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The
Teacher of Gods and Men
25.
A message, no matter how logical or true, is useless if it cannot
be communicated to others. In the Dharma we have a perfect teaching,
and in the Buddha we have a perfect teacher, and the combination
of these two meant that within a short time of being first proclaimed,
the Dharma became remarkably widespread. The Buddha was the first
religious teacher who meant his message to be proclaimed to all
humankind and who made a concrete effort to do this. The Buddha
was the first religious Universalist. He told his first disciples
to spread the Dharma far and wide.
Go
forth for the good of the many, for the happiness of the many,
out of compassion for the world, for the welfare, the good and
the happiness of gods and men. Let no two of you go in the same
direction. Teach the Dharma which is beautiful in the beginning,
beautiful in the middle and beautiful at the end. Proclaim both
the letter and the spirit of the holy life completely fulfilled
and perfectly pure.[ N1
]
He
also hoped that after his final Nirvana the teachings would
continue to spread and he instructed his disciples, both ordained
and lay, accordingly.
I
shall not die until the monks, the nuns, the laymen and the
laywomen have become deeply learned, wise and well-trained,
remembering the teachings, proficient in the lesser and greater
doctrines and virtuous; until, having learned the teachings
themselves, they are able to tell it to others, teach it, make
it known, establish it, open it up, explain it and make it clear;
until they are able to refute false doctrines taught by others
and are able to spread the convincing and liberating truth abroad.
I shall not die until the holy life has become successful, prosperous,
undespised and popular; until it has become well proclaimed
among both gods and men.[ N2
]
26.
The Buddha's motive in proclaiming the Dharma was compassion.
He said: "Whatever has had to be done by a teacher out of
compassion, for the welfare of his disciples, I have done for
you."[ N3 ]
He saw humans as being limited by their greed, tormented by their
hatred and misled by their delusion and he knew that if they could
hear the Dharma and practise it they could become happy, virtuous
and free. This compassion turned the Buddha into a tireless and
skilful teacher and studying his techniques of teaching can not
only help us in our efforts to proclaim the Dharma to others but
also deepen our appreciation for this most compassionate and wise
of men.
27.
The Buddha would approach people according to their needs and
dispositions. Generally, good people would come to see him while
he would go out to meet bad people or those in distress. In both
cases, he would first give what was called a talk on preliminaries
(anupubbikatha), that is, "about generosity, virtue, heaven,
about the dangers of desires and the advantages of giving them
up."[ N4 ]
This allowed the Buddha to know the listeners' level of intelligence
and receptivity. If the response was good, he would then, "teach
that Dharma which is unique to the enlightened ones - suffering,
its cause, its overcoming and the way leading to its overcoming."
28.
Often the Buddha would talk to groups or individuals giving what
we would call a sermon or engaging in dialogue, asking and answering
questions. The people he talked with always found him "welcoming,
speaking kindly, courteous, genial, clear and ready to speak."[
N5 ] When he met people strongly
attached to their views and whom he knew he could not change,
he would suggest discussing points of agreement so as to avoid
fruitless arguments. At such times he would say: "About these
things there is no agreement, therefore, let us put them aside.
About the things on which we agree let us take up and talk about."[
N6 ] Sometimes rather than
talk about his own Dharma he would invite his opponents to explain
their teachings first. At a time when there was great competition
and jealousy among different religions, the Buddha's fairness
often caused surprise. Once a group of ascetics met the Buddha
and their leader asked him to explain his Dharma. The Buddha said:
"Better still, tell me about your teachings." The ascetics
were astonished and said to each other: "It is wonderful,
truly marvellous, how great is the ascetic Gotama in that he will
hold back his own views and invite others to explain theirs."[
N7 ] When people asked a
particularly appropriate or relevant question he would praise
them, thereby encouraging discussion, questioning and inquiry.
When Bhadda asked such a question, the Buddha replied, "Well
said! Well said, friend Bhadda! Your understanding is welcome.
