|
A gāmani (headman). He came to the Buddha in
the Pārileyyaka Mango Grove in
Nālandā and asked him various questions,
recorded in the Samyutta Nikāya (iv.312ff). One of these related to the custom
among the Pacchābhumaka (Westlander)
brahmins (where, perhaps, he himself belonged) of lifting a man up when dead and
carrying him out, calling him by name to speed him heavenward. Surely the Buddha
who is an arahant, etc., could make the whole world go to heaven thus if he
chose. To this the Buddha answers no, and explains, by various similes, that
only a man's kamma can determine where he will be reborn. On another occasion,
the Buddha tells him, in answer to a question, that the Buddha teaches the
Dhamma in full only to certain disciples and not to others; just as a farmer
sowing seed selects, first the best field, then the moderate, and lastly, the
field with the worst soil.
Asibandhakaputta tells the Buddha that, according to
Nigantha Nātaputta (he is described as
a Nigantha-Sāvaka, S. iv.317), as a man habitually lives so goes he forth to his
destiny. The Buddha points out the absurdity of this view and tells him that all
Tathāgatas lay down definite rules for the guidance of their followers, so that
they may attain development.
It is recorded (S.iv.322ff) that once, when Nālandā was stricken with famine,
Asibandhaka visited Nigantha Nātaputta, who asks him to go and defeat the Buddha
in debate. Asibandhaka is at first reluctant, but his teacher propounds to him a
dilemma to put to the Buddha, and he agrees to go.
Is it true that the Buddha extols compassion to clansmen? Why, then, does the
Buddha ask for alms in a place stricken with famine? The Buddha's answer is that
there are eight ways of injuring clansmen, and that begging for alms is not one
of them. And Asibandhakaputta, pleased with the answer, declares himself to be a
follower of the Buddha.
Asibandhakaputta's conversation with the Buddha, in which the Buddha tells
him that only a man's kamma can determine the state of his rebirth, is quoted in
the Nettippaka-rana (pp.45-47).

|