Visuddhimargaya – Ven Buddhaghosa Thero

විස්තරාර්ථ සන්න සහිත විශුද්ධිමාර්ගය

බුද්ධඝෝෂ අටුවාචාරීන් වහන්සේ

Source : Dhamma Books

බුද්ධඝෝෂ හිමියන් භාරත බෞද්ධ සාහිත්‍යයේ අතිශ්‍රේෂ්ඨ ග්‍රන්ථ කර්‍තෘවරුන් අතර බොහෝ විචාරකයන්ගේ පැසැසුමට ලක්වූ කීර්තිදරයෙකි.” මහාවංශය තුළින් බුද්ධ‍ඝෝෂ හිමියන්ගේ තරමක ජීවන තොරතුරු දැනගත හැකි ය. මහාවංශයේ සදහන් පරිදි බුද්ධඝෝෂ හිමියන් උපත ලබා තිබෙන්නේ බුද්ධගයාව ආසන්නයේ බව සදහන් වේ.

බුද්ධඝෝෂ හිමියන් තම ගුරු රේවත හිමියන් ගේ අවසර ගෙන ලක්දිව ට වැඩම කර තිබේ. බුද්ධඝෝෂ තෙරුන් වහන්සේ තමා මෙහි පැමිණියේ සිංහලාර්ථකථා මාගධියට පෙරලනු පිණිස බව දන්වා ඇත. එබඳු වැඩකට නම් ත්‍රිපිටකවර්ණනාවෙහි දක්‍ෂකම බැලිය යුතු යැයි සංඝරාජයන් වහන්සේ පවසා, සංයුක්ත නිකායේ එන “අන්තෝ ජටා බහි ජටා” යන ගාථාව අනුසාරයෙන් ග්‍රන්ථයක් රචනා කරන්නැ යි නියම කළේය.

ඒ අනුව ලියන ලද ග්‍රන්ථය විශුද්ධි මාර්ගයයි. සත් මහලින් යුත් ගොඩනැගිල්ලක පහත මාලයේ සිට දිනපතා පිඬුසිඟා වැඩීමෙන් අනතුරුව තල්කොළ අහුලාගෙන අවුත් ඒවායේ පොත් ලිවීම ආරම්භ කරනු ලැබීය. එක්තරා වෙළෙන්දෙක් උන්වහන්සේ වඩිනා මඟ තල්කොළ විසුරුවා හැර සැගවී බලාසිටි බවත් ඒවා ගෙනගොස් පොත් ලියනවා දැක දිනපතා දානය ද දෙන්නට වූ බවත් සඳහන් වේ.

සම්පූර්ණ පොත පහත පිවිසුමෙන් බා ගන්න.

[pdf]http://www.dhammikaweb.com/pdfs/Visuddhi-Maargaya.pdf[/pdf]

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Irritation – Ven Ajahn Brahmavamso Thero

Irritation

Irritation is part of life. How you deal with it is what matters. Ajahn Brahm introduces several techniques to help deal with it, including positive reinforcement and the similes of the empty trash can and Ajahn Mosquito.

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Anuruddha Master of the Divine Eye – by Hellmuth Hecker

The Buddha’s father, King Suddhodana, had a brother, the prince Amitodana, who had five children. Among them was Ananda, who was later to be the Buddha’s faithful attendant, and Mahanama, heir to the Sakyan throne. A third brother was Anuruddha.

Among those who were pre-eminent in a particular skill was the venerable Anuruddha, who was praised by the Buddha as being foremost in developing the divine eye. The divine eye (dibba-cakkhu) is the ability to see beyond the range of the physical eye, extending in Anuruddha’s case to a thousandfold world system, which may perhaps be identified with a galaxy in modern astronomy. This faculty can be obtained by one who has reached the fourth meditative absorption jhāna and takes this meditation as the basis for further development as described in The Path of Purification (Visuddhimagga).2 The divine eye is of a mundane (lokiya) character. It can be obtained by an unliberated worldling (puthujjana) as well as by those on the four stages of emancipation. Anuruddha attained it before he became an Arahant.


