The Ways of the Arhat and of the Bodhisattva
By Ken Holmes
It is a great pleasure to
be asked to speak to you today about the two main traditions of
Buddhism: those of the so-called hinayana and mahayana : the lesser way
and the greater way, the ways of Shravaka to become an Arhat and the
way of the Bodhisattva to become a Buddha.
Oh
dear! Lots of foreign words - shravaka, arhat, bodhisattva- 30 seconds
into the talk and you might already feel like going home!
Well,
let's try to explain these terms simply, before going into the details.
Most religions are about the relationship between you, the individual,
and God or, in the case of some religions, between you and a whole
series of Gods. This God or these Gods are believed to be the governing
power of the universe: creator of the universe. Buddhism is different.
It has no belief at all in a creator God.
All of Buddhism is
about working with the potential that exists in the human mind. Not
about a relationship with another being, a Supreme Being, but about
understanding and changing oneself. It is about awakening to the
possibilities of life and in particular about using this extraordinary
thing -which is our own mind- to the full: to become a wiser, kinder,
more peaceful person. Buddhism believes that there is a timeless,
perfect purity, a profound love for all beings, a perfect peace and
amazing wisdom deep within each and every one of us. Life's task is to
discover it.
The Buddha taught very extensively about the nature
of life and our human potential. He taught to thousands of people over
a 45 year period. He taught each person according to his or her needs
and capacities. Over the two and a half thousand years since he taught,
all of those teachings of the Buddha have given rise to two main ways
of working with one's life, known as the Greater Way and the Lesser Way.
Those
following the Lesser Way -Hinayana- want to find perfect inner peace
and want to live in a kind, truthful and generous way in the world.
They are sometimes called Shravakas: Shravakas means those who heed the
teachings. They have a certain "been there, done that" feeling about
most of the pleasures of this world and are no longer interested in
them one bit. You know, the way you feel about whatever was the craze
three years ago - it just doesn't grab you any more. These Shravakas
see the world as obsessed with satisfying the senses to find happiness
-seeing beautiful things, hearing nice sounds, smelling pleasant
odours, tasting good food and seeking pleasant physical sensations.
They consider such happiness too shallow, too fragile and find great
inner strength instead in meditation. The end of their journey, their
dream, their goal -the perfection of inner peace- is called the state
of being an Arhat. Sometimes you can achieve that state in one lifetime
of intense meditation, sometimes it takes many lifetimes.
Those
following the Greater Way -Mahayana- are called Bodhisattvas: bodhi
-sattva means with a mind to be Buddha. They are people who are also
very aware of life's fragile happiness and the suffering that exists in
most people. They are so moved by this suffering that they promise,
from the depths of their hearts, to dedicate this life and all future
lives to caring for other beings. They feel that the best way to care
is to become just like the Buddha. Buddhahood is a state far beyond
that of the Arhat. It takes hundreds of lifetimes -hundreds of
reincarnations- to achieve. The bodhisattva way is based upon
truthfulness, peace and non-violence but its main characteristic is not
a withdrawal from the world into inner peace but an active engagement
with the world, a development of incredibly deep loving kindness,
compassion and care for others. In fact, from beginning to end, the
Bodhisattva's way is the way of compassionate care.
So that
you are clear about 'where I'm coming from', you should know I belong
to the mahayana tradition and that I'll be teaching today's topic in
the traditional way in which it is presented in the mahayana.
Please
have a good look at these terms - they'll come up a few times in the
talk. Please notice that shravakas and bodhisattvas are those following
a spiritual path, and that the ends of those paths are the states of
Arhat and Buddha. Having introduced these two main strands of Buddhism
very briefly, I'd like to go into them more deeply by talking about a
topic traditionally called the three types of valuable human being,
taught widely in India in the 11th century. They are called 'valuable
humans' because -from a Buddhist point of view, in terms of Buddhist
value judgements -they are really doing something with their lives:
making a marked and definitive change to themselves, and perhaps other
people, for the better. If you like, they can be considered the three
sorts of audience for Buddhism or the three psychological types that
Buddhist teachings address. This topic will help us understand where
Arhats and Bodhisattvas fit in -they are the second and third types of
valuable human- and help us define these words hinayana and mahayana.
