The Life of SariputtaCompiled and translated from the Pali texts
by
Nyanaponika Thera
The Wheel Publication No. 90/92 ISBN 955-24-0015-5
Copyright © 1987 Buddhist Publication Society
Buddhist Publication Society P.O. Box 61 54, Sangharaja
Mawatha Kandy, Sri Lanka
For free distribution only. You may print copies of
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This edition was transcribed from the print edition in
1994 by W.D. Savage under the auspices of the DharmaNet Dharma Book
Transcription Project, with the kind permission of the Buddhist
Publication Society. HTML formatting by Jill H. Button (1999).
In many temples of Sri Lanka you will find on either side
of the Buddha image, the statues of two monks. Their robes are draped over
one shoulder and they stand in the attitude of reverence, with joined
palms. Quite often there are a few flowers at their feet, laid there by
some pious devotee.
If you ask who they are, you will be told that they are the Enlightened
One's two Chief Disciples, the Arahats Sariputta and Maha Moggallana. They
stand in the positions they occupied in life. Sariputta on the Buddha's
right, Maha Moggallana on his left. When the great stupa at Sanchi was
opened up in the middle of the last century, the relic chamber was found
to contain two stone receptacles; the one to the north held the body
relics of Maha Moggallana, while that on the south enclosed those of
Sariputta. Thus they had lain while the centuries rolled past and the
history of two thousand years and more played out the drama of
impermanence in human life. The Roman Empire rose and fell, the glories of
ancient Greece became a distant memory; new religions wrote their names,
often with blood and fire, on the changing face of the earth, only to
mingle at last with legends of Thebes and Babylon, and gradually the tides
of commerce shifted the great centers of civilisation from East to West,
while generations that had never heard the Teaching of the Buddha arose
and passed away. But all the time that the ashes of the saints lay
undisturbed, forgotten in the land that gave them birth, their memory was
held dear wherever the Buddha's message spread, and the record of their
lives was passed down from one generation to another, first by word of
mouth, then in the written pages of the Buddhist Tripitaka, the most
voluminous and detailed scripture of any religion. next to the Enlightened
One himself, it is these two disciples of his who stand highest in the
veneration of Buddhists in the Theravada lands. Their names are as
inseparable from the annals of Buddhism as that of the Buddha himself. If
it has come about that in the course of time many legends have been woven
into the tradition of their lives, this is but the natural outcome of the
devotion that has always been felt for them.
And that high esteem was fully justified. Few religious teachers have
been so well served by their immediate disciples as was the Buddha. This
you will see as you read these pages, for they tell the story of one of
the two greatest of them, Sariputta, who was second only to the Buddha in
the depth and range of his understanding, and his ability to teach the
Doctrine of Deliverance. In the Tripitaka there is no connected account of
his life, but it can be pieced together from the various incidents,
scattered throughout the canonical texts and commentaries, in which he
figures. Some of them are more than incidents, for his life so closely
interwoven with the life and ministry of the Buddha that he plays an
essential part in it, and on a number of occasions it is the Sariputta
himself who takes the leading role -- as skilled preceptor and exemplar,
as kind and considerate friend, as guardian of the welfare of the bhikkhus
under his charge, as faithful repository of his Master's doctrine, the
function which earned him the title of Dhamma-senapati, Marshal of
the Dhamma, and always as himself, a man unique in his patience and
steadfastness, modest and upright in thought, word and deed, a man to whom
one act of kindness was a thing to be remembered with gratitude so long as
life endured. Even among the Arahats, saints freed from all defilements of
passion and delusion, he shone like the full moon in a starry sky.
This then is the man, of profound intellect and sublime nature, a true
disciple of the Great Teacher, whose story we have set down, to the best
of our ability, in the pages that follow. If you, the reader, can gather
from this imperfect record something of the qualities of man perfected, of
man fully liberated and raised to the highest level of his being; of how
such a man acts and speaks and comports himself towards his fellows; and
if the reading of it gives you strength and faith in the assurance of
what man may become, then our work has been worthwhile, and is
fully rewarded.
Part I From Birth to the Attainment of
Arahatship
The story begins at two brahmanical villages in India, called Upatissa
and Kolita, which lay not far from the city Rajagaha. Before our Buddha
had appeared in the world a brahman lady named Sari, living in Upatissa
village,[1] conceived; and also, on the same day at Kolita village, did
another brahman lady whose name was Moggalli. The two families were
closely connected, having been friends with one another for seven
generations. From the first day of their pregnancy the families gave due
care to the mothers-to-be, and after ten months both women gave birth to
boys, on the same day. On the name-giving day the child of the brahman
lady Sari received the name Upatissa, as he was a son of the foremost
family of that village; and for the same reason Moggalli's son was named
Kolita.
When the boys grew up they were educated, and acquired mastery of all
the sciences. Each of them had a following of five hundred brahman youths,
and when they went to the river or park for sport and recreation, Upatissa
used to go with five hundred palanquins, and Kolita with five hundred
carriages.
Now at Rajagaha there was an annual event called the Hilltop Festival.
Seats were arranged for both youths and they sat together to witness the
celebrations. When there was occasion for laughter, they laughed; when the
spectacles were exciting, they became excited; and they paid their fees
for the extra shows. In this manner they enjoyed the festival for a second
day; but on the third day their understanding was awakened and they could
no longer laugh or get excited, nor did they feel inclined to pay for
extra shows as they had done on the first days. Each of them had the same
thought: "What is there to look at here? Before these people have reached
a hundred years they will all have come to death. What we ought to do is
to seek for a teaching of deliverance."
It was with such thoughts in mind that they took their seats at the
festival. Then Kolita said to Upatissa: "How is this, my dear Upatissa?
You are not as happy and joyous as you were on the other days. You seem
now to be in a discontented mood, What is on your mind?"
"My dear Kolita, to look at these things here is of no benefit at all.
it is utterly worthless! I ought to seek a teaching of deliverance for
myself. That, my Kolita, is what I was thinking, seated here. But you,
Kolita, seem to be discontented, too."
And Kolita replied: "Just as you have said, I also feel." When he knew
that his friend had the same inclinations, Upatissa said: "That was a good
thought of ours. But for those who seek a teaching of deliverance there is
only one thing to do: to leave home and become ascetics. But under whom
shall we live the ascetic life?"
At that time, there lived at Rajagaha an ascetic of the sect of the
Wanderers (paribbajaka), called Sañjaya, who had a great following
of pupils. Deciding to get ordination under him, Upatissa and Kolita went
there, each with his own following of five hundred Brahman youths and all
of them received ordination from Sañjaya. And from the time of their
ordination under him, Sañjaya's reputation and support increased
abundantly.
Within a short time the two friends had learned Sañjaya's entire
doctrine and they asked him: "Master, does your doctrine go so far only,
or is there something beyond?"
Sañjaya replied: "So far only it goes. You know all."
Hearing this, they thought to themselves: "If that is the case, it is
useless to continue the Holy Life under him. We have gone forth from home
to seek a teaching of deliverance. Under him we cannot find it. But India
is vast; if we wander through villages, towns and cities we shall
certainly find a master who can show us the teaching of deliverance." And
after that, whenever they heard that there were wise ascetics or brahmans
at this or that place, they went and discussed with them. But there was
none who was able to answer their questions, while they were able to reply
to those who questioned them.
Having thus traveled through the whole of India they turned back, and
arriving at their old place they agreed between them that he who should
attain to the Deathless State first, should inform the other. It was a
pact of brotherhood, born of the deep friendship between the two young
men.
Some time after they had made that agreement, the Blessed One, the
Buddha, came to Rajagaha. It was when he had delivered the Fire Sermon at
Gaya Peak that he remembered his promise, given before his Enlightenment
to King Bimbisara, that he would come to Rajagaha again when he had
attained his goal. So in stages the Blessed One journeyed from Gaya to
Rajagaha, and having received from King Bimbisara the Bamboo Grove
Monastery (Veluvana) he resided there.
Among the sixty-one Arahats (Saints) whom the Master had sent forth to
proclaim to the world the virtues of the Triple Gem, there was the Elder
Assaji, who belonged to the group of five ascetics, the Buddha's erstwhile
companions before his Enlightenment, and afterwards his first disciples.
The Elder Assaji had returned to Rajagaha from his wanderings, and when
one morning he was going for alms in the city he was seen by Upatissa, who
was on his way to the Paribbajaka ascetic's monastery. Struck by Assaji's
dignified and serene appearance, Upatissa thought: "Never before have I
seen such a monk. He must be one of those who are Arahats, or on the way
to Arahatship. Should I not approach him and ask, 'Under whom have you
been ordained? Who is your teacher and whose teaching do you profess?'"
But then he thought: "It is not the proper time now for putting
questions to this monk, as he is going for alms through the streets. I had
better follow behind him, after the manner of supplicants." And he did so.
Then, when the Elder had gathered his almsfood, and Upatissa saw him
going to another place intending to sit down and take his meal, he
prepared for him his own ascetic's seat that he carried with him, and
offered it to the Elder. The Elder Assaji took his meal, after which
Upatissa served him with water from his own water-container, and in that
way performed towards Assaji the duties of a pupil to a teacher.
After they had exchanged the usual courteous greetings. Upatissa said:
"Serene are your features, friend. Pure and bright is your complexion.
Under whom, friend, have you gone forth as an ascetic? Who is your teacher
and whose doctrine do you profess?"
Assaji replied: "There is, O friend, the Great Recluse, the scion of
the Sakyas, who has gone forth from the Sakya clan. Under that Blessed One
I have gone forth. That Blessed One is my teacher and it is his Dhamma
that I profess."
"What does the venerable one's master teach, what does he proclaim?"
Questioned thus, the Elder Assaji thought to himself: "These wandering
ascetics are opposed to the Buddha's dispensation. I shall show him how
profound this dispensation is". So he said: "I am but new to the training,
friend. It is not long since I went forth from home, and I came but
recently to this teaching and discipline. I cannot explain the Dhamma in
detail to you."
The wanderer replied: "I am called Upatissa, friend. Please tell me
according to your ability, be it much or little. It will be my task to
penetrate its meaning by way of a hundred or a thousand methods." And he
added:
"Be it little or much that you can tell, the meaning
only, please proclaim to me! To know the meaning is my sole
desire; Of no avail to me are many words." In response,
the Elder Assaji uttered this stanza:
"Of all those things that from a cause arise, Tathagata
the cause thereof has told; And how they cease to be, that too he
tells, This is the doctrine of the Great Recluse."[2]
Upon hearing the first two lines, Upatissa became established
in the Path of Stream-entry, and to the ending of the last two lines he
already listened as a Stream-winner.
When he become a Stream-winner, and before he had achieved the higher
attainments, he thought: "Here will the means of deliverance be found!"
and he said to the Elder: "Do not enlarge upon this exposition of the
Dhamma, venerable sir. This will suffice. But where does our Master live?"
"In the Bamboo Grove Monastery, wanderer."
"Then please go on ahead, venerable sir. I have a friend with whom I
agreed that he who should reach the Deathless State first, should tell the
other. I shall inform him, and together we shall follow on the road you
went and shall come into the Master's presence." Upatissa then prostrated
himself at the Elder's feet, saluted him and, taking the Elder's leave,
went back to the park of the Wandering Ascetics.
Kolita saw him approaching and thought: "Today my friend's appearance
is quite changed. Surely, he must have found the Deathless State!"
And when he asked him about it, Upatissa replied: "Yes, friend, the
Deathless State has been found!" and he recited to him the stanza he had
heard. At the end of the verse, Kolita was established in the Fruition of
Stream-entry and he asked: "Where, my dear, does the Master live?"
"I learned from our teacher, the Elder Assaji, that he lives at the
Bamboo Grove Monastery."
"Then let us go, Upatissa, and see the Master," said Kolita.
But Sariputta was one who always respected his teacher, and therefore
he said to his friend: "First, my dear, we shall go to our teacher, the
Wanderer Sañjaya, and tell him that we have found the Deathless. If he can
grasp it, he will penetrate to the Truth. And even if he does not he may,
out of confidence in us, come with us to see the Master; and hearing the
Buddha's teaching, he will attain to the penetration of the Path and
Fruition."
So both of them went to Sañjaya and said: "Oh, our teacher! What are
you doing? A Buddha has appeared in the world! Well proclaimed is his
Teaching and in right conduct lives his community of monks. Let us go and
see the Master of the Ten Powers!"
"What are you saying, my dear?" Sañjaya exclaimed. And refusing to go
with them he spoke to them of the gain and fame they would enjoy if they
would share his, the teacher's, place.
But they said: "Oh, we should not mind always remaining in the state of
pupils! But you, O teacher, you must know whether to go or not!"
Then Sañjaya thought: "If they know so much, they will not listen to
what I say." And realizing that, he replied: "You may go, then, but I
cannot."
"Why not, O teacher?"
"I am a teacher of many. If I were to revert to the state of a
disciple, it would be as if a huge water tank were to change into a small
pitcher. I cannot live the life of a pupil now."
"Do not think like that, O teacher!" they urged.
"Let it be, my dear. You may go, but I cannot."
"Oh teacher! When a Buddha has appeared in the world, people flock to
him in large crowds and pay homage to him, carrying incense and flowers.
We too shall go there. And then what will happen to you?"
To which Sañjaya replied: "What do you think, my pupils: are there more
fools in this world, or more wise people?"
"Fools there are many, O teacher, and the wise are few."
"If that is so, my friends, then the wise ones will go to the wise
recluse Gotama, and the fools will come to me, the fool. You may go now,
but I shall not."
So the two friends left, saying: "You will come to understand your
mistake, O teacher!" And after they had gone there was a split among
Sañjaya's pupils, and his monastery became almost empty. Seeing his place
empty, Sañjaya vomited hot blood. Five hundred of his disciples had left
along with Upatissa and Kolita, out of whom two hundred and fifty returned
to Sañjaya. With the remaining two hundred and fifty, and their own
following, the two friends arrived at the Bamboo Grove Monastery.
There the Master, seated among the fourfold assembly[3]
was preaching the Dhamma, and when the Blessed One saw the two coming he
addressed the monks: "These two friends, Upatissa and Kolita, who are now
coming, will be two excellent disciples to me, a blessed pair."
Having approached, the friends saluted the Blessed One reverentially
and sat down at one side. When they were seated they spoke to the Blessed
One, saying: "May we obtain, O Lord, the ordination of the Going Forth
under the Blessed One, may we obtain the Higher Ordination!"
And the Blessed One said: "Come, O bhikkhus! Well proclaimed is the
Dhamma. Now live the Life of Purity, to make an end of suffering!" This
alone served as the ordination of these venerable ones.
Then the master continued his sermon, taking the individual
temperaments[4] of the listeners into consideration; and with the exception
of the two chief disciples all of them attained to Arahatship. But the two
chief disciples had not yet completed the task of attaining to the three
higher paths of sanctity. The reason for this was the greatness of the
"knowledge pertaining to the perfection of a disciple"
(savakaparami-ñana), which they had still to reach.
Upatissa received the name of Sariputta on becoming a disciple of the
Buddha, while Kolita became known as Maha Moggallana.
Now the Venerable Maha Moggallana went to live at a village in Magadha
called Kallavala, on which he depended for almsfood. On the seventh day
after his ordination when he was doing the recluse's work (of meditation),
fatigue and torpor fell upon him. But spurred on by the Master,[5] he
dispelled his fatigue, and while listening to the Master expounding to him
the meditation subject of the elements (dhatu-kammatthana), he
completed the task of winning to the three higher paths and reached the
acme of a disciple's perfections (savaka-parami).
But the Venerable Sariputta continued to stay near the
Master, at a cave called the Boar's Shelter (Sukarakhata-lena), depending
on Rajagaha for his almsfood. Half a month after his ordination the
Blessed One gave a discourse on the comprehension of feelings[6] to
the Venerable Sariputta's nephew, the wandering ascetic Dighanakha. The
Venerable Sariputta was standing behind the Master, fanning him. While
following with his thoughts the progress of the discourse, as though
sharing the food prepared for another, the Venerable Sariputta on that
occasion reached the acme of "knowledge pertaining to a disciple's
perfection and attained to Arahatship together with the fourfold
analytical knowledge (patisambhida-ñana)."[7]
And his nephew, at the end of the sermon, was established in the Fruition
of Stream-entry.[8]
Now it may be asked: Did not the Venerable Sariputta possess great
wisdom; and if so, why did he attain to the disciple's perfections later
than the Venerable Maha Moggallana? The answer is, because of the
greatness of the preparations necessary for it. When poor people want to
go anywhere they take to the road at once; but in the case of kings,
larger preparations are required, as for instance to get ready the
elephants and chariots, and so on. Thus it was in this case.
On that same day, when the evening shadows had lengthened, the Master
caused his disciples to assemble and bestowed upon the two Elders the rank
of Chief Disciples. At this, some monks were displeased and said among
themselves: "The Master should have given the rank of Chief Disciples to
those who were ordained first, that is, the Group of Five disciples. If
not to them, then either to the group of two hundred and fifty bhikkhus
headed by Yasa, or to the thirty of the Auspicious Group (Bhaddavaggiya),
or else to the three Kassapa brothers. But passing over all these Great
Elders, he has given it to those whose ordination was the very last of
all."
