Today we are going
to continue a theme that we began two weeks ago when we talked
about the teaching of karma. We are going to consider the results
of karma in the next life, in other words rebirth. But before
I begin to consider specifically the Buddhist teaching regarding
rebirth, I think we need to spend a little bit of time on the
concept of rebirth in general. This is because it is a concept
which many people have difficulty with, particularly over the
last few decades when we have become increasingly conditioned
to think in what passes for scientific terms, in what most people
would naively believe to be scientific terms. Thinking in this
way has caused many people to discard the idea of rebirth as
something that smacks of superstition, that is a part of an
old-fashioned way of looking at the world. So I think we need
to redress the balance and create a certain amount of openness
to the concept of rebirth before we treat specifically the Buddhist
teaching on rebirth.
There are a number
of approaches that we can take to what we might call outlining
the case for the reality of rebirth. One line which we might
take would be to recall that in almost all the major cultures
of the world, at one time or another, there had been a strong
belief in the reality of rebirth. This is particularly true
in India where the idea of rebirth can be traced back to the
very earliest period of Indian civilization where all the major
Indian religions, be they theism or atheism, be they schools
of Hinduism or non-Hindu doctrines like Jainism, believe in
the reality of rebirth. Similarly, in other cultures there has
been a belief in rebirth, as for instance even in the Mediterranean
world, there is a lot of evidence that belief in rebirth was
quite common before and during the first few centuries of the
Common Era. So the belief in rebirth has been an important part
of the human way of thinking about ones situation.
Specifically, within
the Buddhist tradition, we have the testimony of the Buddha
on the matter of rebirth. On the night of His enlightenment,
the Buddha acquired three varieties of knowledge and the first
of these was the detailed knowledge of His past lives. He was
able to recollect the conditions in which He had been born in
His past lives. He was able to remember what His names had been,
what His occupations had been and so on. Besides the Buddhas
testimony, His prominent disciples were also able to recollect
their past lives. Ananda, for instance, acquired the ability
to recollect his past life soon after his ordination. Similarly,
throughout the history of Buddhism, saints, scholars and meditators
have been able to recollect their past lives.
Nonetheless, neither
of these two arguments for rebirth can be expected to be completely
convincing in a scientific and rational environment. So perhaps
we need to look a bit closer to home so to speak, and here we
get help from a very unexpected direction. Most of us may be
aware that in the past twenty or thirty years there have been
a huge amount of scientific investigations of the question of
rebirth and these investigations have been pursued by psychologists
and parapsychologists. Gradually through these investigations,
we have built up a very convincing case for the reality of rebirth,
a case which is developed along scientific lines. There have
been many books published in which the details of these investigations
have been described and discussed. One scholar who has been
particularly active in this area in recent years is Professor
Ian Stevenson of the University of Virginia, USA. He has published
findings on more than twenty cases of rebirth. Some of us may
be familiar with the case of the woman who was able to recall
her past life more than a hundred years before as Bridey Murphy
in a foreign land which she had never visited in her present
life. I am not going to go through these specific cases in detail
because if one is interested in this scientific evidence for
rebirth one can read about it for oneself. Nonetheless, I think
we are now at a point where even the most skeptical of us will
have to admit that there is a lot of circumstantial evidence
in favour of the reality of rebirth.
But in making the
case for rebirth, we can look even closer to our own experience,
and here we need to recall and examine it in the true Buddhist
way to see what meaning we can distil from our own experience.
All of us in this room have our own particular capabilities,
our own particular likes and dislikes, and I think it is fair
to ask whether these are all merely the result of chance. For
instance, some of us are more capable at sport than others,
some of us have a talent for mathematics, others have a talent
for music, some of us like swimming, others are afraid of water.
Are all these differences in our abilities and attitudes merely
the result of chance? There are incredible peculiarities in
the nature of our experiences. Let me take my own case. I was
born in a Roman Catholic family in the United States. There
was absolutely nothing in my early background to indicate that
by the age of twenty I would have travelled to India and that
I would spend the next fourteen years of my life predominantly
in Asia, and that I would become deeply involved in Buddhist
studies.
