinction of pain and
sorrow, for attaining the right method, for the realisation of nibbāna, namely,
the four foundations of mindfulness.” One should examine any teaching that
claims to be insight meditation and consider whether it contains all of the four
foundations of mindfulness, namely, contemplation of the body, feelings,
consciousness, and mental objects. One should understand that the aim of insight
meditation is to remove mental impurities such as greed, ill-will, delusion,
etc., and one should also understand what the Buddha meant by insight, otherwise
one may rest content with superficial results. Compare the qualities required of
the would-be-meditator to ‘The Eight Thoughts of a Great Man.’
- This Dhamma is for one who wants little, not for one who wants much.
- This Dhamma is for the contented, not the discontented.
- This Dhamma is for the secluded, not for one fond of society.
- This Dhamma is for the energetic, not for the lazy.
- This Dhamma is for one who has set up mindfulness, not for the unmindful.
- This Dhamma is for the composed, not for the flustered.
- This Dhamma is for the wise, not for the unwise.
- This Dhamma is for one who delights in being unimpeded, not for one who delights in impediments.
To put it simply: “Does one have
to maintain constant, unbroken mindfulness of each and every phenomena arising
within one’s own body and mind, throughout the whole day without a break?” If
not, then it is not genuine insight meditation.
A further distinctive
characteristic of insight meditation is that the meditation objects to be
observed are ultimate realities, not concepts. For example, you may know that
your abdomen is moving up and down when you breathe. If you look at it, you may
see that it is moving, but still you do not know the movement. However, if you
close your eyes and pay attention to your abdomen, you can know that there is
movement. The rising and falling movements are ultimate realities that you can
know by direct experience. The shape of the abdomen, or the word ‘abdomen’ are
not ultimate realities, they are concepts.
Please check this out for
yourself. How do you know that you are sitting or standing, walking or lying
down? Certainly you can know it, but investigate how you know it. Don’t just
live in the idea of sitting or standing, get to know the sensations of
heaviness, pressure, movement, or heat within your own body. Stand completely
still for a few minutes. How does your body remain in the standing position?
What would happen if you made no effort to remain standing? See how the
intention to stand straight must keep recurring, otherwise the body will
collapse.
Now sit down very slowly. Why
does the body move? If no intention to move arises, can you sit down? In what
manner did you sit down? Did you cross your legs, or hug your knees? Why did you
do that? Was it because you intended to, or did it just happen
automatically?
Sit absolutely still for five
minutes; do not move a muscle. Some people may find it difficult to keep still
even for such a short time. If you opened your eyes then you moved a muscle,
didn’t you? Try to realise that you cannot even look without the intention to do
so. Why did you look? Did you move your hands? Did the hands move by themselves
or did the intention to move them arise first? Try to know every passing
intention. It is important that mindfulness is continuous and constant. Nothing
should escape your attention.
You may understand by now that
constant mindfulness is not as easy as it seems to be. We generally assume that
we know what we are doing, and why we are doing it. We assume that we are not
mad. However, check it out. Are you really mindful or are you really mad? I will
let you decide. If you are mad then you had better make some serious efforts to
tame your crazy mind.
The purpose of insight
meditation is to remove all traces of madness from the mind. To gain liberation
means to put an end to insanity. Wouldn’t you like to do that? Do you want to
waste the rest of your life like a mad person driven around by every passing
mood? Would you not like to experience deep inner peace? Mindfulness is the only
way. This Dhamma is for the mindful, not for the unmindful. Unmindfulness can
never lead to liberation from suffering. Unmindfulness leads to greed, hatred,
or delusion. Greed, hatred, and delusion lead to unwholesome actions of body,
speech, and mind, and unwholesome actions lead to suffering.
In the Mahāsi meditation centres
in Burma, the meditators must practise sitting and walking meditation
alternately throughout the whole day. Only four to six hours are allowed for
sleep. All other necessary activities such as bathing, eating, going and coming,
must be done very slowly, noting every action and intention. It is not easy.