The first type of valuable human being: the person who lives wisely in the world.
The
vast majority of dedicated Buddhists (as opposed to people just born
into a Buddhist culture and not strongly practising it) belong to this
first type of valuable human being. They are not yet following the way
of either the Arhat or the Bodhisattva. It is too soon. They are like
children learning to walk. Shravakas and Bodhisattvas are like adults
drive cars or pilot a plane. Unlike the Shravaka and Bodhisattva, this
first type of valuable human is not yet ready to let go of its
attachment to worldly things, in order to seek spiritual peace. The
Buddha's teachings can nevertheless still help them greatly. So really
today's talk could have been about three ways and been called the ways
of the worldly Buddhist, the Arhat and the Bodhisattva.
How does
the Buddha help the first sort of valuable human, the worldly Buddhist?
By helping them live their lives according to principles based on the
laws of karma. Karma means action and the laws of karma explain why
things happen and how our actions determine our destiny. Everyone
wonders why things happen. You know, you must have asked yourselves why
you are you, different from the person sitting next to you. Why is
there life's exquisite beauty? Why are there life's atrocious horrors?
Most religions describe these things in terms of God's purpose: divine
forces are pulling the strings and pushing the buttons of life.
Buddhism, by contrast, says that events are not God-created but the
long-term consequences of our own action: actions as individuals and
actions as groups. Buddhism says our actions make us what we are and
make our world what it is.
The Buddha taught that nearly all the
things we do, say and think have long-term consequences for their doer.
What we are doing now is shaping our own future, in this life and lives
to come. What we are now has been shaped by how we acted and reacted in
the past. Remember that Buddhists believe this life to
be just one
in a long chain of lives, as we reincarnate over and over again. What
we do in this life generates all the details of our future lives: who
we meet, the way the environment changes, our health, our suffering,
our happiness. When we live in a harmonious, helpful and wise way with
each other now, this generates happiness for later. When we live in
conflict, self-centredly and unwisely now, it stores up suffering for
later.
Thus, if we protect and save life -in this life- then we
ourselves will be born with long life and good health next time round.
If we are generous and caring now, we will feel satisfied with our lot
in the future life and be cared for by others. If we lead what Buddhism
defines as a respectful, responsible life in one's sexual
relationships, we will find loving, caring and suitable partners in the
next life and so on and so forth.
The Buddha gave many teachings
about our actions - and in particular a very helpful list of the 10
main actions to avoid and the 10 to cultivate. These form the basis for
Buddhist morality just as the 10 commandments do in the
Judaeo-Christian traditions. I have listed these 10 in the printed
version of this talk, which is also on the Web.
There is, of course,
in the action of this first type of Buddhist, a fair degree of
self-interest: a studied concern for one's own worldly future. These
are not Buddhists who desperately want to leave all worldliness and
find the lasting peace of nirvana. If we use Shakespeare's words, "To
be or not to be..." then our first Buddhist customer is definitely not
ready not to be. This person likes life, still wants to be someone,
somewhere in the world but preferably would like to be a healthier,
happier and more prosperous person in a better family and social
environment than at present. Even if that does not look likely in this
existence, they try to live according to the Buddha's teaching on karma
so that they will have a better time in the next life.
In
teaching the laws of karma - the cause and effects of our actions - the
Buddha was not only trying to help people help themselves but also
trying to make for a better society: one in which there is less
violence, less dishonesty and greater respect for others.
Furthermore,
our other two types of valuable human being -those following the ways
of the Arhat and the Bodhisattva- emerge from this pool of good people.
One day, one life, it is said, there will dawn in their minds a
profound awareness of the extent of suffering that there is in the
world and indeed in one's own mind; then they become candidates for the
ways of the Shravaka and the Bodhisattva.
The second type of valuable human being: the Shravaka, who shuns worldliness to attain nirvana; the nirvana of the Arhat.
