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Arhat

In Buddhism, an arhat (Sanskrit: अर्हत्) or arahant (Pali: अरहन्त्, 𑀅𑀭𑀳𑀦𑁆𑀢𑁆) is one who has gained insight into the true nature of existence and has achieved Nirvana[1][2] and liberated from the endless cycle of rebirth.

Gautama Buddha statue and 500 arhats at the courtyard of Shanyuan Temple (善緣寺), Fushun, Liaoning province, China.
Translations of
Arhat
Sanskritअर्हत्
(IAST: Arhat)
Paliअरहन्त
(Arahant)
Bengaliঅর্হৎ
(ôrhôt)
Burmeseရဟန္တာ
(MLCTS: ra.ha.nta)
Chinese阿罗汉, 罗汉
阿羅漢, 羅漢 (Traditional)
(Pinyin: āluóhàn, luóhàn)
Japaneseあらかん
(Kanji: 阿羅漢, 羅漢)
(Katakana: アルハット)
(Rōmaji: arakan, rakan)
Khmerអរហន្ត
(Arahon)
Korean아라한, 나한
(Hanja: 阿羅漢, 羅漢)
(RR: arahan, nahan)
Sinhalaඅරහත්, රහත්
(Arahat, Rahat)
Tibetanདགྲ་བཅོམ་པ།
(Wylie: dgra bcom pa)
Tamilஅருகன்
(Aruhan)
TagalogAlhat
(Baybayin: ᜀᜎᜑᜀᜆ)
Thaiอรหันต์
(RTGS: arahan)
Vietnamesea-la-hán, la hán
(Chữ Nôm: 阿羅漢, 羅漢)
Glossary of Buddhism

The understanding of the concept has changed over the centuries, and varies between different schools of Buddhism and different regions. A range of views on the attainment of arhats existed in the early Buddhist schools. The Sarvāstivāda, Kāśyapīya, Mahāsāṃghika, Ekavyāvahārika, Lokottaravāda, Bahuśrutīya, Prajñaptivāda, and Caitika schools all regarded arhats as imperfect in their attainments compared to buddhas.[3][4][5]

Mahayana Buddhist teachings urge followers to take up the path of a bodhisattva, and to not fall back to the level of arhats and śrāvakas.[6] The arhats, or at least the senior arhats, came to be widely regarded by Theravada buddhists as "moving beyond the state of personal freedom to join the Bodhisattva enterprise in their own way".[7]

Mahayana Buddhism regarded a group of Eighteen Arhats (with names and personalities) as awaiting the return of the Buddha as Maitreya, while other groupings of 6, 8, 16, 100, and 500 also appear in tradition and Buddhist art, especially in East Asia called luohan or lohan.[8][9] They may be seen as the Buddhist equivalents of the Christian saint, apostles or early disciples and leaders of the faith.[8][relevant?]

Etymology edit

 
Gohyaku rakan - five hundred statues depicting arhats, at the Chōkei temple in Toyama

The Sanskrit word arhat (Pāḷi arahant) is a present participle coming from the verbal root √arh "to deserve",[10] cf. arha "meriting, deserving"; arhaṇa "having a claim, being entitled"; arhita (past participle) "honoured, worshipped".[11] The word is used in the Ṛgveda with this sense of "deserving".[12][13]

Meaning edit

In early Buddhist schools edit

In pre-Buddhist India, the term arhat (denoting a saintly person in general) was closely associated with miraculous power and asceticism. Buddhists made a sharp distinction between their arhats and Indian holy men, and miraculous powers were no longer central to arhat identity or mission.[14]

A range of views on the relative perfection of arhats existed in the early Buddhist schools. Mahāsāṃghikas, such as the Ekavyāvahārika, Lokottaravāda,[3] Bahuśrutīya,[15] Prajñaptivāda and Caitika[4] schools, advocated the transcendental nature of the buddhas and bodhisattvas and the fallibility of arhats;[16] the Caitikas advocated the ideal of the bodhisattva (bodhisattvayāna) over that of the arhat (śrāvakayāna), and viewed arhats as fallible and still subject to ignorance.[4]

According to A. K. Warder, the Sarvāstivādins held the same position as the Mahāsāṃghika branch about arhats, considering them imperfect and fallible.[5] In the Sarvāstivādin Nāgadatta Sūtra, the demon Māra takes the form of Nāgadatta's father and tries to convince Nāgadatta (who was a bhikṣuṇī) to work toward the lower stage of arhatship rather than strive to become a fully enlightened buddha (samyaksaṃbuddha):

Māra therefore took the disguise of Nāgadatta's father and said thus to Nāgadatta: "Your thought is too serious. Buddhahood is too difficult to attain. It takes a hundred thousand nayutas of koṭis of kalpas to become a Buddha. Since few people attain Buddhahood in this world, why don't you attain Arhatship? For the experience of Arhatship is the same as that of nirvāṇa; moreover, it is easy to attain Arhatship.[17]

In her reply, Nāgadatta rejects arhatship as a lower path: "A Buddha's wisdom is like empty space of the ten-quarters, which can enlighten innumerable people. But an Arhat's wisdom is inferior."[17] The Kāśyapīya school also believed that arhats were fallible and imperfect, similar to the view of the Sarvāstivādins and the Mahāsāṃghika sects.[5] The Kāśyapīyins believed that arhats have not fully eliminated desire, their "perfection" is incomplete, and it is possible for them to relapse.[5]

In Theravāda Buddhism edit

In Theravada Buddhism, an arahant is a person who has eliminated all the unwholesome roots which underlie the fetters – who upon their death will not be reborn in any world, since the bonds (fetters) that bind a person to samsara have been finally dissolved. In the Pali Canon, the word tathagata is sometimes used as a synonym for arhat, though the former usually refers to the Buddha alone.[note 1]

After attainment of nirvana, the five aggregates (physical forms, feelings/sensations, perception, mental formations and consciousness) will continue to function, sustained by physical bodily vitality. This attainment is termed the nirvana element with a residue remaining. But once the arhat passes away and with the disintegration of the physical body, the five aggregates will cease to function, hence ending all traces of existence in the phenomenal world and thus total release from the misery of samsara. It would then be termed the nirvana element without residue remaining.[18] Parinirvana occurs at the death of an arhat.