Beginners will always miss many objects of attention. However, the more that
they practise, the sharper concentration and mindfulness will become. Sooner or
later, mindfulness will become steady and continuous. If it does, then insight
is sure to develop. No effort is wasted, even if no results come at first. It
takes time and patience to acquire new skills. Most beginners have lived
carefree lives without much mental discipline, usually for many years.
Obviously, it will take them weeks or months to make significant
progress.
Though it is very hard at first
to follow such a strict routine, and even after much experience, never easy;
after a few days or weeks, concentration begins to develop, the hindrances are
gradually dispelled, and the task of meditation becomes somewhat smoother and
more enjoyable.
An important aspect of the
technique is to note every stray thought. This is particularly difficult for
those who are very fond of reflection. Bare awareness is the tool that must be
used to observe the mental and physical processes — including thoughts — to
understand their impermanent, conditioned, and unsatisfactory nature. One cannot
gain right understanding of the mental process by thinking about it. Excessive
reflection only makes the mind more agitated. One must simply sit quite still
and observe mental and physical phenomena as and when they arise. When the mind
is really quiet and fully attentive, understanding has a chance to mature.
Enlightenment may still be far away, but at least one will be on the right
track. First, stop the external chatter, then stop the internal chatter. When
the internal chatter has stopped, one is practising bare awareness properly.
Bare awareness is the only method that leads to right understanding of mental
and physical phenomena as they really are. When we can understand mental and
physical phenomena as they really are, then we won’t be attached to them. When
we are not attached to them, then we can gain liberation from them.
Therefore, please attend weekly
meditation classes whenever you can, but do not expect to gain liberation with
so little effort, nor even from an intensive retreat for one month — a
particularly gifted individual might do that — but for most of us it will take a
more prolonged and sustained effort. We must be prepared to submit ourselves to
strict discipline for months, years, or as long as it takes, if we really aspire
to liberation.
For lay-people engaged in
intensive meditation in Burma there is little difference between their routine
and that of fully ordained monks. They do not have to concern themselves with
shopping, cooking, or other mundane activities, they just have to meditate. Here
in the UK it is hard to find such ideal conditions, but there is a growing
number of retreat centres as more people take up meditation practice. Whenever
people wish to practise, I conduct short, but intensive retreats.
If you really want liberation,
and not just freedom, cut off your impediments, pass on some of your
responsibilities to an understanding friend or relative, and attend an intensive
retreat for at least ten days. Although intensive meditation may be hard at
first, after a few days you will begin to relax. Ten days of intensive
meditation are far more restful than a ten day holiday, and will probably cost
less too. If you gain insight it will have a radical effect on your attitude to
life, and it will equip you to deal with stress effectively on a daily basis.
You will no longer need to resort to alcohol, medication, or cigarettes, which
will extend your life expectancy by many years.
If you do not yet have family
commitments, consider taking up the holy life. Though monastic life may seem
hard because of the many restraints that one has to observe, if one follows the
training with sincerity and singleness of purpose, one will soon realise that
lay life is actually much more painful and difficult than monastic life. To live
the monastic life properly, one must swim upstream against the current of
desire, so one gradually becomes stronger. Lay life encourages people to follow
desire. Unless a lay person is exceptionally wise, he or she will follow desire
most of the time, and gradually become weaker. If one becomes wise late in life
and wishes to take up the holy life, it is then much harder to break free from
attachment.
May you resolutely practise
systematic mindfulness as taught by the Buddha for the sole purpose of
liberation from all suffering. May you experience the joy of uninterrupted
mindfulness. May you attain deep insight and realise nibbāna.END=NAM MO SAKYAMUNI BUDDHA.( 3 TIMES ).WORLD VIETNAMESE BUDDHIST ORDER=VIETNAMESE BUDDHIST NUN=GOLDEN LOTUS MONASTERY=AUSTRALIA,SYDNEY.15/10/2013.THICH CHAN TANH.THE MIND OF ENLIGHTMENT.
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