Introduction
by Bhikkhu Bodhi
From
ancient times to the present, the Dhammapada has been regarded
as the most succinct expression of the Buddha's teaching found
in the Pali Canon and the chief spiritual testament of early
Buddhism. In the countries following Theravada Buddhism, such
as Sri Lanka, Burma and Thailand, the influence of the Dhammapada
is ubiquitous. It is an ever-fecund source of themes for sermons
and discussions, a guidebook for resolving the countless problems
of everyday life, a primer for the instruction of novices in
the monasteries. Even the experienced contemplative, withdrawn
to forest hermitage or mountainside cave for a life of meditation,
can be expected to count a copy of the book among his few material
possessions.
Yet
the admiration the Dhammapada has elicited has not been confined
to avowed followers of Buddhism. Wherever it has become known
its moral earnestness, realistic understanding of human life,
aphoristic wisdom and stirring message of a way to freedom from
suffering have won for it the devotion and veneration of those
responsive to the good and the true.
The
expounder of the verses that comprise the Dhammapada is the
Indian sage called the Buddha, an honorific title meaning "the
Enlightened One" or "the Awakened One." The story
of this venerable personage has often been overlaid with literary
embellishment and the admixture of legend, but the historical
essentials of his life are simple and clear. He was born in
the sixth century B.C., the son of a king ruling over a small
state in the Himalayan foothills, in what is now Nepal. His
given name was Siddhartha and his family name Gotama (Sanskrit:
Siddhartha Gautama) . Raised in luxury, groomed by his father
to be the heir to the throne, in his early manhood he went through
a deeply disturbing encounter with the sufferings of life, as
a result of which he lost all interest in the pleasures and
privileges of rulership. One night, in his twenty-ninth year,
he fled the royal city and entered the forest to live as an
ascetic, resolved to find a way to deliverance from suffering.
For six years he experimented with different systems of meditation
and subjected himself to severe austerities, but found that
these practices did not bring him any closer to his goal. Finally,
in his thirty-fifth year, while sitting in deep meditation beneath
a tree at Gaya, he attained Supreme Enlightenment and became,
in the proper sense of the title, the Buddha, the Enlightened
One.
Thereafter,
for forty-five years, he traveled throughout northern India,
proclaiming the truths he had discovered and founding an order
of monks and nuns to carry on his message. At the age of eighty,
after a long and fruitful life, he passed away peacefully in
the small town of Kusinara, surrounded by a large number of
disciples.
To his followers, the Buddha is neither a god, a divine incarnation,
or a prophet bearing a message of divine revelation, but a human
being who by his own striving and intelligence has reached the
highest spiritual attainment of which man is capable -- perfect
wisdom, full enlightenment, complete purification of mind. His
function in relation to humanity is that of a teacher -- a world
teacher who, out of compassion, points out to others the way
to Nibbana (Sanskrit: Nirvana), final release from suffering.
His teaching, known as the Dhamma, offers a body of instructions
explaining the true nature of existence and showing the path
that leads to liberation. Free from all dogmas and inscrutable
claims to authority, the Dhamma is founded solidly upon the
bedrock of the Buddha's own clear comprehension of reality,
and it leads the one who practices it to that same understanding
-- the knowledge which extricates the roots of suffering.
The
title "Dhammapada" which the ancient compilers of
the Buddhist scriptures attached to our anthology means portions,
aspects, or sections of Dhamma. The work has been given this
title because, in its twenty-six chapters, it spans the multiple
aspects of the Buddha's teaching, offering a variety of standpoints
from which to gain a glimpse into its heart. Whereas the longer
discourses of the Buddha contained in the prose sections of
the Canon usually proceed methodically, unfolding according
to the sequential structure of the doctrine, the Dhammapada
lacks such a systematic arrangement. The work is simply a collection
of inspirational or pedagogical verses on the fundamentals of
the Dhamma, to be used as a basis for personal edification and
instruction. In any given chapter several successive verses
may have been spoken by the Buddha on a single occasion, and
thus among themselves will exhibit a meaningful development
or a set of variations on a theme. But by and large, the logic
behind the grouping together of verses into a chapter is merely
the concern with a common topic. The twenty-six chapter headings
thus function as a kind of rubric for classifying the diverse
poetic utterances of the Master, and the reason behind the inclusion
of any given verse in a particular chapter is its mention of
the subject indicated in the chapter's heading . In some cases
(Chapters 4 and 23) this may be a metaphorical symbol rather
than a point of doctrine. There also seems to be no intentional
design in the order of the chapters themselves, though at certain
points a loose thread of development can be discerned.
