The Perfection of Patience - Analysis of the Elements I
We read in the “Discourse on the Analysis of the Elements” (Middle Length Sayings III, no 140):
“Thus have I heard:
At one time the Lord, walking on tour among the people of Magadha,
arrived at Rajagaha and approached the potter Bhaggava;
having approached, he spoke thus to Bhaggava the potter:
‘If it is not inconvenient to you, Bhaggava,
I would spend one night in your dwelling.’
‘It is not inconvenient, revered sir,
but there is here one gone forth who came before you to stay.
But if he allow it, do stay, revered sir, according to your pleasure.’ ”
We see the patience of the Buddha who wandered for the benefit of others in
teaching the Dhamma, so that he could help those who were able to realize the
four noble Truths. He walked on tour in Magadha, he stopped in the city of
Rajagaha and came to see the potter. He did not go to a place that was pleasant
and confortable. He asked for a sleeping place in the potter’s workshop just for
one night.
We read in the Commentary to this sutta, the “Papancasudaní” that the potter
Bhaggava thought:
“Monks usually have different inclinations:
some like to keep company, and others like to be alone.
If the monk who came here first is someone who wants to be alone,
he will say, ‘Revered sir, do not enter here,
because I am already in this dwelling’,
so that the person who comes afterwards will go away.
If this would happen, both people would quarrel.
Thus, what has been given should be considered as such,
and what has been done cannot be altered.”
The Commentary states:
“Therefore, he said, ‘It is not inconvenient, revered sir,
but there is here one gone forth who came before you to stay.
But if he allows it, do stay, revered sir, according to your pleasure.’ ”
We read further on in the Sutta:
“At that time there was a young man of family called Pukkusati
who had gone forth from home into homelessness through faith in the Lord.
He was the person who had arrived first at that potter’s dwelling.
Then the Lord approached the venerable Pukkusati:
‘If it is not inconvenient to you, monk,
I will spend a night in this dwelling.’
‘Spacious, friend, is the potter’s dwelling;
let the venerable one stay according to his pleasure.’ ”
- Endurance with kusala
- Adhivasana khanti
- The unimpeded weapon of the good I
- The unimpeded weapon of the good II
- Reflection on patience
- Conduct of Buffalo King
- Dhamma Jataka
- Patience is the highest ascetism
- Analysis of the Elements I
- Analysis of the Elements II
- Analysis of the Elements III
- Analysis of the Elements IV
- Analysis of the Elements V
- Analysis of the Elements VI
- Analysis of the Elements VII
- Analysis of the Elements VIII
- Analysis of the Elements IX
- Analysis of the Elements X
- Analysis of the Elements XI
- When perfections is completed
- A wise man & a dull witted man
- He cannot endure
- The danger of impatience
- Right & wrong kind of patience
- The Ovada-patimokkha I
- The Ovada-patimokkha II
- The Ovada-patimokkha III
- It takes an endlessly long time
- Kassapamandiya Jataka I
- Kassapamandiya Jataka II
- Kassapamandiya Jataka III