Sri Subodha Sangamitta Dhamma Education Institution

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

ARAHAT THERI UTTARA (LIFE ENDS IN DEATH) – Dhammapada- (Verse 148)



“All decrepit is this body,    diseases’ nest and frail;
This foul mass is broken up  for life does end in death.”  
 


While residing at the Jetavana Monastery the Buddha spoke this verse, with reference to Venerable Nun Uttara. Arahat Theri, Uttara, in her former lives had reaped good karma.  The paramis she had built up as a nun under previous Buddhas stored enough requisites to end suffering by the perfection of insight and total elimination of defilements in the Gautama Buddha’s era. She was reborn at Savatthi into a Sakyan clansman’s family named Uttara. She began to establish on the path, after hearing one of the Buddha’s discourses preached by Theri Patachara, There she gave up lay-life and later entered the order under Theri Patachara.

Nun Uttara was one hundred and twenty years old, when one day returning from her alms-round she met a monk and requested him to accept her offering of alms-food: She went without food for that day. The same thing happened on the next two days, thus Nun Uttara was without food for three succexessive days and she was feeling weak. On the fourth day while she was on her alms-round, she met the Buddha on the road where it was narrow. She paid obeisance to the Buddha with respect and stepped back. While doing so, she accidently stepped on her own robe and fell on the ground, injuring her head. The Buddha went up to her and said,” your body is getting very old and firm, it is ready to crumble, it will soon perish,” At the end of the discourse, Nun Uttara attained sotapatti fruition.

“Later she declared that she had eradicated all mental stains, particularly eradication of thirst (tanha), that she had cut down all cravings, concerning existence in the human or divine and she had become cool and been quenched that a burning fever had been eliminated by the extinction fire of mental stains: desire, aversion and illusion.”(‘Buddhist Nuns’, Mohan Wijayatatna, p139) 

Insight Knowledge of Impermanence leads to Stream- Entry, the First stage of Deliverance.
Life ends in death" - The central purpose of this stanza is to drive home the fact of impermanence of life. Impermanence (anicca) is the first of the three characteristics of existence. (Tilakkhana). It is from the fact of impermanence that in most texts, the other two characteristics, suffering (dukka) and not-self (anatta), are derived. Impermanence of things is the rising, passing and changing of things, or the disappearance of things that have become arisen. The meaning is that they are vanishing and dissolving from moment to moment.

Each aggregate arises due to certain causes and when these causes end, the aggregate also ceases. Impermanence is a basic feature of all conditioned phenomena, be they material or mental, coarse or subtle, one’s own or external. All formations are impermanent. The totality of existence in terms of the five aggregates, the twelve sense bases. Only Nibbana which is unconditioned and not a formation (asanka), is permanent.

The Insight leading to the first stage of deliverance, stream entry, is often expressed in terms of impermanence. Without deep insight into the impermanence and unsubstatioality of all phenomena of existence there is no attainment of deliverance. Therefore, comprehension of impermanence gained by direct meditative experience, heads two lists of insight knowledge:

(a)Contemplation of impermanence is the first of the eighteen chief kinds of   insight.
(b)The contemplation of arising and vanishing is the first of nine kinds of knowledge (Vipassana Gnana) which lead to the purification by knowledge and vision of the path congress. Contemplation of impermanence leads to the condition less deliverance. As herein the faculty of confidence is out sanding. The one who attains in that way, the path of stream-entry, is called a faith-devotee and at the seven higher stages he/she is called faith-liberated.  
 
Anicca: Impermanence,
Regarding the impermanence, though we may
see; leaves on a tree, some young, some
unfolding, some mature, while others are 
sere and yellow, impermanence does 
not strike home in our hearts. With aging, 
hair decades, if not kept cleaned, smells and
 infest by lice etc. Although our hair changes from black, to grey to white over the years, other parts of body declines too. We do not realise what is so obviously being preached by this change – impermanence.
 
There is a vast difference between occasionally acquiescing in the mind or admitting with the tongue the truth of impermanence and actually realising it constantly in the heart. The trouble is that while intellectually we may accept impermanence as valid truth, emotionally we do not admit it, especially in regard to me and mine. But whatever our unskilful emotions of greed may or may not admit, impermanence remains a truth and the sooner we come to realise through insight that that is a truth; the happier we shall be, because our mode of thought thus be nearer to reality. 

