March 6-8. 1987
Beginner's
Retreat
A Brief
Sketch of the Life of the Buddha
This is a beginner's retreat.
I know most of you are not beginners, but I will regard you all as complete
beginners. Most of today will be spent with study. Until 7:00pm I will be
giving talks. So I have prepared the notes for you. When you listen to me,
please refer to these notes.
During this retreat we are
going to practice loving-kindness and VipassanA
meditation. VipassanA meditation especially could
be found only during the time of the Buddha and when his teachings are
available. VipassanA is a distinct type of
meditation found only in Buddhism. Since you are going to practice VipassanA
meditation, it is proper that you know something about the person who
discovered this method of meditation and taught it to the world. The person who
discovered this type of meditation was the Buddha. We will begin with a brief account
of the life of the Buddha.
I will give some important
dates to begin with. The Buddha was born on the full moon day in May of 624
B.C. In some books it says 623 B.C., but one year of difference is not much.
How do we get dates like 624 B.C. and so on? In our countries especially
Myanmar, SrI Lanka and Thailand we have an unbroken
tradition. We celebrate every year the full moon day of May as the day the
Buddha was born, gained enlightenment and died. So I think it is fairly reliable
with regard to these dates.
However western scholars
reckon in a different way. They give some years later than the years given
here. But I don't think it need bother us because there may be some difference
in calculating. It remains a fact that the Buddha was a historical person and
he was born more than 600 years before the Christian era.
How did we get the dates? In
1956 Buddhists from all over the world celebrated the 2500th year of the death
of the Buddha. So 1956 was the 2500th year after the death of the Buddha. If we
subtract 1956 from 2500 we get 544. That is the year Buddha died. The Buddha
lived for eighty years. If we add eighty to 544 we get 624 B.C. So Buddha was born
on the full moon day of May in 624 B.C.
He was born in a place called
Kapilavatthu. It is on the border of Nepal. Maybe some of you have visited that
place. If you have been to India, you may have gone there. It is just across
the border of India in Nepal. The place was just called Kapilavatthu. At that
time there was no India. There was no Nepal at the time of the Buddha. There
was Jambudipa, the continent of the rose-apples. Buddha was born in the kingdom
of Kapilavatthu which is on the border of present day Nepal.
The Buddha's parents were King
Suddhodana and Queen MahA-MAyA. So
he was born as a prince. King Suffhodana and Queen MahA-MAyA
were reigning at that time in the kingdom of Kapilavatthu. Perhaps in those
days they thought these kingdoms to be large. Under present conditions they are
like districts or a state in this country. King Suddhodana and Queen MahA-MAyA
were the parents of the Buddha.
He was not yet called the
Buddha at that time. His name was Siddhattha Gotama. Gotama was his clan name.
Siddhattha was his personal name. He was given the name Siddhattha Gotama.
A few days after his birth on
the day when he was given this name the king invited Brahmins to read the signs
of the child and to give predictions. Seven of them said this boy would become
either a universal monarch or a Buddha. One of them, the youngest of them said,
"No, he will definitely become a Buddha." A person with such signs
(They are called signs of a super man.) will not stay in the household life. He
will eventually leave household life and become a Buddha. This Brahmin's
prediction was true.
An important incident occurred
during the Buddha's infancy at the king's ploughing ceremony. People in those
days were mostly farmers. In order to promote cultivation the king had a ploughing
ceremony every year. The king would take a plough and do ploughing for some
time in a ceremonial way. Many people gathered to see the king and also the
ministers plough.
At that time the king left the
infant son with the nurses under a tree. The nurses wanted also to go see the
ceremony. So they left the prince under the tree which was surrounded by
gardens. They wanted to see the ceremony. After some time they remembered the
baby and went back to him. When they went back the baby was no longer lying down
but was sitting and meditating.
It may seem impossible, but
everything is possible for such very gifted persons. Even in the west there
have been people who could compose very complicated music at the age of four.
So it is not impossible even though the infant may have not been a year old at
the time. If the king had to leave the child with nurses, it means the baby was
not more than a year old.
When the prince did not see
anyone around him, he just sat up and began to practice meditation, breathing
meditation. It is said in our books that he attained the first absorption. the
first JhAna. He was in the first JhAna
when the nurses came back. The nurses were surprised and reported to the king.
