home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1994-06-10 | 98.7 KB | 1,766 lines |
- 500 BC
- BUDDHA, THE WORD
- (The Eightfold Path)
-
- THE FOUR NOBLE TRUTHS
-
- THUS has it been said by the Buddha, the Enlightened One: It is
- through not understanding, not realizing four things, that I,
- Disciples, as well as you, had to wander so long through this round of
- rebirths. And what are these four things? They are the Noble Truth
- of Suffering, the Noble Truth of the Origin of Suffering, the Noble
- Truth of the Extinction of Suffering, the Noble Truth of the Path that
- leads to the Extinction of Suffering.
- As long as the absolutely true knowledge and insight as regards
- these Four Noble Truths was not quite clear in me, so long was I not
- sure, whether I had won that supreme Enlightenment which is
- unsurpassed in all the world with its heavenly beings, evil spirits
- and gods, amongst all the hosts of ascetics and priests, heavenly
- beings and men. But as soon as the absolutely true knowledge and
- insight as regards these Four Noble Truths had become perfectly
- clear in me, there arose in me the assurance that I had won that
- supreme Enlightenment unsurpassed.
- And I discovered that-profound truth, so difficult to perceive,
- difficult to understand, tranquilizing and sublime, which is not to be
- gained by mere reasoning, and is visible only to the wise.
- The world, however, is given to pleasure, delighted with pleasure,
- enchanted with pleasure. Verily, such beings will hardly understand
- the law of conditionality, the Dependent Origination of every thing;
- incomprehensible to them will also be the end of all formations, the
- forsaking of every substratum of rebirth, the fading away of
- craving; detachment, extinction, Nirvana.
- Yet there are beings whose eyes are only a little covered with dust:
- they will understand the truth.
- FIRST TRUTH
- THE NOBLE TRUTH OF SUFFERING
-
- WHAT, now, is the Noble Truth of Suffering?
- Birth is suffering; Decay is suffering; Death is suffering;
- Sorrow, Lamentation, Pain, Grief, and Despair, are suffering; not to
- get what one desires, is suffering; in short: the Five Groups of
- Existence are suffering.
- What, now, is Birth? The birth of beings belonging to this or that
- order of beings, their being born, their conception and springing into
- existence, the manifestation of the groups of existence, the arising
- of sense activity-this is called Birth.
- And what is Decay? The decay of beings belonging to this or that
- order of beings; their getting aged, frail, grey, and wrinkled; the
- failing of their vital force, the wearing out of the senses-this is
- called Decay.
- And what is Death? The parting and vanishing of beings out of this
- or that order of beings, their destruction, disappearance, death,
- the completion of their life-period, dissolution of the groups of
- existence, the discarding of the body-this is called Death.
- And what is Sorrow? The sorrow arising through this or that loss
- or misfortune which one encounters, the worrying oneself, the state of
- being alarmed, inward sorrow, inward woe-this is called Sorrow.
- And what is Lamentation? Whatsoever, through this or that loss or
- misfortune which befalls one, is wail and lament, wailing and
- lamenting, the state of woe and lamentation this is called
- Lamentation.
- And what is Pain? The bodily pain and unpleasantness, the painful
- and unpleasant feeling produced by bodily contact-this is called Pain.
- And what is Grief? The mental pain and unpleasantness, the painful
- and unpleasant feeling produced by mental contact-this is called
- Grief.
- And what is Despair? Distress and despair arising through this or
- that loss or misfortune which one encounters, distressfulness, and
- desperation-this is called Despair.
- And what is the "suffering of not getting what one desires?" To
- beings subject to birth there comes the desire: "O that we were not
- subject to birth! O that no new birth was before us!" Subject to
- decay, disease, death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and
- despair, the desire comes to them: "O that we were not subject to
- these things! O that these things were not before us!" But this cannot
- be got by mere desiring; and not to get what one desires, is
- suffering.
-
- THE FIVE GROUPS OF EXISTENCE
-
- And what, in brief, are the Five Groups of Existence? They are
- Corporeality, Feeling, Perception, [mental] Formations, and
- Consciousness.
- Any corporeal phenomenon, whether one's own or external, gross or
- subtle, lofty or low, far or near, belongs to the Group of
- Corporeality; any feeling belongs to the Group of Feeling; any
- perception belongs to the Group of Perception; any mental formation
- belongs to the Group of Formations; all consciousness belongs to the
- Group of Consciousness.
- [Our so-called individual existence is in reality nothing but a mere
- process of these "bodily and mental" phenomena, which since immemorial
- times was going on before one's apparent birth, and which also after
- death will continue for immemorial periods of time. In the
- following, we shall see that these five Groups, or Khandhas-either
- taken separately, or combined-in no way constitute any real
- "Ego-entity," and that no Ego-entity exists apart from them, and hence
- that the belief in an Ego-entity is merely an illusion. Just as that
- which we designate by the name of "chariot," has no existence apart
- from axle, wheels, shaft, and so forth: or as the word "house" is
- merely a convenient designation for various materials put together
- after a certain fashion so as to enclose a portion of space, and there
- is no separate house-entity in existence:-in exactly the same way,
- that which we call a "being," or an "individual," or a "person," or by
- the name is nothing but a changing combination of physical and
- psychical phenomena, and has no real existence in itself.]
-
- THE "CORPOREALITY GROUP" OF FOUR ELEMENTS
-
- What, now, is the Group of Corporeality? It is the four primary
- elements, and Corporeality derived from them.
- And what are the four primary elements? They are the Solid
- Element, the Fluid Element, the Heating Element, the Vibrating
- Element.
- [The four elements, or-to speak more correctly-the four elementary
- qualities of matter, may be rendered in English as: Inertia, Cohesion,
- Radiation, and Vibration.
- The twenty-four corporeal phenomena which depend upon them are,
- according to the Abhidharma: eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, visible
- form, sound, odor, taste, masculinity, femininity, vitality, organ
- of thinking, gesture, speech, space (cavities of ear, nose, etc.),
- agility, elasticity, adaptability, growth, duration, decay,
- variability, change of substance.]
- 1. What, now, is the Solid Element? The solid element may be one's
- own, or it may be external. And what is one's own solid element? The
- dependent properties, which on one's own person and body are hard
- and solid, as the hairs of head and body, nails, teeth, skin, flesh,
- sinews, bones, marrow, kidneys, heart, liver, diaphragm, spleen,
- lungs, stomach, bowels, mesentery, excrement, or whatever other
- dependent properties which on one's own person and body are hard and
- solid-this is called one's own solid element. Now, whether it be one's
- own solid element, or whether it be the external solid element, they
- are both only the solid element.
- And one should understand, according to reality, and true wisdom:
- "This does not belong to me; this am I not; this is not my Ego."
- 2. What, now, is the Fluid Element? The fluid element may be
- one's own, or it may be external. And what is one own fluid element?
- The dependent properties, which on one's own person and body are
- watery or cohesive, as bile, phlegm, pus, blood, sweat, lymph,
- tears, semen, spit, nasal mucus, oil of the joints, urine or
- whatever other dependent properties which on one own person and body
- are watery or cohesive-this is called one's own fluid element. Now,
- whether it be one's own fluid element, or whether it be the external
- fluid element, they are both only the fluid element.
- And one should understand, according to reality, and true wisdom:
- "This does not belong to me; this am I not; this is not my Ego."
- 3. What, now, is the Heating Element? The heating element may be one
- own, or it may be external. And what is one's own heating element? The
- dependent properties, which on one's own person and body are heating
- and radiating, as that whereby one is heated, consumed, scorched,
- whereby that which has been eaten, drunk, chewed, or tasted, is
- fully digested; or whatever other dependent properties, which on one's
- own person and body are heating and radiating this is called one's own
- heating element. Now, whether it be one's own heating element, or
- whether it be the external heating element, they are both only the
- heating element.
- And one should understand, according to reality, and true wisdom:
- "This does not belong to me; this am I not; this is not my Ego."
- 4. What, now, is the Vibrating Element? The vibrating element may be
- one's own, or it may be external. And what is one's own vibrating
- element? The dependent properties, which on one's own person and
- body are mobile and gaseous, as the upward-going and downward-going
- winds; the winds of stomach and intestines; in-breathing and
- out-breathing; or whatever other dependent properties, which on
- one's own person and body are mobile and gaseous-this is called
- one's own vibrating element. Now, whether it be one's own vibrating
- element, or whether it be the external vibrating element, they are
- both only the vibrating element.
- And one should understand, according to reality, and true wisdom:
- "This does not belong to me; this am I not; this is not my Ego."
- Just as one calls "hut" the circumscribed space which comes to be by
- means of wood and rushes, reeds, and clay, even so we call "body"
- the circumscribed space that comes to be by means of bones and sinews,
- flesh and skin.
-
- DEPENDENT ORIGINATION OF CONSCIOUSNESS
-
- Now, though one's eye be intact, yet if the external forms do not
- fall within the field of vision, and no corresponding conjunction
- takes place, in that case there occurs no formation of the
- corresponding aspect of consciousness. Or, though one eye be intact,
- and the external forms fall within the field of vision, yet if no
- corresponding conjunction takes place, in that case also there
- occurs no formation of the corresponding aspect of consciousness.
- If, however, one's eye is intact, and the external forms fall within
- the field of vision, and the corresponding conjunction takes place, in
- that case there arises the corresponding aspect of consciousness.
- Hence, I say: the arising of consciousness is dependent upon
- conditions; and without these conditions, no consciousness arises. And
- upon whatsoever conditions the arising of consciousness is
- dependent, after these it is called.
- Consciousness whose arising depends on the eye and forms, is
- called "eye-consciousness."
- Consciousness whose arising depends on the ear and sound, is
- called "ear-consciousness."
- Consciousness whose arising depends on the olfactory organ and
- odors, is called "nose-consciousness."
- Consciousness whose arising depends on the tongue and taste, is
- called "tongue-consciousness."
- Consciousness whose arising depends on the body and bodily contacts,
- is called "body-consciousness."
- Consciousness whose arising depends on the mind and ideas, is called
- "mind-consciousness."
- Whatsoever there is of "corporeality" in the consciousness thus
- arisen, that belongs to the Group of Corporeality. there is of
- "feeling"-bodily ease, pain, joy, sadness, or indifferent
- feeling-belongs to the Group of Feeling. Whatsoever there is of
- "perception"-visual objects, sounds, odors, tastes, bodily
- impressions, or mind objects-belongs to the Group of Perception.
- Whatsoever there are of mental "formations" impression, volition,
- etc.-belong to the Group of mental Formations. Whatsoever there is
- of "consciousness" therein, belongs to the Group of Consciousness.
- And it is impossible that any one can explain the passing out of one
- existence, and the entering into a new existence, or the growth,
- increase, and development of consciousness, independent of
- corporeality, feeling, perception, and mental formations.
-
- THE THREE CHARACTERISTICS OF EXISTENCE
-
- All formations are "transient"; all formations are "subject to
- suffering"; all things are "without an Ego-entity." Corporeality is
- transient, feeling is transient, perception is transient, mental
- formations are transient, consciousness is transient.
