Ministering
to the Sick
Great
indeed, was the Master’s compassion for the sick. On one occasion
the Blessed One found an ailing monk, Pûtigatta Tissa,
with festering ulcers lying on his soiled bed. Immediately the
Master prepared hot water, and with the help of the Venerable
Ânanda washed him, tenderly nursed him with his own hands,
and taught the Dhamma, thus enabling him to win arahatship before
he died. On another occasion, too, the Master tended a sick
monk and admonished his disciples thus:
"Whosoever,
monks, would follow my admonition (would wait upon me, would
honour me), he should wait upon the sick."n48
When
the arahat Tissa passed away, the funeral rites were duly performed
and the Buddha caused the relics to be enshrined in a stupa.n49
The
Buddha’s mettâ or loving-kindness was all-pervading
and immeasurable. His earnest exhortation to his disciples was:
"Just
as with her own life
a mother shields from hurt
her own, her only child,
let all-embracing thoughts
for all that lives be thine."n50
Being
one who always acted in constant conformity with what he preached,
loving-kindness and compassion always dominated his actions.
While
journeying from village to village, from town to town, instructing,
enlightening, and gladdening the many, the Buddha saw how superstitious
folk, steeped in ignorance, slaughtered animals in worship of
their gods. He spoke to them:
Thus
when people who prayed to the gods for mercy were merciless,
and India was blood-stained with the morbid sacrifices of innocent
animals at the desecrated altars of imaginary deities, and the
harmful rites and rituals of ascetics and brahmins brought disaster
and brutal agony, the Buddha, the Compassionate One, pointed
out the ancient path of the Enlightened Ones, the path of righteousness,
love, and understanding.
Mettâ
or love is the best antidote for anger in oneself. It is
the best medicine for those who are angry with us. Let us then
extend love to all who need it with a free and boundless heart.
The language of the heart, the language that comes from the
heart and goes to the heart, is always simple, graceful, and
full of power.