[pdf]http://www.dhammikaweb.com/pdfs/Anuruddha.pdf[/pdf]

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Pina Saha Kusalaya

පින සහ කුසලය

පින සහ කුසලය පිලිබදව විවිධ මතිමතාන්තර නිතරම ඉදිරිපත් වීම දක්නට ලැබේ. මෙය අර්ථ වශයෙන් දෙකක් යන් න එක මතයකී.

පින” යනු කුසල යෙහි ලෞකික කොටස බව තව මතයකී. ථෙරවාදය අසුරෙන් සම්පාදනය වී ඇති මෙම ලිපියෙන් පින සහ කුසලය පිලිබදව මනා විග්‍රහයක් ඔබට ලබා ගත හැකි ය.

 [pdf]http://www.dhammikaweb.com/pdfs/EBooks_Aathaapi_Dilations_01_Pin_and_Kusal_2008_Nov_27_v12.pdf[/pdf]

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The Incontrovertible Teachings – Ven Bhikkhu Bodhi Thero

Apannaka Sutta – Majjhima Nikaya No. 60

Effect on conduct: avoidance of wholesome action; leads to unwholesome deeds of body, speech, and thought. Reason: not seeing the danger in unwholesome states & benefits in renouncing them

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[pdf]http://www.dhammikaweb.com/pdfs/M0007_MN-60_WrongViews.pdf[/pdf]

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Remembering the Ven. Dr. Hammalawa Saddhatissa Thera

Venerable Dr. Hammalawa Saddhatissa (M.A., Ph.D, D.Litt) was born in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) in 1914. He was ordained as a Buddhist monk in 1926. Proficient in Pali, Sanskrit, Sinhalese and Hindi, he studied at the Universities of Benares, London and Edinburgh. He received his Ph.D from the University of Edinburgh in 1963.

He was Professor of Pali and Buddhism at Benares Hindu University from 1956 to 1957, Lecturer at the University of London from 1958-1960 and Professor at the University of Toronto, Canada, from 1966-1969. He was a visiting lecturer at Oxford University in 1973, He has lectured in university in Europe, the United States, as well as in Korea and Japan.

He was renowned for his translation of Sanskrit and Pali works into English. His critical study of the Upasakajanalankara and the Dasabodhisattuppattikatha (the Birth-Stories of Ten Bodhisattas) and the Namarupasamasa (the Summary of Mind and Matter) published by the Pali Text Society, London, are well-known among Pali scholars. Among his numerous contributions to the clear understanding of Buddhism are: Buddhist Ethics, The Buddha’s Way, The Life of the Buddha, and the translation of the Sutta Nipata which have won world-wide recognition as authoritative books in their field. He contributed numerous scholarly articles to felicitation volumes and journals which have been collected and edited to form the present book. Further articles on all aspects of Buddhism have been compiled as one comprehensive work — Facets of Buddhism — providing a rich source of spiritual guidance for Buddhists and non-Buddhists alike.◈

Ven. Dr. Hammalawa Saddhatissa Maha Thera after almost fifty years of selfless service towards the noble cause of the propagation of Buddha Dhamma in India and Europe and in the world at large, passed away fifteen years ago in London on 13 February 1990. He was one of the most erudite, articulate and pious and popular monks of our times.

He was the head of the London Buddhist Vihara and the Sanghanayake of the United Kingdom and Europe. The London Buddhist Vihara was founded in the 1920s by that great Buddhist revivalist, Anagarika Dharmapala, whose aim was a Buddhist renaissance in and beyond the confines of his own country. Anagarika Dharmapala, with the dedicated assistance and co-operation of Anagarika Devapriya Walisinha, sent the Most Ven. Parawahera Wajiragnana Thera and Venerables Dehigaspe Pannasara and Hegoda Nandasara Theras to London to break new ground in the United Kingdom and Europe as Dhammadutas. However, this Dhammaduta service fell into abeyance with the onset of the Second World War.

Thereafter, the London Buddhist Vihara was reopened in 1954. And it stood in great need of clear direction and purposeful leadership. Hence, the Mahabodhi Society of Sri Lanka looked up to the Ven. Saddhatissa Thera, who has already distinguished himself as a great Dhammaduta with his indefatigable service in India, to help them in this task.

