I didn't
come here today to give any formal sermon or
lecture, but to have an informal chat among friends.
I hope that you all agree to this, so that we can
speak and listen to each other without formality and
rituals, even if our talk here becomes somewhat
different or unusual. Further, I intend to speak
only about the most essential matters, important
topics that people consider to be profound.
Therefore, if you don't listen carefully you may
find it difficult to follow and might misunderstand,
especially those of you who haven't heard the
previous talks in this series.
The last
talk was called "What To Do To Be Void." This time I
intend to talk about "No Religion." If you find the
subject strange or incomprehensible, or if you
simply don't agree, please take the time to think it
over. But remember, it isn't necessary to believe or
subscribe to what I say right away.
When we
meet together like this, I feel there is something
which prevents us from understanding each other and
this thing is simply the problem of language itself.
You see, there are two kinds of language. One is the
conventional language that ordinary people speak,
what I call "people language."
People language is used by the ordinary
people who don't understand Dhamma very well and by
those worldly people who are so dense that they are
blind to everything but material things. Then, there
is the language which is spoken by those who
understand reality (Dhamma), especially those who
know and understand reality in the ultimate sense.
This is another kind of language. Sometimes, when
only a few words or even just a few syllables are
uttered, the ordinary listener finds Dhamma language
paradoxical, completely opposite to the language he
speaks. We can call it "Dhamma language." You always
must take care to recognize which language is being
spoken.
People who
are blind to the true reality (Dhamma) can speak
only people language, the conventional language of
ordinary people. On the other hand, people who have
genuinely realized the ultimate truth (Dhamma) can
speak either language. They can handle people
language quite well and are also comfortable using
Dhamma language, especially when speaking among
those who know reality, who have already realized
the truth (Dhamma). Amongst those with profound
understanding, Dhamma language is used almost
exclusively; unfortunately, ordinary people can't
understand a word. Dhamma language is understood
only by those who are in the know. What is more, in
Dhamma language it isn't even necessary to make a
sound. For example, a finger is pointed or an
eyebrow raised and the ultimate meaning of reality
is understood. So, please take interest in these two
kinds of language - people language and Dhamma
language.
To
illustrate the importance of language, let's
consider the following example. Ordinary, ignorant
worldly people are under the impression that there
is this religion and that religion, and that these
religions are quite different, so different that
they're opposed to each other. Such people speak of
"Christianity," "Islam," "Buddhism," "Hinduism,"
"Sikhism," and so on, and consider these religions
to be different, separate, and incompatible. These
people think and speak according to their personal
feelings and thus turn the religions into enemies.
Because of this mentality, there come to exist
different religious which are hostilely opposed to
each other.
Those who
have penetrated to the essential nature of religion
will regard all religions as being the same.
Although they may say there is Buddhism, Judaism,
Taoism, Islam, or whatever, they will also say that
all religious are inwardly the same. However, those
who have penetrated to the highest understanding of
Dhamma will feel that the thing called "religion"
simply doesn't exist at all. There is no Buddhism;
there is no Christianity and there is no Islam. How
can they be the same or in conflict when they don't
even exist? It just isn't possible. Thus, the phrase
"no religion!" is actually Dhamma language of the
highest level. Whether it will be understood or not
is something else, depending upon the listener, and
has nothing to do with the truth or with religion.
I'd like to
give a simple example of people language, the
language of materialism. "Water" will suffice.
People who don't know much about even the simplest
things think that there are many different kinds of
water. They view these various kinds of water as if
they have nothing in common. They distinguish
rain-water, well-water, underground-water,
canal-water, swamp-water, ditch-water, gutter-water,
sewer-water, toilet-water, urine, diarrhea, and many
other kinds of water from each other. Average people
will insist that these waters are completely
different, because such people take external
appearances as their criteria.
A person
with some knowledge, however, knows that pure water
can be found in every kind of water. If we take
rain-water and distill it, we will get pure water.
If we take river-water and distill it, we will get
pure water. If we take canal-water, sewer-water, or
toilet-water, and distill it, we will still end up
with pure water. A person with this understanding
knows that all those different kinds of water are
the same as far as the water component is concerned.
As for those elements which make it impure and look
different, they aren't the water itself. They may
combine with water, and alter water, but they are
never water itself. If we look through the polluting
elements, we can see the water that is always the
same, for in every case the essential nature of
water is the same. However many kinds of water there
may seem to be, they are all the same as far as the
essential nature of water is concerned. When we look
at things from this viewpoint, we can see that all
religions are the same. If they appear different
it's because we are making judgments on the basis of
external forms.
On an even
more intelligent level, we can take that pure water
and examine it further. Then, we must conclude that
there is no water, only two parts hydrogen and one
part oxygen. There's no water left. That substance
which we have been calling "water" has disappeared,
it's void. The same is true everywhere, no matter
where we find the two parts of hydrogen and one part
of oxygen. In the sky, in the ground, or wherever
these parts happen to be found, the state of water
has disappeared and the term "water" is no longer
used. For one who has penetrated to this level of
truth, there is no such thing as "water."
In the same
way, one who has attained to the ultimate truth sees
that there's no such thing as "religion." There is
only a certain nature which can be called whatever
we like. We can call it "Dhamma," we can call it
"Truth," we can call it "God," "Tao," or whatever,
but we shouldn't particularize that Dhamma or that
Truth as Buddhism, Christianity, Taoism, Judaism,
Sikhism, Zoroastrianism, or Islam, for we can
neither capture nor confine it with labels and
concepts. Still, such divisions occur because people
haven't yet realized this nameless truth for
themselves. They have only reached the external
levels, just as with canal-water, muddy water, and
the rest.
The Buddha
intended for us to understand and be able to see
that there is no "person," that there is no separate
individual, that there are only Dhamma or natural
phenomena. Therefore, we shouldn't cling to the
belief that there is this religion and that
religion. We added the labels "Buddhism," "Islam,"
and "Christianity" ourselves, long after the
founders lived. None of the great religious teachers
ever gave a personal name to their teachings, like
we do today. They just went about teaching us how to
live unselfishly.
Please try
to understand this correctly. When the final level
is reached, when the ultimate truth is realized, not
even man exists. There is only nature, only Dhamma.
This reality can't be considered to be any
particular thing; it can't be anything other than
Dhamma. It can't be Thai, Chinese, Indian, Arab, or
European. It can't be black, brown, yellow, red, or
white. It can't be eastern or western, southern or
northern. Nor can it be Buddhist, Christian,
Islamic, or anything else. So please try to reach
this Dhamma, for then you will have reached the
heart of all religions and of all things, and
finally come to the complete cessation of suffering.
