Hành Trình Vô Ngã by
Vô Ngã Vô Ưu
Transcript of Thich Nhat Hanh English Dharma Talks
14 The Sutras on Dependant Co-arising and Great Emptiness
Dharma Talk given by Thich Nhat Hanh
on March 19, 1998 in Plum Village, France.
Dear Sangha,
Today is the 19th
March and we are in the New Hamlet in the spring retreat.
We have studied the
Sutra on the Middle Way and at the same time we have looked at the Sutra on
Dependent Co-arising and the Sutra on Great Emptiness. The Sutra on Dependent
Co-arising is No. 296 in the Samyukta Agama. The word "Samyukta" is
generally understood as "miscellaneous." This word gives us a rather
negative first impression, as if items classed as "miscellaneous" were
unimportant. The Samyukta Agama is, in fact, a collection of sutras which
contain the essence of the Buddhadharma. If you look deeply into the sutras of
the Samyukta Agamayou will see the source of Buddhism, thus making it even
greater than the other Agamas, like the Madhya Agama or the Dirgha Agama. These
last two collections have been organised in a special manner; but in the
Samyukta Agama, presentation is more natural. If you want to get close to the
original teachings of the Buddha, examine the Samyukta Agama. It is a
collection of short sutras containing the essence of the Buddhadharma. The
Sutra on Dependent Co-arising, The Sutra on the Middle Way, and The Sutra on
Great Emptiness are all there in the Samyukta Agama.
First, we shall
examine the sutra called Causes and Conditions and dependent Co-arising.
(Because "causes and conditions", and "interdependence"
carry a similar meaning, it is sufficient to call the sutra "Dependent
Co-arising.")
The word
"Cause" means the seed, the principle cause or condition.
"Conditions" here means other necessary conditions, but they may not
be the principle conditions. Studying the word as written in Chinese reveals a
number of things, one being that there is something very great within a small
boundary or square. If something is to become great, it must break through
those boundaries. Thus there are four walls enclosing the word
"great" in the Chinese character. When you look at a mustard seed, it
is small because the other conditions are not there for it to be great. But
when the mustard seed is put into the earth and watered, it becomes a great
plant. The conditions to bring the mustard seed to fruition are water, earth,
fertiliser, and warmth. Notice that the conditions are also causes, but the
primary cause, of course, is the seed itself; and the subsidiary causes are the
conditions necessary to support the primary cause to develop. Thus, we can
translate causes and conditions as interdependent origins or dependent
co-arising. "Co" means together; simultaneously; "dependent"
means relying on each other. Something cannot arise alone, nothing can stand on
its own; everything is dependent upon something else.
We have the word
"independence". There are Buddhists who live in America who say that
although we celebrate Independence Day, we cannot really live without being
dependent on other countries. We should talk about celebrating "Dependence
or Interdependence Day." Because one country has to depend on other
countries in order to exist.
"Causes and
Conditions" and "Interdependent Origins" are terms;
"Dependent Co-Arising" is a term. In the Sutra of Great Emptiness and
the Sutra on Causes and Conditions, it is said, "This is, because that
is." This is the meaning of interdependence. "This arises because
that arises". The word "arises' is better than the word
"born". This is the definition of the Sutra of Dependent Co-arising
and it is repeated many times in the Agamas: "This is; therefore, that
is." "This is, because that is; this is not, because that is
not." "This ceases to be because that ceases to be." "This
is like this, because that is like that." That is the definition of
co-arising in the sutra and that is the best definition we can give. If we
smile, the mirror smiles back at us, because if we are kind, our brothers and
sisters will be kind.
In Buddhism there are
many theories concerning causes and conditions. There are theories which talk
about "four causes and conditions," or twenty, or twenty-two
conditions, or twelve causes and conditions; but regardless of the number,
"conditions" which are related to each other bring about a result
which is existence or co-existence. If those causes and conditions were not
related, they could not result in existence. When these conditions are
together, connected, or inter-related, we recognise a phenomenon, we have a
perception about a phenomenon. The teachings on Dependent Co-arising say that
whether a Buddha is or is not present in the world, dependent co-arising
remains the basis of everything. This truth, this law is always there in the
field of all phenomena. This truth, or law, is always present in all dharma
realms.
