Hubbry Logo
search
logo

Sakadagami

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

In Buddhism, the Sakadāgāmin (Pali; Sanskrit: Sakṛdāgāmin, Chinese: 斯陀含 or 一往來; pinyin: sī tuó hán), "returning once"[1] or "once-returner," is a partially enlightened person, who has cut off the first three chains with which the ordinary mind is bound, and significantly weakened the fourth and fifth. Sakadagaminship is the second stage of the four stages of enlightenment.

The Sakadagami will be reborn into the realm of the senses at most once more. If, however, they attain the next stage of enlightenment (Anagamiship) in this life, they will not come back to this world.

The three specific chains or fetters (Pali: saṃyojana) of which the Sakadagamin is free are:
1. Sakkāya-diṭṭhi (Pali) - Belief in self (ātman)
2. Sīlabbata-parāmāsa (Pali) - Attachment to rites and rituals
3. Vicikicchā (Pali) - Skeptical doubt
The Sakadagami also significantly weakened the chains of:
4. Kāma-rāga (Pali) - Sensuous craving
5. Vyāpāda (Pali) - Ill-will

Thus, the Sakadagamin is an intermediate stage between the Sotapanna, who still has comparatively strong sensuous desire and ill-will, and the Anagami, who is completely free from sensuous desire and ill-will. A Sakadagami's mind is very pure. Thoughts connected with greed, hatred and delusion do not arise often, and when they do, do not become obsessive.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

Sources

[edit]


Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
In Theravada Buddhism, a sakadagami (Pali: sakadāgāmi, Sanskrit: sakṛdāgāmin), meaning "once-returner," refers to an individual who has attained the second of the four stages of enlightenment, having eradicated the first three fetters—self-identification views, doubt about the Buddha's teachings, and attachment to rites and rituals—while significantly weakening the fetters of sensual desire and ill will.[1] This attainment ensures that, upon death, the sakadagami will be reborn only once more in the sensuous realm, typically as a human, before progressing to higher stages and ultimately achieving full liberation (arahantship).[2] The term derives from the Pali words sakideva (once) and āgacchati (to come), literally denoting one who returns just once to the cycle of birth and death.[2] As described in the Pali Canon, the sakadagami path builds directly on the initial stage of stream-entry (sotapanna), where the first three fetters are fully abandoned, but advances further by attenuating the coarser aspects of desire and aversion through deepened insight into the Four Noble Truths and sustained practice of the Noble Eightfold Path.[1] This weakening of the fourth and fifth fetters distinguishes the sakadagami from the sotapanna, who may require up to seven lifetimes for full enlightenment, and positions them closer to the non-returner (anagami) stage, where sensual desire and ill will are completely uprooted, preventing any further rebirth in the sensuous world.[2] Sakadagamis are revered as noble disciples (ariya) who embody ethical conduct, mental composure, and wisdom, serving as inspirations within the Buddhist community (sangha).[1] Their partial enlightenment reflects the progressive nature of the path to nibbana, illustrating how insight meditation and moral discipline progressively dismantle the ten fetters that bind beings to samsara. While the exact moment of attainment often occurs during intensive meditation, the sakadagami's life is marked by reduced attachment to sensory pleasures and a resolute commitment to eradicating remaining defilements.[2] This stage underscores the Buddha's teachings on gradual awakening, as outlined in core discourses of the Sutta Pitaka, emphasizing that even partial realization brings profound freedom from the cycle of suffering.[1]

