(Pali: ) is a Sanskrit term that refers to benevolence, loving-kindness, friendliness, amity, and active interest in others. Within Buddhism, it is notably the first of the four sublime states (), one of the ten of Theravāda Buddhism, and expounded upon in the Metta Sutta.

The cultivation of benevolence () is a popular form of Buddhist meditation. It is a part of the four immeasurables in (divine abidings) meditation. as "compassion meditation" is often practiced in Asia by broadcast chanting, wherein monks chant for the laity.

The meditative cultivation of mettā has been studied by scientists. Small sample studies suggest that loving-kindness meditation may result in enhanced positive emotions during daily life in individuals who continue the practice. The Pali term mettā is derived from the Sanskrit term. The Sanskrit term is found in this sense in the Vedic literature, such as the Shatapatha Brahmana and various early Upanishads, and Vedanga literature such as Pāṇini's Aṣṭādhyāyī 5.4.36. In Buddhist belief, this is a (divine abode) or an immeasurable that leads to a meditative state by being a counter to ill-will. It removes clinging to negative states of mind, by cultivating kindness unto all beings.

Origins

According to Martin Wiltshire, prior to the advent of the Buddha, there existed traditions of and of meditation with the four virtues of loving-kindness, compassion, empathetic joy, and equanimity. The early Buddhist texts assert that pre-Buddha ancient Indian sages who taught these virtues were earlier incarnations of the Buddha. Post-Buddha, these same virtues are found in the Hindu texts such as verse 1.33 of the Yoga Sutras of Patañjali, wherein the word is synonymous with .

Loving-kindness (), along with compassion and equanimity, are found in the early Upanishads of Hinduism, while loving-kindness () is found in early Sutras of Jainism along with compassion, empathetic joy and equanimity. The ancient Indian Paccekabuddhas who are mentioned in the early Buddhist Suttas, those who lived before the Buddha, mention all "four immeasurables" and Brahmavihara, and they are claimed in the Suttas to be previous incarnations of the Buddha.

According to Ian Harris, the Buddhist scriptures acknowledge that the -concept containing four meditation practices "did not originate within the Buddhist tradition". The Buddha never claimed that the "four immeasurables" and related -meditation were his unique ideas, states Harvey Aronson, in "cessation, quieting, nirvana".

The pre-Buddha Chandogya Upanishad, states Jayatilleke, in section 8.15 teaches metta and ahimsa (doctrine of non-harm, esp. non-violence) to all creatures claiming that this practice leads to . The shift in Vedic ideas, from rituals to virtues, is particularly discernible in the early Upanishadic thought, and it is unclear as to what extent and how early Upanishadic traditions of Hinduism and Sramanic traditions such as Buddhism and Jainism influenced each other, on ideas such as "four immeasurables", meditation, and Brahmavihara.

In the Jain text, the Tattvartha Sutra (Chapter 7, sutra 11), which is accepted by all Jain sub-traditions as authoritative, there is a mention of four right sentiments: Maitri, pramoda, karunya, and madhyastha:

Mettā in Buddhism

Mettā Meditation

meditation, or often "loving-kindness meditation", is the practice concerned with the cultivation of , i.e. benevolence, kindness, and amity. The practice generally consists of silent repetitions of phrases such as "may you be happy" or "may you be free from suffering", for example directed at a person who, depending on tradition, may or may not be internally visualized. This can be displayed mainly through 3 forms:

  1. Care for the other individual
  2. Appreciation of what the individual has done for us
  3. The sincere wish for the individual to have happiness

The "far enemy" of is hate or ill-will, a mind-state in obvious opposition. The "near enemy" (quality which superficially resembles but is in fact more subtly in opposition to it), is attachment (greed): here too one likes experiencing a virtue, but for the wrong reason.

Metta in Specific Buddhist Texts

In the Pāli Canon, the term appears in many texts such as the Kakacupama Sutta and Karaniya Metta Sutta. Other canonical materials, such as in the Paṭisambhidāmagga, elaborate on it as a practice. Yet other canonical sources, such as the Abhidhamma, underline the key role of benevolence in the development of wholesome karma for better rebirths.

can also be found in several other canonical discourses.