We are already
familiar with the term dharmadhatu. It has lying behind it the word,
"world." lokadhatu in Sanskrit. In Sanskrit the word
"world" refers to this world. Within this world you see things that
appear to be born and they die, apparently independent of each other. The
grapefruit is independent of the lemon. But in the dharmadhatu, the lotus is
not different from the meditation hall, a man is not different from his
brother, all things are interconnected; in the one is the all. All dharmas, all
phenomena, dwell in the dharmadhatu. If we can be in touch with them deeply, we
can be in touch with their no-birth and no-death nature. The more superficial
way of looking is we will be caught in the lokadhatu and we will see them being
born and dying and not being related to each other. In The Sutra of Co-arising,
we should understand that according to the teachings concerning Dependent
Co-arising all phenomena dwell in their dharma nature. We have our dharma
nature; the flower has its dharma nature. If we can be in touch with that, we
are beyond the ideas of being born and dying. If we can be in touch with the
dharma nature of the flower, we won't see the flower as something separate from
other things. So the idea of phenomena dwelling in the dharmadhatu is very
important. We can see the essence of the Mahayana already in these sutras.
When we come to line
11 we see the words, "these phenomena which are interdependent". When
we observe things properly and do not look at them in an upside-down manner, we
can penetrate dependent co-arising. We will realise the teaching of interdependence.
Here the word "penetrate" means to become one with the truth of
interdependence. If we are in accord with that, one with that, we have exact
and absolute understanding, that is called "to witness" and "to
penetrate" and "to be in accord with." Then we will know clearly
what is meant by the teaching on interdependence. When we have seen that, we
are no longer caught in returning to the past to ask, "Was I there in the
past? If so, what kind of creature was I? What kind of person was I? What was
my form? What was my content? And we are not occupied with the future asking,
"In the future will I exist, and if so, what kind of species will I
be?" When I return to the present, I will not ask questions about whether
or not I exist. Who says, "Do we exist or not? Where did I come from,
where will I go?" These are questions we ask when we have no understanding
of dependent co-arising. When we have been able to penetrate these teachings,
we go beyond these ropes which bind us, like the view of self, the view of sentient
beings, and the view of lifespan. Or the view of divination, wanting to divine
the future, "How will we be in the future, what is my destiny
tomorrow?" When we, in Plum Village, look in to the poem of 'Kieu', to
find out our future for the year, what we are doing is asking the ancestral
teachers, "How should I practise this year?" We are not trying to
divine about the future.
When we have gone
beyond these four ideas, we come to situation of the birthlessness of dharmas.
Birthlessness means no-birth and no-death. This birthlessness of dharmas, is
the dharmadhatu, it is the basis of nirvana. When we practice skilfully we can
penetrate the teachings of interdependence. As far as the teachings of
interdependence are concerned there is right view, the view of things as they
are. This is the skilful view, the skilful understanding, the skilful practice,
and the skilful penetration. The practice has to be skilful. It is not
necessary to work so hard that we exhaust ourselves in order to realise the
way; instead, it is because we have the skills to do that. 'Practicing
skilfully' means that our practice needs our intelligence, we have to use our
intelligence when we practice.
That is the Sutra on
Interdependent Co-arising, and now we will go on to the Sutra on Great
Emptiness. The Sutra on Great Emptiness also means interdependent co-arising.
Emptiness does not mean non-existence. Emptiness means embracing everything -
completely free, not being caught in an idea. This is what I heard at a time
that the Buddha was staying in the Buffalo Herdsmans' Village, the Buddha said
to the bhikkhus, "I will teach you the Dharma. This Dharma is beautiful in
the beginning, beautiful in the middle, and beautiful at the end, its meaning
is good, and its taste is good, it is clear and pure. The life of a monk or nun
is clear and bright". This teaching is called the Great Emptiness Sutra,
the Mahasunyata Sutra. Bhikkhus, you should listen carefully, and accept this
Sutra skilfully.
What is Emptiness?
This is because this is not, this arises because that arises. Because of
ignorance there is impulses; because of impulses there is consciousness, which
results in this great heap of suffering. We notice that the Six Ayatanas have
been left out. Out of this great mass of suffering arises old age, sickness,
and death. Because we are born, we must to grow old and die. If anyone asks:
"Who is it that has to grow old and die? This birth, old age, and death,
to whom do they belong?" A lack of understanding makes people state, "It
is I, myself, who has to grow old and die, this old age and death belong to me,
to the self." This is the subject matter of this sutra. When we say old
age and death, people ask, "Who is it that grows old? Who is it that
dies?" These are not intelligent questions. Living beings are caught in
the idea of self. They say we are born, we grow old, we die, and so we are
afraid. But if we are able to overcome the idea of self we will not say,
"I am the one who was born, I am the one who grows old, I am the one who
dies; this birth and death belong to me," if we say this we then take upon
ourselves a lot of suffering with no benefit.
