Chapter 8
THE SANGHA
256. Q. _How do Buddhist Bhikkhus differ from the priests of other religions?_
A. In other religions the priests claim to be intercessors between men and God, to help to obtain pardon of sins; the Buddhist Bhikkhus do not acknowledge or expect anything from a divine power.
257. Q. _But why then was it worth while to create this Order, or Brotherhood, or Society, apart from the whole body of the people, if they were not to do what other religious orders do?_
A. The object in view was to cause the most virtuous, intelligent, unselfish and spiritually-minded persons to withdraw from the social surroundings where their sensual and other selfish desires were naturally strengthened, devote their lives to the acquisition of the highest wisdom, and fit themselves to teach and guide others out of the pleasant path leading towards misery, into the harder path that leads to true happiness and final liberation.
258. Q. _Besides the Eight, what two additional observances are obligatory upon the Bhikkhus?_
A. I observe the precept to abstain from dancing, singing and unbecoming shows.
I observe the precept to abstain from receiving gold or silver.
The whole _Dasa_, or _Bhikkhu S[=i]la_ or Ten Precepts, are binding on _all_ Bhikkhus and _Samaneras_, or novices, but optional with lay devotees.
The _Atthanga S[=i]la_ are for those who aspire to higher stages beyond the heavenly regions,[1] aspirants after Nirv[=a]na.
259. Q. _Are there separate Rules and Precepts for the guidance and discipline of the Order?_
A. Yes: there are 250, but all come under the following four heads:
Principal Disciplinary Rules {_P[=a]timokkha Samvara S[=i]la_).
Observances for the repression of the senses (_Indriya Samvara S[=i]la_).
Regulations for justly procuring and using food, diet, robes, etc., (_Paccaya Sannissita S[=i]la_).
Directions for leading an unblemished life (_Ajivapari Suddha S[=i]la_).
260. Q. _Enumerate some crimes and offences that Bhikkhus are particularly prohibited from committing?_
A. Real Bhikkhus abstain from:
Destroying the life of beings;
Stealing;
False exhibition of "occult" powers to deceive anybody;
Sexual intercourse;
Falsehood;
The use of intoxicating liquors, and eating at unseasonable times;
Dancing, singing, and unbecoming shows;
Using garlands, scents, perfumes, etc.;
Using high and broad beds, couches, or seats; receiving presents of gold, silver, raw grain and meat, women, and maidens, slaves, cattle, elephants, etc.;
Defaming;
Using harsh and reproachful language;
Idle talk;
Reading and hearing fabulous stories and tales;
Carrying messages to and from laymen;
Buying and selling;
Cheating, bribing, deception, and fraud;
Imprisoning, plundering, and threatening others;
The practice of certain specified magical arts and sciences, such as fortune-telling, astrological predictions, palmistry, and other sciences, that go under the name of magic. Any of these would retard the progress of one who aimed at the attainment of Nirv[=a]na.
261. Q. _What are the duties of Bhikkhus to the laity?_
A. Generally, to set them an example of the highest morality; to teach and instruct them; to preach and expound the Law; to recite the _Paritta_ (comforting texts) to the sick, and publicly in times of public calamity, when requested to do so; and unceasingly to exhort the people to virtuous actions. They should dissuade them from vice; be compassionate and tender-hearted, and seek to promote the welfare of all beings.
262. Q. _What are the rules for admission into the Order?_
A. The candidate is not often taken before his tenth year; he must have the consent of his parents; be free from leprosy, boils, consumption and fits; be a free man; have no debts; and must not be a criminal or deformed or in the royal service.
263. Q. _As a novice what is he called?_
A. _Samanera_, a pupil.[2]
264. Q. _At what age can a Samanera be ordained as _Sramana_--monk?_
A. Not before his twentieth year.
265. Q. When ready for ordination what happens?
A. At a meeting of Bhikkhus he is presented by a Bhikkhu as his proposer, who reports that he is qualified, and the candidate says: "I ask the Sangha, Reverend Sirs, for the _Upasampada_ (ordination) ceremony, etc."