The Master inquired about the subject of their talk. When he was told,
he said: "I do not show preference, but give to each what he has aspired
to. When, for instance, Kondañña-the Knower in a previous life gave
almsfood nine times during a single harvest, he did not aspire to Chief
Discipleship; his aspiration was to be the very first to penetrate to the
highest state, Arahatship. And so it came about. But when Sariputta and
Maha Moggallana many aeons ago, at the time of the Buddha Anomadassi, were
born as the brahman youth Sarada and landowner Sirivaddhaka, they made the
aspiration for Chief Discipleship. This, O bhikkhus, was the aspiration
for these my sons at that time. Hence I have given them just what they
aspired to, and did not do it out of preference."
This account of the beginning of the Venerable Sariputta's career is
taken from the Commentary to the Anguttara Nikaya, Etad-agga section, with
some passages from the parallel version in the Dhammapada Commentary. From
it some of the principal traits of the Venerable Sariputta's character are
already discernible. His capacity for deep and constant friendship showed
itself while he was still a worldling, a youth nurtured in luxury and
pleasure, and it persisted after he had abandoned the household life. On
receiving his first insight into the Dhamma, and before proceeding any
further, his first thought was for his friend Kolita and the vow they had
sworn together. His penetrating intellect is revealed in the promptness
with which he grasped the essence of the Buddha's teaching from a few
simple words. And, most rare of all, he combined that intellectual power
with a modesty and sweetness of nature that expressed itself in gratitude
and reverence for anyone, even the misguided Sañjaya, who had taught him
things of value. It was no wonder, therefore, that throughout his life he
continued to show respect for the Venerable Assaji, from whom he had
gained his introduction to the Buddha's Teaching. We are told in the
Commentary to the Nava Sutta (Sutta-Nipata), and also in the
Commentary to v. 392 of the Dhammapada, that whenever the Venerable
Sariputta lived in the same monastery as the Elder Assaji, he always went
to pay obeisance to him immediately after having done so to the Blessed
One. This he did out of reverence, thinking: "This venerable one was my
first teacher. It was through him that I came to know the Buddha's
Dispensation." And when the Elder Assaji lived in another monastery, the
Venerable Sariputta used to face the direction in which the Elder Assaji
was living, and to pay homage to him by touching the ground at five places
(with the head, hands and feet), and saluting with joined palms.
But this led to misunderstanding, for when other monks saw it they
said: "After becoming a Chief Disciple, Sariputta still worships the
heavenly quarters! Even today he cannot give up his brahmanical views!"
Hearing these remarks, the Blessed One said: "It is not so, bhikkhus.
Sariputta does not worship the heavenly quarters. He salutes him through
whom he came to know the Dhamma. It is him he salutes, worships and
reveres as his teacher. Sariputta is one who gives devout respect to his
teacher." It was then that the Master preached to the monks assembled
there the Nava Sutta,[9]
which starts with the words:
"As gods their homage pay to Indra, So should a man give
reverence to him From whom he learned the Dhamma." Another
example of the Venerable Sariputta's gratitude is given in the story of
Radha Thera. The Commentary to verse 76 of the Dhammapada relates that
there was living at Savatthi a poor brahman who stayed in the monastery.
There he performed little services such as weeding, sweeping, and the like
and the monks supported him with food. They did not, however, want to
ordain him. One day the Blessed One, in his mental survey of the world,
saw that this brahman was mature for Arahatship. he inquired about him
from the assembled monks, and asked whether any one of them remembered to
have received some help from the poor brahman. The Venerable Sariputta
said that he remembered that once, when he was going for alms in Rajagaha,
this poor brahman had given him a ladle full of almsfood that he had
begged for himself. The Master asked Sariputta to ordain the man, and he
was given the name Radha. The Venerable Sariputta then advised him time
and again as to what things should be done, and always Radha received his
admonitions gladly, without resentment. And so, living according to the
Elder's advice, he attained Arahatship in a short time.
This time the bhikkhus remarked on Sariputta's sense of gratitude and
said that he who himself willingly accepts advice obtains pupils who do
the same. Commenting on this, the Buddha said that not only then, but also
formerly Sariputta had showed gratitude and remembered any good deed done
to him. And in that connection the Master told the Alinacitta
Jataka, the story of a grateful elephant.[10]
Part II Maturity of Insight
If Sariputta was notable for his lasting sense of
gratitude, he was no less so for his capacity for friendship. With Maha
Moggallana, the friend and companion of his youth, he maintained a close
intimacy, and many were the conversations they held on the Dhamma. One of
these, which is of special interest as throwing light on the process of
Venerable Sariputta's attainment, is recorded in the Anguttara Nikaya,
Catukka-nipata, No. 167. It relates that once the Venerable Maha
Moggallana went to see the Elder and said to him:
"There are four ways of progress, brother Sariputta:
difficult progress, with sluggish
direct-knowledge; difficult progress, with swift
direct-knowledge; easy progress, with sluggish
direct-knowledge; easy progress, with direct-knowledge.
"By which of these four ways of progress, brother, was your
mind freed from the cankers without remnants of clinging?" To which the
Venerable Sariputta replied: "By that of those four ways of progress,
brother, which is easy and has swift direct-knowledge."
The explanation of this passage is that if the suppression of the
defilements preparatory to absorption or insight takes place without great
difficulty, progress is called "easy" (sukha-patipada); in the
reverse case it is "difficult" or "painful" (dukkha-patipada). If,
after the suppression of the defilements, the manifestation of the Path,
the goal of insight, is quickly effected, the direct-knowledge (connected
with the Path) is called "swift" (khippabhiñña); in the reverse
case it is "sluggish" (dandabhiñña). In this discourse the
Venerable Sariputta's statement refers to his attainment of Arahantship.
His attainment of the first three Paths, however, was, according to the
commentary to the above text, connected with "easy progress and sluggish
direct-knowledge."
In such ways as this did the two friends exchange information about
their experience and understanding of the Dhamma. They were also
frequently associated in attending to affairs of the Sangha. One such
occasion was when they combined in winning back certain monks who had been
led astray by Devadatta. There is an interesting passage[11]
in this connection which shows that the Venerable Sariputta's generous
praise of Devadatta's achievements before the latter brought about a
schism in the Sangha was the cause of a slight embarrassment. It relates
that when the Buddha asked Sariputta to proclaim in Rajagaha that
Devadatta's deeds and words should no longer be regarded as connected with
the Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha, the Venerable Sariputta said: "Formerly I
spoke at Rajagaha in praise of Devadatta's magical powers?" "Yes, Lord,"
the elder replied. "So you will now speak truthfully also, Sariputta, when
you make this proclamation about Devadatta." So, after receiving the
formal approval of the Sangha, the Venerable Sariputta, together with many
monks, went to Rajagaha and made the declaration about Devadatta.
When Devadatta had formally split the Sangha by declaring that he would
conduct Sangha-acts separately, he went to Vultures' Peak with five
hundred young monks who through ignorance had become his followers. To win
them back, the Buddha sent Sariputta and Maha Moggallana to the Vultures'
Peak, and while Devadatta was resting, the two Chief Disciples preached to
the monks, who attained to Stream-entry and went back to the Master.[12]
Another time when the Venerable Sariputta and the Venerable Maha
Moggallana worked together to restore order in the Sangha was when a group
of monks led by Assaji (not the Elder Assaji referred to earlier) and
Punnabbassu, living at Kitagiri, were misbehaving. In spite of repeated
admonitions, these monks would not mend their ways, so the two Chief
Disciples were sent to pronounce the penalty of pabbajaniya-kamma
(excommunication) on those who would not submit to the discipline.[13]
Venerable Sariputta's devotion to his friend was fully reciprocated; we
are told of two occasions when Sariputta was ill, and Maha Moggallana
attended to him and brought him medicine.
Yet there was nothing exclusive about the Venerable Sariputta's
friendships, for according to the commentary to the Maha-Gosinga
Sutta there was also a bond of mutual affection between him and the
Elder Ananda. On the part of Sariputta it was because he thought: "He is
attending on the Master -- a duty which should have been performed by me";
and Ananda's affection was due to the fact that Sariputta had been
declared by the Buddha as his foremost disciple. When Ananda gave Novice
Ordination to young pupils he used to take them to Sariputta to obtain
Higher ordination under him. The Venerable Sariputta did the same in
regard to Ananda, and in that way they had five hundred pupils in common.
Whenever the Venerable Ananda received choice robes or other requisites
he would offer them to Sariputta, and in the same way, Sariputta passed on
to Ananda any special offerings that were made to him. Once Ananda
received from a certain brahman a very valuable robe, and with the
Master's permission he kept it for ten days awaiting Sariputta's return.
The sub-commentary says that later teachers commented on this: "There may
be those who say: 'We can well understand that Ananda, who had not yet
attained to Arahatship, felt such affection. But how is it in the case of
Sariputta, who was a canker-free Arahat?" To this we answer: 'Sariputta's
affection was not one of worldly attachment, but a love for Ananda's
virtues (guna-bhatti).'"
The Buddha once asked the Venerable Ananda: "Do you, too, approve of
Sariputta?" And Ananda replied: "Who, O Lord, would not approve of
Sariputta, unless he were childish, corrupt, stupid or of perverted mind!
Learned, O Lord, is the Venerable Sariputta; of great wisdom, O Lord, is
the Venerable Sariputta; of broad, bright, quick, keen and penetrative
wisdom is the Venerable Sariputta; of few wants and contented, inclined to
seclusion, not fond of company, energetic, eloquent, willing to listen, an
exhorter who censures what is evil."[14]
In the Theragatha (v. 1034f) we find the Venerable Ananda describing
his emotion at the time of Sariputta's death. "When the Noble Friend
(Sariputta) had gone," he declares, "the world was plunged in darkness for
me." But he adds that after the companion had left him behind, and also
the Master had passed away, there was no other friend like mindfulness
directed on the body. Ananda's sorrow on learning of the Venerable
Sariputta's death is also described very movingly in the Cunda
Sutta.[15]
Sariputta was a true friend in the fullest sense of the word. He well
understood how to bring out the best in others, and in doing so did not
hesitate sometimes to speak straightforwardly and critically, like the
ideal friend described by the Buddha, who points out his friend's faults.
It was in this way that he helped the venerable Anuruddha in his final
break-through to Arahatship, as recorded in the Anguttara Nikaya
(Tika-Nipata No. 128):
Once the Venerable Anuruddha went to see the
Venerable Sariputta. When they had exchanged courteous greetings he sat
down and said to the Venerable Sariputta: "Friend Sariputta, with the
divine eye that is purified, transcending human ken, I can see the
thousandfold world-system. Firm is my energy, unremitting; my
mindfulness is alert and unconfused; the body is tranquil and
unperturbed; my mind is concentrated and one-pointed. And yet my mind is
not freed from cankers, not freed from clinging."
"Friend Anuruddha," said the Venerable Sariputta, "that you think
thus of your divine eye, this is conceit in you. That you think thus of
your firm energy, your alert mindfulness, your unperturbed body and your
concentrated mind, this is restlessness in you. That you think of your
mind not being freed from the cankers, this is worrying[16] in you. It will be good, indeed, if the Venerable
Anuruddha, abandoning these three states of mind and paying no attention
to them, will direct the mind to the Deathless Element."
And the Venerable Anuruddha later on gave up these three states of
mind, paid no attention to them and directed his mind to the Deathless
Element. And the Venerable Anuruddha, living then alone, secluded,
heedful, ardent, with determined mind, before long reached in this very
life, understanding and experiencing it by himself, that highest goal of
the Holy Life, for the sake of which noble sons go forth entirely from
home into homelessness. And he knew: "Exhausted is rebirth, lived is the
holy life, the work is done, nothing further remains after this." Thus
the Venerable Anuruddha became one of the
Arahats. Sariputta must have been stimulating company, and
sought after by many. What attracted men of quite different temperament to
him and his conversation can be well understood from the incident
described in the Maha-Gosinga Sutta (Majjhima Nikaya No. 32). One
evening the Elders Maha Moggallana, Maha Kassapa, Anuruddha, Revata and
Ananda went to Sariputta to listen to the Dhamma. The Venerable Sariputta
welcomed them, saying: "Delightful is this Gosinga Forest of Sala trees;
there is moonlight tonight, all the Sala trees are in full bloom, and it
seems that heavenly perfume drifts around. What kind of monk, do you
think, Ananda, will lend more luster to this Gosinga Sala Forest?"
The same question was put to the others as well, and each answered
according to his individual nature. Finally, Sariputta gave his own
answer, which was as follows:
"There is a monk who has control over his mind, who is under
the control of his mind.[17] In whatever (mental) abiding or attainment he wishes to
dwell in the forenoon, he can dwell in it at that time. In whatever
(mental) abiding or attainment he wishes to dwell at noon, he can dwell
in it at that time. In whatever (mental) abiding or attainment he wishes
to dwell in the evening, he can dwell in it at that time. It is as
though a king's or royal minister's cloth chest were full of
many-colored garments; so that whatever pair of garments he wishes to
wear in the morning, or at noon, or in the evening, he can wear it at
will at those times. Similarly it is with a monk who has control over
his mind, who is not under the control of his mind; in whatever (mental)
abiding or attainment he wishes to dwell in the morning, or at noon, or
in the evening, he can do so at will at those times. Such a monk, friend
Moggallana, may lend luster to this Gosinga Sala Forest."
They then went to the Buddha, who approved of all their
answers and added his own.
We see from this episode that Sariputta, with all his powerful
intellect and his status in the Sangha, was far from being a domineering
type who tried to impose his views on others. How well did he understand
how to stimulate self-expression in his companions in a natural and
charming way, conveying to them the pensive mood evoked by the enchanting
scenery! His own sensitive nature responded to it, and drew a similar
response from his friends.
There are many such conversations recorded between Sariputta and other
monks, not only the Venerables Maha Moggallana, Ananda and Anuruddha, but
also Maha Kotthita, Upavana, Samiddhi, Savittha, Bhumija and many more. It
seems that the Buddha himself liked to talk to Sariputta, for he often did
so, and many of his discourses were addressed to his "Marshal of the Law,"
to use the title he gave him.
Once, Sariputta repeated some words the Master had spoken to Ananda on
another occasion. "This is the whole of the Life of Purity
(brahmacariya); namely, noble friendship, noble companionship,
noble association."[18]
There could be no better exemplification of that teaching than the life
of the Chief Disciple himself.
Among the bhikkhus Sariputta was outstanding as one who helped others.
We find a reference to this in the Devadaha Sutta.[19]
Some visiting monks, about to return to their own places, took formal
leave of the Buddha. He then advised them to see the Venerable Sariputta
and take leave of him also, telling them: "Sariputta, O bhikkhus, is wise,
and a helper of his fellow monks."
The Commentary, in explanation of these words, says: "Sariputta was a
helper in two ways: by giving material help (amisanuggaha) and the
help of the Dhamma (dhammanuggaha)."
The Elder, it is said, did not go on almsround in the early morning
hours as the other bhikkhus did. Instead, when they had all gone he walked
around the entire monastery grounds, and wherever he saw an unswept place,
he swept it; wherever refuse had not been removed, he threw it away; where
furniture such as beds, chairs, etc., or earthenware had not been properly
arranged, he put them in order. He did that lest other, non-Buddhist
ascetics, visiting the monastery, might see some disorderliness and speak
in contempt of the bhikkhus.
Then he used to go to the hall for the sick, and having spoken
consoling words to the patients he would ask them about their needs. To
procure their requirements he took with him young novices, and went in
search of medicine either by way of the customary almsround or to some
appropriate place. When the medicine was obtained he would give it to the
novices, saying: "Caring for the sick has been praised by the Master! Go
now, good people, and be heedful!" After sending them back to the
monastery sick room he would go on the alms-round or take his meal at a
supporter's house. This was his habit when staying for some time at a
monastery.
But when going on a journey on foot with the Blessed One, he did not go
with the very first of the monks, shod with sandals and umbrella in hand,
as one who thinks: "I am the Chief Disciple." But letting the young
novices take his bowl and robes sending them with the others, he himself
would first attend to those who were old, very young, or unwell, making
them apply oil to any sores they might have on their bodies. Then, either
later on the same day or on the next day, he would leave together with
them.
Once, when for that reason the Elder Sariputta had arrived particularly
late at the place where the others were resting, he did not get proper
quarters for the night, and seated himself under a tent made from robes.
The Master saw this, and next day he caused the monks to assemble and told
them the story of the elephant, the monkey and the partridge who, after
deciding which was the eldest of them, lived together showing respect for
the seniormost.[20]
He then laid down the rule that "lodgings should be allocated according to
seniority."[21]
In this way the Venerable Sariputta was a helper by giving material
help.