Although we
call ourselves "Buddhists" and profess Buddhist
principles, we haven't yet realized the truth of
Buddhism, for we are acquainted with only a tiny
aspect of our own Buddhism. Although we be monks,
nuns, novices, lay devotees, or whatever, we are
aware of only the bark, the outer covering which
makes us think our religion is different from other
religions. Because we have failed to understand and
haven't yet realized our own truth, we look down
upon other religions and praise only our own. We
think of ourselves as a special group and of others
as outsiders or foreigners. We believe that they are
wrong and only we are right, that we are special and
have a special calling, and that only we have the
truth and the way to salvation. We have many of
these blind beliefs. Such ideas and beliefs show
that we are still ignorant, very foolish indeed,
just like little babies who know only their own
bellies. Tell a small child to take a bath and to
wash with soap to get all the dirt off; the little
child will scrub only her belly. She doesn't know to
wash all over. She will never think of washing
behind her ears or between her toes or anywhere like
that. She merely scrubs and polishes her tummy
vigorously.
In this
same way as the child, most of the adherents of
Buddhism know only a few things, such as how to take
and how to get. Even while doing good, supporting
the temples and monks, and observing the precepts,
their only objective is to get something, they even
want to get more in return than they gave. When they
make offerings, some people expect back ten times
what they gave, some a hundred times, some a
thousand, and some even more. In this case, it would
be more accurate to say that these people know
nothing at all, for they are acquainted only with
how to get and how to take. That isn't Buddhism at
all. It's the religion of getting and taking. If
ever they can't get or can't take something, they
are frustrated and they suffer. Real Buddhism is to
know how to get without getting and take without
taking so that there is no frustration and no
suffering at all.
This must
be spoken about very often in order to acquaint
everyone with the heart of Buddhism, which is
Non-Attachment. Buddhism is about not trying to
seize or grasp anything, to not cling or attach to
anything, not even to the religion itself, until
finally we realize that there is no Buddhism after
all. That means, if we speak directly, that there is
no Buddha, no Dhamma, and no Sangha! (The Buddha,
Dhamma, and Sangha (or Community) are the beloved
Triple Gem which most Buddhists cherish as the basis
of their faith.) However, if we speak in this way,
nobody will understand; they will be shocked and
frightened.
Those who
do understand, see that the Buddha, the Dhamma, and
the Sangha are the same thing, that is, just Dhamma
or just Nature itself. The compulsion to seize and
hang onto things as persons and individuals, as this
and that, doesn't exist in them. Everything is
non-personal, that is, is Dhamma or Nature in its
pure state or whatever we wish to call it. But we
dare not think like this. We are afraid to think
that there is no religion, that there is no Buddha,
Dhamma, or Sangha. Even if people were taught or
forced to think in this way, they still wouldn't be
able to understand. In fact, they would have a
totally distorted understanding of what they thought
and would react in the opposite way to what was
intended.
For this
reason, after the passing away of the Buddha, there
appeared many new systems of religious practice. The
teachings were reorganized into descending levels,
with lower, more accessible aspects, so that even if
someone wished to make offerings in order to gain
heavy benefits in return, equal to dozens, hundreds,
or thousands of times their "merits," it could be
done. This was a preliminary arrangement so that the
rewards for good deeds would be a bait to attract
people and keep them from going astray. As a
starting point, people were encouraged to hang on to
the good and its rewards as much as possible. If
they continued to do so, they would eventually
discover that it was unnecessary to cling, or be
attached to goodness. They would come to see that
any such attachment is unsatisfying and painful.
Thus, they would gradually disentangle themselves
from the habit of attachment. This is how Dhamma
leads through successively higher levels and is why
the practice of Dhamma in its earliest stage is
based on "gaining merit" to let people get something
they really like at the start.
The next step on the
path of Dhamma is to voluntarily choose to live a
plain and simple life, a pure life, in which one
isn't led astray or intoxicated by anything. On this
level, there is still a sense of the "I" who is
enjoying this mode of happiness, but it's a better,
more developed "I."
The next
highest level of Dhamma is to not let any traces of
the "I" remain at all. It's finished. The mind no
longer has the feeling of being "I," of being a
self, and there is no way that suffering or
dissatisfaction can happen, since there is no "I" to
suffer. Suffering can't occur because this
ego-less-ness is the highest possible happiness, if
we speak in people language. If we speak in Dhamma
language, however, there is nothing to say. There is
nothing to get nothing to have nothing to be - no
happiness, no suffering, nothing at all. We call
this "void-ness." Everything still exists, but it's
free and void of any feeling of being "I" or "mine."
For this reason we say "void-ness."
To see that
everything is void is to see things as being neither
an aspect of oneself nor in anyway possessed by
oneself. The words "void" and "void-ness" in the
common language of ignorant people mean that nothing
exists, but in the language of the Buddha, the
Awakened One, the words "void" and "void-ness" mean
everything exists, but without attachment to any of
it in terms of "I" or "mine." That there isn't
clinging or attachment to things as being "I" and
"mine" is void-ness of I and void-ness of mine. When
the words "void" and "void-ness" are used in this
way, it's the void-ness of Dhamma language. To use
"void" in the sense that nothing actually exists is
the language of worldly people who are trapped in
their senses, is the language of materialism, is the
language of householders who know nothing but their
homes. Here, "void-ness" has given us another
example of the difference between people language
and Dhamma language.
We should
always keep in mind this truth about language and
discriminate whether the words we hear, read, and
use are people language or Dhamma language. For
example, the Buddha said, "Kill your father and kill
your mother, then you shall attain Nibbána." "Kill
your father and mother, be an ungrateful child, then
you shall attain Nibbána." The Buddha didn't mean
that we should take this literally and kill our
flesh and blood parents. Instead, he meant that
ignorance is a kind of father and craving is a kind
of mother. The two give birth to ego-consciousness
and subsequently all forms of selfishness and sin.
There's no reason in feel any gratitude toward them;
destroy them immediately and Nibbána is realized.
To speak in
this fashion is to use the Dhamma language which the
ordinary person is unable to understand. He must
study and inquire, think and reflect, until finally
he understands. But the Noble ones, those who have
realized Dhamma already, will understand
immediately, though only a few words are spoken and
without any explanation or advice. Just one word is
enough for them to understand, without further
explanation, because they know Dhamma language
thoroughly.
The words
"birth" and "death" require the same discrimination
regarding language. In people language, the word
"birth" means to be born from a mothers womb. In
Dhamma language, however, the word "birth" means
some form of attachment is born. This kind of birth
happens every time we allow the arising of a thought
or feeling which involves grasping and clinging to
something as "I" or "mine," such as, "I am," "I
have," "I think," and "I do." This is the birth of
the "I" or the ego.
For
example, think like a criminal and one is instantly
born as a criminal. A few moments later those
thoughts disappear, one thinks like a normal human
being again and is born as a human being once more.