Your wisdom is welcome."[ N8
]
29.
Debates were a very common feature of religious life in ancient
India and large crowds would gather to hear speakers defend their
own doctrines against the attacks of their opponents or critics.
Sometimes passions became quite heated during these debates with
one party trying to shout down or ridicule the other. Because
a speaker's pride and reputation was at stake, those who participated
in these debates were sometimes prepared to engage in trickery
in order to win or at least give the impression of winning. A
monk called Hatthaka used to enjoy debating but eventually he
suffered several defeats. After that he would arrange to meet
his opponents at a particular time, show up several hours earlier
and then boast to his admirers that his opponents were too frightened
to confront him.[ N9
] It was probably for these reasons that during the early
part of his career the Buddha avoided such debates.[
N10 ]
But
gradually as his Dharma became more popular and began to be challenged
or misrepresented by ascetics of other sects, he began to frequent
debates. In fact, he was soon recognised as the most persuasive
debater of his time. Certain rules governed the conduct of debates
and the Buddha always abided by these rules and expected others
to follow them also. When a young man named Canki kept interjecting
while the Buddha was debating with some learned Brahmins, he turned
to him and said firmly: "Quiet, Canki! Do not interrupt while
we are speaking."[ N11
] If on being asked a question for the third time a person
could still not answer, the Buddha would insist that they admit
defeat as was the rule.[ N12
] Once he asked an ascetic if he readily believed in the
view he held, the ascetic said, "I believe it and so do all
these people," as he pointed at the large audience. The Buddha
said, "What they believe is not the point. Is that your view?"[
N13 ]But of course the Buddha's
purpose was not to defeat his opponents but to lead them to a
clearer understanding. To this end he would often use what is
called the Socratic method, so called because in the West it was
first used by the Greek philosopher Socrates, asking clearer questions
as a means of leading people to an insight or to prove a point.
For example, once during a discussion, a Brahmin named Sonadanda
proclaimed: "A true Brahmin has pure ancestry, he is well-versed
in the sacred scriptures, he is fair in colour, he is virtuous,
he is wise and he is an expert in the rituals." The Buddha
asked: "Could a person lack one of these qualities and still
be considered a Brahmin?" Sonadanda thought for a moment
and then admitted that one could have a dark complexion and still
be a Brahmin. Continuing to ask the same question, Sonadanda was
led to the same view as the Buddha's, that it is not ancestry,
knowledge, colour or social status that makes one superior but
virtue and wisdom.[ N14
]
30.
Humour plays an important part in mental health as it does in
effective communication. Consequently, it is not surprising to
find the Buddha sometimes including humour in his teaching. His
discourses contain clever puns, amusing stories and a good deal
of irony. After King Ajatasattu had killed his father and started
to become suspicious that his own son might be plotting to kill
him, he began to realise that the fruits of worldly ambition could
be bitter and went to seek guidance from the Buddha. He asked:
"Sir, can you show me any benefits of the monk's life that
can be seen here and now?" The Buddha replied by asking him
a question: "If you had a slave who ran away and became a
monk and later, on finding out where he was, would you have him
arrested and brought back?" "Certainly not," replied
the king, "on the contrary, I would stand up for him, respect
him and offer to provide him with his needs." "Well
there," said the Buddha, "that is one of the benefits
of being a monk that can be seen here and now."[
N15 ] The humorous vein of
this answer was clearly meant to put Ajatasattu at his ease, lift
him out of his gloom and make him receptive to the fuller and
more serious answer that the Buddha then proceeded to give. The
Buddha often poked good-natured fun at the pretensions of the
Brahmins and the absurdity of some of their beliefs. When they
claimed to be superior to others because they were born from God's
mouth, the Buddha would comment: "But you were born from
the womb of your mother just like everyone else."[
N16 ] He told stories in
which he portrayed the all-knowing God of the Brahmins as being
embarrassed and not a little annoyed at being asked a question
he could not answer.[ N17
] When Brahmins said that they could wash away their sins
by bathing in sacred rivers, he joked that the water might wash
away their good deeds also.