Sometimes he would give material help and the help of the Dhamma
together, as when he visited Samitigutta, who suffered from leprosy, in
the infirmary. The Theragatha Commentary tells us that he said to
Samitigutta: "Friend, so long as the aggregates (khandha) continue,
all feeling is just suffering. Only when the aggregates are no more is
there no more suffering." Having thus given him the contemplation of
feelings as subject of meditation, Sariputta went away. Samitigutta,
following the Elder's instruction, developed insight and realised the six
supernormal powers (chalabhiñña) as an Arahat.[22]
Again, when Anathapindika was lying on his deathbed, Sariputta visited
him, accompanied by Ananda. Sariputta preached to the dying man on
non-attachment, and Anathapindika was greatly moved by the profound
discourse.[23]
Another sickbed sermon given by the Elder to Anathapindika is preserved
in the Sotapatti-Samyutta (Vagga 3, Sutta 6). In this discourse,
Anathapindika is reminded that those things which lead to rebirth in
states of woe are no longer in him, but that he possesses the four basic
qualities of Stream-entry (sotapattiyanga) and the eight path
factors: in considering this, his pains would subside. As the result, his
pains did subside.
Once the Elder Channa was lying ill and in great pain. The Venerable
Sariputta paid him a visit, in company with the Elder Maha Cunda. Seeing
the sick monk's agonies, Sariputta at once offered to go in search of
medicines and suitable food for him. But Channa told them he had decided
to take his life, and after they had left he did so. Afterwards the Buddha
explained that the Elder Channa's act was without demerit and blameless,
since he had attained Arahatship while dying. This story is found in the
Channovada Sutta (Majjh. 144).
It is said that whenever Sariputta gave advice, he showed infinite
patience; he would admonish and instruct up to a hundred or a thousand
times, until his pupil was established in the Fruition of Stream-entry.
Only then did he discharge him and give his advice to others. Very great
was the number of those who, after receiving his instruction and following
it faithfully, attained to Arahatship. In the Sacca-vibhanga Sutta
(Majjh. 141) the Buddha says: "Sariputta is like a mother who brings
forth, while Moggallana is like a nurse of that which has been brought
forth. Sariputta trains to the Fruit of Stream-entry, and Moggallana
trains to the highest goal."
Explaining this passage, the Commentary says: "When Sariputta accepted
pupils for training, whether they were ordained by him or by others, he
favored them with his material and spiritual help, looked after them in
sickness, gave them a subject of meditation and at last, when he knew that
they had become Stream-winners and had risen above the dangers of the
lower worlds, he dismissed them in the confident knowledge that 'Now they
can, by their own manly strength, produce the higher stages of Saintship.'
Having thus become free from concern about their future, he instructed new
groups of pupils. But Maha Moggallana, when training pupils in the same
way, did not give up concern for them until they had attained Arahatship.
This was because he felt, as was said by the Master: 'As even a little
excrement is of evil smell, I do not praise even the shortest spell of
existence, be it no longer than a snap of the fingers.'"
But although the Majjhima Commentary says that Sariputta used to lead
his regular pupils only up to Stream-entry, in individual cases he helped
monks to attain the higher stages. The Udana Commentary, for example, says
that "at that time bhikkhus in higher training (sekha) often used
to approach the Venerable Sariputta for a subject of meditation that could
help them to attain the three higher Paths." It was after taking
instruction from Sariputta that the Elder Lakuntika Bhaddiya ("The Dwarf")
attained Arahatship,[24]
having been a Stream-winner at the time. There is also the case of the
Venerable Anuruddha, referred to on p. 27.
It was in this manner that the Venerable Sariputta gave the help of the
Dhamma. He was a great leader of men and an outstanding spiritual adviser.
To the latter task he brought not only a keen and perceptive understanding
of the human mind, but also a warm, human interest in others which must
have been a great encouragement to those under his spiritual guidance. We
have already seen how ready he was to give generous praise where it was
due; he was also keen at all times to meet noble monks, particularly those
whom the Master had commended. One such was the Elder Punna Mantaniputta;
when Sariputta learned that he had come on a visit he went to meet him.
Without telling him who he was, he listened to Punna's great discourse,
the Stage Coach simile (Majjh. No. 24), and when it was ended gave it high
praise.
Administering to the physical as well as the spiritual needs of the
monks under his charge, restraining them with kindly admonitions and
encouraging them with the praise their efforts deserved, guiding them on
the path showing in all he did that vital sympathetic interest which draws
forth the best from a pupil, Sariputta combined the qualities of a perfect
teacher with those of a perfect friend. He was ready to help in every way,
in small things as in great. Filled with the virtue of the Holy Life
himself, he was quick to see virtue in others, expert in developing it in
those in whom it was latent, and among the first to extol it where it was
in full flower. His was no cold, aloof perfection, but the richest
intermingling of spiritual exaltation with the qualities that are finest
and most endearing in a human being.
Two stanzas in the Theragatha (995, 996) relate, in words ascribed to
the Venerable Sariputta himself, the way in which he attained Arahatship.
There he tells us:
"It was to another that the Blessed One was teaching the
Dhamma; to the Dhamma-preaching I listened intently for my own good. And
not in vain, for freed from all defilements, I gained release."
In the next two verses (996-7) the Elder declares that he
felt no inclination to develop the five supernormal powers
(abhiñña). However, the Iddhividha-Katha of the Patisambhida
Magga credits him with possessing the intensive degree of meditative
concentration called "the power of intervention by concentration"
(samadhi-vipphara-iddhi), which is capable of intervening in
certain normal physiological processes or other natural events. This is
illustrated by the anecdote in the Visuddhimagga, Ch. XII, which
records that once when the Venerable Sariputta was living with the Elder
Maha Moggallana at Kapotakandara, he was sitting meditating in the open
with his hair freshly shaved when he was given a malicious blow on the
head by a mischievous spirit. The blow was a very severe one, but at the
time it was given "the Elder was absorbed in meditative attainment;
consequently he suffered no harm." The source of this story is the Udana
(IV.4) which continues the account as follows:
The Venerable Maha Moggallana saw the incident and
approached the Venerable Sariputta to ask how he fared. He asked him:
"Brother, are you comfortable? Are you doing well? Does nothing trouble
you?"
"I am comfortable, brother Moggallana," said the Venerable Sariputta.
"I am doing well, brother Moggallana. Only my head troubles me a
little."
Whereupon the Venerable Maha Moggallana said: "O wonderful is it,
brother Sariputta! O marvelous is it, brother Sariputta! How great is
the psychic power, and how great is the might of the Venerable
Sariputta! For just now, brother Sariputta, a certain demon gave you a
blow on the head. And a mighty blow it was! With such a blow one might
fell an elephant seven or seven and a half cubits high, or one might
split a mountain peak. But the Venerable Sariputta says only this, 'I am
comfortable, brother Moggallana. I am doing well, brother Moggallana.
Only my head troubles me a little.'"
Then the Venerable Sariputta replied: "O wonderful is it, brother
Moggallana! O marvelous is it, brother Moggallana! How great is the
psychic power and how great is the might of the Venerable Moggallana,
that he should see any demon at all! As for me, I have not seen so much
as a mud-sprite!" The Anupada Sutta
(Majjh. III) contains a description of Sariputta's attainments given by
the Buddha himself. In it the Blessed One declares that the Venerable
Sariputta had mastered the nine meditative attainments, that is the four
fine-material and four immaterial jhanas and the cessation of perception
and feeling. And in the Sariputta Samyutta[25]
the Venerable Elder mentions the fact himself, in speaking to Ananda,
adding that in all the stages he was free of any self-reference: "I had no
such thoughts as 'I am entering the jhana; I have entered it; I am rising
from it.'" And on another occasion he describes to Ananda how he attained
to such developed concentration of mind that with regard to the earth
element he was without earth perception of them. Yet it seems that he was
without perception of them. Yet it seems that he was not entirely without
perception of another kind, his only perception being that "Nibbana is
ceasing of coming-to-be" (bhava-nirodha).[26]
This detached attitude to the jhanic attainments may have been due to
the meditative "abiding in voidness" (suññata-vihara) which the
Venerable Sariputta cultivated. We read in the Pindapata-parisuddhi
Sutta (Majjh. 151) that the Buddha once remarked on the Venerable
Sariputta's radiant features and asked him by which state of mind this
radiance had been caused.[27]
The Venerable Sariputta replied that he frequently practiced the abiding
in voidness, upon which the Buddha said that this was the abode of great
men, and proceeded to describe it in detail. The Udana records that on
three occasions the Master saw the Venerable Sariputta seated in
meditation outside the monastery and uttered verses (udana) in
praise of a firm and calm mind.
We may perhaps imagine the Venerable Sariputta seated in meditation in
a bower such as that mentioned in the Devadaha Sutta (Khandha
Samyutta, No.2), where it is said "Once the Blessed One lived in the Sakya
country, at Devadaha, a market town of the Sakyas... At that time the
Venerable Sariputta was seated, not far from the Blessed One, under an
Elagala bush." The Commentary to the text tells us: "At Devadaha there was
a bower under an Elagala bush. This bush grows where there is a constant
supply of flowing water. People had made a bower with four posts over
which they let the bush grow, forming a roof. Under it they made a seat by
placing bricks there and strewing it with sand. It was a cool place for
the daytime, with a fresh breeze blowing from the water." It may well have
been in some such rustic shelter as this that the Buddha saw Sariputta
deep in meditation, on those occasions when he extolled his disciple's
tranquillity and detachment.
Concerning his attainment to analytical knowledge
(patisambhida-ñana), the Venerable Sariputta speaks of it in the
Anguttara Nikaya (Fours, No. 172), where he says:
"It was half a month after my ordination, friends that I
realized, in all their parts and details, the analytical knowledge of
meaning, the analytical knowledge of the Dhamma, the analytical
knowledge of language, the analytical knowledge of perspicuity. These I
expound in many ways, teach them and make them known, establish and
reveal them, explain and clarify them. If anyone has any doubt or
uncertainty, he may ask me and I shall explain (the matter). Present is
the Master who is well acquainted with our attainments." From
all of this it is evident that the Venerable Sariputta was a master of all
the stages of attainment up to and including the highest
insight-knowledge. What could be more aptly said of him than this, in the
Buddha's own words:
"If one could ever say rightly of one that he has come to
mastery and perfection in noble virtue, in noble concentration, in noble
wisdom and noble liberation, it is of Sariputta that one could thus
rightly declare.
"If one could ever say rightly of one that he is the Blessed One's
true son, born of his speech, born of the Dhamma, formed of the Dhamma,
heir to the Dhamma, not heir to worldly benefit, it is Sariputta that
one could thus rightly declare.
"After me, O monks, Sariputta rightly turns the supreme Wheel of
Dhamma, even as I have turned it."
Majjh. 111, Anupada Sutta
The discourses of Sariputta and the books attributed to him form a
comprehensive body of teaching that for scope and variety of exposition
can stand beside that of the Master himself. Sariputta understood in a
unique way how to organize and present the rich material of the Dhamma
lucidly, in a manner that was intellectually stimulating and also an
inspiration to practical effort. We find this exemplified in two classic
discourses of the Majjhima Nikaya, the Samma-ditthi Sutta (No. 9)
and the Greater Sutta on the Elephant Footprint Simile (No. 28).
The Greater Discourse on the Elephant Footprint
Simile[28] is a masterpiece of methodical treatment. It begins with
the statement that the Four Noble Truths comprise everything that is
salutary, then singles out the Truth of Suffering as being identifiable
with the five aggregates of personality. From these, the aggregate of
corporeality is chosen for detailed investigation; it is shown to consist
of the four great elements, each of which is said to be internal and
external. The bodily parts and functions belonging to the internal element
are stated in detail, and it is said of both the internal and external
elements that they neither belong to a self, nor constitute a self. This
insight leads to disgust and detachment regarding the elements.
The discourse then goes on to show the impermanence of the mighty
external elements when they are involved in great upheavals of nature, and
against that background it is stressed that this tiny body, the product of
craving, can never be regarded as "I" or "mine" or considered in the sense
of "I am." And when a monk who has this firm and deeply rooted insight
meets with abuse, blame and hostility on the part of others, he is able to
analyze the situation soberly and so remain master of it. He recognizes
that the painful feeling that has arisen in him is produced by
ear-contact, which is in itself no more than a conditioned phenomenon; and
of all the constituent parts of the situation he knows that they are
impermanent. This he discerns with reference to contact, feeling,
perception, formations and consciousness. At this point of the discourse
we see that the other four aggregates, the mental components of
personality, are introduced in an organic context, together with the
already mentioned factor of contact. The discourse then continues: "Then
his mind, just by taking only the elements as its object, becomes elated,
gladdened, firm and intent; and even if he is beaten and injured he will
think: 'This body is of such a nature that is liable to such injuries.'"
Thereupon he recollects the Master's Simile of the Saw and will resolve to
follow the Buddha's injunction to suffer all injuries in patience,
whatever may happen to him.
But, the sermon continues, if when thus remembering the Buddha, Dhamma
and Sangha the monk's equanimity does not endure, he will be stirred by a
sense of urgency and feel ashamed that, in spite of that recollection of
the Triple Gem, he could not remain constant. On the other hand, if his
endurance persists he will experience happiness. "Even to this extent,
much has been achieved by that monk," says the sutta.
Here all the four elements are treated identically. The concluding
section starts by comparing the body and its constituent parts with a
house, which is made up of its various components. After that follows an
exposition of the conditioned arising of the sixfold perceptual
consciousness. In mentioning the five sense-organs and sense-objects as
the basic conditions for the arising of five-sense consciousness, derived
corporeality is here introduced by means of a prominent part of it, thus
completing the treatment of the corporeal aggregate. With the state of
consciousness having thus arisen, all five aggregates are given, and in
that way their conjunction can be understood, as well as their dependent
origination. And in this connection Sariputta quotes the Master: "He who
understands dependent origination understands the Dhamma; and he who
understands the Dhamma understands dependent origination." Desire,
inclination and attachment in regard to the five aggregates is the
origin of suffering. Removal of that desire, inclination and
attachment is the cessation of suffering. And of the monk who has
understood this it is said: "Even to this extent, much has been achieved
by that monk," Thus the exposition is rounded off with the Four Noble
Truths. This discourse is indeed like an intricate and beautifully
constructed piece of music ending on a solemn and majestic chord.
Another model exposition of the Venerable Sariputta's
is the Samma-ditthi Sutta.[29]
This is a masterpiece of teaching, which also provides a framework for
further elaboration, such as given in the extensive commentary to it. The
Commentary says: "In the Buddha Word as collected in the five great
Nikayas there is no discourse other than the Discourse on Right
Understanding, wherein the Four Noble Truths are stated thirty-two times,
and thirty-two times the state of Arahatship." The same discourse also
gives us an original exposition of dependent origination, with slight, but
very instructive, variations. Each factor of dependent origination is
used, as are also the additional sections, to illustrate the right
understanding of the Four Noble Truths, the comprehension of which is thus
greatly enhanced, broadened and deepened. This discourse has been widely
used for instructional purposes throughout the centuries down to the
present day.
Another of the Venerable Sariputta's discourses is the
Sama-citta Sutta[30]
which was listened to by the "devas of tranquil mind." It is concerned
with the first three stages of sanctitude, the Stream-winner, the
Once-returner and the Non-returner. Its purpose is to clarify the question
of their residuum of rebirths, in the five-sense world or in the
fine-material and non-material worlds, which depends upon their mode of
practice and on the fetters of existence still remaining. It is a very
short discourse, but had a singular impact on the huge assembly of devas
who, according to tradition, assembled to hear it. It is said that a very
large number of them attained Arahatship, and innumerable were those who
reached Stream-entry. This discourse of the Venerable Sariputta is, in
fact, counted among the few which had unusually far-reaching results among
beings of the higher worlds; and although it is a very brief text rather
cryptic without the commentarial explanation, it had a high reputation in
succeeding centuries. It is the sermon that was preached by the Arahat
Mahinda on the evening of his arrival in Ceylon, and the Mahavamsa
(XIV, 34ff), Ceylon's famous chronicle, relates that on this occasion,
also, numerous devas listened and achieved penetration of the Dhamma.
The high regard in which the discourse is held, and the strong impact
ascribed to it, may be attributed to the fact that it helps those on the
Path to define their position as to the kind of rebirths still to be
expected by them. Devas on higher levels of development are sometimes
inclined to regard their heavenly status as final, and do not expect to be
reborn in the five-sense world, as may sometimes be the case. The Great
Elder's discourse gave them a criterion by which to judge their position.
For worldlings still outside the Paths, as well, it must have offered
valuable orientation for the direction of their efforts.
The Sangiti Sutta ("The Recital") and
Dasuttara Sutta ("Up to Ten"), two more of the Venerable
Sariputta's sermons, are the last two texts of the Digha Nikaya, the
Collection of Long Discourses. Both these texts are compilations of
doctrinal terms, in which a large number of topics are classified as
falling into groups of from one to ten members. The reason for bringing
the compilation only up to ten may have been that there are only very few
groups of doctrinal terms extending beyond ten members, and these could be
supposed to be well known and easily remembered. The Sangiti Sutta
was preached in the presence of the Buddha, and at its conclusion received
his express approval.
