The
Meaning of a Holy Statement of Lord Buddha
Dr.
Amartya Kumar Bhattacharya
BCE
(Hons.) ( Jadavpur ), MTech ( Civil ) ( IIT Kharagpur ), PhD ( Civil
) ( IIT Kharagpur ), Cert.MTERM ( AIT Bangkok ), CEng(I), FIE,
FACCE(I), FISH, FIWRS, FIPHE, FIAH, FAE, MIGS, MIGS – Kolkata
Chapter, MIGS – Chennai Chapter, MISTE, MAHI, MISCA, MIAHS, MISTAM,
MNSFMFP, MIIBE, MICI, MIEES, MCITP, MISRS, MISRMTT, MAGGS, MCSI,
MIAENG, MMBSI, MBMSM
Chairman
and Managing Director,
MultiSpectra
Consultants,
23,
Biplabi Ambika Chakraborty Sarani,
Kolkata
– 700029, West Bengal, INDIA.
E-mail:
dramartyakumar@gmail.com
Website:
https://multispectraconsultants.com
Lord
Buddha said 'Whoever sees Dependent Origination, he sees the Dhamma;
whoever sees the Dhamma, he sees Dependent Origination.' It is the
aim of this article to explain the meaning of the above Holy
Statement of Lord Buddha.
This
statement of Lord Buddha is reported by Venerable Sariputta in the
Sutta Pitaka of the Pali Tipitaka.
Now,
it must be clearly understood that Dependent Origination is
fundamental to Lord Buddha's philosophy. Suffering arises dependent
on other factors and also ceases dependent on other factors. It is
Dependent Origination that makes the extermination of suffering
possible. Therefore, it is Dependent Origination that makes Nirvana
possible. Thus, Dependent Origination, which meshes well with
impermanence which is another key teaching of Lord Buddha, is
co-extensive with Dhamma.
The
above statement of Lord Buddha, together with another statement of
His made in a totally different situation 'Whoever sees the Dhamma,
sees me; whoever sees me, sees the Dhamma', are combined in the
Mahayana Rice Sapling Sutra where Venerable Sariputta asks the
meaning of the combined statement to Bodhisattva Maitreya. I do not
fully agree with Bodhisattva Maitreya's answer and do not aprove of
the proto-Tantric elements in Bodhisattva Maitreya's answer. This
Mahayana scripture combines two statements made by Lord Buddha in two
different contexts which was one of the devices used by Mahayana
scriptures to get Mahayana scriptures accepted. Indeed, many Mahayana
scriptures tend to be hybrid texts, combining established teachings
with new innovations.
The
word Dhamma can have more than just one meaning. When written with a
lower-case d, dhamma can also mean any element of the universe, that
is, Samsara. Every dhamma in Samsara is Dependently Originated and
conditioned. In contrast, Nirvana is unconditioned. The word dhammata
means the quality or characteristic of a dhamma. The dhammata of all
dhammas is that every dhamma in the universe, Samsara, is Dependently
Originated and conditioned. The word dhammata is a neutral word - it
does not make any assertion as to whether a dhamma is empty or not.
The moment one says that the dhammata of a dhamma is emptiness, as
does Mahayana, one is making a definite commitment as regards the
dhammata of a dhamma. In fact, if I were to spell out the difference
between Theravada and Mahayana in just one sentence, it is that
Theravada accepts only Pudgalanairatmya whereas Mahayana accepts both
Pudgalanairatmya and Dharmanairatmya.
I
have previously proved in a published article of mine that the soul,
as conceived in Hinduism - and that includes the Hindu Bhagavat Gita,
is empty. Carrying that discussion to its logical extremity, the
emptiness of the soul allows us to make sense of some of the stickier
elements of this Hindu text. For example, it is said in the Bhagavat
Gita that the soul cannot be cut, burnt, etc. Why? Because the soul
is empty. Emptiness cannot be cut, burnt, etc. Thus, to explain some
elements of the Bhagavat Gita satisfactorily, we must take recourse
to Buddhism. Also, the Bhagavat Gita implies, after giving a line of
Hindu Samkhya philosophy, that the soul is not the owner of karma.
Why? Because the soul is empty. Emptiness cannot be the owner of
anything. The emptiness of the Hindu soul takes it very close to Lord
Buddha's teaching of Anatta. The fit of early Hindu texts borrowing
Buddhist materials appears even tighter when we find that in the Yoga
Sutra, an ostensibly Hindu text written by Patanjali, certain
materials are lifted from Lord Buddha's mouth ( Lord Buddha talked
about the Four Sublime Abodes, which are Metta, Karuna, Mudita and
Upekkha, and Patanjali writes exactly the same four, Maitri, Karuna,
Mudita and Upeksha in his Yoga Sutra ) and much of Lord Buddha's
concepts are interspersed throughout the text. Of course, there is
Hindu Samkhya influence also in the Yoga Sutra.
Lord
Buddha admitted the existence of suffering in the world. In fact,
that suffering is Dependently Originated. Lord Buddha famously talked
about the twelve links of Dependent Origination starting with
ignorance and ending in suffering. But in the same breadth, Lord
Buddha also talked about the cessation of ignorance eventuating in
the cessation of suffering. To put a man's duty succinctly, Lord
Buddha's injunction is simple: Suffering exists, end ( Nirodha ) it.
How? By following the Noble Eightfold Path. Thus, it is the Holy Duty
of each man not to accept, fear or succumb to suffering but to end,
Nirodha, any suffering that exists and to achieve Nirvana. That is
the Sat, meaning True, Dharma or, using the grammatical Sandhi,
Saddharma. Saddharma is another name for Buddhism.
©
Bhattacharya International Buddhist Foundation, 2020.
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