If a few moments later one has foolish thoughts,
right then one is born as a fool. If one then thinks
in an increasingly foolish and dull manner, one will
be born as an animal immediately. Whenever an
attachment is felt intensely - when it burns inside
one with the heat of fire - one is born as a demon
in hell. Whenever one is so hungry and thirsty that
one could never be satiated, one is born as an
insatiably hungry ghost. When one is overly cautions
and timid without reason, one is born a cowardly
titan. Thus, in a single day one can be born any
number of times in many different forms, since a
birth takes place each and every time there arises
any form of attachment to the idea of being
something. Each conception of "I am," "I was," or "I
will" is simultaneously a birth. This is the meaning
of "birth" in Dhamma language. Therefore, whenever
one encounters the word "birth," one must be very
careful to understand its meaning in each particular
context.
"Birth is
suffering." These words mean that the egoistic kind
of birth described above is always painful and ugly.
That is to say, if we allow "I" to be born in any
manner, suffering occurs immediately. If we live
simply and directly in the awareness of
"not-being-I," it's like remaining unborn and never
experiencing suffering. Although physical birth has
happened long ago, there is no further spiritual
birth of the egoistic "I."
On the
other hand, whenever an egoistic thought or feeling
arises, there is suffering at once and the suffering
always fits the particular kind of "I" that is being
born. If "I" is human, it suffers like a human. If
"I" is an angel, it suffers angelically. If "I" is
demonic, it suffers hellishly. The manner of the
grasping and clinging can change repeatedly, even
being born as beast, hungry ghosts, and cowardly
titans. In one day, there may be many birth many
dozens of births, and every one of them is
unsatisfactory, frustrating, and painful. To destroy
this kind of birth is Nibbána.
2. Animals,
demons, hungry ghosts (peta), and cowardly
titans (asura) are the inhabitants of the
"lower realms" in traditional Buddhist cosmology.
Concerning death, there's no need to speak
about what happens after the people language
version. Why talk about what happens once we're in
the coffin? Instead, please deal with this most
urgent issue of ego-birth, that is, don't get born
and there will be no suffering. Without the feeling
of being born, there is no person anymore and all
the problem disappear with it. That is all. When
there isn't this continual being born, there is no
longer a "somebody" to have problems. It's as simple
as that. The time remaining in life is no longer an
issue once we know how to experience the fact that
this "I" will never be born again. This can be
called "non-birth." You may call it "death" if you
prefer.
So you see,
between people language and Dhamma language the
words "birth" and "death" have opposite meanings.
The same situation exists in the scriptures of other
religions, especially those of Christianity. As a
result, the Christians don't understand their own
Bible, just as we Buddhists don't understand the
Tipitaka (Buddhist scriptures). Thus, whenever
members of the two meet, they end up arguing until
they are blue in the face. The quarrels are simply
unbelievable; they fight to the end. Therefore, let
us develop some understanding concerning this matter
of people language and Dhamma language.
We have
discussed the word "birth" in a Buddhist context,
now let us consider a word from the Christian
scriptures, such as "life." Matthew says that Jesus
Christ "surrendered his life as a ransom for many"
(Matt. 20:28). Elsewhere, Jesus said, "If you would
enter life, keep the commandments" (Matt. 19:17).
These two statements show that the word "life" has
more than one meaning. In the first statement,
"life" is used in its people language sense. Jesus
allowed them to kill the life of his body, which is
the ordinary meaning of "life." "Life" in the second
passage is the same word "life," but it now refers
to a life that can never be killed. It's a life
which will never know death. By this we see that
even the simple word "life" can have two very
different meanings.
The word
"die" provides another example. In people language,
"to die" means that the bodily functions have
stopped, which is the kind of death we can see with
our eyes. However, "die" in the language used by God
has quite a different meaning, such as when he spoke
to Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden telling them
not to eat the fruit of a certain tree, "for in the
day that you eat of it you shall die" (Gen. 2:17).
Eventually, Adam and Eve ate that fruit, but we know
that they didn't die in the ordinary sense, the kind
that puts people into coffins. That is, their bodies
didn't die. Instead, they died in another way, in
the Dhamma language sense, which is a spiritual
death much more cruel than being buried in a coffin.
This fate worse than death was the appearance of
enormous sin in their minds, that is, they began to
think in dualistic terms - good and evil, male and
female, naked and clothed, husband and wife, and so
on. The pairs of opposites proliferated making the
pain very heavy, so much so that their minds were
flooded by a suffering so severe that it's
impossible to describe. All this has been passed
down through the years and inherited by everyone
living in the present era.
The
consequences have been so disastrous that the
Christians give the same "Original Sin" to the first
appearance of dualistic thinking. Original Sin first
happened with that primordial couple and then was
passed on to all their descendants down to this very
day. This is what God meant by the word "death";
whenever we partake of this fruit of dualism (from
the tree of the knowledge of good and evil") we must
die right then and there. This is the meaning of
"death" in Christian language.
"Death" has
the same meaning in the language of the Buddha. Why
is this so? Because both religions are pointing to
the same truth concerning attachment and dualism.
Whenever dualistic thoughts arise there is bound to
be suffering, which is death. Death means the end of
everything good, the end of happiness, the end of
peace, the end of everything worthwhile. This is the
meaning of "death" in Dhamma language. Most of us
die this way many times each day.
It's called
"death" because it makes the heart heavy. It always
creates a feeling of frustration and depression to
some degree, not to mention worry, restlessness, and
anxiety. The more intelligent and clever a person
is, the more often one dies and the more profound
the deaths. The clever person's deaths are much more
special and creative than those of an ignorant
person.
We must
know how to avoid death in order to be in accord
with the teachings of the Buddha and Jesus (along
with the other prophets). The objective of Buddhism
is the same as of Christianity: don't let this
original sin overpower you; don't let dualistic
attachment dominate your heart or your mind. Refuse
to let it dominate the mind ever again.
We must
always be aware of the true nature of Dhamma, that
in reality there is no duality of any sort - no
gain, no loss, no happiness, no suffering, no good,
no evil, no merit, no sin, no male, no female. There
is absolutely nothing at all that can be separated
and polarized into opposites. Rather than buy into
them, we ought to transcend.
The
dualistic pairs are the basis of all attachment, so
don't fall for their tricks. Don't attach to any of
them. Try to understand that these things can never
be seized and held onto because they are
impermanent, lack any real substance, and are
not-self. Try to go about your business with a mind
that is unattached. Work with a mind that clings to
nothing and is free from all forms of attachment.
This is called "working with a void mind."
We should
perform every kind of task with a void mind, no
matter whether it's at the office or at home. Even
rest and recreation should be done with a void mind,
a mind that always remains unattached and free
because it's above all dualities. If we work with a
busy mind, a mind that is restless and always
grasping and clinging to one thing or idea after
another, a mind that is over-burdened with
attachments, then there is suffering and we must
inevitably be born in a lowly state. The lower
realms spoken of by traditional Buddhists happen
right then and there; birth as a demon in hell, as a
beast, as a hungry ghost, or as a cowardly titan
takes place at that very moment. This is the most
serious problem facing humanity, it's the most
original sin, and it's death in Dhamma language.
Therefore, we should live, work, and play without
attachments.
There is a short
verse of mine which I'd like to discuss.