Terminology

Etymology

The Pali term sakadāgāmin is composed of sakad (or sakid), meaning "once" or "a single time," and āgāmin, derived from the verb āgamati, which signifies "to come," "to go," or "to return." This etymological structure yields the meaning "one who returns once" or "one who comes once more," referring to an individual destined for a single additional rebirth in the sensuous realm before attaining higher enlightenment.[3] In the Pali Canon, sakadāgāmin denotes the second of the four ariya-puggala, or noble persons, and appears frequently in the Suttas to describe this stage of realization. For instance, it is referenced in the Dīgha Nikāya (e.g., DN 1.156, DN 2.229; DN 3.107), Majjhima Nikāya (MN 1.34), Saṃyutta Nikāya (SN 3.168), and Anguttara Nikāya (e.g., AN 1.120, AN 1.232; AN 2.89, AN 2.134), where it highlights the transitional progress beyond the sotāpanna stage toward full liberation.[3] The Sanskrit equivalent, sakṛdāgāmin, parallels this breakdown with sakṛt meaning "once" and āgāmin from āgacchati ("to come" or "to arrive"), thus "one who comes once" or "returning only once more" before rebirth ceases. This term emerges in early Mahāyāna texts, such as the Pratyutpanna Samādhi Sūtra, where it similarly identifies the second fruit of the path among noble disciples.[4][5]

Translations and Equivalents

In English, the Pali term sakadāgāmin is most commonly translated as "once-returner," reflecting the practitioner's attainment of a stage where they will undergo only one more rebirth in the sensuous realm before achieving non-returner status.[6] Alternative renderings include "returning once" or "one who comes back once," which underscore the diminished attachment to sensory desires and ill will, thereby limiting future existences to a single return and facilitating a clearer path toward full liberation.[7] These translations emphasize the conceptual shift in understanding rebirth, portraying the sakadāgāmin as having substantially weakened the forces that perpetuate repeated human or divine births in samsara. Within the Theravada tradition, the term remains sakadāgāmin in Pali, denoting the second of the four noble stages of awakening. In Mahayana Buddhism, the Sanskrit equivalent is sakṛdāgāmin, which preserves the core meaning of a singular return and is applied similarly to describe advanced shravaka practitioners on the path to arhatship.[8] Occasionally, the related Sanskrit term ekajāti ("one-born") is used interchangeably in Mahayana texts to highlight the single remaining birth, though sakṛdāgāmin is the more standard rendering across sutras. In Vajrayana contexts, the Tibetan translation is lan cig phyir 'ong ba, literally meaning "one who returns once," and it aligns with the shravaka vehicle's framework while integrating into broader tantric paths of accumulation and joining.[9]

The Four Stages of Enlightenment

Overview of the Stages

In Theravada Buddhism, the path to enlightenment is delineated through four progressive stages of awakening, known as the ariya-puggala or noble persons: sotāpanna (stream-enterer), sakadāgāmin (once-returner), anāgāmin (non-returner), and arahant (fully enlightened one).[10] These stages represent incremental realizations of the Four Noble Truths, marking the practitioner's entry into the irreversible stream leading to nibbāna, the cessation of suffering.[11] The sotāpanna attains initial insight, entering the "stream" with unshakeable confidence in the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha; the sakadāgāmin, as the second stage, further refines this insight; the anāgāmin achieves deeper liberation from sensual attachments; and the arahant realizes complete freedom from all defilements.[10] The progression across these stages involves the systematic weakening and elimination of the ten fetters (saṃyojana)—mental bonds that bind beings to saṃsāra—including self-identity views, doubt, attachment to rites and rituals, sensual desire, ill will, desire for form, desire for formless existence, conceit, restlessness, and ignorance.[10] Each stage eradicates or attenuates specific fetters through insight meditation and ethical conduct, culminating in the arahant's total uprooting of all ten, thereby attaining parinibbāna upon death with no further rebirth.[10] This framework underscores the gradual path outlined in the Noble Eightfold Path, where insight into impermanence, suffering, and non-self progressively dissolves these bonds, leading inexorably to nibbāna.[10] The scriptural foundation for this staging is rooted in the Pali Canon, particularly the Saṅgīti Sutta (DN 33), which enumerates the four fruits of the ascetic life—corresponding to the attainments of these stages—and describes the eight noble individuals (four pairs) as worthy of offerings.[11] Additional discourses, such as those in the Aṅguttara Nikāya, elaborate on the fetters and their abandonment, affirming the structured progression toward full enlightenment.[10]

