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The
statues of the arhats represent the early followers of the
Buddha. After the Buddha's death at the age of 80, 500
arhats were gathered to collect the teachings of the Buddha.
The Assembly
at Vulture Peak:
The Eighteen Arhats
After his
enlightenment, Sakyamuni Buddha frequently visited Mount
Gridhrakrta near Rajagrha, the capital of Magadha where he
gathered an assembly of disciples and propagated his teachings.
This mountain is called the Vulture Peak because of the shape of
its peak. Each time when the Buddha was there, his disciples
of monks and arhats, Boddhisattvas of foreign lands, incalculable
numbers of gods, dragons, yaksas, asuras, and other sentient
beings would gather at the same locale and listen attentively to
the Buddha's teachings of the Dharma, hence the Assembly at
Vulture Peak.
In order for Buddha
to flourish after his time, and that sentient beings be given the
opportunity to understand and follow the Buddhist Dharma, Sakamuni
Buddha thus ordered his sixteen arhats to remain in this world,
dwell in different lands, and disseminate his teachings to benefit
all sentient beings. After the arrival of Buddhism in China,
these sixteen arhats became the source of creative ideas for
several local artists who subsequently added the number of arhats
to eighteen. Arhats refers to those who had extinguished all
defilements and suffered afflictions. They had benefited
themselves and severed all bonds of existence. They were
conversant with the true teachings and had reached the other
shore, never to be subject to the relentless cycle of birth and
death. As their cultivation is complete and their
righteousness exemplary, these saints are worthy of offerings from
sentient beings.
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