The Dhammapada: A Brief Overview
By: Yan • Essay • 406 Words • April 30, 2010 • 1,067 Views
The Dhammapada: A Brief Overview
The Dhammapada is a collection of rules and observations about how people should live. As such, the content of this work centers predominantly around matters of doctrinal and ethical matters.
“Those who thing the unreal is, and think the Real is not, they shall never reach the Truth, lost in the path of wrong thought.” (#11) Doctrinally, this encourages followers to understand the world on a metaphysical level. The unreal is this world of dukkha and samsara, that is, impermanence and rebirth. The Real is the unseen truth that comes with enlightenment. Ethically, it points out that those who do not seek the Real, those who believe the unreal exists, will never see the Truth. Hence, the purpose of trying to see the Real is to see the truth.
“If a man speaks many holy words but he speaks and does not, this thoughtless man cannot enjoy the life of holiness: he is like a cowherd who counts the cows of his master.” (#19) Doctrinally, this stresses the need for Buddhists to practice what is taught in the holy texts, rather than simply preaching the words found in them. If one preaches but does not practice the teachings, then one is not living properly. This life is compared to that of a cowherd who counts another man’s cows. The cows represent virtue and the cowherd is the preacher who does not act. The cows do not belong