- And that which is transient, is subject to suffering; and of that
- which is transient, and subject to suffering and change, one cannot
- rightly say: "This belongs to me; this am I; this is my Ego."
- Therefore, whatever there be of corporeality, of feeling,
- perception, mental formations, or consciousness, whether one's own
- or external, whether gross or subtle, lofty or low, far or near, one
- should understand, according to reality, and true wisdom: "This does
- not belong to me; this am I not; this is not my Ego."
- Suppose, a man who is not blind, were to behold the many bubbles
- on the Ganges as they are driving along; and he should watch them, and
- carefully examine them. After carefully examining them, they will
- appear to him empty, unreal, and unsubstantial. In exactly the same
- way, does the monk behold all the corporeal phenomena, feelings,
- perceptions, mental formations, and states of consciousness-whether
- they be of the past, or the present, or the future, far, or near.
- And he watches them, and examines them carefully; and, after carefully
- examining them, they appear to him empty, void, and without an Ego
- Whoso delights in corporeality, or feeling, or perception, or mental
- formations, or consciousness, he delights in suffering; and whoso
- delights in suffering, will not be freed from suffering. Thus I say
-
- How can you find delight and mirth,
- Where there is burning without end?
- In deepest darkness you are wrapped!
- Why do you not seek for the light?
-
- Look at this puppet here, well rigged,
- A heap of many sores, piled up,
- Diseased, and full of greediness,
- Unstable, and impermanent!
-
- Devoured by old age is this frame,
- A prey of sickness, weak and frail;
- To pieces breaks this putrid body,
- All life must truly end in death.
-
- THE THREE WARNINGS
-
- Did you never see in the world a man, or a woman, eighty, ninety, or
- a hundred years old, frail, crooked as a gable roof, bent down,
- resting on crutches, with tottering steps, infirm, youth long since
- fled, with broken teeth, grey and scanty hair, or bald-headed,
- wrinkled, with blotched limbs? And did the thought never come to you
- that also you are subject to decay, that also you cannot escape it?
- Did you never see in the world a man, or a woman, who being sick,
- afflicted, and grievously ill, and wallowing in his own filth, was
- lifted up by some people, and put to bed by others? And did the
- thought never come to you that also you are subject to disease, that
- also you cannot escape it?
- Did you never see in the world the corpse of a man, or a woman, one,
- or two, or three days after death, swollen up, blue-black in color,
- and full of corruption? And did the thought never come to you that
- also you are subject to death, that also you cannot escape it?
-
- SAMSARA, THE WHEEL OF EXISTENCE
-
- Inconceivable is the beginning of this Samsara; not to be discovered
- is any first beginning of beings, who, obstructed by ignorance, and
- ensnared by craving, are hurrying and hastening through this round
- of rebirths.
- [Samsara-the Wheel of Existence, lit., the "Perpetual
- Wandering"-is the name by which is designated the sea of life ever
- restlessly heaving up and down, the symbol of this continuous
- process of ever again and again being born, growing old, suffering,
- and dying. More precisely Put: Samsara is the unbroken chain of the
- fivefold Khandha-combinations, which, constantly changing from
- moment to moment, follow continuously one upon the other through
- inconceivable periods of time. Of this Samsara, a single lifetime
- constitutes only a vanishingly tiny fraction; hence, to be able to
- comprehend the first noble truth, one must let one's gaze rest upon
- the Samsara, upon this frightful chain of rebirths, and not merely
- upon one single lifetime, which, of course, may be sometimes not
- very painful.]
- Which do you think is the more: the flood of tears, which weeping
- and wailing you have shed upon this long way-hurrying and hastening
- through this round of rebirths, united with the undesired, separated
- from the desired this, or the waters of the four oceans?
- Long time have you suffered the death of father and mother, of sons,
- daughters, brothers, and sisters. And whilst you were thus
- suffering, you have, verily, shed more tears upon this long way than
- there is water in the four oceans.
- Which do you think is the more: the streams of blood that, through
- your being beheaded, have flowed upon this long way, or the waters
- in the four oceans?
- Long time have you been caught as dacoits, or highwaymen, or
- adulterers; and, through your being beheaded, verily, more blood has
- flowed upon this long way than there is water in the four oceans.
- But how is this possible?
- Inconceivable is the beginning of this Samsara; not to be discovered
- is any first beginning of beings, who, obstructed by ignorance, and
- ensnared by craving, are hurrying and hastening through this round
- of rebirths.
- And thus have you long time undergone suffering, undergone
- torment, undergone misfortune, and filled the graveyards full; verily,
- long enough to be dissatisfied with all the forms of existence, long
- enough to turn away, and free yourselves from them all.
-
- SECOND TRUTH
- THE NOBLE TRUTH OF THE ORIGIN OF SUFFERING
-
- WHAT, now, is the Noble Truth of the Origin of Suffering? It is that
- craving which gives rise to fresh rebirth, and, bound up with pleasure
- and lust, now here, now there, finds ever fresh delight.
- [In the absolute sense, it is no real being, no self-determined,
- unchangeable, Ego-entity that is reborn. Moreover, there is nothing
- that remains the same even for two consecutive moments; for the Five
- Khandhas, or Groups of Existence, are in a state of perpetual
- change, of continual dissolution and renewal. They die every moment,
- and every moment new ones are born. Hence it follows that there is
- no such thing as a real existence, or "being" (Latin esse), but only
- as it were an endless process, a continuous change, a "becoming,"
- consisting in a "producing," and in a "being produced"; in a
- "process of action," and in a "process of reaction," or "rebirth."
- This process of perpetual "producing" and "being produced" may
- best be compared with an ocean wave. In the case of a wave, there is
- not the slightest quantity of water traveling over the surface of
- the sea. But the wave structure, that hastens over the surface of
- the water, creating the appearance of one and the same mass of
- water, is, in reality, nothing but the continuous rising and falling
- of continuous, but quite different, masses of water, produced by the
- transmission of force generated by the wind. Even so, the Buddha did
- not teach that Ego-entities hasten through the ocean of rebirth, but
- merely life-waves, which, according to their nature and activities
- (good, or evil), manifest themselves here as men, there as animals,
- and elsewhere as invisible beings.]
-
- THE THREEFOLD CRAVING
-
- There is the "Sensual Craving," the "Craving for
- Eternal-Annihilation." Existence," the "Craving for
- Self-Annihilation."
- [The "Craving for Eternal Existence," according to the
- Visuddhi-Magga, is intimately connected with the so-called
- Eternity-Belief," i.e., the belief in an absolute, eternal, Ego-entity
- persisting independently of our body.
- The Craving for Self-Annihilation is the outcome of the so-called
- "Annihilation-Belief," the delusive materialistic notion of an Ego
- which is annihilated at death, and which does not stand in any
- causal relation with the time before birth or after death.]
- But, where does this craving arise and take root? Wherever in the
- world there are delightful and pleasurable things, there this
- craving arises and takes root. Eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, and mind,
- are delightful and pleasurable: there this craving arises and takes
- root.
- Visual objects, sounds, smells, tastes, bodily impressions, and
- mind-objects, are delightful and pleasurable: there this craving
- arises and takes root.
- Consciousness, sense impression, feeling born of sense impression,
- perception, will, craving, thinking, and reflecting, are delightful
- and pleasurable: there this craving arises and takes root.
- If, namely, when perceiving a visual object, a sound, odor, taste,
- bodily impression, or a mind object, the object is pleasant, one is
- attracted; and if unpleasant, one is repelled.
- Thus, whatever kind of "Feeling" one experiences, pleasant,
- unpleasant, or indifferent-one approves of, and cherishes the feeling,
- and clings to it; and while doing so, lust springs up; but lust for
- feelings, means Clinging; and on Clinging, depends the "Process of
- Becoming"; on the Process of Becoming (Karma-process), depends
- (future) "Birth"; and dependent on Birth, are Decay and Death,
- Sorrow, Lamentation, Pain, Grief, and Despair. Thus arises this
- whole mass of suffering.
- This is called the Noble Truth of the Origin of Suffering.
-
- HEAPING UP OF PRESENT SUFFERING
-
- Verily, due to sensuous craving, conditioned through sensuous
- craving, impelled by sensuous craving, entirely moved by sensuous
- craving, kings fight with kings, princes with princes, priests with
- priests, citizens with citizens; the mother quarrels with the son, the
- son with the mother, the father with the son, the son with the father;
- brother quarrels with brother, brother with sister, sister with
- brother, friend with friend. Thus, given to dissension, quarreling and
- fighting, they fall upon one another with fists, sticks, or weapons.
- And thereby they suffer death or deadly pain.
- And further, due to sensuous craving, conditioned through sensuous
- craving, impelled by sensuous craving, entirely moved by sensuous
- craving, people break into houses, rob, plunder, pillage whole houses,
- commit highway robbery, seduce the wives of others. Then, the rulers
- have such people caught, and inflict on them various forms of
- punishment. And thereby they incur death or deadly pain. Now, this
- is the misery of sensuous craving, the heaping up of suffering in this
- present life, due to sensuous craving, conditioned through sensuous
- craving, caused by sensuous craving, entirely dependent on sensuous
- craving.
-
- HEAPING UP OF FUTURE SUFFERING
-
- And further, people take the evil way in deeds, the evil way in
- words, the evil way in thoughts; and by taking the evil way in
- deeds, words, and thoughts, at the dissolution of the body, after
- death, they fall into a downward state of existence, a state of
- suffering, into perdition, and the abyss of hell. But, this is the
- misery of sensuous craving, the heaping up of suffering in the
- future life, due to sensuous craving, conditioned through sensuous
- craving, caused by sensuous craving, entirely dependent on sensuous
- craving.
-
- Not in the air, nor ocean-midst,
- Nor hidden in the mountain clefts,
- Nowhere is found a place on earth,
- Where man is freed from evil deeds.
-
- INHERITANCE OF DEEDS (KARMA)
-
- For, owners of their deeds (karma) are the beings, heirs of
- their deeds; their deeds are the womb from which they sprang; with
- their deeds they are bound up; their deeds are their refuge.
- Whatever deeds they do-good or evil-of such they will be the heirs.
- And wherever the beings spring into existence, there their deeds
- will ripen; and wherever their deeds ripen, there they will earn the
- fruits of those deeds, be it in this life, or be it in the next
- life, or be it in any other future life.
- There will come a time, when the mighty ocean will dry up, vanish,
- and be no more. There will come a time, when the mighty earth will
- be devoured by fire, perish, and be no more. But, yet there will be no
- end to the suffering of beings, who, obstructed by ignorance, and
- ensnared by craving, are hurrying and hastening through this round
- of rebirths.
-
- THIRD TRUTH
- THE NOBLE TRUTH OF THE EXTINCTION OF SUFFERING
-
- WHAT, now, is the Noble Truth of the Extinction of Suffering? It
- is the complete fading away and extinction of this craving, its
- forsaking and giving up, the liberation and detachment from it.
- But where may this craving vanish, where may it be extinguished?
- Wherever in the world there are delightful and pleasurable things,
- there this craving may vanish, there it may be extinguished.