The Ven. Saddhatissa Thera came to London in 1957. At that time the Vihara was the only Theravada centre in the UK and the whole of Europe. However, it was still in a rudimentary state. His charismatic personality, his breadth and depth of scholarship, his penetrating knowledge of the Buddha Dhamma and of the Pali and Sanskrit languages and his skill as an exponent of the Buddha’s teaching, soon enabled him to fill his position as head of the Vihara with great distinction.

And the vihara in turn became a focal point of Buddhist learning and practice serving the religious needs of all Buddhists in the UK and Europe. It also drew the focus of attention of eminent scholars and orientalists internationally.

The vihara though a Theravada Buddhist centre encouraged discussions on the views and teachings of all Buddhist traditions and always welcomed their representatives. It also acquired a popularity among the representatives of other religions encouraged by Maha Thera’s keen interest in inter-religious dialogue. The Ven. Dr. Saddhatissa Thera served the vihara as its head for nearly three decades and his name will always be associated with that of the vihara for posterity. The Ven. Maha Thera also revived the British Mahabodhi Society with the active assistance of a group of Western Buddhists giving further impetus to the spread of Buddhism.

Prior to his leaving for London, he was engaged in Dhammaduta activity in India. Impressed by his scholarship and his reputation as an exponent of the Buddha Dhamma, Mahabodhi Society of Sri Lanka invited him to continue the pioneering work initiated by the late Anagarika Dharmapala in the subcontinent. He committed himself to this task in a tireless and selfless manner and made himself conversant in Indian languages like Hindi, Urdu and Panjab to help him to carry the message of the Buddha to the local people.

His 12-year Dharmaduta Service in India culminated in the mass conversion at Nagpur on October 14th 1956 of over half a million members of a socially disadvantaged community led by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, an architect of the Indian Constitution.

Dr. Ambedkar was a frequent caller on the Maha Thera primarily to discuss the administration of the sangha according to the Vinayapitaka. His intention had been to draft the new Indian constitution along the lines set out in the disciplinary code for the Buddhist monks. Out of this encounter, Dr. Ambedkar gradually displayed a deeper appreciation of the Buddha and his teachings. During their talks he had revealed to the Maha Thera his desire to adopt Buddhism as his religion, and to encourage his followers to do likewise.

The Ven. Maha Thera was born at Hammalawa, a rather remote hamlet in the North Western region of the island. His father was a Ayurvedic practitioner. From a very young age, he showed a liking towards the monastic order, and was admitted into the order as a “Samanera” at the young age of twelve years.

As a young monk, he had his early education at the Sastrodaya Pirivena at Sandalankawa. Then he proceeded to Vidyodaya Pirivena, Colombo for higher studies. Here, he distinguished himself as a brilliant student and passed its final examination with honours. At about the same time, he also passed with distinction the “Pracheena” exam.

He made use of his sojourn in the sub-continent to obtain the M. A. Degree from the Benares University. Subsequently, he was made a lecturer at the same university. He obtained his PhD from the University of Edinburgh.

At various times, he held academic appointments at a number of universities. He was a visiting lecturer in Buddhist studies at the Oxford University, a lecturer in Sinhala at the University of London and Professor of Pali and Buddhism at the University of Toronto. He was also the Buddhist Chaplain at the London University.

He was one of the two vice presidents of the Pali Text Society of Great Britain.

And he served the society with commitment as an expositor, translator and editor of the Pali texts. His translation of the Sutta Nipata and the editing of the Pali texts of the Tripitaka are of particular importance in this regard.

The Ven. Maha Thera had been a prolific writer and his writing had ranged over Buddhism, Sri Lankan history and culture, Sinhala language and literature, Pali language and literature and national issues. His work consists of newspaper articles to scholarly monographs published in many countries over a period of four decades.

This article is not complete. I believe, unless I mention the name of Maha Thera’s pupil and “Upasthayake”, Rev. Galayaye Piyadassi Thera. It was Rev. Piyadassi who so devotedly attended to the Maha Thera, when his health, during his last year or two, was in a rather poor state.

Rev. Piyadassi was so inspired by Maha Thera’s service to humanity, he realised it his duty to establish an institution to continue Maha Thera’s service for the benefit of posterity. Hence, the Saddhatissa International Buddhist Centre at Kingsbury in London. The institution has blossomed out into a centre famous for its Buddhist religious activities and Buddhist learning and research. It also provides facilities for children’s education and social and cultural activities.

