MN 137 - Directed only to Stream Entrants (and beyond)?












4















"And what are the six kinds of renunciation joy? The joy that arises when — experiencing the inconstancy of those very forms, their change, fading, & cessation — one sees with right discernment as it actually is that all forms, past or present, are inconstant, stressful, subject to change: That is called renunciation joy. (Similarly with sounds, smells, tastes, tactile sensations, & ideas.)




Is this achieved by intellectual pondering about the six senses (and meditative insight into the three characteristics) or just pondering alone?



I'd say the former, but then this Sutta is primarily directed towards Stream Entrants, no?










share|improve this question



























    4















    "And what are the six kinds of renunciation joy? The joy that arises when — experiencing the inconstancy of those very forms, their change, fading, & cessation — one sees with right discernment as it actually is that all forms, past or present, are inconstant, stressful, subject to change: That is called renunciation joy. (Similarly with sounds, smells, tastes, tactile sensations, & ideas.)




    Is this achieved by intellectual pondering about the six senses (and meditative insight into the three characteristics) or just pondering alone?



    I'd say the former, but then this Sutta is primarily directed towards Stream Entrants, no?










    share|improve this question

























      4












      4








      4








      "And what are the six kinds of renunciation joy? The joy that arises when — experiencing the inconstancy of those very forms, their change, fading, & cessation — one sees with right discernment as it actually is that all forms, past or present, are inconstant, stressful, subject to change: That is called renunciation joy. (Similarly with sounds, smells, tastes, tactile sensations, & ideas.)




      Is this achieved by intellectual pondering about the six senses (and meditative insight into the three characteristics) or just pondering alone?



      I'd say the former, but then this Sutta is primarily directed towards Stream Entrants, no?










      share|improve this question














      "And what are the six kinds of renunciation joy? The joy that arises when — experiencing the inconstancy of those very forms, their change, fading, & cessation — one sees with right discernment as it actually is that all forms, past or present, are inconstant, stressful, subject to change: That is called renunciation joy. (Similarly with sounds, smells, tastes, tactile sensations, & ideas.)




      Is this achieved by intellectual pondering about the six senses (and meditative insight into the three characteristics) or just pondering alone?



      I'd say the former, but then this Sutta is primarily directed towards Stream Entrants, no?







      impermanence stream-entry six-senses three-characteristics






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Nov 20 '18 at 17:18









      Val

      1,005213




      1,005213






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          3














          The way my teacher explained a crucial point about this was summarized with a single but powerful word: Immediacy!



          At some point in our practice our familiarity with Dharma should go beyond it being something "over there" that we study and try to understand, and become something very personal that is happening "right here" in our own immediate experience, second-by-second.



          This type of joy that arises in case of mature student, is part of this breakthrough to the Immediacy of Dharma. On the initial phases of the breakthrough, we keep discovering more and more real life microsituations that turn out to be perfectly described by some ancient scripture, and this gives a sense of wonder and joy. And then as we get used to this match, we get a kind of relaxed bliss of a traveler who reached the oasis, had enough food and water to recover, and is now resting in the shade (to give a traditional image of what "bliss" means in this context).



          Specifically as it pertains to Transience/Inconstancy of all configurations, once you clearly see that every frustration you used to take seriously is a temporary arrangement of clouds that actually shifts beyond pain fairly quickly, as long as you don't hold on to it, -- this immediate observation gives a sort of deep peace and a sense of relief that you experience continuously as you interact with all kinds of situations.



          So to answer your question explicitly, it's not just intellectual pondering nor is it meditative insight, as it is the immediate observation (directly seeing) it all in your own life.






          share|improve this answer





























            0















            Is this achieved by intellectual pondering about the six senses (and meditative insight into the three characteristics) or just pondering alone?



            I'd say the former, but then this Sutta is primarily directed towards Stream Entrants, no?




            Intellectual pondering and/or meditative insight probably won't cut it. While there's no mentioning of the Sutta being directed only towards Stream Entrants, the Comy.'s explanation seems to suggest it does require one who has already established insight-knowledge:



            Note. 1: [Six kinds of joy] “Based on the household life” means connected with the cords of sensual pleasure; [Six kinds of joy] “based on renunciation” means connected with insight.



