Showing posts with label vipassi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vipassi. Show all posts

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Part III: It's Been a Long Time (sutra)

Maurice O'C. Walshe, "Great Discourse on the Lineage" (DN 14); Dhr. Seven, Wisdom Quarterly
Spiritual evolution occurs in cycles (bisquich.com)

The Buddha: "Then the Bodhisattva Vipassi thought, 'I have found the insight-way to enlightenment, namely:
  1. "By the cessation of mind-and-body, consciousness ceases;
  2. by the cessation of consciousness, mind-and-body ceases;
  3. by the cessation of mind-and-body, the six sense bases cease;
  4. by the cessation of the six sense bases, contact ceases;
  5. by the cessation of contact, feeling ceases;
  6. by the cessation of feeling, craving ceases;
  7. by the cessation of craving, clinging ceases;
  8. by the cessation of clinging, becoming ceases;
  9. by the cessation of becoming, birth ceases;
  10. by the cessation of birth aging and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and distress cease. Thus this whole mass of suffering ceases." 
"And at the thought, ‘Cessation, cessation,’ there arose in the Bodhisattva Vipassi insight into things never before realized accompanied by knowledge, vision, awareness, and light.
  
Buddha Peace Pagoda inset (Valdnad)
"Then, disciples, at another time the Bodhisattva Vipassi dwelled contemplating the rise and fall of the Five Aggregates of Clinging: 'Such is the (1) body, such its arising, such its passing away; such is (2) sensation... such is (3) perception... such are the (4) formations [usually represented by volition]... such is (5) consciousness, such its arising, such its passing away.'
  
"And as he remained contemplating the rise and fall of the Five Aggregates of Clinging, before long his mind was freed from the corruptions, freed without remainder. [That is, he became completely enlightened and liberated from all future rebirth.]
  
"Then, disciples, the Blessed One, the Arhat, the fully-enlightened Buddha Vipassi thought, 'Suppose I were now to teach Dharma?' Then he thought, 'I have attained to this Dharma, which is profound, hard to see, hard to grasp, peaceful, excellent, beyond reasoning, subtle, to be apprehended by the wise.
   
"'But this generation delights in clinging, rejoices and revels in it. But for those who so delight, rejoice, and revel in clinging this is hard to see, namely, the conditioned [dependently originated] nature of things. 
   
"Equally hard to see would be the calming of all the mental formations, the abandonment of all substrates of rebirth, the waning away of craving, dispassion, cessation, [so as to see] nirvana. And if I were to teach Dharma to others and they did not understand, that would be wearisome and troublesome."
  
"And to the Buddha Vipassi there occurred spontaneously this verse never heard before:
  
"This that I’ve attained why should I proclaim?"
Those full of lust and hate can never grasp it.
Upstream this Dharma subtle, deep does aim.
So hard to discern, the passion-blinded cannot see it."
   
Maha Brahma (Thai Erawan Shrine)
"As the Buddha Vipassi pondered in this way, his mind was inclined to inaction rather than to teaching the Dharma. And, disciples, the Buddha Vipassi’s reasoning became known to a certain Great Brahma [telepathically], who thought:
  
"'Alas the world is perishing. It will be destroyed because the mind of Vipassi, the Blessed One, the Arhat, the Fully Enlightened Buddha, is inclined to inaction rather than to teaching the Dharma!'
   
"So this Great Brahma, as swiftly as a strong man might stretch his flexed arm or flex it again, disappeared from the Brahma plane and reappeared before the Buddha Vipassi. Arranging his upper robber over one shoulder and kneeling on his right knee, he saluted the Buddha Vipassi with joined hands and said:
   
"'Venerable sir, may the Blessed One teach Dharma, may the Well-Farer teach Dharma! There are beings with little dust in their eyes who are perishing from not hearing Dharma: they will become knowers of Dharma!" More

Friday, December 4, 2009

(Sivali) Karma and Great Wealth

Gold plated amulets of Ven. Sivali, a monk in the Buddha's time renowned for his amazing good fortune (dhammapath.blogspot.com)

Ven. Sivali was praised by the Buddha as the most miraculous monk for manifesting fortune. Sivali is recollected by Thai Buddhists as a great fortune-fetching figure with a mantra uttered to secure wealth:

"Sivali ja Mahathero Devatanarapuchito Soraho Pajjayatimhi Sivali ja Mahathero Yakkhadeva Puchito Soraho Pajjayatimhi Ahang Wanthami Tang Sathatassatherassa Aetang Khunang Sotthilabhang Bhavantumae."

Eating modestly is a type of eating that is very good, both in terms of the world and of the Dharma. Take Ven. Sivali, who ate modestly, as an example. How did he eat modestly? All that most of us know about Ven. Sivali is that he was wealthy in terms of the donations he received. But where did that wealth come from?