It is with gratitude I recall the inspiring advice and kindly guidance my family and I always received from the Maha Thera, and the blessings he often bestowed on us during my student days in London and our subsequent stay there. This advice and guidance has stood me in good stead even to this day and has inspired me in moments of need.

I like to conclude this article quoting what Russell Webb, a former associate of Maha Thera, had written of him. “To meet the Venerable Dr. Saddhatissa is to enter into a calming atmosphere, where a basic kindly spirit, devoid of material considerations, manifests itself.

A serenity and warmth of feeling are ever displayed which must surely characterise the inner detachment of someone far advanced on the path of enlightenment.”

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The Buddha and His Teachings

by   Venerable Narada Mahathera

THE WHEEL OF LIFE – PATICCA-SAMUPPĀDA

“No God no Brahma can be found,
No matter of this wheel of life,
Just bare phenomena roll
Dependent on conditions all!”
— VISUDDHI MAGGA

The process of rebirth has been fully explained by the Buddha in the Paticca-Samuppāda.

Paticca means “because of” or “dependent upon” samuppāda “‘arising” or “origination”. Although the literal meaning of the term is “arising because of” or “dependent arising or origination,” it is applied to the whole causal formula which consists of twelve interdependent causes and effects, technically called paccaya and paccayuppanna.

The method of the Paticca-Samuppāda should be understood as follows:

Because of A arises B. Because of B arises C.
When there is no A, there is no B.
When there is no B, there is no C.
In other words — “this being so, that is; this not being so, that is not.”
(imasmim sati, idam hoti; imasmim asati, idam na hoti.)

Paticca-Samuppāda is a discourse on the process of birth and death, and not a philosophical theory of the evolution of the world. It deals with the cause of rebirth and suffering with a view to helping men to get rid of the ills of life. It makes no attempt to solve the riddle of an absolute origin of life.

It merely explains the “simple happening of a state, dependent on its antecedent state.

Ignorance (avijjā) of the truth of suffering, its cause, its end, and the way to its end, is the chief cause that sets the wheel of life in motion. In other words, it is the not-knowingness of things as they truly are, or of oneself as one really is. It clouds all right understanding.

“Ignorance is the deep delusion wherein we here so long are circling round, ” says the Buddha.

When ignorance is destroyed and turned into knowingness, all causality is shattered as in the case of the Buddhas and Arahants.

In the Itivuttaka [3] the Buddha states — “Those who have destroyed delusion and broken through the dense darkness, will wander no more: causality exists no more for them.”

Ignorance of the past, future, both past and future and “The Dependent Origination” is also regarded as Avijjā.

Dependent on ignorance, arise conditioning activities (samkhārā).

Samkharā is a multisignificant term which should be understood according to the context. Here the term signifies immoral (akusala), moral (kusala) and unshakable (āne?a) volitions (cetanā) which constitute Kamma that produces rebirth. The first embraces all volitions in the twelve types of immoral consciousness; the second, all volitions in the eight types of Beautiful (sobhana) moral consciousness and the five types of moral rūpajhāna consciousness; the third, all volitions in the four types of moral arūpajhāna consciousness.

Samkhārā, as one of the five aggregates, implies fifty of the fifty-two mental states, excluding feeling and perception.

There is no proper English equivalent which gives the exact connotation of this Pāli term.

The volitions of the four supramundane Path consciousness (lokuttara maggacitta) are not regarded as samkhārā because they tend to eradicate ignorance. Wisdom (pa?ā) is predominant in supramundane types of consciousness while volition (cetanā) is predominant in the mundane types of consciousness.

All moral and immoral thoughts, words and deeds are included in samkhārā. Actions, whether good or bad, which are directly rooted in, or indirectly tainted with ignorance, and which must necessarily produce their due effects, tend to prolong wandering in Samsāra. Nevertheless, good deeds, freed from greed, hate and delusion, are necessary to get rid of the ills of life. Accordingly the Buddha compares His Dhamma to a raft whereby one crosses the ocean of life. The activities of Buddhas and Arahants, however, are not treated as samkhārā as they have eradicated ignorance.

