A Great Man. A Great Man. Mahæpurisa. Sayædaw U Janaka. Mahæpurisa. Sayædaw U Janaka

Similar documents
A Great Man Mahāpurisa

Ænæpænasati: Samatha or Vipassanæ? and Basic Instructions for Insight

Practical Vipassanæ Meditation Exercises

Vipassanæ Meditation Guidelines

VISUDDHI-ÑÆ A-KATTHÆ

cetovimutti - Christina Garbe 1

A DISCOURSE ON SØLAVANTA SUTTA CONTENTS PART I

cetovimutti - Christina Garbe 1 Dependent origination Paṭiccasamuppāda Christina Garbe

PART ONE THE NIBBÆNA ASPIRER S GUIDE TO THE MIND!

What are the Four Noble Truths

MAHASØ ABROAD (FIRST SERIES)

...between the extremes of sensual indulgence & self-mortification.

cetovimutti - Christina Garbe 1

CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION APPAMATTO ATÆPI FOUR RIGHT EXERTIONS PAHITATTO 2. BUDDHA S ADMONITION 3. VIPASSANÆ QUESTION I

CHAPTER-VI. The research work "A Critical Study of the Eightfold Noble Path" developed through different chapters is mainly based on Buddhist

VIPASSANA MEDITATION RETREAT Vipassana-bhavana by Sayadaw Venerable Ashin Pandavacara M.A

CHAPTER V T H E F O U R T H N O B L E T R U T H : MAGGA: 'The Path'

Healing. Insight Meditation. Insight Meditation. through. through

Satipatthana Sutta. Original Instructions for Training in Mindfulness Meditation. Four Foundations of Mindfulness. Compiled by Stephen Procter

1 P a g e. What is Abhidhamma?

Contemplation of the Mind

Mindfulness and its Correlation to Awakening (Nibbana) Radhika Abeysekera

Dependent Co-Arising American Bodhi Center February 10-12, 2017

Gems of MahÈsi Thought (One day Retreat April 4, 1998)

THE SATIPA HÆNA VIPASSANÆ MEDITATION

CONTENTS 2. NON-ACCEPTANCE OF TRUTH IS MANIFESTATION OF LOW INTELLIGENCE

Relevance of Buddha Dharma for World Peace

DISCOURSE ON PA ICCASAMUPPÆDA

General Instructions for Establishing Insight:

PURÆBHEDA SUTTA DHAMMA OR THE DHAMMA ONE SHOULD ACCOMPLISH BEFORE DEATH

The Canberra 1992 Talks. Venerable Chanmyay Sayadaw

4: Visuddhimagga. Cetovimutti and paññāvimutti. Reading: Visuddhimagga

Asavas Sabbasava Sutta. Sabbasava Sutta: Discourse on All Āsavas

Namo Tassa Bhagavato Arahato Sammasambuddhassa (3 times)

The Art of Giving. Ven. K. Rathanasara. Sponsored by Ehipassiko Chanting Group ~ Warming the Heart, Freeing the Mind ~

Vibhaṅga Sutta (Saṃyutta Nikāya) Analysis of Mindfulness

Development by Love and Compassion

Satipaµµh±na Sutta Discourses

METTA (LOVINGKINDNESS) MEDITATION: BASIC INSTRUCTIONS

Taken From: nibbana.com

12. Dvayatànupassanà Sutta -Twofold Reflections

MEDITATION INSTRUCTIONS

cetovimutti - Christina Garbe 1 Insight-meditation Vipassanā-bhāvanā Christina Garbe

International Journal of Education & Applied Sciences Research (IJEASR) MINDFULNESS MEDITATION: THE WAY TO NIBBANA (TRUE HAPPINESS)