Then, too, there
are those situations in which we sometimes feel a strong presentiment
that we have been in a particular place before although we have
not visited this place in our present life. Or, sometimes we
feel that we have known someone before. Sometimes we meet a
person and within a very short space of time we feel that we
have known that person thoroughly. Alternatively, sometimes
we have known a person for years and yet we are not close to
that person. These experiences of feeling that we have been
to a place before or have known a person before are so common
and universal even in a culture which knows almost nothing of
rebirth. There is a particular phrase for this experience, the
French words "deja vu" which mean "already seen
or experienced". If we are not dogmatic, when we add up
all the evidence of rebirth - the persistent belief in rebirth
in many cultures in many different times throughout history,
the Buddhas own testimony, the testimony of His prominent
disciples, the evidence presented by scientific investigations,
and our own personal intimations that we have been here before
we have to admit that there is at least a good possibility
that rebirth is a reality.
In Buddhism, rebirth
is part of the continuous process of change. In fact, we are
not only reborn at the time of death, we are born and reborn
at every moment. This too, like many other Buddhist teachings,
is easily verifiable by reference to our own experience and
by reference to the teachings of science. For instance, the
majority of the cells in the human body die and are replaced
many times during the course of ones life. Even those
few cells which last ones entire life undergo constant
internal changes. This is part of the process of birth, death
and rebirth. If we look at the mind too, we find that mental
states of worry, happiness and so forth are changing every moment.
They die and are replaced by new states. So whether we look
at the body or the mind, our experience is characterized by
continuous birth, death and rebirth.
In Buddhism, it
is taught that there are various realms, spheres or dimensions
of existence. There are thirty-one planes of existence listed,
but for our purposes, we are going to utilize a simpler scheme
which enumerates six realms of existence. In general, the six
realms may be divided into two groups, one of which is relatively
fortunate and the other relatively miserable. The first group
includes three of the six realms and they are the realm of the
gods, the realm of the demigods and the realm of human beings.
Rebirth in these fortunate realms is the result of wholesome
karma. The second group includes the three realms that are considered
relatively miserable. They are sometimes called the realms of
woe, and they are the realm of animals, the realm of hungry
ghosts and the realm of hell beings. Rebirth in these states
of woe is the result of unwholesome karma.
Let us look at
each of these realms individually and starting from the realm
at the bottom, let us look at the realm of the hell beings (Niraya).
There are various hells in Buddhism, and they are principally
eight hot hells and eight cold hells. In the hells, beings suffer
incalculable and inexpressible pain. It is said that the suffering
experienced as a result of being pierced by three hundred spears
in a single day in this life is only a minute fraction of the
suffering experienced in hell. The cause of rebirth in hell
is continuous, habitual violent actions habitual killing,
cruelty and so forth, actions that are borne of ill-will. Beings
born in the hells suffer the pain of hell until their unwholesome
karma is exhausted. This is important because we must note that
in Buddhism no one suffers eternal damnation. When their unwholesome
karma is exhausted, beings in hell are reborn in a more fortunate
realm of existence.
The next realm
is the realm of the hungry ghosts (Pretas). Beings in this realm
suffer chiefly from hunger and thirst, and from heat and cold.
They are completely bereft of the objects of their desire. It
is said that when the hungry ghosts perceive a mountain of rice
or a river of fresh water, and rush towards that vision, they
find the mountain of rice is only a heap of pebbles, and the
river of fresh water only a ribbon of blue slate. Similarly,
it is said that in the summer even the moon is hot, while in
the winter even the sun is cold for them. The foremost cause
of rebirth as a hungry ghost is avarice and miserliness borne
of greed. As with the hells, the beings in this realm are not
condemned to eternal existence in the form of hungry ghosts,
for when their unwholesome karma is exhausted, they will be
reborn in a higher realm.
In the next realm
which is the realm of animals (Tiryak), the living beings suffer
from a variety of unhappy circumstances. They suffer from the
fear and pain that is the result of constantly killing and eating
one another. They suffer from the depredations of man who kills
them for food or for their hides, horns or teeth. Even if they
are not killed, domestic animals are forced to work for man
and are driven on by hooks and whips. All these are a source
of suffering. The principal cause of rebirth as an animal is
ignorance. In other words, the blind, heedless pursuit of ones
animal-like desires, the preoccupation with eating, sleeping
and sexual desire, and the disregard of developing ones
mind to the practice of virtue and so forth lead one to be reborn
as an animal.