The
teachings of the Buddha, viewed in their completeness, all link
together into a single perfectly coherent system of thought
and practice which gains its unity from its final goal, the
attainment of deliverance from suffering. But the teachings
inevitably emerge from the human condition as their matrix and
starting point, and thus must be expressed in such a way as
to reach human beings standing at different levels of spiritual
development, with their highly diverse problems, ends, and concerns
and with their very different capacities for understanding.
Thence, just as water, though one in essence assumes different
shapes due to the vessels into which it is poured, so the Dhamma
of liberation takes on different forms in response to the needs
of the beings to be taught. This diversity, evident enough already
in the prose discourses, becomes even more conspicuous in the
highly condensed, spontaneous and intuitively charged medium
of verse used in the Dhammapada. The intensified power of delivery
can result in apparent inconsistencies which may perplex the
unwary. For example, in many verses the Buddha commends certain
practices on the grounds that they lead to a heavenly birth,
but in others he discourages disciples from aspiring for heaven
and extols the one who takes no delight in celestial pleasures
(187, 417) [Unless chapter numbers are indicated, all figures
enclosed in parenthesis refer to verse numbers of the Dhammapada.]
Often
he enjoins works of merit, yet elsewhere he praises the one
who has gone beyond both merit and demerit (39, 412). Without
a grasp of the underlying structure of the Dhamma, such statements
viewed side by side will appear incompatible and may even elicit
the judgment that the teaching is self-contradictory.
The
key to resolving these apparent discrepancies is the recognition
that the Dhamma assumes its formulation from the needs of the
diverse persons to whom it is addressed, as well as from the
diversity of needs that may co-exist even in a single individual.
To make sense of the various utterances found in the Dhammapada,
we will suggest a schematism of four levels to be used for ascertaining
the intention behind any particular verse found in the work,
and thus for understanding its proper place in the total systematic
vision of the Dhamma. This fourfold schematism develops out
of an ancient interpretive maxim which holds that the Buddha's
teaching is designed to meet three primary aims: human welfare
here and now, a favorable rebirth in the next life, and the
attainment of the ultimate good. The four levels are arrived
at by distinguishing the last aim into two stages: path and
fruit.
(i)
The first level is the concern with establishing well-being
and happiness in the immediately visible sphere of concrete
human relations. The aim at this level is to show man the way
to live at peace with himself and his fellow men, to fulfill
his family and social responsibilities, and to restrain the
bitterness, conflict and violence which infect human relationships
and bring such immense suffering to the individual, society,
and the world as a whole. The guidelines appropriate to this
level are largely identical with the basic ethical injunctions
proposed by most of the great world religions, but in the Buddhist
teaching they are freed from theistic moorings and grounded
upon two directly verifiable foundations: concern for one's
own integrity and long-range happiness and concern for the welfare
of those whom one's actions may affect (129-132). The most general
counsel the Dhammapada gives is to avoid all evil, to cultivate
good and to cleanse one's mind (183). But to dispel any doubts
the disciple might entertain as to what he should avoid and
what he should cultivate, other verses provide more specific
directives. One should avoid irritability in deed, word and
thought and exercise self-control (231-234). One should adhere
to the five precepts, the fundamental moral code of Buddhism,
which teach abstinence from destroying life, from stealing,
from committing adultery, from speaking lies and from taking
intoxicants; one who violates these five training rules "digs
up his own root even in this very world" (246-247). The
disciple should treat all beings with kindness and compassion,
live honestly and righteously, control his sensual desires,
speak the truth and live a sober upright life, diligently fulfilling
his duties, such as service to parents, to his immediate family
and to those recluses and Brahmins who depend on the laity for
their maintenance (332-333).
A
large number of verses pertaining to this first level are concerned
with the resolution of conflict and hostility. Quarrels are
to be avoided by patience and forgiveness, for responding to
hatred by further hatred only maintains the cycle of vengeance
and retaliation. The true conquest of hatred is achieved by
non-hatred, by forbearance, by love (4-6). One should not respond
to bitter speech but maintain silence (134). One should not
yield to anger but control it as a driver controls a chariot
(222). Instead of keeping watch for the faults of others, the
disciple is admonished to examine his own faults, and to make
a continual effort to remove his impurities just as a silversmith
purifies silver (50, 239). Even if he has committed evil in
the past, there is no need for dejection or despair; for a man's
ways can be radically changed, and one who abandons the evil
for the good illuminates this world like the moon freed from
clouds (173).
