GAUTAMA-THE COMPASSIONATE
Gautama, prince of the house of Siddhartha,
of the Sakya class, was born in northern India in
the township of Kapilavastu, in the year 556 B.C.,
according to the best authorities, as interpreted and
reported by Max Muller.
The Japanese tradition agrees with
this, practically, stating that O Shaka Sama (signifying
one born of wisdom and love) was born as a Kotai Si,
crown prince of the Maghada country.
We have the assurance that as a youth,
Gautama, like Jesus, exhibited a serious mindedness
and an insight into matters spiritual, which astonished
and dumbfounded his hearers, and the sages who gave
him respectful attention.
Some accounts even go so far as to
state that at the very moment of his birth the young
prince was able to speak, and that his words ascended
“even to the gods of the uppermost Brahma-world.”
Divesting the traditions that surround
the birth and early life of the world’s great
masters, of much that has been interpolated by a designing
priesthood, we may yet conclude that a certain seriousness,
and a deep sympathy with the sorrows of their fellowmen,
would naturally characterize these inspired ones,
even while they were still in their early youth.
It is evident that the young Prince
Siddhartha was subject to meditation and that these
meditations led at times to complete trance.
It is reported that one day while
out riding in all the pomp and accoutrements of the
son of a ruling king, he was visited by an angel (a
messenger from the gods of Devachan), and told that
if he would lessen the sorrows of the world that he
must renounce his right to his father’s kingdom
and go into the jungle, becoming a hermit, and devoting
his life to fasting, prayer and meditation, in order
to fit himself for the work of preaching the “way
of liberation,” which consisted of, first of
all, to take no life; be pure in mind; be as the humblest,
which latter admonition found little favor with the
world of his personal environment where caste was
and still is, a seemingly ineradicable race-thought.
The sorrows of humanity weighed heavily
upon his heart, and the superficialities of the wealthy
and ostentatious court in which he lived, irked his
outspoken and truth-loving spirit.
Surrounded, as he was, by wealth and
ease, with time for contemplation and a mind given
to philosophic speculation, the young prince found
no sense of comfort or permanent satisfaction in his
own immunity from want and sorrow. He pondered
long upon the way to become freed from the “successive
round of births and deaths,” and thus pondering,
he sought solitude in which to find his questions
answered.
Fasting and penance have ever been
the gist of the instruction given to those who would
“find the way to God,” and so to this end
Gautama fasted and prayed, and practised self-sacrifice.
But the attainment of liberation was
not easy, and Siddhartha suffered long and practiced
self-mortification assiduously, at length being rewarded;
and “there arose within him the eye to perceive
the great and noble truths which had been handed down;
the knowledge of their nature; the understanding of
their cause; the wisdom that lights the true path;
the light that expels darkness.”
The terrible struggle which characterized
the attainment of cosmic consciousness, by so many
of the sages and saviours of history, is, we believe,
clue to the fact that no one individual may hope to
rise so immeasurably above the plane of the race-consciousness
of his day and age, except through intense and overwhelming
desire.
Gautama abandoned his heritage, his
relatives, his wife to whom he was devoted, and his
infant son, as we have previously stated, not because
Illumination is purchasable at so terrible a price,
but because his desire to know transcended
all other desires, and in order to be free from the
demands made upon him, he must of necessity, seek solitude.
Few examples of the attainment of
cosmic consciousness are as complete and of such fullness,
as that attained by Buddha, and no instance which history
affords has left so great an effect upon the world.
It is estimated that at least one-third
of the human race are Buddhists. This is not
saying that any such number of persons are like unto
Buddha, nor do we contend that this is any evidence
that his message is greater or more fraught with truth
than that of other illumined ones.
The intelligent student of occultism
in all its phases will arrive, sooner or later, at
the inevitable conclusion that all illumined souls
have seen and have taught the same fundamental truth.
