The Life Stories of the Monks – 2010
Then Buddha Vipassī appeared in the world and went about in the company of
6,800,000 monastic Arahats, with Bandhumatī as the resort for collecting daily
alms food, where he benefited his father, King Bandhuma, with discourses on
the doctrine. Later he resided in the Deer Park known as Khemā, “the
Sanctuary.”
The recluse, the future Bākula, heard the news of the appearance of the Buddha
in the world. He approached Buddha Vipassī, and on hearing his discourse,
became a disciple of his. Although he took refuge in the three refuges, he did
not want to leave his mountain abode and remained there as a recluse, but
frequenting the monastery of the Buddha to attend on him.
One day, the Saṅgha, with the exception of the two chief disciples and the
Buddha himself, developed headaches, which was due to contact with poisonous
pollen wafted in the air from a certain poisonous kind of plant growing in the
Himavanta. When the recluse visited the Buddha and saw the infected monastics
lying down with their heads covered, he inquired from a monastic about the
cause of the ailment. On being told the cause, he thought that an opportunity
presented itself for him to tend to the sick monastics and earn merit. He
gathered the necessary herbs, prepared a medicine, and administered it to the
sick monastics who were immediately cured.
Repairing an Old Monastery
After living the full lifespan as a recluse, he passed away and was reborn in the
Brahma realm. After that existence, he was reborn only in the fortunate
destinations for a period of 91 aeons (
kappa
) only, when Buddha Kassapa
appeared. Then he was born a householder in Bārāṇasī.
One day, he went to a remote country together with a team of carpenters to
fetch timber for repairing his house. On the way, he came across an old
monastery in a state of disrepair. He considered that repairing his own house
had no particular merit to his life hereafter, but by repairing the monastery he
could earn much merit. Therefore he sent his team of carpenters to find timber
from the countryside and had the old monastery fully renovated, adding a new
kitchen, a new eating place, a new fire-house for the cold season, a new
walkway, a new hot bathroom, a new larder, a new latrine, a new clinic, a store
of medicines and medicinal requisites comprising drugs, ointments, snuffs,
inhalants. All these he dedicated to the Saṅgha.
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