- Be it in the past, present, or future, whosoever of the monks or
- priests regards the delightful and pleasurable things in the world
- as "impermanent," "miserable," and "without an Ego," as a disease
- and cancer; it is he who overcomes the craving.
- And released from Sensual Craving, released from the Craving for
- Existence, he does not return, does not enter again into existence.
-
- DEPENDENT EXTINCTION OF ALL PHENOMENA
-
- For, through the total fading away and extinction of Craving,
- Clinging is extinguished; through the extinction of clinging, the
- Process of Becoming is extinguished; through the extinction of the
- (karmic) process of becoming, Rebirth is extinguished; and through
- the extinction of rebirth, Decay and Death, Sorrow, Lamentation,
- Suffering, Grief, and Despair, are extinguished. Thus comes about
- the extinction of this whole mass of suffering.
- Hence, the annihilation, cessation, and overcoming of
- corporeality, feeling, perception, mental formations, and
- consciousness, this is the extinction of suffering, the end of
- disease, the overcoming of old age and death.
- [The undulatory motion, which we call wave-which in the spectator
- creates the illusion of a single mass of water moving over the surface
- of the lake-is produced and fed by the wind, and maintained by the
- stored-up energies. After the wind has ceased, and no fresh wind again
- whips up the water, the stored-up energies will gradually be consumed,
- and the whole undulatory motion come to an end. Similarly, if fire
- does not get new fuel, it will become extinct. just so, this
- Five-Khandha-process-which, in the ignorant worldling, creates the
- illusion of an Ego-entity-is produced and fed by the life-affirming
- craving, and maintained for some time by means of the stored-up
- life-energies. Now, after the fuel, i.e., the craving and clinging
- to life, has ceased, and no new craving impels again this
- Five-Khandha-process, life will continue as long as there are still
- life-energies stored up, but at their destruction at death, the
- Five-Khandha-process will reach final extinction.
- Thus, nirvana or "Extinction" (Sanskrit: to cease blowing, to
- become extinct), may be considered under two aspects:
- 1. "Extinction of Impurities," reached at the attainment of
- Arahatship, or Holiness, which takes place during the life-time.
- 2. "Extinction of the Five-Khandha-process," which takes place at
- the death of the Arahat.]
-
- NIRVANA
-
- This, truly, is the Peace, this is the Highest, namely the end of
- all formations, the forsaking of every substratum of rebirth, the
- fading away of craving: detachment, extinction-Nirvana.
- Enraptured with lust, enraged with anger, blinded by delusion,
- overwhelmed, with mind ensnared, man aims at his own ruin, at
- others' ruin, at the ruin of both parties, and he experiences mental
- pain and grief. But, if lust, anger, and delusion are given up, man
- aims neither at his own ruin, nor at others' ruin, nor at the ruin
- of both parties, and he experiences no mental pain and grief. Thus
- is Nirvana immediate, visible in this life, inviting, attractive,
- and comprehensible to the wise.
- The extinction of greed, the extinction of anger, the extinction
- of delusion: this, indeed, is called Nirvana.
-
- THE ARAHAT, OR HOLY ONE
-
- And for a disciple thus freed, in whose heart dwells peace, there is
- nothing to be added to what has been done, and naught more remains for
- him to do. Just as a rock of one solid mass remains unshaken by the
- wind, even so, neither forms, nor sounds, nor odors, nor tastes, nor
- contacts of any kind, neither the desired, nor the undesired, can
- cause such an one to waver. Steadfast is his mind, gained is
- deliverance.
- And he who has considered all the contrasts on this earth, and is no
- more disturbed by anything whatever in the world, the Peaceful One,
- freed from rage, from sorrow, and from longing, he has passed beyond
- birth and decay.
-
- THE IMMUTABLE
-
- There is a realm, where there is neither the solid, nor the fluid,
- neither heat, nor motion, neither this world, nor any other world,
- neither sun, nor moon. This I call neither arising, nor passing
- away, neither standing still nor being born, nor dying. There is
- neither foothold, nor development, nor any basis. This is the end of
- suffering.
- There is an Unborn, Unoriginated, Uncreated, Unformed. If there were
- not this Unborn, this Unoriginated, this Uncreated, this Unformed,
- escape from the world of the born, the originated, the created, the
- formed, would not be possible.
- But since there is an Unborn, Unoriginated, Uncreated, Unformed,
- therefore is escape possible from the world of the born, the
- originated, the created, the formed.
-
- FOURTH TRUTH
- THE NOBLE TRUTH OF THE PATH
- THAT LEADS TO THE EXTINCTION OF SUFFERING
-
- THE TWO EXTREMES AND THE MIDDLE PATH
-
- TO GIVE oneself up to indulgence in sensual pleasure, the base,
- common, vulgar, unholy, unprofitable; and also to give oneself up to
- self-mortification, the painful, unholy, unprofitable: both these
- two extremes the Perfect One has avoided, and found out the Middle
- Path, which makes one both to see and to know, which leads to peace,
- to discernment, to enlightenment, to Nirvana.
-
- THE EIGHTFOLD PATH
-
- It is the Noble Eightfold Path, the way that leads to the extinction
- of suffering, namely:
- 1. Right Understanding, 2. Right Mindedness, which together are
- Wisdom.
- 3. Right Speech, 4. Right Action, 5. Right Living, which together
- are Morality.
- 6. Right Effort, 7. Right Attentiveness, 8. Right Concentration,
- which together are Concentration.
- This is the Middle Path which the Perfect One has found out, which
- makes one both to see and to know, which leads to peace, to
- discernment, to enlightenment, to Nirvana.
- Free from pain and torture is this path, free from groaning and
- suffering; it is the perfect path.
- Truly, like this path there is no other path to the purity of
- insight. If you follow this path, you will put an end to suffering.
- But each one has to struggle for himself, the Perfect Ones have only
- pointed out the way.
- Give ear then, for the Immortal is found. I reveal, I set forth
- the Truth. As I reveal it to you, so act! And that supreme goal of the
- holy life, for the sake of which, sons of good families rightly go
- forth from home to the homeless state: this you will, in no long time,
- in this very life, make known to yourself, realize, and make your own.
-
- THE EIGHTFOLD PATH
- FIRST STEP
- RIGHT UNDERSTANDING
-
- WHAT, now, is Right Understanding? It is understanding the Four
- Truths. To understand suffering; to understand the origin of
- suffering; to understand the extinction of suffering; to understand
- the path that leads to the extinction of suffering: This is called
- Right Understanding
- Or, when the noble disciple understands what is karmically
- wholesome, and the root of wholesome karma; what is karmically
- unwholesome, and the root of unwholesome karma, then he has Right
- Understanding.
- ["Karmically unwholesome" is every volitional act of body, speech,
- or mind which is rooted in greed, hatred, or delusion, and produces
- evil and painful results in this or any future form of existence.]
- What, now, is "karmically unwholesome?"
- In Bodily Action it is destruction of living beings; stealing; and
- unlawful sexual intercourse. In Verbal Action it is lying;
- tale-bearing; harsh language; and frivolous talk. In Mental Action
- it is covetousness; ill-will; and wrong views.
- And what is the root of unwholesome karma? Greed is a root of
- unwholesome karma; Anger is a root of unwholesome karma; Delusion is a
- root of unwholesome karma.
- [The state of greed, as well as that of anger, is always accompanied
- by delusion; and delusion, ignorance, is the primary root of all
- evil.]
- Therefore, I say, these demeritorious actions are of three kinds:
- either due to greed, or due to anger, or due to delusion.
- What, now, is "karmically wholesome?"
- In Bodily Action it is to abstain from killing; to abstain from
- stealing; and to abstain from unlawful sexual intercourse.
- In Verbal Action it is to abstain from lying; to abstain from
- tale-bearing; to abstain from harsh language; and to abstain from
- frivolous talk.
- In Mental Action it is absence of covetousness; absence of ill-will;
- and right understanding.
- And what is the root of wholesome karma? Absence of greed
- (unselfishness) is a root of wholesome karma; absence of anger
- (benevolence) is a root of wholesome karma; absence of delusion
- (wisdom) is a root of wholesome karma.
- Or, when one understands that corporeality, feeling, perception,
- mental formation, and consciousness, are transient [subject to
- suffering, and without an Ego], also in that case one possesses Right
- Understanding.
-
- UNPROFITABLE QUESTIONS
-
- Should anyone say that he does not wish to lead the holy life
- under the Blessed One, unless the Blessed One first tells him, whether
- the world is eternal or temporal, finite or infinite; whether the life
- principle is identical with the body, or something different;
- whether the Perfect One continues after death, and so on such a man
- would die, ere the Perfect One could tell him all this.
- It is as if a man were pierced by a poisoned arrow, and his friends,
- companions, or near relations, should send for a surgeon; but that man
- should say: "I will not have this arrow pulled out, until I know who
- the man is that has wounded me: whether he is a noble, a priest, a
- citizen, or a servant"; or: "what his name is, and to what family he
- belongs"; or: "whether he is tall, or short, or of medium height."
- Verily, such a man would die, ere he could adequately learn all this.
- Therefore, the man who seeks his own welfare, should pull out this
- arrow-this arrow of lamentation, pain, and sorrow.
- For, whether the theory exists, or whether it does not exist, that
- the world is eternal, or temporal, or finite, or infinite-certainly,
- there is birth, there is decay, there is death, sorrow, lamentation,
- pain, grief, and despair, the extinction of which, attainable even
- in this present life, I make known unto you.
- There is, for instance, an unlearned worldling, void of regard for
- holy men, ignorant of the teaching of holy men, untrained in the noble
- doctrine. And his heart is possessed and overcome by Self-Illusion, by
- Skepticism, by attachment to mere Rule and Ritual, by Sensual Lust,
- and by will; and how to free himself from these things, he does not
- really know.
- [Self-Illusion may reveal itself as "Eternalism" or Eternity-belief"
- i.e., the belief that one's Ego is existing independently of the
- material body, and continuing even after the dissolution of the
- latter; or as "Annihilationism," or "Annihilation-belief" i.e., the
- materialistic belief that this present life constitutes the Ego, and
- hence that it is annihilated at the death of the material body.]
- Not knowing what is worthy of consideration, and what is unworthy of
- consideration, he considers the unworthy, and not the worthy.
- And unwisely he considers thus: "Have I been in the past? Or. have I
- not been in the past? What have I been in the past? How have I been in
- the past? From what state into what state did I change in the
- past?-Shall I be in the future? Or, shall I not be in the future? What
- shall I be in the future? How shall I be in the future? From what
- state into what state shall I change in the future?" And the present
- also fills him with doubt: "Am I? Or, am I not? What am I? How am I?
- This being, whence has it come? Whither will it go?"
- And with such unwise considerations, he falls into one or other of
- the six views, and it becomes his conviction and firm belief: "I
- have an Ego"; or: "I have no Ego"; or: "With the Ego I perceive the
- Ego"; or: "With that which is no Ego, I perceive the Ego"; or: "With
- the Ego I perceive that which is no Ego. Or, he falls into the
- following view: "This my Ego, which can think and feel, and which, now
- here, now there, experiences the fruit of good and evil deeds; this my
- Ego is permanent, stable, eternal, not subject to change, and will
- thus eternally remain the same."
