Any discussion of Buddhism must start with its founder, our historical Buddha, Shakyamuni Buddha (Chinese: 釋迦牟尼佛), also known as Siddhartha Gautama.
According to the results of an archaeological excavation at the Mayadevi Temple in Lumbini, Nepal, by Dr. Robin Coningham of Durham University, the exact birthplace of Shakyamuni Buddha was dated to the sixth century BC.
Buddha was born into an aristocratic family, with his father serving as the chieftain of the Shakya clan. Shortly after his birth, his father brought in a palace soothsayer, who told him that his son would grow up to be either a great political or religious leader. His father, keen to have his son follow in his footsteps as a political leader, decided to shield him from the harsh realities of the outside world and restricted his movements, keeping him from leaving the palace. In addition, he pampered his son with luxury and beautiful maidens who pleased him with their physical beauty, music, dancing, etc. Yet, these temptations did not move the young prince. Eventually, when he was twenty-nine, the young prince finally convinced his father to let him out of the palace. On four subsequent trips, he experienced what became known as the Four Sights, which profoundly changed his life.
During the trip, he encountered an aging old man, sickness, and a corpse. His charioteer, Channa, explained to him that aging is part of everyone’s life. Finally, he saw a mendicant monk. Channa told him that this person had renounced worldly comforts, pleasures, and luxuries in exchange for a spiritual life, seeking answers to the existential suffering the prince had observed.
During the trip, the young prince meditated for the first time. According to the commentator, “the story recalled that he watched the farmer plowing. He saw the toil and effort, the struggle and the repetitions of this back-breaking work, something he never seen in the palace. He managed to slip from the festivities and be alone. This first experience of real life had a profound effect on him. To everyone else, this was a celebration. But to Siddhartha, it symbolized something quite different. He felt his mind leading him to a meditative state. He watched the plow cut a path into the ground and noticed the bird eating a freshly unearthed worm. He asked himself, why living beings have to suffer in this way. If the farmer had not been plowing, the bird would not have not eaten the worm. He realized that everything is connected, and all actions have consequences. This simple observation would become one of the cornerstones of his teachings, known as karma. As Siddhartha’s mind focused on these profound thoughts, he slipped into a trance or jhana, a mental state that would become a first step on his way to enlightenment.”
Indeed, the realization that all beings are impermanent and that all birth would inevitably lead to death, with aging and sickness sandwiched between the two, tormented the prince greatly. He decided that, like the mendicant monk, he would have to renounce the luxurious palace life to confront the realities of suffering and seek answers independently.
Later, in his teaching known as the Eight Sufferings, the Buddha lists birth, aging, sickness, and death as the first four. It is why, in Buddhism, suffering is existential. Suffering in living beings is existential because ageing, sickness, and eventual death inevitably follow birth. It is so important to Buddha that his soteriological goal is to end suffering for all living beings.
The young prince eventually eloped from the palace, abandoning his wealth and power. He cut off his hair, put on a robe, and started life anew as a wandering mendicant monk searching for answers to life’s misery and suffering. First, he visited the best gurus of his time to learn from them. Eventually, however, he found their teachings insufficient for permanent liberation from suffering and left them.
The first was a yogi named Alara Kalama. After studying under him for a while, Buddha realized that, like the other students, he only recited the yogi’s doctrine while proclaiming that they understood his teachings.
According to author Pankaj Mishra of An End to Suffering, “he began to think that ‘Kalama only has faith in his teaching and does not proclaim, “I myself know, realize, and take upon myself this teaching, abiding in it.'”
The future Buddha decided to confront Kalama, “How far have you yourself realized this teaching by direct knowledge?” In response, Kalama taught him about the Sphere of Nothingness. Soon after practicing, Buddha realized the state of the Sphere of Nothingness and could abide in it. Impressed, Kalama invited Buddha to join the hermitage as a co-teacher. However, the Buddha was not yet satisfied and declined the offer because the Sphere of Nothingness “does not lead to revulsion, dispassion, cessation, calm, knowledge, awakening, and Nibbana.”
Next, the future Buddha went to another guru called Udraka Ramaputra. This time, the guru told him about the Sphere of Neither Perception nor Non-Perception. Again, the Buddha could quickly grasp the teachings and abide by them. Once again, Udraka Ramaputra offered him a leadership position in his hermitage, which his student also declined. He left the second guru for the same reason as before.
According to author Pankaj Mishra, Buddha felt that the meditation these gurus taught, “no matter how deep,” was “temporary, comfortable abiding, in the here and now.” However, “one emerges from them, even after a long session, essentially unchanged.” These states were “without a corresponding moral and intellectual development, they by themselves did not end suffering.“
Buddha would later teach that to be enlightened and released from repeated cycles of rebirth, one needs a higher meditative state than the “Realm of Neither Cognition nor Non-Cognition.” After his enlightenment, the Buddha taught a meditation technique known as samatha-vipassana that could accomplish this.