In Theravada Buddhism, the Buddha himself is first identified as an arhat, as are his enlightened followers, because they are free from all defilements, existing without greed, hatred, delusion, ignorance and craving. Lacking "assets" which will lead to future birth, the arhat knows and sees the real here and now. This virtue shows stainless purity, true worth, and the accomplishment of the end, nirvana.[19][20]

In the Pali canon, Ānanda states that he knows monastics to achieve nirvana in one of four ways:[original research?][21][note 2]

  • one develops insight preceded by serenity (Pali: samatha-pubbaṇgamaṃ vipassanaṃ),
  • one develops serenity preceded by insight (vipassanā-pubbaṇgamaṃ samathaṃ),
  • one develops serenity and insight in a stepwise fashion (samatha-vipassanaṃ yuganaddhaṃ),
  • one's mind becomes seized by excitation about the dhamma and, as a consequence, develops serenity and abandons the fetters (dhamma-uddhacca-viggahitaṃ mānasaṃ hoti).

For those that have destroyed greed and hatred (in the sensory context) with some residue of delusion, are called anagami (non-returner). Anagamis will not be reborn into the human world after death, but into the heaven of the Pure Abodes, where only anagamis live. There, they will attain full enlightenment.

The Theravadin commentator Buddhaghosa placed the arhat at the completion of the path to liberation.[note 3]

In Mahāyāna Buddhism edit

 
Seated Luohan from Yixian, around 1000, one of a famous Group of glazed pottery luohans from Yixian

Mahayana Buddhists see Gautama Buddha himself as the ideal towards which one should aim in one's spiritual aspirations. A hierarchy of general attainments is envisioned with the attainments of arhats and pratyekabuddhas being clearly separate from and below those of samyaksambuddha or tathāgatas such as Gautama Buddha.[6]

In contrast to the goal of becoming a fully enlightened buddha, the path of a śrāvaka in being motivated by seeking personal liberation from saṃsāra is often portrayed as selfish and undesirable.[22] There are even some Mahāyāna texts that regard the aspiration to arhatship and personal liberation as an outside path.[23] Instead of aspiring for arhatship, Mahayanins are urged to instead take up the path of the bodhisattva and to not fall back to the level of arhats and śrāvakas.[6] Therefore, it is taught that an arhat must go on to become a bodhisattva eventually. If they fail to do so in the lifetime in which they reach the attainment, they will fall into a deep samādhi of emptiness, thence to be roused and taught the bodhisattva path, presumably when ready. According to the Lotus Sutra, any true arhat will eventually accept the Mahāyāna path.[24]

Mahāyāna teachings often consider the śrāvaka path to be motivated by fear of saṃsāra, which renders them incapable of aspiring to buddhahood, and that they therefore lack the courage and wisdom of a bodhisattva.[25] Novice bodhisattvas are compared to śrāvakas and arhats at times. In the Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra, there is an account of sixty novice bodhisattvas who attain arhatship despite themselves and their efforts at the bodhisattva path because they lacked the abilities of prajnaparamita and skillful means to progress as bodhisattvas toward complete enlightenment (Skt. Anuttarā Samyaksaṃbodhi). This is because they are still viewed as having innate attachment and fear of saṃsāra. The Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra compares these people to a giant bird without wings that cannot help but plummet to the earth from the top of Sumeru.[25]

Mahayan Buddhism has viewed the śrāvaka path culminating in arhatship as a lesser accomplishment than complete enlightenment, but still accords due respect to arhats for their respective achievements. Therefore, buddha-realms are depicted as populated by both śrāvakas and bodhisattvas.[25] Far from being completely disregarded, the accomplishments of arhats are viewed as impressive, essentially because they have transcended the mundane world.[26] Chinese Buddhism and other East Asian traditions have historically accepted this perspective, and specific groups of arhats are venerated as well, such as the Sixteen Arhats, the Eighteen Arhats, and the Five Hundred Arhats.[27] The first famous portraits of these arhats were painted by the Chinese monk Guanxiu (Chinese: 貫休; pinyin: Guànxiū) in 891 CE. He donated these portraits to Shengyin Temple in Qiantang (modern Hangzhou), where they are preserved with great care and ceremonious respect.[28]

In some respects, the path to arhatship and the path to complete enlightenment are seen as having common grounds. However, a distinctive difference is seen in the Mahāyāna doctrine pushing emotional and cognitive non-attachment to their logical consequences. Of this, Paul Williams writes that in Mahāyāna Buddhism, "Nirvāṇa must be sought without being sought (for oneself), and practice must be done without being practiced. The discursive mode of thinking cannot serve the basic purpose of attainment without attainment."[29]

Attainments edit

A range of views on the attainment of arhats existed in the early Buddhist schools. The Sarvāstivāda, Kāśyapīya, Mahāsāṃghika, Ekavyāvahārika, Lokottaravāda, Bahuśrutīya, Prajñaptivāda and Caitika schools all regarded arhats as being imperfect in their attainments compared to buddhas.[4][5][3]

The Dharmaguptaka sect believed that "the Buddha and those of the Two Vehicles, although they have one and the same liberation, have followed different noble paths."[30]

The Mahīśāsaka and the Theravada regarded arhats and buddhas as being similar to one another. The 5th century Theravadin commentator Buddhaghosa regarded arhats as having completed the path to enlightenment.[note 4] According to Bhikkhu Bodhi, the Pāli Canon portrays the Buddha declaring himself to be an arahant.[32][note 5] According to Bhikkhu Bodhi, nirvāṇa is "the ultimate goal", and one who has attained nirvana has attained arhatship:[note 6] Bhikkhu Bodhi writes, "The defining mark of an arahant is the attainment of nirvāṇa in this present life."[32]