The
sterling qualities distinguishing the man of virtue are generosity,
truthfulness, patience, and compassion (223). By developing
and mastering these qualities within himself, a man lives at
harmony with his own conscience and at peace with his fellow
beings. The scent of virtue, the Buddha declares, is sweeter
than the scent of all flowers and perfumes (55-56). The good
man, like the Himalaya mountains, shines from afar, and wherever
he goes he is loved and respected (303-304).
(ii) In its second level of teaching, the Dhammapada shows that
morality does not exhaust its significance in its contribution
to human felicity here and now, but exercises a far more critical
influence in molding personal destiny. This level begins with
the recognition that, to reflective thought, the human situation
demands a more satisfactory context for ethics than mere appeals
to altruism can provide. On the one hand our innate sense of
moral justice requires that goodness be recompensed with happiness
and evil with suffering; on the other our typical experience
shows us virtuous people beset with hardships and afflictions
and thoroughly bad people riding the waves of fortune (119-120).
Moral intuition tells us that if there is any long-range value
to righteousness, the imbalance must somehow be redressed. The
visible order does not yield an evident solution, but the Buddha's
teaching reveals the factor needed to vindicate our cry for
moral justice in an impersonal universal law which reigns over
all sentient existence. This is the law of kamma (Sanskrit:
karma), of action and its fruit, which ensures that morally
determinate action does not disappear into nothingness but eventually
meets its due retribution, the good with happiness, the bad
with suffering.
In
the popular understanding kamma is sometimes identified with
fate, but this is a total misconception utterly inapplicable
to the Buddhist doctrine. Kamma means volitional action, action
springing from intention, which may manifest itself outwardly
as bodily deeds or speech, or remain internally as unexpressed
thoughts, desires and emotions. The Buddha distinguishes kamma
into two primary ethical types: unwholesome kamma, action rooted
in mental states of greed, hatred and delusion; and wholesome
kamma action rooted in mental states of generosity or detachment,
goodwill and understanding. The willed actions a person performs
in the course of his life may fade from memory without a trace,
but once performed they leave subtle imprints on the mind, seeds
with the potential to come to fruition in the future when they
meet conditions conducive to their ripening.
The
objective field in which the seeds of kamma ripen is the process
of rebirths called samsara. In the Buddha's teaching, life is
not viewed as an isolated occurrence beginning spontaneously
with birth and ending in utter annihilation at death. Each single
life span is seen, rather, as part of an individualized series
of lives having no discoverable beginning in time and continuing
on as long as the desire for existence stands intact. Rebirth
can take place in various realms. There are not only the familiar
realms of human beings and animals, but ranged above we meet
heavenly worlds of greater happiness, beauty and power, and
ranged below infernal worlds of extreme suffering.
The
cause for rebirth into these various realms the Buddha locates
in kamma, our own willed actions. In its primary role, kamma
determines the sphere into which rebirth takes place, wholesome
actions bringing rebirth in higher forms, unwholesome actions
rebirth in lower forms. After yielding rebirth, kamma continues
to operate, governing the endowments and circumstances of the
individual within his given form of existence. Thus, within
the human world, previous stores of wholesome kamma will issue
in long life, health, wealth, beauty and success; stores of
unwholesome kamma in short life, illness, poverty, ugliness
and failure.
Prescriptively,
the second level of teaching found in the Dhammapada is the
practical corollary to this recognition of the law of kamma,
put forth to show human beings, who naturally desire happiness
and freedom from sorrow, the effective means to achieve their
objectives. The content of this teaching itself does not differ
from that presented at the first level; it is the same set of
ethical injunctions for abstaining from evil and for cultivating
the good. The difference lies in the perspective from which
the injunctions are issued and the aim for the sake of which
they are to be taken up. The principles of morality are shown
now in their broader cosmic connections, as tied to an invisible
but all-embracing law which binds together all life and holds
sway over the repeated rotations of the cycle of birth and death.
The observance of morality is justified, despite its difficulties
and apparent failures, by the fact that it is in harmony with
that law, that through the efficacy of kamma, our willed actions
become the chief determinant of our destiny both in this life
and in future states of becoming. To follow the ethical law
leads upwards -- to inner development, to higher rebirths and
to richer experiences of happiness and joy. To violate the law,
to act in the grip of selfishness and hate, leads downwards
-- to inner deterioration, to suffering and to rebirth in the
worlds of misery. This theme is announced already by the pair
of verses which opens the Dhammapada, and reappears in diverse
formulations throughout the work (see, e.g., 15-18, 117-122,
127, 132-133, Chapter 22).
