The Benefits of Being Monks and Nuns
by Lama Zopa Rinpoche
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Some people
ask why it is necessary in the modern world to live an ordained
life. Is it necessary when as a lay person one can practice
Dharma and achieve enlightenment?
If
you tell some Western people about Buddha displaying the twelve
deeds first being a child, then living a householder's life,
married life, then renouncing that and becoming a monk—they
might think ordination is only for Eastern people, for Eastern
culture. Because Buddha's life happened in India, they will
think it doesn't relate to the West and, especially, they
will think it relates just to ancient times. People think
like this, it's normal.
Likewise,
Western people don't know about the mind, nor do they know
much about karma, or, for example, about the existence of
the hell realms. Because these were taught by the Buddha in
ancient times, people feel that hell doesn't exist now. If
hell doesn't exist now then that would mean that nobody creates
the negative karma to get reborn in hell. If no one could
possibly get reborn in hell then everyone would have to have
stabilized realizations.
Usually,
in order to not be reborn in the lower realms, one would have
to have attained the patience level, the third of the four
levels of the path of preparation. Of the five paths to liberation,
this is the second.
Jesus
Christ also revealed the method of living in ordination. From
that, so many monasteries and nunneries were established,
which have produced so many saints and monks and nuns in Christianity.
It's
mainly because of delusion that people say ordination is not
relevant to the twentieth century. You should protect your
mind from delusions so that you don't harm other sentient
beings or yourself. In this way you won't receive harm from
others, and you will receive much peace and happiness. That
is the nature of karma. This is the immediate goal; the longer-term
goal is good rebirth, and then by far the longest are liberation
and enlightenment.
Even
though Buddha and Jesus revealed the method
of ordination, however, it doesn't mean that all lay people
can be monks or nuns—just like some lay people can practice
well, but that doesn't mean that all lay people can practice
well; it doesn't mean that. It's difficult for most lay people.
Not everybody has karma to become sangha. Not everyone can
become sangha. Only some people can become sangha, because
you need a lot of merit and no obstacles to be sangha. If
there is no obstacle coming from your mind, manifesting out,
then also there is no obstacle from outside.
The
main point is that you need much time to practice Dharma,
by keeping distant from the object of delusions. This is especially
true for a beginner. You need to practice until your mind
is stabilized in the realization of the three principal paths
(renunciation, bodhicitta and emptiness)—if possible, even
up till one is an aryan being (liberated). This is why monasteries,
nunneries, caves, hermitages—ascetic places—are needed. This
is why monasteries have discipline—discipline in the mind
and externally. There you see the importance of morality.
In
order to actualize the fundamental path, you need the conditions
for that practice: you need a lot of meditation; a lot of
time to study and to meditate. The most important thing is
to not distract the mind. The more negative karma you create,
the more obstacles to realizations you make. And that means
it takes longer and is more difficult to become free from
samsara, even just for your own happiness.
Therefore,
as much as you live in pure ordination, that much less you
engage in negative karma. Renouncing the householder's life
and living as sangha cuts down so much negative karma. The
idea is to have fewer external activities, work, fewer distractions,
and therefore much more time for meditation, study. There
are a lot of advantages to living the ordained life; a lot
of time to meditate, to study, to develop one's mind.
One of
the most important things for really developing the path to
enlightenment is the realization of samatha—single pointed
concentration. And for that, you need a lot of discipline,
a lot of protection, a lot of morality; you have to cut a
lot of distractions. Even to meditate well for one hour, you
need to cut distractions and apply discipline; you need to
renounce attachment even for that.
If
you follow attachment, you cannot meditate even for one minute;
you cannot find the time. For example if you sit down and
your mind follows attachment towards your boyfriend or girlfriend,
the desire object, then you won't be able to meditate for
even one second. Even from this simple example one can understand
that living as an ordained person makes life so much easier.
The
environment is very important in order for sangha to continue
to be inspired to remain monks and nuns and to continue—month
after month, year after year—to practice and develop the mind
in the path to liberation and enlightenment. Especially for
a beginner, whose mind is not stabilized with the three principal
paths, calm abiding and so forth, the environment has a strong
effect on the mind. It controls the mind of the person who
doesn't practice lam-rim, someone who, besides having no realizations,
doesn't even practice. If you know the teachings but don't
practice, whether you are lay or sangha, then external objects
will control your mind, overwhelm your mind, and that makes
you seek and run after objects.
But when you start to
meditate on, to practice, lam-rim, the three principal paths,
the mind is able to overcome the outside objects. The mind
is more powerful than the outside objects when you meditate
effectively, when you apply the teachings of the Buddha, especially
the lam-rim, in daily life.
During
the time that you apply the meditation, the mind is able to
control the outside object, whether it is a living being or
a non-living thing, whatever. Whether the object is a handsome,
beautiful person or a beautiful flower, when you apply the
lam-rim, the mind is more powerful, and the objects are under
its control. Why? Because the delusion is under the control
of lam-rim practice, the practice of the teaching of the Buddha.