When the king came and saw his son sitting in meditation, he bowed down to his
son. This is an important incident because the remembrance of this incident was
a turning point in the Bodhisatta's struggle for enlightenment in the forest.
Following the custom of that
time Siddhattha was married at the age of sixteen to Princess YasodhAra
of the same age. He enjoyed the life of a prince for thirteen years.
Then in his 29th year he saw
four great signs. They are also important in his life. He saw them when going
to a pleasure garden. He occasionally went to the pleasure garden. One day when
he went to the pleasure garden, he saw an old man. It is said in the books that
these signs were shown by the gods. When he saw the old man, he asked the driver
of the chariot what it was. The driver said it was an old man. It is said that
the prince had never seen an old man before. So he asked if he would become old
like this man. The driver said yes that he would become old like that man. The
prince was dispassioned or disgusted with this. So he returned to the palace.
Next time when he went out, he
saw a sick man. He was sick and he could not carry his own weight. The same
questions and answers followed.
The third time he saw a dead
man. These three signs taught him the realities of life. Although life at the
palace may be pleasurable, with little suffering, when he saw these three
signs, he realized that there was so much suffering in the world and that
nobody could escape age, disease and death. So he was not happy with his life
at the palace.
The fourth time he went out he
saw a recluse or a monk perhaps sitting under a tree, sitting there meditating.
When he saw the monk, he was very pleased with him. He wanted to become one
himself. So he decided to leave the palace. He decided to leave all behind so
he could become a monk and practice meditation and find a way to end all
suffering.
When he went back to the
palace, the birth of his son was reported to him. The son, later named Rahula,
was born in the l3th year of his marriage that is when he was 29. But the Bodhisatta
was not happy at the good news of the birth of his son. The first thing he said
upon hearing of the birth was: “A bondage has been born.” He thought, “It is another
bondage for me. I will not be able to get out if I stay any longer. A son is a
strong bondage.”
The PAli
word for bondage is Rahu. Rahu was the name of a demon. That demon was supposed
to take hold of the moon every now and then. We call such a thing an eclipse
now. Eclipses were interpreted as the demon Rahu taking hold of the moon. Rahu
means bondage.
That is why Siddhattha's
father named the infant Rahula. He asked the men what the prince said when he
heard of his son's birth. They reported that the prince had said Rahu has been
born. Therefore the grandfather gave the name Rahula to the grandson.
So a son had been born to him,
but he was not happy. On that very night he left all. He left his parents. He
left his son. He left his wife. He left his country. He left everything. It is
called the great renunciation. This great renunciation took place on the full
moon of July in 595 B.C. with only one man, the driver of the chariot. They rode
all night on a horse until they reached a river. After reaching the river, the
Bodhisatta changed himself into a monk or recluse and sent the driver back to
the city.
After becoming a recluse, he
tried to find a way to get out of this suffering. He approached one teacher.
That teacher was able to teach him a very high form of absorption, JhAna. He
was soon able to get that JhAna, but he found it could not
lead to freedom from suffering.
So he left that teacher and
went to another teacher who was able to teach him a step higher. But that JhAna
was also found to be defective because it also would not lead him to final
deliverance from suffering.
So he left the second teacher.
He was on his own after that. He practiced many types of meditation practices
popular at that time. Mostly in those days the recluses thought if you inflict
pain on your physical body, you will be able to dry up the defilements, dry …………..
in your mind. Austerities were the popular practice of that time.
So the Bodhisatta practiced
these austerities for six years. He himself after becoming the Buddha related
how he practiced. Sometimes he stopped breathing and felt great pain in the
body and the head. Also he thought going for food was a waste of time. He
reduced eating little by little until he was eating only about a handfull of
pea soup each day. Sometimes he did not eat even that much. He became very thin
and his skin became black. For six years he practiced these austerities, but he
did not get any nearer to his goal.
One day he thought to himself,
"I have been practicing this for so many years and nobody can practice
more than I have either in the past, in the future or at the present time.
Perhaps I am not practicing the right way." So he reviewed his practice
and had some doubts about the correctness of his practice. Then the remembrance
of that incident as an infant came to his mind. So he remembered when he was a
child, and the time he practiced breathing meditation and entered JhAna.
