The next link is the link between Upàdàna and bhava or the link between
clinging and becoming. Conditioned by clinging becoming arises. The Pàli word
for becoming here is Bhava. There can be a ittle confusion here because the
word 'Bhava' is used in a different way here than in other places. Here the
Pàli texts themselves as well as the Commentaries state that there are two
kinds of Bhava, two kinds of becoming. The first is Kamma becoming or
Kammabhava and the second is rebirth becoming or in Pàli Upapattibhava. The
reason we have two kinds of Bhava here is because of the next link which is
between Bhava and Jati. Jati is also rebirth. If we take Bhava as rebirth, then
it is the same as saying A conditions A. So we have to take something
different. Bhava here means two things Kammabhava and Upapattibhava.
You have heard the word Kamma. So you have guessed that Kammabhava means
Kamma. That is correct. Kammabhava or Kamma-becoming means just the good and
bad Kamma conditioned by ignorance. If you remember the 12 factors, the second
factor is Kamma formations. Kmma formations mean the volition accompanying the
wholesome types of consciousness belonging to the mundane world and unwholesome
consciousness also. Here Kammabhava means the same volition accompanying the
same types of consciousness and just a little bit more.
It is explained in the Commentary. 'It is in brief volition also and
states of covetousness etc. associated with the volition and reckoned as Kamma
too according as it is said. Herein what is Kamma-process-becoming? Formation
of merit, formation of demerit, the formation of the imperturbable either with
the small limited plane or with the large exalted plane, that is called
Kamma-process-becoming. Also all Kamma that leads to becoming is called
Kamma-process-becoming.'
'All Kamma that leads to becoming' here means both volition and the
states of covetousness etc. associated with that volition. We learn a new thing
here. Formerly we think when we say Kamma, we only mean volition. Volition is
Kamma. But here Kamma means volition plus the states of covetousness or the
absence of covetousness associated with volition. This is the difference.
Kammabhava means volition, the same as the second factor as well as
covetousness etc. concomitant with it.
Upapattibhava here just means the resultant aggregates. There are nine
Upapattibhavas or becomings like Kamma-becoming, Rupa-becoming and so on.In
brief they are just the aggregates generated by Kamma. That means when you do
some Kamma here, then as a result of one of these Kammas, you will be reborn in
any of the states. At the moment of relinking or at the moment of rebirth there
is the relinking consciousness or the rebirth consciousness. Together with the
rebirth consciousness generally there are some material properties.They are
called the resultant aggregates. Actually Upapattibhava means the different
existences - as human beings, as deities, as Brahmas and so on.
Why is Kamma or volition repeated here? Kamma formations are also
volition. Kammabhava or Kamma-becoming is also volition. What is the
difference? One and the same thing is mentioned twice in this doctrine. What is
the first factor? Ignorance. And the second? Kamma formations. What re Kamma
formations? They are just Kamma, good or bad Kamma. Conditioned by this good or
bad Kamma there is what? Consciousness, resultant consciousness. 'Resultant
consciousness' means in the next life the rebirth consciousness, the
life-continuum consciousness and death consciousness. Sankhàra or the second
link belong to the past life. Consciousness, mind and matter, the six bases and
so on belong to the present life. They are different in that the Sankhàras
belong to the past life or past time and the Kammabhava or Kamma-becoming
belong to the present life or the present time. So they are different with
respect to time. That is why they are taken twice in this doctrine. You know
this doctrine covers three lives. There is the past, the present and the
future. We are still in the present.
Cetanàs as Sankhàras are the conditions in the past life for rebirth in
the present life. Here Cetanà as Kamma-becoming is the condition in this life
for the future life. That is the difference.
'Alternatively in the former instance in the passage beginning here in
what is the formation of merit it is profitable volition of the sense sphere,
it ws only volitions that were called 'formations', but here with the words
'all Kamma that leads to becoming' the states associated with the volition are
also included. The other difference is that among the Sankhàras, the second
factor, only volition is taken. But here as Kammabhava volition and also the
states of covetousness etc. are taken. This is the difference between the
Sankhàras and this factor Kammmabhava.
'In the former instance it was only such Kamma as is a condition for
consciousness that was called formations. But now also that which generates
non-percipient becoming is included.' Do you understand that? You know the
Sankhàras condition Viññàna, Kamma formations condition rebirth conscioousness.
What about mindless beings? Mindless beings are not included in consciousness
because they have no consciousness. But here at Kammabhava the cause or the
condition for mindless beings is also included. That is the difference. In the
Sankhàras the cause or the condition for rebirth as a mindless being is not
included, but here it is included. That is one difference.