As
a beginner you need to have strong lam-rim meditation and
at the same time to be away from the disturbing objects. The
mind is very weak because it has been habituated since beginningless
time with attachment, and has not been habituated with the
three principles of the path to enlightenment. Therefore,
the delusions are so strong, especially when disturbing objects
are around you, and your intention or desire to seek liberation
is very weak. The delusions are so strong in seeking samsara,
seeking the object of delusion, of pleasure or desire.
Therefore
you need strong lam-rim meditation to subdue the mind, to
control the mind, and at the same time you need to retreat
from, keep distant from, the object of delusion; you need
to retreat from attachment and to retreat from the object
of attachment. If you don't retreat from the internal suffering
of attachment and desire, then being ordained with the desire
objects around you will be a bit like sitting next to a fire
and at the same time wishing to be cool.
Of
course, one thing is to set up a good external environment
for Western sangha, but from the individual sangha's side,
they need to stay in the right environment. Even if someone
sets up a good environment but the individual sangha doesn't
stay in the right environment, then, as I mentioned before,
because the mind is very weak and there is no realization,
no stabilization, the external object will take over the mind.
Which means you will follow the delusions; the delusions will
take over the mind, and you will be unable to practice Dharma,
unable to live in the vows. That makes life so hard, so difficult,
and that's why living in ordination feels like living in a
prison. This is a mistaken view.
By
thinking of the results of living in ordination—liberation
and enlightenment—you should feel so fortunate, and you should
enjoy all the advantages you can get: morality is like a degree
that gets you respect from others, a job to earn a living,
and a one hundred-percent good rebirth, whenever you die.
Morality is a passport to a good rebirth. Most urgent is to
stop rebirth in the lower realms; and then, on top of that,
morality is the basis, the foundation for liberation and enlightenment.
Therefore there is a need to set up a good environment.
There
are so many benefits of living in ordination, as explained
by Buddha in sutra and lam-rim teachings. In the monks' confession
that is done twice a month, some of these benefits of keeping
vows are recited for inspiration, as are some of the shortcomings
of breaking vows. Bikkshus who have morality have "shining
body glorification." They naturally become known to people,
(famous). People praise those qualities. They will achieve
happiness.
There
is no way for one who has morality to receive harm from others.
This point is very important. To receive harm from others
you have to create the cause, that is, causing harm to others.
So you should concentrate on the importance of this very logical
point. A person who doesn't have eyes cannot see form. Likewise
a person who doesn't have morality cannot be liberated. A
person who doesn't live in morality is like someone without
limbs and so cannot walk on the road to go where they wish
(this is not talking about using modern techniques like artificial
legs).
As
a vase is a basis for jewels, so morality is a basis for all
the realizations. If the vase is broken then it cannot act
as a container for precious jewels. Similarly if someone breaks
vows, then it's difficult to achieve realizations. So without
the very foundation of morality, can one achieve sorrowless
state in the future? No.
These
are just a few of the benefits from the sutra spoken by the
Buddha that are normally recited in the bi-monthly confession
for both bikkshus and novices.
Each
sangha has to have a plan to protect themselves by living
in the right environment. That is why monasteries are set
up, that is the purpose of the vinaya rules. They help to
protect the mind. By protecting the mind, guarding the mind,
you become free from an the problems and obstacles, all the
sufferings. You get liberated ultimately from all the sufferings,
from samsara, the oceans of sufferings. All your wishes for
happiness, up to highest enlightenment, get fulfilled, and
also cause happiness to all sentient beings.
Many
of the vinaya precepts describing what to do and what not
to do were advised by Buddha to protect other people's minds,
to prevent them from criticizing the sangha, which is a very
heavy object. That happens if you are careless of the sentient
beings' minds, their feelings, their happiness, their suffering.
So one does have the responsibility to guide other people's
minds. If one is able to follow the vinaya correctly, it generates
a lot of faith in other people's minds and plants the seed
of liberation and enlightenment. It inspires them to follow
the path by taking ordination.
Normally,
sentient beings follow the Buddha's example of how to practice
Dharma. Being sangha causes others to respect you and causes
them to create much good. Even when they respect you, they
create much merit. Also, living in pure ordination causes
your prayers to have so much power for success when you pray
for other people. Your prayers and pujas have much power for
success for other people. If you are living a pure life, that
means you can achieve the result much more easily; your reciting
mantras has much more power, effect. The deities, Buddhas,
Dharma protectors have to listen to your requests, they have
to help you.
They
have no choice because of your purity; and even without your
requests they naturally have to serve you, have to help you.
When other sentient beings make offerings to you, they create
much merit. Since you are living purely there is also no danger
to yourself by accepting offerings. Otherwise, it is said
in the teachings, eating offerings is like drinking lava or
eating iron when it is afire with flames. It is said that
to eat these is much easier than to live on the offerings
made by people with devotion.
There
is a big difference between lay and ordained people giving
teachings. If you are ordained, there is great effect, because
what someone sees is a person living in renunciation. Lay
people will respect what you are doing, living a life that
the lay person cannot do; that quality that is difficult to
achieve. Respect comes from the side of the lay people.