Ignorance is predominant in immoral activities, while it is latent in moral activities. Hence both moral and immoral activities are regarded as caused by ignorance.

Dependent on past conditioning activities, arises relinking or rebirth-consciousness (patisandhi-vi?āna) in a subsequent birth. It is so called because it links the past with the present, and is the initial consciousness one experiences at the moment of conception.

Vi?āna strictly denotes the nineteen types of rebirth-consciousness (patisandhi-vi?āna) described in the Abhidhamma. All the thirty-two types of resultant consciousness (vipāka citta) experienced during lifetime, are also implied by the term.

The foetus in the mother’s womb is formed by the combination of this relinking-consciousness with the sperm and ovum cells of the parents. In this consciousness, are latent all the past impressions, characteristics and tendencies of that particular individual life-flux.

This rebirth-consciousness is regarded as pure  as it is either devoid of immoral roots of lust, hatred, and delusion [5] or accompanied by moral roots. [6]

Simultaneous with the arising of the relinking-consciousness there occur mind and matter (nāma-rūpa) or, as some scholars prefer to say, “corporeal organism.”

The second and third factors (samkhārā and vi?āna) pertain to the past and present lives of an individual. The third and fourth factors (vi?āna and nāma-rūpa) on the contrary, are contemporaneous.

This compound nāma-rūpa should be understood as nāma (mind) alone, rūpa (matter) alone, and nāma-rūpa (mind and matter) together. In the case of Formless Planes (arūpa) there arises only mind; in the case of Mindless (asa?a) Planes, only matter; in the case of Sentient Realm (kāma) and Realms of Form (rūpa), both mind and matter.

Nāma here means the three aggregates — feeling (vedanā), perception (sa?a) and mental states (samkhārā) — that arise simultaneous with the relinking-consciousness. Rūpa means the three decads — kāya (body), bhāva (sex), and vatthu (seat of consciousness) — that also arise simultaneous with the relinking-consciousness, conditioned by past Kamma.

The body-decad is composed of the four elements –namely, 1. the element of extension (pathavi), 2. the element of cohesion (āpo), 3. the element of heat (tejo), 4. the element of motion (vāyo); its four derivatives (upādā rūpa) — namely, 5. colour (vanna), 6. odour (gandha), 7. taste (rasa), 8. nutritive essence (ojā), 9. vitality (jīvitindriya) and 10. body (kāya).

Sex-decad and base decad also consist of the first nine and sex (bhāva) and seat of consciousness (vatthu) respectively.

From this it is evident that sex is determined by past Kamma at the very conception of the being.

Here kāya means the sensitive part of the body (pasāda).

Sex is not developed at the moment of conception but the potentiality is latent. Neither the heart nor the brain, the supposed seat of consciousness, has been evolved at the moment of conception, but the potentiality of the seat is latent.

In this connection it should be remarked that the Buddha did not definitely assign a specific seat for consciousness as He has done with the other senses. It was the cardiac theory (the view that the heart is the seat of consciousness) that prevailed in His time, and this was evidently supported by the Upanishads.

The Buddha could have accepted the popular theory, but He did not commit Himself. In the Patthāna, the Book of Relations, the Buddha refers to the seat of consciousness, in such indirect terms as “yam rūpam nissāya — depending on that material thing”, without positively asserting whether that rūpa was either the heart (hadaya) or the brain. But, according to the view of commentators like Venerable Buddhaghosa and Anuruddha, the seat of consciousness is definitely the heart. It should be understood that the Buddha neither accepted nor rejected the popular cardiac theory.

During the embryonic period the six sense-bases (salāyatana) gradually evolve from these psycho-physical phenomena in which are latent infinite potentialities. The insignificant infinitesimally small speck now develops into a complex six senses-machine.

Human machine is very simple in its beginning but very complex in its end. Ordinary machines, on the other hand, are complex in the beginning but very simple in the end. The force of a finger is sufficient to operate even a most gigantic machine.

The six-senses-human machine now operates almost mechanically without any agent like a soul to act as the operator. All the six senses — eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind — have their respective objects and functions. The six sense-objects such as forms, sounds, odours, sapids, tangibles and mental objects collide with their respective sense-organs giving rise to six types of consciousness.

