Saturday, 16 November 2024

Jewel Symbolism

 This talk was given at retreat for young men in Padmaloka Retreat Centre, June 2024


Jewels and me

I was ordained by Bhante Sangharakshita on June 11th 1988. On June 10th, the day before my private ordination I had a very vivid vision in my meditation. I saw a small man sitting on a rock in the middle of a lake and he said to me “the important thing about jewels is the light”.

The reason why jewels were in my consciousness at all, was because I had decided to take up the Ratnasambhava meditation practice. Ratnasambhava means “The Jewel Born” – he who is born from a jewel. The jewel that Ratnasambhava is born from is the same as the jewel in the parable if the Jewel in the Garment, from the White Lotus Sutra, which we are looking at this weekend.

Earlier that year, 1988, I was here in Padmaloka on a month-long retreat – in those days we were invited on a month-long retreat here before being invited to a three-month ordination retreat at Guhyaloka. On that month long retreat I kept having spontaneous images in meditation of descending to the bottom of the ocean and entering a cave which was glittering with jewels and there I would encounter Ratnasambhava. That’s why I was taking up the meditation on Ratnasmabhava.

I don’t think I knew at the time that the image of caves under the sea full of jewels is associated with the mythical creatures called Nagas, who feature quite prominently in Mahayana Buddhism, including in the White Lotus Sutra. Nagas are depicted as half human half reptile and can change into being human. They are associated with wisdom – wisdom coming from the depths.

So, jewel symbolism has been an important element in my spiritual quest for a long time. But what is jewel symbolism about? Well of course, jewels are precious, very valuable – so symbolically they come to stand for that which is most valuable, that which is most precious.

It is important to note that a symbol can have more than one meaning, or to put it another way, an object or image can have many different symbolic meanings. It is not a simple case of this means that and only that. So, when we look at the symbolism in a parable there can be more than one meaning. Or when we look at the symbolism of jewels there can be many meanings.

Parable of Jewel in the Garment

In this story of the Drunkard and the jewel, also known as the jewel in the garment, in the White Lotus Sutra, the jewel represents that which is most precious in our consciousness, our inner world, and it can also be seen to represent the Dharma teachings and guidance we have received from the Buddha.

Here is the parable:

“It is, O Lord, as if some man having come to a friend's house got drunk or fell asleep, and that friend bound a priceless gem within his garment, with the thought: Let this gem be his. After a while, O Lord, that man rises from his seat and travels further; he goes to some other country, where he is befallen by incessant difficulties, and has great trouble to find food and clothing. By dint of great exertion, he is hardly able to obtain a bit of food, with which (however) he is contented and satisfied. The old friend of that man, O Lord, who bound within the man's garment that priceless gem, happens to see him again and says: How is it, good friend, that thou hast such difficulty in seeking food and clothing, while I, in order that thou shouldst live in ease, good friend, have bound within thy garment a priceless gem, quite sufficient to fulfil all thy wishes? I have given thee that gem, my good friend, the very gem I have bound within thy garment. It is something foolish, my good friend, to be contented, when thou hast with (so much) difficulty to procure food and clothing. Go, my good friend, betake thyself, with this gem, to some great city, exchange the gem for money, and with that money do all that can be done with money.”

The friend is one way of thinking of the Buddha. He refers to himself as a Kalyana Mitra – a spiritual friend as we say. The drunkard falling asleep is a symbol of unmindfulness, lack of awareness of what is most important.  Buddhism sees our suffering and deluded behaviour as coming from ignorance rather than wickedness. Spiritually speaking we are like children who don’t know any better. There is a difference between sleep and drunkenness though. Sleep is necessary to our animal nature. There are aspects of us which are instinctual and stay unconscious. Drunkenness is an active avoidance of awareness. Not only do we have forces within us that operate automatically in terms of fight and flight, but we add to that deliberately by pursuing delusions in an effort to find happiness. The jewel is the potential that we all have, to Awaken, to attain Enlightenment. It is Shraddha or faith to begin with and later becomes awareness and Insight into the nature of reality and finally an embodied realisation of that reality. The friend symbolises the Buddha who points out our potential to us and gives us the gift of the Dharma.

Psychologically speaking, we could interpret the poverty and the wandering around for the sake of material well-being as symbolising or representing the projection on to external objects and situations the qualities which belong to the poor man all along. The poor man is spiritually impoverished. Seeking outside ourselves for the qualities we already possess is one way of thinking of psychological projection.

This is often what happens in romantic relationships and sometimes in relation to spiritual teachers. We project on to our partner or on to a spiritual guide, qualities that we eventually need to recognise as our own. The jewel hidden in the garment.