Position of the Sakadagami

In Theravada Buddhism, the sakadagami, or once-returner, occupies the second position in the four stages of enlightenment, following the sotāpanna (stream-enterer) and preceding the anāgāmin (non-returner).[12] This stage signifies partial liberation, characterized by a single additional rebirth within the kāma-loka, the sensuous realm, typically in the human or heavenly domains, before achieving higher realization.[13] As a transitional phase, the sakadagami embodies an intermediary state between initial awakening and advanced freedom, with the capacity to attain the anāgāmin or arahant stages either in the present lifetime or during the subsequent rebirth, depending on continued practice and insight development.[14] This potential underscores the sakadagami's ongoing momentum toward full enlightenment, distinguishing it from the more preliminary sotāpanna entry while not yet reaching the non-returning threshold of the anāgāmin.[15] Canonical texts such as the Dhammasaṅgaṇī and broader Abhidhamma literature classify the sakadagami as a sekha, or learner, indicating a practitioner still in training and subject to further refinement of the path, in contrast to the asekha status of the fully liberated arahant.[15] This designation highlights the sakadagami's position as an active participant in the progressive sequence of supramundane paths outlined in the Abhidhamma framework.[13]

Attainments and Characteristics

Abandoned Fetters

In the attainment of the sakadagami stage, the first three fetters—known as the lower fetters—are completely eradicated, marking a profound shift in understanding that builds upon the stream-entry (sotapanna) realization. These fetters bind beings to the cycle of rebirth and suffering, and their abandonment ensures no further existence in the lower realms. The three are: sakkāya-diṭṭhi (self-identity view), vicikicchā (doubt), and sīlabbata-parāmāsa (attachment to precepts and practices).[10][16] Sakkāya-diṭṭhi refers to the mistaken belief in a permanent, unchanging self or identity inherent in the five aggregates of form, feeling, perception, fabrications, and consciousness. This view arises from misconceiving these transient phenomena as "mine," "I," or "self," perpetuating attachment and delusion. Its eradication occurs when insight reveals the aggregates as devoid of such a core essence.[10][17] Vicikicchā involves skeptical doubt or uncertainty regarding the Buddha, the Dhamma, the Sangha, and the efficacy of the path to liberation, often manifesting as hesitation about the attainability of the deathless state (amata). This fetter undermines commitment to practice and is fully dispelled upon direct experiential confirmation of the Dhamma's truth.[10][18] Sīlabbata-parāmāsa denotes the rigid adherence to rites, rituals, or moral observances as sufficient in themselves for spiritual purity or enlightenment, without discernment of their impermanent nature. It treats external practices as ends rather than supports for inner development, leading to misguided reliance. Abandonment comes from seeing such attachments as empty of inherent efficacy.[10] The process of abandoning these fetters is achieved through the path of insight (vipassanā), where the practitioner applies right view to contemplate the five clinging-aggregates under the lens of the three marks of existence: impermanence (anicca), suffering (dukkha), and non-self (anattā). This contemplation—guided by appropriate attention—uncovers the conditioned, unsatisfactory, and ownerless nature of all phenomena, culminating in the "arising of the Dhamma eye," a pivotal insight that severs the fetters. As the Buddha states in the Sabbāsava Sutta, this discernment leads to the complete ending of these bonds through understanding.[10][19] These same three fetters are initially abandoned at the sotapanna stage, and the sakadagami further progresses by attenuating the subsequent fetters of sensual desire and ill will. Scriptural references to these as the "first three bonds" appear in discourses such as the Sutta Nipāta (Sn 4.9), which critiques attachment to observances, and the Majjhima Nikāya (MN 2), outlining their role in the destruction of outflows.[10][16]

Weakened Fetters

In the sakadagami stage of enlightenment, the two higher fetters—kāma-rāga (sensual desire) and vyāpāda (ill-will or hatred)—are attenuated (tanu), reduced to subtle levels where they arise infrequently and lack obsessive force.[12] This weakening occurs through the second supramundane path (sakadagami-magga), which diminishes the roots of greed and aversion without fully eradicating them.[12] The Abhidhamma Pitaka's Vibhaṅga classifies these fetters in its analysis of defilements, noting their attenuation at the sakadagami level among the ten samyojana (fetters), specifically as the fourth and fifth in the fivefold exposition.[20] Here, kāma-rāga refers to craving for sensory pleasures, while vyāpāda encompasses aversion and hostility, both of which bind beings to samsara but are notably lessened in intensity for the once-returner.[20] As a result of this attenuation, the sakadagami engages in no deliberate indulgence in sensual pursuits or expressions of ill-will; any arising desires or resentments manifest weakly and are swiftly overcome through insight into their impermanent and unsatisfactory nature, fostering ethical conduct marked by restraint rather than complete abstinence.[12] This partial reduction ensures one more rebirth in the sensuous realm, in contrast to their full elimination in the anāgāmin stage.[12]

