论以敬畏之心听佛言:瓦苏班杜佛教修行的第一步Vyākhyāyukti

Makio Ueno
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摘要

本文主要关注于4、5世纪活跃在印度西北部的佛教思想家瓦苏班杜(Vasubandhu)的著作Vyākhyāyukti的第五章,以及Guṇamati对该著作Vyākhyāyuktiṭīkā的评论。在本章中,Vasubandhu讨论了那些宣讲佛法的人应该如何教导佛法,以及那些聆听佛法的人应该如何学习佛法的问题。瓦苏班杜解释说,“怀着敬畏之心倾听佛陀的话语”是修行的第一步,这是至关重要的。Vasubandhu的这个位置的来源可以在Sarvāstivāda的Dīrghāgama中找到Arthavistara-dharmaparyāya。Vasubandhu认为,佛教修行的第一步是怀着敬畏的心倾听佛陀的话语,这是基于《佛经》第五部分所描述的16种倾听佛陀话语的方法中的第三种。为什么听佛言要敬畏?Vasubandhu用三种容器的著名比喻来回答这个问题。这个比喻分别把(1)不听教义的人,(2)听教义却误解教义的人,(3)听教义却不记住教义的人比喻为(1)一个颠倒的容器,(2)一个肮脏的容器,(3)一个有洞的容器。也就是说,Vasubandhu指出的事实是,如果一个听众缺乏对传道者的尊重,他们将(1)不会试图仔细聆听教义,(2)误解它们,或(3)忘记它们。Vasubandhu在Vyākhyāyukti之后写的Pratītyasamutpādavyākhyā中也使用了这个比喻。这一比喻也经常出现在藏传佛教文学作品中,如布斯顿仁钦格鲁和宗喀巴。瓦苏班杜所持的以敬畏之心聆听佛陀话语的重要性的立场极具影响力,并在五世纪后在印度和西藏的佛教传统中被广泛接受。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
On the Listening to Buddha’s Words with Reverence: The Very First Step of Buddhist Practice in Vasubandhu’s Vyākhyāyukti
This paper focuses on the fifth chapter of the Vyākhyāyukti by Vasubandhu, a Buddhist thinker who was active in the fourth and fifth centuries in Northwestern India, and a commentary on that work, the Vyākhyāyuktiṭīkā by Guṇamati. In this chapter, Vasubandhu deals with the issue of how those who preach about the Buddha’s words should teach about them and how those who listen to those teachings should study them. Vasubandhu explains that ‘listening to the Buddha’s words with reverence’ is critical as the first step of Buddhist practice. The source for this position of Vasubandhu’s can be found in the Arthavistara-dharmaparyāya in the Dīrghāgama of the Sarvāstivāda. Vasubandhu argues that the first step of Buddhist practice is listening to the Buddha’s words with reverence based on the third of sixteen methods for listening to the Buddha’s words that are described in the fifth section of that scripture.Why is reverence necessary when listening to the Buddha’s words? Vasubandhu uses the famous metaphor of three kinds of vessels in answering this question. This metaphor respectively likens (1) a person who does not listen to the teachings, (2) a person who listens to the teachings but misunderstands them, and (3) a person who listens to the teachings but fails to remember them to (1) an upside-down vessel, (2) a dirty vessel, and (3) a vessel with a hole in it. That is to say, Vasubandhu is pointing to the fact that if a listener lacks respect for the preacher, they will (1) not try to listen carefully to the teachings, (2) misunderstand them, or (3) forget them.Vasubandhu also uses this metaphor in his Pratītyasamutpādavyākhyā, which was written after the Vyākhyāyukti. This metaphor also appears frequently in Tibetan Buddhist literature in the works of figures such as Bu ston rin chen grub and Tsong kha pa. The position that Vasubandhu took regarding the importance of listening to the Buddha’s words with reverence was extremely influential and came to be broadly held in the Buddhist traditions of both India and Tibet after the fifth century.
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