He remembered how it was so peaceful, how it was so calm at that time, how he
was so happy at that time. He remembered this and thought that might be the
right way.
Later on he decided it was the
right way and he would practice this kind of meditation. But at that time his
body was very weak. He was just skin and bones. So he decided to eat food
again.
At that time there were five
recluses attending upon him with the expectation that he would become the
Buddha and that they would gain the benefits from his Buddhahood. These five
recluses were the Brahmins that had predicted he would become the Buddha. So
they were disgusted with him because they thought taking food was a luxury. So
they left the Buddha-to-be and went to another place. Siddhattha was left alone, but he was not depressed. He began taking
food. When he gained enough strength to practice meditation again, he approached
what is now known as the Bodhi Tree. He went to the tree and sat down under the
Bodhi tree and practiced meditation. That tree came to be known as the Bodhi
Tree. Bodhi means enlightenment. It is called Bodhi Tree because the Buddha
became enlightened under that tree.
After approaching the Bodhi
Tree he sat down and made a resolution: “I will not break this sitting until I
become the Buddha.” He made a great firm resolution. He practiced breathing
meditation again. He reached first JhAna.
Then he reached second JhAna, third JhAna
and fourth JhAna. He also reached the other JhAnas
in succession. There are eight or nine JhAnas.
During the first watch of the
night he gained the supernormal knowledge of remembering his past lives. During
that time he could remember all his past lives.
Then he carried on meditating.
During the second watch of the night, some time around midnight, he gained
another kind of supernormal knowledge by which he could see beings dying in one
life and being reborn in another life. When he saw beings dying here and being
reborn there, and when he saw this being did good things in this life and was reborn
in a better life, or this being did bad things in this life and was reborn in
hell. He saw all these deaths and births as if it were with his own eyes. That
supernormal knowledge he attained during the second watch of the night.
During the third or the last
watch of the night, from 2:00am - 6:00am, he reflected upon the Doctrine of
Dependent Origination. That is everything is caused by something. Nothing comes
out of nothing. Everything is relative. So he reflected on the Doctrine of
Dependent Origination back and forth, again and again.
After that he practiced
VipassanA meditation. At about dawn he became the
Buddha. He became the fully self-enlightened one. That was in his 35th year. At
the age of 29 he left the palace, did the great renunciation. He struggled for
six years in the forest to become the Buddha. So at the age of 35 he became the
Buddha, the fully enlightened one. That was on the full moon day of May in 589
B.C.
The place where he gained enlightenment
can be seen today. It is in Bodh GAya
in India. There is now a meditation center there.
Under the Bodhi Tree he gained
full enlightenment and became the Buddha. The word 'Buddha' is not his personal
name. It is a name like the president. The Buddha means the enlightened one or
the awakened one. It is a title, not a personal name.
After becoming Buddha he was
known as Gotama-Buddha. His personal name was not used after that. He was
called the Buddha or Gotama-Buddha.
After becoming the Buddha he
taught for 45 years. After becoming the Buddha he spent seven weeks under and
near the Bodhi Tree. In the eighth week he went to where the five former
disciples were living to teach them. So he went to them and two months after
his enlightenment he gave his first sermon, the sermon of turning the wheel of
Dhamma, turning the wheel of Truth.
After that he taught day and
night for 45 years. He became the Buddha at the age of 35 and taught for 45
years. At the age of 80 he died. On the full moon of May in 544 B.C. at the age
of 80 he passed away. That is a very brief account of his life. There are books
written on the life of the Buddha. I think you can find some of the titles in
these leaflets.
Now let us study some of the
characteristics of the Buddha, Buddha’s qualities or attributes are said to be
immeasurable. So we cannot describe all of his qualities, but here we will give
some of them.
Number one he was a human
being. He was not god with a capital G, not a god, not a prophet. He was 100% a
human being. As a human being he was born. As a human being he lived. As a
human being he died. Since he had the body of a human being, he had to suffer
the pains of human beings. He had the pains of the physical body. Sometimes he
had headaches. Sometimes he had backaches. Sometimes he had illness or
sickness. He was not free from these things. Buddha was not a god nor the
prophet or a representative of any god. He was a human being.