Now when I say
for instance that habitual killing is the cause of rebirth in
the hells, or that greed is the cause of rebirth in the realm
of the hungry ghosts, or that ignorance is the cause of rebirth
in the realm of animals, it does not mean that a specific hateful,
greedy or ignorant action will result in rebirth amongst the
appropriate class of beings - the hells, the realms of hungry
ghosts or the realm of animals. What it does mean is that there
is a relationship between hatred and rebirth in the hells, and
between greed and rebirth in the realm of hungry ghosts, and
between ignorance and rebirth in the realm of the animals. If
unimpeded, if unbalanced by other virtuous actions, such actions
if habitual are likely to result in rebirth in these three states
of woe.
I am going to skip
the realm of human beings for the moment and go on to the realm
of demigods (Asuras). The Asuras are more powerful physically
and are more intelligent mentally than human beings. Yet they
suffer because of jealousy and conflict. Mythologically, it
is said that the Asuras and the gods share a celestial tree.
While the gods enjoy the fruits of this celestial tree, the
Asuras are custodians of the roots of the tree. The Asuras are
envious of the gods and constantly attempt to take the fruits
of the tree from the gods. As a result of this, they fight with
the gods, and are defeated by the gods and suffer greatly as
a consequence. Because of this constant jealousy, envy and conflict,
existence amongst the Asuras is unhappy and unfortunate. As
with the other realms, there is a cause of rebirth amongst the
demigods. On the positive side, the cause is generosity. On
the negative side, the causes are anger, envy and jealousy.
The sixth realm,
the realm of the gods (Devas) is the happiest amongst the six
realms. As a result of having done wholesome actions, of having
observed the moral precepts and having practised meditation,
living beings are reborn amongst the gods where they enjoy sensual
pleasure or spiritual pleasure, or tranquillity depending upon
the level within the realm of the gods in which they are born.
Nonetheless, the realm of the gods is not to be desired because
the happiness of the gods is impermanent. No matter how much
they may enjoy their existence as a god, when the force of their
karma is exhausted, when the merits of their good conduct and
the power of their experience in meditation are exhausted, the
gods fall from heaven and are reborn in another realm. At this
moment, at the moment of their death, it is said that the gods
suffer even more mental anguish than the physical pain suffered
by beings in the other realms. The negative factor associated
with birth in the realm of the gods is pride.
So here, as you
can see, we have an affliction or defilement associated with
the five realms - hell beings, hungry ghosts, animals, demigods
and the gods, and they are ill-will, desire, ignorance, jealousy
and pride. Birth in any of these five realms is undesirable.
Birth in the three lower realms is undesirable for obvious reasons,
because of the intense suffering and because of the total ignorance
of the beings who inhabit these realms. Even rebirth in the
realms of the demigods and the gods too is undesirable. This
is because, although one experiences a certain degree of happiness
and power, existence amongst the demigods and gods is impermanent.
Besides, because of the distractions and pleasures in these
realms, beings there never think of looking for a way out of
the cycle of birth and death. This is why it is said that of
the six realms, the most fortunate, opportune and favored is
the human realm. This is why I have left the human realm to
the last.
The human realm
(Manushya) is the most favoured of the six realms because as
a human being one has the motivation and the opportunity to
practise the Dharma and to achieve enlightenment. One has this
motivation and opportunity because the conditions conducive
to practising the path are present. In the human realm, one
experiences both happiness and suffering. The suffering in this
realm, though terrible, is not so great as the suffering in
the three realms of woe. The pleasure and happiness experienced
in the human realm is not so great as the pleasure and happiness
experienced in the heavens. As a result, human beings are neither
blinded by the intense happiness experienced by the beings in
the heavens, nor distracted by the unbearable suffering that
beings in the hells experience. Again, unlike the animals, human
beings possess sufficient intelligence to recognize the necessity
to look for a means to achieve the total end of suffering.
Human birth is
difficult to gain from a number of points of view. First of
all, it is difficult to gain from the point of view of its cause.
Good conduct is the foremost cause of rebirth as a human being,
but how rare is truly good conduct. Again, human birth is difficult
to gain from the point of view of number, for human beings are
only a small fraction of the living beings who inhabit the six
realms. Moreover it is not enough simply to be born as a human
being because there are countless human beings who do not have
the opportunity to practise the Dharma. It is therefore not
only necessary to be born as a human being, it is also necessary
to have the opportunity to practise the Dharma, to develop ones
qualities of morality, mental development and wisdom.