Well-Being, Buddhism and Economics

Mindfulness of Breathing

MN111 Anupada Sutta - One by One As They Occurred

MN 2: Sabbāsava Sutta All the Taints Translated by Suddhāso Bhikkhu

MN 111 ONE BY ONE AS THEY OCCURRED ANUPADA SUTTA

PRACTICAL VIPASSANÆ MEDITATIONAL EXERCISES

Things Never Heard Before: The Buddha s Applied Dhamma

The Five Spiritual Faculties ('Panca Indriyadhamma' පඤ චඉන ද ර යධම ම - in Pali)

Dukkha is a very profound teaching Talk on the 30th of October 2009

G E T T I N G R I D O F A L L C A R E S A N D T R O U B L E S. (Sabbasava-sutta)

THE FIRST NOBLE TRUTH OF SUFFERING : DUKKHA

WORLD BUDDHIST MISSIONARY TOUR

NIBBÆNAPATISAMYUTTA KATHÆ OR ON THE NATURE OF NIBBÆNA

The Karmic Law in Buddhism Cullakammavibhanga Sutta (MN. 3, 135 sutta)

Buddhist Ethics and Mental Development

Waking up America Venerable Luangpor Pramote Pamojjo

Brother Teoh s Thusday class dated 25 th October 2018 outline short notes

Investigating fear, contemplating death

Introduction to Mindfulness Meditation and Overview of the Teachings of the Buddha

Guidance for Yogis at Interview Venerable Sayadawgyi U Panditabhivamsa

Mindfulness of Breathing (ànàpànassati) The Venerable Pa-Auk Tawya Sayadaw

Practical Insight Meditation

Cålahatthipadopama-sutta The Shorter Discourse on the Simile of the Elephant s Footprint

Relative Merits of Samatha and Vipassana Techniques of Meditation.

The Buddha visited Sri Lanka three times and during these visits he went to sixteen different places. Relics of the Buddha have been enshrined in

Turning the wheel of truth[1]

The Second Discourse giving an Analysis [of the Faculties]

Q: Before we go on to the last link, can we please take a look into Karma now? A: Yes. As I promised you Q, this installment will discuss Kamma.

A Question of Balance

1. How can one enter the first jhana (concentrated state)?

(Satipatthana-sutta)

What About Neutral Feelings? by Bhikkhu Anālayo

Vipassanā Meditation Lectures on Insight Meditation. Venerable Chanmyay Sayadaw

The Buddha s Path Is to Experience Reality

89 / 121 types of consciousness. Name of minds Unwholesome Wholesome Resultant Functional Total of minds

An excerpt from the Autobiography of Tan Chao Khun Upælø Gu¼þpamæjahn written in 1926 when he was 70 years old

1 Triad of suttas There are three (Samatha Vipassanā) Samādhi Suttas all dealing with 4 ways of meditating for the sake of awakening as follows:

Chapter 10 Wise striving

The Origin of Suffering The Second Noble Truth

This Gift of Dhamma. is sponsored by. Dr. A. M. Attygalla

Ānāpānasati Sutta (M.N) Practicing One Object Brings Liberation Breathing Meditation

Ajivatthamka Sila (The Eight Precepts with Right Livelihood as the Eighth)in the Pali Canon

THE FOUR FOUNDATIONS OF MINDFULNESS. Sayadaw U SÊlÈnanda (REVISED) Edited by Ruth-Inge Heinze, Ph.D

DAKKHINAVIBHANGA SUTTA

1 Sutta summary and significance. 2 The 2 kinds of nirvana. A Aṅguttara Nik ya 9, Navaka Nipāta 1, Paṭhama Paṇṇāsaka 5, Sāmañña Vagga 11

THE REAL WAY TO AWAKENING

SAMMÆ PARIBBÆJANIYA SUTTA

Vipassana Meditation Exercises, by Mahasi Sayadaw - Part 3 [PART III]

The distortion of view, perception and thoughts perpetuating delusion.