The conjunction of the sense-bases, sense-objects and the resultant consciousness is contact (phassa) which is purely subjective and impersonal.

The Buddha states:

“Because of eye and forms, visual consciousness arises; contact is the conjunction of the three. Because of ear and sounds, arises auditory consciousness; because of nose and odours, arises olfactory consciousness; because of tongue and sapids, arises gustatory consciousness; because of body and tangibles, arises tactile consciousness; because of mind and mental objects, arises mind-consciousness. The conjuction of these three is contact. (Samyutta Nikāya, part ii, p. 70; Kindred Sayings, part ii, p. 50.)

It should not be understood that mere collision is contact (na sangatimatto eva phasso).

Dependent on contact, feelings (vedanā) arise.

Strictly speaking, it is feeling that experiences an object when it comes in contact with the senses. It is this feeling that experiences the desirable or undesirable fruits of an action done in this or in a previous birth. Besides this mental state there is no soul or any other agent to experience the result of the action.

Feeling or, as some prefer to say, sensation, is a mental state common to all types of consciousness. Chiefly there are three kinds of feeling — namely pleasurable (somanassa), unpleasurable (domanassa), and neutral (adukkhamasukha). With physical pain (dukkha) and physical happiness (sukha) there are altogether five kinds of feelings. The neutral feeling is also termed upekkhā which may be indifference or equanimity.

According to Abhidhamma there is only one type of consciousness accompanied by pain. Similarly there is only one accompanied by happiness. Two are connected with an unpleasurable feeling. Of the 89 types of consciousness, in the remaining 85 are found either a pleasurable or a neutral feeling

It should be understood here that Nibbānic bliss is not associated with any kind of feeling. Nibbānic bliss is certainly the highest happiness (Nibbānam paramam sukham), but it is the happiness of relief from suffering. It is not the enjoyment of any pleasurable object.

Dependent on feeling, arises craving (tanhā) which, like ignorance, is the other most important factor in the “Dependent Origination.” Attachment, thirst, clinging are some renderings for this Pāli term.

Craving is threefold — namely, craving for sensual pleasures (kāmatanhā), craving for sensual pleasures associated with the view of eternalism, (bhavatanhā) i.e., enjoying pleasures thinking that they are imperishable, and craving for sensual pleasures with the view of nihilism (vibhavatanhā) i.e., enjoying pleasures thinking that everything perishes after death. The last is the materialistic standpoint.

Bhavatanhā and vibhavatanhā are also interpreted as attachment to Realms of Form (rūpabhava) and Formless Realms (arūpabhava) respectively. Usually these two terms are rendered by craving for existence and non-existence.

There are six kinds of craving corresponding to the six sense objects such as form, sound and so on. They become twelve when they are treated as internal and external. They are reckoned as 36 when viewed as past, present and future. When multiplied by the foregoing three kinds of craving, they amount to 108.

It is natural for a worldling to develop a craving for the pleasures of sense. To overcome sense-desires is extremely difficult.

The most powerful factors in the wheel of life are ignorance and craving, the two main causes of the Dependent Origination. Ignorance is shown as the past cause that conditions the present; and craving, the present cause that conditions the future.

Dependent on craving is grasping (upādāna) which is intense craving. Tanhā is like groping in the dark to steal an object. Upādāna corresponds to the actual stealing of the object. Grasping is caused by both attachment and error. It gives rise to the false notions, of “I” and “mine.”

Grasping is fourfold — namely, Sensuality, False Views, Adherence to rites and ceremonies, and the Theory of a soul.

The last two are also regarded as false views.

Dependent on grasping arises bhava which, literally, means becoming. It is explained as both moral and immoral actions which constitute Kamma (Kammabhava) — active process of becoming and the different planes of existence (upapattibhava) — passive process of becoming.

The subtle difference between samkhārā and kammabhava is that the former pertains to the past and the latter to the present life. By both are meant Kammic activities. It is only the Kammabhava that conditions the future birth.

Dependent on becoming arises birth (jāti) in a subsequent life. Birth strictly speaking, is the arising of the psycho-physical phenomena (khandhānam pātubhāvo). Old age and death (jarāmarana), are the inevitable results of birth.

If, on account of a cause, an effect arises, then, if the cause ceases, the effect also must cease.