According to the
teachings of interdependent co-arising, when we understand that everything is
caused and conditioned we don't need a self lying in the centre of things like
this. When we ask, "Who is born, who grows old, who dies?" It is like
when we look at a flower and ask, "Who is opening?" We don't need
someone who is a bud, someone who opens, and the flower will still be a bud and
open. You don't need an "I" which is born, which will die, and which
grows old, why do you need it? Because we say, "If there is birth, there
has to be an "I" that is born, if there is ageing, there has to be an
"I" that grows old, and if there is death, there has to be someone
who will die." In truth, when we master the teaching of dependent
co-arising, birth is simply birth; old age is simply old age, death is death;
there is no "I" in that. It is only when we are caught in the idea of
self that we say there has to be an "I" who is born.
Look at the flower:
Has it a soul within it, a self within it? Does it need to have a self in order
to be born, in order to open, and in order to fade; does it need an
"I" in order to exist? The idea that there has to be an "I"
who is the subject to make other things possible is a misconception. The twelve
causes and conditions are like that. You don't need a subject going around in
the twelve links of dependent co-arising. Dependent co-arising occurs anyway.
Rain happens; you don't have to ask, "Who is falling?" For there to
be rain, there doesn't have to be an "I." In many languages, it is
necessary to say "it" is raining. We have to have a self which is
raining. But if there is rain, is there a self in the rain? We get used to this
way of speaking, that there has to be a subject, a self, and only then can
there be action. In language people have to put in a subject of the word rain,
so we have to say, "it rains". In Vietnamese we say the sky is
raining, or the weather is raining.
To practice together
in order to see this we must be skilful in our practice, in our looking, in our
awakening. When we say, "I know the wind is blowing," this sentence
can be divided into two phrases. One is "I know," the other, "the
wind is blowing." This is truly a funny statement. How can you have wind
that doesn't blow? As soon as you have wind, you have blowing; without blowing
there is no wind. The blowing is part of the wind. What's the point of saying,
"The wind is blowing?" Why not just say, "the wind"? We
also have the phrase, "I know." Do we have to have an "I".
To just say "know" is enough, we don't need "I."
It's the same when we
say, "A cloud is floating in the sky, a flower is opening." If a
cloud is not floating in the sky, then it's the water in the river; if a flower
is not open, it's not yet a flower, it's a bud. "I know" is the same.
"Know" is a verb and our languages state that verbs require subjects,
so you have to have the word "I". If we wish to say the truth, just
to say "rain" is enough. So, with "I know" you can remove
the I, "know" is enough on it's own. Why do you know, when we know we
have to know something, to know that the wind is blowing. "The wind is
blowing," is the object of the knowledge. Therefore the object has a
subject within it. When you know, you have to know something, so all you have
to say is "the wind is blowing", you can get rid of the
"know". Or if you like you can just say, "wind". Look into
wind and you will see the knower there, because the wind is the object of your
knowledge, and if it's wind it must be blowing. So instead of saying, "I
know that the wind is blowing", you can just say "wind". In
order to save space and time, and in order to be nearer to the truth, all you
have to say is "wind", "cloud", "flower",
"know". You don't need a subject. The flower needs no self in order
to be born; old age doesn't need a self in order to be old age; we have simply
become accustomed to the habit of thinking and speaking with a subject, with a
self. This has been happening for so many past generations, but, unfortunately,
the idea that there must be a subject is something that hides the truth from
us.
We know that there
are twelve causes and conditions, and they can lead to a great mass of
suffering. If we are able to transform these twelve links we will have a lot of
freedom and happiness. One of these twelve links is ignorance. Is it necessary
to say that ignorance comes before everything else? Do we need to say, "In
the beginning there was ignorance?" We know there is no beginning and no
end. That is why we say, "We are your disciples since beginningless
time." If we say, "In the beginning there was ignorance," we
haven't understood anything. It's the same when we walk, sit, touch, eat, there
is ignorance in it. All we need is mindfulness, and we will see ignorance in
our daily life. Ignorance is a lack of clarity, a lack of looking deeply.
