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‘ The Buddhist Hour’
Hillside Radio Broadcast 114
Sunday 26 November 2000

This Program is called: How to get the most results from merit

The Johnsonian message that conclusions are at best misleading in a field already rife with premature absolutes and warring methodologies applies well to merit.

One form of merit appears as money. Good results from money are dependent on application in the right place at the right time and the right audience. Even if all these factors are considered and practiced, there is no guarantee that the causes for good results from money have been made, because other factors influence outcome.

Merits, like money, may be dedicated towards good results or bad results.

Before dedicating money towards good results we must first consider what we mean by ‘good results’.

In the Mangala Sutta, the Buddha taught a deva about what the 37 highest blessings were. The Buddha said some of the highest blessings are not to associate with fools but to associate with the wise, and to respect those who are worthy of respect (such as parents, elders and teachers).

How could our money be geared using this Mangala knowledge?

How could our pleasant speech be geared using this Mangala knowledge?

How could our loving kindness be geared using this Mangala knowledge?

Parents should be regarded as the first teachers who are worthy of offerings. Good results may come from the merit of changing money into by appropriate offerings for parents such as food, non-alcoholic drinks, suitable clothing and affordable housing. Parents are one example of the right audience.

Some error may occur when considering what constitutes a good action towards a parent. If our parent is overweight, for example, and running a high risk of heart disease, then more food is not always better. (Offering sweets to our diabetic parent will not bring a good result.) So there is the error in offering too much of food to an audience.

If we dedicate only our wholesome merit towards an action and we only ‘think’ it will give a good result and it turns out that the actions cause unwholesome kamma to the donor, then we have performed de-meritous action because we do not have clear vision of the outcome field.

Offering money to some persons may be a very demeritous action for you if the person were to spend the money supporting his or her drug addiction. When a person who thought they were kind, in fact, contributed negative causes toward another person, in this scenario, the person who thought the action was kind was giving to the wrong audience. Their money would be better spent on a right person such as the person who manages an orphanage.

We fund overseas orphanages.

***

Opportunities for making merit (kusala kamma) are rare at times because they depend on conditions that are difficult to ‘assemble’. For example, to offer food to a Bhikkhu or a Nun requires at least ten contemporaneous conditions to arise.

1 The co-existent human birth of both the Bhikkhu and oneself.

2 A living Bhikkhu or Nun who is near at hand.

3 Sufficient vision to see.

4 The knowledge that such an act is meritorious.

5 Food available.

6 The volition to want to offer food to another person.

7 The correct time and proper place within the Vinaya Rules.

8 The time and means to prepare the food.

9 Sufficient physical strength to prepare and offer the food.

10 The actual acceptance of the food by the Bhikkhu.

For some persons, the ‘assembling’ of such conditions may take as long as one million lifetimes or more. Why? Because we may be born as animals and cannot offer in that state.

It is the volition that creates causes. We must be aware of our volition (intentions) and be conscious of such actions if we want to make meritorious action. So what is meant by ‘volition’ (Pali: cetana)? The meaning for ‘volition’ as defined by the Oxford Dictionary is: “1. An act of willing or resolving something; a decision or choice made after due consideration or deliberation. 2. The action of consciously willing or resolving something; the making of a definite choice or decision regarding a course of action; exercise of the will. 3. The power or faculty of willing; will-power.”

By using basic inferential logic you will agree with us that good motivations, as long as they are helpful, lead to good results. As long as they are truly helpful, the action cannot come to bad results.

If we asked the great scientist and thinker Albert Einstein in 1952 how to get the most results he would have replied:

“It is not enough to teach man specialty. Through it he may become a kind of useful machine but not a harmoniously developed personality. It is essential that the student acquire an understanding of and a lively feeling for values. He must acquire a vivid sense of the beautiful and of the morally good. Otherwise he - with his specialized knowledge - more closely resembles a well-trained dog than a harmoniously developed person. He must learn to understand the motives of human beings, their illusions, and their sufferings, in order to acquire a proper relationship to individual fellow-men and to the community.”

