Quiz
Instructions: Please answer the following ten questions in two to three complete sentences each, based on the provided source text.
1. What is brahmin JÄį¹ussoį¹iās initial concern about the practice of dwelling in remote jungle resting places?
2. Before his enlightenment, how did the Bodhisatta find "great solace" and overcome the initial difficulty of dwelling in the forest?
3. Describe the Bodhisatta's method for directly confronting and subduing the "fear and dread" that he encountered in horrifying abodes.
4. What are the four states of meditative absorption, or jhÄnas, that the Bodhisatta achieved, and what was the quality of mind that resulted from them?
5. What was the first true knowledge the Bodhisatta attained during the first watch of the night?
6. What did the second true knowledge, gained through the "divine eye," reveal about the passing away and reappearance of beings?
7. What was the third and final true knowledge attained in the last watch of the night, and what was its ultimate result?
8. The source text identifies three specific "taints" from which the mind is liberated. What are they?
9. After achieving full enlightenment, what two reasons does the Blessed One give JÄį¹ussoį¹i for continuing to dwell in remote forest resting places?
10. How does JÄį¹ussoį¹i react at the conclusion of the discourse, and what action does he take?
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Essay Questions
Instructions: Consider the following prompts for longer, essay-style responses. Do not provide answers.
1. Analyze the relationship between inner purity and outer environment as described in the Bhayabherava Sutta. How does the Bodhisatta argue that a long list of internal qualitiesāfrom purified bodily conduct to being possessed of wisdomāare the primary defense against the "fear and dread" of the forest?
2. Trace the progression of the Bodhisatta's journey on the night of his enlightenment, from the attainment of the four jhÄnas to the realization of the three true knowledges. Discuss how each stage builds upon the previous one.
3. Discuss the concept of action and consequence as presented in the sutta, specifically through the "second true knowledge." How does the text explain the connection between a being's conduct (in body, speech, and mind) and their future reappearance?
4. Explain the significance of the Bodhisatta's decision to actively seek out "awe-inspiring, horrifying abodes" on auspicious nights. What does this reveal about his approach to overcoming psychological obstacles like fear?
5. The Blessed One states he continues his forest-dwelling practice for his own "pleasant abiding here and now" and out of "compassion for future generations." Elaborate on what these two reasons signify in the broader context of his role as a teacher and leader who sets an example for others.
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Answer Key
1. JÄį¹ussoį¹iās concern is that remote jungle-thicket resting places are hard to endure and that seclusion is difficult to practice. He believes that the jungles could "rob a bhikkhu of his mind" if the individual does not possess concentration.
2. The Bodhisatta found solace by considering that recluses and brahmins who were unpurified in conduct, livelihood, and various mental states were the ones who evoked unwholesome fear. Seeing in himself a purity of bodily, verbal, and mental conduct, as well as freedom from defects like covetousness, ill will, and doubt, he found great comfort in dwelling in the forest.
3. The Bodhisatta decided to subdue fear and dread while maintaining the exact posture he was in when the fear arose. Whether he was walking, standing, sitting, or lying down, he would not change his posture until he had completely subdued the fear.
4. The four jhÄnas are states of deep concentration achieved by first secluding oneself from sensual pleasures, then stilling thought, then fading rapture to abide in equanimity, and finally abandoning pleasure and pain for pure mindfulness. This process resulted in a concentrated mind that was purified, bright, unblemished, rid of imperfection, malleable, wieldy, steady, and had attained imperturbability.
5. The first true knowledge was the knowledge of the recollection of past lives. He remembered manifold past lives in great detail, including names, clans, appearances, experiences of pleasure and pain, and life-terms across many aeons of world-contraction and expansion.
6. The second true knowledge revealed how beings pass on according to their actions. With the divine eye, he saw that beings who were ill-conducted in body, speech, and mind reappeared in states of deprivation like hell, while those who were well-conducted reappeared in good destinations like the heavenly world.
7. The third true knowledge was the knowledge of the destruction of the taints, wherein he directly knew the nature of suffering, its origin, its cessation, and the path leading to its cessation. This resulted in his mind being liberated, and he directly knew that birth was destroyed, the holy life had been lived, and there would be no more coming to any state of being.
8. The three taints from which the mind was liberated are the taint of sensual desire, the taint of being, and the taint of ignorance.
9. The Blessed One states that he continues this practice for two reasons. The first is to have a "pleasant abiding for myself here and now," and the second is that he has "compassion for future generations."
10. JÄį¹ussoį¹i declares the Blessed One's teaching to be magnificent, as if turning upright what was overthrown or showing the way to the lost. He then goes for refuge to the Master Gotama, the Dhamma, and the Sangha of bhikkhus for the rest of his life.