The Elements - Datu

Let us look here at the eighteen elements.
“The sense faculties (eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind)
Their objects (sight, sounds, smells, tastes, touches, mental- objects)
And the mind consciousness that arises when those two come together is the sixth in each set, completing the eighteen. 

The Buddha analysed the totality of conditioned phenomena into ultimate constituents in a number of ways for the benefit of listeners of varying proclivities. (“Inspiration from Enlightened Nuns” - Susan Elbaum Jootla, The Wheel Publications, 1988).

Here according to the Buddha’s advice Theri Uttara was vigilant to contemplate the fleeting and the impermanent nature of her decaying sick body. She was able to see the thirty two impurities in her own self and realised the true nature of life through insight knowledge. She attained higher absorptions, Jhanas, and further Formless Jhanas thereby reaching, Atta-Samapatthi and eliminated all cankers and attained perfect sainthood - Arahatship. 




On  reflecting on her attainment she uttered the exulted thus: ("PASALMS OF THE SISTERS" -MRS. RHYS DAVIDS),
”Seeing the constituent elements as other, arisen casually, liable to dissolution, I eliminated all taints. I have become cool, quenched.”

“Now this Sister, one day, when under Paācārā she had established herself in an exercise, went into her own dwelling, and seating herself cross-legged, thought: 'I will not break up this sitting until I have emancipated my heart from all dependence on the Āsavas.' Thus resolving, she incited her intellectual grasp and gradually clarifying insight as she progressed along the Paths, she attained Arahantship, together with the power of intuition and thorough grasp of the Norm. Thus contemplating nineteen subjects in succession, with the consciousness that 'Now have I done what herein I had to do,' she uttered in her happiness the verses given above, and stretched her limbs. And when the dawn arose, and night brightened into day, she sought the Therī's presence, and repeated her verses.”



Quoted from;["PASALMS OF THE SISTERS” BY MRS. RHYS DAVIDS,   M.A.FELLOW OF UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, LONDON AUTHOR OF 'A MANUAL OF BUDDHIST PSYCHOLOGY']
 For further readings; Visit this site:
"from the Enlightened Nuns" http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/davids/psalms/psalms.html

Sunday, April 27, 2014

WORST DISEASES AND GREATEST HAPPINESS/ SANKARA/VOLITION



Dhammapada (verse 203)

“Jighaccha parama roga   sankara parama dukha
Etam natva yathabhutam  nibbanam paramam sukham.”

“Hunger is the greatest ill
The greatest dukka – conditionedness,
Knowing this really as it is:  Nibbana bliss supreme.”

The Buddha spoke this verse at the village of Alavi, with reference to a lay- disciple. 

Once when the Blessed one was living in the village of Alavi, saw in his vision that the time has ripened for a poor man to attain sotapatti fruition. So he went to that village, which was thirty yojanas (leagues) away from Savatthi. It so happened that on that very day the man lost his oxen. So, he had to be looking for the oxen. Meanwhile in a house in the village of Alvi, alms food was being offered to the Buddha and his disciples.  

After food, the village people got prepared to listen to the Buddha’s preaching. But the Buddha waited for the young man. Having found his oxen, the tired and hungry man came running to the house where the Buddha was.  The Buddha directed the donors to offer food for him. When the man had been fed, the Buddha gave his discourse, expounding the Dhamma step by step and finally leading to the Four Noble Truths. The lay disciple attained sotapatti fruition at the end of the discourse.

On their return to the Jetavana Monastery, the monks remarked that they should not have waited for the man to eat his meal.
On hearing their remarks, the Buddha said, “monks! What you said is true, but you
do not understand that I have come here,
all this distance of thirty yojanas, because, I knew that he was in a fitting condition to take in the Dhamma. If he were feeling hungry, the pangs of hunger might have prevented him from taking in the Dhamma fully. That man had been out looking for his oxen the whole morning, and was very tired and also very hungry. Monks! After all there is no ailment which is so difficult to bear as hunger.”

The term ‘Sankara’ has different shades of meanings:
The term “sankara” has different shades of meanings which should be carefully distinguished. In most usages, this general term “formation” is used frequently according to the conditions required by that particular context. This term may refer either to the act of forming or to the passive state of having been formed to both. One should distinguish the meaning of sankara really well in order to understand the formula of Dependent Origination as sankara is the second link of the formula.

   1.  According to the above stanza, the term sankara (“sankara parama dukha”) is applied to components as the worst suffering.  This term may refer either to the act of forming or to the passive state of having been formed or to both.
 
