HOME Abhidhamma.org CONTENTSBANNER OF THE ARAHANTSChapter IVThe Sangha and the Spread of Buddhism[continued 1] Here
is a chart showing the classification of the Basket of Discipline and the
Basket of Discourses as we have them now:- Vinaya-Pitaka[5] - Basket of Discipline
Sutta-Pitaka[6] - Basket of the Doctrine or Discourses
When
the business of recitation and classification had been concluded venerable
Ananda said that the Buddha before his Parinibbána had allowed the
abolishment of the „minor and lesser rules“. But he had not been mindful
enough to ask which were these rules. Then the assembly expressed various
opinions on this matter at which venerable Maha-Kassapa spoke these words:
‘Let the Sangha hear me, friends; there are certain of our training rules
that involve laymen, by which laymen know what is allowed to Bhikkhus who are
sons of the Sakiyans and what is not. If we abolish these minor and lesser
rules, there will be those who say, „The Training Rule proclaimed by the
Samana Gotama to his disciples existed only for the period ending with his
cremation: they kept his training rules as long as he was present; but now
that he has finally attained Nibbána they have given up keeping his training
rules“. If it seems proper to the Sangha, let not what is undeclared be
declared, and let not what is declared be abolished; let the Sangha proceed
according to the training rules as they have been declared“[7]
(Vinaya Pit. Cv. Kh II). This motion was accepted by the Council and is the
ruling still in Theravada countries, being the reason why the Sangha in those
lands has changed least in its form and still preserves the original teachings
and practices of the Buddha. So it
is due to the wisdom of the Arahants in that Council and to the diligence of
successive generations of Bhikkhus that the Dhamma has been transmitted to us
today. But for their great efforts there would be no teachings of the Buddha
remaining, for who could have preserved them? Only the Sangha had the freedom
and time to pass on this great body of teaching. Out of gratitude to them many
passages and lines in Buddhist devotion are respectfully chanted, such as:
„I revere that Noble group who are perfectly purified“. Only
five hundred Arahants attended the Council but there were at that time tens of
thousands of Bhikkhus, some of them also with great followings. We have a
picture of one of these Teacher-monks in a little incident recorded at the end
of the account of this Council. Venerable Púrana came to the Council-elders
when they had finished. He was asked, „Friend Púrana, the Dhamma-Vinaya
have been rehearsed by the elders. Do you support that rehearsal?“ His
rather cryptic reply was, „Friends, the Dhamma-Vinaya have been well
rehearsed by the elders I, however, shall remember them as I heard them from
the Blessed One’s own lips“. Here
is the beginning of the many slightly differing Buddhist traditions, which
were later found in India. The Buddha had already allowed Bhikkhus to learn
his teaching in their own dialects[8],
a fact which could easily make for varying traditions in course of time; no
doubt with the slow communications of those days and the Sangha spread far and
wide this tendency would be increased. But variation in the texts (the
original meaning of the word Pali) established by that First Council would be
more difficult since large numbers of Teacher-monks, some of them Noble Ones,
know them by heart. There
follows a period of one hundred years about which we have very little
information. We have to picture Bhikkhus steadily spreading out from the
Middle Country into the surrounding areas. Already in the days of the Buddha
we find venerable Mahá-Kaccána in North central India, in the area where the
famous stupas of Sanchi are found. But he had difficulty to assemble ten
Bhikkhus there for an Acceptance ceremony and only managed it after three
years. Then the story of venerable Punna, who went on the long journey to
Sunaparanta and who was such a successful Dhammadúta, will be told at the end
of this chapter. The Buddha himself taught as far West as the country of the
Kurus which was around New Delhi, while he had at least one pupil, Báhiya Dáruciriya,
who heard about him as far away as Bombay. So even in the Buddha time Bhikkhus
were travelling far afield. The
Second Council was held one hundred years after the first. It is known as the
council of the seven hundred since that number of Arahants participated. The
reason for calling it was the wrong Vinaya practices of the Vajji Bhikkhus in
Vesáli. They had started to practise Vinaya in ways, which would be
comfortable for themselves, and the stricter Bhikkhus saw that this could
easily lead the Sangha into decline. What did they do? The most important
things are as follows. They ate after noon, so long as the shadow cast by the
sun was not past the meridian by more than two finger breadths. The Buddha
laid down that the Bhikkhu’s food must be finished by midday. He could eat
more than once in the period from dawn to that time but he must have finished
his food when the shadow cast by the sun is shortest. Without such a rule and
with the strength of attachment people have to food, some Bhikkhus would have
taken afternoon tea, dinner and supper too! So this lengthening of two
mealtimes was a danger - and showed lack of restraint and contentment. In
large monasteries the Vajjian Bhikkhus said that it was allowable for
different groups of Bhikkhus to do the Uposatha ceremony - which is confession
of offences followed by the recitation of the 227 rules of the Pátimokkha,
separately and in different places. This ceremony, which is held on each Full
Moon and Now Moon day, the Buddha said must be attended by all the Bhikkhus in
a monastery. To do as the Vajjians would only encourage the formation of
parties and sectarian differences. The Vajjians also allowed official acts of
the Sangha to be carried out in the absence of some Bhikkhus who resided
within the boundary of the monastery, expecting that they would agree
afterwards. This is also a dangerous practice probably leading to contentions.