- If there really existed the Ego, there would be also something which
- belonged to the Ego. As, however, in truth and reality, neither the
- Ego, nor anything belonging to the Ego, can be found, is it not
- therefore really an utter fool's doctrine to say: "This is the
- world, this am I; after death, I shall be permanent, persisting, and
- eternal?"
- These are called mere views, a thicket of views, a puppet show of
- views, a toil of views, a snare of views; and ensnared in the fetter
- of views, the ignorant worldling will not be freed from rebirth,
- from decay, and from death, from sorrow, pain, grief, and despair;
- he will not be freed, I say, from suffering.
-
- THE SOTAPAN, OR "STREAM-ENTERER"
-
- The learned and noble disciple, however, who has regard for holy
- men, knows the teaching of holy men, is well trained in the noble
- doctrine, he understands what is worthy of consideration, and what
- is unworthy. And knowing this, he considers the worthy, and not the
- unworthy. What suffering is, he wisely considers. What the origin of
- suffering is, he wisely considers; what the extinction of suffering
- is, he wisely considers; what the path is that leads to the extinction
- of suffering, he wisely considers.
- And by thus considering, three fetters vanish, namely:
- Self-illusion, Skepticism, and Attachment to mere Rule and Ritual.
- But those disciples in whom these three fetters have vanished have
- "entered the Stream," have forever escaped the states of woe, and
- are assured of final enlightenment.
-
- More than any earthly power,
- More than all the joys of heaven,
- More than rule o'er all the world,
- Is the Entrance to the Stream.
-
- And, verily, those who are filled with unshaken faith in me, all
- those have entered the stream.
- There are ten "Fetters" by which beings are bound to the wheel of
- existence. They are: Self-Illusion, Skepticism, Attachment to mere
- Rule and Ritual, Sensual Lust, Ill-will, Craving for the World of pure
- Form, Craving for the Formless World, Conceit, Restlessness,
- Ignorance.
- A Sotapan, or "Stream-Enterer" i.e. "one who has entered the
- stream leading to Nirvana," is free from the first three fetters.
- A Sakadagamin, or "Once-Returned"-namely to this sensuous sphere-has
- overcome the 4th and 5th fetters in their grosser form. An Anagamin,
- or "Non-Returner," is wholly freed from the first five fetters,
- which bind to rebirth in the sensuous sphere; after death, whilst
- living in the sphere of pure form, he will reach the goal. An
- Arahat, or perfectly "Holy One," is freed from all fetters.]
-
- THE TWO UNDERSTANDINGS
-
- Therefore, I say, Right Understanding is of two kinds:
- 1. The view that alms and offerings are not useless; that there is
- fruit and result, both of good and bad actions; that there are such
- things as this life, and the next life; that father and mother as
- spontaneously born beings (in the heavenly worlds) are no mere
- words; that there are monks and priests who are spotless and
- perfect, who can explain this life and the next life, which they
- themselves have understood: this is called the "Mundane Right
- Understanding," which yields worldly fruits, and brings good results.
- 2. But whatsoever there is of wisdom, of penetration, of right
- understanding, conjoined with the Path-the mind being turned away from
- the world, and conjoined with the path, the holy path being turned
- away from the world, and conjoined with the path, the holy path
- being pursued;-this is called the "Ultramundane Right
- Understanding," which is not of the world, but is ultramundane, and
- conjoined with the Path.
- [Thus, there are two kinds of the Eightfold Path: the "mundane,"
- practiced by the "worldling"; and the "ultra-mundane," practiced by
- the "Noble Ones."]
- Now, in understanding wrong understanding as wrong, and right
- understanding as right, one practices Right Understanding [1st step];
- and in making efforts to overcome wrong understanding, and to
- arouse right understanding, one practices. Right Effort [6th step];
- and in overcoming wrong understanding with attentive mind, and
- dwelling with attentive mind in the possession of right understanding,
- one practices Right-Attentiveness [7th step]. Hence, there are three
- things that accompany and follow upon right understanding, namely:
- right understanding, right effort, and right attentiveness.
-
- COMPLETE DELIVERANCE
-
- Now, if any one should put the question, whether I admit any view at
- all, he should be answered thus:
- The Perfect One is free from any theory, for the Perfect One has
- understood what corporeality is, and how it arises, and passes away.
- He has understood what feeling is, and how it arises, and passes away.
- He has understood what perception is, and how it arises, and passes
- away. He has understood what the mental formations are, and how they
- arise, and pass away. He has understood what consciousness is, and how
- it arises, and passes away. Therefore, I say, the Perfect One has
- won complete deliverance through the extinction, fading-away,
- disappearance, rejection, and getting rid of all opinions and
- conjectures, of all inclination to the vainglory of "I" and "mine."
- Whether Perfect Ones [Buddhas] appear in the world or whether
- Perfect Ones do not appear in the world, it still remains a firm
- condition, an immutable fact and fixed law: that all formations are
- impermanent" that all formations are "subject to suffering"; that
- everything is "without an Ego."
- [The word sankhara (formations) comprises all things which have
- a beginning and an end, the so-called created, or "formed" things,
- i.e., all possible physical and mental constituents of existence.]
- A corporeal phenomenon, a feeling, a perception, a mental formation,
- a consciousness, that is permanent and persistent, eternal and not
- subject to change: such a thing the wise men in this world do not
- recognize; and I also say, there is no such thing.
- And it is impossible that a being possessed of Right Understanding
- should regard anything as the Ego.
- Now, if someone should say that Feeling is his Ego, he should be
- answered thus: "There are three kinds of feeling: pleasurable,
- painful, and indifferent feeling. Which of these three feelings,
- now, do you consider your Ego?" At the moment namely of experiencing
- one of these feelings one does not experience the other two. These
- three kinds of feelings are impermanent, of dependent origin, are
- subject to decay and dissolution, to fading-away and extinction.
- Whosoever, in experiencing one of these feelings, thinks that this
- is his Ego, will, after the extinction of that feeling, admit that his
- Ego has become dissolved. And thus he will consider his Ego already in
- this present life as impermanent, mixed up with pleasure and pain,
- subject to rising and passing away.
- If any one should say that Feeling is not his Ego, and that his
- Ego is inaccessible to feeling, he should be asked thus: "Now, where
- there is no feeling, is it there possible to say: 'This am I?'"
- Or, someone might say: "Feeling, indeed, is not my Ego, but it
- also is untrue that my Ego is inaccessible to feeling; for it is my
- Ego that feels, for my Ego has the faculty of feeling." Such a one
- should be answered thus: "Suppose, feeling should become altogether
- totally extinguished; now, if there, after the extinction of
- feeling, no feeling whatever exists, it is then possible to say: 'This
- am I?'"
- To say that the mind, or the mind-objects, or the
- mind-consciousness, constitute the Ego; such an assertion is
- unfounded. For an arising and a passing away is seen there; and seeing
- this, one should come to the conclusion that one's Ego arises and
- passes away.
- It would be better for the unlearned worldling to regard this
- body, built up of the four elements, as his Ego, rather than the mind.
- For it is evident that this body may last for a year, for two years,
- for three years, four, five, or ten years, or even a hundred years and
- more; but that which is called thought, or mind, or consciousness,
- is continuously, during day and night, arising as one thing, and
- passing away as another thing.
- Therefore, whatsoever there is of corporeality, of feeling, of
- perception, of mental formations, of consciousness, whether one's
- own or external, gross or subtle, lofty or low, far or near; there one
- should understand according to reality and true wisdom: "This does not
- belong to me; this am I not; this is not my Ego."
- [To show the Egolessness, utter emptiness of existence,
- Visuddhi-Magga XVI quotes the following verse:
-
- Mere suffering exists, no sufferer is found;
- The deed is, but no doer of the deed is there;
- Nirvana is, but not the man that enters it;
- The Path is, but no traveler on it is seen.]
-
- PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE
-
- If, now, any one should ask: "Have you been in the past, and is it
- untrue that you have not been? Will you be in the future, and is it
- untrue that you will not be? Are you, and is it untrue that you are
- not?"-you may say that you have been in the past, and it is untrue
- that you have not been; that you will be in the future, and it is
- untrue that you will not be; that you are, and it is untrue that you
- are not.
- In the past only the past existence was real, but unreal the
- future and present existence. In the future only the future
- existence will be real, but unreal the past and present existence. Now
- only the present existence is real, but unreal the past and future
- existence.
- Verily, he who perceives the Dependent Origination, perceives the
- truth and he who perceives the truth, perceives the dependent
- origination. For, just as from the cow comes milk, from milk curds,
- from curds butter, from butter ghee, from ghee the scum of ghee; and
- when it is milk, it is not counted as curds, or butter, or ghee, or
- scum of ghee, but only as milk; and when it is curds, it is only
- counted as curds-just so was my past existence at that time real,
- but unreal the future and present existence; and my future existence
- will be at one time real, but unreal the past and present existence;
- and my present existence is now real, but unreal the past and future
- existence. All these are merely popular designations and
- expressions, mere conventional terms of speaking, mere popular
- notions. The Perfect One, indeed, makes use of these, without,
- however, clinging to them.
- Thus, he who does not understand corporeality, feeling,
- perception, mental formations and consciousness according to reality
- [i.e., as void of a personality, or Ego], and not their arising,
- their extinction, and the way to their extinction, he is liable to
- believe, either that the Perfect One continues after death, or that he
- does not continue after death, and so forth.
- Verily, if one holds the view that the vital principle [Ego] is
- identical with this body, in that case a holy life is not possible;
- or, if one holds the view that the vital principle is something
- quite different from the body, in that case also a holy life is not
- possible. Both these two Extremes the Perfect One has avoided, and
- shown the Middle Doctrine, saying:
-
- DEPENDENT ORIGINATION
-
- On Delusion depend the Karma-Formations. On the karma-formations
- depends Consciousness [starting with rebirth-consciousness in the
- womb of the mother].- On consciousness depends the Mental and Physical
- Existence.-On the mental and physical existence depend the Six
- Sense-Organs.-On the six sense-organs depends the Sensory
- Impression.-On the sensory impression depends Feeling.-On feeling
- depends; Craving.-On craving depends Clinging. On clinging depends the
- Process of Becoming.-On the process of becoming [here: karmaprocess]
- depends Rebirth.-On rebirth depend Decay and Death, sorrow,
- lamentation, pain, grief and despair. Thus arises this whole mass of
- suffering. This is called the noble truth of the origin of suffering.
- In whom, however, Delusion has disappeared and wisdom arisen, such a
- disciple heaps up neither meritorious, nor demeritorious, nor
- imperturbable Karma-formations.