Karaniya Metta Sutta (Sn 1.8)

or lovingkindness here, states Harvey, is a heartfelt aspiration for the happiness of all beings. It is different from "lack of ill-will", and more an antidote to fear and hatred. It is the precept to conquer anger by kindness, conquer the liar by truth, conquer the stingy by giving, and conquer evil by good, says Harvey.

Vatthūpama Sutta

In over a dozen discourses, the following description (in English and Pāli) is provided for radiating loving-kindness in six directions:

In the canon, this basic formula is expanded upon in a variety of ways. For instance, a couple of discourses provide the following description of how to gain rebirth in the heavenly realm of Brahmā () :

:"What... is the path to the company of Brahmā? Here a bhikkhu abides pervading one quarter with a mind imbued with benevolence, likewise the second, likewise the third, likewise the fourth; so above, below, around, and everywhere, and to all as to himself, he abides pervading the all-encompassing world with a mind imbued with benevolence, abundant, exalted, immeasurable, without hostility, and without ill will. When the deliverance of mind by benevolence is developed in this way, no limiting action remains there, none persists there.

:"Just as a vigorous trumpeter could make himself (or herself) heard without difficulty in the four quarters, so too, when the deliverance of mind by benevolence is developed in this way, no limiting action remains there, none persists there. This is the path to the company of Brahmā."

Patisambhidamagga Mettakatha (Ps. 2.4)

In the Khuddaka Nikāyas Paṭisambhidāmagga, traditionally ascribed to Sariputta, is a section entitled Mettākathā (Ps. 2.4, "Story on Loving-Kindness"). In this instruction, a general formula (below, in English and Pāli), essentially identical to the aforementioned Cunda Kammaraputta Sutta verse (especially evident in the Pāli), is provided for radiating benevolence:

In addition, this instruction categorizes twenty-two ways in which "the mind-deliverance of benevolence" () can be radiated with

; five ways of "unspecified pervasion" () : all beings (), all breathing things (), all creatures (), all persons (), all with a personality ()

; seven ways of "specified pervasion" () : all women (), all men (), all Noble Ones (), all non-Noble Ones (), all deities (), all humans (), all born in lower realms (),

; ten ways of "directional pervasion" () : of the eastern direction (), of the western direction (), of the northern direction (), of the southern direction (), of the eastern intermediate direction (), of the western intermediate direction (), of the northern intermediate direction (), of the southern intermediate direction (), of the downward direction (), of the upward direction ().

Moreover, the directional pervasions can then be applied to each of the unspecific and specific pervasions. For instance, after radiating benevolence to all beings in the east (), one radiates it to all beings in the west and then north and then south, etc.; then, one radiates it to all breathing things in this fashion (), then all creatures, persons, and so forth until such is extended for all those born in the lower realms.

Benefits of Mettā

The Pali canon says that there are a number of benefits from the practicing of meditation, including:

:One sleeps easily, wakes easily, dreams no evil dreams. One is dear to human beings, dear to non-human beings. The devas protect one. Neither fire, poison, nor weapons can touch one. One's mind gains concentration quickly. One's complexion is bright. One dies unconfused and—if penetrating no higher—is headed for [rebirth in] the Brahma worlds.

The canon also upholds fully ripened development as a foremost antidote to ill will:

:"No other thing do I know, O monks, on account of which unarisen ill will does not arise and arisen ill will is abandoned so much as on account of this: the liberation of the heart by benevolence. For one who attends properly to the liberation of the heart by benevolence, unarisen ill will does not arise and arisen ill will is abandoned."

:"Monks, whatever grounds there are for making merit productive of a future birth, all these do not equal a sixteenth part of the liberation of mind by benevolence. The liberation of mind by benevolence surpasses them and shines forth, bright and brilliant."

meditation is regularly recommended to the Buddha's followers in the Pali canon, which generally advises radiating in each of the six directions. A different set of practical instructions, still widely used today, is found in Visuddhimagga; this is also the main source for the "near and far enemies" given above. In addition, variations on this traditional practice have been popularized by modern teachers and applied in modern research settings.

and

is found in pre-Buddhist Vedic Sanskrit texts as , , and , which are derived from the ancient root (love).