RS (Philosophy and Applied Ethics) Year 11 Revision Guide

Vipassana Meditation - THE METHOD IN BRIEF (BY MAHASI SAYADAW) Without Jhana

Contemplation of Feeling

LIFE IS UNCERTAIN; DEATH IS CERTAIN

Knowing and Seeing. Talks and Questions-and-Answers at a Meditation Retreat in Taiwan by Venerable Pa-Auk Sayadaw

The Places Where the Five Spiritual Faculties can be seen Datthabba Sutta (දට ඨබ බ ස ත රය)

Transcription:

A Great Man Mahæpurisa Printed for free Distribution by ASSOCIATION FOR INSIGHT MEDITATION 3 Clifton Way Alperton Middlesex HA0 4PQ Website: AIMWELL.ORG Email: pesala@aimwell.org Sayædaw U Janaka A Great Man Mahæpurisa Printed for free Distribution by ASSOCIATION FOR INSIGHT MEDITATION 3 Clifton Way Alperton Middlesex HA0 4PQ Website: AIMWELL.ORG Email: pesala@aimwell.org Sayædaw U Janaka

Mahæpurisa Suttaµ Atha kho Æyasmæ Særiputto yena Bhagavæ tenupasa³kami; upasa³kamitvæ Bhagavantaµ abhivædetvæ ekamantaµ nisødi. Ekamantaµ nisinno kho Æyasmæ Særiputto Bbhagavantaµ etadavoca: Mahæpuriso, mahæpuriso ti, bhante, vuccati. Kittævatæ nu kho, bhante, mahæpuriso hotø ti? Vimuttacittattæ khvæhaµ, Særiputta, mahæpuriso ti vadæmi. Avimuttacittattæ No Mahæpuriso ti vadæmi. Kathañca, Særiputta, vimuttacitto hoti? Idha, Særiputta, bhikkhu kæye kæyænupassø viharati ætæpø sampajæno satimæ, vineyya loke abhijjhædomanassaµ. Tassa kæye kæyænupassino viharato cittaµ virajjati, vimuccati anupædæya æsavehi. Vedanæsu pe citte pe dhammesu dhammænupassø viharati ætæpø sampajæno satimæ, vineyya loke abhijjhædomanassaµ. Tassa dhammesu dhammænupassino viharato cittaµ virajjati, vimuccati anupædæya æsavehi. Evaµ kho, Særiputta, vimuttacitto hoti. Vimuttacittattæ khvæhaµ, Særiputta, Mahæpuriso ti vadæmi. Avimuttacittattæ No Mahæpuriso ti vadæmø ti. (Saµyuttanikæya, Mahævagga, Nælandavaggo) A Great Man Today our topic is: a great man with a liberated mind. The so-called person or being is composed of næma and rþpa. Næma and rþpa (mentality and materiality) are divided into five aggregates. The physical phenomenon is only one aggregate, called rþpakkhanda. Næma (mentality) consists of four aggregates: Vedanakkhandha the aggregate of feeling. Saññakkhandha the aggregate of perception. Sa³khærakkhandha the aggregate of mental formations. Viññæ¼akkhandha the aggregate of consciousness. Sometimes the Omniscient Buddha gave a discourse summarising these five aggregates as two processes næma and rþpa, mental and physical phenomena. Thus næma and rþpa must be thoroughly realised by the meditator so that he can liberate the mind from all defilements. To realise mental phenomena (næma) is much more important than to realise physical phenomena (rþpa) because it is mental phenomena that create 1 12 A Great Man How Can We Liberate the Mind? 5 tration develops. When thoughts are not noted, concentration is wavering, and becomes weak. Sometimes you are not aware of thoughts, though they are going on and wandering. Your mind is wandering, stealthily planning something in the future. You think you are observing rising/falling, or an object of mentality or physicality, but actually you are recollecting something in the past and so on. However, you are not aware of it because you think that the mind is with an object such as rising/falling, or lifting/dropping. Why? Because you do not observe thoughts when they arise. Thoughts are Impermanent and Not Self When you observe any thought that arises in the sitting or the walking, you come to realise the true nature of thought if your concentration is good enough. Thought is a mental state which is impermanent, it arises and then passes away. However, sometimes you think that thought continues for a very long time. Actually, it is not only one thought. A series of thought-moments arise one after another. It is a thought-process, not only one thought-moment. A thought-moment doesn t even meditation. That is why we have to practise mindfulness meditation so that we can liberate the mind from defilements. How Can We Liberate the Mind? How can we liberate the mind from defilements and suffering? One day the Venerable Særiputta went to the Omniscient Buddha and asked Him a question. Venerable Sir, A Great Man, thus people speak. How far is one a Great Man? The Buddha said: With mind liberated is one a Great Man. With mind not liberated, one is not a Great Man. Great Man is Mahæpurisa in Pæ¹i. In scripture, the word Mahæpurisa refers to the Buddha. In some cases, it means noble man. With the mind liberated is vimuttacitto in Pæ¹i. Vimutta means liberated, citto means mind. Then the Buddha continued to explain how the mind can be liberated: Idha Særiputta bhikkhu kæye kæyanupassø viharati ætæpø sampajæno satimæ vineyya loke abhijjhædomanassaµ. (S.v.158)