The Mahayana discerned a hierarchy of attainments, with samyaksambuddhas at the top, mahāsattvas below that, pratyekabuddhas below that and arhats further below.[33] "But what was it that distinguished the bodhisattva from the sravaka, and ultimately the buddha from the arhat? The difference lay, more than anywhere else, in the altruistic orientation of the bodhisattva."[34]

Translations edit

The term arhat is often rendered in English as arahat. The term arhat was transliterated into some East Asian languages phonetically, for example, the Chinese āluóhàn (Ch. 阿羅漢), often shortened to simply luóhàn (Ch. 羅漢). This may appear in English as luohan or lohan. In Japanese the pronunciation of the same Chinese characters is rakan (Ja. 羅漢) or arakan (Ja. 阿羅漢).[35][36][37]

The Tibetan term for arhat was translated by meaning from Sanskrit. This translation, dgra bcom pa (Ti. དགྲ་བཅོམ་པ།), means "one who has destroyed the foes of afflictions".[38] Thus the Tibetan translators also understood the meaning of arhat to be ari-hanta.

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Peter Harvey, The Selfless Mind. Curzon Press 1995, p. 227:

    Before focusing on key passages on the tathagata, it is first necessary to clarify which persons the word refers to. The Buddha often used it when talking of himself as an enlightened being, rather than as the individual Gotama. In general, "tathagata" is used specifically of the Buddha, the one who discovers and proclaims the path to nirvana (A.II.8–9, S.III.65-6), with the "tathagata, Arahat, perfectly and completely enlighteneed one" being contrasted with a "disciple of the tathagata" (D.II.142). Nevertheless, "tathagata" is sometimes used of any Arahat. S.V.327, for example, discusses the "dwelling of a learner" and that of a tathagata, and explains the second by describing the qualities of an Arahat. At M.I.139–140 and 486-7, moreover, there is a switching between talk of a "tathagata" and of "a monk whose mind is freed thus", as if they were simple equivalents. Tathagata literally means "thus-gone" or "thus-come", probably meaning one who is "attained-to-truth" or "whose-nature-is-from-truth".

  2. ^ Bodhi (2005), p. 268, translates this fourth way as: "a monk's mind is seized by agitation about the teaching." Thanissaro (1998) gives a seemingly contrary interpretation of: "a monk's mind has its restlessness concerning the Dhamma [Comm: the corruptions of insight] well under control." Thus, it appears possible to interpret the excitation (Pali: uddhacca, see Rhys Davids & Stede, 1921–25) as either something that the future arahant uses to impel their pursuit of the path or something that the future arahant controls in order to pursue the path.
  3. ^ Keown and Prebish (2007), Routledge Encyclopedia of Buddhism, p. 36: "When the great Theravada commentator, Buddhaghosa, wrote the Visuddhimagga delineating the nature of the gradual path to enlightenment, he placed the arahant at the completion of that path. The arahant stands as a transcendent figure in Theravada, one who has followed to its end the way of Dharma set out by the Buddha."
  4. ^ Routledge Encyclopedia of Buddhism: "When the great Theravada commentator, Buddhaghosa, wrote the Visuddhimagga delineating the nature of the gradual path to enlightenment, he placed the arahant at the completion of that path. The arahant stands as a transcendent figure in Theravada, one who has followed to its end the way of Dharma set out by the Buddha."[31]
  5. ^ Bhikkhu Bodhi: "The Buddha is the first of the arahants, while those who reach the goal by following his path also become arahants. In the verse of homage to the Buddha, it is said: "Iti pi so Bhagavā Arahaṃ... — The Blessed One is an arahant..." Shortly after his enlightenment, while walking to Benares to meet the five monks, a wanderer stopped the Buddha and asked who he was. The Buddha replied: "I am the arahant in the world, I am the supreme teacher" (MN 26/I 171). So the Buddha first of all declares himself to be an arahant."[32]
  6. ^ "From the perspective of the Nikāyas, the ultimate goal – the goal in strict doctrinal terms – is nirvāṇa, and the goal in human terms is arahantship, the state of a person who has attained nirvāṇa in this present life."[32]