Similarly, the term appears in hymn 55 of Book 19 of the Atharvaveda, and various Upanishads. A major early Upanishad of Hinduism, named Maitri Upanishad, discusses universal kindness and amity. The Maitri Upanishad, states Martin Wiltshire, provides the philosophical underpinning, by asserting, "what one thinks, that one becomes, this is the eternal mystery". This idea, adds Wiltshire, reflects the assumption in the ancient thought that one influences one's own environment and situation, causality is equitable, and "good volitional acts conduce pleasant situations, while bad volitional acts conduce unpleasant situations". The Maitri Upanishad teaches, states Juan Mascaró, that peace begins in one's own mind, in one's longing for truth, in looking within, and that "a quietness of mind overcomes good and evil works, and in quietness the soul is one: then one feels the joy of eternity."

The Isha Upanishad similarly discusses universal amity and loving-kindness, but without the term . These teachings of universal influenced Mahatma Gandhi.

In Jainism, Yogabindu – the 6th-century yoga text by Haribhadra – uses the Sanskrit word in verses 402–404, in the sense of loving-kindness towards all living beings.

meditation research

Some pilot research studies on the effect of meditation indicate an increase in positive emotions for practitioners. In particular, an immediate impact on positive emotions after practice as well as a long-term effect could be shown, though these effects might not hold true for everybody. Compassion meditation, a Science Daily article states, may reduce inflammatory and behavioral responses to stress that have been linked to depression and a number of medical illnesses.

meditation is a central practice within mindfulness-based pain management (MBPM), the effectiveness of which has been supported by a range of studies.

Meta-analysis

A 2015 meta-analysis, synthesizing various high-quality experiments on loving-kindness meditation, found a medium-sized[quantify] improvement to daily positive emotion, with meditation on the loving-kindness aspect of mettā having a greater effect than practices with a focus on compassion. The length of time meditating did not affect the magnitude of positive impact of the practice.

In a 2014 review of multiple studies, Galante et al. reach a similar conclusion, stating "results were inconclusive for some outcomes, in particular against active controls; the methodological quality of the reports was low to moderate; results suffered from imprecision due to wide CIs (confidence intervals) deriving from small studies" and that "the kindness meditation methods show evidence of individual and community benefits through its effects on their well-being and social interaction".

See also

  • Anapanasati Sutta
  • Bhāvanā (contemplation)
  • Brahmavihara (Karuṇā, Mudita)
  • Kammaṭṭhāna
  • Kayagatasati Sutta
  • Pāramī (perfection)
  • Adhiṭṭhāna (resolute determination)
  • Dāna (generosity)
  • Khanti (patience)
  • Nekkhamma (renunciation)
  • Pañña (wisdom)
  • Sacca (truth)
  • Śīla (morality)
  • Upekkhā (equanimity)
  • Vīrya (diligence)
  • Satipatthana Sutta, also called the Four Satipatthanas
  • Similar concepts in other cultures:
  • Caritas - Latin term for love
  • Chesed – a similar Hebrew term, given the association of kindness and love
  • Philia, Philautia, Storge, Eros, Agape - Greek terms for love