We can also see the parable as an entirely internal process. We are the drunkard and simultaneously we are the Buddha and the Jewel. We wander about in search of security and well-being in all sorts of places. We search for happiness in relationships, in careers, in possessions, in power, in opinions and views, in escapism. But all the while another aspect of our consciousness is aware that we are not satisfied, not contented and that there is more to life and more to us than mental restlessness. And the potential for greater awareness is always present. It’s as if we have a lower and a higher mind.

Why is the jewel hidden in the garment? Often our relationship to our own spiritual potential or the depths of our being is a superficial one.  The jewel is something that has to be brought into the light of awareness and then can be seen for its true value. In the work of the German romantic writer, Novalis, there are lots of references to jewels being hidden beneath the earth, in darkness and unpolished. Spiritual jewels need to be mined through meditation, ethics, and receptivity to teachings. Jewels need to be brought out into the light and not hoarded but shared with others. That of course reminds us of the jewel of compassion, which is the jewel or mani in the well-known mantra om mani padme hum. The jewel held to the heart of Avalokiteshvara, the Bodhisattva of compassion.

Bhante Sangharakshita makes the point that the jewel doesn’t come into our possession at some particular time – it is always there. Parables are not to be taken literally and always take place outside of time. The jewel is our deepest, true nature. It is that which makes us truly human. The potential to become more and more aware and loving. It is what is most valuable. To fully activate our humanity means fully activating our potential for greater awareness and love. This corresponds to some degree with Bhante’s teaching about the need to find emotional equivalents to our intellectual understandings. The jewel could be seen as the spark that ignites our motivation to practise the Dharma and transform ourselves. This spark could be called faith or shraddha.

Jewel symbolism is very common in Buddhism and the jewel, as is appropriate, is multi-faceted in its meanings.

Parable of the Jewel in the Topknot

In the White Lotus Sutra, there are at least two other stories where a jewel is prominent. There’s the parable of the jewel in the topknot.

“A king seeing his troops successful in warfare, he is greatly delighted and rewards them according to their merits, giving them fields, houses, villages, cities, counties; or else clothing; personal ornaments; or various precious treasures of gold, silver, lapis lazuli, mother-of-pearl, carnelian, coral, or agate; or elephants, horses, carriages, servants, or subjects.

"Only the bright pearl on his cowl, that alone, he does not give away. Why not? Only the king can wear this pearl on his crown. If he gave it away, the king’s retinue would surely be greatly astonished.

 "Manjushri, eventually the wheel-turning king, seeing among his troops those who have been greatly successful, is overjoyed and at last gives them the incredible pearl, which he has long worn in his topknot and which he would never casually give away.”

This parable has pretty much the same message as the biblical instruction “do not cast pearls before swine”. In other words, don’t try to give what is precious to those who won’t or can’t appreciate it. Here the jewel represents the various teachings of the Buddha, or the jewel simply represents the Truth, or the nature of reality, and the king represents the Buddha, who waits until people are ready before revealing the full truth.

Again, we can look at this as a completely inner process. The soldiers and ministers of our mind are our concerns with worldly matters, defending ourselves, planning for our security and happiness. The king is our better self, which requires the right combination of conditions before it can be fully integrated. The jewel here is both the teachings we hear and our capacity to take them on board. If we try to go to the seemingly higher teachings before we have grasped the basics, we can only confuse ourselves. So, this is pointing to both the need for a teacher who can guide us and the need for patience when it comes to the spiritual life.

If we don’t have a teacher or some guidance we may mistake jewels for gravel, and mistake gravel for jewels. We may be inclined to overvalue what is not valuable and undervalue that which is really precious.

Both of these jewels, the jewel of our potential and the jewel of deeper meanings in life can be revealed to us suddenly as a result of some misfortune or a mystical experience or some combination of circumstances. But we still need to then learn about the path and how to practice and how to grow in awareness and loving kindness. This is what is meant by vision and transformation. The vision of life’s spiritual purpose or meaning may come to us somehow but the transformation will require effort from us. Effort to be receptive and effort to understand and practice what we learn.

Jewels and Nagas

The third appearance of a jewel in the White Lotus Sutra is when a young Naga princess rises up from beneath the sea and makes an offering of a jewel to the Buddha. I mentioned the nagas before. They are mythical creatures in the form of half reptile, half human who live at the bottom of the ocean and they have vast treasures of jewels.

