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Sutta Nipata » Context of this sutta
- Sutta Nipata V.3
- Punnaka-manava-puccha
- Punnaka's Questions
- For free distribution only, as a gift of Dhamma
Punnaka:
To the one unperturbed,
who has seen the root [of all things],
I have come with a question.
Because of what
have many human seers
-- noble warriors, brahmins --
offered sacrifices to devas
here in the world?
I ask you, O Blessed One.
Please tell me.
The Buddha:
Those many human seers
-- noble warriors, brahmins --
who have offered sacrifices to devas
here in the world, Punnaka,
hoping for more of this state of being,
offered their sacrifices
because of aging.
Punnaka:
Those many human seers
-- noble warriors, brahmins --
who have offered sacrifices to devas
here in the world:
Have they, O Blessed One,
heeding the path of sacrifice,
crossed over birth & aging?
I ask you, O Blessed One.
Please tell me.
The Buddha:
They hoped for, liked,
longed for,
so sacrificed --
they longed for sensuality,
dependent on gain.
I tell you:
those who take on the yoke
of sacrifice,
impassioned with
the passion for becoming,
have not crossed over birth & aging.
Punnaka:
If those who take on the yoke of sacrifice
haven't crossed over the flood, dear sir,
then who in the world
of beings divine & human
has crossed over birth & aging?
I ask you, O Blessed One.
Please tell me.
The Buddha:
He who has fathomed
the far & near in the world,
for whom there is nothing
perturbing in the world --
his vices evaporated,
undesiring, untroubled,
at peace --
he, I tell you, has crossed over birth
& aging.
Note
AN III.32 and AN IV.41 contain discussions of
the last verse in this poem.
In AN III.32, Ven. Ananda asks the Buddha, "Could it be that a monk could attain a
concentration of such a sort such that, with regard to this conscious body, he would have
no 'I'-making or 'mine'-making or underlying tendency to conceit, such that with regard to
all external themes [topics of concentration] he would have no 'I'-making or 'mine'-making
or underlying tendency to conceit, and that he would enter & remain in the release of
awareness & release of discernment in which there is no 'I'-making or 'mine'-making or
underlying tendency to conceit?"
The Buddha answers that it is possible, and that such a concentration can be attained
when one is percipient in this way: "This is peace, this is exquisite -- the
resolution of all mental processes; the relinquishment of all acquisitions; the ending of
craving; dispassion; cessation; Unbinding." He then adds that it was in connection to
this state of mind that he uttered the last verse in this poem.
In AN IV.41, the Buddha identifies four ways
of developing concentration: "There is the development of concentration that, when
developed & pursued, leads to a pleasant abiding in the here & now. There is the
development of concentration that, when developed & pursued, leads to the attainment
of knowledge & vision. There is the development of concentration that, when developed
& pursued, leads to mindfulness & alertness. There is the development of
concentration that, when developed & pursued, leads to the ending of the
effluents." (For details, see AN IV.41) The
Buddha then adds that he uttered the last verse of this poem in connection with these four
ways of developing concentration.