2 A Great Man Thoughts are Impermanent and Not Self 15 the world. Here the world means all living beings in the world. The Buddha said: Mano pubba³gamæ dhammæ, mano se hæ manomayæ, Manasæ ce padu hena, bhæsati væ karoti væ, Tato naµ dukkhamanveti, cakkaµ va vahato padaµ. The mind is the leader, the mind is dominant, all things are made by the mind. If one should speak or act with a corrupt mind, suffering (dukkha) caused by that follows him, as the wheel of a cart follows the ox s hoof. So when you do an unwholesome deed, the cause is unwholesome mentality, unwholesome mental states. Unwholesome mental states are called akusala in Pæ¹i. Wholesome mental states are called kusala. A wholesome mind brings about wholesome speech and deeds. The root cause of good deeds and good speech is a wholesome mind. The root cause of bad deeds and body as body, contemplation on feeling as feeling, contemplation on mind as mind, and contemplation on phenomena as phenomena, his mind becomes detached from everything, liberated from all mental defilements. Then he is a Great Man with a liberated mind. So I urge you to observe or watch, without fail, thoughts that arise in the sitting or walking whether they are good or bad, significant or insignificant. Observe them energetically, attentively and precisely. Then you will be able to liberate your mind from defilements and become a Great Man with a liberated mind. Excerpt from a Dhamma talk by Sayædaw U Janaka at a retreat in Sæsana House Blue Mountains Insight Meditation Centre near Sydney, Australia in March 1998 6 A Great Man Mindfulness of Wandering Thoughts 11 Særiputta, a bhikkhu abides contemplating on the body as body, contemplating on feeling as feeling, contemplating on consciousness as consciousness (or mind as mind), contemplating on phenomena as phenomena, ardent, clearly comprehending and mindful, having abandoned covetousness and grief concerning the world. Because he practises contemplation of body, feeling, mind, and phenomena, his mind becomes detached from everything, then it is liberated from all kinds of æsava. Æsava here refers to all kinds of mental defilements. Thus his mind is liberated from defilements and he is a Great Man with a liberated mind. If a man does not practise contemplation of body, feeling, mind, and phenomena, he is not a Great Man because his mind is not liberated from defilements. The Four Foundations of Mindfulness Here the Buddha says, To liberate one s mind, one should contemplate on the body as body, feeling as feeling, consciousness as consciousness, and phenomena as phenomena. Here the Buddha teaches your mind is depressed, note: depression, depression. If your mind is reluctant, note: reluctant. Whatever mental states arise must be observed as they are. This is contemplation of mind to liberate the mind from defilements and suffering. Mindfulness of Wandering Thoughts Then again, the Buddha said: Vikkhittaµ va cittaµ vikkhittaµ cittan ti pajænæti. Here vikkhittaµ cittaµ means dissipating thought. It covers all the senses of thinking, wandering, planning, visualising, and so on. When the mind is wandering, you must observe it, wandering, wandering. When your mind is thinking, you note: thinking, thinking. When your mind is planning, you note: planning, planning, and so on. To observe or to be mindful of wandering thoughts, thinking mind, or imagination, is the most important factor to make progress in Vipassanæ meditation. So when you have these thoughts you should not fail to note them. When thoughts are noted, when they are observed, they diminish, and concen-