Citations edit

  1. ^ "arhat | Buddhism | Britannica". www.britannica.com.
  2. ^ Warder 2000, p. 67.
  3. ^ a b c Baruah, Bibhuti. Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism. 2008. p. 446
  4. ^ a b c d Sree Padma. Barber, Anthony W. Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra. 2008. p. 44
  5. ^ a b c d e Warder, A.K. Indian Buddhism. 2000. p. 277
  6. ^ a b c Williams, Paul. Buddhism. Vol. 3: The origins and nature of Mahāyāna Buddhism. Routledge. 2004. p. 119
  7. ^ Rhie & Thurman 1991, p. 102.
  8. ^ a b Rhie & Thurman 1991, p. 102-119.
  9. ^ "Sixteen Arhats at Shengyin Temple-- the 15th: Ajita Arhat: Shi liu zun zhe xiang: 16 Lohans: A shi duo zun zhe xiang bing zan: Sheng yin si shi liu zun zhe xiang di shi wu". Chinese Rubbings Collection - CURIOSity Digital Collections. Retrieved 11 August 2019.
  10. ^ Whitney, D. W. Roots, Verb-forms and Primary Derivatives of the Sanskrit Language
  11. ^ Monier-Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary
  12. ^ RV 1.4.47, 2.5.51
  13. ^ Richard Gombrich, 2009, What the Buddha Thought, Equinox: London, pp. 57–58.
  14. ^ Richard Kieckhefer, George D. Bond. "Sainthood: Its Manifestations in World Religions" 1988. pp. 159-160.
  15. ^ Walser, Joseph. Nāgārjuna in Context: Mahāyāna Buddhism and Early Indian Culture. 2005. p. 218.
  16. ^ Baruah, Bibhuti. Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism. 2008. p. 48.
  17. ^ a b Kalupahana, David. Buddhist Thought and Ritual. 2001. p. 109
  18. ^ Bhikkhu Bodhi. "Transcendental Dependent Arising". Access to Insight. from the original on 30 March 2009. Retrieved 16 March 2009.
  19. ^ "Yahoo! Groups". Archived from the original on 11 July 2012.
  20. ^ "Yahoo | Mail, Weather, Search, Politics, News, Finance, Sports & Videos". www.yahoo.com.
  21. ^ Ānanda's teaching on achieving arhantship can be found in AN 4.170. Translations for this sutta can be found in Bodhi (2005) pp. 268–9, 439, and Thanissaro (1998).
  22. ^ Baruah, Bibhuti. Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism. Sarup & Son. 2008. p. 192
  23. ^ Sheng Yen. Orthodox Chinese Buddhism. North Atlantic Books. 2007. p. 149.
  24. ^ Sheng Yen. Orthodox Chinese Buddhism. North Atlantic Books. 2007. p. 163.
  25. ^ a b c Williams, Paul. Buddhism. Vol. 3: The origins and nature of Mahāyāna Buddhism. Routledge. 2004. p. 120
  26. ^ Powers, John. A Concise Introduction to Tibetan Buddhism. Snow Lion Publications. 2008. p. 36.
  27. ^ Leidy, Denise. The Art of Buddhism: An Introduction to Its History and Meaning. Shambhala. 2009. p. 196
  28. ^ Susan Bush and Ilsio-yen Shih (1985). Early Chinese Texts on Painting. Cambridge, Massachusetts, and London. p. 314.
  29. ^ Williams, Paul. Buddhism. Vol. 3: The origins and nature of Mahāyāna Buddhism. Routledge. 2004. p. 50
  30. ^ 《異部宗輪論述記》:謂佛雖在僧中所攝,然別施佛果大,非僧(果大)。於窣堵波興供養業獲廣大果。佛與二乘解脫雖一,而聖道異。無諸外道能得五通。阿羅漢身皆是無漏。餘義多同大眾部執。
  31. ^ Charles Prebish and Damien Keown (2007), Routledge Encyclopedia of Buddhism, pp 36
  32. ^ a b c d Bhikkhu Bodhi, Arahants, Bodhisattvas, and Buddhas
  33. ^ Williams, Paul. Buddhism. Vol. 3: The origins and nature of Mahāyāna Buddhism. Routledge. 2004. pp. 119-120
  34. ^ Prebish & Keown 2004, p. 88.
  35. ^ "羅漢 - English translation – Linguee". Linguee.com. Retrieved 11 August 2019.
  36. ^ Visser, Marinus Willem de (1923). The Arhats in China and Japan. Oesterheld & Company.
  37. ^ "Sixteen Arhats at Shengyin Temple-- the 15th: Ajita Arhat | Guanxiu". ResearchGate. Retrieved 12 August 2019.
  38. ^ Cozort, Daniel. Unique Tenets of the Middle Way Consequence School. Snow Lion Publications. 1998. p. 259.

General sources edit

  • Prebish, Charles; Keown, Damien, eds. (2004). Encyclopedia of Buddhism. Routledge. ISBN 978-0415314145.
  • Rhie, Marylin; Thurman, Robert (1991). Wisdom And Compassion: The Sacred Art of Tibet. new York: Harry N. Abrams (with 3 institutions). ISBN 0810925265.
  • Warder, A.K. (2000). Indian Buddhism. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers.

Further reading edit

  • Addiss, Stephen. The Art of Zen: Paintings and Calligraphy by Japanese Monks, 1600–1925. New York: H.N. Abrams. 1989.
  • Bodhi, Bhikkhu (ed.) (2005). In the Buddha's Words: An Anthology of Discourses from the Pāli Canon. Boston: Wisdom Pubs. ISBN 0-86171-491-1.
  • Bush, Susan, and Hsio-yen Shih. Early Chinese Texts on Painting. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Published for the Harvard-Yenching Institute by Harvard University Press. 1985.
  • Joo, Bong Seok, "The Arhat Cult in China from the Seventh through Thirteenth Centuries:Narrative, Art, Space and Ritual" (PhD diss., Princeton University, 2007).
  • Kai-man. 1986. The Illustrated 500 Lo Han. Hong Kong: Precious Art Publications.
  • Katz, Nathan. Buddhist Images of Human Perfection: The Arahant of the Sutta Piṭaka Compared with the Bodhisattva and the Mahāsiddha. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. 1982.
  • Kent, Richard K. "Depictions of the Guardians of the Law: Lohan Painting in China". In Latter Days of the Law: Images of Chinese Buddhism, Marsha Weidner, 183–213. N.p.:University of Hawaii Press, 1994.
  • Khantipalo, Bhikkhu (1979). Banner of the ArahantKandy, Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society. ISBN 978-955-24-0311-8.
  • Khantipalo, Bhikkhu (1989). Buddha, My Refuge: Contemplation of the Buddha based on the Pali Suttas. Kandy, Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society. ISBN 955-24-0037-6. An excerpt from the "Introduction" is available on-line at https://groups.yahoo.com/group/Buddhawaslike/message/17.
  • Laufer, Berthold. "Inspirational Dreams in Eastern Asia". The Journal of American Folklore 44, no. 172 (1931): 208–216.
  • Levine, Gregory P. A., and Yukio Lippit. Awakenings: Zen Figure Painting in Medieval Japan. New York: Japan Society. 2007.
  • Little, Stephen. "The Arhats in China and Tibet". Artibus Asiae 52 (1992): 255–281.
  • Rhys Davids, T.W. & William Stede (eds.) (1921–5). The Pali Text Society's Pali–English dictionary. Chipstead: Pali Text Society. A general on-line search engine for the PED is available at http://dsal.uchicago.edu/dictionaries/pali/.
  • Seckel, Dietrich. "The Rise of Portraiture in Chinese Art". Artibus Asiae 53, no. 1/2 (1993): 7–26.
  • Tanaka, Ichimatsu. Japanese Ink Painting: Shubun to Sesshu. New York: Weatherhill. 1972.
  • Tredwell, Winifred Reed. Chinese Art Motives Interpreted. New York [etc.]: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1915.
  • Visser, Marinus Willem de. The Arhats in China and Japan. Berlin: Oesterheld & Co. 1923.
  • Watanabe, Masako. "Guanxiu and Exotic Imagery in Raken Paintings". Orientations 31, no. 4 (2000): 34–42.
  • Watters, Thomas. The Eighteen Lohan of Chinese Buddhist Temples. Shanghai: Kelly and Walsh. 1925.