            Note. 2: "Herein, what are the six kinds of joy based on renunciation? When, by knowing the impermanence, change, fading away, and cessation of forms, one sees as it actually is with proper wisdom that forms both formerly and now are all impermanent, suffering, and subject to change, joy arises. Such joy as this is called joy based on renunciation." And explanation: "This is joy that arises when one has established insight and is sitting observing the breaking-up of formations with a flow of sharp and bright insight-knowledge focussed on the formations"






            share|improve this answer





























              0














              You will not have joy, but aside of tee-break stories of sectarians and householder it is the joy opposite householder-joy/satisfaction:




              "And what are the six kinds of household joy [in MN137] ? The joy that arises when one regards as an acquisition the acquisition of idea cognizable by the intelect — agreeable, pleasing, charming, endearing, connected with worldly baits — or when one recalls the previous acquisition of such forms after they have passed, ceased, & changed: That is called household joy. (Similarly with form, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile & sensations).




              It's archived when leaving home, having gained higher right view, and steady when gained non-return.



              And once gained one does no more take what is not given and provides what is the deal to make use of something for ones gain.



              The Sutta is given for distinction, that one knows the different intellectually and put it into prove, and certain explainings are given by the translator as well.




              "'With regard to them, depending on this, abandon that': thus was it said. And in reference to what was it said?




              As in regard of "To whom was the Sutta directed?": Those who have left home/house.



              [Note: this is a gift of Dhamma, not thought for trade, stakes, exchanges or other gains subject toward decay and should be deleted if it's not giften to give in Dhammic conditions]






              share|improve this answer























                Your Answer








                StackExchange.ready(function() {
                var channelOptions = {
                tags: "".split(" "),
                id: "565"
                };
                initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

                StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
                // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
                if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
                StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
                createEditor();
                });
                }
                else {
                createEditor();
                }
                });

                function createEditor() {
                StackExchange.prepareEditor({
                heartbeatType: 'answer',
                autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
                convertImagesToLinks: false,
                noModals: true,
                showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
                reputationToPostImages: null,
                bindNavPrevention: true,
                postfix: "",
                imageUploader: {
                brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
                contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
                allowUrls: true
                },
                noCode: true, onDemand: true,
                discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
                ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
                });


                }
                });














                draft saved

                draft discarded


















                StackExchange.ready(
                function () {
                StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fbuddhism.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f30004%2fmn-137-directed-only-to-stream-entrants-and-beyond%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                }
                );

                Post as a guest















                Required, but never shown

























                3 Answers
                3






                active

                oldest

                votes








                3 Answers
                3






                active

                oldest

                votes









                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes









                3














                The way my teacher explained a crucial point about this was summarized with a single but powerful word: Immediacy!



                At some point in our practice our familiarity with Dharma should go beyond it being something "over there" that we study and try to understand, and become something very personal that is happening "right here" in our own immediate experience, second-by-second.



                This type of joy that arises in case of mature student, is part of this breakthrough to the Immediacy of Dharma. On the initial phases of the breakthrough, we keep discovering more and more real life microsituations that turn out to be perfectly described by some ancient scripture, and this gives a sense of wonder and joy. And then as we get used to this match, we get a kind of relaxed bliss of a traveler who reached the oasis, had enough food and water to recover, and is now resting in the shade (to give a traditional image of what "bliss" means in this context).



                Specifically as it pertains to Transience/Inconstancy of all configurations, once you clearly see that every frustration you used to take seriously is a temporary arrangement of clouds that actually shifts beyond pain fairly quickly, as long as you don't hold on to it, -- this immediate observation gives a sort of deep peace and a sense of relief that you experience continuously as you interact with all kinds of situations.



                So to answer your question explicitly, it's not just intellectual pondering nor is it meditative insight, as it is the immediate observation (directly seeing) it all in your own life.






                share|improve this answer


























                  3














                  The way my teacher explained a crucial point about this was summarized with a single but powerful word: Immediacy!



                  At some point in our practice our familiarity with Dharma should go beyond it being something "over there" that we study and try to understand, and become something very personal that is happening "right here" in our own immediate experience, second-by-second.



                  This type of joy that arises in case of mature student, is part of this breakthrough to the Immediacy of Dharma. On the initial phases of the breakthrough, we keep discovering more and more real life microsituations that turn out to be perfectly described by some ancient scripture, and this gives a sense of wonder and joy. And then as we get used to this match, we get a kind of relaxed bliss of a traveler who reached the oasis, had enough food and water to recover, and is now resting in the shade (to give a traditional image of what "bliss" means in this context).



