CHAPTER 23
THE BUDDHA ON THE SO-CALLED
CREATOR-GOD
"I count your Brahma one th' unjust among,
Who made a world in which to shelter wrong."
-- JĀTAKA
The
Pāli equivalent for the Creator-God in other religions is either Issara
(Samskrit -- isvara) or Brahma. In the Tipitaka there is absolutely no
reference whatever to the existence of a God. On several occasions the
Buddha denied the existence of a permanent soul (Attā). As to the
denial of a Creator-God, there are only a few references. Buddha never
admitted the existence of a Creator whether in the form of a force or a
being.
Despite the fact that the Buddha placed no
supernatural God over man some scholars assert that the Buddha was
characteristically silent on this important controversial question.
The following quotations will clearly indicate
the viewpoint of the Buddha towards the concept of a Creator-God.
In the Anguttara Nikāya the Buddha speaks of
three divergent views that prevailed in His time. One of these was:
"Whatever happiness or pain or neutral feeling this person experiences all
that is due to the creation of a Supreme Deity (Issaranimmānahetu)
[1]"
According to this view we are what we were
willed to be by a Creator. Our destinies rest entirely in his hands. Our
fate is pre-ordained by him. The supposed freewill granted to his creation
is obviously false.
Criticising this fatalistic view, the Buddha
says: "So, then, owing to the creation of a Supreme Deity men will become
murderers, thieves, unchaste, liars, slanderers, abusive, babblers,
covetous, malicious and perverse in view. Thus for those who fall back on
the creation of a God as the essential reason, there is neither desire nor
effort nor necessity to do this deed or abstain from that deed.
[2]"
In the Devadaha Sutta
[3] the Buddha,
referring to the self-mortification of naked ascetics, remarks: "If, O
Bhikkhus, beings experience pain and happiness as the result of God's
creation (Issaranimmānahetu), then certainly these naked ascetics
must have been created by a wicked God (pāpakena issarena), since
they suffer such terrible pain."
Kevaddha Sutta narrates a humorous conversation
that occurred between an inquisitive Bhikkhu and the supposed Creator.
A Bhikkhu, desiring to know the end of the
elements, approached Mahā Brahma and questioned him thus:
"Where, my friend, do the four great elements
-- earth, water, fire and air -- cease, leaving no trace behind?"
To this The Great Brahma replied:
"I, brother, am Brahma, Great Brahma, the
Supreme Being, the Unsurpassed, the Chief, the Victor, the Ruler, the
Father of all beings who have been or are to be."
For the second time the Bhikkhu repeated his
question, and the Great Brahma gave the same dogmatic reply.
When the Bhikkhu questioned him for the third
time, the Great Brahma took the Bhikkhu by the arm, led him aside, and
made a frank utterance:
"O Brother, these gods of my suite believe as
follows: 'Brahma sees all things, knows all things, has penetrated all
things.' Therefore, was it that I did not answer you in their
presence. I do not know, O brother, where these four great elements --
earth, water, fire and air -- cease, leaving no trace behind. Therefore it
was an evil and a crime, O brother, that you left the Blessed One, and
went elsewhere in quest of an answer to this question. Turn back, O
brother, and having drawn near to the Blessed One, ask Him this question,
and as the Blessed One shall explain to you so believe."
Tracing the origin of Mahā Brahma, the
so-called Creator-God, the Buddha comments in the Pātika Sutta.
[4]
"On this, O disciples, that being who was first
born (in a new world evolution) thinks thus: 'I am Brahma, the Great
Brahma, the Vanquisher, the All-Seer, the Disposer, the
Lord, the Maker, the Creator, the Chief, the Assigner, the Master of
Myself, the Father of all that are and are to be. By me are these beings
created. And why is that so? A while ago I thought: Would that other
beings too might come to this state of being! Such was the aspiration of
my mind, and lo! these beings did come.
"And those beings themselves who arose after
him, they too think thus: 'This Worthy must be Brahma, the Great Brahma,
the Vanquisher, the All-Seer, the Disposer, the Lord, the Maker, the
Creator, the Chief, the Assigner, the Master of Myself, the Father of all
that are and are to be.
"On this, O disciples, that being who arose
first becomes longer lived, handsomer, and more powerful, but those who
appeared after him become shorter lived, less comely, less powerful. And
it might well be, O disciples, that some other being, on deceasing from
that state, would come to this state (on earth) and so come, he might go
forth from the household life into the homeless state. And having thus
gone forth, by reason of ardour, effort, devotion, earnestness, perfect
intellection, he reaches up to such rapt concentration, that with rapt
mind he calls to mind his former dwelling place, but remembers not what
went before. He says thus: 'That Worshipful Brahma, the Vanquisher, the
All-Seer, the Disposer, the Lord, the Maker, the Creator, the Chief, the
Assigner, the Master of Myself, the Father of all that are and are to be,
he by whom we were created, he is permanent, constant, eternal,
un-changing, and he will remain so for ever and ever. But we who were
created by that Brahma, we have come hither all impermanent,
transient, unstable, short-lived, destined to pass away.'
"Thus was appointed the beginning of all
things, which ye, sirs, declare as your traditional doctrine, to wit, that
it has been wrought by an over-lord, by Brahma."
In the Bhūridatta Jātaka
[5] (No. 543) the
Bodhisatta questions the supposed Divine justice of the Creator as
follows:
"He
who has eyes can see the sickening sight,
Why does not Brahma set his creatures right?
If his wide power no limit can restrain,
Why is his hand so rarely spread to bless?
Why are his creatures all condemned to pain?
Why does he not to all give happiness?
Why do fraud, lies, and ignorance prevail?
Why triumphs falsehood -- truth and justice fail?
I count you Brahma one th'unjust among,
Who made a world in which to shelter wrong."
Refuting the theory that everything is the
creation of a Supreme Being, the Bodhisatta states in the Mahābodhi
Jātaka (No. 528):
"If there exists some Lord all powerful to
fulfil
In every creature bliss or woe, and action good or ill;
That Lord is stained with sin.
Man does but work his will.
[6]"
[1]
Anguttara Nikāya i, p. 174. Gradual Sayings, i, p. 158.
[2] Majjhima Nikāya
ii, p. 222. Sutta No. 101.
[3] Dīgha Nikāya i,
p. 221, Sutta No. 11.
[4] Digha Nikāya
(No.24) iii, p.29. Dialogues of the Buddha. iii, pp. 26, 27.
[5] Jātaka
Translation, vol. vi, p. 110.
[6] Jātaka
Translation, vol. vi, p. 122.
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