While in the Sangiti Sutta the doctrinal terms are arranged
solely in numerical groups of one to ten, in the Dasuttara Sutta
each of these ten groups has tenfold subdivision which serves to bring out
the practical significance of these groups, for example:
"One thing(1) is of great importance, (2) should be
developed, (3) should be fully known, (4) should be abandoned, (5)
implies decline, (6) implies progress, (7) is hard to penetrate, (8)
should be made to arise, (9) should be directly known, (10) should be
realized. What is the one thing of great importance? Heedfulness in
salutary things..." These texts must have been compiled at a
fairly late period of the Buddha's and the Venerable Sariputta's life,
when there was already in existence a large body of doctrine and carefully
transmitted discourses which required organizing for ready use, and also
anthologies of salient features of the Dhamma became a useful aid in a
comprehensive study of the Teaching. The Sangiti Sutta was
delivered at the time of Nigantha Nataputta's death, on the date of which,
however, scholars differ. It was, in fact, this event that occasioned the
preaching of the sutta, for it speaks of the dissensions, schisms and
doctrinal disagreements that arose among the Jains immediately after the
death of their Master, Nigantha Nataputta, otherwise Mahavira. This was
taken as a warning example by the Venerable Sariputta, who in his
discourse stresses that this text "should be recited by all in concord and
without dissension, so that the Holy Life should last long for the welfare
and happiness of gods and men." The commentators say that the Sangiti
Sutta is meant to convey the "flavor of concord" (samaggi-rasa)
in the Teaching, which is strengthened by doctrinal proficiency
(desana-kusalata).
The practical purpose of the Dasuttara Sutta is indicated in the
Venerable Sariputta's introductory verses:
"The Dasuttara (Discourse) I shall proclaim -- a teaching
for the attainment of Nibbana and the ending of suffering, the release
from all bondage."
Dasuttaram pavakkhami dhammam nibbanappattiya dukkhas'
antakiriyaya sabbaganthapamocanam.
It seems likely that these two suttas served as a kind of index to
selected teachings. They may have been useful also to those monks who did
not memorize a great many texts; to them they may have been helpful in
presenting numerous aspects of the Teaching in a form that was easily
memorized and assimilated. Both of these discourses admirably illustrate
the Venerable Sariputta's concern with the preservation of the Dhamma, and
his systematic way of ensuring that it was transmitted intact in all its
details. It was for that purpose that he provided "study aids" such as
these and other discourses, together with works like the Niddesa.
* * *
A summary of other discourses given by the Venerable Sariputta is
included at the end of this book. We shall now turn to a consideration of
larger canonical works attributed to him.
The first is the Niddesa, which belongs to the Khuddaka Nikaya
of the Sutta Pitaka. it is the only work of an exclusively commentarial
character included in the Pali Tipitaka. Of its two parts, the Maha
Niddesa is a commentary to the Atthaka-vagga of the Sutta Nipata,
while the Cula Niddesa comments on the Parayana-vagga and the
Khaggavisana Sutta, likewise of the Sutta Nipata.
The Atthaka-vagga and the Parayana-vagga are the last two books of the
Sutta Nipata, and doubtlessly belong to the oldest parts not only of that
work but of the entire Sutta Pitaka. They were highly appreciated even in
the earlier days of the Sangha, and of the Buddhist laity as well, as is
testified by the fact that the Udana records a recital of the
Atthaka-vagga by Sona Thera and the Anguttara Nikaya a recital of the
Parayana-vagga by the female lay disciple, Nandamata. On at least five
occasions the Buddha himself has given explanations of verses contained in
these two parts of the Sutta Nipata. Apart from the high esteem in which
they were evidently held, the fact that these two verse collections
contain numerous archaic words and terse aphoristic sayings makes it
understandable that in very early days a commentary on them was composed
which was later included in the canonical scriptures. The traditional
attribution of it to the Venerable Sariputta must be regarded as highly
plausible.[31] It is quite in character with the great Elder's concern
with the methodical instruction of bhikkhus that the Niddesa contains not
only word explanations, clarifications of the context and supporting
quotations from the Buddha Word, but also material obviously meant for
linguistic instruction, such as the addition of many synonyms of the word
explained. On this subject, Prof. E.J. Thomas writes as follows:[32]
The most characteristic feature of the Niddesa... consists
of a list of synonyms of the words commented on. Such lists are not used
to explain the meaning of a word in a particular context. They are
repeated in the same form wherever the word occurs and were evidently
intended to be learned in the same way as the modern kosha
(dictionary)... Much of this is also found in the Abhidhamma books, but
in the Niddesa it is used as general matter applied to passages for
which it was not immediately intended... This shows a system for
learning the vocabulary of the Canon, and for explaining archaic forms,
but no further grammatical teaching occurs apart from the description of
certain terms as particles... in the Niddesa we thus have direct
evidence of a general system of instruction applied to a definite work,
consisting of interpretation, doctrinal teaching and the verbal
expositions of the beginnings of grammar. The Abhidhamma books and
related works like the Patisambhida Magga give other traces of
its existence. It appears to be this system which is expressly referred
to in the Niddesa (1, 234) and other places as the four kinds of
analysis (patisambhida); the analysis of meanings (attha),
of conditions (dhamma), of grammatical analysis (nirutti),
and clearness of insight (patibhana). The Nirutti of the Niddesa
is of the kind that we should expect to exist when Pali was a living
language. All the grammatical analysis that was required was a knowledge
of those words in the Scriptures that had become obsolete, and the
explanation of unusual grammatical forms by means of current
expressions... We can see from its different forms and readings that it
underwent changes and received additions, and in the case of a work used
continually for instruction this would be inevitable. The
Venerable Sariputta states that he attained to the four kinds of
analytical knowledge (patisambhida) two weeks after his ordination,
that is, on attaining Arahatship.[33]
This fact, and the extensive application of nirutti-patisambhida,
"grammatical analysis," in the Niddesa, make it quite probable that he was
actually the author of both the Niddesa and the Patisambhida Magga.
The Maha Niddesa contains also the commentary on the Sariputta
Sutta (also called the "Therapañha Sutta") which forms the last
text of the Atthaka-vagga. The first part of this text, with verses in
praise of the Master and questions put to him, is ascribed to Sariputta.
The Maha Niddesa explains the opening stanza as referring to the Buddha's
return from Tavatimsa heaven after he had preached the Abhidhamma there.
Apart from that it contains only his questions, the essential part of the
text being the Buddha's replies.
The Patisambhida Magga has the appearance of a manual of higher
Buddhist studies, and its range is as broad as that of the mind of its
reputed author. At the beginning it presents treatises on 72 types of
knowledge (ñana) and on the types of wrong speculative views
(ditthi), both of which show the methodical and penetrative mind of
the Venerable Sariputta. In the Treatise on Knowledge, as well as in other
chapters of the work, there are found a large number of doctrinal terms
appearing for the first time and only in the Patisambhida Magga. It also
contains elaborations of terms and teachings that are mentioned only
briefly in other and older parts of the Sutta Pitaka. In addition to this,
it contains material on meditation of great practical value, as for
example on mindfulness of breathing,[34]
metta-bhavana, and numerous insight-exercises. There is also, to
give variety to the subject matter, a passage of hymnic character and
great beauty, on the Great Compassion of the Tathagata. Mahanama Thera of
Ceylon, who wrote the Saddhammappakasini, the commentary to the
work, confidently ascribes it to the Venerable Sariputta, and in the
introductory stanzas gives eloquent praise of the great Elder. In the
Patisambhida Magga itself, Sariputta is mentioned twice, once as being one
who possesses samadhi-vipphara-iddhi (in the
Iddhividha-katha) and again in the Maha-pañña-katha,
Solasa-pañña-niddesa, where it is said: "Those whose wisdom is equal
to that of Sariputta, they partake to some extent of the
Buddha-knowledge."
We come now to one of the most important contributions made by the
Venerable Sariputta to Buddhist teaching. According to tradition (e.g., in
the Atthasalini), the Buddha preached the Abhidhamma in the
Tavatimsa heaven to his mother, Queen Maya, who had been reborn as deva in
that world. He did this for three months, and when returning daily to
earth for his meals, he gave to the Venerable Sariputta the "method"
(naya) of that portion of Abhidhamma he had preached. The
Atthasalini says; "Thus the giving of the method was to the Chief
Disciple, who was endowed with analytical knowledge, as though the Buddha
stood on the edge of the shore and pointed out the ocean with his open
hand. To the Elder the doctrine taught by the Blessed One in hundreds and
thousands of methods became very clear." Thereafter, the Elder passed on
what he had learned to his five hundred disciples.
Further it is said: "The textual order of the Abhidhamma originated
with Sariputta; the numerical series in the Great Book (Patthana)
was also determined by him. In this way the Elder, without spoiling the
unique doctrine, laid down the numerical series in order to make it easy
to learn, remember, study and teach the Law."
The Atthasalini, the Commentary to the Dhamma-sangani also
ascribes to Sariputta the following contributions to the canonical
Abhidhamma:
(a) The 42 couplets (dyads; duka) of the
Suttanta Matika, which follows the Abhidhamma Matika, both of which
preface the seven Abhidhamma books. The 42 Suttanta couplets are
explained in the Dhammasangani and this likewise has probably to be
ascribed to the Elder.
(b) The fourth and last part of the Dhammasangani, the
Atthuddhara-kanda, the "Synopsis".
(c) The arrangement for the recitation of the Abhidhamma
(vacanamagga).
(d) The Numerical Section (gañanacara) of the
Patthana. In the Anupada Sutta[35]
the Buddha himself speaks of the Venerable Sariputta's analysis of
meditative consciousness into its chief mental concomitants, which the
Elder undertook from his own experience, after rising from each of the
meditative attainments in succession. This analysis may well be either a
precursor or an abridgment of the detailed analysis of jhana-consciousness
given in the Dhammasangani.
Concerning the Venerable Sariputta's mastery of the Dhamma, and its
exposition, the Buddha had this to say:
"The Essence of Dhamma (dhammadhatu) has been so well
penetrated by Sariputta, O monks, that if I were to question him therein
for one day in different words and phrases, Sariputta would reply
likewise for one day in various words and phrases. And if I were to
question him for one night, or a day and a night, or for two days and
nights, even up to seven days and nights, Sariputta would expound the
matter for the same period of time, in various words and phrases."
Nidana Samyutta, No. 32 And
on another occasion the Master employed this simile:
"If he is endowed with five qualities, O monks, the eldest
son of a World-ruling Monarch righteously turns the Wheel of sovereignty
that had been turned by his father. And that Wheel of Sovereignty cannot
be overturned by any hostile human being. What are the five qualities?
The eldest son of a World-ruling Monarch knows what is beneficial, knows
the Law, knows the right measure, knows the right time and knows the
society (with which he has to deal, parisa).
Similarly, O monks, is Sariputta endowed with five qualities and
rightly turns the supreme Wheel of Dhamma, even as I have turned it. And
this Wheel cannot be overturned by ascetics, or priests, by deities or
Brahma, nor by anyone else in the world. What are those five qualities?
Sariputta, O monks, knows what is beneficial, knows the Teaching, knows
the right measure, knows the right time and knows the assembly (he is to
address)."
Anguttara Nikaya, V. 132
Other Theras were not behind in their appreciation. The Elder Vangisa,
in his encomium in the Theragatha (vv. 1231-3) praises Sariputta who
"teaches in brief and also speaks in detail," while in the same
compilation other great Elders, Maha Kassapa (vv. 1082-5) and Maha
Moggallana (vv. 1158; 1176-7; 1182) also give their meed of praise. And
the Venerable Maha Moggallana, at the end of Sariputta's Discourse on
Guiltlessness,[36]
uttered these words of tribute to his friend's sermon: "To (virtuous and
earnest) monks who have heard the exposition of the Venerable Sariputta it
will be like food and drink to their ears and mind. How well does he lift
up his fellow-monks from what is unwholesome, and confirm them in what is
good!"
The relationship in which the two Chief Disciples stood to one another
in the matter of teaching was explained by the Buddha when he said:
"Associate, O monks with Sariputta and Moggallana, and keep
company with them! They are wise bhikkhus and helpers of their
fellow-monks. Sariputta is like a mother who brings forth, and
Moggallana is like a nurse to what has been brought forth. Sariputta
trains (his pupils) in the Fruition of Stream-entry, and Moggallana
trains them for the highest goal.
"Sariputta is able to expound the Four Noble Truths in detail, to
teach them and make them intelligible, to proclaim, reveal and explain
them, and make them clear."
Majjh. 141, Sacca-vibhanga Sutta
And in the Anguttara Nikaya (11, 131);
"A monk of faith, O bhikkhus, should cherish this right aspiration:
'Oh, may I become such as Sariputta and Moggallana!' For Sariputta and
Moggallana are the model and standard for my
bhikkhu-disciples." That the Venerable Sariputta's great
reputation as a teacher of the Dhamma long survived him, to become a
tradition among later Buddhists, is shown by the concluding passages of
the Milinda-pañha, written some three hundred years later. There,
King Milinda compares Nagasena Thera to the Venerable Sariputta, saying:
"In this Buddha's Dispensation there is none other like yourself for
answering questions, except the Elder Sariputta, the Marshal of the Law."
That grand reputation still lives today, upheld by the cherished
teachings of the Great Disciple, preserved and enshrined in some of the
oldest books of Buddhism alongside the words of his Master.
As we have already seen, the Venerable Sariputta was born
into a brahman family of Upatissa village (or Nalaka), near Rajagaha, his
father's name being Vaganta and his mother's Sari. He had three brothers:
Cunda, Upasena and Revata, and three sisters named Cala, Upacala and
Sisupacala. All six took ordination and attained Arahatship.
Cunda was known by the name Samanuddesa, meaning "the
Novice" in the Sangha, even after becoming a bhikkhu; this was to
distinguish him from the Elder Maha Cunda. At the time of Sariputta's
death, Cunda was his attendant and it was he who informed the Buddha of
his passing away, bringing with him the Chief Disciple's relics. The story
is told in the Cunda Sutta, an outline of which will be given
elsewhere in this book.
Upasena, who came to be known as Vagantaputta, or "Son of Vaganta," as
Sariputta is "Son of Sari", was said by the Buddha to be foremost among
those of all-pleasing deportment (samantappasadika). He died of a
snakebite, as is related in the Salatayana Samyutta, Vagga 7, Sutta 7.
Revata was the youngest of the brothers, and their mother, wishing to
prevent his seeking ordination, had him married when he was a very young
boy. But on the wedding day he saw the grandmother of his future wife, an
old woman of 120, stricken with all the signs of decrepitude. At once he
became disgusted with worldly life. Escaping from the wedding procession
by a ruse, he fled to a monastery and was ordained. In later years he was
on his way to see the Buddha when he stopped at a forest of acacia trees
(khadira-vana), and while spending the rainy season there he
attained Arahatship. After that he became known as Revata Khadiravaniya --
"Revata of the Acacia Forest." The Buddha distinguished him as being the
foremost among forest dwellers.
The three sisters, Cala, Upacala and Sisupacala, wishing to follow
their brothers' example, became nuns after their marriage. In marriage,
each of them had a son who was named after his mother Cala (or Cali) and
so on. These three sons were also ordained, being received as novices by
Revata Khadtravaniya. Their good conduct was praised by the Venerable
Sariputta, who met them when he went to see his youngest brother who was
ill. This is recorded in the Commentary to the Theragatha, v. 42.
Cala, Upacala and Sisupacala as nuns are said to have been approached
by Mara with taunting and tempting questions, to which they gave excellent
replies. These are recorded in the Theragatha and Bhikkhuni Samyutta.
In contrast to all these, Sariputta's mother was a staunch brahman and
hostile to the Buddha's Teaching and his followers. In the Commentary to
the Dhammapada (v. 400) it is related that once, when the Venerable
Sariputta was in his own village of Nalaka with a large retinue of monks,
he came to his mother's house in the course of his almsround. His mother
gave him a seat and served him with food, but while she did so she uttered
abusive words: "Oh, you eater of others' leavings!" she said. "When you
fail to get leavings of sour rice-gruel you go from house to house among
strangers, licking the leavings off the backs of ladies! And so it was for
this that you gave up eighty crores of wealth and became a monk! You have
ruined me! Now go on and eat!"
Likewise, when she was serving food to the monks, she said: "So! You
are the men who have made my son your page boy! Go on, eat now!"
Thus she continued reviling them, but the Venerable Sariputta spoke not
a word. He took his food, ate it and in silence returned to the monastery.
The Buddha learned of the incident from the Venerable Rahula, who had been
among the monks at the time. All the bhikkhus who heard of it wondered at
the Elder's great forbearance, and in the midst of the assembly the Buddha
praised him, uttering the stanza:
"He that is free from anger, who performs his duties
faithfully. He that guards the precepts, and is free from lust; He
that has subdued himself, he that wears his last body -- He it is I
call a brahman." It was not until right at the close of
Sariputta's life that he was able to convert his mother; that story will
be told later on. But the incident that has been related here leads us to
a consideration of the great Elder's most pleasing characteristics, his
humility, patience and forbearance.
It is the neighborhood of Jetavana, where the Buddha is
residing. Some men are in a group, talking about the noble qualities of
the Elder Sariputta. "Such great patience has our noble Elder," they are
saying, "that even when people abuse him and strike him, he feels no trace
of anger."