The reverse order of the Paticca-Samuppāda will make the matter clear.

Old age and death are only possible in and with a psycho-physical organism, that is to say, a six-senses-machine. Such an organism must be born, therefore it presupposes birth. But birth is the inevitable result of past Kamma or action, which is conditioned by grasping due to craving. Such craving appears when feeling arises. Feeling is the outcome of contact between senses and objects.

Therefore it presupposes organs of sense which cannot exist without mind and body. Mind originates with a rebirth-consciousness, conditioned by activities, due to ignorance of things as they truly are.

The whole formula may be summed up thus:

Dependent on Ignorance arise Conditioning Activities.
Dependent on Conditioning Activities arises Relinking-Consciousness.
Dependent on Relinking-Consciousness arise Mind and Matter.
Dependent on Mind and Matter arise the six Spheres of Sense.
Dependent on the Six Spheres of Sense arises Contact.
Dependent on Contact arises Feeling.
Dependent on Feeling arises Craving.
Dependent on Craving arises Grasping.
Dependent on Grasping arise Actions (Kamma bhava).
Dependent on Actions arises Birth.
Dependent on Birth arise Decay, Death, Sorrow, Lamentation, Pain, Grief, and Despair.
Thus does the entire aggregate of suffering arise.

The complete cessation of Ignorance leads to the cessation of Conditioning Activities.
The cessation of Conditioning Activities leads to the cessation of Relinking-Consciousness.
The cessation of Relinking-Consciousness leads to the cessation of Mind and Matter.
The cessation of Mind and Matter leads to the cessation of the six Spheres of Sense.
The cessation of the six Spheres of Sense leads to the cessation of Contact.
The cessation of Contact leads to the cessation of Feeling.
The cessation of Feeling leads to the cessation of Craving.
The cessation of Craving leads to the cessation of Grasping.
The cessation of Grasping leads to the cessation of Actions.
The cessation of Actions leads to the cessation of Birth.
The cessation of Birth leads to the cessation of Decay, Death, Sorrow, Lamentation, Pain, Grief, and Despair.
Thus does the cessation of this entire aggregate of suffering result.

The first two of these twelve factors pertain to the past, the middle eight to the present, and the last two to the future.

Of them Moral and Immoral Activities (samkharā) and Actions (bhava) are regarded as Kamma.

Ignorance (avijjā), Craving (tanhā), and Grasping (upādāna) are regarded as Passions or Defilements (kilesa);

Relinking-Consciousness (patisandhivi?āna), Mind and Matter (nāma-rūpa), Spheres of Sense (salāyatana), Contact (phassa), Feeling (vedanā), Birth (jāti), Decay and Death (jarāmaranā) are regarded as Effects (vipāka).

Thus Ignorance, Activities, Craving, Grasping and Kamma, the five causes of the past, condition the present five effects (phala) — namely, Relinking-Consciousness, Mind and Matter, Spheres of Sense, Contact, and Feeling.

In the same way Craving, Grasping, Kamma, Ignorance, and Activities of the present condition the above five effects of the future.

This process of cause and effect continues ad infinitum. A beginning of this process cannot be determined as it is impossible to conceive of a time when this life-flux was not encompassed by ignorance. But when this ignorance is replaced by wisdom and the life-flux realizes the Nibbāna Dhatu, then only does the rebirth process terminate.

[7] Tis Ignorance entails the dreary round
— now here, now there — of countless births and
deaths.”
“But, no hereafter waits for him who knows!”

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Anthar Bhawaya – Ven Na Uyane Ariyadhamma Thero

Na_Uyane_Theroඅන්තර් භවය – නා උයනේ අරියධම්ම හිමියන්

නා උයනේ අරියධම්ම හිමියන් පෙළ දහමෙහි ඇතුළත් බුද්ධ දේශිත ධර්ම විනය අටුවා ටීකා සහිතව මැනවින් හදාරා දිගු කලක් බවුන් වැඩීමෙන් ලද ආධ්‍යාත්මික අත්දැකීම් ද ඇති මහ තෙර නමකි. කර්මය හා කර්ම විපාක, අපාය, දෙව්ලොව හා බඹලොව, මරණය හා පුනර්භවය, අන්තරාභවය හා මනෝකාය ආදී සංකල්ප පිළිබඳ උන්වහන්සේ පැවැසූ අදහස් “නොපෙනෙන ලොව සැබෑ තතු” නමින් “ආලෝකෝ උදපාදි” සමග ඔබට පුදමු.

