The Three Kinds of Full Understanding - The right cause brings the right result
The Sammasambuddha had accumulated the perfections for four
incalculable periods and hundred thousand aeons. From the time the
Buddha Dipankara proclaimed him to be a Sammasambuddha in the
future, he developed all the perfections from life to life. He came to see
and listened to twenty-four former Buddhas during his past lives before he
attained Buddhahood. In his last life, while sitting under the Bodhi tree, he
penetrated the Four Noble Truths and attained successively the stages of
enlightenment of the sotapanna, the sakadagami, the anagami and finally
the stage of the arahat, and thereby became the Sammasambuddha with
Incomparable wisdom. He attained Buddhahood in the vigil of the last night
of the full moon, in the month of Vesakha.
The Buddha's chief disciples were the Venerable Sariputta who was pre-
eminent in wisdom and the Venerable Moggallana who was pre-eminent
in supernatural powers. They had developed panna during one incalculable
period of time and hundred thousand aeons. In his last life Sariputta
attained the stage of the Sotapanna after he had listened to the Dhamma
which Assaji explained to him. When Sariputta explained to Moggallana the
Dhamma he had heard from Assaji, Moggallana attained the stage of the
Sotapanna. Later on they both became Arahats. The Disciples who were
pre-eminent in different ways, such as Kassapa, Ananda, Upali and
Anuruddha, had cultivated panna for hundred thousand aeons. In the
Buddha's time there were many people who had cultivated panna to the
degree that they could penetrate the Four Noble Truths and attain
enlightenment. The time just before the Buddha had passed away was the
most favourable time for the development of panna. The period from his
parinibbana until the present time is not all that long, but still, the present
time is less favourable for the realisation of the Noble Truths. For the
realisation of the Noble Truths the right conditions have to be present,
which are study and understanding of the Dhamma and the right way of
practice. Only the right cause, the development of panna, can bring
the right result.