36: King Pukkusāti and Others – 1290
The merit acquired by one who pays homage with faith (
saddhā
) to those
Buddhas, Paccekabuddhas and other noble ones, who have calmed the
heat of defilements, who have no source whatsoever from which grief and
fear derive, who are endowed with virtues excellent and visible, are
incalculable to any one in the three worlds of humans, Devas and Brahmas
saying: “This merit is beneficial this much, this merit is profitable this
much.”
At the end of the verse, 84,000 beings became noble Stream-enterers
(
Sotāpanna-ariya
), having the opportunity of blissfully enjoying the elixir of
Nibbāna.
Rāhu, the Asura Deva King, was 4,800 leagues in height. The distance between
his two arms was 1,200 leagues. The thickness of his body was 600 leagues. His
palms and his soles were 300 leagues in perimeter. The portion of the finger
between two joints was 50 leagues long. The distance between the two eye-brows
was 50 leagues. The mouth was 200 leagues long, 300 leagues deep and 300
leagues in circumference. The neck had a girth of 300 leagues. The forehead was
300 leagues. The forehead was 300 leagues in breath and the head 900 leagues.
Rāhu, the Asura King, thought: “I am too tall, I will not be able to look down
and see the Fortunate One.” So he did not go to the Buddha. But, one day, he
heard words about the greatness of the Buddha and so he went, hoping to see the
master by any possible means.
Knowing the Asura Deva King’s mind, the Buddha thought of the posture in
which he should be viewed. Then since a person who is standing appears to be
tall in spite of his short stature, the Buddha decided to show his body to the
Asura King in a lying posture. The Buddha told Ven. Ānanda to put a small
couch outside the fragrant chamber and then he lay down on the right side on
the couch like a lion king.
Rāhu then went near the Buddha but he had to look up to see the Buddha’s face,
just as he had to stretch his neck and look up at the moon in the sky. The Buddha
asked him why he had come to see him only after a very long time. The Asura
King replied that he had not come because he was under the misapprehension
that he would not be able to stoop down far enough to see the exalted Buddha.
Then the Buddha said to him: “Asura King! I have not developed the perfections
(
pāramī
) holding my head down, that is, by relaxing my effort. I have given