"Who is this that never gets angry?" The question is from a brahman, a
holder of false views. And when they tell him, "It is our Elder,
Sariputta," he retorts: "It must be that nobody has ever provoked him."
"That is not so brahman," they reply. "Well, then, I will provoke him
to anger." "Provoke him to anger if you can!" "Leave it to me," says the
brahman. "I know just what to do to him."
The Venerable Sariputta enters the city on his round for alms.
Approaching him from behind, the brahman strikes him in a tremendous blow
on the back. "What was that?" says the Venerable Sariputta; and without so
much as turning to look, he continues on his way.
The fire of remorse leaps up in every part of the brahman's body.
Prostrating himself at the Elder's feet he begs for pardon. "For what?"
asks the Elder, mildly. "To test your patience I struck you," the penitent
brahman replies. "Very well, I pardon you."
"Reverend sir," the brahman says, "if you are willing to pardon me,
hereafter please take your food only at my house." With these words he
takes the Elder's almsbowl, which the Elder willingly yields, and leading
him to his house serves him with food.
But those who saw the assault are enraged. They gather at the brahman's
house, armed with sticks and stones, to kill him. When the Venerable
Sariputta emerges, accompanied by the brahman carrying his bowl, they cry:
"Reverend sir, order this brahman to turn back!"
"Why, lay disciples?" asks the Elder. They answer: "The man struck you.
We are going to give him what he deserves!"
"But what do you mean? Was it you, or me, he struck?"
"It was you, reverend sir." "Well, if it was me he struck, he has
begged my pardon. Go your ways." And so, dismissing the people and
permitting the brahman to return, the great Elder calmly makes his way to
the monastery.
This incident, recorded in the Dhammapada Commentary, was the occasion
of the Buddha's uttering the verses 389 and 390 of the Dhammapada, which
are among those that give the Buddha's definition of what constitutes a
brahman, that is to say, rectitude of conduct rather than birth or rank.
Let none strike a brahman; Let no brahman return a
blow. Shame on him that strikes a brahman! More shame on the
brahman who returns the blow! Not small is the gain to a
brahman Who restrains his mind from what is dear; As fast as the
will to injure wanes So fast indeed does suffering decline.
Dhammapada, vv 389, 390 The
Venerable Sariputta's humility was as great as his patience. He was
willing to receive correction from anyone, not only with submission but
with gratitude. It is told in the Commentary to the Devaputta Samyutta,
Susima Sutta, that once, through a momentary negligence, a corner
of the Elder's under-robe was hanging down, and a seven-year-old novice,
seeing this, pointed it out to him. The Venerable Sariputta stepped aside
at once and arranged the garment in the proper equally-circular way. Then
he stood before the novice with folded hands, saying: "Now it is correct,
teacher!"[37]
There is a reference to this incident in the Questions of
Milinda, where these verses are ascribed to the Venerable Sariputta:
"One who this very day, at the age of seven, has gone forth
-- If he should me, I accept it with (bended) head. At sight of
him, I give him ardent zeal and regard. With respect may I again and
again set him in the teacher's place!" On one
occasion the Buddha mildly reproved Sariputta for not having carried his
teaching far enough. When the brahman Dhanañjani was on his deathbed he
was visited by the Venerable Sariputta. The Elder, reflecting that
brahmans are bent on the Brahma-world (or "union with Brahma") taught the
dying man the way to it through the Brahma-viharas. As a result, it is
said, the brahman was in fact reborn there.
When the Venerable Sariputta returned from the visit, the Master asked
him: "Why, Sariputta, while there was more to do, did you set the brahman
Dhanañjani's thoughts on the inferior Brahma-world, and then rising from
your seat, leave him?" The Venerable Sariputta replied: "I thought: 'These
brahmans are bent on the Brahma-world. Should I not show the brahman
Dhanañjani the way to the communion with Brahma?"
"The brahman Dhanañjani has died, Sariputta", said the Buddha, "and he
has been reborn in the Brahma-world."
This story, which is found in the Dhanañjani Sutta of the
Majjhima Nikaya (97), is interesting as an illustration of the
undesirability of rebirth in an inferior Brahma-world for one who is
capable of bringing rebirth entirely to an end. For while the Buddha
himself sometimes showed only the way to Brahma, as for example in the
Tevijja Sutta, it seems probable that in the case of Dhanañjani the
Master saw that he was fit to receive a higher teaching, while the
Venerable Sariputta, lacking the capacity of knowing others' hearts
(lokiya-abhiñña), was not able to discern that fact. The result is
that Dhanañjani will spend an incalculable period in the Brahma-world and
will have to take human birth again before he can achieve the goal.
The Venerable Sariputta received another gentle reproof when, having
asked the Buddha why it was that the Sasana of some of the Buddhas of the
past did not last very long, and the Buddha had replied that it was
because those Enlightened Ones did not preach very much Dhamma, did not
lay down regulations for the disciples, nor institute the recital of the
Patimokkha, Sariputta said that it was now time for the Blessed One to
promulgate the regulations and to recite the Patimokkha, so that the Holy
Life might last for a long period. The Buddha said: "Let it be, Sariputta!
the Tathagata himself will know the time for it. The Master will not lay
down regulations for the disciples nor recite the Patimokkha until signs
of corruption have appeared in the Sangha."[38]
The disciple's concern that the Sasana should endure as long as
possible is characteristic of Sariputta; equally characteristic was it of
the Buddha that he did not wish to lay down regulations until such time as
it was absolutely necessary to do so. He went on to explain that at that
time the least-advanced member of the Sangha was a Sotapanna (perhaps a
fact of which the Venerable Sariputta was not aware), and therefore it was
not yet necessary to lay down the rules of the bhikkhu life.
The Catuma Sutta[39]
records another occasion when the great Elder was admonished by the
Master. A large number of monks, newly ordained, as the Commentary tell
us, by the Venerable Sariputta and Maha Moggallana, had come with the
latter to pay their respects to the Buddha for the first time. On arrival
they were allotted quarters and started chatting with the resident monks
of Catuma. Hearing the noise, the Buddha summoned the resident monks to
question them about it, and was told that the commotion was caused by the
new arrivals. The text does not say the visiting monks were present at the
time, but they must have been, for the Buddha addressed them with the
words: "Go away, monks I dismiss you. You should not stay with me."
The newly ordained monks left, but some persons intervened in their
behalf and they were allowed to return.
The Buddha then said to the Venerable Sariputta: "What did you think,
Sariputta, when I dismissed that group of monks?"
The Venerable Sariputta replied: "I thought: 'The Blessed One wishes to
remain unconcerned and to abide in the state of happiness here-and-now; so
we too shall remain unconcerned and abide in the state of happiness
here-and-now."
"Hold, Sariputta! Do not allow such a thought ever to arise in you
again!" the Buddha said. Then turning to Maha Moggallana, he put the same
question.
"When the Blessed One dismissed those monks," replied Maha Moggallana,
"I thought: 'The Blessed One wishes to remain unconcerned and to abide in
the state of happiness here-and-now. Then I and the Venerable Sariputta
should now look after the community of monks.'"
"Well spoken, Moggallana, well spoken!" said the Master. "It is either
myself or Sariputta or Moggallana who should look after the community of
monks."
The Sutta account is lacking in certain details which would place the
story in the proper light necessary for an understanding of all its
implications, but it is possible that since the monks who had been
dismissed were pupils of Sariputta and Maha Moggallana, the Elder wished
to show his displeasure with them and to indicate by his aloofness that
they had behaved badly.
Once, when the Buddha was residing at Jetavana, the Venerable Sariputta
was the victim of a false accusation. It so happened that at the end of
the rains the Elder took leave of the Master and departed with his own
retinue of monks on a journey. A large number of monks also took leave of
Sariputta, and in dismissing them he addressed those who were known by
their personal and family names, by those names. Among them there was a
monk who was not known by his personal and family name, but a strong
desire arose in him that the Chief Disciple should address him by those
names in taking his departure.
In the great throng of monks, however, the Venerable Sariputta did not
give him this distinction, and the monk was aggrieved. "He does not greet
me as he does the other monks," he thought, and conceived a grudge against
Sariputta. At the same time it chanced that the hem of the Elder's robe
brushed against him, and this added to his grievance. He approached the
Buddha and complained; "Lord, the Venerable Sariputta, doubtless thinking
to himself, 'I am the Chief Disciple', struck me a blow that almost
damaged my ear. And having done that without so much as begging my pardon,
he set out on his journey."
The Buddha summoned Sariputta into his presence. Meanwhile, the
Venerable Maha Moggallana and the Venerable Ananda, knowing that a calumny
was about to be exposed, summoned all the monks, convoking an assembly.
"Approach, venerable sirs!" they called. "When the Venerable Sariputta is
face to face with the Master, he will roar the roar of a lion!"[40]
And so it came about. When the Master questioned the
great Elder, instead of denying the charge he said: "O Lord, one who is
not firmly established in the contemplation of the body with regard to his
body, such a one may be able to hurt a fellow monk and leave without
apologizing." Then followed the Venerable Sariputta's lion's roar. He
compared his freedom from anger and hatred with the patience of the earth
which receives all things, clean and unclean; his tranquillity of mind to
a bull with severed horns, to a lowly Candala youth, to water, fire and
wind, and to the removal of impurity; he compared the oppression he felt
from his own body to the oppression of snakes and corpses, and the
maintenance of his body to that of fatty excrescences. In nine similes he
described his own virtues, and nine times the great earth responded to the
words of truth. The entire assembly was moved by the majestic force of his
utterance.
As the Elder proclaimed his virtues, remorse filled the monk who had
unjustly traduced him. Immediately, he fell at the feet of the Blessed
One, admitting his slander and confessing his fault. Thereupon the Buddha
said: "Sariputta, pardon this deluded man, lest his head should split into
seven pieces." Sariputta's reply was: "Venerable sir, I freely pardon this
venerable monk." And, with joined palms, he added, "May this venerable
monk also pardon me if I have in any way offended him."
In this way they were reconciled. The other monks were filled with
admiration, saying: "See, brethren, the surpassing goodness of the Elder!
He cherishes neither anger nor hatred against this lying, slanderous monk!
Instead, he crouches before him, stretches his hands in reverence, and
asks his pardon."
The Buddha's comment was: "Bhikkhus, it is impossible for Sariputta and
his like to cherish anger or hatred. Sariputta's mind is like the great
earth, firm like a gate post, like a pool of still water."
Unresentful like the earth, firm like a gate post, With
mind like a clear pool, such is the virtuous man For whom the round
of births exists no more.[41] Another incident of this nature, in the early
Sangha, did not end so happily, for the calumniator refused to admit his
fault. He was a monk named Kokalika, who approached the Buddha with a
slander against the two Chief Disciples; "Sariputta and Moggallana have
bad intentions, O Lord!" he said. "They are in the grip of evil ambition."
The Master replied: "Do not say so, Kokalika! Do not say so! Have
friendly and trustful thoughts towards Sariputta and Moggallana! They are
of good behavior, and lovable!"
But the misguided Kokalika paid no heed to the Buddha's words. He
persisted with his false accusation, and soon after that his whole body
became covered with boils, which continued to grow until eventually he
died of his illness.
This incident was well-known. It is recorded in the following places in
the Sutta-pitaka: Brahma Samyutta No. 10; Sutta Nipata, Mahavagga No. 10;
Anguttara Nikaya V. 170, and Takkariya Jataka (No. 481). A
comparison of these two incidents reveals the importance of penitence.
Neither the Venerable Sariputta nor Maha Moggallana bore the monk Kokalika
any ill-will for his malice, and his apologies, had he offered them, would
have made no difference to the attitude of the two Chief Disciples. But
they would have benefited the erring monk himself, averting the
consequences of his bad kamma. Evil rebounds upon those who direct it
towards the innocent, and so Kokalika was judged and punished by himself,
through his own deeds.
Part III The Further Shore
We now come to the year of the Master's Parinibbana. The Blessed One
had spent the rainy season at Beluva village,[42]
near Vesali, and when the Retreat was over he left that place and, going
by the way he had come, returned by stages to Savatthi and arrived at the
Jeta Grove Monastery.
There the Elder Sariputta, the Marshal of the Law, paid homage to the
Blessed One and went to his day quarters. When his own disciples had
saluted him and left, he swept the place and spread his leather mat. Then,
having rinsed his feet, he sat down cross-legged and entered into the
state of the Fruition Attainment of Arahatship.
At the time predetermined by him, he arose from the meditation, and
this thought occurred to him: "Do the Enlightened Ones have their final
passing away first, or the Chief Disciples?" And he saw that it is the
Chief Disciples who pass away first. Thereupon he considered his own
life-force, and saw that its residue would sustain him only for another
week.
He then considered: "Where shall I have my final passing away?" And he
thought: "Rahula finally passed away among the deities of the
Thirty-three, and the Elder Kondañña the Knower at the Chaddanta Lake.[43]
Where, then, will be my place?"
While thinking this over repeatedly he remembered his mother, and the
thought came to him: "Although she is the mother of seven Arahats[44]
she has no faith in the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha. Has she the
supportive conditions in her to acquire that faith or has she not?"
Investigating the matter he discerned that she had the supportive
conditions for the Path-intuition (abhisamaya) of Stream-entry.
Then he asked himself: "Though whose instruction can she win to the
penetration of truth?"
And he saw that not through anyone else's but only through his own
instruction in the Dhamma, could it come about. And following upon that
came the thought: "If I now remain indifferent, people will say:
'Sariputta has been a helper to so many others; on the day, for instance,
when he preached the Discourse to the Deities of Tranquil Mind a large
number of devas attained Arahatship, and still more of them penetrated to
the first three Paths; and on other occasions there were many who attained
to Stream-entry, and there thousands of families who were reborn in
heavenly worlds after the Elder had inspired them with joyous confidence
in the Triple Gem. Yet despite this he cannot remove the wrong views of
his own mother? Thus people may speak of me. Therefore I shall free my
mother from her wrong views, and shall have my final passing away in the
very chamber where I was born."
Having made that decision, he thought: "This very day I shall ask the
Master's permission and then leave for Nalaka." And, calling the elder
Cunda, who was his attendant, he said: "Friend Cunda, please ask our group
of five hundred bhikkhus to take their bowls and robes, for I wish to go
to Nalaka." And the elder Cunda did as he was bidden.
The bhikkhus put their lodgings in order, took their bowls and robes,
and presented themselves before the Elder Sariputta. He, for his own part,
had tidied up his living quarters and swept the place where he used to
spend the day. Then, standing at the gate, he looked back at the place,
thinking: "This is my last sight of it. There will be no more coming
back."
Then, together with the five hundred bhikkhus he went to the Blessed
One, saluted him and spoke: "May, O Lord, the Blessed One permit, may the
Exalted One consent: the time of my final passing away has come, I have
relinquished the life-force.
Lord of the World, O greatest Sage! From life I soon
shall be released. Going and coming no more shall be; This is the
last time that I worship thee.
Short is the life that now remains to me; But seven days from now,
and I shall lay This body down, throwing the burden off.
Grant it, O Master! Give permission, Lord! At last for me
Nibbana's time has come, Relinquished have I now the will to
live." Now, says the text, if the enlightened One were to
have replied, "You may have your final passing away," hostile sectarians
would say that he was speaking in praise of death; and if he had replied,
"Do not have your final passing away," they would say that he extolled the
continuation of the round of existence. Therefore the Blessed One did not
speak in either way, but asked: "Where will your final passing away take
place?"
The Venerable Sariputta replied: "In the Magadha country, in the
village called Nalaka, there in the chamber of my birth shall I finally
pass away."
Then the Blessed One said: "Do, Sariputta, what you think timely. But
now your elder and younger brethren in the Sangha will no longer have the
chance to see a bhikkhu like you. Give them once more a discourse on
Dhamma."
The great Elder then gave a discourse, displaying all his descending to
mundane truth, rising again, and again descending, he expounded the Dhamma
directly and in symbols. And when he had ended his discourse he paid
homage at the feet of the Master. embracing his legs, he said: "So that I
might worship these feet I have fulfilled the Perfections throughout an
aeon and a hundred thousand kalpas. My heart's wish has found fulfillment.
From now on there will be no more contact or meeting; severed now is that
intimate connection. The City of Nibbana, the unaging, undying, peaceful,
blissful, heat-assuaging and secure, which has been entered by many
hundreds of thousands of Buddhas -- I too shall enter it now.
"If any deed or word of mine did not please you, O Lord, may the
Blessed One forgive me! It is now time for me to go."
Now once before, the Buddha had answered this, when he said: "There is
nothing, be it in deeds or words, wherein I should have to reproach you,
Sariputta. For you are learned, Sariputta, of great wisdom, of broad and
bright, quick, keen and penetrative wisdom."[45]
So now he made answer in the same way: "I forgive you, Sariputta," he
said. "But there was not a single word or deed of yours that was
displeasing to me. Do now, Sariputta, what you think timely."
From this we see that on those few occasions when the Master seemed to
reproach his Chief Disciple, it was not that he was displeased with him in
any way, but rather that he was pointing out another approach to a
situation, another way of viewing a problem.
