35c: More Stories about Wrong View – 1216
A vast circular area in which the sun and the moon wander, illuminating
all over the directions, is called a world-element (
loka-dhātu
), or a
spherical universe (
cakka-vāḷa
).
“All over these universes, numbering 1,000, your Brahma’s authority spreads.
You, Brahma Baka, know beings high and low, beings covetous and uncovetous,
this and the remaining 999 universes, the rebirth and death of beings in these
universes. Brahma Baka, I know that you are of such great power, of such great
might, of such great retinue and fame. I know your abilities too.”
The Buddha’s words have not come to an end yet. A note may, however, be
inserted here. By saying so, the Buddha tried to subdue the Brahma. What
he meant to say was this: “Brahma Baka, your authority spreads only
within 1,000 universes. Yet you think highly of yourself: ‘I am a Great
Brahma.’ you are only a Brahma who can see 1,000 universes. There are
other Brahmas who are superior to you such as those who can see 2,000
universes, who can see 3,000, 4,000, 5,000, 10,000 world-elements and
those who can see 100,000 world-element, and they are countless. And yet,
like a man who tries to compare his piece of cloth, which is only four cubit
long, with another piece of cloth that is far greater in length, like a man
who desires to immerse himself in the water which is only ankle-deep, or
like a small frog which thinks that the water in a bullock’s footprint is a
deep pool, you have a high opinion of yourself, thinking: ‘I am a Great
Brahma
.
’
“Brahma Baka, there is still another world indeed apart from this world of the
first absorption (
jhāna
). You neither know it nor see it. But I know it and see it.
Brahma Baka, there is still another world known as the Ābhassara world.
Falling from that Ābhassara world, you have landed in this world of the first
meditation. Because you have lived in this world of the first meditation you
have lost your memory. Therefore you neither know nor see that Ābhassara
world. But I know and see it. Brahma Baka, because I know the Ābhassara world
which is unknown to you, you are not equal to me in intellect. Why should I be
inferior to you? In fact, I am superior to you intellectually.”
The Buddha’s speech has not come to an end yet. Another note may,
however, be inserted here. Brahma Baka had fallen from the higher worlds
and landed in a lower world. In a past aeon (
kappa
), devoid of the
appearance of a Buddha, Brahma Baka became an ascetic and practised
meditation on a device (
kasiṇa
) as a prelude to the attainment of the
absorptions (
jhāna
). When he passed away, without any slip of the