[无量香光 · 显密文库 · 手机站]
fowap.goodweb.net.cn
{返回首页}


Devadatta
 
{返回 The Buddha, His Life and Teaching 文集}
{返回网页版}
点击:1624

Devadatta

A striking example of this mental attitude is seen in his relation with Devadatta. Devadatta was a cousin of the Buddha who entered the Order and gained supernormal powers of the mundane plane (puthujjana-iddhi). Later, however, he began to harbour thoughts of jealousy and ill will toward his kinsman, the Buddha, and his two chief disciples, Sâriputta and Mahâ Moggallâna, with the ambition of becoming the leader of the Sangha, the Order of Monks.

Devadatta wormed himself into the heart of Ajâtasattu, the young prince, the son of King Bimbisâra. One day when the Blessed One was addressing a gathering at the Veluvana Monastery, where the king, too, was present, Devadatta approached the Buddha, saluted him, and said: "Venerable sir, you are now enfeebled with age. May the Master lead a life of solitude free from worry and care. I will direct the Order."

The Buddha rejected this overture and Devadatta departed irritated and disconcerted, nursing hatred and malice toward the Blessed One. Then, with the malicious purpose of causing mischief, he went to Prince Ajâtasattu, kindled in him the deadly embers of ambition, and said:

"Young man, you had better kill your father and assume kingship lest you die without becoming the ruler. I shall kill the Blessed One and become the Buddha."

So when Ajâtasattu murdered his father and ascended the throne Devadatta suborned ruffians to murder the Buddha, but failing in that endeavour, he himself hurled down a rock as the Buddha was climbing up Gijjhakûta Hill in Râjagaha. The rock tumbled down, broke in two, and a splinter slightly wounded the Buddha. Later Devadatta made an intoxicated elephant charge at the Buddha; but the animal prostrated himself at the Master’s feet, overpowered by his loving-kindness. Devadatta now proceeded to cause a schism in the Sangha, but this discord did not last long. Having failed in all his intrigues, Devadatta retired, a disappointed and broken man. Soon afterwards he fell ill, and on his sick-bed, repenting his follies, he desired to see the Buddha. But that was not to be; for he died on the litter while being carried to the Blessed One. Before his death, however, he uttered repentance and sought refuge in the Buddha.n56


{返回 The Buddha, His Life and Teaching 文集}
{返回网页版}
{返回首页}

上一篇:The Last Days
下一篇:Equanimity and Self-composure
 At Kapilavatthu
 Devadatta
 The Birth
 The Sinsapa Grove
 The Buddha’s Ministry
 Self-mortification
 The Middle Path
 Ministering to the Sick
 The Peerless Physician
 The First Sermon
全文 标题
 
【佛教文章随机阅读】
 中国佛教哲学要义 第三章 中国佛教哲学的思想体系 第三节 中国佛教哲学体系的内外作用[栏目:中国佛教哲学要义]
 修行教言[栏目:教言汇集]
 洗漱时如何修持摧破金刚修法?[栏目:达真堪布·学修问答]
 一日之计在于晨[栏目:普巴扎西仁波切·微教言]
 六根作道场 1991.7.16~1991.7.31[栏目:星云日记]
 禅与生活艺术[栏目:佛教期刊文章选摘]
 学修三皈依(90~93)[栏目:傅味琴居士]
 菩萨功德藏[栏目:海涛法师弘法讲义-2010年]
 今生已在佛像前发愿成佛的人,现在希望证圣果能如愿吗?[栏目:玛欣德尊者答疑]
 天台小止观 讲解 第十集[栏目:天台小止观讲解·成观法师]


{返回首页}

△TOP

- 手机版 -
[无量香光·显密文库·佛教文集]
教育、非赢利、公益性的佛教文化传播
白玛若拙佛教文化传播工作室制作
www.goodweb.net.cn Copyrights reserved
(2003-2015)
站长信箱:yjp990@163.com