According to tradition and legend, the Prajñapāramita sutras (perfection of wisdom) had been given by the Buddha to a great nāga ,who guarded them in the sea, and they were conferred upon Nāgārjuna later by a naga. In Tibetan Buddhist literature, nagas are portrayed as guardians or owners of submerged treasure, which can be mere wealth or  "spiritual" treasures. So, the nagas are associated with wisdom and a gift of a jewel from the nagas is a gift of wisdom. The jewel is a symbol of wisdom from the depths, in this context. The fact that we have reflexive awareness, which is the nature of human consciousness, means that we have a kind of innate wisdom, which can be activated. That is the jewel of our potential to grow spiritually, the jewel of wisdom.

The Three Jewels

Perhaps the most well-known jewel symbolism in Buddhism is the Three Jewels of Buddha, Dharma and Sangha. Our Order and Community is called Triratna, mean three jewels and on our kesa is an image of three jewels. So, for us the three jewels of Buddha, Dharma and Sangha are the most precious or valuable things in the world. The Buddha is both an historical figure, the one who instigated the whole tradition of Dharma teachings and created a spiritual community based on those truths and the Buddha also represents the potential for Enlightenment or Awakening, which it is possible for any human being to activate.  This is what we are reminded of in the Threefold Puja with the lines,

“What the Buddha overcame, we too can overcome,

What the Buddha attained we too can attain.”

The Dharma is the teaching of the Buddha and the path pointed out by him and the Dharma is also the truth, the reality, the way things really are. The spiritual community is the communication and co-operation between those who awaken their own potential for Enlightenment in the quest to realise the way things really are. We are jewels and if we are exposed to the light of the Buddha and the Dharma, our inner light shines through and the true value of our precious humanity can be seen more clearly. The important thing about jewels is the light.

Pure Lands

There are some Sutras of later Buddhism, which describe what they call a Pure Land. A pure land is a metaphor for the most ideal conditions in which to practice the Dharma. And Pure Lands are always described as being made of jewels – the trees are jewel trees, the fruit on the trees is jewel fruit, the ground is a ground of jewels, there are jewel chains marking different areas – jewels everywhere. When you read these descriptions of pure lands – if you take them literally, they are not very attractive. They sound like the jewellery section of a very high-class department store. But they are not to be taken literally. They are to be read by the faculty of imagination. It is as if you are meditating, and you start to spontaneously experience everything as utterly precious. You are precious, other people are precious, the possibility of spiritual growth is precious, everything that enables you to practice is precious, your body, your mind, your capacity for effort and understanding. Everything is precious and in that sense jewel-like. The Pure Land is an image or metaphor of a pure mind, a mind devoted to spiritual growth.

The symbolism of jewels is, appropriately enough, multi-faceted. Jewels can symbolise Enlightenment or the path to enlightenment or your own potential for enlightenment, or the ideal conditions for enlightenment. Of course, all of these meanings are intimately connected. It is the human potential for Buddhahood, the jewel referred to in the parable of the jewel and the drunkard, which enabled the emergence into this world of the Buddha, the Dharma and all the practitioners down the generations. And it is all those who have sincerely put the Dharma into practice who have created the conditions which we all benefit from.

Jewel Symbolism and Us

When the friend sees that the man in the parable is still scrabbling around to make a living and unaware of the jewel, he sort of tells him off. It is as if the parable is saying it is beneath the dignity of a human being to ignore or be unaware of our spiritual potential. Our potential to grow and develop spiritually is the most important thing about us, it’s what makes us human and to ignore it or squander it is shameful and undignified, and stupid even. To spend our lives in pursuit of ephemeral mundane things like wealth and status and power or fame is an undignified way to use our precious opportunity.

Coming down to our own situation, it is for us to realise the preciousness of what we have discovered in the Dharma and the Sangha. It is for us to realise what rich, abundant lives we have and what precious opportunities we have.

The appreciation of our conditions and gratitude for what we have received and are receiving is the necessary attitude for making progress. If we are unaware of our own good fortune, then we are like the man in the parable, wandering around trying to grab the bare necessities, while all the time we have within our hearts something much more precious than any mundane wealth or status.

Here we are on a weekend retreat at Padmaloka – in such great conditions, getting teachings about the Buddhadharma, having time to meditate and reflect, sharing what is most important to us with like-minded people and being well looked after. We are in a little Pure Land, glittering with jewels and all we need to do is be as present as possible, open our hearts to the gifts we are being offered and allow our own inner jewels and inner light to emerge and radiate, so that our love and understanding grows and connects with the understanding and love radiating from those around us. This is the path to contentment and happiness for ourselves and the path to creating a world that is more at peace with itself and therefore more creative and worthwhile.

 

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