Do work of all
kinds with a mind that is void
And to the void-ness surrender all of the fruits;
Eat the food of void-ness as the holy ones do,
You'll have died to yourself from the very start.
Some people are
unable to understand this verse and they keep saying
that the author is crazy. Nonetheless, it isn't so
difficult to explain.
That we
should do every kind of work with a void mind is a
warning that the busy and agitated mind which jumps
into things with attachment always becomes dark and
clouded with delusion, is full of worries and fears,
and becomes gloomy and insecure. If people insist on
keeping this up, before long they are sure to suffer
a nervous breakdown or some other kind of illness.
If they let these mental diseases and related
physical ailments accumulate, they end up confined
to a sick bed. Even though they may be intelligent,
talented, and sophisticated people who do important
work and earn a great deal of money, they will still
end up being confined to bed with nervous
breakdowns, ulcers, and other disorders caused by
insecurity and anxiety. All of these illnesses begin
with attaching and clinging to such things as fame
and money, profit and loss, happiness and
unhappiness, and praise and blame.
So, don't
get involved with these things. Get free of all such
attachments and the mind will be void. The mind will
be brilliantly intelligent, as clear and sharp as
possible. Then, do your work with just such a void
mind as this. All your needs will be satisfied
without the least bit of frustration or suffering.
Sometimes, it will even seem to be a Dhammic sort of
fun. Best of all, working like this is the kind of
Dhamma practice which frees us from the false
distinction between practicing Dhamma at the temple
and working at home. Such a dichotomy is rather
foolish; it's what happens when people think only in
people language.
According
to Dhamma language, we must practice Dhamma in this
body and mind at the same time that we do our work
with this same body and mind. Both work and Dhamma
practice are done in the same place or the same
thing. The practice of Dhamma is there in the work;
the work in itself is Dhamma practice. In other
words, to do work of any kind without grasping or
clinging is a way to practice Dhamma. Wherever and
whenever we practice non-attachment, there and then
is Dhamma practice.
Accordingly, whether we are engaged in training the
mind to be unattached and calm, or whether we are
working to earn a living in some occupation or
another, if we do so with a void mind that forms no
attachments, right there is the practice of Dhamma.
It doesn't matter if we are in an office, a factory,
a cave, or whatever. To work like this without
getting involved in attachments, obsession, and ego
is what is meant by " Do work of all kinds with a
mind that is void. "
The result
of working this way is that we enjoy ourselves while
working, and that the work is done well because our
minds are very clear and sharp then, and there are
no worries about things like money. The things we
need are acquired in the usual ways and all this
without the attachment forged by grasping and
straining.
This brings
us in the second line of the verse which is " And
to the void-ness surrender all of the fruits. "
When our work bears fruit in the form of money,
fame, influence, status, and so forth, we must give
it all to void-ness. Don't be so stupid as to cling
to these things as "belonging to me" - "my money,"
"my success," "my talent," or "my" anything. This is
what is meant by not attaching to the results of our
work.
Most of us
blindly cling to our successes and so our
experiences of success increase our selfish desires
and defilements (kilesa). Let ourselves be
careless for only a moment and we will fall into
pain immediately due to the weight of attachments
and anxieties. In truth, this kind of mental or
spiritual pain is always happening. Before long, if
we aren't careful, the pain manifest itself
physically in the body as well. Some people have
nervous breakdowns or go insane, while others
develop one of the numerous varieties of neuroses so
prevalent in the world today, even though they may
be famous, knowledgeable, and wealthy. All this pain
results from the fact that people the world over
have misunderstood, abused, and ignored their own
religious.
We
shouldn't think that the teaching of non-attachment
is found only in Buddhism. In fact, it can be found
in every religion, although many people don't notice
because it's expressed in Dhamma language. Its
meaning is profound, difficult to see, and usually
misunderstood.
Please
forgive me, I don't mean to be insulting, but I feel
that many religious people don't yet understand
their own religion. For instance, in the Christian
Bible, St. Paul advises us to "Let those who have
wives live as though they had none, and those who
mourn as though they were not mourning, and those
who rejoice as though they were not rejoicing, and
those that buy as though they had no goods, and
those who deal with the world as though they had no
dealings with it" (Cor.7:29-31). This passage is
found in the New Testament of the Christian Bible;
anyone can look it up. It should be understood in
the same way as our basic Buddhist theme of
non-attachment. That is, if you have a wife, don't
attach to having her; if you have a husband, don't
cling to having him. If you have painful or
sorrowful experiences, don't cling to them as "I" or
"mine" and it will be as if they never happened.
That is, don't be sad about them. Don't attach to
joy, goods, and worldly dealings, either.
Unfortunately, the fact is that most people -
whatever their religion - are dominated by these
things. They let themselves suffer intolerably over
such matters until finally they go insane or commit
suicide. But those of us who follow St. Paul's
advice can go on as if nothing had happened. That
kind of suffering doesn't happen to us, we remain
fine. We buy things without taking anything home,
which means we never get attached to what we buy and
take home. We bought it, we brought it home, but
it's like we didn't buy anything, because we don't
give birth to the thought that we possess something.
This is how
to buy and live as though having no goods, but if
you discuss this passage with some Christians, you
will find that they don't understand it at all. Even
some of the clergy, the teachers of their religion,
couldn't explain to me correctly how to practice in
accordance with St. Paul's instructions. Their
explanations were vague and obscure. They beat
around the bush and didn't give any practical
interpretation of the passage. In fact, this passage
has the same meaning as "Do work of all kinds
with a mind that is void and to the void-ness
surrender all of the fruits," which, of course,
many Buddhism don't understand either.
The third
line of the verse is "Eat the food of void-ness
as the holy ones do." Here, some people might
ask, "Then, what do we eat?" If everything is void
or given away to the void-ness, what will there be
to eat? The answer is to eat food that belongs to
void-ness, the same way that the Noble Ones do. We
work with a void mind and turn all the rewards over
to void-ness. Void-ness then stockpiles it all and
preserves it safely. When it's time to eat, we can
eat from the stock of void-ness too.
If you earn
a million dollars from your work and store it in a
safe or the bank, offer it to void-ness and don't
think "it's mine, it belongs to me!" When you spend
the money, do so with the same void mind. Simply use
the money to buy some food to eat, or whatever we
need to consume. This is what is meant by "Eat
the food of void-ness as the holy ones do."
In this
line, "holy ones" means those who understand deeply
and have no attachments. We ourselves ought to eat
in the same way that these liberated ones eat. The
Buddha ate food and all the enlightened disciples
ate foods. So, we aren't saying that a Buddha
doesn't have to eat food anymore, but from whomever
he gets his food, it's always the food of void-ness,
for it's received and eaten without any feelings of
possession or attachment. And yet, a Buddha always
has more than enough to eat. This is the meaning of
"Eat the food of void-ness as the holy ones do."
We can do
the same. When we give all the rewards of our work
to void-ness, they don't disappear. Nothing is lost.
