The Life Stories of the Monks – 1802
escapes the result of his evil deed when it finds the opportunity to show up at an
opportune moment.
Knowing full well his being caught and bitten by his own evil deed, Ven. Mahā
Moggallāna was unable to get away by his supernormal power at the seventh
attempt. This was the power that had been strong enough to make even the Nāga
King Nandopananda tame and to make the Vejayanta palace tremble, but as a
result of his past wickedness, he could not disappear into the air. The power that
had enabled him to defeat the Nāga King and to make the Vejayanta tremble
had now become weak because of his former unwholesone deed.
The chief robber, Samaṇaguttaka, arrested Ven. Mahā Moggallāna, and together
with his men he hit him and pounded him so that the bones broke to pieces like
broken rice. After doing this
[1205]
deed known as pounding the bones to dust
so they become something like straw used as a cushion to put something on
(
palālapiṭhika
), and thinking that Ven. Mahā Moggallāna was dead, the chief
robber threw the body into a bush and left together with his men.
Becoming conscious, Ven. Mahā Moggallāna thought of seeing the Buddha
before his demise, and having fastened his pounded body with the bandage of
his psychic powers, he rose into the sky and appeared before the Buddha and
paid homage to the master. Thereafter, the following conversation took place
between Ven. Mahā Moggallāna and the Buddha:
Ven. Mahā Moggallāna: Exalted Buddha, I have given up the control of my life
process (
āyu-saṅkhāra
), I am going to attain Parinibbāna.
Buddha: Are you going to do so, my dear son Moggallāna?
Ven. Mahā Moggallāna: Yes, I am, venerable sir.
Buddha: Where will you go and do that?
Ven. Mahā Moggallāna: At the place where the Kālasilā stone slab is, exalted
Buddha.
Buddha: In that case, dear son Moggallāna, give a Dhamma talk to me before
you go. I will not have another opportunity to see a disciple like you.
When the Buddha said thus, the noble Ven. Mahā Moggallāna, replying: “Yes,
exalted Buddha, I shall do as you say,” and he paid homage to the Buddha and
flew up into the air up to the height of a toddy palm tree, then that of two palm