Ignorance brings in
its train impulsive action. Impulse means energy, samskara. When we
misunderstand another sister, that is ignorance which results in irritation and
aversion to that sister. Energy is called here Samskara, it is an energy which
pushes us to do or say something, that is our action. This action lies in our
unconscious mind. Can we see that we all have ignorance and impulses in our
unconscious mind? Let us consider a glass of water as an example of our
consciousness. One drop of black ink in that glass of water, and the water
becomes black. That glass of water is our consciousness, and these drops of
ink, ignorance, cloud our consciousness. All our jealousy, all our despair,
come from this ignorance. These negative emotions are samskara; they are
impulses that make us suffer and make others suffer. Therefore ignorance leads
to impulses (samskara); and samskara also leads to ignorance; ignorance and
samskara give rise to each other. If we sit quietly and look at ourselves we
will see ignorance and samskara holding hands in us. When we see and
acknowledge this, and smile, we will already feel better, we feel that we can intervene
at this point, and that is what is meant by practicing. So with a drop of black
ink in a glass of water, clarity becomes obscured. When our wisdom is obscured,
it can no longer be called wisdom; instead, we must call it consciousness.
Consciousness is therefore wisdom which contains a drop of black ink.
Prajna is the glass
of clear water without the drop of ink in it, once we have the drop of ink in
it, then prajna becomes vijnana, it becomes consciousness. Impulses give rise
to consciousness, and consciousness give rise to impulses. We must see clearly
that our conscious mind is holding hands with our samskaras. We don't know what
they are planning together, but we should find out. Only mindfulness will help
us to see what these two are plotting together.
Consciousness arises
in two ways: as form (or body), and as mind. In Sanskrit it is namarupa. Our
aggregates (skandhas), our body, feelings, perceptions, mental formations, and
consciousness, all belong to this field of psyche-soma and they are all a
manifestation of consciousness. Consciousness is present in all skandhas.
Because these skandhas contain wrong consciousness, wrong samskaras; they are
therefore the objects of grasping, and we get caught by them. So they are
called the five elements of grasping. In our own person our skandhas already
contain grasping, because they are the manifestations of consciousness coloured
by ignorance. Psyche and soma are Greek terms. Psyche refers to our feelings,
our perceptions, and our consciousness; and soma is our body. When we look into
psyche and soma, we see consciousness, ignorance, and impulses. In our body,
there is ignorance. If this ignorance did not exist in our body, it would not
be as it is. It is through ignorance that we eat junk foods, and we live in a
certain way; that is why our body is what it is.
So if you look into
our feelings you will see the presence of consciousness, of impulses, and of
ignorance. And here consciousness means wrong consciousness. So our five
aggregates are related to consciousness, the six objects of our senses, and the
six organs of sense. Form and psyche-soma gives rise to the six organs of
sense, they manifest as our eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and mind, each in
turn giving us form, sound, smell, taste, touch, and object of mind. When we
have these twelve things we have contact, and when we have contact between the
six organs and the six objects of sense, we have feeling-pleasant and
unpleasant. Because these six organs and objects of sense contain ignorance and
impulses, when they come together, because of contact, there is still
ignorance, impulses, and attachment. Therefore contact gives rise to feelings,
and these feelings are conditioned by ignorance. Sometimes, although we think
they are pleasant feelings, they are not, because there is attachment, there is
irritation because there is ignorance in our feelings. There are things which
are not beautiful, but we say they are. Things which are not pure, we say are
pure. Those things which are not self, we say are self; things which are not
enemy, we say are enemy. So there is ignorance, and it is seen in the five
skandhas, the Six Ayatanas, contact, and feelings. When feelings contain
ignorance, then there is grasping.