Now
we come to the second type of Buddhist or second type of valuable human
being. These are people who -if we return to Shakespeare's to be or not
to be -no longer want 'to be' someone, somewhere. They have understood
that there is a deep, spiritual state of equanimity and peace, far more
satisfactory than anything this world can offer. You know, it's as
though you've been in a smoky, noisy, crowded room all your life and
suddenly you discover the vast, clean open spaces of nature. The
crowded, smoky room is a busy, worldly mind. The purity and freshness
is discovered in the inner space of meditation. It is a peaceful,
infinite space which transcends personality and the cult of personality
- you know what I mean by cult of personality, where ME, I is all
important - a world in which you have to assert yourself, create
territory, be beautiful, be intelligent, BE …someone.
Our second
type of valuable human being has had enough of seeking the pleasures of
the senses and of having a happiness that always depends on external
things: on other people, on the weather, on food, on sights, on sounds,
on success at work, on human affection etc. They are shocked by the
fragility
and impermanence ( anicca) of such happiness and by the
price-tag of suffering ( dukha) that goes along with it. They know that
the Buddha and the Arhats of the past managed to stopped being reborn
into lives of mixed happiness and suffering. How did they do it? By
stopping doing the harmful actions - karma- that generate rebirth. How
to stop these harmful actions? By getting rid of their cause: anger,
jealousy, pride, ignorance and desire. How to get rid of all those? by
destroying their cause: the illusion of self, of ME of I.
These
saintly beings cleanse their mind of all these unhelpful emotions,
feelings and illusions and instead cultivated very natural states of
inner peace and harmony. The advantage of this inner happiness is that
it does not depend on other people and external things. It is a state
of constant well-being which does not depend upon the up-and-down world
of personality and feelings. It is self-contained. It is free of
suffering. When it is perfected, it will remain forever. It is called
nirvana. This is what the Shravaka hopes to achieve.
At this
point, I think it will be useful to clarify the meaning of this word
nirvana. Nirvana is not something in particular: not something that is
. Nirvana means "suffering transcended". In other words, it is defined
by what it isn't: it isn't suffering. It means that you have got free
from suffering forever. It is like saying, "got out of the fire". One
is no longer being burnt by the sufferings of life. But this does not
tell us where we actually are: in a swimming-pool, up a mountain, in a
space-capsule. It only tells us that we are out of the fire. So this
word nirvana can cover many possibilities. This will become important
when we look at the way of the bodhisattva. We will find that the
bodhisattva is trying to achieve a much higher nirvana than that of the
Arhat. Both are nirvana inasmuch as both have gone beyond the suffering
of the world because both have ceased creating the karma that causes
suffering. But the bodhisattva aims to become a Buddha and a Buddha has
far more qualities than an Arhat and has removed more blockages from
the mind.
To give an analogy: if we think of worldliness as the
planet Earth, the Arhat has gone beyond the Earth's gravitational field
and is floating in the space of meditation. The Buddha has also gone
beyond the Earth's gravity but has reached the heart of the Sun of
Wisdom.
Now let us return to the way of the Arhat. It consists
of the Triple Training: Conduct, Meditation and Wisdom. I think you may
know these. The basis for the Arhat's path to the Arhat's nirvana is a
very pure ethical and moral conduct in all one says, all one does
physically and also in one's profession. In one respect, it is similar
to the careful attention to karma of the first type of valuable human
being. But the motivation is different. Here the pure conduct is aimed
at switching off the video of life, not at making it into a better
film! This different motivation channels things differently. It is like
earning the same amount of money but investing it in another account.
The Arhat's good karma is not paying the worldly mortgage - it is going
in to the permanent retirement fund.
On this basis of pure
conduct, nirvana is achieved through the skilful combination of two
things: meditation and wisdom. Let us first examine meditation.