                  Specifically as it pertains to Transience/Inconstancy of all configurations, once you clearly see that every frustration you used to take seriously is a temporary arrangement of clouds that actually shifts beyond pain fairly quickly, as long as you don't hold on to it, -- this immediate observation gives a sort of deep peace and a sense of relief that you experience continuously as you interact with all kinds of situations.



                  So to answer your question explicitly, it's not just intellectual pondering nor is it meditative insight, as it is the immediate observation (directly seeing) it all in your own life.






                  share|improve this answer
























                    3












                    3








                    3






                    The way my teacher explained a crucial point about this was summarized with a single but powerful word: Immediacy!



                    At some point in our practice our familiarity with Dharma should go beyond it being something "over there" that we study and try to understand, and become something very personal that is happening "right here" in our own immediate experience, second-by-second.



                    This type of joy that arises in case of mature student, is part of this breakthrough to the Immediacy of Dharma. On the initial phases of the breakthrough, we keep discovering more and more real life microsituations that turn out to be perfectly described by some ancient scripture, and this gives a sense of wonder and joy. And then as we get used to this match, we get a kind of relaxed bliss of a traveler who reached the oasis, had enough food and water to recover, and is now resting in the shade (to give a traditional image of what "bliss" means in this context).



                    Specifically as it pertains to Transience/Inconstancy of all configurations, once you clearly see that every frustration you used to take seriously is a temporary arrangement of clouds that actually shifts beyond pain fairly quickly, as long as you don't hold on to it, -- this immediate observation gives a sort of deep peace and a sense of relief that you experience continuously as you interact with all kinds of situations.



                    So to answer your question explicitly, it's not just intellectual pondering nor is it meditative insight, as it is the immediate observation (directly seeing) it all in your own life.






                    share|improve this answer












                    The way my teacher explained a crucial point about this was summarized with a single but powerful word: Immediacy!



                    At some point in our practice our familiarity with Dharma should go beyond it being something "over there" that we study and try to understand, and become something very personal that is happening "right here" in our own immediate experience, second-by-second.



                    This type of joy that arises in case of mature student, is part of this breakthrough to the Immediacy of Dharma. On the initial phases of the breakthrough, we keep discovering more and more real life microsituations that turn out to be perfectly described by some ancient scripture, and this gives a sense of wonder and joy. And then as we get used to this match, we get a kind of relaxed bliss of a traveler who reached the oasis, had enough food and water to recover, and is now resting in the shade (to give a traditional image of what "bliss" means in this context).



                    Specifically as it pertains to Transience/Inconstancy of all configurations, once you clearly see that every frustration you used to take seriously is a temporary arrangement of clouds that actually shifts beyond pain fairly quickly, as long as you don't hold on to it, -- this immediate observation gives a sort of deep peace and a sense of relief that you experience continuously as you interact with all kinds of situations.



                    So to answer your question explicitly, it's not just intellectual pondering nor is it meditative insight, as it is the immediate observation (directly seeing) it all in your own life.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Nov 20 '18 at 17:43









                    Andrei Volkov

                    37.3k330107




                    37.3k330107























                        0















                        Is this achieved by intellectual pondering about the six senses (and meditative insight into the three characteristics) or just pondering alone?



                        I'd say the former, but then this Sutta is primarily directed towards Stream Entrants, no?




                        Intellectual pondering and/or meditative insight probably won't cut it. While there's no mentioning of the Sutta being directed only towards Stream Entrants, the Comy.'s explanation seems to suggest it does require one who has already established insight-knowledge:



                        Note. 1: [Six kinds of joy] “Based on the household life” means connected with the cords of sensual pleasure; [Six kinds of joy] “based on renunciation” means connected with insight.



                        Note. 2: "Herein, what are the six kinds of joy based on renunciation? When, by knowing the impermanence, change, fading away, and cessation of forms, one sees as it actually is with proper wisdom that forms both formerly and now are all impermanent, suffering, and subject to change, joy arises. Such joy as this is called joy based on renunciation." And explanation: "This is joy that arises when one has established insight and is sitting observing the breaking-up of formations with a flow of sharp and bright insight-knowledge focussed on the formations"






                        share|improve this answer


























                          0















                          Is this achieved by intellectual pondering about the six senses (and meditative insight into the three characteristics) or just pondering alone?



                          I'd say the former, but then this Sutta is primarily directed towards Stream Entrants, no?