Grasping and craving
don't manifest only after ignorance. They are present in ignorance from the
start. In ignorance there is attachment, jealousy, anger and hatred. This
craving, this attachment gives rise to grasping, and grasping makes the roots
of craving grow deeper. Once the roots have gone deeper, there is the arising
of the life of suffering, attachment, and bondage. The cycle of suffering and
bondage then manifests in terms of birth, old age, and death. You can portray
the Six Ayatanas, contact, and feeling all together. Sometimes the Buddha
talked like that, he said there were only seven causes and conditions, and
other times he said there were eight, nine, ten, or twelve. So any number of
causes and conditions are correct, it doesn't mean that twelve causes and
conditions are more correct than ten causes and conditions. So we can talk
about the psyche-soma, but we can also talk about the five skandhas. So we have
twelve links; ignorance, impulses, consciousness etc, and they’re all linked to
one another, they all influence each other. For example ignorance is not only
the cause of impulses, but impulses are also the cause of ignorance, and
ignorance is also the cause of consciousness and psyche-soma. In each one of
these eleven there is ignorance, in each of the other eleven links there is
samskara, and in each the other eleven links there is consciousness. So do not
think that the twelve links are in a straight line, one leading on to the next
one. If you take a little of your flesh or your emotion in one moment of your
daily life, you will see that all of the twelve links are in that small part
you have taken. These twelve causes and conditions lean on each other, are
committed to each other and bring about the great mass of suffering. Each one
of the twelve links is in relation with the other eleven.
If you don't look
practice, if you don’t look deeply, you allow this cycle to continue. If you
practice, if you light up the lamp of mindfulness, you will say, "that is
how it is working. You will say, "let it not work like that anymore, we
have suffered enough already." When we bring mindfulness into the picture,
this ignorance becomes less dark, and clarity arises. Because we look deeply
into the twelve causes and conditions, the darkness of ignorance is released
and the light begins to appear. From where does this light come? It comes from
the consciousness. Within consciousness is ignorance, but there is also a seed
of awakening, and mindfulness. If we bring the seed out of consciousness and
light it like a lamp, that light will make the darkness disappear. Very often
our suffering, our despair, helps us to awaken. Thus, clarity can come from
ignorance. When the lamp is alight the ignorance of our attachment, our
despair, will weaken and change. When we have clarity we don’t want to pay
someone back for what they have done, to make somebody suffer for what they
have done to us. We want to do something greater, we want to help our sister
who has made us suffer, because we know then that if our sister is happy, we
shall be happy. So we have a good aspiration as the cause of our clarity. This
clarity gives rise to the bodhicitta, or the great aspiration. If you have a
great aspiration, have the energy of bodhicitta within you, that is because you
have seen suffering, you have awakened to the presence of suffering, and you
want to put an end to it. That is why you give rise to this great aspiration,
this bodhicitta, which comes from clarity.
Therefore ignorance
brings about samskaras which have blindness in them, actions and emotions which
contain fear, attachment, hatred, and jealousy. When you have clarity this
brings about an energy. That is not blind energy; it is the energy which will
bring us to do things which are useful. We can call this energy the energy of
bodhicitta, or the great aspiration. If ignorance gives rise to samskara,
clarity gives rise to great aspiration. This great aspiration does not darken
the mind; rather it gives rise to wisdom. In consciousness there is ignorance,
but in wisdom there is not. Wisdom therefore makes our aspirations stronger and
more solid. When the mind is no longer vijnana (consciousness), but is prajna
(wisdom), we want to be there to save beings, we have the great aspiration. The
great aspiration gives us the insight that we have to be there for the beings
who are suffering in the three realms. So we have something which is equivalent
to psyche-soma in order to be present but we don’t call it psyche-soma, we call
it nirmanakaya (transformation body). We are present as all other living
beings, but living beings contain so much hatred, so much darkness. Our
presence is to bring freshness and happiness like the flower, to be present
like flowers. It is called the nirmanakaya, and that is the form in which
bodhisattvas are present. There are the six senses, but this wisdom lays at the
basis, while in the first cycle an ordinary person has the six senses, but the
six senses are the cause of bondage for that person. As for the bodhisattva the
six senses are there, but they are the transformation body of the bodhisattva;
the six senses do not have ignorance in them, they have the great vow in them.
The transformation body of thebodhisattva is also in contact with the objects
of the senses, and there is contact between the sense organs and the object. So
here we call the Six Ayatanas the subject and object of sense. And there is the
contact between subject and object of sense as far as the bodhisattva is
concerned, because the bodhisattva is there in the world in order to be in
touch. In that contact between the sense organs and the six objects of sense,
there is mindfulness, so there isn’t ignorance. When the bodhisattva's six
organs of sense are in touch with the six objects of sense, there is
mindfulness. Mindfulness means there is clarity, there is great aspiration, and
wisdom. This contact leads to feeling which also contains mindfulness. (If you
have an interest in very concise terminology, please read The Heart of the
Buddha.)