Physically, in worldly terms, everything is still
there. It's stored and protected in the usual ways
and the law still recognizes that it belongs to us.
If someone tries to snatch it away, we can battle to
protect our rights in court, but always with the
same void mind. That is, we needn't get angry or
upset, we needn't suffer, we needn't feel personally
involved, we needn't attach. In fact, with complete
non-attachment we will be able to argue our case
even better. We needn't create any problems for
ourselves, things won't become complicated and
difficult, and we will be able to protect our rights
most effectively.
To pursue
this point a little further: even when caught in an
argument or involved in a lawsuit we should be
restrained and mindful at all times so that the mind
is free of attachment. Take care not to be attached
or emotionally involved. In other words, first make
sure the mind is void, then argue and fight out the
case to the finish. In this way, we will have the
advantage. Our side will debate more cleverly, will
argue more skillfully, and will experience a higher
level of victory.
Even in
cases when we are forced to be insulting, use the
usual words but do so with a void mind. This may
sound funny and hopelessly impractical, but it
really is possible. The word "void" includes such
strange aspects; they are all implications of
working with a void mind, willingly giving all that
we get to void-ness, and always eating food from the
pantry of void-ness.
The fourth,
final, and most important line of the verse is "You'll
have died to yourself from the very start." We
already have died to ourselves - that precious inner
"me" is gone - from the very first moment. This
means that when we re-examine the past and reflect
upon it with clarity, mindfulness, and wisdom, we
will know for a fact that there never was a "person"
or "individual." We will see that there are only the
basic processes of life (khandha), the
sensory media (ayatana), the elements (dhatu),
and natural phenomena (Dhammas). Even the
things we had previously clung to as existing no
longer exist. They died in that moment.
Everything
has died at the moment of its birth. There never was
an "I" and there never was a "mine." In the past, we
were stupid enough to lug "I" and "mine" around all
the time. Now, however, we know the truth that even
in retrospect they never were what we took them to
be. They're not-me, they're not-mine, the me-ing and
my-ing died from the very start right up to this
moment. They're finished, even in the future. Don't
ever again fall for any "I" and "mine" in your
experiences. Simply stop thinking in terms of "I"
and "mine." So you see, we needn't interpret this
verse to mean that we must physically kill
ourselves. One has to be trapped in ones ego to
understand it in such a way; such an interpretation
is too physical, too superficial, and too childish.
This "I,"
this ego, is just a mental concept, a product of
thought. There's nothing substantial or permanent
upon which it's based. There's only an ever-changing
process flowing according to causes and conditions,
but ignorance misconstrues this process to be a
permanent entity, a "self," and an "ego." So don't
let attached thoughts and feelings based on "I" and
"mine" arise. All pains and problems will end right
there and then, so that the body becomes
insignificant, no longer a cause of worry. It's
merely a collection of the five aggregates (khandha),
functioning according to causes and conditions, pure
in its own nature. These five aggregates or
component processes of life are naturally free of
attachment and selfishness. As for the inner aspect,
those habits of desire and selfishness, try to do
without them. Keep striving to prevent them from
being born until the defilements and selfishness
have no more opportunities to pollute the heart. In
this way, we force ourselves to die, that is, we die
through the elimination of polluting selfishness and
defilements (kilesa). Just don't allow any
egoistic consciousness, that's the meaning of
"death" in Dhamma language. Without anything
masquerading as "I" and "mine," where can suffering
take place? Suffering can only happen to an "I" and
its "mine". So you see, possessing "I" and "mine" is
the heart of suffering. Should there be some
happiness, as soon as clinging comes in the
happiness becomes painful, yet one more way to
suffer.
Ignorant
people are always attaching to something; they don't
know how to live without clinging to "I" and "mine."
As a result, even beneficial things are converted
into causes of suffering. Happiness is turned into
pain; goodness is turned into pain; praise, fame,
honor and the like are all turned into forms of
suffering. As soon as we try to seize and hang on to
them, they all become unsatisfactory, painful, and
ugly. Among good and evil, virtue and sin, happiness
and unhappiness, gain and loss, and all other
dualistic pairs, suffering inevitably happens
whenever we attach to either pole of one pair or
another. Clinging to one pole also traps us in its
opposite partner.
When we are
intelligent enough not to cling or be attached to
any form of dualism, then we will no longer suffer
because of these things. Good and evil, happiness
and suffering, virtue and sin, and the rest, will
never be painful again. We realize that they are
merely natural phenomena, the ordinary stuff of
nature. They all are naturally void and so there is
no suffering inherent in any of them.
These are
the consequences of not having an ego, of not having
any "I" and "mine" in the mind. Outwardly, we may
say "I" and "my" according to social conventions,
but don't let them exist in the mind or heart. As
St. Paul said, "Let those who have wives live as
though they had none, and those that mourn as though
they weren't mourning ... and those who buy as
though they had no goods."
Externally,
we should behave the same as others do; eat like
they eat, work like they work, and speak like they
speak. Speak in their people language: "this is my
house, this is mine." There's nothing wrong in using
these words when necessary, but don't let the mind
fall for them. Leave such words outside, don't let
them into the mind, don't believe them. We ought
always to train ourselves this way, that is "mouth
is one and mind another." The mouth says one thing,
but the heart knows otherwise.
Actually,
this phrase is usually an insult used to condemn
liars and conmen, not something to be encouraged. In
the end, however, it can be turned around and
applied to a person who really practices Dhamma,
that is, whose external behavior conforms with
worldly conventions but whose internal reality is
another story. While the external expressions
actually take place, they don't manifest in the
mind. We call this, "mouth is one and mind another"
or "external and internal do not correspond." A
behavior that we used to condemn and try to abandon
because of its dishonesty and crookedness becomes
the most noble and excellent form of speech.
Sometimes Dhamma language seems rather strange!
To be
honest in both mouth and mind, that is, speech and
thought, is people language, not Dhamma language.
Ordinary people demand that our words honesty
reflect our thoughts, but when it comes to the
Dhamma language of the Buddha, we practice in the
manner called "mouth is one and mind another." In
other words, the outside appears one way, while the
inside is the opposite. Outwardly, in our speech and
actions, we may possess all the things that others
possess, but in the mind we possess nothing.
Inwardly, we are broke and bankrupt, without a penny
to our names. So please remember this saying -
"mouth is one and mind another" - in its Dhamma
language meaning of course, not in the people
language understanding. Please give it some thought.
