Even the monks are like this. Sometimes I hear them say, ''I didn't
become a monk to practice the Dhamma, I only ordained to study.''
These are the words of someone who has completely cut off the path
of practice. There's no way ahead, it's a dead end. When these monks
teach it's only from memory. They may teach one thing but their minds
are in a completely different place. Such teachings aren't true.
This is how the world is. If you try to live simply, practicing the
Dhamma and living peacefully, they say you are weird and anti-social.
They say you're obstructing progress in society. They even intimidate
you. Eventually you might even start to believe them and revert to
the worldly ways, sinking deeper and deeper into the world until it's
impossible to get out. Some people say, ''I can't get out now,
I've gone in to deeply.'' This is how society tends to be. It doesn't
appreciate the value of Dhamma.
The value of Dhamma isn't to be found in books. Those are just the
external appearances of Dhamma, they're not the realization of Dhamma
as a personal experience. If you realize the Dhamma you realize
your own mind, you see the truth there. When the truth becomes apparent
it cuts off the stream of delusion.
The teaching of the Buddha is the unchanging truth, whether in the
present or in any other time. The Buddha revealed this truth 2,500
years ago and it's been the truth ever since. This teaching should
not be added to or taken away from. The Buddha said, ''What the
Tathāgata has laid down should not be discarded, what has not
been laid down by the Tathāgata should not be added on to the
teachings.'' He ''sealed off'' the teachings. Why did the Buddha
seal them off? Because these teachings are the words of one who has
no defilements. No matter how the world may change these teachings
are unaffected, they don't change with it. If something is wrong,
even if people say it's right doesn't make it any the less wrong.
If something is right, that doesn't change just because people say
it's not. Generation after generation may come and go but these things
don't change, because these teachings are the truth.
Now who created this truth? The truth itself created the truth! Did
the Buddha create it? No, he didn't. The Buddha only discovered
the truth, the way things are, and then he set out to declare it.
The truth is constantly true, whether a Buddha arises in the world
or not. The Buddha only ''owns'' the Dhamma in this sense, he
didn't actually create it. It's been here all the time. However,
previously no-one had searched for and found the Deathless, then taught it as
the Dhamma. He didn't invent it, it was already there. |