Four Noble Truths Talks

In Buddhism, the Four Noble Truths (Sanskrit: चत्वार्यार्यसत्यानि, romanized: catvāryāryasatyāni; Pali: cattāri ariyasaccāni; "The Four arya satya") are "the truths of the noble one (the Buddha)," a statement of how things really are when they are seen correctly. The four truths are

dukkha (not being at ease, 'suffering', from dush-stha, standing unstable). Dukkha is an innate characteristic of transient existence; nothing is forever, this is painful; samudaya (origin, arising, combination; 'cause'): together with this transient world and its pain, there is also thirst, craving for and attachment to this transient, unsatisfactory existence; nirodha (cessation, ending, confinement): the attachment to this transient world and its pain can be severed or contained by the confinement or letting go of this craving; marga (road, path, way): the Noble Eightfold Path is the path leading to the confinement of this desire and attachment, and the release from dukkha.

The four truths appear in many grammatical forms in the ancient Buddhist texts, and are traditionally identified as the first teaching given by the Buddha. While often called one of the most important teachings in Buddhism, they have both a symbolic and a propositional function. Symbolically, they represent the awakening and liberation of the Buddha, and of the potential for his followers to reach the same liberation and freedom as him. As propositions, the Four Truths are a conceptual framework that appear in the Pali canon and early Hybrid Sanskrit Buddhist scriptures, as a part of the broader "network of teachings" (the "dhamma matrix"), which have to be taken together. They provide a conceptual framework for introducing and explaining Buddhist thought, which has to be personally understood or "experienced".

As a proposition, the four truths defy an exact definition, but refer to and express the basic orientation of Buddhism: unguarded sensory contact gives rise to craving and clinging to impermanent states and things, which are dukkha, "unsatisfactory," "incapable of satisfying" and painful. This craving keeps us caught in saṃsāra, "wandering", usually interpreted as the endless cycle of repeated rebirth, and the continued dukkha that comes with it, but also referring to the endless cycle of attraction and rejection that perpetuates the ego-mind. There is a way to end this cycle, namely by attaining nirvana, cessation of craving, whereafter rebirth and the accompanying dukkha will no longer arise again. This can be accomplished by following the eightfold path, confining our automatic responses to sensory contact by restraining oneself, cultivating discipline and wholesome states, and practicing mindfulness and dhyana (meditation).

The function of the four truths, and their importance, developed over time and the Buddhist tradition slowly recognized them as the Buddha's first teaching. This tradition was established when prajna, or "liberating insight", came to be regarded as liberating in itself, instead of or in addition to the practice of dhyana. This "liberating insight" gained a prominent place in the sutras, and the four truths came to represent this liberating insight, as a part of the enlightenment story of the Buddha.

The four truths grew to be of central importance in the Theravada tradition of Buddhism by about the 5th-century CE, which holds that the insight into the four truths is liberating in itself. They are less prominent in the Mahayana tradition, which sees the higher aims of insight into sunyata, emptiness, and following the Bodhisattva path as central elements in their teachings and practice. The Mahayana tradition reinterpreted the four truths to explain how a liberated being can still be "pervasively operative in this world". Beginning with the exploration of Buddhism by western colonialists in the 19th century and the development of Buddhist modernism, they came to be often presented in the west as the central teaching of Buddhism, sometimes with novel modernistic reinterpretations very different from the historic Buddhist traditions in Asia.

From Four Noble Truths on Wikipedia

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March 5th, 1992, Serial No. 00650

Perfect Wisdom, Mahayana, Heart Sutra, Lotus Sutra, Nirvana, Continuous Practice,...
Mar 05 1992

January 23rd, 1992, Serial No. 00281

Four Noble Truths, Impermanence, Heart Sutra, Lay, Sangha, Karma, Buddha Mind,...
Jan 23 1992

January 16th, 1992, Serial No. 00282

Four Noble Truths, Lay, Renunciation, Religion, Lineage, Fasting, Dependent...
Jan 16 1992

Transmission of Light

Eka, Bodhidharma, Four Noble Truths, Buddha Ancestors, Soto Zen, Greed, Birth-and-...
Dec 14 1991
Berkeley Zen Center

Avatamsaka Sutra: The Ten Stages; Awareness and Acceptance

Serial: BZ-00272

Class 3 of 4

Soto Zen, Concentration, Liberation, Karma, Obstacles, Four Noble Truths, Commitment...
Nov 21 1991
3
Berkeley Zen Center

Avatamsaka Sutra: The Ten Stages; First Two Stages

Serial: BZ-00274

Class 1 of 4

Four Noble Truths, Enthusiasm, Passions, Vow, Lineage, Concentration, Practice Period...
Nov 07 1991
1
Berkeley Zen Center

“Engaged”: Webster’s as a Buddhist Text

Serial: BZ-00972B

Lecture

Fox, Four Noble Truths, Priest, Right Speech, Right Effort, Funeral, Vow, Soto Zen,...
Aug 17 1991
Berkeley Zen Center

Mindfulness Straight Through

Serial: BZ-00971B

Lecture

Renunciation, Four Noble Truths, Mindfulness, Mill Valley, Four Foundations, Anger,...
Aug 03 1991
Berkeley Zen Center

Heart Sutra: Skanda, Form and Emptiness

Serial: BZ-00265

Class 3 of 4

Heart Sutra, Hindrances, Anger, Passions, Skandas, Four Noble Truths, causation,...
Feb 21 1991
3
Berkeley Zen Center

Heart Sutra: Paramitas, Skandas, Emptiness, Bodhisattva Way

Serial: BZ-00266

Class 2 of 4

Heart Sutra, Four Noble Truths, Complete Perfect Enlightenment, Hindrances, Don'...
Feb 14 1991
2
Berkeley Zen Center