Another
common teaching concerns humility. The Buddha taught
us not to boast or show off and Jesus Christ
emphasized this point even more. There are many
pages in the Bible concerning this subject. In the
Sermon on the Mount, Jesus teaches us to do our
religious practices - such as praying, giving,
charity, and fasting - in secret so as to not let
others to see (Matt. 5-7, especially 6). If it's
something we want others to see, that means we want
to show off, which is attachment. If we apply his
teaching to our Buddhist practices, such as when we
keep the special precepts on the observance days (uposatha),
we shouldn't dress up or powder and perfume
ourselves. Don't let anyone know we are keeping the
special precepts, just keep them strictly. Jesus
stresses this point in many ways, both in this
sermon and elsewhere. When offering prayers to God,
fasting, or practicing austerities, don't let others
see. If we wish to give alms or make a donation to
charity, do so secretly; don't let others know who
the giver is. Jesus teaches us to do everything
without any one knowing. In other words, his aim is
to teach non-attachment. This kind of practice
destroys selfishness and overcomes sin.
Buddhists
should be able to understand this principle of
giving without letting anyone know; giving in this
way will destroy the giver's self-centeredness much
more than public giving. As you know, we like to
say, "sticking gold on the image's back." This
saying can be interpreted in two ways. As understood
by foolish people, this should never be done,
because sticking gold leaf on the back of an image
won't gain one any honor, reputation, or other
benefits.[1]
([1]
In Thailand, putting small squares of gold leaf onto
Buddha images and other respected objects is a
popular form of making merit. According to popular
Thai belief, by affixing gold leaf to the eyes,
mouth, forehead, cheeks, etc., of a Buddha image,
the one who affixes it will be reborn in her next
life with beautiful eyes, mouth, forehead, cheeks,
etc., just like those of the image decorated with
gold. At the same time, her merit making is seen by
all.)
On the other hand,
wise people take the words "sticking gold on the
image's back" to mean something good, because one
doesn't receive any recognition, praise, status, or
honor from the act. One hasn't traded the goodness
of the act for any worldly benefits. Thus, one makes
more merit than if one were to stick the gold on the
front of the image.
Here we see
that the teachings of Christianity and Buddhism are
the same; they have the same meaning, namely, to
destroy attachment. We should do all religious
duties and practices without others knowing. In the
end, it's like they don't exist any more and we
don't exist either. There's no good, no evil, no
virtue, no sin, no happiness, no suffering, and,
finally, not even any religion. This is the highest
level of religion.
Now, let us
consider the fact that non-attachment, the highest
Dhamma, is something wonderful, priceless, and
extraordinary. It's the heart of every religion.
It's the essence of Dhamma. If there is a God, it
can only be found right here in non-attachment.
Non-attachment, the highest Dhamma, is wonderful
precisely because anyone seeking it need not invest
anything. No money, gold, or jewels are needed, not
even a single penny. According to people language,
nothing can be obtained without an investment. If
they listen to people language, those who wish to
gain merit, goodness, or whatever must pay in money,
silver, and gold, or invest their labor. If they
listen to Dhamma language, however, the reality is
quite different. The Buddha said that Nibbána is
given free of charge. Nibbána - the coolness and
peace experienced when there's no attachment -
doesn't cost a penny. This means that we can
practice for the sake of Nibbána without spending
any money along the way. Jesus said what amounts to
the same thing. He invited us to drink the water of
life for which there is no charge. He said this at
least three times. Further, he called us to enter
eternal life, which means to reach the state where
we are one with God and therefore will never die
again.
"Let him
who is thirsty come, let him who desires take the
water of life without price" (Rev. 22:17). This call
of Jesus is identical to what is taught in Buddhism.
The Buddha said that the Noble Path of Liberation,
the Liberating Results, and Nibbána are free of
charge, no monetary investment is required. We live
according to the Noble Eightfold Path, which means
we give up this, give up that, and keep giving up
things until everything is surrendered. Give up
everything and take nothing back. Don't receive any
payment and we won't have to pay anything: we will
realize what is called "the Noble Path, the
Liberating Results, and Nibbána." We can taste the
flavor of Nibbána without paying a penny.
We spend a
lot of money trying to buy Nibbána, but the money
just get in the way. It's like investing money in
order to win a palace in heaven: the two have
nothing to do with each other. In fact, they are
incompatible. If we want to give charity, it should
be solely for the sake of others. Nibbána is our
first concern and requires no money.
Why do we
make donations then? Not for ourselves, of course,
but to help our fellow human beings so that they may
also reach that which requires no financial
investment. So, we contribute money to build temples
and schools, we develop methods of teaching, and we
publish books in order to help our fellow human
beings to travel on the right path, to travel toward
that which is obtained without payment - Nibbána.
Those of us who intend to earn merit with their gold
and silver should please think in this way.
If those
who intend to invest their money for so-called
spiritual rewards don't reconsider, they will incur
losses rather than make profits. Not only will they
fail to make a profit, they won't even be able to
recover their investment. And when there is no
profit and no breaking even, there is only loss. To
act that way goes contrary to the words of the
Buddha who said, "It's free." Jesus also said that
it's free.
Jesus added
further that what "you received without pay, give
without pay" (Matt. 10:8). It seems that the Buddha
never said quite the same thing, but we can say,
from the implications of his teaching, that he could
easily have spoken these words. If something is
obtained for free, we ought to pass it on for free,
too. Don't be unwilling or reluctant. Don't go
taking advantage of people by claiming favors or
hinting that they'll benefit by helping one in
such-and-such a way or implying that students owe a
debt of gratitude to their teachers. All of that is
inappropriate. When we get something for free, we
must give it away for free. Therefore, as the
loftiest of all things, the Dhamma of each religion
is something to be obtained for free. Once we have
got it, we are obligated to pass it on to our fellow
human beings for free, also. Don't try to wheedle
any benefits out of it in return.
When we
make contributions to religious causes, they are for
a particular purpose, which has no bearing on our
realizing Nibbána. Such contributions are meant to
be instrumental in helping people who don't yet see
the way to be able to find it and eventually arrive
at that which is given away for free to everyone. In
the end, they also will obtain that precious thing
which is obtained for free, without any obstacles.
If we look
carefully, we will see that the pinnacle, the most
excellent of things, which we get for free, is
called "Nibbána" (as well as by many other names).
Jesus called it "Life." This state in which we
currently exist is death. Because everyone is dying,
they don't reach God, they don't reach the Ultimate.
Yet, if we follow the teachings of Jesus we are born
again at once. After dying for so long, we need to
be reborn. When we are born anew, we are born into
eternal life, which is true life. The Buddha spoke
in the same fashion. He said that we don't realize
that this existence is like being dead, that is,
that it's suffering. We must make the required
knowledge, we must awaken into a new world, newly
born. Then there will be no more suffering. To
understand this is a fundamental principle.
Up until
this realization, we were dead, that is, full of "I"
and "mine." Always living under the burden of ego
and egoism is death. Because of "I" and "mine," we
died over and over again. Now we are reborn into
eternal life, the life of Nibbána, the deathless
life, the immortality in which all "I" and "mine"
end. The word "reborn" here comes to means a life
without ego, free of "I" and "mine." This is the
true life which can never die. The five aggregates (khandha),
the basic processes of life, are now pure, the body
and mind are free of attachment and selfishness.