It came from eating modestly. Eating modestly is the source that gives rise to wealth. What Sivali did (in a previous birth) was this: Whenever he received cloth, if he had not yet given a gift of cloth, he would not wear what he had received. When he received food in his bowl, he would not eat it until he had given some of it as a gift to someone else. No matter which of the four requisites he received — food, clothing, shelter, or medicine, no matter how much or how little — once it was in his possession, he would not use it until he had shared some of it with those around him.

When he received a lot, he would make a large gift to benefit many people. When he received just a little, he would still try to benefit others. This gave rise to all sorts of good things: His friends loved him, his community loved him, and they were kind to him. This is why being generous is said to tie the knot of friendship and to wipe out your enemies.

When he passed away from that lifetime and was reborn in his last lifetime, he gained all kinds of wealth and never went hungry. Even when he went to live in places where food should have been scarce, he never suffered from scarcity, never had to do without... Source


Cave-dwelling brothers to get billions
In a reversal of fortune, two destitute brothers living in a cave could inherit a fortune. Photo - Rags-to-riches stories


The story of Sivali in the Dhammapada Commentary is an example of the great merit which even a small gift can yield when presented to the Sangha led by the Buddha. At the time of Vipassi Buddha, the citizens of a country were competing with their king to see who could make the greatest offering to the Buddha and Sangha.

The citizens had obtained everything for their offering except fresh honey. And they sent out messengers, each with plenty of money, to buy the missing ingredient. One of these messengers met a villager who happened to be bringing a newly harvested honeycomb into the city for sale. The messenger was only able to buy it from the peasant when he had offered his entire allowance of a thousand pieces of money, which was far more than a single honeycomb was worth.

The villager said: "Are you crazy?... This honey isn't worth a penny but you offer me a thousand pieces of money for it? What is the explanation for this?" The messenger told him that the honey was worth so much to him because it was the final item on the menu for the citizens' offering to Vipassi Buddha. The peasant spontaneously replied, "If that is the case, I will not sell it to you. If I may receive the merit of the offering, I will give it to you!" The citizens were impressed with the conviction (saddha) of this man who so readily gave up a windfall and enthusiastically agreed that he should receive the merit of the offering.

Because of this simple gift at the time of Vipassi Buddha (aeons ago), that villager was reborn numerous times in celestial planes and then became the prince who inherited the throne of Benares. In his final lifetime, he became the Great Elder Sivali and attained full enlightenment (arahantship) as a disciple of Shakyamuni Buddha.

But even after that, his gift of the honeycomb continued to bear fruit. To honor the one who had made the sweet gift aeons before, the devas provided lodging and food for the Buddha and many monks, including Sivali, when for several days they had been walking along a deserted road.

The practice of giving is also beneficial when directed to someone who is not spiritually advanced. If the donor's intention is good, then even though the receiver is immoral, the donor will earn merit. Furthermore, by the act of giving one will strengthen within oneself one's own disposition to renunciation. A gift mentally offered to the noble (arya or accomplished, i.e., enlightened) Sangha but physically presented to a monastic who is morally corrupt will still bear great fruit. To be sure, we should not pretend that a bad person is good, but we must be most careful of our own attitude while giving, as our attitude is the factor over which we have most control.

The Objects Given
The third factor involved in giving is the gift itself, which can be either material or immaterial. Dhamma-dana, the gift of the Noble Teachings, is said by the Buddha to excel all other gifts (Dhammapada, Verse 354). Those who expound the Teachings — monastics who preach sermons or recite from the Tipitaka, teachers of meditation — frequently share the Truth, thus practicing the highest kind of generosity.

Those of us who are not qualified to teach the Dharma can give the gift of the Dharma in other ways. We can donate Dharma books or pay for the translation or publication of a rare or new manuscript propagating the Buddha-word. We can discuss the Dharma informally and encourage others to keep precepts or to take up meditation.

We might write an explanation of some aspect of the Dharma for the benefit of others. Giving cash or labor to a meditation center or helping support a meditation teacher can also be considered the gift of the Dharma, as the purpose of the center and the teacher is the transmission of the Buddha's Teaching.

The most common type of gift is material. A material object need not have a high monetary value for it to bring great results, as the story of Sivali and the honeycomb illustrates.

If a poor person gives a monastic the cup of rice that was to be his or her only food for the day, the person is making a great donation which may bear abundant fruit. Conversely, if a prosperous merchant, knowing in advance that the monastic was coming for alms, were to give the same small portion of rice, that merchant would reap meager fruits. We should try to give things whose quality is at least as good as those we use ourselves, like the people of Burma, who buy the best fruits on the market as gifts for the monastery although these fruits are much too expensive for them to consume themselves.