14 A Great Man A Liberated Mind 3 It is very interesting to watch the thought-process when it arises. When our concentration is deep enough, we see the thinking process as one thought after another, appearing and disappearing. We see the impermanence of the thought, the suffering of being oppressed by arising and passing away. Then we don t have any mental defilement in our mind. In this way the mind is liberated from defilement. When our insight into the impersonal nature of the thought becomes mature, we realise or experience one insight knowledge after another until we have attained the final stage of insight knowledge. After that, the mind changes into enlightenment path knowledge (magga ñæ¼a). That enlightenment eliminates some aspects of defilement. Then the mind is liberated from some of its defilements. In this way, one stage of enlightenment after another uproots the defilements. Eventually, the final stage of enlightenment (arahatta magga) uproots all mental defilements completely. Then the mind is completely liberated. That is why the Buddha says that when a man practises mindfulness meditation, contemplation on bad speech is an unwholesome mind. When the mind is unwholesome, deeds and speech become unwholesome, and this produces suffering. When the mind is wholesome, then deeds and speech are wholesome, which produces happiness and peace. A Liberated Mind So the mind is the most important thing of all. The mind is much more important than the body. That is why the Buddha says vimuttacitto. He doesn t say vimuttakæya. Vimuttacitto means liberated mind. If we said vimuttakæya it would mean liberated body. The Buddha never said vimuttakæya, liberated body, he always said vimuttacitta, liberated mind. Why? Because when the mind is liberated from defilements and suffering, the body also becomes liberated from suffering. As you may know, Venerable Moggallæna had a liberated mind, completely liberated from all defilements through to the final stage of enlightenment, arahantship. When he was about to pass away, he was killed by robbers, because of his past kamma. The robbers thought that the Venerable One was 10 A Great Man The Four Foundations of Mindfulness 7 sure to liberate his mind from defilements while he observing that mental state. That mental state (awareness of defilements) is free from defilement. When he realises the arising and passing away of a mental state, anger for example, then he doesn t take the anger to be himself. He doesn t identify that anger with himself, with a person, a being, a self or soul. Because he realises anger is just a mental state, he comes to realise the impersonal nature of the anger. He comes to realise the non-self nature of the anger. Then he won t be attached to the anger, or he won t be attached to his mind, because he sees it as impermanent, or as arising and passing away. The Buddha continued to teach us: Sa³kkhittaµ væ cittaµ sa³kkhittaµ cittan ti pajænæti. That is from the chapter on contemplation of mind (cittænupassana satipa hæna). Sa³kkhittaµ cittaµ means sloth and torpor reluctance to practise meditation, and laziness. If you have laziness in your mind, you must observe it: lazy, lazy. If the four foundations of mindfulness or the four types of mindfulness. Mindfulness of the body (kæyænupassana satipa hæna). Mindfulness of feelings or sensations (vedanænupassana satipa hæna). Mindfulness of mind or consciousness (cittænupassana satipa hæna). Mindfulness of phenomena (dhammænuppassana satipa hæna). The Buddha said, If he practises this mindfulness, his mind will be detached from everything. Then it will be liberated from defilements. So the mindfulness meditation you are now practising is the way to be a Great Man with the mind liberated from defilements. Here a Great Man refers to an arahant, but what we must note is that the Buddha didn t say vimuttakæya liberated body. He said vimuttacitto liberated mind. So the most important thing is to be aware of any mental states that arise from moment to moment.