Concentration
meditation is the way in which those becoming Arhats overcome their
passions, angers and other agitations of the mind. Concentration
meditation cultivates inner peace. As the peace develops, desires,
aggravations, and all these other things naturally diminish. As the
peace grows, worldiness diminishes. It is like water. Let's just think
together for a minute. Has everyone seen a turbulent ocean? Try to
imagine it: those vast, powerful, rolling grey-green waves Brrrr! You
can't see into it, it is busy, dangerous and it reflects nothing
clearly. That's the worldly mind: very agitated, very busy with itself,
very short-sighted and very endless. Now let's think of clear water - a
very calm loch. Got the image? As water becomes calm, the waves
subside. When water is calm, you can see all the fish and plants in its
depths and it reflects the sky by day and the stars at night. The
meditation mind is very still, clear and beautiful, like a very calm
ocean. It has far-seeing wisdom.
As anger, desires and so on
diminish through meditation, the peace becomes more lasting and more
stable. This reveals levels of thought and subconscious activity of
which one was not previously aware. Again and again, one refines the
process of inner peace, until the mind is exceedingly clean and pure,
knowing nothing but happiness and equanimity. A great, calm ocean of
peace. Meditation requires careful training in mindfulness,
concentration and channeling one's effort.
Now let us consider
wisdom. As meditation improves, the quietness and clarity of mind
enables great precision in the mind's self-knowledge. Just as our
modern science pierces the secrets of the material universe through
very fine investigation into the atom and into the human genome, the
science of concentration meditation investigates the complex workings
of the human mind and this knowledge is very helpful in transforming
the mind and bringing it to stability and wisdom.This wisdom ends up
being real insight into the Four Noble Truths, which lie at the very
heart of the Buddha's teaching. When I say 'real insight' I mean that
the Four Truths are no longer ideas but things vividly, directly
experienced as true, direct insight into life itself, without the need
of thoughts. This gives you the "right view" of things -the right
perspective- and provides the right intention for instructing other
people.
I don't want to get too technical in this talk. The
Buddha's own teachings -called sutra- on this topic of the way of the
Arhat fill dozens of books. We could -for example- examine extensively
the real meaning of the Eightfold Path that I have just described.
We
could also explore (if we had time) how meditation actually changes the
mind, bringing freedom and peace as well as the emergence of saintly
qualities, which are quite extraordinary; miraculous.
Also,
given time, we would explore the nature of wisdom in this path, seeing
how it is anatta - a complete de-masking of all the delusions of self
that the human mind can fabricate, whether it be a personal self or a
cosmic self in the form of a God or a series of gods. This wisdom also
recognises anicca - the totally transient, or impermanent, nature of
the various phenomena of the worlds
of mind and matter and
understands in detail how they come together and trigger each other
into making the events we perceive as life, with all of its suffering;
dukkha.
The Hinayana mental journey of purification is a voyage
deep into the inner peace of one's mind. There are four main stages on
the journey, with Arhat being the final stage.
1. Stream-entrant
when one has profound faith in what one is doing because the results
are emerging and the process is very obvious. If we compared the path
of meditation to unblocking a drain, it is at this stage that -after
poking for ages with the rods- the blockage clears and the water starts
to flow swiftly.
2. Once-returner when one has purified so much of one's mind and karma that
there will be only one more rebirth in the world.
3. Non-returner when one is living that last life in which one becomes an Arhat
4.
Arhat the final achievement when every trace, gross or subtle, of
ego-delusion and its subsequent desires, anger, jealousy, pride and
confusion are all irreversibly eliminated from the mind and the mind
will rest continuously in deep, far-reaching meditation.
At this
stage, I would like to sum up so far. We have looked at two types of
what are called valuable human beings. Together, they make up what is
known as the hinayana or the smaller way. I must make it clear that the
term hinayana does not refer to the Buddhism of any particular country.
It refers to the Buddhism suitable to a certain psychological type: a
person who is working first and foremost for his or her own well-being.
That person could be in Tibet, Sri Lanka or Scotland, following any
school of Buddhism. Such people are not without love or compassion for
others. It is just that they feel -quite pragmatically- that, in the
end, we cannot change other people that much but that we can change
ourselves
and that self-transformation is our prime duty as human beings. So much
of the world's problems come through people trying to change each other
but being unwilling or unable to change themselves.
