The Sutra Called Flawless Purity
A
dialogue with the Laywoman Gangottara
Introduction
This Short
Sutra from one of the oldest collections of Mahayana sutras, "The Heap of
Jewels" Further explores the meaning of emptiness. If Phenomena are empty
of any essence, than the whole dualistic mind that wants to apprehend them as
real so as to possess or shun them, together with the world of apparently real
things it creates, has really never come into existence. Fundamentally, it is
unborn, yet it appears like a magic display. Since it is unborn it also never
dies. Here, that place beyond the grasp of the conceptual mind is referred to
as Nirvana. The setting of this sutra is in the Jeta Grove outside the city of
Shravasti, north of the Ganges River in Central India. This is the site of one
of the first great monasteries built for The Buddha and his community, donated
by the great patron Anathapindika. The seemingly fearless laywoman Gangottara,
who obviously already has a superb grasp of the teachings (though tending towards
the nihilistic side), is incisively interrogating the Buddha on his own ground.
Though an unflinching debater, she addresses him respectfully as 'Tathágata',
and 'World honored one'.
Thus have I heard.
Once the Buddha was dwelling
in the garden of Anathapindika, in the Jeta Grove near Shravasti. At that time,
a laywoman named Gangottara came from her dwelling in Shravasti to see the Buddha.
She prostrated herself with her head at the Buddha's feet, withdrew to one side,
and sat down.
The world honored one asked Gangottara,
"Where do you
come from?"
The Laywoman asked the Buddha,
"World-Honored One,
if someone were to ask a magically produced being where he came from, how should
the question be answered?
The World Honored One told her,
"A magically
produced being neither comes nor goes, is neither born nor perishes; how can one
speak of a place from which he comes?
Then the laywoman asked,
"Is
it not true that all things are illusory, like magic?"
The Buddha said,
"Yes indeed, what you say is true"
Gangottara asked,
"If
all things are illusory, like magic, why did you ask me where I came from?"
The World Honored One told her,
"A magically produced being does
not go to the miserable planes of existence, nor to heaven; nor does he attain
nirvana. Gangottara is that also true of you?"
The Laywoman replied,
"As I see it, if my own body were different from a magically produced
one, then I could speak of going to the good and miserable planes of existence,
or of attaining Nirvana. I see no difference, though, between my body and a magically
produced one, so how can I speak of going to the good or miserable planes, or
of attaining nirvana?
"Furthermore, World Honored One, nirvana's very
nature is such that it is not reborn in the good or miserable planes, nor does
it experience parinirvana. I perceive that the same is true of my own nature."
The Buddha asked,
"Do you not seek the state of nirvana?"
Gangottara
asked in turn,
"If this question were put to one who had never come into
being, how should it be answered?"
The Buddha replied,
"That
which has never come into being is nirvana itself"
Gangottara asked,
"Are not all things identical with nirvana?
The Buddha replied,
"So they are, so they are.
"World Honored One, if all things
are identical with nirvana why did you ask me 'Do you not seek the state of nirvana'?
"Furthermore World Honored One, if a magically produced being asked another
magically produced being 'Do you not seek the state of nirvana?' what would the
answer be?"
The World Honored One told her,
"I raised the question
because there are in this assembly good men and good women who can be brought
to maturity. I am free of mental attachments. Why? Because the Tathágata
knows that even the names of things inapprehensible, let alone the things themselves
or those who seek nirvana."
Gangottara said,
"If so, why all
the accumulation of good roots for the attainment of enlightenment?"
[The
Buddha replied],
"Neither Bodhisattvas nor their good roots can be apprehended,
because in the Bodhisattvas' minds there is no discriminative thought as to whether
they are accumulating good roots or not."
Gangottara asked,
"What
do you mean by 'no discriminative thought'?"
The World Honored One answered,
"The absence of discriminative thought cannot be understood or grasped
by means of thinking. Why? Because in the state of non-discriminative thought
even the mind is inapprehensible, let alone the mental functions. This state in
which the mind is inappreciable is called inconceivable. It cannot be grasped
or realized. It is neither pure nor impure. Why So? Because, as the Tathágata
always teaches, all things are as empty and unimpeded as space."
Gangottara
inquired,
"If all things are like empty space, why does the World Honored
One speak of form, feeling conception, impulse and consciousness; the eighteen
elements; the twelve entrances; the twelve links of dependent origination; The
defiled and the undefiled; the pure and impure things; samsára and nirvana?"
The Buddha told Gangottara,
"When I speak of a 'self', for example,
although I express the concept by a word, actually the nature of a 'self' is inapprehensible.
I speak of form but the nature of form is also inapprehensible, and so it is with
the other Dharma's, up to nirvana. Just as we cannot find water in mirages, so
we cannot find nature in form, and so it is with the others, up to nirvana.
"Gangottara,
only a person who cultivates pure conduct in accordance with the dharma, perceiving
that nothing can be apprehended, deserves to be called a real cultivator of pure
conduct. Since the arrogant say that they have apprehended something, they cannot
be said to be firmly established in genuine pure conduct. Such arrogant people
will be terrified and doubtful when they hear this profound Dharma. They will
be unable to liberate themselves from birth, old age, sickness, death, worry,
sorrow, suffering, and distress.
"Gangottara, after my parinirvana, there
will be some people able to spread this profound Dharma, which can stop the rounds
of samsára. However, some fools, because of their evil views, will hate
those Dharma-Masters, and will contrive to harm them. Such fools will fall to
the hells for that."
Gangottara asked,
"You speak of this profound
dharma which can stop the rounds of samsára, what do you mean by 'stop
the rounds of samsára?'
The World Honored One replied,
"To
stop the rounds of samsára is to penetrate reality, the realm of the inconceivable.
Such a Dharma cannot be damaged or destroyed. Hence, it is called the dharma that
can stop the rounds of samsára."
Then the World Honored One smiled
graciously and emitted from his forehead blue, yellow, red, white, and crystalline
lights. The lights illuminated all the numerous lands, reaching as high as the
Brahma Heaven, then returned to the Buddha's and entered the top of the Buddha's
head.
Seeing this, the venerable Ánanda thought to himself,
"The
Tathágata, the worthy one, the supremely enlightened one, does not smile
without a reason."
He rose from his seat, uncovered his right shoulder,
knelt on his right knee, and joined his palms towards the Buddha, inquiring,
"Why
did the Buddha smile?"
The Buddha replied,
"Recall that, in
the past, a thousand Tathágatas also taught this dharma here, and each
of those assemblies was also led by a laywoman named Gangottara. After hearing
this Dharma preached, the laywoman, and all the assembly left the household life.
In time, they entered nirvana without residue."
Ánanda asked the
Buddha,
"What name should be given to this Sutra and how should we accept
and uphold it?"
The Buddha said,
"This Sutra is called Flawless
Purity, and you should accept and uphold it by that name"
During the
Preaching of this sutra, seven hundred monks and four hundred nuns were liberated
from defilements forever and their minds were set free.
At that time, the
gods of the realm of desire magically produce various kinds of wonderful celestial
flowers and scattered them on the Buddha, saying,
"Rare indeed is this
laywoman, who can converse fearlessly with the Tathágata on equal terms.
She must have served and made offerings to countless Buddhas, and planted good
roots in their presence."
After the Buddha had finished speaking this
sutra, the Laywoman Gangottara and all the other gods, humans, asuras, gandharvas,
and so forth were jubilant over the Buddha's teaching. They accepted it with faith,
and begun to follow it with veneration"