Ethical Culture
Beggars!
SilaSILA: SI=to seed; LA=etcetera. "As ye sow, so shall ye reap." Ethical Culture. In the Buddha's system, ethical culture is dictated by self-interest, not some authority. While good deeds produce kamma the consequences of which are experienced as pleasant, for the Buddhist, ethical behavior produces kamma the consequences of which are experienced as neither pleasant nor unpleasant. In the Pali, sila is always the abstention from an act that would produce bad kamma. Since the stimulus for an act of bad kamma is always sensation, and as sensation is the result of previous kamma, the non-reaction to sensation, provided it is done with the conscious intent to end past kamma, is the bringing to an end of that chain of kamma with no further kamma resulting. In the Pali, there is no bad kamma from deeds of omission, no matter how compelling, or no matter how much the culture of the times might dictate the opposite. Think about it! If 'doing deeds' (aka kamma) were required, the goal of ending kamma could not be attained.
There is a story of a Japanese torture used on American prisoners of war that is attributed to the Japanese Buddhist culture. In this torture, an innocent person is brought before the prisoner and tortured if the prisoner refuses to cooperate. Here the prisoner would be advised that the torture was not Buddhism, and that the torturers were the only ones who would experience bad kamma as a consequence of their behavior. This is extremely difficult to grasp for the modern American practitioner: there is not only no bad kamma from abstaining from cooperation, but cooperating would, itself be bad kamma in that it would encourage the further use of the torture, and would have been based on incorrect perception of the real mechanism of kamma, something called contrary view, which is bad mental kamma. Finally, the innocent victim of the torture would not, as a consequence of the torture experience bad kamma, but, if the prisoner had cooperated and the victim had been grateful, the view from which that gratitude emanated would be bad kamma, so that the prisoner's cooperation would have had precisely the opposite of the intended result.
Acts are produced by an individual through three modes: The Intent behind the act determines the pleasant, unpleasant, or not-pleasant-but-not-unpleasant outcome (The Three Sense Experiences) in terms of subjective experience. If one serves a beggar a meal, with the intention of furthering that beggar's life, but in some way that meal has become poisoned through no intent of the giver, there is no bad kamma as a consequence.
The first steps in the ARIYA ATTHANGIKA MAGGA (The Aristocratic Multidimensional Way) after High View are brief presentations of ethical culture, and in some ways the entire system of the Pali can be seen as a system of higher ethical culture. In the Buddhist SAMGHA, (the Order of Buddhist Beggars), there are more than 200 rules of conduct. However, one time a Beggar came to the Buddha and said that he was unable to remember so many rules and consequently feared falling off the path. The Buddha asked him if he thought he could remember 3 rules. He said he could. So for the purposes of introducing ethical culture at this stage, while not discouraging the newcomer with excessive rules, the three rules will do for now: 1. Train yourself to abstain from intentional harm to living creatures In your imaginings, word thought and speech, and bodily acts. However this applies: Abstain from imagining theft or harm, uttering malevolent curses, theft by way of causing people to give by "signifying" with the body, and so forth. Rest assured that these three rules are so worded as to encompass all the rules.
OccupationsBeggars! A lay follower should avoid these five Occupations: What Five? Dealing in weapons, Clearly, Beggars, Lay Followers would do well to avoid these five occupations. — Book of the Fives [This is not to be understood as a command. It is given as a matter of advice in interpreting how the law of kamma would apply to one's occupation. And no one should use this list as a gauge for judging others. The Buddha had good relations with kings and generals while at the same time holding that it was rare for such a one not to end up in Hell as a consequence of his occupation.]
The Finger SnapBeggars! Practice the heart's release Beggars, Practicing the heart's release Beggars! If one were to give Or if one were to practice Greater would be the fruit Less would be the fruit Not even worth a quarter part Compared to the fruit
Cover Your BetsThe two-sided, safe position A good rebounding consequence from good deeds is to conform one's actions — Adapted from The Middle Length Sayings, II, #60 (PTS, Horner, On the Sure, pp 69; Wisdom, Bodhi/Nanamoli, The Incontrovertible Teaching, pp 506)
Beggars! If there were not These 3 Signs of a Fool,
Paths Leading UpwardBeggars!
Beggars! AN II:21; GS II:iii:1
How To Judge
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The importance of this little ditty cannot be overemphasized. For Good and Bad Conditions, look to conditions within yourself, in the others and in conditions in the surrounding situation. For Bad Conditions, look for conditions that increase Wanting, Anger, and Blindness; for Good Conditions look for conditions that are without Wanting, Anger, and Blindness. |
It is through having dealings with a man
That his character is to be known.
It is through being in continuous association with a man
That his consistency is to be known.
It is in times of adversity that a man's strengths are to be known.
It is through conversing with a man
That his wisdom is to be known
and then only after a long time
not by a passing thought
or no thought at all
and by a wise man, not a fool.
Beggars!
I see no other single thing
More conducive
To increasing bad conditions
And decreasing good conditions
As keeping
Bad Company
Indeed, Beggars,
Keeping
Bad Company
Is conducive
To increasing bad conditions
And decreasing good conditions
Beggars! Beings, for the most part wish:
"O,O,O May Good Conditions Increase and Bad Conditions Decrease for me."
But for the most part, Beggars, Good Conditions Decrease and Bad Conditions Increase for beings of such Wishes.
How Come?
Because wishing in such a way as that is not the way to make good conditions increase and bad conditions decrease, that's how come.
It's like a man wishing for seed oil, seeking seed oil, gonna find a way to get SOMA seed oil, and 'e 'eap sandinta seed press and sprinkle on SOMA APO (Water) an Press that press crank'n'it
roun anna roun anna roun anna roun
yet still he don' ged eva one dropa seed oil from that press.
An How Come?
Cause that's not The Way to get seed oil from a seed press, that's how come.
But here come some Beggar and whether he wish "O,O,O may good conditions increase and bad conditions decrease," or whether he make no such wish, Good conditions increase and bad conditions decrease for sucha beggar.
How Come?
Because THIS IS THE WAY to make Good Conditions Increase and bad conditions decrease that's how come.
It's like some Beggar looking to get seed oil from a seed press and he heaps oil seed into such a press and he cranks that old press
round and round and round and round
until it oozes out seed oil muchas any Beggar'd Wish.
How Come?
Cause this is The Way to get seed oil from a seed press, that's how come.
Say: "O, O, O May All Beings Know Objective Detachment!"
Something to consider:
From: MAHATANHASANKHAYA SUTTA, The Middle Length Discourses, Wisdom Publications, Bikkhu Nanamoli and Bhikkhu Bodi, trans.
Bhikkhus, the conception of an embryo in a womb takes place through the union of three things. [Here the things that do not result in an embryo are given.] . . . when there is the union of the mother and father, and it is the mother's season, and the being to be reborn is present, through the union of these three things the conception of an embryo in a womb takes place.
Thus, from the Buddhist point of view, "life" as an individual here in this world begins at conception.
Also, from the Buddhist point of view, there is no cause in that for bombing abortion clinics or holding anyone in contempt for anything.
An abortion from this perspective is a serious act of bad kamma for the individual performing it or instigating its performance.
It's nobody else's business.