Hina means
smaller or lesser and Yana means the power to carry. Because these
first two types of valuable human being can, at best, only take one
person to liberation -that person being oneself- then their way is
called the lesser way. It's like a car with only one seat. We will see
that the greater way aims to carry many people to liberation. It's like
a jumbo jet.
C. The third type of valuable human being: the bodhisattva, who works within the world, in order
to attain the 'non-situated' Nirvana of the Buddha
The
bodhisattva shares absolutely all the positive points of the hinayana
follower: he or she recognises the futility and suffering of
worldliness (samsara) and also knows that there is a much more elevated
state to be achieved. But instead of wanting to make the Arhat's
journey deep into the mind's peaceful
recesses, the bodhisattva
wants to become a Buddha, so as to be able to help thousands of other
people free themselves from suffering. A Buddha is not only a great
guide and friend for living beings: a Buddha's attainment - the
Buddha's Nirvana- is far purer than that of the Arhat. It is in
understanding the difference between their two "nirvanas" that one can
clearly understand the different paths of the bodhisattva and the
Shravaka.
In the printed version of this talk, I have spelt the
Buddha's Nirvana with a capital N and the Arhat's nirvana with a small
n. The Buddha's nirvana is called non-situated Nirvana, because we
cannot situate it:
1. either in samsara - the world
2. or in the profound inner peace of the Arhat's nirvana.
The
Buddha's Nirvana -with a captial N- is therefore said to be neither
samsara nor nirvana (with a small n). Here I'd like to remind you of
the all-important point made earlier: nirvana simply and only means
that all suffering has ended but not all nirvanas are the same.
Like
all nirvanas, the Nirvana of the Buddha has transcended worldly
suffering and the necessity of rebirth as someone, somewhere. But it is
much, much more than the profound peace of the Arhat's nirvana. The
Buddha's Nirvana is the total discovery of the timeless, perfect,
heart-essence of the universe. It is everywhere and in everything and
everyone. It is a natural, brilliant world of peace present everywhere
(once you know how to recognise it), not the peace of withdrawal into
an inner sanctum. It is something naturally sacred, ultimately pure and
radiant with immeasurable qualities of universal love, universal
compassion and an incomprehensible outreach, helping beings to the
farthest ends of the universe. Because it is so sublime, so
far-reaching and so much beyond the imagination, we call it the
undefinable or unlocated or non-situated Nirvana which we can locate
neither in the things of this world nor in the peaceful meditation of
the Arhat's nirvana. The Arhat's nirvana we can, by contrast, define
very clearly, in terms of concentration meditation.
I really
hope that as you come to understand this point about the difference
between the two nirvanas. If you do, it will clear up the confusion
created in books about Buddhism, in which they say that the bodhisattva
renounces nirvana in order to help other beings. It sounds almost like
somebody giving up their holiday in order to stay at home to help the
family. Or like someone in prison who could be released but somehow has
to commit more crimes to stay inside and help the inmates. This really
is a misunderstanding. It is true that the bodhisattva abandons one
sort of nirvana (the one with a small 'n', that of the hinayana path -
the inner peace) but this is because he or she is taking a quite
different route towards a different Nirvana: that of the Buddha: the
peace of the compassionate, totally-wise mind. Nirvana with a capital N.
The
only way to reach this Nirvana of the Buddha -often called buddha
nature-is through perfect compassion. Compassion involves being in
living contact with the suffering of the world, facing it and doing all
one can to eliminate it. Furthermore, here one is not shutting off the
senses but liberating them. There is a very good expression in
Christianity which explains exactly what the bodhisattva is doing:
being in the world but not of the world. Take the work of primary
school teachers, for example. They need to skilfully enter into the
world of 5 and 6 year-olds. They give these tiny children the
magnificent skills of literacy and numeracy. It doesn't mean that they
have to become childish themselves and renounce their adulthood. They
operate in the world of small children but are not themselves of that
world.
Someone who dedicates this life and all future lives to
attaining this universal essence which is Buddhahood and helping
millions of beings alleviate their suffering is called a bodhisattva.
