Buddha entered a village. A man asked him as he was entering the village, "Does God exist?" He said, "No, absolutely no."
In the afternoon another man came and he asked, "Does God exist?" And he said, "Yes, absolutely yes."
In the evening a third man came and he asked, "Does God exist?" Buddha
closed his eyes and remained utterly silent. The man also closed his
eyes. Something transpired in that silence. After a few minutes the man
touched Buddha's feet, bowed down, paid his respects and said, "You are
the first man who has answered my question."
Now, Buddha's
attendant, Ananda, was very much puzzled: "In the morning he said no, in
the afternoon he said yes, in the evening he did not answer at all.
What is the matter? What is really the truth?"
So when Buddha
was going to sleep, Ananda said, "First you answer me; otherwise I will
not be able to sleep. You have to be a little more compassionate towards
me too. I have been with you the whole day. Those three people don't
know about the other answers, but I have heard all the three answers.
What about me? I am troubled."
Buddha said, "I was not talking
to you at all! You had not asked, I had not answered YOU. The first man
who came was a theist, the second man who came was an atheist, the third
man who came was an agnostic. My answer had nothing to do with God, my
answer had something to do with the questioner. I was answering the
questioner; it was absolutely unconcerned with God.
"The person
who believes in God, I will say no to him because I want him to drop
his idea of God, I want him to be free of his idea of God -- which is
borrowed. He has not experienced. If he had experienced he would not
have asked me; there would have been no need.
"The person who
believed in God, he was trying to find confirmation for his belief from
me. I was not going to say yes to him -- I am not going to confirm
anybody's belief. I had to say no, I had to deny, just to destroy his
belief, because all beliefs are barriers to knowing the truth. Theist or
atheist, all beliefs, Hindu or Christian or Mohammedan, all beliefs are
barriers.
"And the person with whom I remained silent was the
right inquirer. He had no belief, hence there was no question of
destroying anything. I kept silent. That was my message to him: Be
silent and know. Don't ask, there is no need to ask. It is not a
question which can be answered. It is not an inquiry but a quest, a
thirst. Be silent and know.
I had answered him also; through my
silence I gave him the message and he immediately followed it -- he
also became silent. I closed my eyes, he closed his eyes; I looked in,
he looked in, and then something transpired. That's why he was so much
overwhelmed, he felt so much gratitude, for the simple reason that I did
not give him any intellectual answer. He had not come for any
intellectual answer; intellectual answers are available very cheap. He
needed something existential -- he needed a taste. I gave him a taste.
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