In Buddhism, change is emphasized. First, to unsettle people who think that they can achieve permanance by hanging on to life. And it seems that the preacher is wagging his finger at them and sayingâyou know, like the Scotch preacher, one day saying to Sunday congregation,
Preaching on the text, vanity of vanities, all is vanity. And what about the rich food you put into your mouths? âTis vanity. And the fine raiment you put on your backs? âTis vanity. And all your playing around, going to golf instead of coming to the kirke or the sabbath? âTis vanity. And you be spendinâ all your lives devoted to vanity, and the last day will comeâthe day of your death. And because youâve devoted your life to vanity, you go down to the burning fiery brimstone pits of hell. And there, you look up, and say unto the Lord, âOh Lord, I did not know it! Oh Lord, I wouldnâtâve devoted my life to vanity if I had known it! Oh Lord!â And the Lord, he looked down, and heâll say unto you, out of his infinite mercy, âWell, ye know it now.â
So all the preachers, together, say Donât cling to those things. So then, as a result of thatâand Iâm going to speak in strictly Buddhist termsâthe follower of the way of Buddha seeks deliverance from attachment to the world of change. He seeks nirvÄáča, the state beyond changeâwhich the Buddha called the unborn, the unoriginated, the uncreated, and the unformed. But then, you see, what he finds out is that, in seeking a state beyond change, seeking nirvÄáča as something away from SaáčsÄraâwhich is the name for the wheelâhe is still seeking something permanent.
And so, as Buddhism went on, they thought about this a great deal. And this very point was the point of division between the two great schools of Buddhismâwhich, in the south, were Theravada, the doctrine of the Thera, the elders, sometimes known, disrespectfully, as the HÄ«nayÄna. âYanaâ means a vehicle, a diligance, or a ferryboat. This is a yana, and I live on a ferryboat because thatâs my job. Then there is the other school of Buddhism, called the MahÄyÄna. âMahaâ means great, âhinaâ little. The great vehicle and the little vehicle. Now, what is this?
The MahÄyÄnas say, Youâre little vehicle just gets a few people who are very, very tough ascetics, and takes them across the other shore to nirvÄáča. But the great vehicle shows people that nirvÄáča is not different from ordinary life. So that, when you have reached nirvÄáča, if you think, Now I have attained it. Now I have succeeded. Now I have caught the secret of the universe, and I am at peace, you have only a false peace; you have become a stone buddha. You have a new illusion of the changeless. So it is said that such a person is a pratyekabuddha. That means âprivate buddhaâ: Iâve got it all for myself. And in contrast with this kind of pratyekabuddha, who gains nirvÄáča and stays there, the MahÄyÄnists use the word bodhisattva. âSattvaâ means essential principle; âbodhi,â awakening. A person whose essential being is awakened. The word used to mean âjunior buddha,â someone on the way to becoming a buddha. But in the course of time, it came to mean someone who had attained buddhahood, who had reached nirvÄáča, but who returns into everyday life to deliver everyday beings. This is the popular idea of a bodhisattva: a savior.
And so, in the popular Buddhism of Tibet and China and Japan, people worship the bodhisattvasâthe great bodhisattvasâas saviors. Say, the hermaphroditic Guanyin. People loved Guanyin because sheâhe/she, she/heâcould be a buddha, but has come back into the world to save all beings. The Japanese call he/she Kannon, and they have, in Kyoto, an image of Kannon with one thousand arms, radiating like a great aureole all around this great golden figure. And these one thousand arms are one thousand different ways of rescuing beings from ignorance. Kannon is [a] funny thing. I remember one night when I suddenly realized that Kannon was incarnate in the whole city of Kyoto; that this whole city was Kannon. That the police department, the taxi drivers, the fire department, the mayer and corporation, the shopkeepersâin so far as this whole city was a collaborate effort to sustain human life, however bumbling, however inefficient, however corruptâit was still a manifestation of Kannon with its thousand arms, all working independently, and yet one. So they revere those bodhisattvas as the saviors whoâve come back into the world to deliver all beings.
But there is a more esoteric interpretation of this. The bodhisattva returns into the world. That means he has discovered that you donât have to go anywhere to find nirvÄáča. NirvÄáča is where you are, provided you donât object to it.