Mental Qualities

The sakadagami, or once-returner, possesses a high degree of mental purity characterized by the significant attenuation of greed, hatred, and delusion, resulting from the weakening of the corresponding fetters.[21][22] This attenuation fosters a mind that is markedly free from the coarser defilements that dominate ordinary consciousness, allowing for greater clarity and reduced reactivity to sensory stimuli.[21] Central to the sakadagami's psychological attributes is an unshakable faith (saddhā) in the Buddha, the Dhamma, and the Sangha, arising from direct experiential insight into the path.[22] This faith manifests as unwavering confidence that supports ethical conduct and meditative practice, distinguishing the sakadagami as a "noble one" (ariyapuggala) among disciples. Complementing this is the perfection of ethical discipline (sīla), wherein the sakadagami is wholly accomplished in moral precepts, exhibiting spontaneous virtue without deliberate effort and avoiding all unwholesome physical, verbal, or mental actions.[21][22] In terms of meditative calm (samādhi), the sakadagami achieves moderate proficiency in concentration, enabling a serene and unified mind that is less prone to distraction.[21] This calm supports ongoing insight into impermanence (anicca), suffering (dukkha), and non-self (anattā), though not yet at the full depth of arahanthood, leading to diminished worldly attachments and a luminous quality of awareness unclouded by strong defilements.[21][22] In the Aṅguttara Nikāya, such noble ones are described as having minds that reflect this partial purification, serene in their reduced turbulence yet oriented toward complete liberation.[21]

Path to Becoming a Sakadagami

Prerequisites: Sotapanna Stage

The Sotāpanna, or stream-enterer, constitutes the foundational stage of awakening in the Theravada Buddhist path, essential as a prerequisite for progressing to the Sakadagami level within the four stages of enlightenment. This attainment involves the complete eradication of the first three fetters: identity view (sakkāya-diṭṭhi), which is the belief in a permanent self; doubt (vicikicchā), uncertainty regarding the Buddha's teachings; and attachment to rites and rituals (sīlabbata-parāmāsa), the misguided reliance on external observances for liberation.[22] These eliminations mark the entry into the "stream" of the Dhamma, ensuring irreversible commitment to enlightenment.[10] Key characteristics of the Sotāpanna include immunity to rebirth in the lower realms—such as hells, the animal world, or realms of hungry ghosts—due to the uprooting of the fetters that bind one to such states of misery.[23] Furthermore, this stage limits future rebirths to at most seven more existences among humans and deities, after which full liberation is assured, preventing perpetual wandering in saṃsāra.[10] The Buddha illustrates this in discourses by noting that stream-enterers, having destroyed these fetters, are "secure from downfall" and destined for awakening.[22] The Mahāparinibbāna Sutta provides a canonical foundation for understanding the Sotāpanna's position, portraying them as individuals who, upon realizing the vision of Dhamma, abandon the three fetters and thereby become "safe from falling into the states of misery, assured, and bound for Enlightenment."[23] This assurance stems from the irreversible insight into the Four Noble Truths, which dispels the delusions leading to lower rebirths and sets the foundation for higher attainments. While the Sotāpanna has severed the barriers to noble progress, the stage's limitations lie in the persistence of the remaining fetters, particularly sensual desire (kāma-rāga) and ill will (vyāpāda), which, though not fully eradicated, are destined to weaken through sustained ethical conduct, meditation, and wisdom cultivation.[22] These coarser attachments, along with subtle doubts already resolved, require further attenuation via the Noble Eightfold Path to enable the transition to Sakadagami, where greed, hatred, and delusion are notably diminished.[10] Thus, the Sotāpanna stands poised at the threshold, with the initial breakthrough ensuring no regression but demanding ongoing diligence for deeper realization.