After overcome by all other illnesses the last to arise in a person is hunger, some- times unbearable, in which the Buddha described as the greatest ill(“(jighaccha parama roga).

2. Sankara-Skkhandha (Five Aggregates)

It also denotes the fourth group of existence (sankara-skkhandha), and includes all mental formations whether they belong to karmmically forming consciousness or not.The Buddha taught that every component thing is impermanent (anicca), and this includes everything that we associate with being human: sensations, feelings, thoughts and consciousness. This is the doctrine of anatta, "no-soul," a central concept of Buddhism. Human existence, in the Buddha's view, is nothing more than a composite of five aggregates (khandas):
 
1.  Physical forms (rupa)
2.  Feelings or sensations (vedana)
3.  perceptions (sanna)
4.  Mental formations or dispositions (sankhara)
5.  Consciousness (vinnana

These khandhas come together at birth to form a human person. A person is a "self" in that he or she is a true subject of moral action and karmic accumulation, but not in the sense that he or she has an enduring or unchanging soul. Therefore the greatest dukka is known as conditionedness (“sankara parama dukka”). This insight knowledge in meditation helps one to realise Nibbana.

The Buddha explains (according to Kajjaniya Sutta, SN 22.79), that if any Brahmans or Contemplatives recollect their past lives, so do they attend to it with the help of all five aggregates or with the help of one or two aggregates. In this instance, that person gains a perception of, "I lived in the past and I was one with such a form in the past." According to the Buddha, such disciples have not gained the right knowledge or the right view as there is no self as such. This is because when you recollect the past lives, they begin to see form as form, sensation as sensation etc.; which belongs to the category of “Sankata” Dhamma. Only when these disciples begin to discern the self- image, then they begin to see this illusory consciousness with the right discernment as: 'This is not mine. This is not my self. this is not what I am.’ 



Kajjaniya Sutta further explains that,"Seeing this reality of nature, the instructed disciples of the noble ones grow disenchanted with form, disenchanted with feeling, disenchanted with perception, disenchanted with fabrications, disenchanted with consciousness. Through disenchanted, they become dispassionate. Through dispassion, they are fully released. With full release, there is the knowledge, 'Fully released.' they discern that 'Birth is ended, the holy life fulfilled, the task done. There is nothing further for this world."

.          3. .Sankara according to the Dependent Origination;

As the second link of the formula of Dependent Origination, (Paticca-Samuppada), sankara has the active aspect, forming, and signifies Kamma which is wholesome or unwholesome volitional activity (cetana) of body (kaya), speech (vaci) or mind (citta or mano). In this sense, the word “Karma-Formation” has been created or coined by the author. 

In other passages, in the same context, sankara is defined by reference to:

(a)meritorious karma-formations (punnabhisankara),
(b) demeritorious (apunnabhisankara)
(c) imperturbable (anenjabisankaa).

This three- fold division covers karmic activity in all spheres of existence. The meritorious karma- formations extend to the sensuous and the fine-material sphere, the demeritorious ones only to the sensuous sphere, and the imperturbable only to the immaterial sphere.
Ven. Ajahan Brahmawamso writes: "The meaning of sankhara is sometimes debated because this is a word that does have many meanings in different places. If one wishes to see the word sankhara used as a cause for rebirth, one can go to the Sankharupapatti Sutta (MN 120). Sankharupapatti means `rebirth according to sankhara'. Here, The Buddha talks about how certain beings arise in different realms according to their planned actions of body, speech or mind. These are actions of body, speech and mind, which are accompanied by will (cetana); and it is this kamma which gives rise to future rebirth. This is called sankhara. In another sutta (SN 12, 51) The Buddha talks about how, if a person who has ignorance (avijjagato, who has gone to ignorance) plans a meritorious sankhara (punnam sankharam abhisankaroti), his consciousness goes to a meritorious place. If he plans a demeritorious sankhara (apunnam sankharam abhisankaroti), his consciousness goes to an apunna place, a demeritorious place. If he plans an anenja sankhara (anenja being something in-between), then his consciousness goes to that place accordingly. Again, this shows that there are three types of sankhara - meritorious, demeritorious and in-between - and that sankhara is the working of kamma. In much the same way that kamma can be made by body, speech and mind, so too there are three types of sankhara - body, speech and mind sankhara."