31.
Another characteristic of the Buddha's method of teaching was
his use of similes and metaphors. Drawing upon his wide interest
in and knowledge of the world in which he lived, he used a rich
variety of similes and metaphors to clarify his teachings and
make them more memorable. For example, he compared a person who
fails to practise the teachings he proclaimed to a beautiful flower
without fragrance.[ N18
] We should replace negative thoughts, the Buddha said,
with positive ones, just as a carpenter knocks a peg out of a
hole with a second peg.[ N19
] He was also skilled at using whatever was at hand to
make a point or dramatise or make clear his meaning. Prince Abhaya
once asked the Buddha if he had ever said anything that made people
feel unhappy. At the time the prince was holding his baby son
on his knee. The Buddha looked at the child and said: "If
your son put a stone in his mouth, what would you do?" Prince
Abhaya replied: "I would get it out straight away even if
I had to hurt the child. And why? Because it could be a danger
to the child and I have compassion for him." Then the Buddha
explained that sometimes he would say things that people needed
to be told but did not like to hear, but that his motive was always
compassion for that person.[ N20
]
32.
Another characteristic of the Buddha's skilful way of teaching
was his ability to give a new or practical meaning to old ideas
or practices and to reinterpret things in order to make them relevant.
When someone asked him what the most powerful blessing was, rather
than mention various charms or mantras, as they expected, the
Buddha said that to act with honesty, kindness and integrity would
bless one. When he was accused of teaching annihilation he agreed
that he did, but then qualified his agreement by explaining that
he taught the annihilation of greed, hatred and delusion.[
N21 ] The Buddha used terms
like Brahmin and outcaste (vasala) not in the way they were used
by the supporters of the caste system but to indicate a person's
virtue or lack of it.[ N22
]
33.
In some religions, it is only necessary to believe in order to
be saved, while in Buddhism, Nirvana can only be attained through
understanding. As such, those who came to hear the Buddha teach
and who became his disciples tended to be the better educated
lay men and women, and the intellectuals of the time. The Dharma,
the Buddha said, had "to be understood by the wise each for
himself (paccattam veditabho vinnuhi)."[
N23 ]But this did not mean
that the Buddha had nothing to say to the unsophisticated. On
the contrary, with his skill and creativity, he was able to make
his message intelligible to people of all levels of understanding,
even to children, and as a result people of all types became his
disciples. So successful was he in fact, that some of the other
teachers of his time accused him of using magic to lure their
disciples away.[ N24
]
34.
Because the Buddha's motive in teaching the Dharma was compassion
and because his compassion was infinite, he never tired in his
efforts to proclaim it or explain it to others. Only a few months
before his final Nirvana he said:
"There are some who say that as long as a man is young, he
possesses lucidity of wisdom, but as he ages that wisdom begins
to fade. But this is not so. I am now worn, old, aged, I have
lived my life and am now towards the end of my life, being about
eighty. Now if I had four disciples who were to live for a hundred
years and if, during that time, they were to ask me questions
about the four foundations of mindfulness, except when they were
eating, drinking, answering the call of nature or sleeping, I
would still not finish explaining Dharma. Even if you have to
carry me about on a stretcher there will be no change in the lucidity
of wisdom. If anyone were to speak rightly of me they could say:
'A being not liable to delusion has arisen in the world, for the
good of the many, for the happiness of the many, out of compassion
for the world, for the good and the happiness of gods and men.'"[
N25 ]
35.
And he was true to his words in this respect. As he lay dying,
a man approached him to ask a question. Ananda and the other disciples
held him back saying that the Buddha was tired and ill, but when
the Buddha saw this, he beckoned the man forward and answered
his questions.[ N26
]The Buddha's great gift to humankind was the truth and
his compassion motivated him to give it to all who were willing
to receive it.
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