Notes

Sources

  • Acharya Buddharakkhita (trans.) (1987/2006). "Kakacupama Sutta: The Parable of the Saw (excerpt)" from Positive Response: How to Meet Evil With Good (Bodhi Leaves No. 109). Kandy, Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society (1987). Retrieved from "Access to Insight" (2006) at Kakacupama Sutta: The Parable of the Saw.
  • Amaravati Sangha (trans.) (1994, 2004). "Karaniya Metta Sutta: The Buddha's Words on Loving-Kindness" from Chanting Book: Morning and Evening Puja and Reflections (1994). Hemel Hempstead: Amaravati Publications. Retrieved 2007-11-25 from "Access to Insight" (2004) at Karaniya Metta Sutta: The Buddha's Words on Loving-Kindness.
  • Bodhi, Bhikkhu (2005). In the Buddha's Words: An Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Canon. Somerville, MA: Wisdom Publications. .
  • Buddhaghosa, Bhadantacariya & Bhikkhu (trans.) (1999). The Path of Purification: Visuddhimagga. Seattle, WA: BPS Pariyatti Editions. .
  • Gethin, Rupert (1998). The Foundations of Buddhism. Oxford: Oxford University Press. .
  • Gombrich, Richard (1988; reprinted 2002). Theravada Buddhism: A Social History from Ancient Benares to Modern Colombo. Routledge: London. .
  • Harvey, Peter (2007). An Introduction to Buddhism: Teachings, History and Practices. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. .
  • Monier-Williams, Monier (1899, 1964). A Sanskrit-English Dictionary. London: Oxford University Press. . Retrieved 2008-04-29 from "Cologne University" at MW Scan.
  • Ñanamoli Thera (ed., trans.) (1987/1994). The Practice of Loving-Kindness (Metta): As Taught by the Buddha in the Pali Canon (The Wheel No. 7). Kandy, Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society (1987). Retrieved 2007-11-25 from "Access to Insight" (1994 transcription) at The Practice of Loving-Kindness (Metta): As Taught by the Buddha in the Pali Canon.
  • , Bhikkhu (trans.) & Bhikkhu Bodhi (ed.) (2001). The Middle-Length Discourses of the Buddha: A Translation of the Majjhima Nikāya. Boston: Wisdom Publications. .
  • Ñanamoli Thera (trans.) & Bhikkhu Khantipalo (ed.) (1993/1994). Saleyyaka Sutta: The Brahmans of Sala (MN 41). Retrieved 2007-12-23 from "Access to Insight" (1994 transcription) at Saleyyaka Sutta: The Brahmans of Sala.
  • Nyanaponika Thera (trans.) (1988/1998). "Vatthupama Sutta: The Simile of the Cloth" (MN 7) from The Simile of the Cloth & the Discourse on Effacement (Wheel No. 61). Kandy, Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society (1988). Retrieved 2007-12-03 from "Access to Insight" (1998) at Vatthupama Sutta: The Simile of the Cloth.
  • Nyanaponika Thera & Bhikkhu Bodhi (trans.) (1999). Numerical Discourses of the Buddha: An anthology of Suttas from the Nikāya. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press. .
  • Rhys Davids, Caroline A. F. ([1900], 2003). Buddhist Manual of Psychological Ethics, of the Fourth Century B.C., Being a Translation, now made for the First Time, from the Original Pāli, of the First Book of the , entitled Dhamma- (Compendium of States or Phenomena). Kessinger Publishing. .
  • Rhys Davids, T.W. & William Stede (eds.) (1921-5). The Pali Text Society's Pali–English Dictionary. Chipstead: Pali Text Society. Retrieved 2008-04-29 from "U. Chicago" at http://dsal.uchicago.edu/dictionaries/pali/.
  • Salzberg, Sharon (1995). Lovingkindness: The Revolutionary Art of Happiness. Boston: Shambhala Publications. .
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1994). Raja Sutta: The King (Ud. 5.1). Retrieved 2007-11-25 from "Access to Insight" at Rājan Sutta: The King.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1997a). Cunda Kammaraputta Sutta: To Cunda the Silversmith (AN 10.176). Retrieved 2007-11-25 from "Access to Insight" at Cunda Kammaraputta Sutta: To Cunda the Silversmith.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1997b). Metta (Mettanisamsa) Sutta: Good Will (AN 11.16). Retrieved 2010-07-07 from "Access to Insight" at Metta (Mettanisamsa) Sutta: Good Will.
  • Trungpa, Chögyam (1993). Training the Mind & Cultivating Loving-Kindness. Boston: Shambhala. .
  • Upatissa, Arahant, N.R.M. Ehara (trans.), Soma Thera (trans.) and Kheminda Thera (trans.) (1995). The Path of Freedom (Vimuttimagga). Kandy, Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society. .
  • Walshe, Maurice (1995). The Long Discourses of the Buddha: A Translation of the Dīgha Nikāya. Somerville, MA: Wisdom Publications. .
  • Warder, A. K. (1970; reprinted 2004). Indian Buddhism. Motilal Banarsidass: Delhi. .

{|class=wikitable

! Mon Pali!! Mon !!Translate

|-

|အဟံ အဝေရော ဟောမိ။||နူဘဲပရိုက်အန္တရာဲဂှ် ကဵုအဲဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးအာညိ။||May I be free from enmity and danger.

|-

|အဗျာ ပဇ္ဇော ဟောမိ။||နူဒဒိုက်စိုတ်ဂှ် ကဵုအဲဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးအာညိ။||May I be free from mental suffering.

|-

|အနဳဃော ဟောမိ၊||နူဒဒိုက်ကာယဂှ် ကဵုအဲဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးအာညိ။||May I be free from physical suffering.