 Within the dependent origination, sankara is neither subconscious nor a mere tendency, but is fully conscious and active-karmic volition. In the context of the five groups of existence, a very few of the factors from the group of mental formations (sankara-skhandha) are also present as concomitants of subconsciousness, but are not restricted to it, nor are they mere tendencies.

4. As in Bodily, Verbal & Mental Functions

The three terms mentioned earlier, kaya, vaci and citta (or mano), are sometimes used in quite a different sense, namely as:
(a) Bodily function an in-and–out breathing
(b) Verbal function, thought-conception and discursive thinking:  
(c) Mental function as feeling, perception.

 
Here the Arahat Bhikkhuni Dhammadinna, very clearly answers to the questions raised by the Upasaka Visakha: (Cullavedalla Sutta, Majjima Nikaya, 44);  


“Now, lady, what are fabrications?”
“These three fabrications, friend Visakha: bodily-fabrications, verbal fabrications, & mental fabrications.”
 
“But what are bodily-fabrications? What are verbal fabrications? What are mental fabrications?”
 
“In-&-out breaths are bodily fabrications. Directed thought & evaluation are verbal fabrications. Perceptions & feelings are mental fabrications.”

“But why are in-&-out breaths bodily fabrications? Why are directed thought & evaluation verbal fabrications? Why are perceptions & feelings mental fabrications?”

“In-&-out breaths are bodily; these are things tied up with the body. That’s why in-&-out breaths are bodily fabrications. Having first directed one’s thoughts and made an evaluation, one then breaks out into speech. That’s why directed thought & evaluation are verbal fabrications. Perceptions & feelings are mental; these are things tied up with the mind. That’s why perceptions & feelings are mental fabrications.”

“Now, lady how does the attainment of the cessation of perception & feeling come about?”
 
“The thought does not occur to a monk as he is attaining the cessation of perception & feeling that ‘I am about to attain the cessation of perception & feeling’ or that ‘I am attaining the cessation of perception & feeling’ or that ‘I have attained the cessation of perception & feeling.’ Instead, the way his mind has previously been developed leads him to that state.”

“But when a monk is attaining the cessation of perception & feeling, which things cease first: bodily fabrications, verbal fabrications, or mental fabrications?”
“When a monk is attaining the cessation of perception & feeling, friend Visakha, verbal fabrications cease first, then bodily fabrications, then mental fabrications.”[1]

.               5As in “Sabbe Sankara Anicca”

    
















It occurs further in the sense of anything formed (sankata) and conditioned, and includes all things whatever in the world, all phenomena of existence. This meaning applies to the well-known passage; all formations are impermanent, subject to suffering. - Sabbe sankhara anicca.. dukka).” In that context, however, sankara is subordinate to the still wider and all- embracing term Dhamma (thing); for Dhamma includes also the unformed or unconditioned element (asankhata-dhatu), i.e., Nibbana (e.g., in Sabbe Dhamma anatta: all things are without a self). This insight knowledge in meditation helps one to attain Nibbana.

“Cetana Sutta" describes how each aggregate supports and    conditions the other,(written by Ven, Thannisao Bhikkhu) which is  explained here: 

“The Blessed one explains here how each aggregate support and conditions the other. “What one intends what one arranges, and what one obsesses about: this is a support for the stationing of consciousness. There being a support, there is a landing [or: an establishing] of consciousness. When that consciousness lands and grows, there is the production of renewed becoming in the future. When there is the production of renewed becoming in the future, there is future birth, aging & death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, & despair. Such is the origination of this entire mass of suffering & stress.

The seven obsessions are: the obsession of sensual passion, the obsession of resistance, the obsession of views, the obsession of uncertainty, the obsession of conceit, the obsession of passion for becoming, and the obsession of ignorance. See AN 7.12.
[Cetana Sutta: Intention" (SN 12.38), translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu. Access to Insight (Legacy Edition), 30 November 2013, http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn12/sn12.038.than.html.]

6.  Used as Other Terms
 Sankhara also means “volitional effort”, e. g, in the formula of The   Roads to Power (idhdi-pada); Aryu sanskara - Parinibbana (Only as a Kriya citta/Functional citta, experienced only by Arahats who attain Jhanas).