Gifts to the Sangha may consist of food, robes, medicine, or shelter (monasteries themselves), each of which has a wide range. The limits are set by the rules of the Vinaya to keep the Sangha pure and strong. Lay Buddhists who understand the monastic rules can earn vast merit by donating the proper things at the proper time to the Order of monks and nuns and to other good or needy people.

Bhikkhu Bodhi introducing BuddhistGlobalRelief.org to alleviate world hunger

Friday, September 26, 2008

Karma by Association (Abundance)


Thai prosperity charm/protective amulet of the arhat Sivali

Maha Sivali Thera
Radhika Abeysekera

At the time of Gautama Buddha, there reigned a righteous king and queen named Koliya and Suppavasa. After some time Queen Suppavasa became pregnant. And the unborn child brought great fortune to the kingdom. Not only did the queen receive many gifts from friends and relatives, but the entire realm became prosperous. Crops grew in abundance, and everyone was well-fed and healthy.

The queen grew heavy with child but when the natural time for the birth arrived (10 lunar months), she failed to deliver the baby. She grew uneasy as time passed without sign of the birth. She asked the king to invite the Buddha and his Sangha for a meal. After the meal the Buddha said:

"May Suppavasa, daughter of the Koliya Clan,
Be happy, healthy, and give birth to a healthy son."

After the Buddha departed, the queen gave birth to a beautiful, healthy son. As a mark of respect for the Buddha, who had eased the queen's heavy burden with his blessings, he and his retinue were invited to receive alms at the palace for seven days.

The prince was named Sivali, since from the time of his conception, the people's hardships were alleviated by virtue of the rich and abundant crops. One day when Sariputra was on his alms round, he visited the prince and informed him of the suffering that he and his mother had undergone because of the delayed pregnancy.

Sariputra went on to explain to the prince the unwholesome karma that his mother and he had performed and the resultant effects of their actions:

In a previous birth Sivali had been born as the king of Benares (Varanasi) and had waged war on a neighboring kingdom in collaboration with his consort, his present mother. He had surrounded the kingdom and told the citizens to surrender or fight. When they refused to surrender, together they decided to surround the city and hold the citizens hostage.

The citizens, who neither wanted to fight back nor live under the rule of such a king, had refused to surrender. As a result they suffered greatly without food for a very long period. Many of the sick and the elderly had died. Yet, the arrogant king and his queen had not given in. Many months later the king withdrew his troops and released his hostages, but he paid dearly for the suffering he had caused.

When he died he was reborn in Avici, an infernal world of torment. The delayed pregnancy and the suffering he and his mother had undergone as a result of the delay were the residual effects of this karma.

After illustrating the first noble truth of suffering, Sariputra asked the prince if he would like to join the Noble Order so as to pursue a path to the end of all suffering. The prince was overjoyed at this invitation and agreed to join the Order with his mother's permission.

The queen, who was a devoted follower of the Buddha, agreed. She escorted Prince Sivali in a procession to the monastery to be ordained. On the day of her son's ordination, when his hair was being shaved, Sariputra advised Sivali to meditate on the impurities of the body. Sivali was spiritually advanced as a result of previous wholesome actions and was therefore able to focus his mind as instructed. Before the shaving was completed, Sivali attained the supreme wisdom of nirvana.

The monks soon noticed a strange phenomenon when they were with Sivali. He always seemed to have an abundance of rich, fragrant food and the other requisites (robes, shelter, and medicine). And monks who were with him had the opportunity to share in the bounty. Wherever Sivali went, people flocked around to prepare food for him. Sivali was indeed blessed with all the requisites of a monk. And wherever Sivali traveled, he was well taken care of.

He and his large retinue of monks were once in an uninhabited forest for seven days. Nevertheless, they were not short of food. For the devas made sure that all of their requirements were met. Similarly when Sivali was traveling through the desert, his requisites were provided.

The Buddha, noticing that Sivali was fulfilling a previous aspiration, declared him "foremost among monks in obtaining requisites." He instructed monks who were traveling on long, difficult journeys through uninhabited terrain to be accompanied by Sivali to ensure that they would have their requisites met. In fact, on one occasion when the Buddha and a retinue of 30,000 monks were traveling to visit the monk Khadhiravaniya Revata (Sariputra's younger brother), they had to cross an uninhabited forest.

Ananda, fearing that they would not be able to obtain food in the jungle for such a large number of monks, questioned the Buddha about the logistics of the journey. The Buddha assured Ananda that they had nothing to worry about as Sivali was with them. With Sivali present there would be no shortage of food because even the devas reveled in donating provisions.


Saint Sivali (Shin Thiwali), an enlightened monk, regarded as a deity in Burma.