I think the commentator got wearied. 'But why so many words in the
clause, 'with ignorance as condition there are formations only profitable and
unprofitable states are expressed as the formation of merit etc., but in the
clause with clinging as condition there is becoming profitable, unprofitable
and also functional.' It says 'functional'. I want to substitute another word.
' Indeterminate states are expressed because of the inclusion of rebirth
process becoming.' That mens among the Sankhàrs there are only Cetanàs or
volitions concomitant with profitable or unprofitable or wholesome or
unwholesome types of consciousness. But since we take Bhava to be of two kinds
here, the Kammabhava and Upapattibhava (rebirth Bhava), Cetanà concomitant with
Kusala (wholesome) and Akusala (unwholesome) are taken and also other states.
Since we take Bhavas, since we take rebirths, we take also the rebirth
consciousness which is neither Kusala nor Akusala. We take also here the
indeterminate ones or the indeterminate types of consciousness and also
material properties which are always indeterminate or Abyàkata. The difference
between these two is that in Sankhàra there are only wholesome and unwholesome
states, but here in Bhava there are wholesome states, unwholesome states and
also indeterminate states or indeterminate things (consciousness, mental
factors and material properties). This is the difference.
This repetition has a purpose in each case. That is why Cetanà or
volition is repeated here. We have to understand the difference between
Sankhàra and Kamma becoming here. According to this link Clinging conditions
both becomings, Kamma becoming as well as rebirth becoming. The direct result
of clinging is Kamma becoming. Because of this clinging, because of the four
types of clinging we perform different deeds, good deeds or bad deeds. Clinging
conditions Kammabhava directly. It also conditions Upapattibhava or rebirth
becoming indirectly through Kamma becoming. It is like this: clinging
conditions Kamma becoming or just Kamma and Kamma conditions rebirth.
There are four types of clinging and two types of Bhava. How they are
conditioned and how is the condition, this is explained in the Commentary.
'Which for which becomes condition means that here the exposition should be
known according to what kind of clinging is condition for what kind of
becoming.' Four clingings nd two kinds of becoming, so what kind of clinging is
condition for what kind of becoming. But what is condition for what here? Any
kind is condition for any kind. For the ordinary man is like a mad man. Without
considering is this right or not, then aspiring by way of the kinds of clinging
to any of the kinds of becoming,he performs any of the kinds of Kamma.'
'Ordinary man' is like a mad man. He may do anything he likes.
'Therefore it should be accepted that all kinds come about through all
kinds.' All kinds of becoming come about through all kinds of clinging. It is
fortunate that the Commentary gives us some details.
'For example someone thinks in accordance with heresay or false view
that sense desires come to be fulfilled in the human world among great warrior
families etc. and in the six divine worlds of the sense sphere. Misled by
listening to wrong doctrines etc. and imagining by this kamma sense desires
will be fulfilled, he performs for the purpose of attaining them acts of bodily
misconduct etc. through sense desire clinging. By fulfilling such conduct he is
reborn in the states of loss.'
Suppose we hear from someone or we have this view that sense desires
come to be fulfilled in human world among the great warrior families (That
means among kings etc.) and in the six divine worlds of the sense sphere. We
may have heard or we may have read that it is better to be in the world of
Devas or in the world of higher human beings because they have all kinds of
pleasures that they want. So we have clinging; we want to be reborn there. Let
us say we want to be reborn in the world of Devas because there we will have
more fulfillment of sense desires. When somebody says that there is much
happiness there, we are attached to these existences. So we want to be reborn
there. What do we do? Sometimes we may go to a wrong teacher or we may follow a
wrong doctrine which say if you want to be reborn as a Deva or as a rich human
being, then you need to sacrifice an animal or something like that. If you
sacrifice an animal, by this act of sacrificing or giving, you will be reborn
as deities. We believe them and with the intention of doing wholesome acts, we
really do unwholesome acts, like killing an animal. This killing of the animal,
this unwholesome act will not cause us to be reborn in the world of Devas, but
in the four woeful states (in hell, in animal kingdom and so on). The desire or
clinging to sense desires in the Deva world make us acquire some Kammabhava,
make us acquire some Akusala in this case. This Akusala, this unwholesome act
is conditioned by our clinging to these sense pleasures in the Deva world.