                          Intellectual pondering and/or meditative insight probably won't cut it. While there's no mentioning of the Sutta being directed only towards Stream Entrants, the Comy.'s explanation seems to suggest it does require one who has already established insight-knowledge:



                          Note. 1: [Six kinds of joy] “Based on the household life” means connected with the cords of sensual pleasure; [Six kinds of joy] “based on renunciation” means connected with insight.



                          Note. 2: "Herein, what are the six kinds of joy based on renunciation? When, by knowing the impermanence, change, fading away, and cessation of forms, one sees as it actually is with proper wisdom that forms both formerly and now are all impermanent, suffering, and subject to change, joy arises. Such joy as this is called joy based on renunciation." And explanation: "This is joy that arises when one has established insight and is sitting observing the breaking-up of formations with a flow of sharp and bright insight-knowledge focussed on the formations"






                          share|improve this answer
























                            0












                            0








                            0







                            Is this achieved by intellectual pondering about the six senses (and meditative insight into the three characteristics) or just pondering alone?



                            I'd say the former, but then this Sutta is primarily directed towards Stream Entrants, no?




                            Intellectual pondering and/or meditative insight probably won't cut it. While there's no mentioning of the Sutta being directed only towards Stream Entrants, the Comy.'s explanation seems to suggest it does require one who has already established insight-knowledge:



                            Note. 1: [Six kinds of joy] “Based on the household life” means connected with the cords of sensual pleasure; [Six kinds of joy] “based on renunciation” means connected with insight.



                            Note. 2: "Herein, what are the six kinds of joy based on renunciation? When, by knowing the impermanence, change, fading away, and cessation of forms, one sees as it actually is with proper wisdom that forms both formerly and now are all impermanent, suffering, and subject to change, joy arises. Such joy as this is called joy based on renunciation." And explanation: "This is joy that arises when one has established insight and is sitting observing the breaking-up of formations with a flow of sharp and bright insight-knowledge focussed on the formations"






                            share|improve this answer













                            Is this achieved by intellectual pondering about the six senses (and meditative insight into the three characteristics) or just pondering alone?



                            I'd say the former, but then this Sutta is primarily directed towards Stream Entrants, no?




                            Intellectual pondering and/or meditative insight probably won't cut it. While there's no mentioning of the Sutta being directed only towards Stream Entrants, the Comy.'s explanation seems to suggest it does require one who has already established insight-knowledge:



                            Note. 1: [Six kinds of joy] “Based on the household life” means connected with the cords of sensual pleasure; [Six kinds of joy] “based on renunciation” means connected with insight.



                            Note. 2: "Herein, what are the six kinds of joy based on renunciation? When, by knowing the impermanence, change, fading away, and cessation of forms, one sees as it actually is with proper wisdom that forms both formerly and now are all impermanent, suffering, and subject to change, joy arises. Such joy as this is called joy based on renunciation." And explanation: "This is joy that arises when one has established insight and is sitting observing the breaking-up of formations with a flow of sharp and bright insight-knowledge focussed on the formations"







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Nov 21 '18 at 3:30









                            santa100

                            5,506413




                            5,506413























                                0














                                You will not have joy, but aside of tee-break stories of sectarians and householder it is the joy opposite householder-joy/satisfaction:




                                "And what are the six kinds of household joy [in MN137] ? The joy that arises when one regards as an acquisition the acquisition of idea cognizable by the intelect — agreeable, pleasing, charming, endearing, connected with worldly baits — or when one recalls the previous acquisition of such forms after they have passed, ceased, & changed: That is called household joy. (Similarly with form, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile & sensations).




                                It's archived when leaving home, having gained higher right view, and steady when gained non-return.



                                And once gained one does no more take what is not given and provides what is the deal to make use of something for ones gain.



                                The Sutta is given for distinction, that one knows the different intellectually and put it into prove, and certain explainings are given by the translator as well.




                                "'With regard to them, depending on this, abandon that': thus was it said. And in reference to what was it said?




                                As in regard of "To whom was the Sutta directed?": Those who have left home/house.



                                [Note: this is a gift of Dhamma, not thought for trade, stakes, exchanges or other gains subject toward decay and should be deleted if it's not giften to give in Dhammic conditions]






                                share|improve this answer




























                                  0














                                  You will not have joy, but aside of tee-break stories of sectarians and householder it is the joy opposite householder-joy/satisfaction:




                                  "And what are the six kinds of household joy [in MN137] ? The joy that arises when one regards as an acquisition the acquisition of idea cognizable by the intelect — agreeable, pleasing, charming, endearing, connected with worldly baits — or when one recalls the previous acquisition of such forms after they have passed, ceased, & changed: That is called household joy. (Similarly with form, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile & sensations).