External links edit

  • Arahants, Bodhisattvas, and Buddhas, an article by Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1998). Yuganaddha Sutta: In Tandem.

arhat, luohan, redirects, here, other, uses, luohan, disambiguation, this, article, about, term, buddhism, term, jainism, arihant, jainism, buddhism, arhat, sanskrit, अर, हत, arahant, pali, अरहन, 𑀅𑀭𑀳𑀦, 𑀢, gained, insight, into, true, nature, existence, achieve. Luohan redirects here For other uses see Luohan disambiguation This article is about the term in Buddhism For the term in Jainism see Arihant Jainism In Buddhism an arhat Sanskrit अर हत or arahant Pali अरहन त 𑀅𑀭𑀳𑀦 𑀢 is one who has gained insight into the true nature of existence and has achieved Nirvana 1 2 and liberated from the endless cycle of rebirth Gautama Buddha statue and 500 arhats at the courtyard of Shanyuan Temple 善緣寺 Fushun Liaoning province China Translations ofArhatSanskritअर हत IAST Arhat Paliअरहन त Arahant Bengaliঅর হৎ orhot Burmeseရဟန တ MLCTS ra ha nta Chinese阿罗汉 罗汉 阿羅漢 羅漢 Traditional Pinyin aluohan luohan Japaneseあらかん Kanji 阿羅漢 羅漢 Katakana アルハット Rōmaji arakan rakan Khmerអរហន ត Arahon Korean아라한 나한 Hanja 阿羅漢 羅漢 RR arahan nahan Sinhalaඅරහත රහත Arahat Rahat Tibetanདག བཅ མ པ Wylie dgra bcom pa Tamilஅர கன Aruhan TagalogAlhat Baybayin ᜀᜎᜑᜀᜆ Thaixrhnt RTGS arahan Vietnamesea la han la han Chữ Nom 阿羅漢 羅漢 Glossary of Buddhism The understanding of the concept has changed over the centuries and varies between different schools of Buddhism and different regions A range of views on the attainment of arhats existed in the early Buddhist schools The Sarvastivada Kasyapiya Mahasaṃghika Ekavyavaharika Lokottaravada Bahusrutiya Prajnaptivada and Caitika schools all regarded arhats as imperfect in their attainments compared to buddhas 3 4 5 Mahayana Buddhist teachings urge followers to take up the path of a bodhisattva and to not fall back to the level of arhats and sravakas 6 The arhats or at least the senior arhats came to be widely regarded by Theravada buddhists as moving beyond the state of personal freedom to join the Bodhisattva enterprise in their own way 7 Mahayana Buddhism regarded a group of Eighteen Arhats with names and personalities as awaiting the return of the Buddha as Maitreya while other groupings of 6 8 16 100 and 500 also appear in tradition and Buddhist art especially in East Asia called luohan or lohan 8 9 They may be seen as the Buddhist equivalents of the Christian saint apostles or early disciples and leaders of the faith 8 relevant Contents 1 Etymology 2 Meaning 2 1 In early Buddhist schools 2 2 In Theravada Buddhism 2 3 In Mahayana Buddhism 3 Attainments 4 Translations 5 See also 6 Explanatory notes 7 Citations 8 General sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymology edit nbsp Gohyaku rakan five hundred statues depicting arhats at the Chōkei temple in Toyama The Sanskrit word arhat Paḷi arahant is a present participle coming from the verbal root arh to deserve 10 cf arha meriting deserving arhaṇa having a claim being entitled arhita past participle honoured worshipped 11 The word is used in the Ṛgveda with this sense of deserving 12 13 Meaning editIn early Buddhist schools edit In pre Buddhist India the term arhat denoting a saintly person in general was closely associated with miraculous power and asceticism Buddhists made a sharp distinction between their arhats and Indian holy men and miraculous powers were no longer central to arhat identity or mission 14 A range of views on the relative perfection of arhats existed in the early Buddhist schools Mahasaṃghikas such as the Ekavyavaharika Lokottaravada 3 Bahusrutiya 15 Prajnaptivada and Caitika 4 schools advocated the transcendental nature of the buddhas and bodhisattvas and the fallibility of arhats 16 the Caitikas advocated the ideal of the bodhisattva bodhisattvayana over that of the arhat sravakayana and viewed arhats as fallible and still subject to ignorance 4 According to A K Warder the Sarvastivadins held the same position as the Mahasaṃghika branch about arhats considering them imperfect and fallible 5 In the Sarvastivadin Nagadatta Sutra the demon Mara takes the form of Nagadatta s father and tries to convince Nagadatta who was a bhikṣuṇi to work toward the lower stage of arhatship rather than strive to become a fully enlightened buddha samyaksaṃbuddha Mara therefore took the disguise of Nagadatta s father and said thus to Nagadatta Your thought is too serious Buddhahood is too difficult to attain It takes a hundred thousand nayutas of koṭis of kalpas to become a Buddha Since few people attain Buddhahood in this world why don t you attain Arhatship For the experience of Arhatship is the same as that of nirvaṇa moreover it is easy to attain Arhatship 17 In her reply Nagadatta rejects arhatship as a lower path A Buddha s wisdom is like empty space of the ten quarters which can enlighten innumerable people But an Arhat s wisdom is inferior 17 The Kasyapiya school also believed that arhats were fallible and imperfect similar to the view of the Sarvastivadins and the Mahasaṃghika sects 5 The Kasyapiyins believed that arhats have not fully eliminated desire their perfection is incomplete and it is possible for them to relapse 5 In Theravada Buddhism edit In Theravada Buddhism an arahant is a person who has eliminated all the unwholesome roots which underlie the fetters who upon their death will not be reborn in any world since the bonds fetters that bind a person to samsara have been finally dissolved In the Pali Canon the word tathagata is sometimes used as a synonym for arhat though the former usually refers to the Buddha alone note 1 After attainment of nirvana the