4 A Great Man Thoughts are Impermanent and Not Self 13 dead, but actually he was not yet dead as he had entered into phalasamæpatti, which protected his life against any killing. He was beaten to a sack of chaff, but he did not feel any mental suffering because his mind was liberated from defilements he was not attached to his body. He saw unpleasant physical sensations as arising and passing away, just as a natural process of feeling or sensation. Though his body was injured and beaten very badly, he didn t feel any painful sensation, he didn t feel any suffering because his mind was liberated from all defilements. He didn t take his body to be himself, he saw it as ever-changing mental and physical phenomena. Then he was liberated from physical suffering too. If his mind was not liberated from defilements, he would have suffered a great deal, but he didn t take any mental and physical phenomena to be a person or a self, a being or a man. That is why the Buddha said the mind should be liberated from defilements. When the mind is liberated, you don t have either mental or physical suffering. That s why the Buddha teaches us to see things as they naturally are, by means of mindfulness last a millionth of a second, it arises and instantly passes away. After a previous thought-moment has disappeared, another one arises and passes away. However, we are not able to discern the thoughtmoments. We think that only one thought is continuous and lasting. We thus identify that thought with me or mine, a person or a being. It is I who thinks, or I am thinking about something. This is how the wrong view of a person or self arises. So thought is taken to be a person, a being, or a self. Then the wrong idea of that person or being gives rise to many different defilements such as greed, desire, hatred, and so on. Your thought or mind is not liberated from defilements because you do not observe it. When you observe it, you will come to realise thoughts as natural processes arising and passing away one after another, then you won t identify this process with yourself, with me or mine, a person or being, because you will rightly understand this as a process of mentality that arises and passes away, incessantly. Then you won t have any defilements in your mind because you will be realising or rightly understanding the thought as it really is. 8 A Great Man Contemplation of Mind 9 Contemplation of Mind In the Mahæsatipa hæna Sutta the Buddha teaches us mindfulness of thoughts in some detail: Sarægaµ væ cittaµ sarægaµ cittan ti pajænæti. Vøtarægaµ væ cittaµ vøtarægaµ cittan ti pajænæti. This means, When the mind is with lust, you should observe it as with lust. When lust happens to arise in your mind, at that moment you should note lust, lust, greed, greed, desire, desire, and so on. Here the Buddha uses the word ræga. The word ræga (passion) covers all senses of lust, love, greed, desire, craving, attachment, and grasping. So when there is desire in your mind you should observe it as desire, desire, desire. When greed arise, you should observe it as greed, greed, greed. When there is attachment, you should observe it as attachment, attachment, attachment, and so on. In the Buddhist scriptures, these mental states, together with mind, are sometimes called citta. So mentality is the most important thing to be aware of, to be mindful of, in the world. Why? Because it is the mind that must be liberated from all kinds of defilements and suffering. Then again: Sadosaµ va cittaµ sadosaµ cittan ti pajænæti. When you have anger in your mind, you should observe it ( anger, anger, anger ) as it is. Here also the word dosa covers all senses of anger, hatred, aversion, and ill-will. All of these are called dosa. So when you have anger in your mind, you should be mindful of it, noting, anger, anger, anger. When you have hatred, note hatred, hatred, hatred. When you have aversion, observe it: aversion, aversion, aversion. When you have ill-will, observe it: ill-will, ill-will, ill-will. All these mental states are included in the word citta. So cittænupassana is the most important factor in the four types of mindfulness. However, some meditators do not understand the importance of consciousness or mind, so they do not try to watch when there is any mental state arising. If a meditator is able to be aware of, to be mindful of, any mental state arising at that moment, then he is