The Buddha spoke
about the rarity and the precious nature of opportune birth
amongst human beings. He used a simile to illustrate this point.
Suppose the whole world were a vast ocean, and on the surface
of this ocean there were a yoke floating about, blown about
by the wind, and suppose at the bottom of the ocean there lived
a blind tortoise which came to the surface of the ocean once
every hundred years. Just as difficult as it would be for that
tortoise to place its neck through the opening in that yoke
floating about in the ocean, just so difficult is it to attain
opportune birth as a human being. Elsewhere, it is said that
just as if one were to throw a handful of dried peas against
a stone wall, and just as if one of these peas were to stick
in a crack in the wall, so to be born as a human being with
the opportunity to practise the Dharma is similarly difficult.
It is foolish to
waste human existence along with the conducive conditions that
we enjoy in free societies, the opportunity that we have to
practise the Dharma. It is extremely important that having this
opportunity we make use of it. If we fail to practise the Dharma
in this life, there is no way of knowing where in the six realms
we will be reborn, and when we shall have such a chance again.
We must strive to free ourselves from the cycle of rebirth because
failing to do so means that we will continue to circle endlessly
amongst these six realms of existence. When the karma, wholesome
or unwholesome, that causes us to be born in any of the six
realms is exhausted, rebirth will occur, and we will find ourselves
again in another realm. In fact, it is said that all of us have
circled in the these six realms since beginningless time, that
if all the skeletons that we have had in our various lives were
heaped up, the pile would exceed the height of Mount Sumeru.
If all the mothers milk that we have drunk throughout
our countless existences were collected, the amount would exceed
the amount of water in all the oceans. So now that we have the
opportunity to practise the Dharma, we must do so without delay.
In recent years,
there has been a tendency to interpret the six realms in psychological
terms. Some teachers have suggested that the experience of the
six realms is available to us in this very life. Undoubtedly,
this is true so far as it goes. Those men and women who find
themselves in prisons, tortured, killed, and so forth are undoubtedly
experiencing a situation similar to that of the hell beings.
Similarly, those who are miserly and avaricious experience a
state of mind similar to that of the hungry ghosts. And those
who are animal-like experience a state of mind similar to that
of the animals. Those who are quarrelsome, powerful and jealous
experience a state of mind similar to that of the Asuras. Those
who are proud, tranquil, serene and exalted experience a state
of mind similar to that of the gods. Yet, while it is undoubtedly
true that the experience of the six realms is to some extent
available to us in this human existence, I think it would be
a mistake to assume or to believe that the six realms of existence
do not have a reality which is as real as our human experience.
The hells, the realm of the hungry ghosts, animals, demigods
and gods are as real as our human realm. We will recall that
mind is the creator of all mental states. Actions done with
a pure mind motivated by generosity, love and so forth result
in happy mental states or states of existence like the human
realm and the realm of the gods. But actions done with an impure
mind affected by greed, ill-will and so forth result in unhappy
lives like those of the hungry ghosts and hell beings.
Finally, I would
like to distinguish rebirth from transmigration. You may have
noticed that in Buddhism, we consistently speak of rebirth and
not transmigration. This is because in Buddhism we do not believe
in an abiding entity, in a substance that transmigrates. We
do not believe in a self that is reborn. This is why when we
explain rebirth, we make use of examples which do not require
the transmigration of an essence or a substance. For example,
when a sprout is born from a seed, there is no substance that
transmigrates. The seed and the sprout are not identical. Similarly,
when we light one candle from another candle, no substance travels
from one to the other, and yet the first is the cause of the
second. When one billiard ball strikes another, there is a continuity,
the energy and direction of the first ball is imparted to the
second. It is the cause of the second billiard ball moving in
a particular direction and at a particular speed. When we step
twice into a river, it is not the same river and yet there is
continuity, the continuity of cause and effect. So there is
rebirth, but not transmigration. There is moral responsibility,
but not an independent, permanent self. There is the continuity
of cause and effect, but not permanence. I want to end with
this point because we will be considering the example of the
seed and the sprout, and the example of the flame in an oil
lamp next week when we discuss dependent origination. And with
the help of the teaching of dependent origination, we will understand
better how dependent origination makes moral responsibility
and notself compatible.
Extract
from "Fundamentals of Buddhism", by Dr. Peter Della
Santina.