1-1-5 Ādittavaggo | Samyutta

V. Ablaze

41 (1) Ablaze

Thus have I heard. On one occasion the Blessed One was dwelling at Sāvatthī in Jeta’s Grove, Anāthapiṇḍika’s Park.

Then, when the night had advanced, a certain Devatā of stunning beauty, illuminating the entire Jeta’s Grove, approached the Blessed One.  

Having approached, he paid homage to the Blessed One, stood to one side, and recited these verses in the presence of the Blessed One:

136 When one’s house is ablaze
The vessel taken out
Is the one that is useful,
Not the one left burnt inside.

137 So when the world is ablaze
With [the fires of] aging and death,
One should take out [one’s wealth] by giving:
What is given is well salvaged.

139 What is given yields pleasant fruit,
But not so what is not given.
Thieves take it away, or kings,
It gets burnt by fire or is lost.

140 Then in the end one leaves the body
Along with one’s possessions.
Having understood this, the wise person
Should enjoy himself but also give.
Having given and enjoyed as fits his means,
Blameless he goes to the heavenly state.

42 (2) Giving What?

[A Devatā:]

141 Giving what does one give strength?
Giving what does one give beauty?
Giving what does one give ease?
Giving what does one give sight?
Who is the giver of all?
Being asked, please explain to me.

[The Blessed One:]

142 Giving food, one gives strength;
Giving clothes, one gives beauty;
Giving a vehicle, one gives ease;
Giving a lamp, one gives sight.

143 The one who gives a residence
Is the giver of all.
But the one who teaches the Dhamma
Is the giver of the Deathless.

43 (3) Food

144 They always take delight in food,
Both devas and human beings.
So what sort of spirit could it be
That does not take delight in food?

145 When they give out of faith
With a heart of confidence,
Food accrues to [the giver] himself
Both in this world and the next.

146 Therefore, having removed stinginess,
The conqueror of the stain should give a gift.
Merits are the support for living beings
[When they arise] in the other world.

44 (4) One Root

[A Devatā:]

147 The seer has crossed over the abyss
With its one root, two whirlpools,
Three stains, five extensions,
An ocean with twelve eddies.

45 (5) Perfect

[A Devatā:]

148 Behold him of perfect name,
The seer of the subtle goal,
The giver of wisdom, unattached
To the lair of sensual pleasures.
Behold the wise one, all-knowing,
The great seer treading the noble path.

46 (6) Nymphs

149 Resounding with a host of nymphs,
Haunted by a host of demons!
This grove is to be called ‘Deluding’:
How does one escape from it?

150 The Straight Way’ that path is called,
And ‘fearless’ is its destination.
The chariot is called ‘unrattling,’
Fitted with wheels of wholesome states.

151 The sense of shame is its leaning board,
Mindfulness its upholstery;
I call the Dhamma the charioteer,
With right view running out in front.

152 One who has such a vehicle—
Whether a woman or a man—
Has, by means of this vehicle,
Drawn close to Nibbāna.

47 (7) Planters of Groves

153 For whom does merit always increase,
Both by day and by night?
Who are the people going to heaven,
Established in Dhamma, endowed with virtue?

154 Those who set up a park or a grove,
The people who construct a bridge,
A place to drink and a well,
Those who give a residence:

155 For them merit always increases,
Both by day and by night;
Those are the people going to heaven,
Established in Dhamma, endowed with virtue.

48 (8) Jeta’s Grove

[The Devatā Anāthapiṇḍika:]

156 This indeed is that Jeta’s Grove,
The resort of the Order of seers,
Dwelt in by the Dhamma King,
A place that gives me joy.

157 Action, knowledge, righteousness,
Virtue, an excellent life:
By this are mortals purified,
Not by clan or wealth.

158 Therefore a person who is wise,
Out of regard for his own good,
Should carefully examine the Dhamma:
Thus he is purified in it.