- Thus, through the entire fading away and extinction of this
- Delusion, the Karma-Formations are extinguished. Through the
- extinction of the Karma-formations, Consciousness [rebirth] is
- extinguished. Through the extinction of consciousness, the Mental
- and Physical Existence is extinguished. Through the extinction of
- the mental and physical existence, the six Sense-Organs are
- extinguished. Through the extinction of the six sense-organs, the
- Sensory Impression is extinguished. Through the extinction of the
- sensory impression, Feeling is extinguished. Through the extinction of
- feeling, Craving is extinguished. Through the extinction of craving,
- Clinging is extinguished. Through the extinction of clinging, the
- Process of Becoming is extinguished. Through the extinction of the
- process of becoming, Rebirth is extinguished. Through the extinction
- of rebirth, Decay and Death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief and
- despair are extinguished. Thus takes place the extinction of this
- whole mass of suffering. This is called the Noble Truth of the
- Extinction of Suffering.
-
- KARMA: REBIRTH - PRODUCING AND BARREN
-
- Verily, because beings, obstructed by Delusion, and ensnared by
- Craving, now here now there seek ever fresh delight, therefore such
- action comes to ever fresh Rebirth.
- And the action that is done out of greed, anger and delusion, that
- springs from them, has its source and origin there: this action ripens
- wherever one is reborn; and wherever this action ripens, there one
- experiences the fruits of this action, be it in this life, or the next
- life, or in some future life.
- However, through the fading away of delusion through the arising
- of wisdom, through the extinction of craving, no future rebirth
- takes place again
- For the actions, which are not done out of greed, anger and
- delusion, which have not sprung from them, which have not their source
- and origin there-such actions are, through the absence of greed, anger
- and delusion, abandoned, rooted out, like a palm-tree torn out of
- the soil, destroyed, and not liable to spring up again.
- In this respect one may rightly say of me: that I teach
- annihilation, that I propound my doctrine for the purpose of
- annihilation, and that I herein train my disciples; for, certainly,
- I do teach annihilation-the annihilation, namely, of greed, anger
- and delusion, as well as of the manifold evil and unwholesome things.
- ["Dependent Origination" is the teaching of the strict conformity to
- law of everything that happens, whether in the realm of the
- physical, or the psychical. It shows how the totality of phenomena,
- physical and mental, the entire phenomenal world that depends wholly
- upon the six senses, together with all its suffering-and this is the
- vital point of the teaching is not the mere play of blind chance,
- but has an existence that is dependent upon conditions; and that,
- precisely with the removal of these conditions, those things that have
- arisen in dependence upon them-thus also all suffering-must perforce
- disappear and cease to be.]
-
- SECOND STEP
- RIGHT MINDEDNESS
-
- WHAT, now, is Right Mindedness? It is thoughts free from lust;
- thoughts free from ill-will; thoughts free from cruelty. This is
- called right mindedness.
- Now, Right Mindedness, let me tell you, is of two kinds: 1. Thoughts
- free from lust, from ill-will, and from cruelty:-this is called the
- "Mundane Right Mindedness," which yields worldly fruits and brings
- good results.
- 2. But, whatsoever there is of thinking, considering, reasoning,
- thought, ratiocination, application-the mind being holy, being
- turned away from the world, and conjoined with the path, the holy path
- being pursued-: these "Verbal Operations" of the mind are called the
- "Ultramundane Right Mindedness which is not of the world, but is ultra
- mundane, and conjoined with the paths.
- Now, in understanding wrong-mindedness as wrong, and
- right-mindedness as right, one practices Right Understanding [1st
- step]; and in making efforts to overcome evil-mindedness, and to
- arouse right-mindedness, one practices Right Effort [6th step];
- and in overcoming evil-mindedness with attentive mind, and dwelling
- with attentive mind in possession of right-mindedness, one practices
- Right Attentiveness [7th step]. Hence, there are three things that
- accompany and follow upon right-mindedness, namely: right
- understanding, right effort, and right attentiveness.
-
- THIRD STEP
- THIRD STEP
- RIGHT SPEECH
-
- WHAT, now, is Right Speech? It is abstaining from lying;
- abstaining from tale-bearing; abstaining from harsh language;
- abstaining from vain talk.
- There, someone avoids lying, and abstains from it. He speaks the
- truth, is devoted to the truth, reliable, worthy of confidence, is not
- a deceiver of men. Being at a meeting, or amongst people, or in the
- midst of his relatives, or in a society, or in the king's court, and
- called upon and asked as witness, to tell what he knows, he answers,
- if he knows nothing: "I know nothing"; and if he knows, he answers: "I
- know"; if he has seen nothing, he answers: "I have seen nothing,"
- and if he has seen, he answers: "I have seen." Thus, he never
- knowingly speaks a lie, neither for the sake of his own advantage, nor
- for the sake of another person's advantage, nor for the sake of any
- advantage whatsoever.
- He avoids tale-bearing, and abstains from it. What he has heard
- here, he does not repeat there, so as to cause dissension there; and
- what he heard there, he does not repeat here, so as to cause
- dissension here. Thus he unites those that are divided; and those that
- are united, he encourages. Concord gladdens him, he delights and
- rejoices in concord, and it is concord that he spreads by his words.
- He avoids harsh language, and abstains from it. He speaks such words
- as are gentle, soothing to the ear, loving, going to the heart,
- courteous and dear, and agreeable to many.
- [In Majjhima-Nikaya, No. 21, the Buddha says: "Even, O monks, should
- robbers and murderers saw through your limbs and joints, whoso gave
- way to anger thereat, would not be following my advice. For thus ought
- you to train yourselves:
- "'Undisturbed shall our mind remain, no evil words shall escape
- our lips; friendly and full of sympathy shall we remain, with heart
- full of love, and free from any hidden malice; and that person shall
- we penetrate with loving thoughts, wide, deep, boundless, freed from
- anger and hatred.'"]
- He avoids vain talk, and abstains from it. He speaks at the right
- time, in accordance with facts, speaks what is useful, speaks about
- the law and the discipline; his speech is like a treasure, at the
- right moment accompanied by arguments, moderate and full of sense.
- This is called right speech.
- Now, right speech, let me tell you, is of two kinds: 1. Abstaining
- from lying, from tale-bearing, from harsh language, and from vain
- talk; this is called the "Mundane Right Speech, which yields worldly
- fruits and brings good results.
- 2. But the abhorrence of the practice of this four-fold wrong
- speech, the abstaining, withholding, refraining therefrom-the mind
- being holy, being turned away from the world, and conjoined with the
- path, the holy path being pursued-: this is called the "Ultramundane
- Right Speech, which is not of the world, but is ultramundane, and
- conjoined with the paths.
- Now, in understanding wrong speech as wrong, and right speech as
- right, one practices Right Understanding [1st step); and in making
- efforts to overcome evil speech and to arouse right speech, one
- practices Right Effort [6th step]; and in overcoming wrong speech
- with attentive mind, and dwelling with attentive mind in possession of
- right speech, one practices Right Attentiveness [7th step]. Hence,
- there are three things that accompany and follow upon right
- attentiveness.
-
- FOURTH STEP
- RIGHT ACTION
-
- WHAT, now, is Right Action? It is abstaining from killing;
- abstaining from stealing; abstaining from unlawful sexual intercourse.
- There, someone avoids the killing of living beings, and abstains
- from it. Without stick or sword, conscientious, full of sympathy, he
- is anxious for the welfare of all living beings.
- He avoids stealing, and abstains from it; what another person
- possesses of goods and chattels in the village or in the wood, that he
- does not take away with thievish intent.
- He avoids unlawful sexual intercourse, and abstains from it. He
- has no intercourse with such persons as are still under the protection
- of father, mother, brother, sister or relatives, nor with married
- women, nor female convicts, nor, lastly, with betrothed girls.
- This is called Right Action.
- Now, Right Action, let me tell you, is of two kinds: 1. Abstaining
- from killing, from stealing, and from unlawful sexual intercourse-this
- is called the "Mundane Right Action, which yields worldly fruits and
- brings good results. But the abhorrence of the practice of this
- three-fold wrong action, the abstaining, withholding, refraining
- therefrom-the mind being holy, being turned away from the world, and
- conjoined with the path, the holy path being pursued-: this is
- called the "Ultramundane Right Action," which is not of the world, but
- is ultramundane, and conjoined with the paths.
- Now, in understanding wrong action as wrong, and right action as
- right, one practices Right Understanding [1st step]; and in making
- efforts to overcome wrong action, and to arouse right action, one
- practices Right Effort [6th step]; and in overcoming wrong action
- with attentive mind, and dwelling with attentive mind in possession of
- right action, one practices Right Attentiveness [7th step]. Hence,
- there are three things that accompany and follow upon right action,
- namely: right understanding, right effort, and right attentiveness.
-
- FIFTH STEP
- RIGHT LIVING
-
- WHAT, now, is Right Living? When the noble disciple, avoiding a
- wrong way of living, gets his livelihood by a right way of living,
- this is called Right Living.
- Now, right living, let me tell you, is of two kinds: 1. When the
- noble disciple, avoiding wrong living, gets his livelihood by a
- right way of living-this is called the "Mundane Right Living," which
- yields worldly fruits and brings good results.
- 2. But the abhorrence of wrong living, the abstaining,
- withholding, refraining therefrom-the mind being holy, being turned
- away from the world, and conjoined with the path, the holy path
- being pursued-: this is called the "Ultramundane Right Living,"
- which is not of the world, but is ultramundane, and conjoined with the
- paths.
- Now, in understanding wrong living as wrong, and right living as
- right, one practices Right Understanding [1st step]; and in making
- efforts to overcome wrong living, to arouse right living, one
- practices Right Effort [6th step]; and in overcoming wrong living
- with attentive mind, and dwelling with attentive mind in possession of
- right living, one practices Right Attentiveness [7th step]. Hence,
- there are three things that accompany and follow upon right living,
- namely: right understanding, right effort, and right attentiveness.
-
- SIXTH STEP
- RIGHT EFFORT
-
- WHAT, now, is Right Effort? There are Four Great Efforts: the effort
- to avoid, the effort to overcome, the effort to develop, and the
- effort to maintain.
- What, now, is the effort to avoid? There, the disciple incites his
- mind to avoid the arising of evil, demeritorious things that have
- not yet arisen; and he strives, puts forth his energy, strains his
- mind and struggles.
- Thus, when he perceives a form with the eye, a sound with the ear,
- an odor with the nose, a taste with the tongue, a contact with the
- body, or an object with the mind, he neither adheres to the whole, nor
- to its parts. And he strives to ward off that through which evil and
- demeritorious things, greed and sorrow, would arise, if he remained
- with unguarded senses; and he watches over his senses, restrains his
- senses.
- Possessed of this noble "Control over the Senses," he experiences
- inwardly a feeling of joy, into which no evil thing can enter. This is
- called the effort to avoid.
- What, now, is the effort to Overcome? There, the disciple incites
- his mind to overcome the evil, demeritorious things that have
- already arisen; and he strives, puts forth his energy, strains his
- mind and struggles.
- He does not retain any thought of sensual lust, ill-will, or
- grief, or any other evil and demeritorious states that may have
- arisen; he abandons them, dispels them, destroys them, causes them
- to disappear.