There are many such false views or such false doctrines. Some people
think animals are suffering beings. So if we kill animals we are saving them
from suffering. They don't have to suffer a long time when we kill them. Some
people say it is by killing them that you can save them. If we believe those
people, then we will kill animals with the understanding that we are helping
them. Actually we are not helping them. We are killing them and doing what is
blameworthy. This is an unwholesome (Akusala) act. It will drag us to the four
woeful states instead of taking us to the human or Deva world.
Also there is something like 'mercy killing'. For Buddhists there can be
no 'mercy killing'. Even though a person may be suffering much, we have no
right to shorten his life. If we ask that person what his wish is, it is the
desire to get free from suffering, not to be killed, not to get out of this
life although he may say, 'I want to die.' Actually he wants to die in order to
get rid of suffering. He may have hope that if he dies he will be reborn
somewhere else and get out of this suffering. It is not right to kill or to let
people die before the actual time for their dying so that they can be freed
from their present suffering. It is just killing. So it should not be done by
the followers of the Buddha. We may do whatever we can to diminish suffering
for that person or that being, but we have no right to shorten his life even by
a minute or by a second.
There is a Burmese lady in Florida. She has a dog. She said that the dog
had a stroke. He could not walk well and his eyesight was also impaired. She
took the dog to the Veternarian. The Doctor advised her to 'put the dog to
sleep'. But as a Buddhist she could not do that. She said 'No.' She took the
dog back to the house again. What she did was to call upon the deities to help
heal the dog. She also recited Paritta for the dog again and again and again.
The dog got better. The dog was walking around and playing when I went there.
She said that she could not let them 'put the dog to sleep'. I think that is
correct.
This 'mercy killing' is very dangerous with regard to one's own father
and mother in suffering. If you do something so that your father or mother dies
a little erlier than the appropriate time he or she is to die, then there is
the offense of killing one's own mother or one's own father. So it is very
important if you follow the teachings of the Buddha not to do anything to
shorten their life even though it may seem like it is helping them to get rid
of pain or suffering.
Let us say that you kill a person who is in pain because you have
compassion for that person. So you kill that person, but you don't know what
that person will get in the next life. He may be reborn in hell and get more
suffering than the suffering he is having here. So it is never correct or never
right to shorten the life of a person even though he may be suffering from
intense pain.
Once I and some friends fo mine, all monks, were attending a senior monk
who was like our teacher. He was put on a resirator. When the Doctor thought he
was hopeless,
he came to us and asked us for permission to
remove the aparatus. We said, 'No, we cannot say that.' It would amount to
killing our own teacher. So we could not say anything. The aparatus was removed
though and the monk died later. So it is very important for monks at such times
not to agree to have the aparatus taken away from a patient. It will amount to
killing.
These are all false views regarding saving beings. However instead of
saving beings, we are doing something bad to them. This is doing something
wrong with the understanding that we are doing something good. We may be doing
something wrong because we want to be reborn in a better world, in the world of
Devas or in the world of Brahmas.
'Or he performs acts of bodily misconduct aspiring to sense desires
visible here and now and protecting those he has already acquired. By fulfilling
such misconduct he is reborn in the states of loss.' Sometimes you want to get
something in this life. You want to get richer or you want to get more of
something. So you do something wrong, some misconduct. As a result of that
misconduct, you will be reborn in the woeful states.
Sometimes people do misconduct or wrong things because they have
clinging or attachment to themselves and also those whom they love. Sometimes
the wife mya want the husband to get something for her. If the husband cannot
get it lawfully, he may rob or he may kill person and take the thing away and so on. Such things can
happen. These are all wrong or misconduct.
In the Jàtakas there is a story. There was a man
and a woman. They were very poor. They only had one garment. When there was a
festival, the woman wanted to go out in a beautiful dress. Since there was no
dress, the husband told her to put on the garment that they had. The woman
said, 'I do not want to put on that white garment. I want to wear something with
color.' The husband hd no money with which to buy dye. So he went to the king's
garden and stole some flowers to make dye out of them. He was caught stealing
the flowers. He was impaled, put on the stake. At that time he had a lot of
suffering and the crows came and bit him on the eyes and so on. When these
crows bit him he said aloud, 'The fact that the crows are biting me is not
suffering for me. What is suffering for me is the thought that my wife will not
have the opportunity to have the dress she wanted to put on and to enjoy the
festival with me. That is the greater suffering for me, greater than the cows
coming and biting me.' So such things can happen. It is said that he died and
he was reborn in hell. He wanted to make his wife happy, but in doing that he
did something wrong and was caught. He died and was reborn in hell. His clinging to his wife and his
clinging to his wife's happiness is the condition for his Akusala, for his
misconduct, for his stealing. That is Kammabhava. That Kammabhava conditions
his next life in hell.
