FOUR NOBLE TRUTHS
QUESTION: What are the main teachings of the Buddha?
ANSWER: All of the many teachings of the Buddha centre on the Four Noble Truths just as the rim and spokes of a wheel centre on the hub. They are called 'Four' because there are four of them. They are called 'Noble' because they ennoble one who understands them and they are called 'Truths' because, corresponding with reality, they are true.
QUESTION: What is the First Noble Truth?
ANSWER: The First Noble Truth
is that life is suffering. To live, you must suffer. It is impossible to
live without experiencing some kind of suffering. We have to endure physical
suffering like sickness, injury, tiredness, old age and eventually death
and we have to endure psychological suffering like loneliness, frustrations,
fear, embarrassment, disappointment, anger, etc.
QUESTION: Isn't this a bit pessimistic?
ANSWER: The dictionary defines
pessimism as 'the habit of thinking that whatever will happen will be bad,'
or 'The belief that evil is more powerful than good.' Buddhism teaches
neither of these ideas. Nor does it deny that happiness exists. It simply
says that to live is to experience physical and psychological suffering
which is a statement so true and so obvious that it cannot be denied. The
central concept of most religions is a myth, a legend or a belief that
is difficult or impossible to verify. Buddhism starts with an experience,
an irrefutable fact, a thing that all know, that all have experienced and
that all are striving to overcome. Thus Buddhism is the only truly universal
religion because it goes right to the core of every individual human being's
concern - suffering and how to avoid it.
QUESTION: What is the Second Noble truth?
ANSWER: The Second Noble Truth
is that all suffering is caused by craving. When we look at psychological
suffering, it is easy to see how it is caused by craving. When we want
something but are unable to get it, we feel frustrated. When we expect
someone to live up to our expectation and they do not, we feel let down
and disappointed. When we want others to like us and they don't, we feel
hurt. Even when we want something and are able to get it, this does not
often lead to happiness either because it is not long before we feel bored
with that thing, lose interest in it and commence to want something else.
Put simply, the Second Noble Truth says that getting what you want does
not guarantee happiness. Rather than constantly struggling to get what
you want, try to modify your wanting. Wanting deprives us of contentment
and happiness.
QUESTION: But how does wanting and craving lead
to physical suffering?
ANSWER: A lifetime wanting and
craving for this and that and especially the craving to continue to exist
creates a powerful energy that causes the individual to be reborn. When
we are reborn, we have a body and, as we said before, the body is susceptible
to injury and disease; it can be exhausted by work; it ages and eventually
dies. Thus, craving leads to physical suffering because it causes us to
be reborn.
QUESTION: That's all verywell. But if we stopped
wanting altogether, we would never get or achieve anything.
ANSWER: True. But what the Buddha
says is that when our desires, our craving, our constant discontent with
what we have, and our continual longing for more and more does cause us
suffering, then we should stop doing it. He asks us to make a difference
between what we need and what we want and to strive for our needs and modify
our wants. He tells us that our needs can be fulfilled but that our wants
are endless - a bottomless pit. There are needs that are essential, fundamental
and that can be obtained and this we should work towards. Desires beyond
this should be gradually lessened. After all, what is the purpose of life?
To get or to be content and happy.
QUESTION: You have talked about rebirth, but is
there any proof that such a thing happens?
ANSWER: There is ample evidence
that such a thing happens, but we will look at this in more detail later
on.
QUESTION: What is the Third Noble Truth?
ANSWER: The Third Noble Truth
is that suffering can be overcome and happiness attained. This is perhaps
the most important of the Four Noble Truths because in it the Buddha reassures
us that true happiness and contentment are possible. When we give up useless
craving and learn to live each day at a time, enjoying without restless
wanting the experiences that life offers us, patiently enduring the problems
that life involves without fear, hatred and anger, then we become happy
and free. Then, and only then, do we begin to live fully. Because we are
no longer obsessed with satisfying our own selfish wants, we find we have
so much time to help others fulfil their needs. This state is called Nirvana.
We are free from all psychological suffering as well. This is called Final
Nirvana.
QUESTION: What or where is Nirvana?
ANSWER: It is a dimension transcending
time and space and thus is difficult to talk about or even think about.
Words and thoughts being only suited to describe the time-space dimension.
But because Nirvana is beyond time, there is no movement and so no aging
or dying. Thus Nirvana is eternal. Because it is beyond space, there is
no causation, no boundary, no concept of self and not-self and thus Nirvana
is infinite. The Buddha also assures us that Nirvana is an experience of
great happiness. He says:
Nirvana is the highest happiness.
Dp 204
QUESTION: But is there any proof that such a dimension
exists?
ANSWER: No, there is not. But
its existence can be inferred. If there is a dimension where time and space
do operate and there is such a dimension - the world we experience,
then we can infer that there is a dimension where time and space do
not operate - Nirvana. Again, even though we cannot prove Nirvana exists,
we have the Buddha's word that it does exist. He tells us:
"There is an Unborn, a Not-become, a Not-made,
a Not-compounded. If there were not, this Unborn,
Not become, Not-made, Not-compounded, there could
not be made any escape from what is born, become,
made, and compounded. But since there is this Unborn,
Not become, Not-made, Not-compounded, therefore is
there made known an escape from what is born, become,
made, and compounded."
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We will know it when we attain it. Until that time, we can still practise.
QUESTION: What is the Fourth Noble Truth?
ANSWER: The Fourth Noble Truth
is the Path leading to the overcoming of suffering. This path is called
the Noble Eightfold Path and consists of Perfect Understanding, Perfect
Thought, Perfect Speech, Perfect Action, Perfect Livelihood, Perfect Effort,
Perfect Mindfulness and Perfect Concentration. Buddhist practice consists
of practising these eight things until they become more complete. You will
notice that the steps on the Noble Eightfold Path cover every aspect of
life: the intellectual, the ethical, the social and economic and the psychological
and therefore contain everything a person needs to lead a good life and
to develop spiritually.