Bodhi means Buddha and sattva means mind, in the sense of a determined
and courageous mind. Thus a bodhisattva is someone with the courage and
determination to become a Buddha. The word Arhat means the one who has
conquered the enemy, the "enemy" being the delusion of personality and
all the desires and adversities it produces.
What does the
bodhisattva's path involve? First, all the same mind-purifying work of
the hinayana path. Whichever Buddhist path one follows, every trace of
selfish desire, anger, jealousy, pride and confusion must be eliminated
from the mind.But the way in which these are eliminated by the
bodhisattva is different. You will remember that -in the hinayana way-
it is done by going ever more finely
into the tranquil depths of
concentration meditation. The mind draws away from the senses, draws
away from all that is worldly and goes deep inside. The bodhisattva
does not need to withdraw from the world but instead faces the world
and learns through the world and through his or her own reactions to
it. It
is not so much a path of escape as one of transformation.
Anger is transformed into love. Jealousy is transformed into a sincere
joy, which rejoices in the achievement of others. Pride is transformed
into an awareness of the sameness of us all, before what is eternal and
so on and so forth.
This work -of transforming emotions- is made
possible by meditation, as only meditation gives clear insight into how
the mind works. You know, if you want to fix something you first need
to know how it works. Meditation helps us discover how the human mind
works. The bodhisattva's meditation practices are structured
differently from those of the hinayana path. Also, there are many more
of them. As mentioned before, the bodhisattva is avoiding the nirvana
(with a small 'n') of the hinayana path and the bodhisattva is very
careful not to be drawn into its beautiful inner peace of meditation's
tranquillity. One of the main tools for doing this is right thought or
prayer.
In other religions, people pray to a God or to several
gods, asking for their help. In Buddhism, prayer is not addressed to an
external, other, being. Prayer is an organised way of changing the
mind. By repeating good thoughts, sincerely from the depths of one's
heart, over and over again, they become habitual ways of thinking. They
change the mind. In the end, the way one reacts to life's situations
will be made very different, just through constant prayer. The main
prayer of the bodhisattva is a commitment to help all beings, by
achieving the perfection of Buddhahood. Why is this? The Buddha was
just one person. All he had were three robes, a begging bowl and one or
two small objects. Yet,
through his purity and deep wisdom, he was
able to help many tens of thousands of people personally during his own
lifetime and many thousands of millions after his death, through his
extensive teachings, which show people how to help themselves. The
bodhisattva remembers this over and over again. One
person helps
millions simply by attaining a perfect mind. The Bodhisattva knows that
the finest way to help others is to become totally pure, totally wise
and totally skilful in guiding others on the path, just like the
Buddha. Many times a day, the bodhisattva dedicates his life to this
end, in prayer, and tries to do every daily task -even making a cup of
tea- with a mind filled with compassionate love for all other beings
and a deep longing to attain buddhahood.
But longing to achieve
something is not enough. One must actually do the work. I can stand
here for years, longing to go to Hawaii, but I won't budge an inch. One
needs to earn the money, buy the ticket, buy the baggy shorts, get to
the airport, catch a plane and so on and so forth. What the bodhisattva
has to do in order to really become a Buddha is usually described
through six things. These are like six parts of a puzzle. When they are
all complete and perfectly put together, the puzzle of Buddhahood is
complete. What are they:
The six paramitas LINK
1. Perfect generosity.
2. Perfect right conduct.
3. Perfect forbearance (you could call this one patience or tolerance).
4. Perfect diligence.
5. Perfect meditation.
6. Perfect wisdom.
The
six are called the six paramita or six transcendent perfections. You
will have noted that I have tried not to use Pali or other foreign
words in this talk. We only need to use them when we have no equivalent
term in English. I know a lot about this as my own life's work is
translating scriptures from Tibetan. Your
school examiners may want
you to know words like anicca or dukkha but I cannot see the point too
much. We have perfectly good words for these in English -impermanence
and suffering- and why should you learn the Pali words, rather than the
Sanskrit or the Japanese or the Tibetan? Anyway, paramita is a word
without a direct equivalent in English and so it is useful to use the
Sanskrit.
