THE FOUR
NOBLE TRUTHS
1.
The Noble Truth of Suffering
Besides "suffering," other translations of the Pali
word dukkha include unsatisfactoriness,
dis-ease, and instability. All these words
point to the fact that no conditioned phenomenon can provide
true (lasting) happiness in our lives. The first step in a spiritual life
is to look very closely and honestly at our experience of life and see
that there is suffering. We tend to overlook or ignore or just blindly react
to the unpleasant, so it continually haunts us. Yet although physical
suffering is a natural aspect of our lives, we can learn to transcend mental
suffering.
2. The Noble Truth of the Cause of Suffering
Through a lack of
understanding of how things truly exist, we create and recreate an independent
self entity called "me."
The whole of our experience in life can be viewed through this sense of self.
In consequence, various cravings govern our actions. Cravings arise for sense
experiences, for "being" or "becoming" (e.g. rich, famous,
loved, respected, immortal), and to avoid the unpleasant. These cravings
are the root cause of suffering.
3. The Noble Truth of the Cessation of Suffering
The mind can be purified of
all the mental defilements that cause suffering. Nibbana,
the ultimate peace, has been compared to the extinction of a three-fold
fire of lust, ill-will, and delusion. One who has realized cessation has
great purity of heart, ocean-like compassion, and penetrating wisdom.
4. The Noble Truth of the Way to the Cessation of Suffering
The Way leading to cessation
contains a thorough and profound training of body, speech, and mind.
Traditionally it's outlined as the Noble Eightfold Path:
(1) Right Understanding;
(2) Right Intention;
(3) Right Speech;
(4) Right Action;
(5) Right Livelihood;
(6) Right Effort;
(7) Right Mindfulness;
(8) Right Concentration.
On the level of Morality (sila), the Path
entails restraint and care in speech, action, and livelihood. The concentration
(samadhi) level requires constant effort to
abandon the unwholesome and develop the wholesome, to increase mindfulness
and clear comprehension of the mind-body process, and to develop mental
calm and stability. The wisdom (panna)
level entails the abandonment of thoughts of sensuality, ill will,
and cruelty; ultimately it penetrates the true nature of phenomena to see
impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, and impersonality.
When all 8 factors of the Path come together in harmony to the point of
maturity, suffering is transcended. In summary, the Four Noble Truths can be
thought of as that which is to be
(1) comprehended,
(2) abandoned,
(3) realized,
(4) developed.