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The
Two Chief Disciples
46.
The two people who were to become the Buddha's chief disciples
were both born on the same day in adjacent villages just north
of Rajagaha. The first was named Moggallana while the second was
named Upatissa, although he was always called Sariputta, son of
Sari, Sari being his mother's name. The two boys grew up together
and became close friends. When they grew into youths, they went
into Rajagaha one day to attend a festival, and as they sat watching
a theatrical play they were both overcome by a strong sense of
the impermanence of life, as a result of which they both decided
to renounce the world. One of the most well-known religious teachers
of the time was Sanjaya Belatthiputta, and the two young men became
disciples under him. Sanjaya was famous for his evasiveness in
answering questions and his rivals referred to him as an eel-wriggler
(amaravikkhepikas).[ N1
]
47.
Moggallana and Sariputta stayed with Sanjaya for some years, leading
the life of wandering ascetics, but they were not really satisfied
with what they were learning from their teacher. After a while
they decided to split up and each go their own way in search for
truth, promising that the first to find it should tell the other.
One day, as Sariputta was walking through Rajagaha, he saw a monk
and was deeply impressed by the grace and poise with which he
moved and the calm happy expression on his face. The monk happened
to be Assaji, one of the Buddha's disciples. Sariputta asked him:
"Who
is your teacher?" and Assaji replied, "Friend, there
is a great ascetic, a son of the Sakyans, who went forth from
the Sakyan clan. It is because of this Lord that I have gone
forth. This Lord is my teacher, I accept this Lord's Dharma."
"What doctrine does your teacher teach? What does he point
to?"
"Friend, I am a beginner, I have only just gone forth,
I am new in this Dharma and discipline. I cannot teach the Dharma
in full, but I will tell you its essence."
"So be it, your reverence, tell me little or tell me much,
but either way give me its essence, I just want the essence.
There is no need for great elaboration."
So Assaji said: "Those things that proceed from a cause,
of those things the Tathagata has told the cause. And that which
is their stopping, of that the great recluse also has a doctrine."
48.
When Sariputta heard this he became a Stream-Winner, and set out
straight away to find his friend Moggallana. When the two met,
Moggallana could see straight away that something wonderful had
happened to his friend. "Friend, your faculties are quite
pure and your complexion is bright and clear. Can it be that you
have attained the Immortal?" "Yes, friend, I have attained
the Immortal," Sariputta replied. He told his friend how
it happened and the two decided to seek out the Buddha so they
could both hear more about the Dharma from his own lips. But Moggallana,
whose compassion often led him to think of the welfare of others
before his own, suggested that first they go to Sanjaya and his
disciples and tell them what they had discovered, certain that
they would welcome the news. But when they told Sanjaya that they
intended to become disciples of the Buddha, he was far from happy
and tried to change their minds. In fact, so worried was he at
the prospect of losing two well-known disciples to someone whom
he looked upon as a rival, that he even offered to make them his
co-teachers if they would stay with him. Sariputta and Moggallana
refused this offer and together with nearly all of Sanjaya's two
hundred and fifty disciples, they left to find the Buddha. As
soon as the Buddha saw the two young ascetics coming at the head
of their followers, he knew that they would become his most capable
and trusted disciples. Moggallana became enlightened seven days
after his ordination, as did Sariputta two weeks later.[
N2 ]
49.
Sariputta's and Moggallana's abilities and dispositions were such
that they developed very different faculties. Of all the Buddha's
disciples, Sariputta was best able to understand and explain the
Dharma, and in this way he was only second to the Buddha himself.
Once the Buddha said to him: "You are wise, Sariputta, great
and wide is your wisdom, joyful and quick is your wisdom, sharp
and analytical is your wisdom. Just as the eldest son of a Universal
Monarch rules rightly as his father did, even so do you turn the
wheel of the Dharma just as I have."[ N3
] Such regard did the Buddha have for Sariputta that he
gave him the title General of the Dharma (Dharmasenapati). In
one of his discourses, Sariputta talked about the qualities needed
to teach the Dharma and we can safely assume that he emphasised
these same qualities when he was teaching.