Immediately after the master had given his permission and the Venerable
Sariputta had risen from paying homage at his feet, the Great Earth cried
out, and with a single huge tremor shook to its watery boundaries. It was
as though the Great Earth wished to say: "Though I bear these girdling
mountain ranges with Mount Meru, the encircling mountain walls
(cakkavala) and the Himavant, I cannot sustain on this day so vast
an accumulation of virtue!" And mighty thunder split the heavens, a vast
cloud appeared and heavy rain poured down.
Then the Blessed One thought: "I shall now permit the Marshal of the
Law to depart." and he rose from the seat of the Law, went to his Perfumed
Cell and there stood on the Jewel Slab. Three times the Venerable
Sariputta circumambulated the cell, keeping it to his right, and paid
reverence at four places. And this thought was in his mind: "an aeon and a
hundred thousand kalpas ago it was, when I fell down at the feet of the
Buddha Anomadassi and made the aspiration to see you. This aspiration has
been realized, and I have seen you. At the first meeting it was my first
sight of you; now it is my last, and there will be none in the future."
And with raised hands joined in salutation he departed, going backwards
until the Blessed One was out of sight. And yet again the Great Earth,
unable to bear it, trembled to its watery boundaries.
The Blessed One then addressed the bhikkhus who surrounded him. "Go,
bhikkhus," he said. "Accompany your elder brother." At these words, all
the four assemblies of devotees at once went out of the Jeta Grove,
leaving the Blessed One there alone. The citizens of Savatthi also, having
heard the news, went out of the city in an unending stream carrying
incense and flowers in their hands; and with their hair wet (the sign of
mourning), they followed the Elder lamenting and weeping.
The Venerable Sariputta then admonished the crowd, saying: "This is a
road that none can avoid," and asked them to return. And to the monks who
had accompanied him, he said: "You may turn back now! Do not neglect the
Master!"
Thus he made them go back, and with only his own group of disciples, he
continued on his way. Yet still some of the people followed him,
lamenting. "Formerly our Venerable went on journeys and returned. But this
is a journey without return!" To them the Elder said: "Be heedful,
friends! Of such nature, indeed, are all things that are formed and
conditioned!" And he made them turn back.
During his journey the Venerable Sariputta spent one night wherever he
stopped, and thus for one week he favored many people with a last sight of
him. Reaching Nalaka village in the evening, he stopped near a banyan tree
at the village gate. It happened that at the time a nephew of the elder,
Uparevata by name, had gone outside the village and there he saw the
Venerable Sariputta. He approached the elder, saluted him, and remained
standing.
The Elder asked him: "Is your grand-aunt at home?" "Yes, venerable
sir," he replied. "Then go and announce our coming," said the Elder. "And
if she asks why I have come, tell her that I shall stay in the village for
one day, and ask her to prepare my birth chamber and provide lodgings for
five hundred bhikkhus."
Uparevata went to his grand-aunt and said: "Grandaunt, my uncle has
come."
"Where is he now?" she asked.
"At the village gate."
"Is he alone, or has someone else come with him?"
"He has come with five hundred bhikkhus."
And when she asked him, "Why has he come?" he gave her the message the
elder had entrusted to him. Then she thought: "Why does he ask me to
provide lodgings for so many? After becoming a monk in his youth, does he
want to be a layman again in his old age?" But she arranged the birth
chamber for the Elder and lodgings for the bhikkhus, had torches lit and
then sent for the Elder.
The Venerable Sariputta then, accompanied by the bhikkhus, went up to
the terrace of the house and entered his birth chamber. After seating
himself, he asked the bhikkhus to go to their quarters. They had hardly
left, when a grave illness, dysentery, fell upon the Elder, and he felt
severe pains. When one pail was brought in, another was carried out. The
brahman lady thought: "The news of my son is not good," and she stood
leaning by the door of her own room.
And then it happened, the text tells us, that the Four Great Divine
Kings asked themselves: "Where may he now be dwelling, the Marshal of the
Law?" And they perceived that he was at Nalaka, in his birth chamber,
lying on the bed of his Final Passing Away. "Let us go for a last sight of
him," they said.
When they reached the birth chamber, they saluted the Elder and
remained standing.
"Who are you?" asked the Elder.
"We are the Great Divine Kings, venerable sir."
"Why have you come?"
"We want to attend on you during your illness."
"Let it be!" said the Venerable Sariputta. "There is an attendant here.
You may go."
When they had left, there came in the same manner Sakka the king of the
gods, and after him, Maha Brahma, and all of them the elder dismissed in
the same way.
The brahman lady, seeing the coming and going of these deities, asked
herself: "Who could they have been, who came and paid homage to my son,
and then left?" And she went to the door of the elder's room and asked the
Venerable Cunda for news about the Elder's condition. Cunda conveyed the
inquiry to the Elder, telling him: "The Great Upasika (lay devotee) has
come."
The Venerable Sariputta asked her: "Why have you come at this unusual
hour?"
"To see you, dear," she replied. "Tell me, who were those who came
first?"
"The Four Great Divine Kings, upasika."
"Are you, then, greater than they?" she asked.
"They are like temple attendants," said the Elder. "Ever since our
Master took rebirth they have stood guard over him with swords in hand."
"After they had left, who was it that came then, dear?"
"It was Sakka the king of the gods."
"Are you then, greater than the king of gods, dear?"
"He is like a novice who carries a bhikkhu's belongings," answered
Sariputta. "When our Master returned from the heaven of the Thirty-three
(Tavatimsa), Sakka took his bowl and robe and descended to earth together
with him."
"And when Sakka had gone, who was it that came after him, filling the
room with his radiance?"
"Upasika, that was your own Lord and Master, the Great Brahma."
"Then are you greater, my son, even than my Lord, the Great Brahma?"
"Yes, Upasika. On the day when our Master was born, it is said that
four Great Brahmas received the Great Being in a golden net."
Upon hearing this, the brahman lady thought: "If my son's power is such
as this, what must be the majestic power of my son's Master and Lord?" And
while she was thinking this, suddenly the fivefold rapture arose in her,
suffusing her entire body.
The Elder thought: "Rapture and joy have arisen in my mother. Now is
the time to preach the Dhamma to her." And he said: "What was it you were
thinking about, upasika?"
"I was thinking," she replied, "if my son has such virtue, what must be
the virtue of his Master?"
The Venerable Sariputta answered: "At the moment of my Master's birth,
at his Great Renunciation (of worldly life), on his attaining
Enlightenment and at his first turning of the Dhamma Wheel -- on all these
occasions the ten thousand world-system quaked and shook. None is there
who equals him in virtue, in concentration, in wisdom, in deliverance, and
in the knowledge and vision of deliverance." And he then explained to her
in detail the words of homage: "Such indeed is that Blessed One..."
(Iti pi so Bhagava...). And thus he gave her an exposition of the
Dhamma, basing it on the virtues of the Buddha.
When the Dhamma talk given by her beloved son had come to an end, the
brahman lady was firmly established in the Fruition of Stream-entry, and
she said: "Oh, my dear Upatissa, why did you act like that? Why, during
all these years, did you not bestow on me this ambrosia (the knowledge of
the Deathless)?"
The Elder thought: "Now I have given my mother, the brahman lady
Rupa-Sari, the nursing-fee for bringing me up. This should suffice." and
he dismissed her with the words: "You may go now, upasika."
When she was gone, he asked: "What is the time now, Cunda?"
"Venerable sir, it is early dawn."
And the Elder said: "Let the community of bhikkhus assemble."
When the bhikkhus had assembled, he said to Cunda: "Lift me up to a
sitting position, Cunda." And Cunda did so.
Then the Elder spoke to the bhikkhus, saying: "For forty-four years I
have lived and traveled with you, my brethren. If any deed or word of mine
was unpleasant to you, forgive me, brethren."
And they replied: "Venerable sir, not the least displeasure has ever
come from you to us, who followed you inseparably like your shadow. But
may you, venerable sir, grant forgiveness to us!"
After that the Elder gathered his large robe around him, covered his
face and lay down on his right side. Then, just as the Master was to do at
his Maha Parinibbana, he entered into the nine successive attainments of
meditation, in forward and reverse order, and beginning again with the
first absorption he led his meditation up to the fourth absorption. And at
the moment after he had entered it, just as the crest of the rising sun
appeared over the horizon, he utterly passed away into the Nibbana-element
which is without any remnant of clinging.
And it was the full-moon day of the month Kattika, which by the solar
calendar is between October and November.
The brahman lady in her room thought: "How is my son? he does not say
anything." She rose, and going into the Elder's room she massaged his
legs. Then, seeing that he had passed away, she fell at his feet, loudly
lamenting; "O my dear son! Before this, we did not know of your virtue.
Because of that, we did not gain the good fortune to have seated in this
house, and to feed, many a hundred bhikkhus! We did not gain the good
fortune to have built many monasteries!" And she lamented thus up to
sunrise.
As soon as the sun was up, she sent for goldsmiths and had the treasure
room opened and had the pots full of gold weighed on a large scale. Then
she gave the gold to the goldsmiths with the order to prepare funeral
ornaments. Columns and arches were erected, and in the center of the
village the upasika had a pavilion of heart-wood built. In the middle of
the pavilion a large, gabled structure was raised, surrounded by a parapet
wall of golden arches and columns. Then they began the sacred ceremony, in
which men and deities mingled.
After the great assembly of people had celebrated the sacred rites for
a full week, they made a pyre with many kinds of fragrant woods. They
placed the body of the Venerable Sariputta on the pyre and kindled the
wood with bundles of Usira roots. Throughout the night of the cremation
the concourse listened to sermons on the Dhamma. After that the flames of
the pyre were extinguished by the Elder Anuruddha with scented water. The
Elder Cunda gathered together the relics and placed them in a filter
cloth.
Then the Elder Cunda thought: "I cannot tarry here any longer. I must
tell the Fully Enlightened One of the final passing away of my elder
brother, the Venerable Sariputta, the Marshal of the Law." So he took the
filter cloth with the relics, and the Venerable Sariputta's almsbowl and
robes, and went to Savatthi, spending only one night at each stage of the
journey.
These are the events released in the Commentary to the Cunda
Sutta of the Satipatthana Samyutta, with additions from the parallel
version in the Commentary to the Maha-parinibbana Sutta. The
narrative is taken up in the Cunda Sutta which follows.
Once the Blessed One was dwelling at Savatthi, in
Anathapindika's park. At that time the Venerable Sariputta was at Nalaka
village in the Magadha country, and was sick, suffering, gravely ill.
The Novice Cunda[47] was his attendant.
And the Venerable Sariputta passed away finally through that very
illness. Then the Novice Cunda took the almsbowl and robes of the
Venerable Sariputta and went to Savatthi, to the Jeta Grove,
Anathapindika's park. There he betook himself to the Venerable Ananda
and, having saluted him, seated himself at one side. Thus seated, he
spoke to the Venerable Ananda saying: "Venerable sir, the Venerable
Sariputta has had his final passing away. These are his bowl and robes."
"On this matter, Cunda, we ought to see the Blessed One. Let us go,
friend Cunda, and meet the Master. Having met him, we shall acquaint the
Blessed One with that fact."
"Yes, Venerable sir," said the Novice Cunda.
They went to see the Blessed One, and having arrived there and
saluted the Master, they seated themselves at one side. Then the
Venerable Ananda addressed the Blessed One:
"O Lord, the Novice Cunda has told me this: 'The Venerable Sariputta
has had his final passing away. These are his bowl and robes.' Then, O
Lord, my own body became weak as a creeper; everything around became dim
and things were no longer clear to me, when I heard about the final
passing away of the Venerable Sariputta."
"How is this, Ananda? When Sariputta had his final passing away, did
he take from you your portion of virtue, or your portion of
concentration, or your portion of the knowledge and vision of
deliverance?"
"Not so, Lord. When the Venerable Sariputta had his final passing
away he did not take my portion of virtue... concentration... wisdom...
deliverance, or my portion of the knowledge and vision of deliverance.
But O Lord, the Venerable Sariputta has been to me a mentor, teacher,
and instructor, one who rouses, inspires and gladdens, untiring in
preaching Dhamma, a helper of his fellow monks. And we remember how
vitalizing, enjoyable and helpful his Dhamma instruction was."
"Have I not taught you aforetime, Ananda, that it is the nature of
all things near and dear to us that we must suffer separation from them,
and be severed from them? Of that which is born, come to being, put
together, and so is subject to dissolution, how should it be said that
is should not depart? That, indeed, is not possible. It is, Ananda, as
though from a mighty hardwood tree a large branch should break off, so
has Sariputta now had his final passing away from this great and sound
community of bhikkhus. Indeed, Ananda, of that which is born, come to
being, put together, and so is subject to dissolution, how should it be
said that it should not depart? This, indeed, is not possible.
"Therefore, Ananda, be ye an island unto yourself, a refuge unto
yourself, seeking no external refuge; with the Teaching as your island,
the Teaching your refuge, seeking no other refuge."
The Commentary takes up the narrative thus:
The Master stretched forth his hand, and taking the filter
with the relics, placed it on his palm, and said to the monks:
"These, O monks, are the shell-colored relics of the bhikkhu who, not
long ago, asked for permission to have his final passing away. He who
fulfilled the Perfections for an incalculable aeon and a hundred
thousand kalpas -- this was that bhikkhu. He who obtained the seat next
to me -- this was that bhikkhu. He who, apart from me, had none to equal
him in wisdom throughout the whole ten-thousandfold universe -- this was
that bhikkhu. Of great wisdom was this bhikkhu, of broad wisdom, bright
wisdom, quick wisdom, of penetrative wisdom was this bhikkhu. Few wants
had this bhikkhu; he was contented, bent on seclusion, not fond of
company, full of energy, an exhorter of his fellow monks, censuring what
is evil. He who went forth into homelessness, abandoning the great
fortune obtained through his merits in five hundred existences -- this
was that bhikkhu. He who, in my Dispensation, was patient like the earth
-- this was that bhikkhu. Harmless like a bull whose horns had been cut
-- this was that bhikkhu. Of humble mind like a Candala boy -- this was
that bhikkhu.
"See here, O monks, the relics of him who was of great wisdom, of
broad, bright, quick, keen and penetrative wisdom; who had few wants and
was contented, bent on seclusion, not fond of company, energetic -- see
here the relics of him who was an exhorter of his fellow monks, who
censured evil!"
Then the Buddha spoke the following verses in praise of his Great
Disciple:
"To him who in five times a hundred lives Went forth to
homelessness, casting away Pleasures the heart holds dear, from
passion free, With faculties controlled -- now homage pay To
Sariputta who has passed away!
To him who, strong in patience like the earth, Over his own mind
had absolute sway, Who was compassionate, kind, serenely
cool, And firm as earth withal -- now homage pay To Sariputta
who has passed away!
Who, like an outcaste boy of humble mind, Enters the town and
slowly wends his way From door to door with begging bowls in
hand, Such was this Sariputta -- now homage pay To Sariputta who
has passed away!
One who in town or jungle, hurting none, Lived like a bull whose
horns are cut away, Such was this Sariputta, who had won Mastery
of himself -- now homage pay To Sariputta who has passed
away!"
* * *
When the Blessed One had thus lauded the virtues of the Venerable
Sariputta, he asked for a stupa to be built for the relics.
After that, he indicated to the Elder Ananda his wish to go to
Rajagaha. Ananda informed the monks, and the Blessed One, together with a
large body of bhikkhus, journeyed to Rajagaha. At the time he arrived
there, the Venerable Maha Moggallana had also had his final passing away.
The Blessed One took his relics likewise, and had a stupa raised for them.
Then he departed from Rajagaha, and going by stages towards the Ganges,
he reached Ukkacela. There he went to the bank of the Ganges, and seated
with his following of monks he preached the Ukkacela Sutta, on the
Parinibbana of Sariputta and Maha Moggallana.
Once the Blessed One was dwelling in the Vajji country, at
Ukkacela on the bank of the river Ganges, not long after Sariputta and
Maha Moggallana had passed away. And at that time the Blessed One was
seated in the open, surrounded by company of monks.
The Blessed One surveyed the silent gathering of monks, and then
spoke to them, saying:
"This assembly, O bhikkhus, appears indeed empty to me, now that
Sariputta and Maha Moggallana have passed away. Not empty, for me, is an
assembly, nor need I have concern for a place where Sariputta and Maha
Moggallana dwell.
"Those who in the past have been Holy Ones. Fully enlightened Ones,
those Blessed Ones, too, had such excellent pairs of disciples as I had
in Sariputta and Maha Moggallana. Those who in the future will be Holy
Ones, fully Enlightened Ones, those Blessed Ones too will have such
excellent pairs of disciples as I had in Sariputta and Maha Moggallana.
"Marvelous it is, most wonderful it is, bhikkhus, concerning those
disciples, that they will act in accordance with the Master's
Dispensation, will act in according to his advice; that they will be
dear to the four Assemblies, will be loved, respected and honored by
them. Marvelous it is, most wonderful it is, bhikkhus, concerning the
Perfect Ones, that when such a pair of disciples has passed away there
is no grief, no lamentation on the part of the Perfect One.
