Teachings by Ajahn Sumedho
The teaching is conveyed through the Buddha’s
Four Noble Truths, first expounded in 528 BC in the Deer Park at Sarnath near
Varanasi and kept alive in the Buddhist world ever since.
What Four? They are: The Noble Truth of
Suffering, The Noble Truth of the Origin of Suffering, The Noble Truth of the
Cessation of Suffering, and the Noble Truth of the Way Leading to the Cessation
of Suffering.
Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta: Setting Rolling the Wheel of Truth |
The Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta, the Buddha’s
teaching on the Four Noble Truths, has been the main reference that have used
for the practise over the years. The Theravada school of Buddhism regards this
sutta as the personification of the teaching of the Buddha. This one sutta
contains all that is necessary for understanding Dhamma and for enlightenment.
Digha Nikaya, Sutta 16
Though the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta is
considered to be the first sermon the Buddha gave after his enlightenment, it
sometimes like to think that he gave his first sermon when he met an ascetic on
the way to Varanasi.
After his enlightenment in Bodh Gaya, the Buddha thought:
"This is such a subtle teaching. I
cannot possibly convey in words what I have discovered so I will not teach. I
will just sit under the Bodhi tree for the rest of my life."
Though, this is a very tempting idea, that
just to go off and live alone and not have to deal with the problems of
society. However, while the Buddha was thinking this way, Brahma Sahampati, the creator deity in Hinduism, came to the Buddha
and convinced him that he should go and teach. Brahma Sahampati persuaded the
Buddha that there were beings who would understand, beings who had only a
little dust in their eyes. So the Buddha’s teaching was aimed toward those with
only a little dust in their eyes - I’m sure he did not think it would become a
mass, popular movement.
After Brahma Sahampati’s visit, the Buddha
was on his way from Bodh Gaya to Varanasi when he met an ascetic who was
impressed by his radiant appearance. The ascetic said, "What is it that
you have discovered?" and the Buddha responded: "I am the perfectly
enlightened one, the Arahant, the Buddha."
In real mean, this was his first sermon. It
was a failure because the man listening thought the Buddha had been practicing
too hard and was overestimating himself. If somebody said those words to us,
I’m sure we would react similarly. What would you do if I said, "I am the
perfectly enlightened one"?
Actually, the Buddha’s statement was a very
accurate, precise teaching. It is the perfect teaching, but people cannot
understand it. They tend to misunderstand and to think it comes from an ego
because people are always interpreting everything from their egos. "I am
the perfectly enlightened one" may sound like an egotistical statement,
but isn’t it really purely transcendent? That statement: "I am the Buddha,
the perfectly enlightened one" is interesting to contemplate because it
connects the use of "I am" with superlative attainments or realisations.
In any case, the result of the Buddha’s first teaching was that the listener
could not understand it and walked away.
Later, the Buddha met his five former
companions in the Deer Park in Varanasi. All five were very sincerely dedicated
to strict asceticism. They had been disillusioned with the Buddha earlier
because they thought he had become insincere in his practise. This was because
the Buddha, before he was enlightened, had begun to realise that strict
asceticism was in no way conducive towards an enlightened state so he was no
longer practicing in that way. These five friends thought he was taking it
easy: maybe they saw him eating milk rice, which would perhaps be comparable to
eating ice cream these days. If you are an ascetic and you see a monk eating
ice cream, you might lose your faith in him because you think that monks should
be eating nettle soup. That is the way the human mind works; we tend to admire
impressive deeds of self-torture and denial. When they lost faith in him, these
five friends or disciples left the Buddha - which gave him the chance to sit
under the Bodhi tree and be enlightened.
Then, when they met the Buddha again in the
Deer Park in Varanasi, the five thought at first, ‘We know what he’s like.
Let’s just not bother about him.’ But as he came near, they all felt that there
was something special about him. They stood up to make a place for him to sit
down and he delivered his sermon on the Four Noble Truths.
This time, instead of saying ‘I am the
enlightened one’, he said: ‘There is suffering. There is the origin of suffering.
There is the cessation of suffering. There is the path out of suffering.’
Presented in this way, his teaching requires no acceptance or denial. If he had
said ‘I am the all-enlightened one’, we would be forced to either agree or
disagree - or just be confused. We wouldn’t quite know how to look at that
statement. However, by saying: ‘There is suffering, there is a cause, there is
an end to suffering, and there is a way out of suffering’, he offered something
for reflection or consideration: ‘What do you mean by this? What do you mean by
suffering, its origin, cessation and the path?’