It literally means "gone to the other shore". This is
because when all these six qualities have been brought to an absolute
perfection, one has crossed the ocean of worldly existence (samsara)
and attained the other shore of Buddhahood. We can look at it another
way. What is a Buddha? Someone in
whose mind these six things are totally, immaculately perfect.
Why
does the bodhisattva work with his or her mind in a different way from
the hinayana follower? Let us compare this universal essence -of love,
compassion and wisdom which is everywhere and which we call buddha
nature- to a bright light. Although this light is in each and every one
of us, it cannot shine because it is covered up, blocked off. There are
two layers of blockage:
1. The first is called klesha in
Sanskrit. This is often translated as mind poisons or cankers or
defilements. I have mentioned it a couple of times already today: it
consists of selfish desire, aggression, jealousy, pride and ignorance.
All of these feelings arise through the negative delusions of
personality -the harmful ways in which one defines oneself- I must
have, I can't stand, I ought to have what he has, I'm better than she
is etc. In the hinayana path one removes all such deluded ideas about
self and this removes this first covering on the light of truth. By
simply doing that, one no longer needs to act selfishly, therefore
there is no bad karma and so one stops the cycle of rebirth after
rebirth into worldly existence ( samsara) and eventually become an
Arhat.
2. The second covering, blockage or veil is something
much more subtle. For simplicity, we can call it "duality". It is the
split-second by split-second play of our minds, which is constantly
defining not only ourselves but also the world around us. It is like a
piece of mind-programming which produces, second
after second, a
two-sided movie: me and you, self and other, ours and theirs, my body
and the world in which it moves, my mind and my body etc. etc. It is
through these conscious and subconscious processes that we define
ourselves and our world: our parents, friends, enemies, every detail of
life.
Each of us has his or her totally unique way of seeing and
defining the world. We each move in our own unique universe. In the
mahayana path, one needs not only to see anatta - that our delusions
about ourselves are de void of truth - but also to see how our
delusions concerning other people and other things are also devoid of
truth. Piercing through the illusions and seeing the raw truth of the
cosmos is called discovering its voidness (sunyata). We say voidness
because we discover that other people and other things are devoid of
the illusions we have been projecting onto them - like suddenly
realising
that a mirage is just an optical illusion and not real
water on the road or like realising that someone you have been assuming
was uninteresting is in fact pretty cool. Part of the discovery of
voidness concerns the non-ego (anatta) discovered in the hinayana path.
But it is only a part. By only uncovering anatta, one becomes an Arhat.
By uncovering the whole truth about everything, sunyata, one becomes a
Buddha.
One simple way of putting things may be this: the Arhat
overcomes all illusions concerning himself and is therefore totally at
peace with himself. The Bodhisattva is overcoming all illusions not
only about himself/herself but also about all other people and the
entire universe and is therefore at peace with
everything. By
destroying all illusions, the bodhisattva becomes a Buddha, knowing
everything there is to be known. The Buddha is omniscient. The Arhat is
extraordinarily wise but not ommniscient.
In the six paramita,
the main work of discovering voidness is accomplished through a
combination of the meditation paramita and the wisdom paramita. The
second of these -wisdom paramita- is called prajnaparamita in Sanskrit.
It is exceedingly important in mahayana Buddhism and there are many
gigantic phiolosophical texts elaborating the meaning of voidness.
Although there are so many texts, the truth of voidness can only be
discovered directly, in meditation, as it transcends all thought and
philosophy.
As the six paramita - generosity, right conduct,
forbearance, diligence, meditation and wisdom - come to completion, the
real meaning of the word Buddha becomes apparent.
QUOTE
At the
start, Buddha simply meant someone: an historical figure who gave us
the Buddhist teachings. But as time goes by, one realises that the
historical Buddha Sakyamuni simply achieved something that everyone,
one day, in one life or another, will achieve. What he discovered is
inside each and every one of us. It is our true nature, our
Buddha-nature. This does not mean that each of us is really, at heart,
an Indian prince! It does mean that there is perfect love, perfect
compassion, infinite wisdom and a great ability to help and guide
others, locked up in each and every one of us. It is the inner light.