Lay
people should think in this way, they should look at sangha
in this way, and let it cause devotion. If lay people don't
think that sangha have any qualities, and they don't make
offerings, don't support sangha, they don't create their own
good karma.
Without
protecting the mind, without morality, you cannot do perfect
service for other sentient beings, even if you are a lay person.
When you try to help others, problems and difficulties always
arise because you have ego, because of the three poisonous
minds. So without Dharma practice you can't really do perfect
service for others. Sooner or later a problem arises in your
work, whether you are running a country or doing public service.
Even in normal daily life it's like that. Without morality,
without protection of the mind, without some discipline, you
can't really have satisfaction, peace and happiness in the
heart, you can't have fulfillment in the heart.
Even
Hindus achieve the nine levels of samatha, which is one of
the common meditations that can be achieved even without refuge
in Buddha, Dharma, Sangha. Even they are able to achieve detached
mind, renunciation of the desire realm; their pleasure. That
means even they follow morality and discipline along with
this renunciation. Then they become detached by thinking of
the shortcomings of being in the form realm. Even after that
they achieve the tip of samsara within the formless realms,
which have the four mental states; they get detached from
the three earlier realms by thinking of their shortcomings.
So
even the Hindus practice renunciation, they are able to achieve
renunciation. Not the renunciation of the whole entire samsara;
that is not mentioned in Hinduism. To achieve ultimate liberation
is not mentioned, neither is a description of the five paths
or even emptiness. There is no way to achieve liberation without
emptiness, without knowing the Prasangika view of emptiness,
from the four schools of Buddhist philosophy.
If ordination
does not have a big advantage, if it is not extremely important,
then for what reason did Buddha himself show a monk's life,
shaving his head himself at the River Niranjana? (According
to Mahayana, Buddha's becoming enlightened in Bodhgaya was
not the first time; in reality, he became enlightened an inconceivable
time ago.)
All
the twelve deeds that Buddha showed, and the Four Noble Truths,
teach us sentient beings how to practice Dharma. There are
all these sufferings and problems, and the one way you can
get out of this forever and never experience it at all is
by overcoming the cause: by liberating the mind from the delusions
and karma. Only then will you achieve ultimate liberation
and never have to experience suffering at all. That can be
achieved because there is a true path that one can practice,
the method. So basically the Four Noble Truths and the twelve
deeds show how to practice Dharma.
Generalizing
that it is the best thing for everyone to leave ordained life
and take up lay practice is a wrong concept. The problem is,
one: a lack of real understanding of Dharma, especially karma;
and two: the extremely important thing missing is missing
from the meditation experience, renunciation by realizing
the sufferings of samsara and the lower realms, realizing
impermanence and death; no strong experience is there, the
realization is not there.
Even
when there is some understanding of Dharma, it all remains
intellectual, so the mind stays the same or becomes worse:
even there are stronger delusions than before, depending on
the person. Then of course, the way one lives the life is
with delusion: the one from whom one has taken refuge is delusion,
the friend is delusion, Guru and Triple Gems are delusion.
Then one follows someone else, and they too are delusion.
Life
like this can be very difficult. Life can be extremely difficult,
very confused; or sangha in robes, with shaved head, but inwardly
the opposite. Of course, nobody is making one's life difficult;
one's self is making one's own life difficult, because one
is in a prison of samsara by following the delusions. So then,
because of your own experience, you, the one person's experience,
from not having practiced Dharma continuously, you tell everybody
that it is not a good idea to be a monk but better to be lay
and practice Dharma.
In
Tibet we have a practice called tsa-tsa: from a block
of Buddha's image we make many hundreds and thousands of tsa-tsas.
It's like you become the block and make everybody become the
same as you. I think that this might be a way of making bad
tsa-tsas.
What makes the nun's or monk's life difficult living in ordination
is like this. If, in your heart the goal is nirvana, then
it becomes extremely easy, no problem, even if you face some
hardships, it is a pleasure; they are not important to your
mind. But if, in your heart, the goal you want to achieve
is samsara, the delight of samsaric pleasures, then even if
other people don't make life difficult, you yourself make
it difficult. Even if other people think it's okay, in your
mind it is difficult. So, living in ordination depends on
what is in your heart as the goal. If you change it from samsara
into liberation and enlightenment, and keep that twenty-four
hours, all the time, then there is no problem. This way your
life is not torn out, and it's very clear in your heart.
Of
course you can't have both samsara and liberation. As was
mentioned by the Kadampa geshes, you cannot sew with a two-pointed
needle. This way you lose Dharma liberation. As the Kadampa
geshes mentioned, seeking the happiness of this life and seeking
Dharma don't happen together. If you seek the happiness of
life then you lose Dharma, like the example of the two-pointed
needle which cannot sew. Dharma and liberation are lost when
you seek both nirvana and samsara.
One
can understand from these examples, even without relating
them to Buddhism, the importance, the need, for ordained life.
So generalizing in the West that it is not a good idea to
be ordained, taking lay practice as the best thing for everyone,
that is a wrong concept.
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