Ādittapariyāya Sutta
The Ādittapariyāya Sutta, is a discourse from the Pāli Canon, popularly known as the Fire Sermon. In this discourse, the Buddha preaches about achieving liberation from suffering through detachment from the five senses and mind.
In the Pāli Canon, the Ādittapariyāya Sutta is found in the Saṃyutta Nikāya and is designated by either "SN 35.28" or "S iv 1.3.6" or "S iv 19". This discourse is also found in the Buddhist monastic code at Vin I 35.
English speakers might be familiar with the name of this discourse due to T. S. Eliot's titling the third section of his celebrated poem The Waste Land "The Fire Sermon." In a footnote, Eliot states that this Buddhist discourse "corresponds in importance to the Sermon on the Mount."
Background
In the Suttas, the Fire Sermon is the third discourse delivered by the Buddha, several months after his enlightenment, on top of the Gayasisa Hill, near Gaya, India. He delivered it to a thousand newly converted ascetics who formerly practiced a sacred fire ritual.The 5th-century CE post-canonical Pāli commentary, Sāratthappakāsini, attributed to Buddhaghosa, draws a direct connection between the ascetics' prior practices and this discourse's main rhetorical device:
Having led the thousand bhikkhus monks to Gayā's Head, the Blessed One reflected, 'What kind of Dhamma talk would be suitable for them?' He then realized, 'In the past they worshipped the fire morning and evening. I will teach them that the twelve sense bases are burning and blazing. In this way they will be able to attain arahantship.'
Text
In this discourse, the Buddha describes the sense bases and resultant mental phenomena as "burning" with passion, aversion, delusion and suffering. Seeing such, a noble disciple becomes disenchanted with, dispassionate toward and thus liberated from the senses bases, achieving arahantship. This is described in more detail below.After a prefatory paragraph identifying this discourse's location of deliverance and audience, the Buddha proclaims :
The ensuing text reveals that "all" refers to:
- the six internal sense bases : eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind
- the six external sense bases: visible forms, sound, smells, tastes, touches and mental objects
- consciousness contingent on these sense bases
- the contact of a specific sense organ, its sense object and sense-specific consciousness.
- what is subsequently felt : pleasure, pain, or neither.
- the fire of passion
- the fire of aversion
- the fire of delusion
- the manifestations of suffering: birth, aging and death, sorrows, lamentations, pains, distresses and despairs.
"Disenchanted, he becomes dispassionate.
Through dispassion, he is fully released.
With full release, there is the knowledge, 'Fully released.'
He discerns that 'Birth is ended,
the holy life fulfilled,
the task done.
There is nothing further for this world.'"
A closing paragraph reports that, during this discourse, the thousand monks in attendance became liberated.