For of that which is born, come to being, put together, and so is
subject to dissolution, how should it be said that it should not depart?
That indeed, is not possible."
"Therefore, bhikkhus, be ye an island unto yourselves, a refuge unto
yourselves, seeking no external refuge; with the Teaching as your
island, the Teaching your refuge, seeking no other
refuge."
* * *
And with that profound and deeply moving exhortation, which echoes
again and again through the Buddha's Teaching up to the time of his own
final passing away, ends the story of the youth Upatissa who became the
master's Chief Disciple, the beloved "Marshal of the Law." The Venerable
Sariputta died on the full moon of the month Kattika, which begins in
October and ends in November of the solar calendar. The death of Maha
Moggallana followed a half-month later, on the Uposatha of the New Moon.
Half a year later, according to tradition, came the Parinibbana of the
Buddha himself.
Could such an auspicious combination of three great personages, so
fruitful in blessings to gods and men, have been brought about purely by
chance? We find the answer to that question in the Milinda-pañha[49]
where Nagasena says:
"In many hundred thousands of births, too, sire, the Elder
Sariputta was the Bodhisatta's father, grandfather, uncle, brother, son,
nephew or friend."[50] So the weary round of becoming, which linked
them together in time, came at last to its end; time which is but the
succession of fleeting events became for them the Timeless, and round of
birth and death gave place to the Deathless. And in their final lives they
kindled a glory that has illumined the world. Long may it continue to do
so.
Part IV Discourses of Sariputta
The suttas attributed to the Venerable Sariputta cover a wide range of
subjects connected with the Holy Life, from simple morality up to abstruse
points of doctrine and meditational practice. A list of them, together
with a brief description of the subject matter of each, is given below.
their arrangement in the Sutta Pitaka does not give any indication of the
chronological order in which they were delivered. Some few, however,
contain references to particular events which make it possible to assign
to them a period in the Buddha's ministry. One such is the
Anathapindika Sutta, preached just before the great lay disciple's
death.
Majjhima Nikaya
- No. 3 Heirs of Dhamma (Dhammadayada Sutta)
- After the Buddha had discoursed on "heirs of Dhamma" and "heirs of
worldliness" and had retired into his cell, the Venerable Sariputta
addresses the monks on how they should conduct themselves, and how not,
when the Master goes into seclusion. They likewise should cultivate
seclusion, should reject what they are told to give up, and should be
modest and lovers of solitude. He concludes by speaking on the evil of
the sixteen defilements of mind[51] and says that the Middle Way by which they can be
eradicated is the Noble Eightfold Path.
- No. 5: Guiltfree (Anangana Sutta)
- On four types of persons: those who are guilty of an offence and
know it, and those who are guilty and unaware of it; those who are
guiltless and know it, and those who are guiltless and unaware of it.
The first of each pair is said to be the better one of the two, and the
reason is explained. This discourse shows the importance of
self-examination for moral and spiritual progress.
- No. 9: Right Understanding (Samma-ditthi Sutta)
- Summary on p. 42
- No. 28: The Greater Discourse on the Elephant Footprint Simile
(Maha-hatthipadopama Sutta)
- Summary on p. 40
- No 43: The Greater Discourse on Explanations (Maha-vedalla
Sutta)
- The Elder answers a number of questions put by the Venerable Maha
Kotthita, who was foremost in analytical knowledge. Sariputta matches
the excellence of the questions with the clarity and profundity of his
answers. The questions and answers extend from analytical examination of
terms, through the position of wisdom and right understanding to subtle
aspects of meditation.
- No. 69: Discourse to Gulissani (Gulissani Sutta)
- On the conduct and Dhamma-practice to be followed by a
forest-dwelling monk. Questioned by the Venerable Maha-Moggallana, the
Elder confirms that the same duties apply also to monks living in the
vicinity of towns and villages.
- No. 97: Discourse to Dhanañjani (Dhanañjani Sutta)
- The Venerable Sariputta explains to the brahman Dhanañjani that the
multifarious duties of a layman are no excuse for wrong moral conduct,
nor do they exempt one from painful consequences of such conduct in a
future existence.
Later, when Dhanañjani was on his deathbed he requested the Elder to
visit him, and the Venerable Sariputta spoke to him, on the way to
Brahma through the Brahma-viharas. The Buddha mildly reproached the
elder for not having led Dhanañjani to a higher understanding. (See p.
59)
- No. 114: To Be Practiced and Not To Be Practiced
(Sevitabbasevitabba Sutta)
- The Venerable Sariputta elaborates upon brief indications given by
the Buddha on what should be practiced, cultivated or used, and what
should not. This is shown with regard to threefold action in deed, word
and thought; in relation to mental attitudes and views, the six sense
objects and the monk's requisites.
- No. 143: Discourse to Anathapindika (Anathapindikovada sutta)
-
The Venerable Sariputta is called to Anathapindika's deathbed and
admonishes him to free his mind from any attachment whatsoever,
beginning with the six sense organs: "Thus should you train yourself,
householder: 'I shall not cling to the eye, and my consciousness will
not attach itself to the eye.' Thus, householder, should you train
yourself." This is repeated in full for each of the other five sense
organs, the six sense objects, the sixfold consciousness, sixfold
contact, sixfold feeling born of contact; the six elements, the five
aggregates, the four incorporeal jhanas, and concludes with detachment
from this world and all other worlds; detachment from all things seen,
heard, sensed and thought; from all that is encountered, sought and
pursued in mind.
In short, detachment should be practiced as to the entire range of
experience, beginning with what for a dying person will be his immediate
concern; his sense faculties and their function.
This call for detachment drawing ever wider circles and repeating the
same mighty chord of thought, must have had a deeply penetrating impact
and a calming, liberating, even cheering influence on the dying
devotee's mind. This was what Sariputta, the skilled teacher, obviously
intended. And in fact his words had that impact because our text says
that Anathapindika was moved to tears by the loftiness of the discourse,
one in profundity unlike any he had ever heard before. Anathapindika
passed away soon after, and was reborn as a deity in Tusita
Heaven.
Digha Nikaya
- No. 28: Faith-Inspiring Discourse (Sampasadaniya Sutta)
- An eloquent eulogy of the Buddha by Sariputta, spoken in the
Buddha's presence and proclaiming the peerless qualities
(anuttariya) of his Teaching. It is an expression and at the same
time a justification of Sariputta's deep confidence in the Buddha. It
may be regarded as complementary to Sariputta's "Lion's Roar" which
forms the first section of the discourse and is repeated in the
Maha-parinibbana Sutta.[52]
- No. 33: Doctrinal Recitation (Sangiti Sutta) and
No. 34: Tenfold
Series Discourse (Dasuttara Sutta)
- See
pp. 44f.
Anguttara NikayaRoman figures denote the number of
the book (nipata) and Arabic figures the number of the sutta. The
division of the suttas in the Anguttara Nikaya is only numerical.
- II, 37 (Samacitta-Sutta):
- On the Stream-winner, the Once-returner and the non-returner, and on
what determines the places of the rebirths they have still before them.
See p.
43.
- III, 21:
- On another classification of Noble Persons (ariya puggala):
the Body-witness (kayasakkhi), the one attained to Right
Understanding (ditthippatto) and the one Liberated through Faith
(saddha-vimutto).
- IV, 79:
- Sariputta asks the Buddha why the enterprises of some people fail,
those of others succeed, and those of others even surpass their
expectations. The Buddha replies that one of the reasons is generosity,
or lack of it, shown to ascetics, priests and monks.
- IV, 156:
- On four qualities indicative of loss or maintenance of wholesome
states of mind.
Here it is said that if one finds in oneself four qualities one can
know for certain that one has lost wholesome qualities, and that this is
what has been called deterioration by the Blessed One. These four are:
excessive greed, excessive hate, excessive delusion, and lack of
knowledge and wisdom concerning the diverse profound subjects (relating
to wisdom).
If on the other hand, one finds in oneself four other qualities, one
can know for certain that one has not lost one's wholesome qualities,
and that this is what has been called progress by the Blessed One. These
four other qualities are: attenuated greed, attenuated hate, attenuated
delusion, and the possession of knowledge and wisdom concerning the
diverse profound subjects (relating to wisdom).
- IV, 167f:
- The four types of progress on the Path. See p. 23.
- IV, 171:
- Sariputta elaborates a brief statement made by the Buddha on the
four forms of personalized existence (attabhava) and puts an
additional question. The Buddha's reply to it was later elaborated by
Sariputta in the Samacitta Sutta (see above).
- IV, 172:
- Sariputta states that he attained to the fourfold analytical
knowledge (patisambhida-ñana) two weeks after his ordination
(i.e., at his attainment of Arahatship). He appeals to the Buddha for
confirmation. See p.
38.
- IV, 173:
- Discussion with Maha Kotthita on the limits of the explainable. The
Venerable Sariputta says: "As far, brother, as the six bases of
sense-impression (phassayatana) reach, so far reaches the
(explainable) world of diffuseness (papañca); and as far as the
world of diffuseness reaches, so far reach the six bases of
sense-impression. Through the entire fading away and cessation of the
six bases of sense impression, the world of diffuseness ceases and is
stilled."
- IV, 175:
- On the need of both knowledge and right conduct (vijjacarana)
for the ending of suffering.
- IV, 179:
- On the reasons for obtaining, and not obtaining, Nibbana in the
present life.
- V, 1 5:
- Five reasons why people ask questions: through stupidity and
foolishness; with evil intentions and through covetousness; with a
desire to know; out of contempt; with the thought: "If he answers my
question correctly, it is good; if not, then I shall give the correct
answer.
- V, 167:
- On how to censure fellow-monks.
- VI, 14-15:
- Causes of a monk's good or bad dying.
- VI, 41:
- Sariputta explains that a monk with supernormal powers may, if he so
wishes, regard a tree trunk merely as being solid, or as a liquid, fiery
(calorific) or airy (vibratory), or as being either pure or impure
(beautiful or ugly), because all these elements are to be found in the
tree.
- VII, 66:
- On respect and reverence, Sariputta says that these are helpful in
overcoming what is unwholesome and developing what is wholesome: that is
respect and reverence towards the Master, the Teaching, the Community of
Monks, the training, meditation, heedfulness (appamada) and
towards the spirit of kindliness and courtesy (patisanthara).
Each of these factors is said to be a condition of the one following it.
- IX, 6:
- On the two things needful to know about people, robes, almsfood,
lodging, villages, towns and countries: that is, whether one should
associate with them, use them, or live in them, or whether one should
not.
- IX, 11:
- A second "Lion's Roar" of Sariputta, uttered in the Master's
presence on the occasion of a monk's false accusation; with nine similes
proclaiming his freedom from anger, detachment from the body, and his
inability to hurt others. See p.
63.
- IX, 13:
- A discussion with the Venerable Maha Kotthita about the purpose of
living the Holy Life.
- IX, 14:
- The Venerable Sariputta questions the Venerable Samiddhi about the
essentials of the Dhamma and approves of his answers.
- IX, 26:
- This text illustrates the Venerable Sariputta's scrupulous fairness
even towards antagonists. He corrects a statement attributed to
Devaddata which was probably wrongly formulated by one of Devadatta's
followers who reported it to Sariputta. Later, Sariputta speaks to that
monk on the fully developed and steadfast mind, which is not shaken by
even the most attractive sense impressions.
- IX, 34:
- On Nibbana, which is described as happiness beyond feelings.
- X, 7:
- Sariputta describes his meditation, during which he had only the
single perception that "Nibbana is the ceasing of existence." See p.
37.
- X, 65:
- To be reborn is misery; not to be reborn is happiness.
- X, 66:
- To have delight in the Buddha's Teaching and Discipline is
happiness; not to have delight in them is misery.
- X, 67-68:
- Causes of progress and decline in the cultivation of what is
salutary.
- X, 90:
- On the ten powers of a canker-free Arahant that entitle him to
proclaim his attainment.
Samyutta Nikaya
Nidana Samyutta
- 24:
- Sariputta rejects the alternatives that suffering is produced either
by oneself or by another, and explains the conditioned arising of
suffering through the (sixfold sense-) contact (phassa).
- 25:
- The same is stated with regard to both happiness and suffering
(sukha-dukkha).
- 31:
- On the conditioned arising of existence from nutriment.
- 32:
- Kalara Sutta. Questioned by the Buddha, Sariputta says that
the knowledge inducing him to declare his attainment of Arahantship was
that he knew: the cause of birth being extinct, the result (i.e., future
birth) becomes extinct. Hence he was able to say, in the words of the
stock formula declaring Arahatship: "Extinct is birth..." (khina
jati). He then replies to further questions of the Buddha about the
cause and origin of birth, becoming and the other terms of dependent
origination, leading up to feeling, the contemplation of which had
served the Venerable Sariputta as the starting-point for his attainment
of Arahatship. He says that, as he sees impermanence and suffering in
all three kinds of feeling, there is in him no arising of any hedonic
gratification (nandi).
Khandha Samyutta
- 1:
- Sariputta explains in detail the Buddha's saying: "Even if the body
is ill, the mind should not be ill."
- 2:
- Monks going to distant border districts are instructed by Sariputta
on how to answer questions posed to them by non-Buddhists. He tells them
that the removal of desire for the five aggregates is the core of the
Teaching.
- 122-123:
- On the importance of reflecting on the five aggregates. If one who
possesses virtue (or, in Text 123, learning) contemplates the five
aggregates as impermanent, bound up with suffering and void of self, he
may be able to attain to Stream-entry. if a Stream-winner, Once-returner
or Non-returner thus contemplates, he may be able to win to the next
higher stage. An arahat should also contemplate the five aggregates
thus, as it will conduce to his happiness here and now, as well as to
mindfulness and clear comprehension.
- 126:
- On ignorance and knowledge.
Sariputta Samyutta
- 1-9:
- In these nine texts Sariputta speaks of his having developed all
nine meditative attainments, i.e., from the first jhana up to the
cessation of perception and feeling; and states that in doing so he was
always free of any self-affirmation. See p.
37.
- 10:
- Once, at Rajagaha, after the almsround the Venerable Sariputta was
taking food his food near a wall. A female ascetic called Sucimukhi
(Bright-face) approached him and asked whether when eating he turned to
one or other of the directions, as done by some non-Buddhists ascetics.
Sariputta denied it for every one of the directions, explaining them in
his own way as being several means of livelihood that are wrong for
ascetics, such as geomancy, astrology, going on errands, etc. He said
that he did not turn to any of those wrong directions, but sought his
almsfood in the right manner; and what he had thus obtained righteously,
that he would eat. Sucimukhi was deeply impressed, and thereafter went
from street to street and place to place loudly proclaiming: "The Sakya
ascetics take their food righteously! They take their food blamelessly!
Please give almsfood to the Sakya ascetics!"[53]
Salayatana Samyutta
- 232:
- Not the senses and their objects, but the desire for them is the
fetter that binds to existence.
Jambukhadaka SamyuttaSariputta replies to questions put by
his nephew, Jambukhadaka, who was a Paribbajaka, i.e., a non-Buddhist
ascetic.
- 1-2:
- He defines Nibbana and Arahatship as the elimination of greed,
hatred and delusion.
- 3-16:
- He replies to questions about those who proclaim truth: about the
purpose of the Holy Life; about those who have found true solace. He
explains feeling, ignorance, the taints, personality, etc. and speaks on
what is difficult in the Buddha's Doctrine and Discipline.
Indriya Samyutta
- 44:
- Questioned by the Buddha, Sariputta says that not out of faith in
him, but from his own experience, he knows that the five spiritual
faculties (confidence, etc.) lead to the Deathless.
- 48-50:
- On the five spiritual faculties. (These texts are translated in Wheel
No. 65/66, The Way of Wisdom, pp. 47f, 49f)
Sotapatti Samyutta
- 55:
- On the four conditioning factors of Stream-entry
(sotapattiyanga).
Part V Sariputta in the Jatakas
As might be expected, the Venerable Sariputta makes frequent
appearances in the Jatakas, the stories of the Buddha's previous lives. In
these, the Bodhisatta and Sariputta assume various roles; in some
existences we find Sariputta as the teacher and the Bodhisatta as pupil,
as for example in the Susima (163), Cula Nandiya (223),
Silavimamsa (305), Karandiya (356) and Maha
Dhammapala (447) Jatakas. In the last-mentioned Jataka,
however, the Bodhisatta, as pupil, gives his teacher, Sariputta, a
valuable lesson: not to give the Five Precepts indiscriminately to those
who have no desire to accept them nor the intention to observe them.
In several births Sariputta appears as a human being and the Bodhisatta
an animal. Some examples are the Cula Nandiya Jataka (223), the
Romaka Jataka (277) -- where Sariputta, as a wise ascetic,
instructs a partridge, the Bodhisatta -- the Bhojajaniya Jataka
(23) and the Dummedha Jataka (122).
In other stories the roles are reversed, as in the Jarudapana
(256) and Kundakakucchi Sindhava (254) Jatakas (for the
latter, see below), where Sariputta is an animal and the Bodhisatta human.
Sometimes, as in the Kurungamiga Jataka (206), both are animals.
The following are summaries of Jatakas in which the Venerable
Sariputta's previous personalities appear.