Prior to this, the five aggregates, the body-mind
process, were continually being grasped at and clung
to by means of "I" and "my" and were always stained
by these corrupt attachments. That continuous "I"
and "mine" was death.
When the
polluting desires and attachments are completely
gone there is a new birth in the world of the Noble
Ones. "Rebirth in the world of the Noble Ones" is a
people language expression. In Dhamma language, we
speak of "quenching it." Quench the "I" and the
"mine"; quench ego and its selfishness. Then there's
nothing. There remains only supreme void-ness, which
is Nibbána. So says Dhamma language.
If we speak
in people language, as Jesus Christ often did, we
say that one is reborn in the world of the Noble
Ones and that one lives eternally in the Kingdom of
God. That's people language. When we translate it
into Dhamma language, we use the opposite words and
speak of "quenching." One language speaks of
"rebirth," while the other talks about "utter
quenching." Only the words are different. In people
language we talk about being reborn; in Dhamma
language we talk about quenching completely.
Therefore,
let us live a life of total quenching, a life that
douses the flames of desire, a life of coolness.
When we are burning, we are dying. A person who is
hot inside is like a demon in hell, an animal, a
hungry ghost, or a cowardly titan. Such a person is
always dying. His attachment to "I" is never
quenched. His ego hasn't yet been doused; it boils
and bubbles inside him with the heat of fire. It has
to be cooled down.
To make
things easier, we should remember that the word "nibbána"
means "to cool down." In India at the time of the
Buddha, "nibbána" was a common everyday word
spoken in the houses, streets, and markets. When
something hot had cooled down, they used the word "nibbána"
[2] to describe it. If the curry was too hot
to eat, then cooled down enough to be eaten, they
would say "the curry is nibbána, so let's eat."
([2]
Actually, this word takes on different forms as a
verb, noun, and adjective, and according to case and
context. As Thai doesn't conjugate words like the
Indian language, only the form "Nibbána" is used.)
We can see
that the word "nibbána" wasn't originally an
exalted religious term, but had an ordinary everyday
usage in people language - the cooling down of
something hot. For example, if a red-hot charcoal
cools down until it can be picked up, we can call
that "nibbána." If we apply the term on a
higher level, such as, to animals, then it refers to
animals which are no longer hot. The heat of animals
is the wildness and fierceness which is dangerous
for humans. If a wild elephant or wild bull is tamed
and well-trained so that finally its wildness,
rebelliousness, and viciousness disappear and it's
safe for humans, we can say that it's "nibbána,"
meaning it has cooled down.
When we
speak of humans, "hot" means a person who is burning
and boiling as if in hell or the other netherworlds.
That isn't Nibbána. After we discover the way
to apply Dhamma to cool ourselves off, we begin to
nibbána, continue to nibbána, nibbána
steadily, nibbána until everything is
thoroughly cool, which is the highest level of
Nibbána - absolute coolness.
Even now,
we must nibbána to some extent in order to be
able to sit here and discuss Dhamma like this.
Otherwise, if the flames were flaring up within us
now, we wouldn't be able to remain sitting here.
Therefore, we should understand that Nibbána
is related to us at all times, with every inhalation
and exhalation. If this weren't so, if we had no
connection to Nibbána whatsoever, we would
all go out of our minds and die before we knew it.
Fortunately, we have some relationship with
Nibbána nearly all the time. It may disappear
temporarily when lust, hatred, or delusion arise,
when the mind is taken over by defilements and
selfishness. But when lust, hatred, and delusion
aren't present in our minds, we experience a small
degree of Nibbána, a brief taste or free
sample of Nibbána. Due to the benefits of
these recurring glimpses of Nibbána, we don't
go crazy and don't die from overheat. We survive by
virtue of Nibbána's beneficial effects Therefore, we
should thank Nibbána and acknowledge our
gratitude to it by acting so as to have more and
more Nibbána for longer and longer periods of
time. Keep calming and cooling things, that is,
destroy "I" and "mine." Don't let ego prick up its
ears and point its tail. With self-discipline and
good manners, keep the ego small and out of trouble.
Lessen it, reduce it, shrink it, until at last
nothing remains, then you will get the best thing
that a human being can possibly get.
Whenever we
quarrel due to opinions, pride, vanity, or
stubbornness, it shows that we have lost touch with
Nibbána. At such moments, we are crazy. If we
argue, quarrel, or interfere with others at any time
- no matter whether over an ordinary affair or a
religious one - we are insane. In such moments, we
aren't really human anymore, because we've lowered
ourselves to the level of arguing and fighting. And
so, as was said before, if people remain foolish
they will think that there are many different
religions which are incompatible and opposed to each
other, which are enemies that must compete, fight,
and destroy each other. These are the most stupid
and ignorant of people. They cause and experience a
great deal of trouble.
When
religions are regarded as in opposition and
conflict, people become enemies as a result.
Everyone thinks "We are right, they are wrong; they
are wrong, we are right," and so forth, and then
there is quarrelling and fighting. Such people are
incredibly foolish. What they are quarrelling about
is only the outer shell. Everyone should recognize
that these are only external forms, they aren't the
inner essence.
When people
of intelligence and wisdom get together concerning
the essentials of religion, they recognize that
religions are all the same. Though outwardly they
may seem different, intelligent people know that the
inner spirit must be the same in all cases. The
inner essence is the same no matter how different
the external forms are, just like we saw with the
analogy of water. The essential pure nature of water
is always the same, no matter how putrid or filthy
it appears from the outside. It isn't the water that
is dirty, but the other elements that are mixed in
with the water that are dirty. We shouldn't take
those other elements. When we take those elements,
it means we drink dirty water; it means we swallow
the filth, urine, excrement, or whatever, and don't
drink pure water.
Whenever
there is a quarrel, whether it's among lay people,
novices, nuns, or monks, it means that the people
involved are eating filth, namely, the defilements
of "I" and "mine." This should never happen; it
should be given up. Don't prick your ears and point
your tails. Don't puff yourself with ego and create
these conflicts of pride. That's letting things go
too far. Rather, our duty is try to pacify these
things and cool them down.
How silly
it is that the older a person gets, the more full of
ego he or she becomes. I beg your pardon for
speaking so frankly, but some facts can't be
ignored. Why do people become more egoistic with
age? Because the older they get, the more accustomed
they are to attachment; "I" and "mine" accumulate
and pile up inside us as we age. Further, people
have sons and daughters, so they puff themselves up
with ego and determine to lord it over their
children, "My son! How could he do that without my
permission!" When they have grandchildren, they
become even more puffed up and superior. Thus,
elderly people are more obsessed with "I" and "mine"
than children are.
If we look
back at childhood, we will find that children have
very little ego. Immediately after birth, it's very
hard to find much ego in them, while the child in
the womb has hardly any traces of "I" or "mine" at
all. However, as we grow into adulthood and become
fathers and mothers, and later grandfathers and
grandmothers, "I" and "mine" develop in a multitude
of forms and personalities. These become deeply
rooted in our minds and stick there with such
tenacity that they are very difficult to remove.