But by his own human effort he
became the extraordinary human being the Buddha. Although he was a human being,
he was not an ordinary human being. He was an extraordinary human being. He
became the Buddha by his own effort. Nobody made him into a Buddha. He had to
go through the practice of meditation. That is only in this last life. In order
to accumulate what we call PAramIs,
perfections, he had to spend countless rebirths or countless lives. So to
become a Buddha is not an easy thing. Not many people aspire for Buddhahood for
this reason. One must give up many things and accumulate these perfections. It
is not easy.
The Buddha was fully self-enlightened
and possessed total purity of mind. What is enlightenment? It can mean
different things to different persons. According to our scriptures
enlightenment means realizing the Four Noble Truths, seeing NibbAna
and eradicating mental defilements. That is what is called enlightenment. If we
say a person is enlightened, he must have seen the Four Noble Truths clearly
through direct experience. He must have seen NibbAna.
And he must have eradicated the mental defilements.
There are four stages of enlightenment.
When a person has reached the first stage of enlightenment, he must have eradicated
some of the mental defilements. When he reaches the second stage, he eradicates
some more. When he reaches the third stage, he eradicates some more. And when
he reaches the fourth stage, no defilements will remain with him. After a
person reaches the fourth stage of enlightenment, his mind becomes totally
pure. No mental defilements can be found in his mind. The same is true for the
Buddha but there is some difference. When we say a person is fully enlightened,
then he possesses total purity of mind. No attachment, no greed, no hatred, no
delusion, no pride, no envy arise. All impurities of mind are totally
destroyed. So Buddha was not capable of being attached to anything. He was not
capable of greed, not capable of anger, not capable of pride and so on.
When I said this one time a
man told me, "Then Buddha would be abnormal." I told him, "Yes,
maybe, but I think Buddha was supernormal, not abnormal." If you see a
beautiful thing, then you must have attachment. You must enjoy it. You must be
happy with it. And if there is provocation, you must be angry. That is normal
for ordinary persons. If you don't do that you are supposed to be abnormal. It
is above normal, supernormal. Buddha had total
purity of mind. It is very difficult to get to that stage. Compare with
yourselves. When you drive and someone cuts in front of you or something like
that, you will be angry.
The Buddha possessed
omniscience. That is very important. Omniscience is knowing everything. With
its help he knew exactly what to teach, how to teach and when to teach so that
listeners became enlightened. That is why he was so successful when he taught
beings or people. He could go into the minds of the listeners and find out what
kind of temperament a person had, what were his likes and dislikes. Buddha also
knew whether a person was mature enough to gain enlightenment or not. If he was
not mature yet, the Buddha would not teach him. He would wait for a time when
his mental faculties were mature and knew exactly what to teach.
There are different people
with different temperaments. That is why Buddha's teachings are very varied.
Sometimes he called one thing aggregate. Sometimes he called the same thing a
sense base. Sometimes he called the same thing an element and so on. That was
because some people were accustomed to the word 'aggregate'. So for them Buddha
used the word 'aggregate', so they could understand easily. Others may not be
familiar with the word 'aggregate' but were familiar with the word 'sense-base'
or something similar. So the Buddha would use the name that a particular person
was familiar with. That is why we have many categories in the teachings of the
Buddha. The same thing may have many different names. So the Buddha knew
exactly what to teach, how to teach and when to teach. That is why he was so
successful in his teaching.
The Buddha allowed freedom of
thought, freedom of investigation even of his teachings. He said, "Do not
take something to be true simply because you hear it from someone or something,
or because it was carried down through tradition, or simply because it accords
with your religious books, or simply because it was said by a person for whom
you have respect or respectful persons, because it is your teacher or
monk." Buddha said, "Investigate it and try it. If it seems to be
good accept it and practice it. If it doesn't seem good to you discard
it." He said something like that. So Buddha allowed freedom of thought and
freedom of investigation of his own teachings. You can have doubt about
anything. But you should try to remove this doubt by reading books, by
discussing with other persons, or best by practicing it, by practicing
meditation and trying to find out for yourself whether a thing is true or not.
That means Buddha's teachings
are not to be taken just on faith. Although faith is an important factor or an
important faculty in Buddhism, one must rely on one's own practice, on one's
own judgment to arrive at the truth of anything.