Practices and Insights

Building on the foundation established in the sotāpanna stage, the progression to sakadagāmi involves intensified meditative practices aimed at further eradicating defilements.[24] A key practice is intensive vipassanā meditation focused on the five aggregates—material form, feeling, perception, mental formations, and consciousness—to penetrate their impermanence (anicca), suffering (dukkha), and non-self (anattā). This contemplation discerns the transient nature of all conditioned phenomena, weakening attachment to sensory experiences and fostering supramundane wisdom.[24][25] The Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta provides guidance on establishing mindfulness of these aggregates as part of the four foundations, enabling the practitioner to observe their arising and passing away directly, which supports the development of insight knowledge leading to path moments.[26] To specifically attenuate sensual craving (kāma-rāga) and ill will (vyāpāda), practitioners cultivate jhāna absorption, progressing through the four fine-material jhānas to temporarily suppress these fetters and gain a concentrated mind suitable for deeper insight. Reflection on dependent origination complements this by revealing the causal chain linking sense pleasures to suffering, reinforcing the realization of their impermanence and unsatisfactoriness.[24] The Visuddhimagga outlines these practices in detail, describing how the sakadāgāmi path moment (magga-phala) arises through such disciplined effort, marking the attenuation rather than complete eradication of the lower fetters.[25] These insights culminate in pivotal realizations, such as the ephemerality of sense pleasures, which diminish the intensity of desire and aversion, paving the way for the once-returner's reduced bondage to saṃsāra.[24]

Rebirth and Further Progress

Destinations of Rebirth

A Sakadagami, or once-returner, is destined for rebirth only once more within the sensuous sphere (kāma-loka), encompassing the human realm or one of the heavenly deva realms. This single return ensures the continuation of their spiritual progress without descent into inferior states, as the abandonment of the first three fetters—self-identity view, doubt, and attachment to rites and rituals—secures a noble destination aligned with wholesome kamma.[27] Due to these eradicated fetters, a Sakadagami cannot be reborn in the woeful realms of hell (niraya), the animal kingdom (tiracchāna-yoni), or as a hungry ghost (peta), as such births arise from unwholesome actions incompatible with their attained insight. The weakened but not fully eliminated fetters of sensual desire, ill will, and delusion further limit their rebirth to the sensuous sphere, preventing any further cycles beyond this one return.[16] Illustrative examples appear in suttas such as the Sārakāni Sutta (SN 55.24), where a lay disciple is declared a once-returner who "will return once more to this world," referring to the sensuous realms of humans or devas, and make an end to suffering thereafter. Similarly, the Cūḷakammavibhaṅga Sutta (MN 135) outlines how virtuous conduct and insight lead to superior rebirths in human or divine forms, free from the degraded states tied to harmful kamma.[16][28]

Attaining Higher Stages

A sakadagami possesses the potential to realize the higher stages of anāgāmin or arahant within the current lifetime by deepening insight practice and fully eradicating the five lower fetters—self-identity view, doubt, attachment to precepts and practices, sensual desire, and ill will. This progression occurs through intensified application of the Noble Eightfold Path, particularly wisdom and concentration, enabling the complete cessation of mental effluents before death.[27] If full liberation is not achieved in the present life, the sakadagami takes rebirth in a favorable realm within the sensuous world, such as the Tusita heaven, where long lifespans, minimal distractions, and inherent bliss support swift advancement toward nibbāna. In these environments, the weakened fetters allow for rapid insight development, leading to the attainment of anāgāmin or arahantship and the end of saṃsāra. For instance, the Buddha declared that lay disciples like Purāṇa and Isidatta, upon realizing the sakadagami stage, were reborn in the Tusita heaven due to their virtuous conduct and insight.[29] The Theragāthā preserves verses from elder monks who advanced from the sakadagami stage to arahantship, often recounting their journey through progressive insight and the joy of final liberation, underscoring the accessibility of complete enlightenment for those who persevere.[30]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.