five aggregates physical forms feelings sensations perception mental formations and consciousness will continue to function sustained by physical bodily vitality This attainment is termed the nirvana element with a residue remaining But once the arhat passes away and with the disintegration of the physical body the five aggregates will cease to function hence ending all traces of existence in the phenomenal world and thus total release from the misery of samsara It would then be termed the nirvana element without residue remaining 18 Parinirvana occurs at the death of an arhat In Theravada Buddhism the Buddha himself is first identified as an arhat as are his enlightened followers because they are free from all defilements existing without greed hatred delusion ignorance and craving Lacking assets which will lead to future birth the arhat knows and sees the real here and now This virtue shows stainless purity true worth and the accomplishment of the end nirvana 19 20 In the Pali canon Ananda states that he knows monastics to achieve nirvana in one of four ways original research 21 note 2 one develops insight preceded by serenity Pali samatha pubbaṇgamaṃ vipassanaṃ one develops serenity preceded by insight vipassana pubbaṇgamaṃ samathaṃ one develops serenity and insight in a stepwise fashion samatha vipassanaṃ yuganaddhaṃ one s mind becomes seized by excitation about the dhamma and as a consequence develops serenity and abandons the fetters dhamma uddhacca viggahitaṃ manasaṃ hoti For those that have destroyed greed and hatred in the sensory context with some residue of delusion are called anagami non returner Anagamis will not be reborn into the human world after death but into the heaven of the Pure Abodes where only anagamis live There they will attain full enlightenment The Theravadin commentator Buddhaghosa placed the arhat at the completion of the path to liberation note 3 In Mahayana Buddhism edit nbsp Seated Luohan from Yixian around 1000 one of a famous Group of glazed pottery luohans from Yixian Mahayana Buddhists see Gautama Buddha himself as the ideal towards which one should aim in one s spiritual aspirations A hierarchy of general attainments is envisioned with the attainments of arhats and pratyekabuddhas being clearly separate from and below those of samyaksambuddha or tathagatas such as Gautama Buddha 6 In contrast to the goal of becoming a fully enlightened buddha the path of a sravaka in being motivated by seeking personal liberation from saṃsara is often portrayed as selfish and undesirable 22 There are even some Mahayana texts that regard the aspiration to arhatship and personal liberation as an outside path 23 Instead of aspiring for arhatship Mahayanins are urged to instead take up the path of the bodhisattva and to not fall back to the level of arhats and sravakas 6 Therefore it is taught that an arhat must go on to become a bodhisattva eventually If they fail to do so in the lifetime in which they reach the attainment they will fall into a deep samadhi of emptiness thence to be roused and taught the bodhisattva path presumably when ready According to the Lotus Sutra any true arhat will eventually accept the Mahayana path 24 Mahayana teachings often consider the sravaka path to be motivated by fear of saṃsara which renders them incapable of aspiring to buddhahood and that they therefore lack the courage and wisdom of a bodhisattva 25 Novice bodhisattvas are compared to sravakas and arhats at times In the Aṣṭasahasrika Prajnaparamita Sutra there is an account of sixty novice bodhisattvas who attain arhatship despite themselves and their efforts at the bodhisattva path because they lacked the abilities of prajnaparamita and skillful means to progress as bodhisattvas toward complete enlightenment Skt Anuttara Samyaksaṃbodhi This is because they are still viewed as having innate attachment and fear of saṃsara The Aṣṭasahasrika Prajnaparamita Sutra compares these people to a giant bird without wings that cannot help but plummet to the earth from the top of Sumeru 25 Mahayan Buddhism has viewed the sravaka path culminating in arhatship as a lesser accomplishment than complete enlightenment but still accords due respect to arhats for their respective achievements Therefore buddha realms are depicted as populated by both sravakas and bodhisattvas 25 Far from being completely disregarded the accomplishments of arhats are viewed as impressive essentially because they have transcended the mundane world 26 Chinese Buddhism and other East Asian traditions have historically accepted this perspective and specific groups of arhats are venerated as well such as the Sixteen Arhats the Eighteen Arhats and the Five Hundred Arhats 27 The first famous portraits of these arhats were painted by the Chinese monk Guanxiu Chinese 貫休 pinyin Guanxiu in 891 CE He donated these portraits to Shengyin Temple in Qiantang modern Hangzhou where they are preserved with great care and ceremonious respect 28 In some respects the path to arhatship and the path to complete enlightenment are seen as having common grounds However a distinctive difference is seen in the Mahayana doctrine pushing emotional and cognitive non attachment to their logical consequences Of this Paul Williams writes that in Mahayana Buddhism Nirvaṇa must be sought without being sought for oneself and practice must be done without being practiced The discursive mode of thinking cannot serve the basic purpose of attainment without attainment 29 Attainments editA range of views on the attainment of arhats existed in the early Buddhist schools The Sarvastivada Kasyapiya Mahasaṃghika Ekavyavaharika Lokottaravada Bahusrutiya Prajnaptivada