Buddha was convinced that in The Absolute,
or First Cause, there could be no sin and consequently
no sorrow, and he persistently sought to inaugurate
such systems of conduct and such a standard of morals
as would lead the disciple back to godhood, or liberation
from the “wheel of causation.”
To keep the mind pure and clean was
the burden of his cry, well knowing that the mind
is the fertile field wherein illusions of sense consciousness
thrive. He says:
“Mind is the root (of evil);
actions proceed from the mind. If anyone speak
or act from a corrupt mind, suffering will follow,
as the dust follows the rolling wheel.”
That we can not expect to escape the
result of our thoughts and acts was ever a doctrine
of Buddha, albeit, he seems also to have sought to
make clear to his disciples, the UNREALITY of sin
as a part of the indestructible “First Cause.”
Many Buddhist sects interpret the
doctrines of Buddha to deny a belief in a future existence,
in at least as far as identity is concerned, but this
conception is not consistent with the most reliable
reports, neither is it in keeping with the extreme
peace and satisfaction which all illumined ones experience.
If extinction of identity were the
goal of Illumination, it is inconceivable that the
illumined ones should report the attainment of perfect
satisfaction and bliss.
Besides, it is clearly stated that
Gautama told his disciples that he had already entered
Nirvana, while yet in the body.
“My mind is free from passions;
is released from the follies of the world. I
have gained the victory,” said Lord Buddha to
his disciple Ananda.
It is also asserted that Buddha appeared
in his own “glorified body” to his disciples
after his physical dissolution, plainly indicating
that far from being swallowed up in The Absolute,
he had acquired godhood in his present body.
Detailing the advantages of a pure
life, Buddha said to his disciples:
“The virtuous man rejoices in
this world, and he will rejoice in the next; in both
worlds has he joy. He rejoices, he exults, seeing
the purity of his deed.”
Again, alluding to a sage (rahan),
Buddha is reported to have said:
“He is indeed blest, having
conquered all his passions, and attained the state
of Nirvana.”
This alluded to the acquisition of
Nirvana while still in the physical body.
In other words, as we of this century understand the
teaching, he had experienced cosmic consciousness.
The modern version of the commandments
of Buddha are almost identical with those of the Christian
creed, and these commandments are, as we have previously
observed, the same that Moses laid down for the guidance
of his people. That they were old before Moses
was born, is also more than problematical.
It is also more than probable that
Buddha did not personally write the ethical code which
we now find submitted as the “Commandments of
Buddha,” but that Buddha merely emphasized them.
These commandments are not, however,
understood, by the intelligent Buddhist as “sacred,”
in the sense that “God spoke unto Buddha.”
Moses doubtless assumed to have been
divinely instructed in the law, although that supposition
may be erroneous. He may have had in mind the
same fundamental idea which all those expressing cosmic
consciousness have had, that of being a mouthpiece
of a higher power, rather than to attract to themselves
any adulation or worship, as being specially divine.
The “Commandments,” therefore,
as translated and ascribed to modern Buddhism, are
an ethical and moral code for the MORTAL consciousness,
rather than a formula for developing cosmic
consciousness. These commandments are:
1-Thou shalt kill no animal
whatever, from the meanest insect up to man.
2-Thou shalt not steal.
3-Thou shalt not violate the wife of another.
4-Thou shalt speak no word that is false.
5-Thou shalt not drink
wine, nor anything that may intoxicate.
6-Thou shalt avoid all
anger, hatred and bitter language.
7-Thou shalt not indulge
in idle and vain talk, but shall do all for others.
8-Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s
goods.
9-Thou shalt not harbor
envy, nor pride, nor revenge, nor malice, nor the
desire of thy neighbor’s death or misfortune.
10-Thou shalt not follow the doctrines
of false gods.
And the devotee is assured, even as
in the Christian creed, that “he who keeps these
commandments, shall enter Nirvana-the rest
of Buddha.” But let it be understood that
Gautama, the Lord Buddha, did not formulate these
commandments. Neither are they considered as infallible
formulae, by the enlightened Buddhist.