The Buddha taught
self-reliance and self-responsibility. We cannot rely on even the Buddha to
become enlightened. We have to rely on ourselves. Even though there are
teachers, there are Buddhas, if we do not practice, we cannot get anything from
their teaching. We must rely on ourselves.
We must be responsible for
ourselves. Whatever we get from this life, good or bad, is the result of what
we did in the past. So we are responsible for our happiness here or our
suffering here. Nobody makes us suffer here. Nobody makes us happy here. We
ourselves make that. So the Buddha taught self-reliance and
self-responsibility.
A teacher cannot practice
meditation for the student and the student cannot practice for the teacher. A
teacher must practice for himself. The student also must practice for himself.
Only we ourselves can eradicate or destroy the mental defilements in our own
minds and not other persons simply because they are in our minds. So we must
rely on ourselves. We do not have to rely on anyone else.
The Buddha was only a teacher.
As such he showed us the way to enlightenment. We must make effort ourselves to
achieve the goal. This is more or less the same as self-reliance and self-responsibility.
We look to the Buddha as our teacher, as a guide, not as some authority or
power that would give us something we want. We cannot ask the Buddha to give us
enlightenment, to give us happiness, to give us whatever we want. We have to
strive ourselves to achieve our goal. Buddha taught us, gave us instructions.
If we follow these instructions, if we practice what he taught, we will be able
to achieve our goal, the goal of final deliverance from suffering. These are
some of the characteristics of the Buddha. There are many more. In connection
with the Buddha we should understand the Dhamma and also the SaGgha. Let us try to understand something about the Dhamma.
What is Dhamma? Everybody says
the teachings of the Buddha are the Dhamma. When Buddhists say, "I go for
refuge in the Dhamma or I take refuge in the Dhamma", what do they mean?
His teachings are comprised of what he realized upon enlightenment and what he
taught to beings. What he realized upon enlightenment means at the moment of
enlightenment there arises in any person a particular kind of consciousness.
That kind of consciousness is very powerful. So that kind of consciousness can
eradicate mental defilements altogether. That type of consciousness only lasts
for a moment, a very very brief moment. a billionth of a second maybe.
Immediately following that consciousness are two moments of a different type of
consciousness. The first we call path and the other two we call fruition
because path is something like the cause and fruit is something like the
result. There is path consciousness and then come moments of fruit
consciousness.
Since there are four stages of
enlightenment, we get eight types of consciousness. There are path and fruit
consciousnesses for first stage, second stage, third stage and fourth stage. So
altogether we get eight types of consciousness. When we say enlightenment or
realization of truth we mean one of these pairs of consciousness. So we get
altogether eight types of consciousness.
These consciousnesses take
NibbAna as an object, the destruction of defilements and the cessation of
suffering as object. So we now we have nine altogether - eight types of consciousness
plus NibbAna.
Then we also mean when we say.
"I go to the Dhamma for refuge", the teachings given to us by the
Buddha which are to be found in the Buddhist scriptures. By the Dhamma we mean
the eight types of consciousness which constitute realization of truth, their
object which is NibbAna and the teachings given to
us by the Buddha. There are altogether ten kinds of Dhamma. When we say Dhamma
we mean not only his teachings found in the scriptures but also what he
realized at the moment of enlightenment. Everybody who practices meditation can
realize this Dhamma.
Let us look at some of his
teachings. We cannot go through all of his teachings in a day or many days. The
first of his teachings is the Four Noble Truths. He taught the Four Noble
Truths in his first sermon to the five monks. Among these Four Noble Truths is
the Noble Eightfold Path or Noble Way. It has eight factors - right
understanding, right thought, right speech, right action, right livelihood,
right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration. When we say the Four
Noble Truths, we include the Noble Eightfold Path because the Fourth Noble Truth
is the Noble Eightfold Path. These Four Noble Truths the Buddha taught in his
first sermon and also throughout his ministry of 45 years. He taught these Four
Noble Truths again and again.
He also taught SamsAra. SamsAra
means round of rebirths. Buddha said this life is not the only life we have. We
have had many lives, countless lives in the past, and we will have many lives
in the future if we do not become Arahants in this life. The beings travel
along from one life to another in this SamsAra.
SamsAra is
the round of rebirths.
The Buddha taught the law of
Kamma and rehirth. Good Kamma gives good results. Bad Kamma gives bad results.