and Caitika schools all regarded arhats as being imperfect in their attainments compared to buddhas 4 5 3 The Dharmaguptaka sect believed that the Buddha and those of the Two Vehicles although they have one and the same liberation have followed different noble paths 30 The Mahisasaka and the Theravada regarded arhats and buddhas as being similar to one another The 5th century Theravadin commentator Buddhaghosa regarded arhats as having completed the path to enlightenment note 4 According to Bhikkhu Bodhi the Pali Canon portrays the Buddha declaring himself to be an arahant 32 note 5 According to Bhikkhu Bodhi nirvaṇa is the ultimate goal and one who has attained nirvana has attained arhatship note 6 Bhikkhu Bodhi writes The defining mark of an arahant is the attainment of nirvaṇa in this present life 32 The Mahayana discerned a hierarchy of attainments with samyaksambuddhas at the top mahasattvas below that pratyekabuddhas below that and arhats further below 33 But what was it that distinguished the bodhisattva from the sravaka and ultimately the buddha from the arhat The difference lay more than anywhere else in the altruistic orientation of the bodhisattva 34 Translations editFurther information Zhenren Buddhist texts The term arhat is often rendered in English as arahat The term arhat was transliterated into some East Asian languages phonetically for example the Chinese aluohan Ch 阿羅漢 often shortened to simply luohan Ch 羅漢 This may appear in English as luohan or lohan In Japanese the pronunciation of the same Chinese characters is rakan Ja 羅漢 or arakan Ja 阿羅漢 35 36 37 The Tibetan term for arhat was translated by meaning from Sanskrit This translation dgra bcom pa Ti དག བཅ མ པ means one who has destroyed the foes of afflictions 38 Thus the Tibetan translators also understood the meaning of arhat to be ari hanta See also editArihant Jainism Buddhist paths to liberation Four stages of enlightenment Pratyekabuddha Yashahime Princess Half Demon Yixian glazed pottery luohans Killing an arhat is a anantarika karma crime Explanatory notes edit Peter Harvey The Selfless Mind Curzon Press 1995 p 227 Before focusing on key passages on the tathagata it is first necessary to clarify which persons the word refers to The Buddha often used it when talking of himself as an enlightened being rather than as the individual Gotama In general tathagata is used specifically of the Buddha the one who discovers and proclaims the path to nirvana A II 8 9 S III 65 6 with the tathagata Arahat perfectly and completely enlighteneed one being contrasted with a disciple of the tathagata D II 142 Nevertheless tathagata is sometimes used of any Arahat S V 327 for example discusses the dwelling of a learner and that of a tathagata and explains the second by describing the qualities of an Arahat At M I 139 140 and 486 7 moreover there is a switching between talk of a tathagata and of a monk whose mind is freed thus as if they were simple equivalents Tathagata literally means thus gone or thus come probably meaning one who is attained to truth or whose nature is from truth Bodhi 2005 p 268 translates this fourth way as a monk s mind is seized by agitation about the teaching Thanissaro 1998 gives a seemingly contrary interpretation of a monk s mind has its restlessness concerning the Dhamma Comm the corruptions of insight well under control Thus it appears possible to interpret the excitation Pali uddhacca see Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 25 as either something that the future arahant uses to impel their pursuit of the path or something that the future arahant controls in order to pursue the path Keown and Prebish 2007 Routledge Encyclopedia of Buddhism p 36 When the great Theravada commentator Buddhaghosa wrote the Visuddhimagga delineating the nature of the gradual path to enlightenment he placed the arahant at the completion of that path The arahant stands as a transcendent figure in Theravada one who has followed to its end the way of Dharma set out by the Buddha Routledge Encyclopedia of Buddhism When the great Theravada commentator Buddhaghosa wrote the Visuddhimagga delineating the nature of the gradual path to enlightenment he placed the arahant at the completion of that path The arahant stands as a transcendent figure in Theravada one who has followed to its end the way of Dharma set out by the Buddha 31 Bhikkhu Bodhi The Buddha is the first of the arahants while those who reach the goal by following his path also become arahants In the verse of homage to the Buddha it is said Iti pi so Bhagava Arahaṃ The Blessed One is an arahant Shortly after his enlightenment while walking to Benares to meet the five monks a wanderer stopped the Buddha and asked who he was The Buddha replied I am the arahant in the world I am the supreme teacher MN 26 I 171 So the Buddha first of all declares himself to be an arahant 32 From the perspective of the Nikayas the ultimate goal the goal in strict doctrinal terms is nirvaṇa and the goal in human terms is arahantship the state of a person who has attained nirvaṇa in this present life 32 Citations edit arhat Buddhism Britannica www britannica com Warder 2000 p 67 a b c Baruah Bibhuti Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism 2008 p 446 a b c d Sree Padma Barber Anthony W Buddhism in the Krishna River Valley of Andhra 2008 p 44 a b c d e Warder A K Indian Buddhism 2000 p 277 a b c Williams Paul Buddhism Vol 3 The origins and nature of Mahayana Buddhism Routledge 2004 p 119 Rhie amp Thurman 1991 p 102 a b Rhie amp Thurman 1991 p 102 119 Sixteen Arhats at Shengyin Temple the 15th Ajita Arhat Shi liu zun zhe xiang 16 Lohans A shi duo zun