35b: Stories about Wrong View– 1203
The next day the Buddha went with 500 monks to the gate of Garahadinna’s
residence. The householder came out and made obeisance with the hands, knees
and forehead touching the ground; standing and raising his joined hands, he said
mentally, not by word of mouth: “Venerable sirs, it is said that you know the
past, present and future, that you comprehend the analysis of the sixteen aspects
of a living being’s mental process. That is what your devotee Sirigutta told me.
If that is true, do not enter my house. There is really no gruel, no food, nothing
for you. In fact, I am going to harm you by making you all fall into a ditch filled
with embers.”
Expressing his intention mentally thus he took the alms bowl from the Buddha’s
hand. After saying: “Please come this way,” he added: “Venerable sir, you
visitors to my place have come here not knowing etiquette.” When the Buddha
asked: “What should we do?” Garahadinna said: “You should enter the house
one by one and it is only after the preceding one has sat down that the next one
should follow.”
This suggestion was made because if they all went together other monks
would see the one who went ahead of them falling into the ditch. Seeing
his fall nobody else would proceed. Therefore his idea was to destroy them
by letting them one after another fall into the fire.
Saying: “Very well, supporter,” the Buddha walked off alone. When
Garahadinna came to the fire ditch, he stepped back and told the Buddha to go
ahead. As soon as the Buddha stretched his leg over the ditch, the rough mats
disappeared. Out of the fire emerged large lotus flowers each having the size of
a chariot wheel or a cartwheel. The Buddha walked, stepping on to the centre of
each lotus flower, and sat on the Buddha’s seat placed there. The 500 monks, too,
walked on the centre of one flower to that of another and took their respective
seats.
[827]
On seeing this extraordinary, unprecedented phenomenon, Garahadinna’s body
emitted heat and vapour, like that from a hot pan of oil. He hurried to his friend
Sirigutta and appealed to him, saying: “Friend Sirigutta, please be my refuge.” –
“Why did you say so, friend?” asked Sirigutta. Garahadinna replied: “There was
no gruel, no food, nothing, in my home for 500 monks. What shall I do?”
Sirigutta asked him bluntly: “What have you done, friend?” Garahadinna
confessed: “Friend, to speak frankly I had a large ditch full of embers made
between the two houses, my intention being to subdue the Buddha and his 500