Because of this Kamma there is rebirth. Buddha taught this law of Kamma and
rebirth. When the Buddha taught the law of Kamma, he taught it from his own
experience. He had personally seen it for himself. During the middle watch of
the night of his enlightenment he had seen beings dying in one life and being
born in another. He saw this law of Kamma clearly through direct experience.
The law of Kamma taught by the Buddha was not based on logic, not based on
speculation, but based on real understanding.
He taught Dependent
Origination. This actually is part of the law of Kamma. In Dependent
Origination it is taught that because there is ignorance there are good and bad
actions. Because there are good and bad actions there is rebirth in the next
life. When there is rebirth, there is mind and body and so on. Dependent
Origination teaches us that everything is dependent upon some other thing.
There is nothing which is absolute. There is nothing which we can call a first
cause because this dependency goes on and on and we cannot arrive at a first
cause. Everything is relative according to the teaching of Dependent
Origination. It is a very important teaching in Buddhism.
He taught Abhidhamma.
Abhidhamma is the study of mind, the study of matter, actually the study of
everything. It is like psychology because it explains mind by itself and then
with reference to the concomitants, and then with reference to the material
properties. Also it explains how things are related, in what ways one thing is
related to another. Abhidhamma is a very interesting subject, but it is not so
easy to understand. A knowledge of Abhidhamma is very helpful in the practice
of meditation, especially VipassanA meditation.
And VipassanA meditation can help make you understand
Abhidhamma more thoroughly. The Abhidhamma and meditation help each other.
What is taught in Abhidhamma
can be seen for one's self only through the practice of meditation. Maybe not
everything can be seen by an ordinary person, but many of the teachings in the
Abhidhamma can be seen by people who practice meditation.
The Buddha showed us the way
to purification of mind. He clearly mapped out something like a blueprint for
the spiritual development of people. For the spiritual development of people
the Buddha gave this blueprint.
The first part of the
spiritual blueprint is SIla. That is purity of bodily
and verbal actions. That means taking precepts and keeping them. Sometimes it
is called virtue. Sometimes it is called moral purity or moral precepts. It is
keeping our bodily and verbal actions pure. SIla
controls bodily and verbal actions, but not necessarily mental actions.
For example you may be
thinking of killing a being, but so long as you do not kill with your body or
with your speech, you are not breaking that rule. Simply by thinking you cannot
break the rule of not killing, or of not stealing and so on. So SIla
the first step controls the bodily and verbal actions. It helps us purify the
bodily and verbal actions.
The second part of the
spiritual development is SamAdhi, concentration. We have
mental defilements almost all of the time. SamAdhi
helps us to get rid of these mental defilements or to keep them away from our
minds. This is SamAdhi.
SamAdhi
takes care of the mental actions, not bodily or verbal actions, but mental
actions. When you practice SamAdhi,
you have to control your thoughts. You are not to think unwholesome thoughts.
You are not to allow unwholesome thoughts to come to you.
The third part of spiritual
development is PaJJA, wisdom. Purity of wisdom is
gained through concentration and penetration into the nature of things. PaJJA
here means PaJJA through VipassanA.
When you practice VipassanA, you penetrate into the
nature of things. You come to see the true nature of things. That is PaJJA.
PaJJA
cannot come to us without SamAdhi.
Without SIla we cannot get SamAdhi.
These three must be practiced one after the other. Without SIla
there can be no SamAdhi. Without SamAdhi
there can be no PaJJA. Step by step instructions
were given by the Buddha.
SIla
is to be achieved by taking precepts and keeping them. SamAdhi
and PaJJA are to be achieved through meditation. When you want
SamAdhi, you practice meditation. When you want PaJJA,
you practice VipassanA meditation. We will talk
about meditation in detail later on.
The teachings of the Buddha in
brief are: "Not to do evil, cultivate good, and purify your mind."
There is a verse in the Dhammapada which states in brief the teachings of the
Buddha. That teaching is not to do any evil, cultivate what is good and purify
your mind. Those are the teachings of the Buddha.
If you can practice these
three, you are a saint. You are an Arahant.
I want to take a little about
the importance of the Abhidhamma.
Tape
ends.
SAdhu!
SAdhu!
SAdhu!