Today is the day on which we Buddhists come together
to observe the uposatha2 precepts and listen to the Dhamma, as is our custom. The point of listening to the Dhamma is firstly to create some understanding of
the things we don't yet understand, to clarify them, and secondly,
to improve our grasp of the things we understand already. We must
rely on Dhamma talks to improve our understanding, and listening is
the crucial factor.
For today's talk please pay special attention, first of all straightening
up your posture to make it suitable for listening. Don't be too tense.
Now, all that remains is to establish your minds, making your minds
firm in samādhi. The mind is the important ingredient.
The mind is that which perceives good and evil, right and wrong. If
we are lacking in sati for even one minute, we are crazy
for that minute; if we are lacking in sati for half an hour
we will be crazy for half an hour. However much our mind is lacking
in sati, that's how crazy we are. That's why it's especially
important to pay attention when listening to the Dhamma.
All creatures in this world are plagued by nothing other than suffering.
There is only suffering disturbing the mind. Studying the Dhamma is
for the purpose of utterly destroying this suffering. If suffering
arises it's because we don't really know it. No matter how much we
try to control it through will power, or through wealth and possessions,
it is impossible. If we don't thoroughly understand suffering and
its cause, no matter how much we try to ''trade it off'' with
our deeds, thoughts or worldly riches, there's no way we can do so.
Only through clear knowledge and awareness, through knowing the truth
of it, can suffering disappear. And this applies not only to homeless
ones, the monks and novices, but also to householders: for anybody
who knows the truth of things, suffering automatically ceases.
Now the states of good and evil are constant truths. Dhamma means
that which is constant, which maintains itself. Turmoil maintains
its turmoil, serenity maintains its serenity. Good and evil maintain
their respective conditions - like hot water: it maintains its hotness,
it doesn't change for anybody. Whether a young person or an old person
drink it, it's hot. It's hot for every nationality of people. So Dhamma
is defined as that which maintains its condition. In our practice
we must know heat and coolness, right and wrong, good and evil. Knowing
evil, for example, we will not create the causes for evil, and evil
will not arise.
Dhamma practicers should know the source of the various dhammas.
By quelling the cause of heat, heat cannot arise. The same with evil:
it arises from a cause. If we practice the Dhamma till we know the
Dhamma, we will know the source of things, their causes. If we extinguish
the cause of evil, evil is also extinguished, we don't have to go
running after evil to put it out.
This is the practice of Dhamma. But many are those who study the Dhamma,
learn it, even practice it, but who are not yet with the Dhamma, and
who have not yet quenched the cause of evil and turmoil within their
own hearts. As long as the cause of heat is still present, we can't
possibly prevent heat from being there. In the same way, as long as
the cause of confusion is within our minds, we cannot possibly prevent
confusion from being there, because it arises from this source. As
long as the source is not quenched, confusion will arise again. |
Footnotes
- ...1
- Given on a lunar observance night (Uposatha) at Wat Pah Pong, 1976
- ...uposatha2
- Uposatha (or observance) days, are the days on which practicing
Buddhists usually go to the monastery to practice meditation, listen
to a Dhamma talk and keep the eight uposatha precepts -
to refrain from killing, stealing, all sexual activity, lying, taking
intoxicants, eating food after midday, enjoying entertainments and
dressing up, and sitting or sleeping on luxurious seats or beds.
- ...kusala3
- Kusala: wholesome or skillful actions or mental states.
- ...pariyatti4
- Pariyatti, the teachings as laid down in the scriptures,
or as passed down from one person to another in some form; the ''theoretical''
aspect of Buddhism. Pariyatti is often mentioned in reference
to two other aspects of Buddhism - patipatti, the practice,
and pativedha, the realization. Thus: Study - Practice
- Realization.
- ... reality5
- Sammuti sacca, a difficult term to translate. It refers to
the dualistic, or nominal reality, the reality of names, determinations
or conventions. For instance, a cup is not intrinsically a cup, it
is only determined to be so.
- ... sukho6
- ''Cessation is true happiness,'' or ''the calming of conditions
is true happiness.''
- ... consciousness7
- The five khandhas.
- ...tipitaka8
- The Buddhist Pāli Canon.
- ...abhidhamma9
- The third of the ''Three Baskets,'' the Tipitaka,
being the section on the higher philosophy of Buddhism.
- ...10
- A Pāli phrase said at the end the traditional giving of the precepts.
- ...sīlabbata-parāmāsa11
- Self-view, doubt, and attachment to rites and practices.
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