Of course, where
there is mindfulness, there will be pleasant, unpleasant, and neutral feelings.
But these feelings do not contain ignorance like the feelings of ordinary
beings, instead these feelings contain great aspiration and wisdom. So when
there is a painful feeling the bodhisattva knows that it is a painful feeling,
and that it is really a painful feeling. And when there is a pleasant feeling
the bodhisattva knows that it is a pleasant feeling, and that it is really a
pleasant feeling. So there is no wrong perception within feelings; they are
recognised for what they are. A bodhisattva can share the suffering of living
beings. When they see someone in great pain, they feel compassion, they suffer,
and the bodhisattva is nourished by that kind of suffering; it helps to
increase their wisdom. Therefore feeling here is feeling with mindfulness. The
feelings borne by the bodhisattva do not lead to craving. They lead to
compassion, and loving kindness. Seeing living things suffer, the bodhisattva
does not give rise to anger; instead the suffering gives rise to love and the
mind of compassion. Living beings suffer and they spread their suffering around
them, because they suffer, they crave, and are attached. When the bodhisattva
feels this suffering he is still free and has compassion and loving-kindness.
Loving kindness and
compassion contain clarity. They do not lead to attachment, but to freedom.
Because the bodhisattva has compassion and love, he is always able to maintain
his freedom, which goes along with clarity and great aspiration. When we lose
our clarity and our great aspiration, we lose our freedom at the same time.
Therefore, in freedom there is loving-kindness, compassion, and mindfulness. In
the feelings of the bodhisattva there is also wisdom and freedom. That is why
the freedom of the bodhisattva can be maintained fully. If clarity and great
aspiration are lost, freedom is lost at the same time.
The substance of the
bodhisattva is freedom, but if the bodhisattva goes into life, it's not because
of attachment or bondage. Rather, it is because of the great aspiration.
Because of compassion and loving-kindness, the bodhisattva goes into the world
of birth and death, the world of indifference. Not abandoning the beings who
are drowning and drifting in the three worlds. While living beings are drowning
and drifting, the bodhisattva is going in freedom in the dharmadhatu. So being
or becoming is the lokadhatu, and the equivalent is the dharmadhatu. All living
beings, including bodhisattvas, are in the world, but their way of living is
what makes it the lokadhatu or the dharmadhatu, the pure land or the
saha-world. So when the bodhisattva has established his freedom, the
bodhisattva goes into the world. We see the bodhisattva is with us in the world
of birth and death, but the bodhisattva has gone beyond that and is dwelling in
the world of no birth and no-death in a very natural and peaceful way. The
world of no birth and no-death is caused or conditioned by clarity. To see
things being born and dying, that is ignorance, but when we see things without
birth and death, that is clarity.
Here we have the
twelve causes and conditions in two aspects: the first is life and death; the
second is liberation and nirvana. The cycle of birth and death is that in which
ordinary living beings drown and sink because of their ignorance. The other
cycle is that in which the bodhisattvas realise awakening. We know through
these twelve links, we do not need a subject called "I", because if
we can penetrate the world of the dharmadhatu we do not need a subject, we do
not need a self. Therefore the question that is given in this sutra is
"Who is it who grows old, who is it who owns old-age?" The answer is,
if you still require a subject to go through birth, old age, and death - if you
retain the ideas that this is my life span, my self - then you are not yet a
real practitioner.
Who is born, grows
old, and dies? Life span is this body, or life span is not this body? These
questions give rise to so many other questions, but these are philosophical
questions. These questions have one meaning although they arise in many
different forms. It’s just an idea, but when spoken it has many different
forms. People who are caught in questions like this, and are occupied by them,
are not worthy to be someone practising. If you hear someone say that life-span
is one with our body, then that person is not worthy to be called a
practitioner. If you say that your life-span is not your body, it’s not right
either, because all these things are caught in ideas. When a bodhisattva is
able to penetrate the causes and conditions of the teachings of interdependent
arising then, in the twelfth line it says, "our mind will not fall into
either of these two extremes". We are not caught in one of these two
ideas, that our body is our life-span or our life-span is not our body. We can
go directly on the middle way, and we know that the middle way is the way which
goes beyond the pairs of opposites. These pairs of opposites are; is/is not,
permanence/annihilation, same/different, one/many.