-
- FIVE METHODS OF EXPELLING EVIL THOUGHTS
-
- If, whilst regarding a certain object, there arise in the
- disciple, on account of it, evil and demeritorious thoughts
- connected with greed, anger and delusion, then the disciple should, by
- means of this object, gain another and wholesome object. Or, he should
- reflect on the misery of these thoughts: "Unwholesome, truly, are
- these thoughts! Blameable are these thoughts! Of painful result are
- these thoughts!" Or, he should pay no attention to these thoughts. Or,
- he should consider the compound nature of these thoughts. Or, with
- teeth clenched and tongue pressed against the gums, he should, with
- his mind, restrain, suppress and root out these thoughts; and in doing
- so, these evil and demeritorious thoughts of greed, anger and delusion
- will dissolve and disappear; and the mind will inwardly become settled
- and calm, composed and concentrated.
- This is called the effort to overcome.
- What, now, is the effort to Develop? There the disciple incites
- his will to arouse meritorious conditions that have not yet arisen;
- and he strives, puts forth his energy, strains his mind and struggles.
- Thus he develops the "Elements of Enlightenment," bent on
- solitude, on detachment, on extinction, and ending in deliverance,
- namely: Attentiveness, Investigation of the Law, Energy, Rapture,
- Tranquility, Concentration, and Equanimity. This is called the
- effort to develop.
- What, now, is the effort to Maintain? There, the disciple incites
- his will to maintain the meritorious conditions that have already
- arisen, and not to let them disappear, but to bring them to growth, to
- maturity and to the full perfection of development; and he strives,
- puts forth his energy, strains his mind and struggles.
- Thus, for example, he keeps firmly in his mind a favorable object of
- concentration that has arisen, as the mental image of a skeleton, of a
- corpse infested by worms, of a corpse blue-black in color, of a
- festering corpse, of a corpse riddled with holes, of a corpse
- swollen up.
- This is called the effort to maintain.
- Truly, the disciple who is possessed of faith and has penetrated the
- Teaching of the Master, he is filled with the thought: "May rather
- skin, sinews and bones wither away, may the flesh and blood of my body
- dry up: I shall not give up my efforts so long as I have not
- attained whatever is attainable by manly perseverance, energy and
- endeavor!"
- This is called right effort.
-
- The effort of Avoiding, Overcoming,
- Of Developing and Maintaining:
- These four great efforts have been shown
- By him, the scion of the sun.
- And he who firmly clings to them,
- May put an end to all the pain.
-
- SEVENTH STEP
- RIGHT ATTENTIVENESS
-
- WHAT, now, is Right Attentiveness? The only way that leads to the
- attainment of purity, to the overcoming of sorrow and lamentation,
- to the end of pain and grief, to the entering upon the right path
- and the realization of Nirvana, is the "Four Fundamentals of
- Attentiveness." And which are these four? In them, the disciple dwells
- in contemplation of the Body, in contemplation of Feeling, in
- contemplation of the Mind, in contemplation of the Mind-objects,
- ardent, clearly conscious and attentive, after putting away worldly
- greed and grief.
-
- CONTEMPLATION OF THE BODY
-
- But, how does the disciple dwell in contemplation of the body?
- There, the disciple retires to the forest, to the foot of a tree, or
- to a solitary place, sits himself down, with legs crossed, body erect,
- and with attentiveness fixed before him.
- With attentive mind he breathes in, with attentive mind he
- breathes out. When making a long inhalation, he knows: "I make a
- long inhalation"; when making a long exhalation, he knows: "I make a
- long exhalation." when making a short inhalation, he knows: "I make
- a short inhalation"; when making a short exhalation, he knows: "I make
- a short exhalation." "Clearly perceiving the entire [breath]-body, I
- will breathe in": thus he trains himself; "clearly perceiving the
- entire [breath]-body, I will breathe out": thus he trains himself.
- "Calming this bodily function, I will breathe n": thus he trains
- himself; "calming this bodily function, I will breathe out": thus he
- trains himself.
- Thus he dwells in contemplation of the body, either with regard to
- his own person, or to other persons, or to both. He beholds how the
- body arises; beholds how it passes away; beholds the arising and
- passing away of the body. "A body is there-
-
- "A body is there, but no living being, no individual, no woman,
- no man, no self, and nothing that belongs to a self; neither a
- person, nor anything belonging to a person"-
-
- this clear consciousness is present in him, because of his knowledge
- and mindfulness, and he lives independent, unattached to anything in
- the world. Thus does the disciple dwell in contemplation of the body.
- And further, whilst going, standing, sitting, or lying down, the
- disciple understands the expressions: "I go"; "I stand"; "I sit"; "I
- lie down"; he understands any position of the body.
- [The disciple understands that it is not a being, a real Ego, that
- goes, stands, etc., but that it is by a mere figure of speech that one
- says: "I go," "I stand," and so forth.]
- And further, the disciple is clearly conscious in his going and
- coming; clearly conscious in looking forward and backward; clearly
- conscious in bending and stretching; clearly conscious in eating,
- drinking, chewing, and tasting; clearly conscious in discharging
- excrement and urine; clearly conscious in walking, standing,
- sitting, falling asleep and awakening; clearly conscious in speaking
- and in keeping silent.
- "In all the disciple is doing, he is clearly conscious: of his
- intention, of his advantage, of his duty, of the reality."
- And further, the disciple contemplates this body from the sole of
- the foot upward, and from the top of the hair downward, with a skin
- stretched over it, and filled with manifold impurities: "This body
- consists of hairs, nails, teeth, skin, flesh, sinews, bones, marrow,
- kidneys, heart, liver, diaphragm, spleen, lungs, intestines, bowels,
- stomach, and excrement; of bile, phlegm, pus, blood, sweat, lymph,
- tears, semen, spittle, nasal mucus, oil of the joints, and urine."
- Just as if there were a sack, with openings at both ends, filled
- with all kinds of grain-with paddy, beans, sesamum and husked rice-and
- a man not blind opened it and examined its contents, thus: "That is
- paddy, these are beans, this is sesamum, this is husked rice": just so
- does the disciple investigate this body.
- And further, the disciple contemplates this body with regard to
- the elements: "This body consists of the solid element, the liquid
- element, the heating element and the vibrating element." Just as a
- skilled butcher or butcher's apprentice, who has slaughtered a cow and
- divided it into separate portions, should sit down at the junction
- of four highroads: just so does the disciple contemplate this body
- with regard to the elements.
- And further, just as if the disciple should see a corpse thrown into
- the burial-ground, one, two, or three days dead, swollen-up,
- blue-black in color, full of corruption he draws the conclusion as
- to his own body: "This my body also has this nature, has this destiny,
- and cannot escape it." And further, just as if the disciple should see
- a corpse thrown into the burial-ground, eaten by crows, hawks or
- vultures, by dogs or jackals, or gnawed by all kinds of worms-he draws
- the conclusion as to his own body: "This my body also has this nature,
- has this destiny, and cannot escape it."
- And further, just as if the disciple should see a corpse thrown into
- the burial-ground, a framework of bones, flesh hanging from it,
- bespattered with blood, held together by the sinews; a framework of
- bones, stripped of flesh, bespattered with blood, held together by the
- sinews; a framework of bones, without flesh and blood, but still
- held together by the sinews; bones, disconnected and scattered in
- all directions, here a bone of the hand, there a bone of the foot,
- there a shin bone, there a thigh bone, there the pelvis, there the
- spine, there the skull-he draws the conclusion as to his own body:
- "This my body also has this nature, has this destiny, and cannot
- escape it."
- And further, just as if the disciple should see bones lying in the
- burial ground, bleached and resembling shells; bones heaped
- together, after the lapse of years; bones weathered and crumbled to
- dust;-he draws the conclusion as to his own body: "This my body also
- has this nature, has this destiny, and cannot escape it "
- Thus he dwells in contemplation of the body, either with regard to
- his own person, or to other persons, or to both. He beholds how the
- body arises; beholds how it passes away; beholds the arising and
- passing of the body. "A body is there" this clear consciousness is
- present in him, because of his knowledge and mindfulness; and he lives
- independent, unattached to anything in the world. Thus does the
- disciple dwell in contemplation of the body.
-
- THE TEN BLESSINGS
-
- Once the contemplation of the body is practiced, developed, often
- repeated, has become one's habit, one's foundation, is firmly
- established, strengthened and well perfected, one may expect ten
- blessings:
- Over Delight and Discontent one has mastery; one does not allow
- himself to be overcome by discontent; one subdues it, as soon as it
- arises. One conquers Fear and Anxiety; one does not allow himself to
- be overcome by fear and anxiety; one subdues them, as soon as they
- arise. One endures cold and heat, hunger and thirst, wind and sun,
- attacks by gadflies, mosquitoes and reptiles; patiently one endures
- wicked and malicious speech, as well as bodily pains, that befall one,
- though they be piercing, sharp, bitter, unpleasant, disagreeable and
- dangerous to life. The four "Trances," the mind bestowing happiness
- even here: these one may enjoy at will, without difficulty, without
- effort.
- One may enjoy the different "Magical Powers." With the "Heavenly
- Ear," the purified, the super-human, one may hear both kinds of
- sounds, the heavenly and the earthly, the distant and the near. With
- the mind one may obtain "Insight into the Hearts of Other Beings of
- other persons. One may obtain "Remembrance of many Previous Births."
- With the "Heavenly Eye," the purified, the super-human, one may see
- beings vanish and reappear, the base and the noble, the beautiful
- and the ugly, the happy and the unfortunate; one may perceive how
- beings are reborn according to their deeds.
- One may, through the "Cessation of Passions," come to know for
- oneself, even in this life, the stainless deliverance of mind, the
- deliverance through wisdom.
-
- CONTEMPLATION OF THE FEELINGS
-
- But how does the disciple dwell in contemplation of the feelings?
- In experiencing feelings, the disciple knows: "I have an indifferent
- agreeable feeling," or "I have a disagreeable feeling," or "I have
- an indifferent feeling," or "I have a worldly agreeable feeling," or
- "I have an unworldly agreeable feeling," or "I have a worldly
- disagreeable feeling," or "I have an unworldly disagreeable
- feeling," or "I have a worldly indifferent feeling," or have an
- unworldly indifferent feeling.
- Thus he dwells in contemplation of the feelings, either with
- regard to his own person, or to other persons, or to both. He
- beholds how the feelings arise; beholds how they pass away; beholds
- the arising and passing away of the feelings. "Feelings are there":
- this clear consciousness is present in him, because of his knowledge
- and mindfulness; and he lives independent, unattached to anything in
- the world. Thus does the disciple dwell in contemplation of the
- feelings.
- [The disciple understands that the expression "I feel" has no
- validity except as an expression of common speech; he understands
- that, in the absolute sense, there are only feelings, and that there
- is no Ego, no person, no experience of the feelings.]