However, Buddha’s time spent with these gurus was not wasted. The author suggested that Buddha “picked up ideas and techniques he would later rework into his own teachings.” Indeed, after enlightenment, the Buddha teaches that the “Realm of Nothingness” and the “Realm of Neither Cognition nor Non-Cognition” are the two highest tiers among the twenty-eight levels of the Celestial Realms. These two celestial realms belong to the Formless Celestial Realm, meaning that beings in these realms do not possess physical bodies. However, the meditations achieved in these two Realms are, respectively, one or two steps away from enlightenment, the only path that leads to liberation from existential suffering.
The experience with the gurus also makes Buddha realize “that mere faith in what the guru says isn’t enough and that you have to realize and verify it through your own experience.” Indeed, as the Buddha would teach after his enlightenment, the Buddha is a teacher who can point you in the right direction, but the journey to ending one’s suffering is personal.
After leaving the gurus, Buddha traveled to modern-day Bodh Gaya and spent six years practicing Jainistic asceticism. Jainistic asceticism practices severe fasting and self-mutilation based on the belief that one liberates the soul by relinquishing attachment to the physical body. Buddha followed the course and fasted extensively for so long that he became highly emaciated. As author Pankaj Mishra wrote, Buddha told his disciple Sariputra, “Because I ate so little, my buttocks became like a camel’s hoof, my backbone protruded like a line of spindles, my ribs corroded and collapsed like the rafters of an old and rotten shed, the gleams of the pupils in my eye sockets appeared deeply sunken, my scalp became wrinkled and shrunken….”
After six torturous years, Buddha starts to doubt the path he is on. Later, in Madhyama Agama (Chinese: 中阿含經), or the Collection of Middle-length Discourses, Buddha says, “although I practiced severe asceticism, I cannot attain the unique and extraordinary insight beyond the affairs of human beings. Would it be possible that there is another way to enlightenment?”
Now, he wondered if his great desire for enlightenment wasn’t the obstacle preventing him from going deeper naturally into a higher meditative state. He recalled his first meditation as a young prince, sitting by a tree; his mind drifted naturally into a calm, contemplative state. He felt serene as he gained insight into the causal interconnections among all beings while watching a farmer plow his field, digging up worms that would become food for the birds. This insight would enable him to perceive the fleeting nature of all existence. He realized that all existences are impermanent and causally related. Furthermore, fleeting existence is a source of suffering. He decided he must find a way to end the misery for all.
With the memory of his first meditation, Buddha discontinued starving, which stopped his pain and allowed him to regain his strength. Then, realizing that neither the extremes of comfort and luxury of a princely life nor the painful self-mutilation of Jain asceticism would lead him to his goal, he decided to try the meditation he had drifted into naturally as a youth. He found a fig tree, now known as the Bodhi Tree, and seated under it to meditate, vowing not to leave until enlightened.
History attests that he indeed became enlightened. Thereafter, he would be honored as the first Buddha of our kalpa (Chinese: 劫). According to the Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, “a kalpa in which a Buddha appears in the world is known as an ‘auspicious’ or ‘fortunate’ kalpa (Romanized Sanskrit: bhadrakalpa, Chinese: 賢劫).”
Kalpa (Chinese: 劫), according to The Princeton Dictionary of Dictionary, is “in Sanskrit, ‘con’ or ‘age,’ a unit of measurement for cosmological time.”
After attaining enlightenment, the Buddha embarked on a journey to teach what he had realized to all who would listen, with the stated objective of setting them free from the bondage of existential suffering. The content of his oral instruction would later be collected in texts. The collection of these texts would become Buddhist sutras (suttas), the canons of Buddhism.
In the Lotus Sūtra (Chinese: 妙法蓮華經), “containing the final teaching of Shakyamuni Buddha,” Buddha clearly states his soteriological goal:
“I vowed from the beginning (Chinese: 我本立誓願).
To make all living beings my equals without a difference (Chinese: 欲令一切眾, 如我等無異).
What I have vowed in the past, I have now fulfilled (Chinese: 如我昔所願, 今者已滿足).
Transform them so they can all enter the path of Buddhahood. (Chinese: 化一切眾生, 皆令入佛道).”
To be his equal and be like him, a person must become a Tathāgata, the highest level of Buddhahood.
athāgata (Chinese: 如來), according to The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, is “in Sanskrit and Pali, lit., one who has thus come/gone.” “A secondary denotation of the term is to understand ‘things as they are.'”
The Buddha wants all living beings to be like him and become a Tathāgata because only by understanding “things as they are” can a living being not only rid himself of his delusional misunderstanding of reality, but also understand how that misunderstanding originates. Only so can one be liberated from one’s existential suffering. We will discuss this topic in greater detail in future posts.
In the next post, we will introduce several fundamental concepts in Buddhism, including the Buddha, enlightenment, and Buddhism.
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