Here we must remember
that if you are still occupied with questions like the ones we have examined,
"Was I there in the past, what animal, what thing was I in the past, and
how was I in the past?" Or in the future, "Will I be there or not,
and if I am there what will I be, and what will my form be? Or in the present,
"Am I really here, am I really existing, what am I, and where am I going,
where have I come from?" Then you have not yet penetrated the teachings of
interdependent arising. You are still caught in the four signs of self, living
being, life span, and divination. The idea that life span is this body or life
span is not this body are two ideas that belong to extreme views. When you fall
into such extreme views, you have not been able to penetrate interdependent
arising. When we are able to penetrate interdependent arising, we are walking
on the Middle Way, and we are not caught in these two pairs of opposites; birth
and death, is and is not, permanent and annihilation, the same and different.
If our mind is not caught in these two extremes, we go directly onto the Middle
Way. When the noble ones come into this life they are able to present reality
as it is, not upside down, but in accord with the truth. Here we have reference
to right view as we do in The Sutra on the Middle Way.
The Sutra On Great
Emptiness also talks about the dharma of no birth, when ignorance has been
transformed. When attachment is no longer there, and when the light of wisdom
has arisen, we no longer see the subject of birth and death. You do not see
birth, old age, and death as belonging to someone. You simply see the ending of
birth and death, and you know that the basis of suffering has ended, just like
a palm tree from which the top has been cut, it will no longer grow. When the
practitioner sees the truth of this, he arrives at the insight of no-birth and
no-death. This is 9th line,"If this ignorance is ended and we can leave
behind attachment, then clarity is borne". The question, "Who is the
one who dies and grows old?" and, "who is the one who owns old age
and death?" is no longer a question. Because once old age and death have
come to an end, we know that we have uprooted the root of ignorance and
attachment. We know we have cut it off at the root, like when we cut the top of
the palm tree. In the future we will arrive at the fruit of no-birth, no-death,
or nirvana. If ignorance is taken out of attachment, then clarity is born, and
these questions will no longer be questions because we have gone beyond this
point. Like the palm tree whose top has been removed, it can no longer live. We
will be liberated and will realise the teaching of birthlessness and
deathlessness. Here, conditioned dependent co-arising is called by a very good
name: it is called mahasunyata—the great emptiness. Emptiness here means the
non-existence of a subject called self as a necessary condition as part of the
cycle of causes and conditions.
In conclusion, we may
have learnt by heart, we may be able to describe what is meant by dependent
co-arising, we may be able to say what is meant by ignorance; we may talk very
fluently about the twelve links; but if we are not able to overcome the idea of
self, if we are not able to overcome the idea of living being, if we have not
been able to overcome the idea of life span, if we continue to be occupied with
questions such as, "Who am I?", "Where do I come from?",
"Where will I go to?", "What was I like in the past?",
"What will I be like in the future?", it means we have not understood
the teachings of interdependence, however well we might describe and teach
them. Therefore interdependence is given to us as a tool for looking deeply,
and we look deeply in our daily lives, living them deeply. So when we cook,
wash clothes, or practice walking meditation, we live in such a way that we
look deeply into the interdependent nature of all phenomena. We must penetrate
in order to become one with the functioning of interdependence. We have to
penetrate the flower and see the functioning of the flower, we have to go into
the cloud and see the functioning of interdependence in the cloud, and we can
realise the great emptiness. Then we can go beyond the idea of self, the sign
of self, and at the same time we can go beyond the idea of living being, of
life span. We go beyond these ideas and we see we have become one with the
teachings of interdependence. At that point we come to understand
birthlessness, we can live in the dharmadhatu without being carried away by the
lokadhatu. That is the conclusion. We know that in the sutras of original
Buddhism, like the Sutra on the Middle Way, the Sutra on Interdependence, the
Sutra on Great Emptiness, we have seen that these sutras contain the essence of
the Mahayana. We see clearly that the Mahayana is the work of the ancestral
teachers, to help us see clearly the deeper levels of the original teachings of
the Buddha. Which because of a superficial study and practice, we have not been
able to discover. The opportunity to study the original teachings of the Buddha
through the eyes of the Mahayana, is very wonderful.
Next time we will
study the sutra on Measuring and Reflecting.
15 The Sutra on the Middle Way
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