Therefore, old folks should be very careful and
alert. They should try to return to being like
children again. To be like children is a kind of
Dhamma practice which leads to non-attachment and
void-ness. Otherwise, the older they get, the
further away from the Buddha and from Nibbána
they will end up.
In truth,
as we grow older we should grow closer to the
Buddha. In other words, the more we age the younger
we should be. The older we get, the more youthful we
should become. As we get older we should become more
light-hearted, cheerful, bright, and fresh. We
shouldn't end up dry and lifeless, so that we
gradually wither away. Everybody should become
increasingly fresh, bright, and light-hearted as
they grow older. As we age, we should get closer to
the Buddha, the Dhamma, and the Sangha, which means
we understand Dhamma more and more. The more
successful we are in making the inner flames recede,
the cooler we become. As we get cooler, we feel
increasingly more refreshed and hearty, we took
brighter and more lively. When we have cooled down
absolutely, we will absolutely sparkle with
brightness and cheer. Therefore, the more ancient we
get, the more youthful we should become, and the
more cheerful and fresh we should look and feel.
The lively
physical activity and fresh complexions of young
people is one kind of youth, while the youthfulness
of Dhamma language - of the mind, heart, and spirit
- refers to a spiritual brightness, vigor, and
serenity that comes with having more Dhamma. This is
the youthfulness of heat subsiding so that coolness
can enter and envelop us. Consequently, we feel
increasingly refreshed, vibrant, and cheerful. So
let all elderly people become fresh and full of
life. May we all become more youthful until our age
disappears. Just let youthfulness grow inside us and
that problem of bickering and quarrelling will no
longer exist.
Worse than
that quarrelling is the habit of "extolling oneself
while putting down others." Vicious back-biting and
name-calling has no place among Buddhists and anyone
who does such things has ceased to be a Buddhist,
except, perhaps, in name. Being a Buddhist in name
alone doesn't mean anything and can't be depended
upon. Just declaring oneself to be "Buddhist"
because its written on one's birth certificate or
because one signed up at certain temples doesn't
accomplish much good because they aren't sincere. We
must be genuine Buddhists in the true sense of the
word, which means to weaken and reduce "I" and
"mine" in order to be cool and thereby be closer to
Nibbána. So we needn't discuss atrocities
like disparaging and oppressing others, or extolling
oneself while putting down others. These things
should never happen.
What to do
about those who still engage in such behavior? I
don't know what class to put them in: First grade?
Kindergarten? Nursery school? These are still too
high; there should be some lower class or grade for
people who behave in such gross ways. In Buddhism,
genuine lay followers never do such things. Even
those who are at the kindergarten level and have not
yet reached into the first grade of primary school
know better than to do such things. They know that
such behavior is hot and has nothing to do with
Dhamma or Buddhism.
Progressing
through the upper grades, through the junior and
senior classes, there is less egoism until, finally,
there is no more "I" and "mine." On the highest
level, there's no self, everything is void of self.
There's no "I," no "you," no "we," no "they," which
means there's no Buddhism, no Christianity, no
Islam, and no religion. How can different religions
exist when there's no "we," no "they," no "anybody,
" when there is nothing but Dhamma? There is only
pure nature itself (suddhidhamma pavattanti),
nature is all that exists - with either active
aspects or still aspects, depending on whether
something is conditioned and transient or
unconditioned and absolute. Those who are in the
upper grades already understand this. Those who are
in kindergarten and primary school should also know
about this so that they can prepare themselves to
reach its level.
So don't
get caught up in envy and jealousy, in insults and
praises, in harassing and interfering with others,
in arguing and fighting, in extolling oneself while
putting down others. Such behavior is worthless.
It's for those who don't know how to learn on even
the lowest level. It's too low to have a place in
the network of Buddhists.
All of us
begin at a point where we're full of clinging, then
steadily reduce the clinging until we don't cling to
anything, anymore, until we reach the point where
everything is void-ness: void of "I" and void of
"mine. " Understand that in essence everything has
been void from the start. Whether physical or
mental, look deeply into it's essential nature and
it will turn out to be void. There is no clinging
there anymore.
Whatever
clinging there was has just now happened.
Originally, there was no attachment, just as all
water originally is pure and clean. It's pure as it
forms in the clouds, but picks up fine particles of
dust as it falls through the sky. Once it falls on
roofs and collects in water jars, it becomes further
contaminated. Even more contaminated is the water in
wells, streams, ponds, and swamps. Worse is the
putrid water found in ditches, sewers, and toilets.
As we examine the external changes, we should
recognize that the dirty elements aren't the water
and aren't essential.
So look
deeply into this very body and mind when they're in
their natural state, when they aren't polluted by
any defiled objects. The pure, natural,
uncontaminated body-mind is the object of knowledge
and study. Examine the "I," the ego, knowing this,
knowing that, this is good, that is good; see that
they're just dirty stuff. They mix with the mind,
contaminate it, and muck it up. Naturally, in
themselves, our bodies and minds aren't dirty, but
owing to stupidity and carelessness the newly
spawned defilements invade. It's these impure guests
which enter the mind and contaminate it. Why then do
we take these late-coming impurities to be "I,"
"me," or "my own true self"? They're just new
arrivals, there's nothing genuine about them.
They're just dirt, isn't it silly to take dirt as
one's self? One ends up with a dirty self, a dirty
ego - no doubt about it.
The mind
which is knowledgeable and wise, which is awakened (Buddha),
doesn't take anything to be self. It doesn't take
dirty things as its "self." It doesn't take
defilements to be "self." If it must have a self,
the void-ness which is free of defilements must be
the self. The void-ness of defilements doesn't
attach or cling to anything. Even though the mouth
says "I am" or "I have," the mind inside doesn't
feel any attachment. "Mouth is one and mind another"
at all times. I hope that you will all practice in
this way.
All I have
said today is merely a chat among friends. If this
were a public lecture or formal sermon, we couldn't
say these things in this way. It might create a big
disturbance. However, this has been just an informal
talk within our small circle of friends, among those
who should be able to understand. I only mentioned
these things because I thought the people here are
capable of understanding. Indeed, I hope that
everyone has listened carefully, has been able to
follow, and will think over the issues seriously.
Those who see the truth of and agree with these
principles should try to live accordingly. Before
long we will progress to a higher level on the path
to void-ness and freedom from suffering. Then, we
can do work of all kinds with a void mind and we can
give all of the fruits to void-ness. We will be able
to eat the food of void-ness. And so, we will be
able to die completely from the very beginning.
That's the end. That's the end of being a Buddhist;
it's the end of all religions.
In people
language they say, "Don't waste the opportunity of
having been born human and of having encountered
Buddha-Dhamma." If we speak in Dhamma language,
however, we would have to say, "It's the end of
everything. There is nothing left to be a problem
ever again." Such a life can be called "eternal
life," for there is no more birth, aging, illness,
or death.
Are you ready to die
before dying?