Association with the Wise
By Bhikkhu Bodhi
The Maha-mangala Sutta, the Great Discourse on Blessings, is one of the most popular
Buddhist Suttas, included in all the standard repertories of Pali devotional chants.
The Sutta begins when a deity of stunning beauty, having descended to earth in
the stillness of the night, approaches the Blessed One in the Jeta Grove and asks
about the way to the highest blessings. In the very first stanza of his reply
the Buddha states that the highest blessing comes from avoiding fools and associating
with the wise (asevana ca balanam, panditanan ca sevana). Since the rest of the
Sutta goes on to sketch all the different aspects of human felicity, both mundane
and spiritual, the assignment of association with the wise to the opening stanza
serves to emphasize a key point: that progress along the path of the Dhamma hinges
on making the right choices in our friendships.
Contrary to certain psychological theories, the human mind is not a hermetically
sealed chamber enclosing a personality unalterably shaped by biology and infantile
experience. Rather, throughout life it remains a highly malleable entity continually
remolding itself in response to its social interactions. Far from coming to our
personal relationships with a fixed and immutable character, our regular and repeated
social contacts implicate us in a constant process of psychological osmosis that
offers precious opportunities for growth and transformation. Like living cells
engaged in a chemical dialogue with their colleagues, our minds transmit and receive
a steady barrage of messages and suggestions that may work profound changes even
at levels below the threshold of awareness.
Particularly critical to our spiritual progress is our selection of friends and
companions, who can have the most decisive impact upon our personal destiny. It
is because he perceived how susceptible our minds can be to the influence of our
companions that the Buddha repeatedly stressed the value of good friendship (kalyanamittata)
in the spiritual life. The Buddha states that he sees no other thing that is so
much responsible for the arising of unwholesome qualities in a person as bad friendship,
nothing so helpful for the arising of wholesome qualities as good friendship (AN
I.vii,10; I.viii,1). Again, he says that he sees no other external factor that
leads to so much harm as bad friendship, and no other external factor that leads
to so much benefit as good friendship (AN I.x,13,14). It is through the influence
of a good friend that a disciple is led along the Noble Eightfold Path to release
from all suffering (SN 45:2).
Good friendship, in Buddhism, means considerably more than associating with people
that one finds amenable and who share one's interests. It means in effect seeking
out wise companions to whom one can look for guidance and instruction. The task
of the noble friend is not only to provide companionship in the treading of the
way. The truly wise and compassionate friend is one who, with understanding and
sympathy of heart, is ready to criticize and admonish, to point out one's faults,
to exhort and encourage, perceiving that the final end of such friendship is growth
in the Dhamma. The Buddha succinctly expresses the proper response of a disciple
to such a good friend in a verse of the Dhammapada: "If one finds a person
who points out one's faults and who reproves one, one should follow such a wise
and sagacious counselor as one would a guide to hidden treasure" (Dhp. 76).
Association with the wise becomes so crucial to spiritual development because
the example and advice of a noble-minded counselor is often the decisive factor
that awakens and nurtures the unfolding of our own untapped spiritual potential.
The uncultivated mind harbors a vast diversity of unrealized possibilities, ranging
from the depths of selfishness, egotism and aggressivity to the heights of wisdom,
self-sacrifice and compassion. The task confronting us, as followers of the Dhamma,
is to keep the unwholesome tendencies in check and to foster the growth of the
wholesome tendencies, the qualities that lead to awakening, to freedom and purification.
However, our internal tendencies do not mature and decline in a vacuum. They are
subject to the constant impact of the broader environment, and among the most
powerful of these influences is the company we keep, the people we look upon as
teachers, advisors and friends. Such people silently speak to the hidden potentials
of our own being, potentials that will either unfold or wither under their influence.
In our pursuit of the Dhamma it therefore becomes essential for us to choose as
our guides and companions those who represent, at least in part, the noble qualities
we seek to internalize by the practice of the Dhamma. This is especially necessary
in the early stages of our spiritual development, when our virtuous aspirations
are still fresh and tender, vulnerable to being undermined by inward irresolution
or by discouragement from acquaintances who do not share our ideals. In this early
phase our mind resembles a chameleon, which alters its color according to its
background. Just as this remarkable lizard turns green when in the grass and brown
when on the ground, so we become fools when we associate with fools and sages
when we associate with sages. Internal changes do not generally occur suddenly;
but slowly, by increments so slight that we ourselves may not be aware of them,
our characters undergo a metamorphosis that in the end may prove to be dramatically
significant.
If we associate closely with those who are addicted to the pursuit of sense pleasures,
power, riches and fame, we should not imagine that we will remain immune from
those addictions: in time our own minds will gradually incline to these same ends.
If we associate closely with those who, while not given up to moral recklessness,
live their lives comfortably adjusted to mundane routines, we too will remain
stuck in the ruts of the commonplace. If we aspire for the highest -- for the
peaks of transcendent wisdom and liberation -- then we must enter into association
with those who represent the highest. Even if we are not so fortunate as to find
companions who have already scaled the heights, we can well count ourselves blessed
if we cross paths with a few spiritual friends who share our ideals and who make
earnest efforts to nurture the noble qualities of the Dhamma in their hearts.
When we raise the question how to recognize good friends, how to distinguish good
advisors from bad advisors, the Buddha offers us crystal-clear advice. In the
Shorter Discourse on a Full-Moon Night (MN 110) he explains the difference between
the companionship of the bad person and the companionship of the good person.
The bad person chooses as friends and companions those who are without faith,
whose conduct is marked by an absence of shame and moral dread, who have no knowledge
of spiritual teachings, who are lazy and unmindful, and who are devoid of wisdom.
As a consequence of choosing such bad friends as his advisors, the bad person
plans and acts for his own harm, for the harm of others, and the harm of both,
and he meets with sorrow and misery.
In contrast, the Buddha continues, the good person chooses as friends and companions
those who have faith, who exhibit a sense of shame and moral dread, who are learned
in the Dhamma, energetic in cultivation of the mind, mindful, and possessed of
wisdom. Resorting to such good friends, looking to them as mentors and guides,
the good person pursues these same qualities as his own ideals and absorbs them
into his character. Thus, while drawing ever closer to deliverance himself, he
becomes in turn a beacon light for others. Such a one is able to offer those who
still wander in the dark an inspiring model to emulate, and a wise friend to turn
to for guidance and advice.