zhe xiang bing zan Sheng yin si shi liu zun zhe xiang di shi wu Chinese Rubbings Collection CURIOSity Digital Collections Retrieved 11 August 2019 Whitney D W Roots Verb forms and Primary Derivatives of the Sanskrit Language Monier Williams Sanskrit English Dictionary RV 1 4 47 2 5 51 Richard Gombrich 2009 What the Buddha Thought Equinox London pp 57 58 Richard Kieckhefer George D Bond Sainthood Its Manifestations in World Religions 1988 pp 159 160 Walser Joseph Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture 2005 p 218 Baruah Bibhuti Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism 2008 p 48 a b Kalupahana David Buddhist Thought and Ritual 2001 p 109 Bhikkhu Bodhi Transcendental Dependent Arising Access to Insight Archived from the original on 30 March 2009 Retrieved 16 March 2009 Yahoo Groups Archived from the original on 11 July 2012 Yahoo Mail Weather Search Politics News Finance Sports amp Videos www yahoo com Ananda s teaching on achieving arhantship can be found in AN 4 170 Translations for this sutta can be found in Bodhi 2005 pp 268 9 439 and Thanissaro 1998 Baruah Bibhuti Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism Sarup amp Son 2008 p 192 Sheng Yen Orthodox Chinese Buddhism North Atlantic Books 2007 p 149 Sheng Yen Orthodox Chinese Buddhism North Atlantic Books 2007 p 163 a b c Williams Paul Buddhism Vol 3 The origins and nature of Mahayana Buddhism Routledge 2004 p 120 Powers John A Concise Introduction to Tibetan Buddhism Snow Lion Publications 2008 p 36 Leidy Denise The Art of Buddhism An Introduction to Its History and Meaning Shambhala 2009 p 196 Susan Bush and Ilsio yen Shih 1985 Early Chinese Texts on Painting Cambridge Massachusetts and London p 314 Williams Paul Buddhism Vol 3 The origins and nature of Mahayana Buddhism Routledge 2004 p 50 異部宗輪論述記 謂佛雖在僧中所攝 然別施佛果大 非僧 果大 於窣堵波興供養業獲廣大果 佛與二乘解脫雖一 而聖道異 無諸外道能得五通 阿羅漢身皆是無漏 餘義多同大眾部執 Charles Prebish and Damien Keown 2007 Routledge Encyclopedia of Buddhism pp 36 a b c d Bhikkhu Bodhi Arahants Bodhisattvas and Buddhas Williams Paul Buddhism Vol 3 The origins and nature of Mahayana Buddhism Routledge 2004 pp 119 120 Prebish amp Keown 2004 p 88 羅漢 English translation Linguee Linguee com Retrieved 11 August 2019 Visser Marinus Willem de 1923 The Arhats in China and Japan Oesterheld amp Company Sixteen Arhats at Shengyin Temple the 15th Ajita Arhat Guanxiu ResearchGate Retrieved 12 August 2019 Cozort Daniel Unique Tenets of the Middle Way Consequence School Snow Lion Publications 1998 p 259 General sources editPrebish Charles Keown Damien eds 2004 Encyclopedia of Buddhism Routledge ISBN 978 0415314145 Rhie Marylin Thurman Robert 1991 Wisdom And Compassion The Sacred Art of Tibet new York Harry N Abrams with 3 institutions ISBN 0810925265 Warder A K 2000 Indian Buddhism Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Further reading editAddiss Stephen The Art of Zen Paintings and Calligraphy by Japanese Monks 1600 1925 New York H N Abrams 1989 Bodhi Bhikkhu ed 2005 In the Buddha s Words An Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Canon Boston Wisdom Pubs ISBN 0 86171 491 1 Bush Susan and Hsio yen Shih Early Chinese Texts on Painting Cambridge Massachusetts Published for the Harvard Yenching Institute by Harvard University Press 1985 Joo Bong Seok The Arhat Cult in China from the Seventh through Thirteenth Centuries Narrative Art Space and Ritual PhD diss Princeton University 2007 Kai man 1986 The Illustrated 500 Lo Han Hong Kong Precious Art Publications Katz Nathan Buddhist Images of Human Perfection The Arahant of the Sutta Piṭaka Compared with the Bodhisattva and the Mahasiddha Delhi Motilal Banarsidass 1982 Kent Richard K Depictions of the Guardians of the Law Lohan Painting in China In Latter Days of the Law Images of Chinese Buddhism Marsha Weidner 183 213 N p University of Hawaii Press 1994 Khantipalo Bhikkhu 1979 Banner of the ArahantKandy Sri Lanka Buddhist Publication Society ISBN 978 955 24 0311 8 Khantipalo Bhikkhu 1989 Buddha My Refuge Contemplation of the Buddha based on the Pali Suttas Kandy Sri Lanka Buddhist Publication Society ISBN 955 24 0037 6 An excerpt from the Introduction is available on line at https groups yahoo com group Buddhawaslike message 17 Laufer Berthold Inspirational Dreams in Eastern Asia The Journal of American Folklore 44 no 172 1931 208 216 Levine Gregory P A and Yukio Lippit Awakenings Zen Figure Painting in Medieval Japan New York Japan Society 2007 Little Stephen The Arhats in China and Tibet Artibus Asiae 52 1992 255 281 Rhys Davids T W amp William Stede eds 1921 5 The Pali Text Society s Pali English dictionary Chipstead Pali Text Society A general on line search engine for the PED is available at http dsal uchicago edu dictionaries pali Seckel Dietrich The Rise of Portraiture in Chinese Art Artibus Asiae 53 no 1 2 1993 7 26 Tanaka Ichimatsu Japanese Ink Painting Shubun to Sesshu New York Weatherhill 1972 Tredwell Winifred Reed Chinese Art Motives Interpreted New York etc G P Putnam s Sons 1915 Visser Marinus Willem de The Arhats in China and Japan Berlin Oesterheld amp Co 1923 Watanabe Masako Guanxiu and Exotic Imagery in Raken Paintings Orientations 31 no 4 2000 34 42 Watters Thomas The Eighteen Lohan of Chinese Buddhist Temples Shanghai Kelly and Walsh 1925 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arhat Arahants Bodhisattvas and Buddhas an article by Ven Bhikkhu Bodhi Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1998 Yuganaddha Sutta In Tandem Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arhat amp oldid 1217900638, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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