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III. The Noble Truth Of The Extinction Of
Suffering
D.22
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 abandonment, 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.
S.
XII. 66
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 (anicca), miserable (dukkha), and
without a self (anattaa), as diseases and cankers, it is he who overcomes
craving.
Dependent Extinction Of All
Phenomena
S.
XII. 43
And through the total fading away and
extinction of Craving (ta.nhaa), Clinging (upaadaana) is extinguished;
through the extinction of clinging, the Process of Becoming (bhava) is
extinguished; through the extinction of the (karmic) process of becoming,
Rebirth (jaati) 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.
S.
XXII. 30
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 a
wave-and which in the ignorant spectator creates the illusion of one and
the same mass of water moving over the surface of the lake-is produced
and fed by the wind, and maintained by the stored-up energies. Now,
after the wind has ceased, and if no fresh wind again whips up the water
of the lake, the stored-up energies will gradually be consumed, and thus
the whole undulatory motion will come to an end. Similarly, if fire does
not get new fuel, it will, after consuming all the old fuel, become
extinct.
Just in the same way 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 (ta.nhaa), and maintained for some time by means of the
stored-up life energies. Now, after the fuel (upaadaana), i.e. the
craving and clinging to life, has ceased, and if 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, Nibbaana, or 'Extinction'
(Sanskrit: nirvaana; from nir +root vaa to cease blowing, become
extinct) may be considered under two aspects, namely as:
1. 'Extinction of Impurities'
(kilesa-parinibbaana), reached at the attainment of Arahatship, or
Holiness, which generally takes place during life-time; in the Suttas it
is called 'saupaadisesa-nibbaana', i.e. 'Nibbaana with the Groups of
Existence still remaining'.
2. 'Extinction of the
Five-Khandha-process' (khandha-parinibbaana), which takes place at the
death of the Arahat, called in the Suttas: 'an-upaadisesa-nibbaana' i.e.
'Nibbaana without the Groups remaining'.
NIBBAANA
A.
III. 32
This, truly, is Peace, this is the
Highest, namely the end of all Karma formations, the forsaking of every
substratum of rebirth, the fading away of craving. detachment, extinction,
Nibbaana.
A.
III. 55
Enraptured with lust, enraged with anger,
blinded by delusion, overwhelmed, with mind ensnared, man aims at his own
ruin, at the ruin of others, at the ruin of both, 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 the ruin of others, nor at the ruin
of both and he experiences no mental pain and grief. Thus is Nibbaana
immediate, visible in this life, inviting, attractive, and comprehensible
to the wise.
S.XXXVIII.1
The extinction of greed, the extinction of
hate, the extinction of delusion: this, indeed, is called Nibbaana.
The Arahat, Or Holy
One
A.
VI. 55
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 a one to waver. Steadfast is his mind, gained is
deliverance.
Snp.
1048
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
Ud.
VIII. 1
Truly, 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.
Ud.
VIII. 3
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.
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