His introducer then recommends that he be admitted. He is then accepted.
266. Q. _What then?_
A. He puts on the robes and repeats the Three Refuges {_Tisarana_) and Ten Precepts (_Dasa S[=i]la_.)
267. Q. _What are the two essentials to be observed?_
A. Poverty and Chastity. A Bhikkhu before ordination must possess eight things, _viz._, his robes, a girdle for his loins, a begging-bowl, water-strainer, razor, needle, fan, sandals. Within limitations strictly specified in the Vin[=a]ya, he may hold certain other properties.
268. Q. _What about the public confession of faults?_
A. Once every fortnight, a _Patimokka_ (Disburdenment) ceremony is performed, when every Bhikkhu confesses to the assembly such faults as he has committed and takes such penances as may be prescribed.
269. Q. _What daily routine must he follow?_
A. He rises before daylight, washes, sweeps the vih[=a]ra, sweeps around the Bo-tree that grows near every vih[=a]ra, brings the drinking-water for the day and filters it; retires for meditation, offers flowers before the d[=a]goba, or relic-mound, or before the Bo-tree; then takes his begging-bowl and goes from house to house collecting food--which he must not ask for, but receive in his bowl as given voluntarily by the householders. He returns, bathes his feet and eats, after which he resumes meditation.
270. Q. _Must we believe that there is no merit in the offering of flowers (mala p[=u]j[=a]) as an act of worship?_
A. That act itself is without merit as a mere formality; but if one offers a flower as the sweetest, purest expression of heartfelt reverence for a holy being, then, indeed, is the offering an act of ennobling worship.
271. Q. _What next does the Bhikkhu do?_
A. He pursues his studies. At sunset he again sweeps the sacred places, lights a lamp, listens to the instructions of his superior, and confesses to him any fault he may have committed.
272. Q. _Upon what are his four earnest meditations (Sati-patth[=a]na) made?_
A. 1. On the body, Kay[=a]napass[=a]n[=a]. 2. On the feeling, Vedan[=a]nupass[=a]n[=a]. 3. On the mind, Chitt[=a]nnpass[=a]n[=a]. 4. On the doctrine, Dhamm[=a]nupass[=a]n[=a].
273. Q. _What is the aim of the four Great Efforts (Sammappadh[=a]n[=a])?_
A. To suppress one's animal desires and grow in goodness.
274. Q. _For the perception by the Bhikkhu of the highest truth, is reason said to be the best, or intuition?_
A. Intuition--a mental state in which any desired truth is instantaneously grasped.
275. Q. _And when can that development be reached?_
A. When one, by the practice of Jñ[=a]na, comes to its fourth stage of unfolding.
276. Q. _Are we to believe that in the final stage of Jñ[=a]na, and in the condition called Sam[=a]dhi, the mind is a blank and thought is arrested?_
A. Quite the contrary. It is then that one's consciousness is most intensely active, and one's power to gain knowledge correspondingly vast.
277. Q. _Try to give me a simile?_
A. In the ordinary waking state one's view of knowledge is as limited as the sight of a man who walks on a road between high hills; in the higher consciousness of Jñ[=a]na and _Sam[=a]dhi_ it is like the sight of the eagle poised in the upper sky and overlooking a whole country.
278. Q. _What do our books say about the Buddha's use of this faculty?_
A. They tell us that it was his custom, every morning, to glance over the world and, by his divine (clairvoyant) sight, see where there were persons ready to receive the truth. He would then contrive, if possible, that it should reach them. When persons visited him he would look into their minds, read their secret motives, and then preach to them according to their needs.
[1] The Up[=a]saka and Up[=a]sika observe these on the Buddhist _Uposatha_ (Sabbath) days (in Skr. _Upavasata_). They are the 8th, 14th and 15th days of each half lunar month.
[2] The relationship to his Guru, or teacher, is almost like that of godson to godfather among Christians, only more real, for the teacher becomes father, mother, family and all to him.