Avatamsaka Sutra

Serial: BZ-00261

Class 4 of 5

Precepts, Concentration, Four Noble Truths, Bodhisattva Precepts, Politics, training...
Nov 14 1990
4
Berkeley Zen Center

The Eightfold Path

Serial: BZ-00695A

One-Day Sitting

Eightfold Path, Concentration, Right Speech, Mindfulness, Four Noble Truths, Right...
Nov 11 1990
Berkeley Zen Center

Avatamsaka Sutra

Serial: BZ-00260

Class 3 of 5

Concentration, Four Noble Truths, Liberation, Attachment, Discrimination, Enemies,...
Nov 08 1990
3
Berkeley Zen Center

Avatamsaka Sutra

Serial: BZ-00622

Class 1 of 5

Four Noble Truths, Offering, Heart Sutra, Lotus Sutra, Karma, Sixth Patriarch,...
Oct 25 1990
1
Berkeley Zen Center

Coursing in Deep Prajna Paramita

Serial: BZ-00467B

Saturday Lecture

Birth-and-Death, Heart Sutra, Four Noble Truths, Buddha Nature, Samadhi, Karma,...
Sep 08 1990
Berkeley Zen Center

Nirvana and Parinirvana

Serial: BZ-00498A

Saturday Lecture

Parinirvana, Nirvana, Nirvana, Hate, Greed, Birth-and-Death, confusion, Four Noble...
Feb 10 1990
Berkeley Zen Center

Four Vows, Four Noble Truths

Serial: BZ-00500

Saturday Lecture

Vow, Bodhisattva Vow, Nirvana, Four Noble Truths, Samsara, Daily Life, Two Truths,...
Jan 27 1990
Berkeley Zen Center

December 23rd, 1989, Serial No. 00502, Side A

Peace, Impermanence, Buddha Nature, Four Noble Truths, Bodhisattva Ceremony,...
Dec 23 1989

The Four Brahmaviharas

Serial: BZ-00370A

Lecture

Enemies, Equanimity, Four Noble Truths, Impermanence, Hate, Greed, confusion,...
Dec 17 1988
Berkeley Zen Center

Heart Sutra

Serial: BZ-01474

Lecture 3

Duality, Four Noble Truths, Building, Hindrances, Interdependence, Oneness, Chanting...
Jun 30 1988

On Ryaku Fusatsu

Serial: BZ-01494

Afternoon talk. 

Bodhisattva Ceremony, Precepts, Four Noble Truths, Bodhisattva Vow, Vow, Evil,...
Jun 29 1988
Tassajara Zen Mountain Center

Unknown Title

Serial: BZ-00826

Lecture, Sesshin day 5

Four Noble Truths, Precepts, Blue Cliff Record, Interview, Posture, Vow, Anger,...
Jun 19 1988
Berkeley Zen Center

February 27th, 1988, Serial No. 01536

Serial: BZ-01536

Seventh day of sesshin at Green Gulch Farm. 

Discrimination, Duality, Four Noble Truths, Oneness, Non-discrimination,...
Feb 27 1988
7 of 7
Green Gulch Farm

February 24th, 1988, Serial No. 01534

Serial: BZ-01534

Fifth day of sesshin at Green Gulch Farm. 

Two Truths, Four Noble Truths, Duality, Vow, Ego, Non-duality, Passions,...
Feb 24 1988
5 of 7
Green Gulch Farm

Four Truths and Heart Sutra

Serial: BZ-00309

Rohatsu Day 1

Heart Sutra, Four Noble Truths, Passions, Mundane Life, Attachment, Karma, Mahayana,...
Dec 08 1987

Four Noble Truths, Four Vows

Serial: BZ-00889A

Saturday Lecture

Four Noble Truths, Vow, Bodhisattva Vow, Vow, Four Noble Truths, Attachment, Religion...
May 02 1987
Berkeley Zen Center

How to Sit Sesshin

Serial: BZ-00866B

Lecture

Concentration, Evil, Berkeley Zen Center, Silence, Passions, Four Noble Truths,...
Nov 09 1985
Berkeley Zen Center

After the Bodhisattva Ceremony

Serial: BZ-00865B

Four Vows and Four Noble Truths, Saturday Lecture

Precepts, Bodhisattva Ceremony, Four Noble Truths, Vow, Precepts, Bodhisattva...
Oct 26 1985
Berkeley Zen Center

Chanting Practice

Serial: BZ-01523B

Saturday Lecture

Chanting, Chanting, Offering, Four Noble Truths, Heart Sutra, Bell, American, War,...
Jan 26 1985
Berkeley Zen Center

Book of Serenity: Case #2

Serial: BZ-00418A

The Highest Truth is Emptiness, Rohatsu Day 6

Emptiness, SER-2, Enlightenment, Bodhidharma, Two Truths, Four Noble Truths, Practice...
Dec 1983
Part 1 of 2
Berkeley Zen Center

Mumonkan: Case #42

Serial: BZ-00418B

The Girls Comes Out of Samadhi, Rohatsu Day 7

Samadhi, MM-42, Four Noble Truths, Manjushri, Samadhi, Hindrances, Concentration,...
Dec 1983
Part 2 of 2
Berkeley Zen Center

The Book of Serenity

Serial: BZ-00239

Class 1 of 5

Duality, Intimacy, Ego, Sixth Patriarch, Subject-and-Object, Non-duality, Four Noble...
[field_wisdom_date]
1
Berkeley Zen Center

Unknown Date, Serial 00951, Side B

Heart Sutra, Buddha Nature, Four Noble Truths, Non-duality, Platform Sutra, Subject-...
[field_wisdom_date]

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