***

The Buddha identified ten ways of making merit in ascending order of power.

These are given in Pali with English equivalents.

1 DANA - Charity, Generosity.

2 SILA - Observing Precepts, Morality.

3 BHAVANA - Meditation.

4 APACAYANA - Respect for Dhamma Teachers.

5 VEYYAVACCA - Giving a helping hand for others to perform virtuous deeds .

6 PATTIDANA - Sharing Merits.

7 PATTANUMODANA - Joyful acknowledgments in the sharing of Merits.

8 DHAMMASSAVANA - Listening to Dhamma.

9 DHAIKADESANA -Teaching Dhamma.

10 DHITTHUJUKAMMA - Righting one’s own wrong views.

Without Mindfulness and Wisdom we would not know to use these methods.

Buddha Dhamma Teachers constantly point to merit making opportunities and direct their Students into merit making activities.

In many countries around the world, education is highly valued. Therefore, when teachers are highly respected it is probable that much diligence is applied to learning by the students. To study the Buddha Dhamma a student must request to be taught in order to create the right form of mind to learn.

There are many stories in Japanese history where the student who comes to the temple to see the Master to learn the Dhamma, only to find himself refused every time he attempts to enter. On some occasions the student would be admitted after waiting many days and nights at the gate. The length of time is irrelevant, what is relevant is the readiness of the mind of the Student.

This practice originated at Nalanda Monastery in India. Four gatekeepers would stand guard, only admitting those deemed ready to be taught. Those about whom there were doubt would be referred to the Master. Aspiring Students included princes and people of great wealth, but what mattered was not the social status or wealth of the person who wanted to enter, again all that mattered was the readiness of the mind of the Student to be taught.

The Law of Cause and Effect (kamma and vipaka) determines that to attain learning and benefit in respect of anything, it is necessary to produce an accumulation of available wholesome action (Pali: kusala kamma).

This merit is the ‘energy’ of all realizations and the cause of continued wholesome conditions of practice. A corollary of this means, without sufficient available energy, will not lead to the Student's meditation producing realizations, and further, the Student will find it difficult to find conditions that will support his or her Dhamma Practice. Some basic conditions have to arise in order for beings to be able to practice the Buddha Dhamma. These are:

1 You have to be born into a Buddha-Sasana.

2 You have to be born into a suitable body or form.

3 You have to be born healthy in order to live beyond a few years:

4 You have to have sufficient food, water, warmth and conditions to sustain this present life.

5 You have to meet the Buddha's Teaching of the Middle Way in a language that can be understood.

6 You have to be Teachable as regards the Middle Way.

7 You have to desire to Learn the Middle Way.

8 You have no major obstructions to being trained in the Middle Way

9 Over an extended period of time, you have to desire to practice and realise the Teachings of the Middle Way.

10 You have to have sufficient leisure time to be taught and to practice the Middle Way.

In Australia, the maintenance and development of old and new Dhamma Centres is one type of activity that for many practitioners could act as the base of new wholesome kamma on which they continue to practice and realize the Middle Way. A Practitioner's home altar should reflect his or her Centre's altar for maximum benefit. If the Temple attended is Mahayana, the home altar should reflect this style of practice. Cleaning altars is an offering in itself. It is no different to the cleaning of floors in a Monastery as Monks and Nuns do as part of their usual practice.

As the hard shell of a tortoise protects the soft body within, the soft Dhamma too, has to be protected by the hard structure of Centres: their upkeep, administration, financing and development, at the same time, the shell or structure is not an end itself, but exists for the benefit of Dhamma Practitioners through supporting the preservation and proliferation of The Noble Eightfold Path as taught by the Buddha. A Centre with a sound structure will not become a dead Institutions, and will not become an empty shell devoid of the Body of Living Dhamma.

Temples are for practicing.