EXPLANATION
Generally speaking, the effects of karma, whether wholesome or unwholesome, are reaped only by the doer. However there are instances, as in the case of Sivali, that others also experience the unusually strong actions of another. This overflow of effects from a person's strong karma on others is known as nissandha pala ("overflowing results of karma"). While vipaka pala ("karmic resultants") are reaped only by the doer, nissandha pala are experienced by others who happen to be around them. Nissandha pala may be wholesome or unwholesome in accordance with the deed performed. For instance, Sariputra did not obtain alms in one instance resulting from the nissandha pala of another person's strong unwholesome deeds (in that instance, Losaka).

To find the cause of this strange phenomenon, it is necessary to go back many aeons to the time of Padumuttara Buddha. Sivali had been born as a poor man at that time but had the rare opportunity to see that buddha confer on a monk the designation "foremost among monks in obtaining requisites." Fascinated by the way everyone desired to provide alms and robes to this monk, Sivali decided that he too would like to hold that position in a future birth.

He then performed many acts of generosity to Padumuttara Buddha and the Sangha in that ancient dispensation. Having done so, he made an aspiration. Padumuttara Buddha, foreseeing that Sivali's aspiration would be fulfilled, prophesized that at the time of Gautama Buddha he would be foremost among monks in obtaining requisites.

From this point onwards, Sivali had started in earnest to work towards his aspiration. At death he was reborn in a celestial realm where he enjoyed many thousands of years of heavenly bliss. The next documented birth-story (jataka) took place at the time of Vipassi Buddha 91 world-cycles (maha-kalpas or "aeons") before Gautama Buddha. Sivali was then born as a merchant in the city of Bandhumati. The city was preparing a great almsgiving for Vipassi Buddha and his Sangha. They realized they were short on curd and honey, a dessert that was often served after the noonday meal. Word was sent all over the city to obtain the required delicacies. Unable to obtain the necessary items, the king's men raised the price of curd and honey from one gold coin to 100 gold coins.

In the meantime, Sivali (a merchant who sold curd and honey) was approached and offered 100 gold coins for his merchandise. He was surprised at the unusually high price being offered and enquired for whose consumption they were buying the curd. On being told that it was for Vipassi Buddha and the Sangha, Sivali asked permission to donate his wares. He renewed his aspiration to be foremost among monks in obtaining requisites. Vipassi Buddha, seeing that Sivali's aspiration would be fulfilled, blessed him by saying, "May your aspiration be fulfilled!" Sivali then became a devotee of Vipassi Buddha and practiced the Dharma in that dispensation.

Resulting from this strong aspiration and the meritorious deeds and efforts performed in previous births, Sivali fulfilled his aspiration to be foremost among in obtaining requisites at the time of Gautama Buddha. Even now, some Buddhists venerate the saint (i.e., enlightened) Sivali and often keep a picture or this discourse in their home as a symbol of abundance of food and prosperity.

The Story of Ven. Sivali
Dhammapada 414

While residing in the Kundadhana Forest near the city of Kundakoliya, the Buddha uttered Verse 414, with reference to the Maha Thera Sivali.

Princess Suppavasa of Kundakoliya was pregnant for seven years. Thereafter, she was in labor for seven days. She continued to contemplate the rare qualities of the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha. And in the end she sent her husband to the Buddha to pay obeisance to him on her behalf and to inform him of her condition. When informed of the condition of the princess, the Buddha said, "May Suppavasa be free from danger and from sorrow; may she give birth to a healthy noble son in safety."

As the Buddha spoke these words, Suppavasa gave birth to a son at her house. On that very day, soon after the birth of her child, the queen invited the Buddha and the Sangha to their home for alms. The newborn offered filtered water to the Buddha and the bhikkhus. To celebrate the birth of the child, the parents invited the Buddha and the recluses to their home to offer food for seven days.

When the child grew up he was admitted into the Sangha and came to be known as the monk Sivali. As soon as his head was shaved, he attained enlightenment. He later became famous as the recluse who received the most offerings. As a recipient, he was unsurpassed.

On one occasion, the recluses asked the Buddha the reason for Sivali confinement in his mother's womb for seven years although he had the qualifications to become an arhat. The Buddha replied, "O recluses, in a previous existence, Sivali was the son of a king who lost his kingdom to another king. In trying to regain the kingdom, he had besieged the city on the advice of his mother. As a result, the people in the city were without food or water for seven days.

This unskillful deed was the cause of Sivali's imprisonment in his mother's womb. But now, Sivali has come to the end of all suffering; he had realized nirvana.

The Buddha then uttered this verse: "Him I call a brahmin who, having traversed this dangerous swamp (passion), this difficult road (defilements), this ocean of life and death (Samsara) and darkness of ignorance (moha), and having crossed the fourfold flood, has reached the other shore (nirvana), who practices tranquility and mindfulness, who is free from craving and doubt, who clings to nothing and remains in perfect peace.

  • Dhammapada stories and verses originally translated by Daw Mya Tin (www.nibbana.com), edited by WQ