(iii)
The ethical counsel based on the desire for higher rebirths
and happiness in future lives is not the final teaching of the
Buddha, and thus cannot provide the decisive program of personal
training commended by the Dhammapada. In its own sphere of application,
it is perfectly valid as a preparatory or provisional teaching
for those whose spiritual faculties are not yet ripe but still
require further maturation over a succession of lives. A deeper,
more searching examination, however, reveals that all states
of existence in samsara, even the loftiest celestial abodes,
are lacking in genuine worth; for they are all inherently impermanent,
without any lasting substance, and thus, for those who cling
to them, potential bases for suffering. The disciple of mature
faculties, sufficiently prepared by previous experience for
the Buddha's distinctive exposition of the Dhamma, does not
long even for rebirth among the gods. Having understood the
intrinsic inadequacy of all conditioned things, his focal aspiration
is only for deliverance from the ever-repeating round of births.
This is the ultimate goal to which the Buddha points, as the
immediate aim for those of developed faculties and also as the
long-term ideal for those in need of further development: Nibbana,
the Deathless, the unconditioned state where there is no more
birth, aging and death, and no more suffering.
The
third level of teaching found in the Dhammapada sets forth the
theoretical framework and practical discipline emerging out
of the aspiration for final deliverance. The theoretical framework
is provided by the teaching of the Four Noble Truths (190-192,
273), which the Buddha had proclaimed already in his first sermon
and upon which he placed so much stress in his many discourses
that all schools of Buddhism have appropriated them as their
common foundation. The four truths all center around the fact
of suffering (dukkha), understood not as mere experienced pain
and sorrow, but as the pervasive unsatisfactoriness of everything
conditioned (202-203). The first truth details the various forms
of suffering -- birth, old age, sickness and death, the misery
of unpleasant encounters and painful separations, the suffering
of not obtaining what one wants. It culminates in the declaration
that all constituent phenomena of body and mind, "the aggregates
of existence" (khandha), being impermanent and substanceless,
are intrinsically unsatisfactory. The second truth points out
that the cause of suffering is craving (tanha), the desire for
pleasure and existence which drives us through the round of
rebirths, bringing in its trail sorrow, anxiety, and despair
(212-216, Chapter 24). The third truth declares that the destruction
of craving issues in release from suffering, and the fourth
prescribes the means to gain release, the Noble Eightfold Path:
right understanding, right thought, right speech, right action,
right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right
concentration (Chapter 20).
If,
at this third level, the doctrinal emphasis shifts from the
principles of kamma and rebirth to the Four Noble Truths, a
corresponding shift in emphasis takes place in the practical
sphere as well. The stress now no longer falls on the observation
of basic morality and the cultivation of wholesome attitudes
as a means to higher rebirths. Instead it falls on the integral
development of the Noble Eightfold Path as the means to uproot
the craving that nurtures the process of rebirth itself. For
practical purposes the eight factors of the path are arranged
into three major groups which reveal more clearly the developmental
structure of the training: moral discipline (including right
speech, right action and right livelihood), concentration (including
right effort, right mindfulness and right concentration), and
wisdom (including right understanding and right thought). By
the training in morality, the coarsest forms of the mental defilements,
those erupting as unwholesome deeds and words, are checked and
kept under control. By the training in concentration the mind
is made calm, pure and unified, purged of the currents of distractive
thoughts. By the training in wisdom the concentrated beam of
attention is focused upon the constituent factors of mind and
body to investigate and contemplate their salient characteristics.
This wisdom, gradually ripened, climaxes in the understanding
that brings complete purification and deliverance of mind.
In
principle, the practice of the path in all three stages is feasible
for people in any walk of life. The Buddha taught it to laypeople
as well as to monks, and many of his lay followers reached high
stages of attainment. However, application to the development
of the path becomes most fruitful for those who have relinquished
all other concerns in order to devote themselves wholeheartedly
to spiritual training, to living the "holy life" (brahmacariya).
For conduct to be completely purified, for sustained contemplation
and penetrating wisdom to unfold without impediments, adoption
of a different style of life becomes imperative, one which minimizes
distractions and stimulants to craving and orders all activities
around the aim of liberation. Thus the Buddha established the
Sangha, the order of monks and nuns, as the special field for
those ready to dedicate their lives to the practice of his path,
and in the Dhammapada the call to the monastic life resounds
throughout.