- Lakkhana Jataka (11):
- As the wise one of two brother stags, each leader of a herd,
Sariputta brings his herd safely back to the hills from a dangerous
track, while his foolish brother (Devadatta) loses his whole herd.
- Bhojajaniya Jataka (23):
- The Bodhisatta is a superb warsteed, while Sariputta is a knight
entrusted with the task of capturing seven hostile kings. He succeeds,
thanks to the endurance and sacrificing spirit of the steed.
- Visavanta Jataka (69):
- Sariputta is a snake which refuses to suck back its poison from a
man bitten by it, preferring death. This Jataka was told when
Sariputta, the Great Disciple, gave up the eating of meal cakes, which
he enjoyed, and never went back on his resolution.
- Parosahassa Jataka (99):
- Sariputta, as pupil of a hermit teacher, is able to understand
short, enigmatic sayings. A comment on his penetrative mind.
- Dummedha Jataka (122):
- Sariputta, as a king of Benares, is able to appreciate excellence
when he sees it. The Bodhisatta is a superb white elephant. Devadatta,
as king of Magadha, had owned that elephant but lost it through
jealousy.
- Rajovada Jataka (151):
- Sariputta and Maha Moggallana are both charioteers of powerful
kings. Meeting one another on a narrow road, each expects the other to
give way, and they decide the issue by proclaiming the virtues of their
respective monarchs. Sariputta, whose king is the Bodhisatta, wins the
contest by showing that his master's virtue is superior: he is not only
good to those who are good, he is good to the bad as well.
- Alinacitta Jataka (156):
- Sariputta, as an elephant, shows the virtue of gratitude.
- Kurungamiga Jataka (206):
- Sariputta as a woodpecker and Maha Moggallana as a tortoise save the
life of the Bodhisatta, who is an antelope, from a hunter (Devadatta).
Later, the woodpecker saves the imprisoned tortoise.
- Cula Nandiya Jataka (223):
- As a wise brahman teacher, Sariputta advises his pupil, Devadatta,
not to be harsh, cruel and violent, but his exhortation is in vain.
- Kundakakucchi Sindhava Jataka (254):
- Sariputta, as a wondrous horse owned by the Bodhisatta, a
horse-dealer, benefits an impoverished old woman who had owned the horse
previously.
- Jarudapana Jataka (256):
- Sariputta, as a Naga king, helps the Bodhisatta, a merchant, to
transport some treasure which the latter found.
- Vyaggha Jataka (272):
- In a former life as a Yakkha, the monk Kokalika could not live
together with Sariputta and Maha Moggallana, nor could he live without
them.
- Romaka Jataka (277):
- Sariputta, as a wise ascetic, instructs a partridge, the Bodhisatta.
- Abbhantara (281) and Supatta (292) Jatakas:
- Incidents of Sariputta's last life. Rahula, whose mother is a
bhikkhuni, requests the Venerable Sariputta to get sugared mango juice
as a medicine for her flatulence, which he does. In (292), for another
illness of hers, the Venerable Sariputta procures rice cooked with ghee
and flavored with red fish (rohita-maccha).
- Sayha Jataka (310):
- Ananda, as a king sends his courtier, Sayha (Sariputta) to a friend
of his youth (the Bodhisatta) who had become an ascetic, asking him in
vain to return and be the court brahman.
- Khantivadi Jataka (313):
- When the Bodhisatta was a wise ascetic, the Preacher of Patience
(Khantivadi), and was tortured by King Kalabu (Devadatta),
Sariputta was that king's commander-in-chief of the army. Sariputta
bandaged the Bodhisatta's wounds.
- Mamsa Jataka (315):
- Sariputta was a hunter and the Bodhisatta a merchant's son.
Addressing the hunter as ""friend", and winning him over with kind
words, the Bodhisatta persuaded him to give up his cruel profession.
- Vannoroha Jataka (361):
- In their last lives, when the Great Disciples Sariputta and Maha
Moggallana were living in solitude, a beggar who attended on them and
ate the remnants of their food, tried to set them at variance but
failed. Each of them just smiled at the calumnies and told to go away.
The Jataka relates that the same had happened in an earlier life
when the beggar was a jackal and Sariputta and Maha Moggallana were a
lion and a tiger.
- Kotisimbali Jataka (412):
- Sariputta, as a king of the Garudas (supanna-raja) saves a
tree which was the home of a tree spirit, the Bodhisatta.
- Kanha Dipayana Jataka (444):
- Sariputta is the ascetic Ani-Mandaviya. Impaled by the king on a
false accusation, he bears the torture patiently and without resentment,
knowing it to be the result of past evil kamma. The Bodhisatta is his
brother-ascetic, Kanha Dipayana, who in an Act of Truth confesses that
all throughout he has lived the ascetic life unwillingly, except for the
first week.
- Maha Paduma Jataka (472):
- Sariputta, as a hill spirit, saves the life of the Bodhisatta, who
is Prince Maha Paduma.
A Note on the Relics of Sariputta and Maha
Moggallana
On Sanchi Hill in Bhopal are the remains of ten stupas which are among
the oldest buildings still standing in India. By their architectural
features and sculpture they have always been recognised as belonging to
the high noon of Buddhist art, the characters in which their numerous
inscriptions are written placing them at about the period of Asoka; that
is, some time around the middle of the third century B.C. Some are in good
preservation, while others have been reduced in the course of centuries to
mere mounds of earth and stone.
It was in one of these, the now famous Third Stupa, that Sir Alexander
Cunningham discovered the sacred Body Relics of the Buddha's Chief
Disciples, Sariputta and Maha Moggallana, in 1851. At about the same time,
more relics of the two great Arahats were found in a stupa at Satadhara,
about six miles distant from Sanchi.
On sinking a shaft in the center of the stupa on Sanchi Hill,
Cunningham came upon a large stone slab, upwards of five feet in length,
lying in a direction from north to south. Beneath the slab were found two
boxes of grey sandstone, each with a brief inscription in Brahmi
characters on the lid. The box to the south was inscribed
"Sariputtasa" "(Relics) of Sariputta," while that to the north bore
the legend "Maha-Mogalanasa." "(Relics) of Maha Moggallana."
The southernmost box contained a large flat casket of white steatite,
rather more than six inches broad and three inches in height. The surface
was hard and polished and the box, which had been turned on a lathe, was a
beautiful piece of workmanship. Around this casket were some fragments of
sandalwood believed to have been from the funeral pyre, while inside it,
besides the Relic, various precious stones were found. This casket
contained a single bone relic of the Venerable Sariputta, not quite one
inch in length.
The stone box to the north enclosed another steatite casket, similar to
that of Sariputta but slightly smaller and with a softer surface. Inside
it were two bone relics of the Venerable Maha Moggallana, the larger of
them being something less than half an inch in length.
Each of the two steatite caskets had a single ink letter inscribed on
the inner surface of the lid: "Sa" for Sariputta on the southern and "Ma"
for Maha Moggallana on that to the north. In Cunningham's words,
"Sariputta and Maha Moggallana were the principal followers of the Buddha,
and were usually styled his right and left hand disciples. Their ashes
thus preserved after death the same positions to the right and left of
Buddha which they had themselves occupied in life."[54]
This is explained by the fact that the Buddha customarily sat facing east.
In the stupa at Satadhara, one of a group which Cunningham noted was
called locally "Buddha Bhita" or "Buddha Monuments," he discovered two
caskets of pale mottled steatite. These were inscribed, like those at
Sanchi, "Sariputtasa" and "Maha Mogallanasa" respectively. This stupa
showed signs of having been violated by robbers, but the bone relics had
been left undistrubed. Cunningham, who is a very capable archaeologist,
has left a detailed account of everything his excavations brought to light
in these and other stupas, and it is thanks to him that the authenticity
of the relics is established beyond all doubt.
The relics from both stupas were removed to England and placed in the
Victoria and Albert Museum, but some discrepancies between Cunningham's
description of the caskets and the actual boxes in which the relics were
deposited gives reason to believe that he, or someone else, transferred
the relics from Sanchi to the caskets discovered at Satadhara, and what
became of the Sanchi steatite caskets is not known for certain.
The Sacred Relics were preserved in the Victoria and Albert Museum
until 1939, when the Maha Bodhi Society approached the British government
with a request that they be returned to India. The request was at once
granted, but owing to the outbreak of the second World War in that year,
the actual transfer was delayed for reasons of safety until Feb 24th,
1947. On that date they were handed over to the representatives of the
Maha Bodhi Society at the Victoria and Albert Museum, and so began their
journey back to the land of their origin.
Before being restored to India, however, the relics were taken to Sri
Lanka, where they were received with great honor and amid general
rejoicing. For two and a half months in 1947, they were displayed for
public worship at the Colombo Museum, where it has been estimated that
well over two million people paid homage to them. It is said that not only
Buddhists but Hindus, Christians and Muslims joined in paying reverence to
them.[55]
The next stage of their journey to the new Vihara that was being
erected for their re-enshrinement at Sanchi, was Calcutta. There the
relics were displayed for public homage at the Dharmarajika Vihara,
headquarters of the Maha Bodhi Society of India. The same scenes of
religious devotion were enacted there. Every day for two weeks an unbroken
stream of people filed past the shrine where the relics were exposed, from
morning until late evening. Most of the devotees were Hindus, but there
was also a large number of Muslims among them, and the reverence shown by
all was a deeply impressive sight. Many had come from distant parts to pay
their respects to the remains of these great sons of India.
Next came a request from Burma that the relics should be taken for
exposition here. This was readily granted. The reception given to them in
that country revived all the pomp and religious fervor of ancient times.
In order that everyone in Burma should be given an opportunity of
worshipping them, the relics were conducted on a riverine tour along the
Irrawaddy from Mandalay to Rangoon. The steamer that conveyed them was
escorted by boats decorated in traditional Burmese style, and at every
town along the river the relics were taken ashore in procession for
worship at the chief pagoda. At the same time religious meetings were
held, drawing vast crowds of people from the adjacent villages to hear
sermons and the recitation of suttas, which usually continued all through
the night.
Subsequently, at the request of the respective governments, the relics
were taken for exposition to Nepal and Ladakh.
After they were returned to India the Burmese government asked that a
portion of the Sacred Relics should be given to Burma. The Maha Bodhi
Society of India agreed to this, and the then Prime Minister of Burma went
in person to Calcutta to receive them. They were ceremonially transferred
to him on the 20th October 1950. The portion allotted to Burma was
afterwards enshrined in the Kaba Aye Zedi (World Peace Pagoda), built on
the site of the Sixth Great Buddhist Council, close to Rangoon. The
elaborate ceremonies connected with the crowning of the pagoda and the
installation of the relics lasted from the 5th to 11th of March, 1952.
Another portion was given to Sri Lanka to be enshrined in a new stupa
built by the Maha Bodhi Society of Sri Lanka to receive them. At the time
of writing they are housed in the temple of the Maha Bodhi Society,
Colombo, awaiting the completion of the building.
On the 30th November, 1952, the remaining relics were duly enshrined at
Sanchi on completion of the new Chetiyagiri Vihara built to receive them.
There they remain, objects of the deepest veneration to pilgrims from
every Buddhist country, and a lasting reminder of the lives of those in
whom the Buddha's Teaching bore its finest fruit.
Notes
1. According to the Cunda Sutta (Satipatthana
Samyutta) and its Commentary, the name of his birthplace was Nalaka,
or Nalagama, which may be an alternative name. It was probably quite close
to the more famous Nalanda. Sariputta's father was a brhamin named
Vaganta. (Comy. to Dhammapada, v. 75). [Go back]
2. "Ye dhamma hetuppabhava tesam hetum
tathagato aha, tesanea yo nirodho evamvadi mahasamano 'ti." This
gatha was later to become one of the best-known and most
widely-disseminated stanzas of Buddhism, standing for all time as a
reminder of Sariputta's first contact with the Dhamma and also as a worthy
memorial to Assaji, his great Arahat teacher. Spoken at a time when the
principle of causality was not accorded the prominence it enjoys today in
philosophical thought, its impact on the minds of the early Buddhists must
have been revolutionary. [Go back]
3. That is, monks, nuns, and male and female lay
followers. [Go back]
4. Carita-vasena. This refers to the types
of character (carita) as explained in The Path of Purification
(Visuddhimagga, Ch. III). [Go back]
5. This is a reference to the Discourse in the
Anguttara Nikaya, Sevens, No. 58 (P.T.S. IV.85). [Go back]
6. Dighanakha Sutta, Majjhima Nikaya No.
74. [Go back]
7. The fact of his attainment to analytical
knowledge, which has here been added to the commentarial text, was
mentioned by the Venerable Sariputta himself in Anguttara Nikaya, Fours,
No. 172. [Go back]
8. The Venerable Sariputta refers to his way of
attaining Arahatship in verses 995-96 in the Theragatha. [Go back]
9. Sutta Nipata, vv. 316ff. (Also called
"Dhamma Sutta.") [Go back]
10. Jataka No. 156. [Go back]
11. Culavagga, Sanghabhedaka-khandaka,
Sanghabhedaka-katha. [Go back]
12. Culavagga, Sanghabhedaka-khandaka,
Sanghabhedaka-katha. [Go back]
13. Culavagga, Kammakkhandaka, Pabbajaniyakamma;
Parajika Pali, Sanghadisesa-kanda, Kuladusaka-sikkhapada. [Go back]
14. Devaputta-Samy., Susima Sutta. [Go back]
15. See p.
80. [Go back]
16. Conceit (mana) and restlessness
(uddhacca) are two of the three fetters (samyojana) which
are destroyed only at the stage of Arahatship. Worry (or scruples:
kukkucca), however, is removed already at the stage of Non-returner
(anagami). [Go back]
17. Is not subject to the vagaries of the mind. [Go back]
18. Magga Samyutta, No. 2. [Go back]
19. Khanda Samyutta, No. 2. [Go back]
20. Tittita Jataka (No. 37). [Go back]
21. Vinaya (Cula-Vagga, Senasana-khandhaka). [Go back]
22. Theragatha v. 81 and Commentary. [Go back]
23. Majjh. 143. [Go back]
24. Udana VII, 1. [Go back]
25. Samyutta Nikaya, vol. III: Khandha vagga. [Go back]
26. Ang., Tens, No. 7. [Go back]
27. The Buddhas, although they are able to
divine such matters themselves, ask questions for the instruction and
illumination of others. [Go back]
28. See Wheel No. 101. [Go back]
29. See Right Understanding, Discourse and
Commentary, translated by Soma Thera (Lake House Bookshop, Colombo). [Go back]
30. Anguttara Nikaya (PTS), Vol I, 63 (Twos, No.
IV, 5). [Go back]
31. The Commentary to the Theragatha, by
Bhadantacariya Dhammapala, quotes from the Niddesa and attributes it to
Sariputta (Dhammasenapati). [Go back]
32. See "Buddhist Education in Pali and Sanskrit
Schools," by E.J. Thomas in Buddhistic Studies, ed. by B.C. Law
(Calcutta, 1931), pp. 223ff. [Go back]
33. A. II, 160; see p. 15. [Go back]
34. Translated in Mindfulness of
Breathing by Ñanamoli Thera, Kandy, Buddhist Publication Society,
1964). [Go back]
35. Majjh. No. 111. [Go back]
36. Majjh. No. 5. [Go back]
37. A slightly different version of this is
found in the Commentary to the Theragatha where it deals with Sariputta's
verses. [Go back]
38. Parajika Pali, Introductory chapter. [Go back]
39. Majjh. No. 67. [Go back]
40. A "lion's roar" (siha-nada) is a
weighty and emphatic utterance, made with assurance. [Go back]
41. Dhammapada, v. 95. [Go back]
42. See Maha-parinibbana Sutta, Ch. II
(Last Days of the Buddha, Wheel No. 67/69, p. 26). It was during
his stay at Beluva that the Master fell gravely ill. [Go back]
43. In the Himalayas. [Go back]
44. Sariputta himslef and his younger brothers
and sisters. [Go back]
45. Vangisa Samy., No. 7.
[Go back]
46. Satipatthana Samyutta, No. 23. [Go back]
47. Cunda Samanuddesa. Comy: "He was the
Venerable Sariputta's younger brother. Before he received Higher
Ordination the bhikkhus use to call him 'Novice Cunda,' and even when he
was an elder he was still so addressed." (See. p.
54.) [Go back]
48. Satipatthana Samyutta, No. 24. [Go back]
49. This is according to the Commentary to the
Ukkacela Sutta. [Go back]
50. Milinda's Questions by I.B. Horner,
Vol. I, p. 295. See also the chapter "Sariputta in the
Jatakas" (Part V of this book). [Go back]
51. See "The
Simile of the Cloth" (M. 7) in Wheel No. 61/62, p. 12. [Go back]
52. See Wheel No. 67/69, pp. 9f. [Go back]
53. Sariputta's method of teaching in this
discourse invites comparison with the Buddha's in the Sigalovada
Sutta (Digha Nikaya, 31). [Go back]
54. Bhilsa Topes, p. 300.
[Go back]
55. The Cynosure of Sanchi, p. 28. [Go back] |