So we start contemplating it, thinking about
it. With the statement: ‘I am the all-enlightened one’, we might just argue
about it. ‘Is he really enlightened?’....’I don’t think so.’ We would just
argue; we are not ready for a teaching that is so direct. Obviously, the
Buddha’s first sermon was to somebody who still had a lot of dust in his eyes
and it failed. So on the second occasion, he gave the teaching of the Four Noble
Truths.
Now the Four Noble Truths are: there is
suffering; there is a cause or origin of suffering; there is an end of
suffering; and there is path out of suffering which is the Eightfold Path. Each
of these Four Truths has three aspects so all together there are twelve (4 x 3)
insights. In the Theravada school, an arahant, a perfected one, is one who has
seen clearly the Four Noble Truths with their three aspects and twelve
insights. ‘Arahant’ means a human being who understands the truth; it is
applied mainly to the teaching of the Four Noble Truths.
Let's understand For the First Noble Truth,
‘There is
suffering’ is the first insight. What is that insight? We don’t need to make it
into anything grand; it is just the recognition: ‘There is suffering’. That is
a basic insight. The ignorant person says, ‘I’m suffering. I don’t want to
suffer. I meditate and I go on retreats to get out of suffering, but I’m still
suffering and I don’t want to suffer.... How can I get out of suffering? What
can I do to get rid of it?’ But that is not the First Noble Truth; it is not:
‘I am suffering and I want to end it.’ The insight is, ‘There is suffering’.
Now you are looking at the pain or the
anguish you feel - not from the perspective of ‘It’s mine’ but as a reflection:
‘There is this suffering, this dukkha’. It is
coming from the reflective position of ‘Buddha seeing the Dhamma.’ The insight
is simply the acknowledgment that there is this suffering without making it
personal. That acknowledgment is an important insight; just looking at mental
anguish or physical pain and seeing it as dukkha rather than as personal misery
- just seeing it as dukkha and not reacting to it in a habitual way.
The Second insight of the First Noble Truth
is:
‘Suffering should be understood.’ The second
insight or aspect of each of the Noble Truths has the word ‘should’ in it: ‘It
should be understood.’ The second insight then, is that dukkha is something to
understand. One should understand dukkha, not just try to get rid of it.
We can look at the word ‘understanding’ as
‘standing under’. It is a common enough word but, in Pali, ‘understanding’
means to really accept the suffering, stand under or hug it rather than just
react to it. With any form of suffering - physical or mental - we usually just
react, but with understanding we can really look at suffering; really accept
it, really hold it and embrace it. So that is the second aspect, ‘We should
understand suffering’.
The Third aspect of the First Noble Truth is:
‘Suffering has been understood.’ When you have actually practised with
suffering - looking at it, accepting it, knowing it and letting it be the way
it is - then there is the third aspect, ‘Suffering has been understood’, or
‘Dukkha has been understood.’
So these are the three aspects of the First Noble
Truth: ‘There is dukkha’; ‘it is to be understood’; and, ‘It has been
understood.’
This is the pattern for the three aspects of
each Noble Truth. There is the statement, then the prescription and then the
result of having practised. One can also see it in terms of the Pali words
pariyatti, patipatti and pativedha.
Pariyatti is the theory or the statement,
‘There is suffering.’ Patipatti is the practise - actually practising with it;
and pativedha is the result of the practise.
This is what we call a reflective
pattern; you are actually developing your mind in a very reflective way. A
Buddha mind is a reflective mind that knows things as they are.
We use these Four Noble Truths for our
development. We apply them to ordinary things in our lives, to ordinary
attachments and obsessions of the mind. With these truths, we can investigate
our attachments in order to have the insights. Through the Third Noble Truth,
we can realise cessation, the end of suffering, and practise the Eightfold Path
until there is understanding. When the Eightfold Path has been fully developed,
one is an arahant, one has made it. Even though this sounds complicated - four
truths, three aspects, twelve insights - it is quite simple. It is a tool for
us to use to help us understand suffering and non-suffering.
Within the Buddhist world, there are not many
Buddhists who use the Four Noble Truths anymore, even in Thailand. People say,
‘Oh yes, the Four Noble Truths - beginner’s stuff.’ Then they might use all
kinds of vipassana techniques and become really obsessed with the sixteen
stages before they get to the Noble Truths. I find it quite boggling that in
the Buddhist world the really profound teaching has been dismissed as primitive
Buddhism: ‘That’s for the little kids, the beginners. The advanced course is....’
They go into complicated theories and ideas - forgetting the most profound
teaching.
The Four Noble Truths are a lifetime’s
reflection. It is not just a matter of realising the Four Noble Truths, the
three aspects, and twelve stages and becoming an arahant on one retreat - and
then going onto something advanced. The Four Noble Truths are not easy like
that. They require an ongoing attitude of vigilance and they provide the
context for a lifetime of examination.