The Life Stories of the Male Lay Disciples – 2186
9. They are an incomparably fertile field for all to sow the seed of merit.
And also you should practice with the resolve: ‘We shall always lay everything
we have at the disposal of recipients who have morality and who conduct
themselves well.’ ”
Citta the householder then made his friends and relatives established in paying
reverence to the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Saṅgha and in generosity. With
these last words he expired.
The scriptures do not specifically say in which realm Citta the householder was
reborn, but since he was a Non-returner (
Anāgāmī
), he was presumed to be
reborn in one of the fifteen Brahma realms of the form realm outside of the
formless realm, most probably in the Pure Abodes (
Suddhāvāsa
).
4. Hatthaka Āḷavaka, the Kind Prince
Aspiration in the Past
The future Hatthaka Āḷavaka was reborn into a worthy family in the city of
Haṁsavatī, during the time of Buddha Padumuttara. On one occasion, when he
was listening to the Buddha’s discourse, he saw a lay disciple being named the
foremost among those lay
[1435]
disciples who were accomplished in the
practice of the four ways of kind treatment to others, through generosity, kindly
speech, beneficial conduct and impartiality (
Saṅgaha-vatthu
, see AN 4.256). He
admired that man, and, making an extraordinary offering, he aspired to that
distinction. The Buddha predicted that his aspiration would be fulfilled.
Discipleship in His Last Existence
The future Hatthaka Āḷavaka was reborn in the good destinations for the entire
100,000 aeons. During the time of Buddha Gotama he was reborn as Prince
Āḷavaka, son of King Āḷavaka, in the city of Āḷavī, and it was decided to give
the young prince to the Yakkha Āḷavaka as a sacrifice.
Before this could happen, however, the Buddha converted the Yakkha (see
chapter 33c for details). The story of the young prince, which is
reproduced from the same chapter continues:
When the king’s men from the city of Āḷavī heard the tumultuous acclaim, they
thought to themselves: “Such a roar could not have occurred about any