The Buddha had laid down that Bhikkhus who could not be present, for instance,
at the Uposatha or an Acceptance ceremony, could send their consent by way of
another Bhikkhu. Again, the Vajjian Bhikkhus stated that one could do things,
proper or improper, taking one’s Teacher as one’s example. The Buddha
never agreed to ‘blindly following a guru’ - which is typically an Indian
trait; he told people to question even his own actions to see whether the
influence of greed, aversion and delusion could be seen in them. One’s
Teacher should be followed therefore when he practises according to Dhamma but
if he does things contrary to Dhamma then, respectfully, he could be advised
what it would be better to do. The last of the Vajjian Bhikkhus’ practices
was to accept gold and silver - meaning money. This is a great danger for a
Bhikkhu as he is then in the same position with sense-pleasures as the
layperson. He will be able, apparently, ‘to buy happiness’. By making it
an offence for a Bhikkhu to possess or handle money the Buddha has pointed to
the real source of happiness, a mind purified through meditation: not one
scattered through indulgence in sensual pleasures. These are some of the
Vajjians ten wrong practices. The
Council met and condemned them all, showing that they were offences under
various headings in the Vinaya. Also, the Dhamma and Vinaya were rehearsed
again and a few late discourses, given by different Bhikkhus after the Great
Parinibbána, must have been added on this occasion. Possibly small books in
the Minor Collection like the Lineage of the Buddhas (Buddhavamsa) and the
Collection of Ways of Practice (Cariyapitaka) were also added at this time.
And two non-canonical works[9],
which are manuals to guide one in composing commentaries perhaps, come from
this period. These books contain quotations of the Buddha-word, which cannot
now be traced in the Pali Canon. Here, it seems, some discourses have been
lost but where and how we shall probably never know. A
great assembly of Bhikkhus must have been attracted to the town of Vesáli by
the presence of so many Arahants in solemn assembly. Among them the decisions
of these enlightened senior Bhikkhus did not go unchallenged. We read in the
Chronicles of Sri Lanka that the Vajjian Bhikkhus and their supporters, out of
their conceit, did not accept the decisions of the Arahants and decided to
hold their own meeting, the Great Assembly, calling themselves the ‘Great
Assemblists’ (Mahásanghikas). By doing so they became guilty of causing the
first great schism in the Sangha. To cause schism is not only to burden
oneself with a serious offence (see under the thirteen offences entailing
initial and subsequent meeting of the Sangha, in Chapter III) but also is
among the heaviest kinds of evil kamma that can be made.[10]
The immediate result of splitting the Sangha is to be born without fail in
one’s next life in hell. And in
an effort to besmirch the purity of the Arahants and the original tradition
they represented, the rebel party’s account of the proceedings (not in Pali)
omitted all mention of their deficiencies in Vinaya but discussed instead some
supposed deficiencies in the Arahants! The
Chronicle of the Island (of Sri Lanka, the Dípavamsa) says this about them:
