Q28. Is Nibbāna realized at death or here in this life?
Teachers who lecture in the fancy preaching halls only talk about Nibbāna after death. In the Tipiṭaka, however, we don’t find this idea. Instead, we find expressions such as sandiṭṭhika-nibbāna (Nibbāna that one sees personally) and diṭṭhadhamma-nibbāna (Nibbāna here and now).
Q27. When people are satisfied with Nibbāna, how do we speak of that satisfaction?
We Buddhists teach that we ought not to go about liking and disliking, finding satisfaction in this and dissatisfaction in that. So if someone finds satisfaction in Nibbāna, what are we to call that?
Q26. What is Nibbāna?
If someone persistently raises this question, answer that Nibbāna is the immortal-element (amata-dhātu). Say it is the element that doesn’t perish.
Q25. What is the fullest emptiness?
Total emptiness or freedom is called Nibbāna. The reality completely and thoroughly empty of self-essence is Nibbāna.
Q24. Why is mind in experiencing the world’s emptiness described as empty-mind (cit-waang)?
A verse in one of the later text says, ‘That is truly empty which is empty of lust, hatred, and delusion.’* A mind is empty (unencumbered, disengaged, or free) when it is free of lust, hatred, and delusion.
Q23. Why is everything, this world and every world, considered to be empty?
People unfamiliar with Buddhism may ask you questions such as, ‘Why did the Buddha say the world is empty when it contains all these things? There is matter. There is mind. Isn’t the world just full up with things? What about all these creations?’
Q22. What sort of daily inner life did the Buddha experience?
The Buddha once said concerning himself, ‘The Tathāgata dwells in the Temple of Emptiness (suññatā-vihāra).’ This ‘temple’ is a spiritual dwelling, not a physical one. Vihāra refers to a spiritual dwelling place, that is, a dwelling of mind and heart.
Q21. Did the Buddha end karma?
If asked this, we must not denigrate the Buddha by answering carelessly or recklessly with words that misquote him and belittle his worth.
Q20. Does the Buddha continue to exist at this time?
If we are asked this question, we can answer with this saying of the Buddha: ‘O Ānanda, the Dhamma and the Discipline, which the Tathāgata has taught and demonstrated, let them be your teacher when I have passed away.’
Q19. Where can we find the Buddha?
The Buddha said, ‘Anyone who sees Dhamma, sees the Tathāgata. Anyone who does not see Dhamma, does not see the Tathāgata.
Q18. Whom did the Buddha honor?
The Buddha’s own answer was that he paid homage to Dhamma and to Saṅgha communities with exemplary qualities. Saṅgha communities that conduct themselves well and practice properly can be said to possess exemplary qualities. So the Buddha respected Dhamma and Saṅgha communities of exemplary qualities.
Q17. What did the Buddha say about people in succeeding ages?
In one of the Numerical discourses*, the Buddha speaks of future generations, which includes our own, as ‘rejoicing in unrighteous pleasures, being too much given to covetousness, and pursuing false Dhamma.’
Q16. How can we settle doubts whether a particular teaching is the Buddha’s or not?
The Buddha laid down a principle for testing: examine and measure against the Suttas (discourses) and compare with the Vinaya (discipline). This principle is based on not believing anything second hand and not taking anyone else as sole authority.
Q15. Must we have heard the Buddha’s Dhamma directly from himself in order to end suffering?
There have been some who have argued vehemently that we must hear Dhamma from the Buddha himself, that only then could we really understand. But the Buddha himself said that there were some who, though they hadn’t heard Dhamma directly from him, would still be able to walk the right path.
Q14. What Role Does Kamma Play in Buddhism?
Many Westerners have written books on Buddhism, and they seem to be most proud of the chapters dealing with kamma (Sanskrit, karma) and rebirth. However, their explanations are wrong, quite wrong every time.
Q13. Which Way of Practice Constitutes the Ordinary Path and Which Is the Shortest, Most Direct Path?
Concerning ordinary practice, we might answer ‘The noble eightfold path.’ You have probably heard the details, namely, right understanding, right aim, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration. This is called noble eightfold path.
Q12. How Do the Minds of Ordinary People and of Practicing Buddhists Differ?
We shall consider a perspective that gives some understanding of the difference in level between the minds of ordinary people and the minds of Buddhists who actually practice.
Q11. Whom Did the Buddha Teach Us to Believe?
If you are asked this, answer with the Buddha’s advice from the Kālāma Sutta: believe one’s own clear seeing. What is meant by ‘seeing clearly?’
Q10. Which Aspect of the Teaching, as Recorded in the Pali Texts, Did the Buddha Teach Most of All?
Answer once again by quoting the Buddha: ‘The five khandhas are impermanent (anicca) and not-self (anattā).’ These five khandhas are the five aggregates into which a person is divisible.
Q9. What Is the Dhamma That Is Highest and Most Profound, That Transcends the World and Death in All Their Forms?
The Buddha called it suññatāppaṭisaṃyuttā which means ‘Dhamma connected with suññatā,’ or even ‘suññatā’ itself. Dhamma that is permeated with suññatā is Dhamma at its highest and most profound.