"When
one who teaches wishes to teach another, let him establish well
five things and then teach. What five? Let him think: 'I will
speak at the right time, not at the wrong time. I will speak
about what is, not about what is not. I will speak with gentleness,
not with harshness. I will speak about the goal, not about what
is not the goal. I will speak with a mind filled with love,
not with a mind filled with ill-will.' When one who teaches
wishes to teach another, let him establish well these five things."[
N4 ]
50.
Though Sariputta was an enthusiastic and effective Dharma teacher,
he also knew that while people can be helped through being taught
the Dharma, sometimes they need practical, material help also.
And in this way he was always ready to lend a hand. Once, Yasodhara
became very ill with wind and her son, Rahula, tried to get medicine
for her. He consulted Sariputta who, because of his experience
in nursing the sick, knew exactly what the most suitable medicine
would be and then went to get some. Together with Rahula he administered
the medicine to Yasodhara who soon recovered.[
N5 ] While he was always
ready to visit the sick to offer them comfort and help, he also
had a particular concern for the poor and lonely whom he often
helped and favoured over the wealthy and the influential. On one
occasion large numbers of people were coming to the monastery
where the Buddha was staying to invite monks to their homes for
a meal. People were anxious to get the more well-known monks and
these monks were particularly happy to go to the homes of the
wealthy, knowing they would get fine food. All the monks except
Sariputta had accepted invitations when a very poor woman appeared
and asked if a monk would like to go to her home. The monastery
attendant informed her that all monks except Sariputta were gone.
Thinking that such an eminent monk would not wish to accept a
humble meal from her, she was quite disappointed. But when the
attendant informed Sanputta about the poor woman, he happily agreed
to go to her home, to her delight. When King Pasenadi heard that
Sariputta would be eating at the home of a very poor woman, he
sent her a large amount of money, more than enough to provide
Sariputta with a meal, with plenty left over to live comfortably
for the rest of her life.[ N6
]
51.
Next to Sariputta the Buddha considered Moggallana to be his wisest
and most highly developed disciple. According to tradition, he
had a very dark complexion, as dark as a rain cloud. Moggallana's
most developed faculties were not wisdom but psychic powers (iddhi).
When, as a result of meditation, the mind is "concentrated,
purified, cleansed, unblemished, free from impurities, malleable,
workable and firm," it sometimes becomes capable of extraordinary
abilities. Some of the psychic powers that Buddhist monks occasionally
developed were the ability to change their appearance, being able
to sense what was happening a great distance away, being able
to read other people's minds and being able to leave the body.[
N7 ]
52.
The Buddha knew that the display of psychic powers could have
quite an effect upon people, and not always a positive one. Those
who displayed such powers could easily be spoiled by the adulation
they received, while those who saw such powers displayed often
gave unthinking devotion to those who had them. He was also critical
of the use of psychic displays to convert people. Once, when the
Buddha was staying at Nalanda, one of his disciples said to him:
"Lord, Nalanda is rich, prosperous, crowded, and full of
people who have faith in you. It would be good if you were to
get a monk to perform extraordinary feats and miracles. In this
way Nalanda would come to have even more faith."[
N8 ] The Buddha refused this
request because he wanted people to follow the Dharma out of understanding,
not because they had been impressed by miracles or psychic feats.
53.
Once, a wealthy merchant put a sandalwood bowl on the top of a
long bamboo pole which he set up in the market at Rajagaha. Then
he let it be known that any monk who could rise into the air and
remove the bowl could have it. Shortly afterwards, Moggallana
and Pindola Bharadvaja went into Rajagaha, and when the merchant
saw them he said, "You both have psychic powers. If you fetch
the bowl, it is yours." So Pindola rose into the air and
brought the bowl down, to the immense admiration of the large
crowd who had gathered to watch. Then the merchant called Pindola
to his house and filled the sandalwood bowl with expensive food.