By understanding these processes, your merit making opportunities can increase both in quality and quantity. When properly cultivated, your surroundings become a vehicle to move you along the Middle Path. The merit you accumulate can be directed towards successfully achieving the following stages of practice:

1 Desire to Practice.

2 Resolve to Practice.

3 Remembrance of Practice.

4 Concentration of Practice.

5 Wisdom arising during Practice.

Undirected merit, when vast, may produce anything worldly such as for example successive births of great wealth, power, comfort and pleasure but, in the end, nothing has been achieved because these states are impermanent and subject to decay when the merit that produced them is exhausted.

***

Recently there was a story in the newspaper about a man who was bitten by a crocodile. It happened while the man was out fishing, and when he caught a fish, the crocodile leapt out of the water and tried to eat the fish, but got its teeth into the man’s shoulder instead. The man made a noise when he was bitten by the crocodile, but his wife thought her husband had just caught a fish.

Why did the wife think that her husband had caught a fish? Because the man had made the same sound when bitten by a crocodile as he used to make when having caught a fish! Why did the man make the same noise in the two entirely different situations? Because catching a fish is dukkha (suffering), and being bitten by a crocodile is also dukkha.

The man made that specific sound every time he caught a fish, because he had had a win.

When you win a game, do you laugh?

If you laugh when you win, you lose the merit of the win, directly into the jaws of Mara. That is the reason why it is one of the Vinaya rules for Monks not to laugh. This rule also applies to lay Buddhist practitioners. It is not wise to laugh in a temple; it is not wise to laugh at any place upon having won, for you will certainly not get the results from the merit made.

However, this does not mean that persons cannot laugh at all. There also exist good ways of laughing, and giggling, that actually help persons. That kind of laugh, for example, can loosen up persons and cause happiness. Laughter, or humour, can be an extremely powerful tool in cutting through negative minds when used with skill.

If we pay attention we can distinguish between the bad, ugly laugh and the wholesome laugh. Then we can cut out unwholesome laughs that result in the loss of merit.

It is important to practice friendliness or amity (adosa); it makes persons happy and does not cause merit to be wasted. With practice we can achieve equanimity (tatramajjhattata), which is, like amity, one of the nineteen Wholesome Cetasikas (sobhanasadharana). By practicing amity and equanimity one accumulates kusala kamma; these are wholesome (kusala) moments of consciousness. Also, practicing equanimity will make you less susceptible to the effects of dukkha.

To gain human life is rare. What is certain is that all actions, both positive (kusala kamma) and negative (negative kamma) will have consequences.

Verse 71 of the Dhammapada says:

A bad action that is done,

does not curdle at once, just like milk;

burning it follows the fool

like fire covered by ashes.

The verse clarifies one aspect of the kamma doctrine--every action has consequences for its performer, either in this life or later. The effects either good or bad, may lie hidden, like fire under ashes or like newly drawn milk that does not curdle at once, but they are inescapable.

Verse 80 of the Dhammapada tells us that:

Engineers lead water,

fletchers make arrows,

carpenters form the wood,

wise men master themselves.

MAY ALL BEINGS BE WELL AND HAPPY

The authors and editors of this script are John D. Hughes, Pennie White, Isabella Hobbs, Evelin Halls and Leanne Eames.



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References

Brown, Lesley (ed.), The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1993.

Dhammavuddha, Thero (2000) Only We Can Help Ourselves, Penang, Malaysia: Inward Path, p 5.

Einstein, Albert (1962) Ideas and Opinions, New York: Crown Publishers, Inc., p 66.

Johansson, Rune E., Pali Buddhist Texts--Explained to the Beginner, Curzon Press, London, 1981, pp 62-3.

Norris, C. (1980) On after the new criticism by Frank Lentricchia, cited in, Wall and Ricks (Eds.) (1982) Essays in Criticism, Vol. XXXII, No. 1, p 93.

The Venerable K. Gunaratuna Thera (1998) The Dhamma, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, p 13.

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