The Twenty-Four Buddhas – 133
Like the newly rising sun, the radiance from his body shone as far as twelve
leagues.
[144]
The lifespan during the time of Buddha Anomadassī was 100,000 years. He lived
throughout the period equal to four-fifths of this lifespan, rescuing beings, such
as humans, Devas and Brahmas, from the flood-waters of Saṁsāra and placed
them on the shore of Nibbāna.
Buddha Anomadassī’s Dispensation, consisting of his noble teaching, was
resplendent with noble ones who were Arahats, undisturbed by pleasant and
unpleasant conditions of the world and free of passions and other defilements.
Buddha Anomadassī, who possessed boundless retinue and fame, and his two
chief disciples and others, who were possessors of peerless qualities, have all
vanished. Unsubstantial and futile indeed are all conditioned things!
Buddha Anomadassī, conqueror of the five kinds of death (
māra
), attained
Parinibbāna in Dhammārāma Park. The shrine built and dedicated to him, in
that very Park, was 25 leagues high.
Two persons, who would become the Vens. Sāriputta and Moggallāna,
wished in the presence of Buddha Anomadassī for the state of chief
disciples. This will be narrated later in the section on the Saṅgha Jewel.
8. The Chronicle of Buddha Paduma
After the Parinibbāna of Buddha Anomadassī, the human lifespan decreased
from 100,000 years to ten years and then it increased again to an immeasurable
and decreased again. When the lifespan was 100,000 years, Bodhisatta Paduma,
on complete fulfilment of the perfections, was reborn in the celestial abode of
Tusita which was a practice common to all Bodhisattas. Having agreed to the
entreaty of other Devas and Brahmas, he descended to the human world to be
conceived in the womb of Asamā, Chief Queen of King Asama. When ten
months had elapsed, the Bodhisatta was born in the grove of Campak trees.
At the Bodhisatta’s birth, a rain of Paduma lotuses fell from the sky over the
whole of Jambudīpa, reaching the surrounding seas. On his naming day,
therefore, learned omen-readers and relatives named him Mahā Paduma.