„The Bhikkhus of the Great Assembly made a reversed teaching. They broke up
the original collection (of the Buddha-word) and made another collection. They
put the Sutta collected in one place elsewhere. They broke up the sense and
the doctrine in the Five Collections“. Scholars
considering the evidence found in early Mahásanghika texts are now aware that
it is from the party of the Great Assembly (mahásanghika) that Maháyána,
the Great Vehicle, grew up. This matter however belongs to the history of
Buddhist thought, so we must leave it here. It remains only to say that the
schismatics, as so often seen in other religions, were themselves rent by
schisms until Buddhist authors could talk of the eighteen schools of the
disciples (sávaka). The
doctrinal differences in many cases were not very great as can be seen from
the Book of Discussions (Kathávatthu)[11]
in the Theravada Abhidhamma. It is unlikely that these many minor points, or
the minor variants in discipline among the different schools will have made
much impact upon lay people. Most of these matters will have been of interest
only to the more scholastic Bhikkhus. One suspects that many Bhikkhus with
more practical interests will have taken little or no part in these polemics,
the sort of wrangling of which the Buddha had never approved. He had condemned
the holding of views and opinions, which are only another extension of the
ego, but this is exactly what many later generations of Indian Buddhists did.
Much of it is politely called „Buddhist Philosophy“ these days. This only
made for weakness when the Dhamma was eventually confronted with the new
strength of the Brahmins and later, the violence of marauding Muslims. So if
one thinks of ‘Buddhist sects’, the sectarianism was confined to the
Bhikkhus, lay people generally being supporters of any good Teacher-Bhikkhu,
whatever his ‘sect’. And even amongst these Bhikkhus in spite of the
differences there was undoubtedly much contact and many friendships, for
Buddhists rarely lost sight of the Buddha’s teaching on the importance of
loving-kindness. The
Bhikkhus of all these groups headed by the original teaching, now called
Theravada, the Doctrine of the Elders, continued to spread the Dhamma from the
time of the Second until the Third Council. This
took place in the reign of the great Buddhist Emperor Asoka (reigned 325-288
BC). By this time it seems that differences in the Sangha were irreconcilable
for the Third Council consisted of Bhikkhus only from Theravada. The position
was that the Theravada Sangha had become famous for its purity of teaching and
practice and so had many wealthy patrons. The monasteries they erected were
splendid in construction and the comforts, which Bhikkhus could enjoy, still
without breaking the Vinaya, were ample. With good robes, food, shelter and
medicine provided by devoted followers, it is not surprising that the wrong
sort of people were attracted and many became Bhikkhus. Once they wore in
robes some of them began to display and propagate their wrong views so that
eventually there was such disharmony in the Sangha that it was no longer
possible to hold the Uposatha ceremony. This went on for several years until
venerable Moggaliputta Tissa, an Arahant, came to the notice of the Emperor.