The
entry-way to the monastic life is an act of radical renunciation.
The thoughtful, who have seen the transience and hidden misery
of worldly life, break the ties of family and social bonds,
abandon their homes and mundane pleasures, and enter upon the
state of homelessness (83, 87-89, 91). Withdrawn to silent and
secluded places, they seek out the company of wise instructors,
and guided by the rules of the monastic training, devote their
energies to a life of meditation. Content with the simplest
material requisites, moderate in eating, restrained in their
senses, they stir up their energy, abide in constant mindfulness
and still the restless waves of thoughts (185, 375). With the
mind made clear and steady, they learn to contemplate the arising
and falling away of all formations, and experience thereby "a
delight that transcends all human delights," a joy and
happiness that anticipates the bliss of the Deathless (373-374).
The life of meditative contemplation reaches its peak in the
development of insight (vipassana), and the Dhammapada enunciates
the principles to be discerned by insight-wisdom: that all conditioned
things are impermanent, that they are all unsatisfactory, that
there is no self or truly existent ego entity to be found in
anything whatsoever (277-279). When these truths are penetrated
by direct experience, the craving, ignorance and related mental
fetters maintaining bondage break asunder, and the disciple
rises through successive stages of realization to the full attainment
of Nibbana.
(iv)
The fourth level of teaching in the Dhammapada provides no new
disclosure of doctrine or practice, but an acclamation and exaltation
of those who have reached the goal. In the Pali Canon the stages
of definite attainment along the way to Nibbana are enumerated
as four. At the first, called "Stream-entry" (sotapatti),
the disciple gains his first glimpse of "the Deathless"
and enters irreversibly upon the path to liberation, bound to
reach the goal in seven lives at most. This achievement alone,
the Dhammapada declares, is greater than lordship over all the
worlds (178). Following Stream-entry come two further stages
which weaken and eradicate still more defilements and bring
the goal increasingly closer to view. One is called the stage
of Once-returner (sakadagami), when the disciple will return
to the human world at most only one more time; the other the
stage of Non-returner (anagami), when he will never come back
to human existence but will take rebirth in a celestial plane,
bound to win final deliverance there. The fourth and final stage
is that of the Arahat, the Perfected One, the fully accomplished
sage who has completed the development of the path, eradicated
all defilements and freed himself from bondage to the cycle
of rebirths. This is the ideal figure of early Buddhism and
the supreme hero of the Dhammapada. Extolled in Chapter 7 under
his own name and in Chapter 26 (385-388, 396-423) under the
name brahmana, "holy man," the Arahat serves as a
living demonstration of the truth of the Dhamma. Bearing his
last body, perfectly at peace, he is the inspiring model who
shows in his own person that it is possible to free oneself
from the stains of greed, hatred and delusion, to rise above
suffering, to win Nibbana in this very life.
The
Arahat ideal reaches its optimal exemplification in the Buddha,
the promulgator and master of the entire teaching. It was the
Buddha who, without any aid or guidance, rediscovered the ancient
path to deliverance and taught it to countless others. His arising
in the world provides the precious opportunity to hear and practice
the excellent Dhamma (182, 194). He is the giver and shower
of refuge (190-192), the Supreme Teacher who depends on nothing
but his own self-evolved wisdom (353). Born a man, the Buddha
always remains essentially human, yet his attainment of Perfect
Enlightenment elevates him to a level far surpassing that of
common humanity. All our familiar concepts and modes of knowing
fail to circumscribe his nature: he is trackless, of limitless
range, free from all worldliness, the conqueror of all, the
knower of all, untainted by the world (179, 180, 353).
Always
shining in the splendor of his wisdom, the Buddha by his very
being confirms the Buddhist faith in human perfectibility consummates
the Dhammapada's picture of man perfected, the Arahat.
The
four levels of teaching just discussed give us the key for sorting
out the Dhammapada's diverse utterances on Buddhist doctrine
and for discerning the intention behind its words of practical
counsel. Interlaced with the verses specific to these four main
levels, there runs throughout the work a large number of verses
not tied to any single level but applicable to all alike. Taken
together, these delineate for us the basic world view of early
Buddhism. The most arresting feature of this view is its stress
on process rather than persistence as the defining mark of actuality.
The universe is in flux, a boundless river of incessant becoming
sweeping everything along; dust motes and mountains, gods and
men and animals, world system after world system without number
-- all are engulfed by the irrepressible current. There is no
creator of this process, no providential deity behind the scenes
steering all things to some great and glorious end. The cosmos
is beginningless, and in its movement from phase to phase it
is governed only by the impersonal, implacable law of arising,
change, and passing away.