They constitute the ethical and moral
code of the undeveloped man in all ages of the world,
and among all peoples. They had become traditional
long before Buddha came to interpret “the way
of the gods.” But Gautama, like Jesus,
was an evolutionist, and not a revolutionist.
He came “not to destroy, but to fulfill,”
and so Buddha paid no attention to the code of morals
as it stood, but merely contented himself with emphasizing
the importance of unselfishness-purity
of heart and mind, because he realized that the mental
world is the trap of the soul, even as “the elephant
is held tethered by a galucchi creeper.”
Buddha taught the way of emancipation
of the soul held in bondage by means of the illusions
of maya, even as the elephant is held in captivity
by so weak a thing as a galucchi creeper, which could
be broken by a single effort.
That many who keep the commandments
are yet a long way from cosmic consciousness must
be apparent to all. Therefore we are justified
in assuming that the mere keeping of the commandments
will not bring about mukti. Many a man
follows the letter of the law, and escapes prison,
but if he does this through fear of punishment, and
not because of a desire to maintain peace that his
neighbors may be benefited, then he is not keeping
the spirit of the law at all, and his reward is a negative
one.
According to the most reliable authorities,
Buddha died in his eightieth year, having spent about
fifty years in preaching, in healing the sick, in
conversing with exalted beings in the heavenly worlds,
and in leaving at will his physical body and visiting
other worlds.
Buddha prophesied his coming dissolution,
and expressed to his disciples, a hope that they would
realize that he still lived, even when his physical
body should have become ashes.
As his last hour approached, Buddha
summoned his disciples, and after a moment’s
silent meditation, he addressed himself to Ananda,
his relative; as well as his favorite disciple, thus:
“When I shall have disappeared
from this state of existence, and be no longer with
you, do not believe that the Buddha has left you, and
ceased to dwell among you. Do not think therefore,
nor believe, that the Buddha has disappeared, and
is no more with you.”
From these words, it is evident that
the state of Nirvana which Buddha assured his followers
that he had already attained, did not argue loss of
identity, nor translation to another planet.
Nor is there anywhere in the sayings
of Buddha, rightly interpreted, any suggestion of
expecting or desiring personal worship. This,
the great sage particularly avoided, as indeed have
all illumined ones.
It is evident that Gautama the Buddha
had experienced that divine influx of light and wisdom
in which he sought for others the happiness he had
gained for himself, and to this end he was eager to
leave to his friends and disciples such rules of conduct
of life as should aid them in attaining the divine
peace that comes from illumination.
But that he founded a religious system
of worship of himself, is wholly unbelievable in the
light of a study of comparative religions and the
wisdom which illumination confers.
To realize that one has attained to
immortality, and claimed his birthright of godhood,
is not synonymous with the claim to worship as the
one eternal source of life.
It is a part of human weakness to
insist upon idealizing the personality of a teacher,
and this tendency becomes in time merged into actual
worship, whereas the teacher, if he or she be truly
illumined, seeks only to inculcate the philosophy
which will bring his faithful followers into a realization
of cosmic consciousness.
The points which characterize the
person who has experienced a degree of illumination
(entered into cosmic consciousness), were particularly
evident in the life and character of Gautama, the
Buddha. They may be summed up thus:
A marked seriousness in youth.
A great sympathy and compassion with the sorrows of
others.
A deep tenderness for all forms of life.
A realization of the nothingness of caste and pomp
and power.
The firm conviction that he was instructed by angels.
The wonderful magnetism and illumination of his person.
The firm conviction of immortality-released
from the “wheel of life” as he expressed
it.
The knowledge of when and where he
was to pass out from the life of the body.
The love of solitude and meditation.
The intellectual power maintained even into old age.
The unselfish desire to help others.
Great and never-failing sympathy with
suffering, a divine patience, and insight into the
hearts of all forms of life, earned for this great
soul the name “Buddha-The Compassionate.”