He asked the venerable Arahant what should be done about the discord and was
told that if a meeting of the Sangha was held then a purification of its
members could be instituted. He told the Emperor to enquire from each Bhikkhu
what philosophical method the Buddha had practised and upheld. Any who stated
that he was an eternalist (believing in an eternal soul) or an annihilationist
(declaring that death is followed by nothing) or other such positions were to
be politely but firmly handed a pair of white cloths with the invitation to
disrobe themselves. Only those Bhikkhus who said that the Buddha was an
analyst, a proclaimer of an analytical way (vibhajjavádi), were to continue
as Bhikkhus. We do not know how this sorting out of the Bhikkhus was organised
but the Great Chronicle (of Sri Lanka, the Mahávamsa) tells us that large
numbers of Bhikkhus were disrobed. Presumably this refers only to people
masquerading as Theravada Bhikkhus but maybe this purification of the Sangha
also affected some of the other schools, which would also have agreed that the
Buddha was a Vibhajjavádin. When
the Sangha was again in harmony, the Uposatha ceremony was held and the
Dhamma-Vinaya rehearsed as it had been in the two previous councils. In this
council certainly the Abhidhamma was completed since venerable Moggaliputta
Tissa added to it the Kathávatthu or Book of Discussions, already mentioned. Emperor
Asoka was not yet satisfied that he had done as much as he could do to support
the Buddha-dhamma so he requested that a number of groups of Bhikkhus be sent
in different directions both inside and outside his frontiers. He would see
that they had adequate support and protection while they should teach Dhamma
to all the peoples in his empire and to the various nations on his frontiers
and beyond. The Emperor states in his edicts engraved on stone that such
parties proceeded to the furthest points of the Maurya state and beyond to Sri
Lanka in the south, to the Golden Land in the east (perhaps Burma or
peninsular Thailand), to the Indo-Greek kingdoms on his north-west frontier
and also to the Hellenized lands of the far west - Syria, Egypt, North Africa,
Epirus and Macedonia. Regarding this latter expedition, the first Buddhist
mission to the West, we do not know how it fared so far away from India though
Christian writers have recorded the presence in Alexandria (Egypt) of Bhikkhus
before the Christianization programme that followed Constantine. The
group sent to Sri Lanka was very successful for the mission was headed by the
Emperor’s son, the Arahant Mahinda, who was able to teach and lead to the
Three Refuges the Sinhalese monarch,, Devanampiya-tissa. Thereafter, Sri Lanka
was the island of Dhamma (Dhammadípa) and the fortress in which was preserved
the original teachings of the Buddha under the name, Theraváda or Doctrine of
the Elders. This was forgotten in large parts of India where speculation,
metaphysics and logic combined with a taste for mystical experiences which
were not properly understood, provided the basis for all sorts of Buddhist
schools. As time went on those departed further and further from the
Buddha’s genuine teachings. We are
not sure what happened to the group sent to the Golden Land or exactly where
it was they went to. No Buddhist remains from the period of the Emperor Asoka
have yet been found in either Burma or Thailand (as far as the writer is
aware), but this does not mean that they do not exist. The Buddhist custom of
continually rebuilding monasteries and temples on the same site means that the
later buildings obscure the former, so Asokan remains may yet be found. In
Burma of course, the revered Shwe Dagon pagoda in Rangoon is held to go back
even beyond Asokan days - to the Buddha-time when the merchants Tapussa and
Bhallika, the first people to give food to the Buddha after his Enlightenment
and the first Buddhists, received from him some hair from his head which they
enshrined in their own country. This history, like that of the Buddha’s
three visits to Sri Lanka, still needs to be confirmed. However,
the general result of the Emperor’s efforts to stimulate Dhammadúta work
cannot be doubted. His royal support must have been of great value and given
many the chance to hear Dhamma who otherwise would not have known of it. But
it goes too far to state, as some authors have done, that it was due to the
Emperor that Buddhism began to spread, as though it had not been spread before
by Bhikkhus! The Dhamma would have spread anyway due to its universal appeal:
it did not have to wait for an emperor before it could spread! But the fact
that so powerful a king advocated the Dhamma would have lent it prestige in
the eyes of other kings and princes. We
have mentioned already some examples of Dhammadúta work from the days of the
Buddha. Here, as a conclusion to this chapter, is the story of one Bhikkhu
from the Buddha-time.
„Thus have I heard: At one time the Exalted One was staying near Sávatthi
at the Jeta Grove, Anáthapindika’s monastery. Then venerable Punna,
emerging from solitary meditation towards evening, approached the Lord, bowed
down to him and sat down nearby. Sitting there he spoke thus to the Lord:
„It would be good, revered sir, if the Lord would exhort me briefly so that
having heard Dhamma from the Lord, I might live alone, remote, diligent,
ardent and aspiring“.
„Punna, there are forms cognisable by the eye, sounds cognisable by
the ear, smells cognisable by the nose, tastes cognisable by the tongue,
touches cognisable by the body, mental factors cognisable by the mind, all of
which are agreeable, pleasant, enticing, connected with sense-pleasures,
alluring. If a Bhikkhu delights in them, welcomes them and persists in
clinging to them then because of this, attachment arises in him. From the
arising of attachment there is the arising of dukkha,
thus I declare, Punna. But if a Bhikkhu does not delight in them, does not
welcome them, does not persist in clinging to them then, because of this,
attachment ceases in him. From the cessation of attachment there is the
cessation of dukkha, thus I declare, Punna.