'Another whose knowledge has been intensified by listening to good
Dhamma and so on imagines that by this kind of Kamma sense desire will come to
be fulfilled. He performs acts of good bodily conduct etc. through sense desire
clinging. By fulfilling such bodily conduct he is reborn among deities or human
beings.'
This is a happy story. You hear that it is good to be reborn in the
realms of the Devas and you are fortunate to have the true doctrine or a true
teacher. The teacher may tell you that if you want to be reborn in the Deva
world, you should practice Dàna, you should practice keeping precepts, you
should practice meditation and so on. So you practice these and you will be
reborn in the world of Devas. Your practice of Dàna, Sìla and Bhàvanà is Kamma
becoming here. This Kamma becoming here is conditioned or caused by your
clinging to the world of Devas. As a result of this Kamma becoming after this
life, you will be reborn as Deva.
That is Upapattibhava, or Jati becoming, or rebirth becoming. That is the good
part of the explanation.
Here also there can be much clinging. People wish for clinging. There
are people who aspire to be reborn as a man and a woman, as a husband and wife
in the life to come. 'May I be the same husband; may I be the same wife' is
their desire. Such things have happened in the past as well as in the present
time.
There was a very rich man during the time of the Buddha. In a past life
his wife, his son, his daugther-in-law and his slave were all living together.
They were very rich. At one time there was a famine in the country. So all the
grain was used up. One day the wife brought a small mesure of rice which she
had hidden somewhere. She cooked it and divided it into five portions. They
were about to eat that rice when a Pacceka Buddha, a silent Buddha came for
alms. When the man saw the silent Buddha, he thought, 'It is because that I did
not do much good in the past that I meet with this famine. If I eat this food,
I will live for one more day. But the next day I will have no food and will die
of hunger. Let me die of hunger now. I will offer food to the silent Buddha.'
Then he made an aspirtion: 'May I not meet with such famine in Saçsàra. May I
be able to fill all my warehouses with grain.' And lastly he aspired: 'May I
see the same wife, the same son, the same daughter-in-law and the same slave in
the lives to come.'
Then the wife also offered food to the silent Buddha and wished that she
may not meet with famine in the future. She also wished that she would have a
pot of rice that would not diminish however much rice she took from the pot.
Then she made the same aspiration: 'May I meet this man as a husband; may I
meet this man as a son;' and so on.
It goes on. The son also offered rice to the silent Buddha. He made an
aspiration that he would have a bag of money and however much money he took and
gave to people, the money in the bag would not diminish. Also he made the same
aspiration that he would have this man as a father, this woman as a mother,
this woman as a wife and this man as a slave.
Then his wife also made a resolution something like that. She also made
a wish that she would have the same father-in-law, the same mother-in-law and
the same slave.
It is very strange. The slave also wished that he would be a slave to
this man in every existence. He did not wish for becoming a rich man himself in
the future lives. He said, 'May I be his slave in the future lives.'
After that the silent Buddha took the food and went back to where they
live in the Himilayas. By their magic power they made themselves to be seen by
the five people sharing the food.
After some time the man was hungry and told his wife to find something.
Perhaps there was something left in the pot. But the woman had already cleaned
the pot and stored it away. However the woman did not say anything to him. She
said, 'I will go and see.' When she went to the pot and removed the lid, it was
full of rice. So they all ate rice. They died and were reborn as they had
asired, as a rich man and so on when the Buddha appeared in the world. The same
slave was their slave at that time also. So it is very strange that a slave
would not aspire to become a free man or to become a rich man. He wanted to be
a slave for that man.
In our country there is a saying about people making aspirations. 'Even
though we are born as birds, may we sit on the same branch.' This clinging to
life, this clinging to sense desires is very strong. So they always want to be
together in this journey through Saçsàra. Sense desire can be the condition for
Kusala or Akusala Kammabhava. And Kusala and Akusala Kammabhava can be the
condition for rebirth Bhavas or rebirth becoming.
'Another hears or conjectures that sense desires come to still finer
perfection in the fine material and inmaterial kinds of becoming and through
sense desire clinging he produces the fine material and inmaterial attainments
and in virtue of his attainments he is reborn in the fine material or
inmaterial Brahma world.'
