The Four Truths

 

The Four Truths, the first teaching of the Buddha, explains the heart of Buddhist teaching. The recognition of suffering is the first truth because Buddhism is the compassionate view of the world and spirituaity. It entails a vision of a better world, and a plan for doing something about it. Buddhism is about the relieving of those that are suffering and the offering of true contentment, enlightenment of those that are in the darkness of ignorance and liberation of those that are not free. All of its principles are about this. It is not an intellectual exercise or a philosophical speculation about phenomena. If it is not about bringing comfort, enlightenment and liberation to living beings, it is not Buddhism.

#1 The Truth of Suffering (The Disease): All living beings are subject to birth, sickness, old age and death, and wandering through the endless cycles of life & death (samsara) in the mortal existence of the threefold realm. The Great Calm-Observation says:

#2 The Truth of Its Origination (The Diagnosis): Suffering is caused by ignorant clinging of an impermanent and false self in the threefold realm of mortal existence in Life & Death (Samsara). The Buddha taught that this self-existence causes a never-ending cycle of three inter-penetrating pathways, which are:

  1. Destiny-producing deeds (karmas) that produce retributions of suffering
  2. Retributions of suffering (duhkha) that produce emotional distress
  3. Emotional distress (klesas) that produces destiny-producing deeds

This was later elaborated into a teaching that is called the twelve-fold wheel of dependence on origination, which more elaborately explains the never-ending cycle of Life & Death. Origination is the cause and suffering is the effect. Chih-I said:

The four currents (asravas) are ignorance, sensory desire (for gratification), craving for (self) existence, and attachment to views (opinions).

#3 The Truth of Its Extinction (Health): Suffering is extinguished by the extinction of its cause (origination). The extinction of suffering and its origination (the four asravas) is called Nirvana, which literally means the blowing out of a candle or lamp. Nirvana is defined as the ultimate goal of realization. This goal entails liberation from the self, its suffering and its wandering in the threefold realm of mortality, the wheel of Life & Death (Samsara). It is not ‘nothingness’ or ‘non-existence’, but rather a state in which suffering and its origination (cause) are extinguished.

#4 The Truth of The Path (The Medicine): The path to this liberation can be summarized as morality, mental concentration & spiritual insight. Sakyamuni elaborated this into the noble eightfold path:

 

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  Since July 9, 2001


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