And in what district will you stay now that you have been briefly
exhorted by me?“
„There is a district called Sunaparanta - I shall stay there,
Lord“.
„The people of Sunaparanta are fierce and rough, Punna. If they
revile and abuse you, how will it be for you there?“
„If they revile and abuse me, revered sir, it will be like this for
me there - (I shall think) ‘Good indeed are the people of Sunaparanta, very
good are the Sunaparanta people, in that they do not give me blows with their
hands’. In this case, Lord, it will be like this for me, like this,
Wellfarer“.
„But if they do give you blows with their hands, how will it be with
you there?“
„If they give me blows with their hands … (I shall think), ‘Good
indeed are the people of Sunaparanta in that they do not give me blows with
clods of earth’.“
„But if they do give you blows with clods of earth … ?“
„If they give me blows with clods of earth … I shall think, ‘Good
indeed are the people of Sunaparanta in that they do not strike me with a
stick’.“
„But if they do strike you with a stick … ?“
„If they strike me with a stick … I shall think, ‘Good indeed are
the people of Sunaparanta in that they do not stab me with a dagger’.“
„But if they do stab you with a dagger … ?“
„If they stab me with a dagger … I shall think, ‘Good indeed are
the people of Sunaparanta in that they do not deprive me of life with a sharp
dagger’.“
„But if they do deprive you of life with a sharp dagger … ?“
„If they stab me with a sharp dagger and deprive me of life … I
shall think, ‘There are disciples of the Lord who when tormented by and
disgusted with the body (as when severely diseased) look around for a weapon
(to take their own lives). I have come upon this dagger without looking round
for it’. In this case, Lord, it will be like this for me, like this,
Wellfarer“.
I
„Good, Punna, it is good! You will be able to live in the Sunaparanta
district since you have such calm and tranquillity. Now you should do whatever
you think it is proper to do“. Then
venerable Punna gladdened by and rejoicing in the Exalted One’s words,
rising from his seat, bowed down to the Lord, circumambulated him keeping him
on the right, set in order his lodging and taking his bowl and robes, set off
on his journey to Sunaparanta. Journeying by stages he gradually approached
Sunaparanta. While he was there, venerable Punna stayed in that district among
the people and during the Rains he brought into (the Dhamma) about five
hundred laymen and five hundred laywomen. During the Rains, also, he realised
the Three Knowledges. After a time venerable Punna attained Final Nibbána. When
this had happened, many Bhikkhus approached the Lord, bowed down and sat down
nearby. Sitting there they spoke thus to the Lord: „Revered Sir, that young
man of excellent family who was briefly exhorted by the Lord, has died. What
is his born, what is his future state?“ „Punna
was wise, Bhikkhus. He followed Dhamma according to Dhamma. He did not harass
me with (senseless) queries on Dhamma. Punna has attained Final Nibbána“. Thus
spoke the Lord. Delighted, those Bhikkhus rejoiced in the Exalted One’s
words.“ (Middle
Length Collection, Discourse 145. The Exhortation to Punna) [5]For a detailed account see „An analysis of the Pali Canon“, by Russell Webb, Wheel 217/220. BPS. [6]Almost all books are available from the Pali Text Society. [7]In this last sentence venerable Mahá Kassapa is quoting the Buddha, see Appendix I, „Seven conditions for the non-decline of bhikkhus“. [8]See „Concept and Reality“, Bhikkhu Nyanannanda. B.P.S. pp. 41-45. [9]For these works, all P.T.S. publications, see „Chronicle of the Buddhas“ and „Basket of Conduct“ 1975; „The Guide“ (Nettippakarana) 1962; „Pitaka-disclosure“ (Petakopadesa) 1964. [10]Five kinds of kamma with immediate fruit: Killing one’s mother, killing one’s father, killing an Arahant, wounding a Buddha, causing schism in the Sangha. [11]Translated as „Points of Controversy“, P.T.S. London. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||