                                  It's archived when leaving home, having gained higher right view, and steady when gained non-return.



                                  And once gained one does no more take what is not given and provides what is the deal to make use of something for ones gain.



                                  The Sutta is given for distinction, that one knows the different intellectually and put it into prove, and certain explainings are given by the translator as well.




                                  "'With regard to them, depending on this, abandon that': thus was it said. And in reference to what was it said?




                                  As in regard of "To whom was the Sutta directed?": Those who have left home/house.



                                  [Note: this is a gift of Dhamma, not thought for trade, stakes, exchanges or other gains subject toward decay and should be deleted if it's not giften to give in Dhammic conditions]






                                  share|improve this answer


























                                    0












                                    0








                                    0






                                    You will not have joy, but aside of tee-break stories of sectarians and householder it is the joy opposite householder-joy/satisfaction:




                                    "And what are the six kinds of household joy [in MN137] ? The joy that arises when one regards as an acquisition the acquisition of idea cognizable by the intelect — agreeable, pleasing, charming, endearing, connected with worldly baits — or when one recalls the previous acquisition of such forms after they have passed, ceased, & changed: That is called household joy. (Similarly with form, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile & sensations).




                                    It's archived when leaving home, having gained higher right view, and steady when gained non-return.



                                    And once gained one does no more take what is not given and provides what is the deal to make use of something for ones gain.



                                    The Sutta is given for distinction, that one knows the different intellectually and put it into prove, and certain explainings are given by the translator as well.




                                    "'With regard to them, depending on this, abandon that': thus was it said. And in reference to what was it said?




                                    As in regard of "To whom was the Sutta directed?": Those who have left home/house.



                                    [Note: this is a gift of Dhamma, not thought for trade, stakes, exchanges or other gains subject toward decay and should be deleted if it's not giften to give in Dhammic conditions]






                                    share|improve this answer














                                    You will not have joy, but aside of tee-break stories of sectarians and householder it is the joy opposite householder-joy/satisfaction:




                                    "And what are the six kinds of household joy [in MN137] ? The joy that arises when one regards as an acquisition the acquisition of idea cognizable by the intelect — agreeable, pleasing, charming, endearing, connected with worldly baits — or when one recalls the previous acquisition of such forms after they have passed, ceased, & changed: That is called household joy. (Similarly with form, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile & sensations).




                                    It's archived when leaving home, having gained higher right view, and steady when gained non-return.



                                    And once gained one does no more take what is not given and provides what is the deal to make use of something for ones gain.



                                    The Sutta is given for distinction, that one knows the different intellectually and put it into prove, and certain explainings are given by the translator as well.




                                    "'With regard to them, depending on this, abandon that': thus was it said. And in reference to what was it said?




                                    As in regard of "To whom was the Sutta directed?": Those who have left home/house.



                                    [Note: this is a gift of Dhamma, not thought for trade, stakes, exchanges or other gains subject toward decay and should be deleted if it's not giften to give in Dhammic conditions]







                                    share|improve this answer














                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer








                                    edited Nov 21 '18 at 4:02

























                                    answered Nov 20 '18 at 23:08









                                    Samana Johann

                                    653




                                    653






























                                        draft saved

                                        draft discarded




















































                                        Thanks for contributing an answer to Buddhism Stack Exchange!


                                        • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                        But avoid



                                        • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                        • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                                        To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.





                                        Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.


                                        Please pay close attention to the following guidance:


                                        • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                        But avoid



                                        • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                        • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                                        To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                        draft saved


                                        draft discarded














                                        StackExchange.ready(
                                        function () {
                                        StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fbuddhism.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f30004%2fmn-137-directed-only-to-stream-entrants-and-beyond%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                                        }
                                        );

                                        Post as a guest















                                        Required, but never shown





















































                                        Required, but never shown














                                        Required, but never shown












                                        Required, but never shown







                                        Required, but never shown

































                                        Required, but never shown














                                        Required, but never shown












                                        Required, but never shown







                                        Required, but never shown







                                        Popular posts from this blog

                                        Costa Masnaga

                                        Fotorealismo

                                        Sidney Franklin