159 Sāriputta truly is endowed with wisdom,
With virtue and with inner peace.
Even a Bhikkhu who has gone beyond
At best can only equal him.

49 (9) Stingy

[A Devatā:]

160 Those who are stingy here in the world,
Niggardly folk, revilers,
People who create obstacles
For others engaged in giving alms:

161 What kind of result do they reap?
What kind of future destiny?
We’ve come to ask the Blessed One this:
How are we to understand it?

[The Blessed One:]

162 Those who are stingy here in the world,
Niggardly folk, revilers,
People who create obstacles
For others engaged in giving alms:
They might be reborn in hell,
In the animal realm or Yama’s world.

163 If they come back to the human state
They are born in a poor family
Where clothes, food, pleasures, and sport
Are obtained only with difficulty.

164 Whatever the fools may expect from others,
Even that they do not obtain.
This is the result in this very life;
And in the future a bad destination.

[A Devatā:]

165 We understand thus what you have said;
We ask, O Gotama, another question:
Those here who, on gaining the human state,
Are amiable and generous,
Confident in the Buddha and the Dhamma
And deeply respectful towards the Saṅgha:

166 What kind of result do they reap?
What kind of future destiny?
We’ve come to ask the Blessed One this:
How are we to understand it?

[The Blessed One:]

167 Those here who, on gaining the human state,
Are amiable and generous,
Confident in the Buddha and the Dhamma
And deeply respectful towards the Saṅgha,
These brighten up the heavens
Where they’ve been reborn.

168 If they come back to the human state
They are reborn in a rich family
Where clothes, food, pleasures, and sport
Are obtained without difficulty.

169 They rejoice like the devas who control
The goods amassed by others.
This is the result in this very life;
And in the future a good destination.

50 (10) Ghaṭīkāra

[The Devatā Ghaṭīkāra:]

170 7 Bhikkhus reborn in Avihā
Have been fully liberated.
With lust and hatred utterly destroyed,
They have crossed over attachment to the world.

[The Blessed One:]

171 And who are those who crossed the swamp,
The realm of Death so hard to cross?
Who, having left the human body,
Have overcome the celestial bond?

[Ghaṭīkāra:]

172 Upaka and Palagaṇḍa,
With Pukkusāti—these are 3.
Then Bhaddiya and Bhaddadeva,
And Bāhudantī and Piṅgiya.
These, having left the human body,
Have overcome the celestial bond.

[The Blessed One:]

173 Good is the word you speak of them,
Of those who have abandoned Māra’s snares.
Whose Dhamma was it that they understood
Whereby they cut through the bondage of existence?

[Ghaṭīkāra:]

174 It was not apart from the Blessed One!
It was not apart from your Teaching!
By having understood your Dhamma
They cut through the bondage of existence.

175 Where name-and-form ceases,
Stops without remainder:
By understanding that Dhamma here
They cut through the bondage of existence.

[The Blessed One:]

176 Deep is the speech you utter,
Hard to understand, very hard to grasp.
Having understood whose Dhamma
Do you utter such speech?

[Ghaṭīkāra:]

177 In the past I was the potter,
Ghaṭīkāra in Vehaḷiṅga.
I supported my mother and father then
As a lay follower of the Buddha Kassapa.

178 I abstained from sexual intercourse,
I was celibate, free from carnal ties.
I was your fellow villager,
In the past I was your friend.

179 I am the one who knows
These seven liberated Bhikkhus,
Who with lust and hatred utterly destroyed
Have crossed over attachment to the world.

[The Blessed One:]

180 Just so it was at that time,
As you say, O Bhaggava:
In the past you were the potter,
Ghaṭīkāra in Vehaḷiṅga.
You supported your mother and father then
As a lay follower of the Buddha Kassapa.

181 You abstained from sexual intercourse,
You were celibate, free from carnal ties.
You were my fellow villager,
In the past you were my friend.

182 Such was the meeting that took place
Between those friends from the past,
Both now inwardly developed,
Bearers of their final bodies.