Venerable Udāyī

4 discourses

Discourses

When a debate arises regarding the classification of feelings, the Buddha explains that different presentations can be valid in their context. True understanding, he explains, fosters concord rather than quarrel. He then charts a progressive hierarchy of happiness starting with worldly pleasures.

The Buddha explains how even small attachments can be strong fetters if not relinquished, using similes of a quail and an elephant, and contrasts between the poor and wealthy. He describes four types of practitioners based on their response to attachment and mindfulness. The discourse also presents gradual refinement of meditative attainments from the first jhāna to the cessation of perception and what is felt.

Ānanda asks the Buddha how far his voice can reach. The Buddha explains the cosmological scale of minor, middling, and great three-thousandfold world systems, revealing he can project his voice across a billion worlds by first suffusing them with light.

When the venerable Udāyī repeatedly contradicts Sāriputta regarding mind-made bodies and cessation, the Buddha intervenes to correct his misunderstanding. Afterwards, the venerable Upavāṇa enumerates the five essential qualities that make an elder monk truly worthy of respect.