-
- CONTEMPLATION OF THE MIND
-
- But how does the disciple dwell in contemplation of the mind? The
- disciple knows the greedy mind as greedy, and the not greedy mind as
- not greedy; knows the angry mind as angry, and the not angry mind as
- not angry; knows the deluded mind as deluded, and the undeluded mind
- as undeluded. He knows the cramped mind as cramped, and the
- scattered mind as scattered; knows the developed mind as developed,
- and the undeveloped mind as undeveloped; knows the surpassable mind as
- surpassable, and the unsurpassable mind as unsurpassable; knows the
- concentrated mind as concentrated, and the unconcentrated mind as
- unconcentrated; knows the freed mind as freed, and the unfreed mind as
- unfreed.
- ["Mind" is here used as a collective for the moments of
- consciousness. Being identical with consciousness, it should not be
- translated by "thought." "Thought" and "thinking" correspond rather to
- the so-called "verbal operations of the mind"; they are not, like
- consciousness, of primary, but of secondary nature, and are entirely
- absent in all sensuous consciousness, as well as in the second,
- third and fourth Trances. (See eighth step).]
- Thus he dwells in contemplation of the mind, either with regard to
- his own person, or to other persons, or to both. He beholds how
- consciousness arises; beholds how it passes away; beholds the
- arising and passing away of consciousness. "Mind is there"; this clear
- consciousness is present in him, because of his knowledge and
- mindfulness; and he lives independent, unattached to anything in the
- world. Thus does the disciple dwell in contemplation of the mind.
-
- CONTEMPLATION OF PHENOMENA (Mind-objects)
-
- But how does the disciple dwell in contemplation of the phenomena?
- First, the disciple dwells in contemplation of the phenomen, of the
- "Five Hindrances."
- He knows when there is "Lust" in him: "In me is lust"; knows when
- there is "Anger" in him: "In me is anger"; knows when there is "Torpor
- and Drowsiness" in him: "In me is torpor and drowsiness"; knows when
- there is "Restlessness and Mental Worry" in him: "In me is
- restlessness and mental worry"; knows when there are "Doubts" in
- him: "In me are doubts." He knows when these hindrances are not in
- him: "In me these hindrances are not." He knows how they come to
- arise; knows how, once arisen, they are overcome; knows how, once
- overcome, they do not rise again in the future.
- [For example, Lust arises through unwise thinking on the agreeable
- and delightful. it may be suppressed by the following six methods:
- fixing the mind upon an idea that arouses disgust; contemplation of
- the loathsomeness of the body; controlling one's six senses;
- moderation in eating; friendship with wise and good men; right
- instruction. Lust is forever extinguished upon entrance into
- Anagamiship; Restlessness is extinguished by reaching Arahatship;
- Mental Worry, by reaching Sotapanship.]
- And further: the disciple dwells in contemplation of the
- phenomena, of the five Groups of Existence. He knows what Corporeality
- is, how it arises, how it passes away; knows what Feeling is, how it
- arises, how it away; knows what Perception is, how it arises, how it
- passes away; knows what the Mental Formations are, how they arise, how
- they pass away; knows what Consciousness is, how it arises, how it
- passes away.
- And further: the disciple dwells in contemplation of the phenomena
- of the six Subjective-Objective Sense-Bases. He knows eye and visual
- objects, ear and sounds, nose and odors, tongue and tastes, body and
- touches, mind and mind objects; and the fetter that arises in
- dependence on them, he also knows. He knows how the fetter comes to
- arise, knows how the fetter is overcome, and how the abandoned
- fetter does not rise again in future.
- And further: the disciple dwells in contemplation of the phenomena
- of the seven Elements of Enlightenment. The disciple knows when
- there is Attentiveness in him; when there is Investigation of the
- Law in him; when there is Energy in him; when there is Enthusiasm in
- him; when there is Tranquility in him; when there is Concentration
- in him; when there is Equanimity in him. He knows when it is not in
- him, knows how it comes to arise, and how it is fully developed.
- And further: the disciple dwells in contemplation of the phenomena
- of the Four Noble Truths. He knows according to reality, what
- Suffering is; knows according to reality, what the Origin of Suffering
- is; knows according to reality, what the Extinction of Suffering is;
- knows according to reality, what the Path is that leads to the
- Extinction of Suffering.
- Thus he dwells in contemplation of the phenomena, either with regard
- to his own person, or to other persons, or to both. He beholds how the
- phenomena arise; beholds how they pass away; beholds the arising and
- passing away of the phenomena. "Phenomena are there this consciousness
- is present in him because of his knowledge and mindfulness; and he
- lives independent, unattached to anything in the world. Thus does
- the disciple dwell in contemplation of the phenomena.
- The only way that leads to the attainment of purity, to the
- overcoming of sorrow and lamentation, to the end of pain and grief, to
- the entering upon the right path, and the realization of Nirvana, is
- these four fundamentals of attentiveness.
-
- NIRVANA THROUGH WATCHING OVER BREATHING
-
- "Watching over In-and Out-breathing" practiced and developed, brings
- the four Fundamentals of Attentiveness to perfection; the four
- fundamentals of attentiveness, practiced and developed bring the seven
- Elements of Enlightenment to perfection; the seven elements of
- enlightenment, practiced and developed, bring Wisdom and Deliverance
- to perfection.
- But how does Watching over In-and Out-breathing, practiced and
- developed, bring the four Fundamentals of Attentiveness to perfection?
- I. Whenever the disciple is conscious in making a long inhalation or
- exhalation, or in making a short inhalation or exhalation, or is
- training himself to inhale or exhale whilst feeling the whole
- [breath]-body, or whilst calming down this bodily function-at such
- a time the disciple is dwelling in "contemplation of the body," of
- energy, clearly conscious, attentive, after subduing worldly greed and
- grief. For, inhalation and exhalation I call one amongst the corporeal
- phenomena.
- II. Whenever the disciple is training himself to inhale or exhale
- whilst feeling rapture, or joy, or the mental functions, or whilst
- calming down the mental functions-at such a time he is dwelling in
- "contemplation of the feelings," full of energy, clearly conscious,
- attentive, after subduing worldly greed and grief. For, the full
- awareness of in-and outbreathing I call one amongst the feelings.
- III. Whenever the disciple is training himself to inhale or exhale
- whilst feeling the mind, or whilst gladdening the mind or whilst
- concentrating the mind, or whilst setting the mind free-at such a time
- he is dwelling in "contemplation of the mind," full of energy, clearly
- conscious, attentive, after subduing worldly greed and grief. For,
- without attentiveness and clear consciousness, I say, there is no
- Watching over in-and Out-breathing.
- IV. Whenever the disciple is training himself to inhale or exhale
- whilst contemplating impermanence, or the fading away of passion, or
- extinction, or detachment at such a time he is dwelling in
- "contemplation of the phenomena," full of energy, clearly conscious,
- attentive, after subduing worldly greed and grief.
- Watching over In-and Out-breathing, thus practiced and developed,
- brings the four Fundamentals of Attentiveness to perfection.
- But how do the four Fundamentals of Attentiveness, practiced and
- developed, bring the seven Elements of Enlightenment to full
- perfection?
- Whenever the disciple is dwelling in contemplation of body, feeling,
- mind and phenomena, strenuous, clearly conscious, attentive, after
- subduing worldly greed and grief-at such a time his attentiveness is
- undisturbed; and whenever his attentiveness is present and
- undisturbed, at such a time he has gained and is developing the
- Element of Enlightenment "Attentiveness"; and thus this element of
- enlightenment reaches fullest perfection.
- And whenever, whilst dwelling with attentive mind, he wisely
- investigates, examines and thinks over the Law-at such a time he has
- gained and is developing the Element of Enlightenment "Investigation
- of the Law"; and thus this element of enlightenment reaches fullest
- perfection.
- And whenever, whilst wisely investigating, examining and thinking
- over the law, his energy is firm and unshaken-at such a time he has
- gained and is developing the Element of Enlightenment "Energy"; and
- thus this element of enlightenment reaches fullest perfection.
- And whenever in him, whilst firm in energy, arises supersensuous
- rapture-at such a time he has gained and is developing the Element
- of Enlightenment "Rapture"; and thus this element of enlightenment
- reaches fullest perfection.
- And whenever, whilst enraptured in mind, his spiritual frame and his
- mind become tranquil-at such a time he has gained and is developing
- the Element of Enlightenment "Tranquility"; and thus this element of
- enlightenment reaches fullest perfection.
- And whenever, whilst being tranquilized in his spiritual frame and
- happy, his mind becomes concentrated-at such a time he has gained
- and is developing the Element of Enlightenment "Concentration; and
- thus this element of enlightenment reaches fullest perfection.
- And whenever he thoroughly looks with indifference on his mind
- thus concentrated-at such a time he has gained and is developing the
- Element of Enlightenment "Equanimity."
- The four fundamentals of attentiveness, thus practiced and
- developed, bring the seven elements of enlightenment to full
- perfection.
- But how do the seven elements of enlightenment, practiced and
- developed, bring Wisdom and Deliverance to full perfection?
- There, the disciple is developing the elements of enlightenment:
- Attentiveness, Investigation of the Law, Energy, Rapture, Tranquility,
- Concentration and Equanimity, bent on detachment, on absence of
- desire, on extinction and renunciation.
- Thus practiced and developed, do the seven elements of enlightenment
- bring wisdom and deliverance to full perfection.
- Just as the elephant hunter drives a huge stake into the ground
- and chains the wild elephant to it by the neck, in order to drive
- out of him his wonted forest ways and wishes, his forest unruliness,
- obstinacy and violence, and to accustom him to the environment of
- the village, and to teach him such good behavior as is required
- amongst men: in like manner also has the noble disciple to fix his
- mind firmly to these four fundamentals of attentiveness, so that he
- may drive out of himself his wonted worldly ways and wishes, his
- wonted worldly unruliness, obstinacy and violence, and win to the
- True, and realize Nirvana.
- EIGHTH STEP
- RIGHT CONCENTRATION
-
- WHAT, now, is Right Concentration? Fixing the mind to a single
- object ("One-pointedness of mind"): this is concentration.
- The four Fundamentals of Attentiveness (seventh step): these are
- the objects of concentration.
- The four Great Efforts (sixth step): these are the requisites
- for concentration.
- The practicing, developing and cultivating of these things: this
- is the "Development" of concentration.
- [Right Concentration has two degrees of development: 1.
- "Neighborhood-Concentration," which approaches the first trance,
- without however attaining it; 2. "Attainment Concentration," which
- is the concentration present in the four trances. The attainment of
- the trances, however, is not a requisite for the realization of the
- Four Ultramundane Paths of Holiness; and neither
- Neighborhood-Concentration nor Attainment-Concentration, as such, in
- any way possesses the power of conferring entry into the Four
- Ultramundane Paths; hence, in them is really no power to free
- oneself permanently from evil things. The realization of the Four
- Ultramundane Paths is possible only at the moment of insight into
- the impermanency, miserable nature, and impersonality of phenomenal
- process of existence. This insight is attainable only during
- Neighborhood-Concentration, not during Attainment-Concentration.
- He who has realized one or other of the Four Ultramundane Paths
- without ever having attained the Trances, is called a "Dry-visioned
- One," or one whose passions are "dried up by Insight." He, however,
- who after cultivating the Trances has reached one of the
- Ultramundane Paths, is called "one who has taken tranquility as his
- vehicle."]