Sankata/Asankata

The consciousness of a (putuggana) worldling is conditioned (sankatha)They are called sankatha as they are subject to change and decay. If one makes an effort to see the reality of the aggregates conditioned in one’s mind and body (nama-rupa sanskara), through insight knowledge, that mind changes into an unconditional state of mind (asankatha)which bares no cause or effect and bares the fruit of emancipation from all suffering. Nibbana is the only unconditioned element. It is not caused by conditions. hence Nibbana is called Asankatha Dathu and it is permanent.This state of consciousness is called Anidassana Vinnanya (“Visankaragatan cittam”).

And in the Abhidhamma terms asankarika and sasankarika citta. I.e. without effort – spontaneously or not induced either by an outsider or one-self, and with effort-prompted. In sasankara-parinibayi (anagami).

Abhi-sanskara, Conditioning with higher effort, the eagerness

The following excerpt from “Dvayatanupassana Sutta” teachers how we perceive our six senses as myself and the world, which has been translated from the Pali by- Thanissaro Bhikkhu.

“For those who are able to see through this illusory construction (an ability that comes in part from meditation), ordinary pleasures are seen as a snare that catches and reinforces the ego — that view we have of self as separate, from which so much suffering arises. The moderation or even renunciation of these pleasures, on the other hand, can be viewed as a powerful tool for gaining freedom from our self-created suffering.

The term "nobles" or "noble ones" is used in the Buddhist tradition, not for people of a certain birth or social class, but for any person who thinks, speaks or acts nobly: with generosity, kindness and wisdom, rather than with greed, hatred or delusion.

... Forms and sounds and flavours and smells And touches and all mental states, Are wished for, cherished and pleasing, As long as it's said that "They're real." For the world and for its devas these are equal to happiness; whereas when they come to an end... This for them is equal to pain. 'Happiness,' viewed by the nobles, Comes from restraining the ego. This is just the opposite of how it is seen by all the world. That which is pleasant for others, for the noble ones is painful. And what for others is painful, The noble ones know as pleasant. Behold! A teaching hard to know. The deluded are confused here”. ...


"Dvayatanupassana Sutta: The Contemplation of Dualities" (Sn 3.12), translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu. Access to Insight (Legacy Edition), 30 November 2013, http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/kn/snp/snp.3.12.than.html .




Please listen to this great Dhamma Sermon delivered By Most Ven. Katukurunde Ganarama Himi, who explains Paticcha Samuppadaya into a grater depth. (in Sinhala)
  Please visit:
http://www.dhammikaweb.com/  Dvethanupassana Sutta -
නිවනේ ශාන්ත, ප්‍රනීත බව ප්‍රකාශ කෙරෙන පද මාලාවේ මුලටම සදහන් වන්නේ සබ්බ සංඛාර සමථ නම් වූ සියලු සංස්කාරයන්ගේ සංසිදීම යි.  අවිද්‍යා අන්ඳකාරය තුල සසර දුකට මුල පුරන්නේ ත් සංස්කාර යි. මේ නිසා පටිච්චසමුප්පාද ධර්මය හරි හැටි වටහා ගැනීමට සංස්කාරකියන වචනය තුල ඇති ගැඹුරුවූත්, පුලුල්වූත් අර්ථ සමුදාය හෙලිපෙහෙලි කරගත යුතු ය. එයට මුලාරම්භයක් වශයෙන් මෙම 13 වෙනි දේශනාවට මාතෘකාව කර ගත්තේ සුත්තනිපාතයේ  12.ද්වේතානු පස්සනා සූත්‍රයේ එන ගාථා තුනක්.  ද්වේතාවක් වශයෙන්, අනුපස්සනා දෙකක් වශයෙන් ප්‍රස්තුත ධර්ම කාරණා ඉදිරිපත් කිරීම මේ සූත්‍රයේ විශේෂත්වය යි.  
මෙතන දී බුදුරජාණන් වහන්සේ මේ සංස්කාර පිළිබඳ කථාව සංඝයා වහන්සේලාට මෙහෙමයි ඉදිරිපත් කරන්නේ, මහණෙනි! මැනවින් ද්වේතානු පස්සනාවේ යෙදීමේ තවත් ක්‍රමයක් තිබේ දැ යි කෙනෙක් අසනු ඇතොත් ඒ අයට තිබිය හැකි යැයි කිව යුතු ය. කෙසේ ද තිබිය හැක්කේ?  ……… …http://www.dhammikaweb.com/ Katukurunde Ganarama Himi Most Ven. Katukurunde Ganarama Thero-   Audio Recording