On one occasion Ven. Ananda was staying in Kosambi at Ghosita's monastery. There he addressed the monks: |
|
- "Friend monks!" |
|
-"Yes, friend," the monks replied to him. |
|
Ven. Ananda said: |
|
"It is amazing, friends, it is marvelous, how the Blessed One who knows & sees, the worthy one, rightly self-awakened, has attained & recognized the opportunity for the purification of beings, for the overcoming of sorrow & lamentation, for the disappearance of pain & distress, for the attainment of the right method, & for the realization of Unbinding. |
|
-Where the eye will be, and forms, and yet one will not be sensitive to that dimension. -Where the ear will be, and sounds, and yet one will not be sensitive to that dimension. -Where the nose will be, and aromas,and yet one will not be sensitive to that dimension. -Where the tongue will be, and flavors, and yet one will not be sensitive to that dimension. -Where the body will be, and tactile sensations, and yet one will not be sensitive to that dimension." |
|
When this was said, Ven. Udayin said to Ven. Ananda, -"Is one percipient when not sensitive to that dimension, my friend, or unpercipient?" |
|
[Ananda:] "One is percipient when not sensitive to that dimension, my friend, not unpercipient." |
|
[Udayin:] "When not sensitive to that dimension, my friend, one is percipient of what?" |
|
[Ananda:] "There is the case where, with the complete transcending of perceptions of [physical] form, with the disappearance of perceptions of resistance, and not heeding perceptions of diversity, thinking, 'Infinite space,' one enters & remains in the dimension of the infinitude of space. This is one way of being percipient when not sensitive to that dimension. |
|
Then again, with the complete transcending of the dimension of the infinitude of space, thinking, 'Infinite consciousness,' one enters & remains in the dimension of the infinitude of consciousness. This is another way of being percipient when not sensitive to that dimension. |
|
Then again, with the complete transcending of the dimension of the infinitude of consciousness, thinking, 'There is nothing,' one enters & remains in the dimension of nothingness. This is another way of being percipient when not sensitive to that dimension. |
|
Once, friend, when I was staying in Saketa at the Game Refuge in the Black Forest, the nun Jatila Bhagika went to where I was staying, and on arrival — having bowed to me — stood to one side. As she was standing there, she said to me: 'The concentration whereby — neither pressed down nor forced back, nor with fabrication kept blocked or suppressed — still as a result of release, contented as a result of standing still, and as a result of contentment one is not agitated: This concentration is said by the Blessed One to be the fruit of what?' |
|
"I said to her, |
|
Note 1. Arahantship. |
|