-
- THE FOUR TRANCES
-
- Detached from sensual objects, detached from unwholesome things, the
- disciple enters into the first trance, which is accompanied by "Verbal
- Though," and "Rumination," is born of "Detachment," and filled with
- "Rapture," and "Happiness."
- This first trance is free from five things, and five things are
- present. When the disciple enters the first trance, there have
- vanished [the 5 Hindrances]: Lust, Ill-will, Torpor and Dullness,
- Restlessness and Mental Worry, Doubts; and there are present: Verbal
- Thought, Rumination, Rapture, Happiness, and Concentration.
- And further: after the subsiding of verbal thought and rumination,
- and by the gaining of inward tranquility and oneness of mind, he
- enters into a state free from verbal thought and rumination, the
- second trance, which is born of Concentration, and filled with Rapture
- and Happiness.
- And further: after the fading away of rapture, he dwells in
- equanimity, attentive, clearly conscious; and he experiences in his
- person that feeling, of which the Noble Ones say: "Happy lives the man
- of equanimity and attentive mind"-thus he enters the third trance.
- And further: after the giving up of pleasure and pain, and through
- the disappearance of previous joy and grief, he enters into a state
- beyond pleasure and pain, into the fourth trance, which is purified by
- equanimity and attentiveness.
- [The four Trances may be obtained by means of Watching over In-and
- Out-breathing, as well as through the fourth sublime meditation, the
- "Meditation of Equanimity," and others.
- The three other Sublime Meditations of "Loving Kindness,"
- "Compassion", and "Sympathetic Joy" may lead to the attainment of
- the first three Trances. The "Cemetery Meditations," as well as the
- meditation "On Loathsomeness," will produce only the First Trance.
- The "Analysis of the Body," and the Contemplation on the Buddha, the
- Law, the Holy Brotherhood, Morality, etc., will only produce
- Neighborhood-Concentration.]
- Develop your concentration: for he who has concentration understands
- things according to their reality. And what are these things? The
- arising and passing away of corporeality, of feeling, perception,
- mental formations and consciousness.
- Thus, these five Groups of Existence must be wisely penetrated;
- Delusion and Craving must be wisely abandoned; Tranquility and Insight
- must be wisely developed.
- This is the Middle Path which the Perfect One has discovered,
- which makes one both to see and to know, and which leads to peace,
- to discernment, to enlightenment, to Nirvana.
- And following upon this path, you will put an end to suffering.
-
- DEVELOPMENT OF THE EIGHTFOLD PATH IN THE DISCIPLE
-
- CONFIDENCE AND RIGHT-MINDEDNESS (2nd Step)
-
- SUPPOSE a householder, or his son, or someone reborn in any
- family, hears the law; and after hearing the law he is filled with
- confidence in the Perfect One. And filled with this confidence, he
- thinks: "Full of hindrances is household life, a refuse heap; but
- pilgrim life is like the open air. Not easy is it, when one lives at
- home, to fulfill in all points the rules of the holy life. How, if now
- I were to cut off hair and beard, put on the yellow robe and go
- forth from home to the homeless life?" And in a short time, having
- given up his more or less extensive possessions, having forsaken a
- smaller or larger circle of relations, he cuts off hair and beard,
- puts on the yellow robe, and goes forth from home to the homeless
- life.
-
- MORALITY (3rd, 4th, 5th Step)
-
- Having thus left the world, he fulfills the rules of the monks. He
- avoids the killing of living beings and abstains from it. Without
- stick or sword, conscientious, full of sympathy, he is anxious for the
- welfare of all living beings.-He avoids stealing, and abstains from
- taking what is not given to him. Only what is given to him he takes,
- waiting till it is given; and he lives with a heart honest and
- pure.-He avoids unchastity, living chaste, resigned, and keeping aloof
- from sexual intercourse, the vulgar way.-He avoids lying and
- abstains from it. He speaks the truth, is devoted to the truth,
- reliable, worthy of confidence, is not a deceiver of men.-He avoids
- tale-bearing and abstains from it. What he has heard here, he does not
- repeat there, so as to cause dissension there; and what he has heard
- there, he does not repeat here, so as to cause dissension here. Thus
- he unites those that are divided, and those that are united he
- encourages; concord gladdens him, he delights and rejoices in concord,
- and it is concord that he spreads by his words.-He avoids harsh
- language and abstains from it. He speaks such words as are gentle,
- soothing to the ear, loving, going to the heart, courteous and dear,
- and agreeable to many.- He avoids vain talk and abstains from it. He
- speaks at the right time, in accordance with facts, speaks what is
- useful, speaks about the law and the disciple; his speech is like a
- treasure, at the right moment accompanied by arguments, moderate,
- and full of sense.
- He keeps aloof from dance, song, music and the visiting of shows;
- rejects flowers, perfumes, ointments, as well as every kind of
- adornment and embellishment. High and gorgeous beds he does not use.
- Gold and silver he does not accept. Raw corn and meat he does not
- accept. Women and girls he does not accept. He owns no male and female
- slaves, owns no goats, sheep, fowls, pigs, elephants, cows or
- horses, no land and goods. He does not go on errands and do the duties
- of a messenger. He keeps aloof from buying and selling things. He
- has nothing to do with false measures, metals and weights. He avoids
- the crooked ways of bribery, deception and fraud. He keeps aloof
- from stabbing, beating, chaining, attacking, plundering and
- oppressing.
- He contents himself with the robe that protects his body, and with
- the alms with which he keeps himself alive. Wherever he goes, he is
- provided with these two things; just as a winged bird, in flying,
- carries his wings along with him. By fulfilling this noble Domain of
- Morality he feels in his heart an irreproachable happiness.
-
- CONTROL OF THE SENSES (6th Step)
-
- Now, in perceiving a form with the eye- a sound with the ear- an
- odor with the nose- a taste with the tongue- a touch with the body- an
- object with his mind, he sticks neither to the whole, nor to its
- details. And he tries to ward off that which, by being unguarded in
- his senses, might give rise to evil and unwholesome states, to greed
- and sorrow; he watches over his senses, keep his senses under control.
- By practicing this noble "Control of the Senses" he feels in his heart
- an unblemished happiness.
-
- ATTENTIVENESS AND CLEAR CONSCIOUSNESS (7th Step)
-
- Clearly conscious is he in his going and coming; clearly conscious
- in looking forward and backward; clearly conscious in bending and
- stretching his body; clearly conscious in eating, drinking, chewing
- and tasting; dearly conscious in discharging excrement and urine;
- clearly conscious in walking, standing, sitting, falling asleep and
- awakening; clearly conscious in speaking and keeping silent.
- Now, being equipped with this lofty Morality, equipped with this
- noble Control of the Senses, and filled with this noble "Attentiveness
- and Clear Consciousness, he chooses a secluded dwelling in the forest,
- at the foot of a tree, on a mountain, in a cleft, in a rock cave, on a
- burial ground, on a woody table-land, in the open air, or on a heap of
- straw. Having returned from his alms-round, after the meal, he sits
- himself down with legs crossed, body erect, with attentiveness fixed
- before him.
-
- ABSENCE OF THE FIVE HINDRANCES
-
- He has cast away Lust; he dwells with a heart free from lust; from
- lust he cleanses his heart.
- He has cast away Ill-will; he dwells with a heart free from
- ill-will; cherishing love and compassion toward all living beings,
- he cleanses his heart from ill-will.
- He has cast away Torpor and Dullness; he dwells free from torpor and
- dullness; loving the light, with watchful mind, with clear
- consciousness, he cleanses his mind from torpor and dullness.
- He has cast away Restlessness and Mental Worry; dwelling with mind
- undisturbed, with heart full of peace, he cleanses his mind from
- restlessness and mental worry.
- He has cast away Doubt; dwelling free from doubt, full of confidence
- in the good, he cleanses his heart from doubt.
-
- THE TRANCES (8th Step)
-
- He has put aside these five Hindrances and come to know the
- paralyzing corruptions of the mind. And far from sensual
- impressions, far from unwholesome things, he enters into the Four
- Trances.
-
- INSIGHT (1st Step)
-
- But whatsoever there is of feeling, perception, mental formation, or
- consciousness-all these phenomena he regards as "impermanent,"
- "subject to pain," as infirm, as an ulcer, a thorn, a misery, a
- burden, an enemy, a disturbance, as empty and "void of an Ego"; and
- turning away from these things, he directs his mind towards the
- abiding, thus: "This, verily, is the Peace, this is the Highest,
- namely the end of all formations, the forsaking of every substratum of
- rebirth, the fading away of craving; detachment, extinction: Nirvana."
- And in this state he reaches the "Cessation of Passions."
-
- NIRVANA
-
- And his heart becomes free from sensual passion, free from the
- passion for existence, free from the passion of ignorance. "Freed am
- I!": this knowledge arises in the liberated one; and he knows:
- "Exhausted is rebirth, fulfilled the Holy Life; what was to be done,
- has been done; naught remains more for this world to do."
-
- Forever am I liberated,
- This is the last time that I'm born,
- No new existence waits for me.
-
- This, verily, is the highest, holiest wisdom: to know that all
- suffering has passed away.
- This, verily, is the highest, holiest peace: appeasement of greed,
- hatred and delusion.
-
- THE SILENT THINKER
-
- "I am" is a vain thought; "I am not" a vain thought; "I shall be" is
- a vain thought; "I shall not be" is a vain thought. Vain thoughts
- are a sickness, an ulcer, a thorn. But after overcoming all vain
- thoughts, one is called silent thinker." And the thinker, the Silent
- One, does no more arise, no more pass away, no more tremble, no more
- desire. For there is nothing in him that he should arise again. And as
- he arises no more, how should he grow old again? And as he grows no
- more old, how should he die again? And as he dies no more, how
- should he tremble? And as he trembles no more, how should he have
- desire?
-
- THE TRUE GOAL
-
- Hence, the purpose of the Holy Life does not consist in acquiring
- alms, honor, or fame, nor in gaining morality, concentration, or the
- eye of knowledge. That unshakable deliverance of the heart: that,
- verily, is the object of the Holy Life, that is its essence, that is
- its goal.
- And those, who formerly, in the past, were Holy and Enlightened
- Ones, those Blessed Ones also have pointed out to their disciples this
- self-same goal, as has been pointed out by me to my disciples. And
- those, who afterwards, in the future, will be Holy and Enlightened
- Ones, those Blessed Ones also will point out to their disciples this
- self-same goal, as has been pointed out by me to my disciples.
- However, Disciples, it may be that (after my passing away) you
- might think: "Gone is the doctrine of our Master. We have no Master
- more." But you should not think; for the Law and the Discipline, which
- I have taught you, Will, after my death, be your master.
-
- The Law be your light,
- The Law be your refuge!
- Do not look for any other refuge!
-
- Disciples, the doctrines, which I advised you to penetrate, you
- should well preserve, well guard, so that this Holy Life may take
- its course and continue for ages, for the weal and welfare of the
- many, as a consolation to the world, for the happiness, weal and
- welfare of heavenly beings and men.
- THE END
-