After that, everywhere Pindola went, crowds of noisy, excited
people followed him. When the Buddha heard about this, he called
Pindola and scolded him:
"It
is not fitting, it is not becoming, it is not right, it is not
worthy of a monk, it is not allowable, it should not be done.
How could you, for the sake of a miserable wooden bowl, exhibit
one of the conditions of a developed person to these householders.
It is just like a loose woman who exhibits her undergarment
for the sake of a few miserable coins."[
N9 ]
As
a result of this incident, the Buddha made a rule making it an
offence for monks to unnecessarily display their psychic powers.
However, he also realised that psychic powers could sometimes
be put to good use. On another occasion, some thieves attacked
a house and kidnapped two children. When the monk Pilindavaccha
heard of this, he used his psychic powers to bring the children
back. When the other monks accused him of breaking the rule, the
Buddha declared him innocent of any offence because he had used
his powers out of compassion."[ N10
]
54.
Moggallana likewise usually used his psychic powers only to help
people. Once when he was staying with the Buddha on the upper
floor of the residence of Migaramata, a group of monks on the
ground floor were chattering away and making a great noise. The
Buddha described them as being "frivolous, empty-headed,
agitated, with harsh and useless speech, lacking concentration,
unsteady, not composed, with flighty minds and with senses uncontrolled"
and he urged Moggallana to give them "a good stirring."
So using his big toe Moggallana made the whole house, as large
as it was, shake and tremble. Thinking that the house was about
to collapse and shouting in fear, the monks ran outside. The Buddha
then approached them and told them that at his request Moggallana
had shaken the house by means of the psychic powers he had developed
with diligent meditation and that they likewise should spend time
meditating instead of indulging in idle chatter.[
N11 ] But like the Buddha
himself, Moggallana more usually helped people by teaching them
the Dharma, and the Tipitaka preserves many of the discourses
he delivered to monks and nuns, laymen and laywomen.
55.
Both Sariputta and Moggallana died before their teacher, the Buddha.
When Sariputta realised that his end was near, he took his leave
of the Buddha and set off for the village where he was born. Despite
having such a spiritually developed son, Sariputta's mother had
no faith in the Dharma, and Sariputta wished to repay his mother
for bringing him up by helping her understand the Buddha's teachings.
He sent a monk ahead to inform his mother that he was coming home.
She was delighted, thinking that her son had finally disrobed
and returned to the lay life. When he arrived and she realised
that he was still a monk, she locked herself in her room and sulked.
Sariputta's health rapidly began to deteriorate and as he lay
in his room numerous devas came to pay their respects to him.
When Sariputta's mother saw all these heavenly beings, she began
to realise just how virtuous and holy her son was, and went to
see him as he lay dying. Sariputta discussed the Dharma with her
and she became a Stream-Winner. He then called all the other monks
who had accompanied him and asked them if over the last forty
years he had offended them, whether they would forgive him. They
all assured him that there was nothing to forgive and shortly
after this, Sariputta attained final Nirvana.
56.
Only two weeks later, Moggallana died. He had long claimed that
he knew the destinies of those who had passed away and that Jain
ascetics were usually reborn in the lower realms. Moggallana was
widely respected, his psychic powers were well-known and people
believed what he said about the Jains. Alarmed at their waning
influence, a group of unscrupulous Jain ascetics decided to murder
him. They hired some thugs who surrounded the house where Moggallana
was staying, but when he became aware of their presence, he escaped
through the key hole. This happened on several occasions until
eventually the thugs caught him, beating him severely and leaving
him for dead. Barely alive, he staggered to where the Buddha was,
to pay his last respects, and then he died. Legend says that Moggallana
met his death in this way because, in a former life, he had murdered
his parents at the instigation of his wife, who was jealous of
the attention he gave them.
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