It is not correct that he hears or conjectures that sense desires come
to still finer perfection in the fine material and inmaterial kinds of
becoming. Actually there are no sense objects in the worlds of the fine
material and inmaterial Brahmas. They do not have nose, tongue and body
sensitivity. There is only sight and sound there. But this person may have
heard from some other person the wrong information. So he may want to be reborn
in the world of Brahmas to enjoy more sensual pleasure. That person practices
meditation and gets Jhàna. Then he might be reborn there. His clinging to that
world made him practice meditation and get Jhàna which is Kammabhava here. As a
result of Kammabhava or in this case Jhàna he is reborn in the world of
Brahmas. This is how sense desire clinging conditions becoming.
'Another clings to the annihilationist view
thus: this self comes to be entirely cut off when it is cut off in the
fortunate states of the sense sphere, or in the fine material or inmaterial kinds of becoming and he
performs Kamma to achieve that.' This person has the annihilationist view. That
means this person believes everything is cut off at the end of this life. He
clings to the view that htis self comes to be entirely cut off when it is cut off
in the fortunate states or sense sphere, or fine material sphere, or inmaterial
sphere. That means he must be reborn in those states and that would be his last
life. He will be cut off from that state. So with that clinging he practices
good conduct, or he practices meditation nd gets Jhàna. Therefore he will be
reborn in those states. This is the wrong view clinging conditioning becoming.
'Another through self theory clings to things. This self comes to be
blissful or free from fever in the becoming in the fortunate states in the
sense sphere or in one of the other of the fine material or inmaterial kinds of
becoming. He performs kamma to achieve that.' This man has a self theory, the
wrong view of self theory. He thinks that the self comes to be blissful or
comes to be free of fever in the fortunate states of sense sphere, or in the
fine material sphere, or inmaterial sphere. Accordingly he practices
meritorious deeds and meditation and he is reborn in those states. That is self
theory clinging conditioning becoming.
'Then through rites and ritual clinging - this rite and ritual leads him
to the perfect bliss in becoming in the fortunate states of the sense sphere,
or in the fine material or inmaterial kinds of becoming.' This person thinks
the rites and rituals could be achieved to perfection in the blissful states.
So he wants to be reborn there so that he may practice the rites and rituals to
perfection. He practices good conduct or meditation and he is reborn in the
blissful states of sense sphere, or in the fine material or inmaterial spheres.
This is rite and ritual clinging conditioning the Kammabhava or Kamma becoming
and also rebirth becoming. This is how clinging conditions different becomings
- the Kamma becoming and also the rebirth becoming.
Now their relation - how are they related? There are four clingings and
there is Bhava. Clinging is taken as one. Bhavas are taken differently.
Clinging is a condition for the fine material existence and inmaterial
existence by way of decisive support. Because they belong to different times
only decisive support condition can be had. Clinging is the condition for
rebirth in the sense sphere world by way of decisive support.
Clinging can be the condition of Kamma becoming which is wholesome by
way of decisive support because clinging and wholesome Kammabhava cannot arise
together. Clinging is unwholesome and the other is wholesome so they cannot
arise together. Therefore they are related by way of decisive support.
Clinging is the condition for Kammabhava which is unwholesome by way of
what? Clinging is unwholesome and Kammabhava is unwholesome. So they can arise
at the same time. There can be conascence, mutuality, support, association,
presence, non-disappearance, root conditions. That is the unwholesome
Kammabhava connected with or concomitant with clinging, arising at the same
time with clinging. There is some unwholesome Kammabhava that does not arise
with clinging. With regard to that there is only one kind of relationship and
that is by way of decisive support.
Clinging and becoming can arise at the same time and also they can arise
at different times. When they arise at different times, they are related by way
of decisive support. When they arise at the same time, then they can be related
by way of conascence because they arise together. They may be mutually
supporting, and one is dependent on the other. Also they are called associated.
So here in this link the conditioning factor and the conditioned factor both
arise at the same time and also at different times. We are to understand the
relationship between different factors with reference to the teaching in the
Patthàna. Sometimes they arise at different times and sometimes they arise at
the same time, but one is called the conditioning factor and the other is
called the conditioned factor. Let us call them cause and effect. So cause and
effect can be simultaneous or they can belong to diffeent times. Each link
cannot be explained by cause producing effect only. Some links are linked in that
way, the cause producing the effect. Other links re not linked in that way.
They just arise together and support or help each other. One is called
conditioning and the other is clled conditioned. Sometimes we may find the
conditioning nd the conditioned factor at the same time. Sometimes we may not.
This is the link between Upàdàna and Bhava or between clinging and becoming.
We have two more links to go. So we will take that up tomorrow. Thank
you.
Sàdhu! Sàdhu! Sàdhu!