Chapter IX
(This was the second
sannipÈta
.)
In the midst of ninety crores of monks, who took part in the Sangha meeting headed by
the
bhikkhu
who formerly was Sunanda the Universal Monarch, the Buddha repeated His
recitation of the
PÈÔimokkha
.
(This was the third
sannipÈta
.)
Bodhisatta Gotama, as Brahmin Suruci, received prophecy from Buddha Ma~gala
At the time of Buddha Ma~gala, our Bodhisatta was a brahmin, Suruci by name, living at
the village of Suruci. He was accomplished in the Vedas (Vedic texts),
nighaÓÉu
(glossary),
keÔubha
(rhetoric),
akkharapabheda
(grammar) and
itihÈsa
(legends and histories) as the
fifth treatise.
He was clever in writing and reading poetry (
padaka
) as well as prose (
veyyÈkaraÓa
) .
He was well-versed in LokÈyata philosophy, which was concerned not with spiritual
matters but only with mundane affairs and also in MahÈpurisa LakkhaÓa, the art of reading
bodily signs of a superior being.
Having listened to the Buddha's talks on the Dhamma, Brahmin Suruci cultivated faith in
Him and took refuge in the Three Gems. He then invited the Buddha and His disciples:
‚Please accept my offering of food for tomorrow.‛
‚Brahmin, how many monks do you like to have?‛ asked the Buddha. ‚How many monks
are there, Venerable Sir?‛ ‚There are all together one hundred thousand crores,‛ replied the
Buddha, as it was the occasion when His Disciples assembled for the first time. ‚Then
Venerable Sir, together with all these monks, please accept my offering of the meals.‛ The
Buddha kept silent showing His consent.
Having invited the Buddha, Bodhisatta Brahmin Suruci went home and thought thus: ‚I
can afford to give such a great number of monks rice gruel and pieces of cloth meant to be
robes. But how can the seating for them be arranged?‛
The Bodhisatta's thought caused warming of the stone slab, which was the seat of Sakka
on Mount Meru, eighty-four thousand leagues high.
Then Sakka contemplated thus: ‚Who is interested in removing me from this place?‛
When he looked for the cause of the warming of his seat, he saw Brahmin Suruci; it then
occurred to him thus: ‚This Bodhisatta has invited the Sangha, led by the Buddha, for meals
and is worrying about their accommodation. I should go there and take my share of
merits.‛ Assuming the appearance of a carpenter and carrying an axe in hand, he appeared
before the Bodhisatta.
Construction of A Pavilion
Sakka, as the carpenter, enquired: ‚Is there any job for a worker?‛ Seeing the carpenter,
the Bodhisatta asked: ‚What can you do?‛ ‚There is no craft that I do not know. If anybody
wants to build a pavilion, a palace, a house, or any other building, that is my job.‛ ‚Then I
have something for you to do.‛ ‚What is it?‛ ‚I have invited a hundred thousand crores of
monks to tomorrow's meal. Can you build a pavilion to accommodate theme.‛ ‚Yes, I can,
provided you pay me.‛ ‚Friend, I will.‛ ‚Very well, I will construct it as you will make
payment.‛ So saying, Sakka looked round for a certain plot of land.
Rise of A Jewelled Pavilion from The Earth
The plot of land, twelve leagues in size, which was viewed by Sakka, became an evenly
level ground like a
kasiÓa
-device. Sakka looked around and made the wish: ‚Let a great
pavilion of seven kinds of jewels, pleasing to the eye and richly adorned, appear from the
earth.‛ And while he was watching, there rose up a great pavilion of jewels, splitting the
earth surface. Its pillars of gold had lotus-vases of silver; its pillars of silver had lotus
vases of gold; its pillars of rubies had lotus-vases of coral; its pillars of coral had lotus-
vases of rubies, and its pillars of seven kinds of jewels had lotus-vases of seven kinds of
jewels.