ප‍්‍රශ්නය – කෙනෙකු මරණයට පත්වූවාට පසු ඔහුට ඉපදීමට සුදුසු ස්ථානයක් සකස් වී නොතිබුණොත් ඉපදීමට තැනක් සොයමින් අහසේ හැසිරෙන බවත්, එය අන්තර්භවය බවත්, ඇතැම් බහුශ‍්‍රැත ස්වාමීන් වහන්සේලා පවා ප‍්‍රකාශ කර තිබෙනවා. මොන තරම් ප‍්‍රසිද්ධ විශ්ව කීර්තියට පත් උගතෙක් කීවත් කොපමණ පොත් ලියා තිබුණත් මේ මතය තථාගත ධර්මයට කොච්චර සමීපද යන්න ධර්මය ගවේෂණය කරන උදවිය බුද්ධිමත්ව සිතා බැලිය යුතුයි. අන්තරාභව මතය නිසා මං මුලා වූ සියලු දෙනාගේ යහපත පිණිස අන්තර්භවය පිළිබඳ විමසීමේදී නාඋයනේ අරියධම්ම නාහිමිපාණන් වහන්සේ දුන් පිළිතුර මෙසේයි…………

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Abhidhamma Researches in Buddhist Psychology – Ven Nyanaponika Thera

The Abhidhamma Pitaka, or the Philosophical Collection, forms the third great section of the Buddhist Pàli Canon (Tipitaka). In its most characteristic parts it is a system of classifications, analytical enumerations and definitions, with no discursive treatment of the subject matter. In particular its two most important books, the Dhammasangaõã and the Paññhàna, have the appearance of huge collections of systematically arranged tabulations, accompanied by definitions of the terms used in the tables. This, one would expect, is a type of literature scarcely likely to gain much popular appreciation.

Yet there is the fact that the Abhidhamma was, and is, highly esteemed and even venerated in the countries of Theravàda Buddhism. Two examples taken from the chronicles of Ceylon illustrate that high regard for the Abhidhamma. In the 10th century A.C., on the order of King Kassapa V of Ceylon, the whole Abhidhamma Piñaka was inscribed on gold plates, and the first of these books, the Dhammasangaõã, was set with jewels. When the work was completed, the precious manuscripts were taken in a huge procession to a beautiful monastery and deposited there.

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Bauddayage Athpotha- Ven Rerukane Chandawimala Thero

bawddayage-athpothaබෞද්ධයාගේ අත්පොත

රේරුකානේ චන්දවිමල මහ නාහිමිගේ

මතු ඵල ලබනු සදහා කරන සෑම දෙයකින් ම උසස් ලෙස ඵල ලැබිය හැකි වන්නේ ඒ ඒ දෙය ගැන මනා දැනුම ඇති ව කරන තැනැත්තාට ය.

කරන දෙය ගැන හොද දැනුමක් නැති වැඩ කරන්නන්ගේ වියදම හා මහන්සිය බොහෝ සෙයින් නිෂ්පල වේ.

එසේ කරන දෙයින් ඵලයක් ලැබෙතත් ලැබෙන්නේ වියදමට මහන්සියට නො සරිලන අල්ප ඵලයකී.වරදවා කරන ප්‍රතිකාරයෙන් සමහරවිට රෝගියා මිය යන්නාක් මෙන් නොදැන කරන වැඩවලින් සමහරවිට විපතක් ද සිදුවේ.

බුද්ධාගම ඇදහීම වනාහී උසස් ලෞකික ලෝකෝත්තර ඵල ලබනු සදහා කරන්නකී.

ආගම ඇදහීමෙන් ලැබිය හැකි ඒ උසස් ඵල ආගම ගැන දැනුම නැති ව නොම නා ලෙස ආගම අදහන බෞද්ධයාට නො ලැබී යන්නේ ය.

සම්පූර්ණ පොත පහත පිවිසුමෙන් බා ගන්න.

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