Need for consensus on Buddhist rites
and ceremonies
A.R.M.T.B. Ratnayake
The Buddha hardly spoke of external rites and ceremonies
which a Buddhist should perform. But today, laymen as
well as Buddhist monks organise mass scale ceremonies
involving offering of thousands and thousands of
flowers, pahan-pooja needing gallons of coconut oil, in
the name of worship of a single Buddhist statue or
a sacred place. Several learned Buddhist monks like Ven.
Prof. Walpola Rahula Thera, disapproved the
offering of cooked food to the Buddha even after 2600
years of the Enlightened One’s
Mahaparinibbana.
This year, commencing from the 2600th year of Buddhahood,
which fell on the last Vesak Full-Moon day, is devoted
to adaptation of what the Buddha really taught and not
place importance on rites and ceremonies including
various kinds of offerings, on which more attention is
given by the average Buddhist, today. His beneficent and
successful ministry was liberation of the people from
the bonds of Samsara. The Enlightened One said, “the
reality that I have reached is deep, hard to see, hard
to understand, rare, beyond reasoning to be understood
only by the wise.” The Middle Way is the Buddha’s
criterion, to be applied to our daily life.
In effect, it is the eightfold way of life; right view,
right mindedness, right speech, right action, right
livelihood, right endeavour, right mindfulness and right
concentration. The one that achieves these goals is a
perfect Buddhist.
The common concern of the right-minded Buddhists today
is that many followers place too much emphasis on
rituals and ceremonies rather than on the precepts so
taught by the Buddha.
Worship is worthless if one fails to do the duty by the
worshipped. Therefore, doing one’s duty by the Buddha is
not merely worship but in a greater sense, following his
noble precepts. We know of the story where the young man
named Sigala who used to worship the six cardinal points
of the heavens: east, west, south, north, nadir, and
zenith, which was his dying father’s last advice. The
Buddha however, did not approve of it, but explained to
him that the six directions were not those that he
worshipped but according to the ‘noble discipline’ the
six directions were: east; parents; south; teachers;
west; wife and children; north; friends, relatives and
neighbours; nadir; servants, workers and employees;
zenith; religious men. Further, the Buddha said that
‘worship’ is not merely paying homage to one but
performing one’s duty towards him. In the case of
parents, they should be properly looked after in their
old age; should maintain the honour of the family, and
continue the family traditions.
External rites
The Buddha hardly spoke of external rites and ceremonies
which a Buddhist should perform. But today, laymen as
well as Buddhist monks organise mass scale ceremonies
involving offering of thousands and thousands of
flowers, pahan-pooja needing gallons of coconut oil, in
the name of worship of a single Buddhist statue or a
sacred place. Several learned Buddhist monks like Ven.
Prof. Walpola Rahula Thera, disapproved the offering of
cooked food to the Buddha even after 2600 years of the
Enlightened One’s Mahaparinibbana. Yet, we see many
Buddhists offering cooked food to Buddhist statues, even
keeping a vessel of water for the statue of Buddha to
wash its hands. Even a spittoon can be seen placed
nearby meaninglessly. These practices are in effect
misleading assumptions derived from other religions.
Throughout the Buddhist history there had not been an
iota of dispute on the teachings of the Buddha, the
doctrines of the Four Noble Truths, the Noble Eightfold
Path, the Five Aggregates, Karma and Rebirth etc. They
are fundamental to all Buddhists, Theravada or Mahayana.
But today there is confusion, mainly with regard to
beliefs, practices and observances followed by some
Buddhists, which require the attention of our learned
Sangha.
We all know that the Buddha never made any provision for
the supreme leadership of the Buddhist Sangha but
declared that the Dharma was the head of the order of
the Sangha. However, the Buddha visualised the possible
dissensions in the Sangha that would arise after the
Enlightened One’s Parinirvana. The Buddha framed rules
by which the conduct of the Bhikkhus could be directed
on the right lines. The Sangha so constituted, worked
smoothly and silently to uphold his teachings and preach
the doctrine in the correct lines.
These Vinaya rules are early examples of representative
self-governing institutions obtaining in India. The
remarks of the Marques of Shetland, a former Viceroy of
India could be recalled in this connection.
Surprise
“It is, indeed, to the Buddhist books that we have to
turn for an account of the manner in which the affairs
of these early examples of representative self-governing
institutions were conducted. And it may come as a
surprise to many to learn that the assemblies of the
Buddhists in India two thousand years and more ago are
to be found the rudiments of our own Parliamentary
practice of the present day.”
Thus, the Sangha being a democratic body always arrived
at decisions through discussion among themselves. This
was the organisation which the Buddha established to
counter any matter coming into practice that is contrary
to his teachings. At these congregations, the most
senior monk took the chair. The proceedings were opened
by the president uttering the formula:
“May the honourable Sangha hear me; if the time seems
fit to the Sangha, let the Sangha act. This is the
motion before the Sangha.”
After the motion had been read, the proposer of it
explained its purport, and only those who disapproved of
it continued the debate. The president put the question
whether the motion should be accepted or not. If there
is no opposition after the question has been put three
times, it was declared carried. Otherwise, it was put to
the vote and a majority of the Sangha decided the
question. However, it should be noted that no vote of
the Sangha was valid which was contrary to the Dharma as
revealed by the Buddha himself.
Hostility
At the beginning, the Sangha with the Buddha as its head
aroused bitter hostility among the Brahmins whose
authority and doctrine of sacrifice and mantram which
were in vogue were replaced by the Dharma of right
thought and right living. It is this Dharma of right
thought and right living that the Sangha today, should
restore.
During the Buddha’s time the formation of a society of
lay devotees to work with the Sangha was complete. Thus
the Buddha in the course of time prescribed that every
lay devotee should observe the five precepts and the
more advanced among them, the eight precepts and that
religious discussions and discourses be held in the
assemblies of the Sangha. But today the Sangha is
disintegrated. They must get-together and do their duty
by the lay devotees by giving them correct guidance and
sermon.
So, the motion before the Sangha today is concerning the
irrational practices adhered to by some Buddhists
contrary to the Buddha’s doctrine of right thought and
right thinking. So, at least the Maha Nayake Theras,
Nayaka Theras of the various sectors, and other leading
Buddhist monks should sit in assembly and decide on
these issues and set out a uniform system of practices
permissible under the teachings of the Buddha.