We just need to find it and to remove all the layers of illusion
covering it and blocking off its power.
This timeless light, universal peace or cosmic wisdom manifests in three ways, known as the three kaya.
LINK FROM GOLDEN ROSARY
1.
This Buddha nature, just as it is and as only a Buddha will ever know
it, is called dharmakaya. Dharmakaya is formless: that means it has no
shape, colour, sound, smell or form whatsoever. It is a vast, cosmic
wisdom: the wisdom of voidness
2. Bodhisattvas who are very
saintly, who are no longer reborn in human worlds but have bodies of
light, experience this buddha nature through the filters of their
senses. Though it is formless, they see it as thousands of different
Buddhas in various pure paradises. They hear it as deeply moving
teachings
expressing the universal laws of truth. The whole
experience of their senses is an uninterrupted mental 'movie' of
transcendent perfection. The way Buddha-nature appears in these
bodhisattva's minds is called sambhogakaya: the enjoyment body, meaning
the visions and experiences of purity enjoyed
by saintly bodhisattvas.
3.
More ordinary beings, who are still in the world of rebirth and
suffering, also have an experience of Buddha nature. They will have
religious experiences, perhaps see a Buddha or a being of light in a
vision and so on and so forth. This happens in moments when the mind is
pure and open. It doesn't last
and is not nearly so pure or so
accurate as the experience of the bodhisattvas mentioned just now. The
bodhisattvas' experience is constant, never interrupted. Nevertheless,
when worldly beings have experience of the Buddha mind, it is usually a
remarkable moment which changes and shapes
the whole of their life. This aspect of Buddha-nature or Buddha mind is called nirmanakaya: the emanated body.
Today,
I have spoken briefly -and very quickly- about the three types of
valuable human being. Of course, this does not mean that other beings
are worthless. It is just that these three types live lives which help
themselves mature as human beings and they help the world. When the
Buddha came to our planet, he came, like all great spiritual teachers,
to help everyone, not just Buddhists. Understanding that we are each
unique, he taught everyone he met according to their individual needs
and, in general, he helped the three psychological types. I have spoken
of today as the three sorts of valuable human being: the everyday
Buddhist and those deeply committed to the paths of the Arhat and the
Bodhisattva. It is not that one way is better than the other. They are
just different way suited to different people.
Today I have not
spoken about the "sociological" side of Buddhism: its different
temples, different customs for marriages etc. These are simply the
outer shell of a faith. They are the clothes it wears. The actual faith
is a series of beliefs and attitudes towards life, towards oneself and
other people. They form the real body of the religion. It is true that
some Buddhist countries accentuate some of these ways, while others
have dropped into the background or disappeared. I could have spent the
whole lecture describing the geographical and historical develoment of
Buddhism. Instead I have chosen to sketch the psychology of these main
strands of Buddhism and tried to explain how the Buddha was trying to
help everyone through these three approaches.
The Buddha often
used the analogy of a doctor to describe himself. His teachings are
like medicine, our mind's impurities and our karma are like the
sickness. These three ways are suited to different types just like
different medicines are suited to different diseases. Can we say a
heart medicine is better than medicine for rheumatism? Of course not.
Would ther be any point in giving the rheumatism medicine to the heart
patient? Of course not. These three ways of living one's life and
meditating suit different types of people. When someone comes to our
monastery in Dumfriesshire for training, we use all three types
according to the individual.
In
fact, when you look closely, you will see that -besides denoting types-
these three psychologies often exist side by side in nearly all of us.
One part of us wants very much to be, another part seeks a peace beyond
the passing pleasures of this world and another part of us seeks the
way to truly serve and help other beings find their way to liberation.
I would like to conclude by expressing my profound respect for all the
goodness achieved by all three types of valuable human being and by
saying that I think the Buddha was extremely wise and broad-minded in
providing such an immense spectrum of advice concerning these three
ways, teachings filling over a hundred books, during the 45 years of
his teaching.