However,
the focus of the Dhammapada is not on the outer cosmos, but
on the human world, upon man with his yearning and his suffering.
his immense complexity, his striving and movement towards transcendence.
The starting point is the human condition as given, and fundamental
to the picture that emerges is the inescapable duality of human
life, the dichotomies which taunt and challenge man at every
turn. Seeking happiness, afraid of pain, loss and death, man
walks the delicate balance between good and evil, purity and
defilement, progress and decline. His actions are strung out
between these moral antipodes, and because he cannot evade the
necessity to choose, he must bear the full responsibility for
his decisions. Man's moral freedom is a reason for both dread
and jubilation, for by means of his choices he determines his
own individual destiny, not only through one life, but through
the numerous lives to be turned up by the rolling wheel of samsara.
If he chooses wrongly he can sink to the lowest depths of degradation,
if he chooses rightly he can make himself worthy even of the
homage of the gods. The paths to all destinations branch out
from the present, from the ineluctable immediate occasion of
conscious choice and action.
The
recognition of duality extends beyond the limits of conditioned
existence to include the antithetical poles of the conditioned
and the unconditioned, samsara and Nibbana, the "near shore"
and the "far shore." The Buddha appears in the world
as the Great Liberator who shows man the way to break free from
the one and arrive at the other, where alone true safety is
to be found. But all he can do is indicate the path; the work
of treading it lies in the hands of the disciple. The Dhammapada
again and again sounds this challenge to human freedom: man
is the maker and master of himself, the protector or destroyer
of himself, the savior of himself (160, 165, 380). In the end
he must choose between the way that leads back into the world,
to the round of becoming, and the way that leads out of the
world, to Nibbana. And though this last course is extremely
difficult and demanding, the voice of the Buddha speaks words
of assurance confirming that it can be done, that it lies within
man's power to overcome all barriers and to triumph even over
death itself.
The
pivotal role in achieving progress in all spheres, the Dhammapada
declares, is played by the mind. In contrast to the Bible, which
opens with an account of God's creation of the world, the Dhammapada
begins with an unequivocal assertion that mind is the forerunner
of all that we are, the maker of our character, the creator
of our destiny. The entire discipline of the Buddha, from basic
morality to the highest levels of meditation, hinges upon training
the mind. A wrongly directed mind brings greater harm than any
enemy, a rightly directed mind brings greater good than any
other relative or friend (42, 43). The mind is unruly, fickle,
difficult to subdue, but by effort, mindfulness and unflagging
self-discipline, one can master its vagrant tendencies, escape
the torrents of the passions and find "an island which
no flood can overwhelm" (25). The one who conquers himself,
the victor over his own mind, achieves a conquest which can
never be undone, a victory greater than that of the mightiest
warriors (103-105).
What
is needed most urgently to train and subdue the mind is a quality
called heedfulness (appamada). Heedfulness combines critical
self awareness and unremitting energy in a process of keeping
the mind under constant observation to detect and expel the
defiling impulses whenever they seek an opportunity to surface.
In a world where man has no savior but himself, and where the
means to his deliverance lies in mental purification, heedfulness
becomes the crucial factor for ensuring that the aspirant keeps
to the straight path of training without deviating due to the
seductive allurements of sense pleasures or the stagnating influences
of laziness and complacency. Heedfulness, the Buddha declares,
is the path to the Deathless; heedlessness, the path to death.
The wise who understand this distinction abide in heedfulness
and experience Nibbana, "the incomparable freedom from
bondage" (21-23).
As
a great religious classic and the chief spiritual testament
of early Buddhism, the Dhammapada cannot be gauged in its true
value by a single reading, even if that reading is done carefully
and reverentially. It yields its riches only through repeated
study, sustained reflection, and most importantly, through the
application of its principles to daily life. Thence it might
be suggested to the reader in search of spiritual guidance that
the Dhammapada be used as a manual for contemplation. After
his initial reading, he would do well to read several verses
or even a whole chapter every day, slowly and carefully, relishing
the words. He should reflect on the meaning of each verse deeply
and thoroughly, investigate its relevance to his life, and apply
it as a guide to conduct. If this is done repeatedly, with patience
and perseverance, it is certain that the Dhammapada will confer
upon his life a new meaning and sense of purpose. Infusing him
with hope and inspiration, gradually it will lead him to discover
a freedom and happiness far greater than anything the world
can offer.