|-

|သုခဳ အတ္တာနံ ပရိဟရောမိ။||ဇကုအဲ ကဵုဂွံမၚ်မွဲဗွဲတသိုက်ညိ။||May I be free from myself happily.

|-

|မာတာပိတု ဟောန္တု၊||မိမအဲကီု၊||May my parents,

|-

|အာစရိယစ၊||အ္စာအဲကီု၊||teacher relatives,

|-

|ဉာတိမေတ္တာစ၊||ကလောဒညာတ်မိဿဟာဲအဲကီု၊||and friends,

|-

|သရမ္ဘစရိယောစ၊||ညးမဒ္ဂေတ်ဓဝ်မပြဲမွဲစွံကီု၊||follow Dhamma farmers,

|-

|အဝေရာ ဟောန္တု၊||ကဵုအဲဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးနူဘဲပရိုက်အန္တရာဲအိုတ်ညိ။||be free from enmity and

|-

|အဗျာ ပဇ္ဇာ ဟောန္တု၊||ကဵုဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးနူဒဒိုက်စိုတ်အိုတ်ညိ။||be free from mental suffering,

|-

|အနဳဃာ ဟောန္တု၊||ကဵုဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးနူဒဒိုက်ကာယအိုတ်ညိ၊||be free from physical suffering,

|-

|သုခဳ အတ္တာနံ ပရိဟာရန္တု၊||ဇကုညးတံကဵုညးတံ ကဵုဂွံမၚ်မွဲဗွဲတသိုက်အိုတ်ညိ၊||may they take care of themselves happily,

|-

|ဣမသ္မိံအာရာမေ၊||ပ္ဍဲအရှာံဝွံ ပူဂဵုယောဂဳသီုဖ္အိုတ်ဂမၠိုၚ်၊||May all yogis in this compound,

|-

|အဝေရာ ဟောန္တု၊||ကဵုအဲဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးနူဘဲပရိုက်အန္တရာဲအိုတ်ညိ၊||be free from enmity and danger,

|-

|အဗျာ ပဇ္ဇာ ဟောန္တု၊||ကဵုဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးနူဒဒိုက်စိုတ်အိုတ်ညိ။||be free from mental suffering,

|-

|အနဳဃာ ဟောန္တု၊||ကဵုဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးနူဒဒိုက်ကာယအိုတ်ညိ၊||be free from physical suffering,

|-

|သုခဳ အတ္တာနံ ပရိဟာရန္တု၊||ဇကုညးတံကဵုညးတံ ကဵုဂွံမၚ်မွဲဗွဲတသိုက်အိုတ်ညိ၊||may they take care of themselves happily,

|-

|ဣမသ္မိံအာရာမေ၊||ပ္ဍဲအရှာံဝွံ ခမဳဂမၠိုၚ်သီုဖ္အိုတ်ကီု။||May all monks in this compound

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|သမဏောရေစ၊||ထပိုယ်ဂမၠိုၚ် သီုဖ္အိုတ်ကီု၊||novice monks,

|-

|ဥပါသကာ ဥပါသိကာစ၊||ဥပ္ပးတြုံ ဗြဴဂမၠိုၚ်ကီု၊||laymen and laywomen disciples

|-

|အဝေရာ ဟောန္တု၊||ကဵုအဲဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးနူဘဲပရိုက်အန္တရာဲအိုတ်ညိ၊||be free from enmity and danger,

|-

|အဗျာ ပဇ္ဇာ ဟောန္တု၊||ကဵုဂွံတိတ်ဗၠးနူဒဒိုက်စိုတ်အိုတ်ညိ။||be free from mental suffering,

|}

  • Brahmavihara Dhamma by Mahasi Sayadaw
  • An essay on metta by Acharya Buddharakkhita
  • The Four Sublime States and the Practice of Loving Kindness by Ñāṇamoli Bhikkhu & Nyanaponika Thera
  • Abundant, Exalted, Immeasurable by Ajahn Pasanno
  • I'm Right, You're Wrong by Ajahn Amaro
  • The Metta Sutta
  • Dharma Dictionary - RangjungYesheWiki - Byams Pa / Maitri
  • Facets of Metta by Sharon Salzberg
  • Curbing Anger, Spreading Love by Visuddhacara
  • Matthieu Ricard talks about his lifelong practice of Compassion Meditation