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The
Order of Monks and Nuns
36.
For centuries, religion in India had been divided between two
contrasting movements, the orthodox Brahmin tradition and the
unorthodox (samana) tradition. The Brahmins taught that
salvation could be achieved by being a good son and father and
by faithfully performing certain rituals. The Brahmins themselves
were married, usually to several wives, well educated in sacred
and secular knowledge, and supported themselves and their families
with the fees they received by performing the rituals that were
believed to be essential for prosperity in this life and heaven
in the next. The samana tradition on the other hand taught
that salvation could only be achieved by understanding and transforming
the mind. To facilitate this, renouncing family and social responsibility
was considered helpful as it freed one from unnecessary distractions.
Experimentation with various yogic and meditative exercises and
also the practice of self-mortification were also common in this
movement. This tradition was epitomised by the ascetic (samana,
paribbajaka, muni, tapasa, etc.) who lived alone, or in small
bands in the jungle, or in mountain caves, shunning society and
its conventions. While some ascetics went naked, most wore simple
clothing, usually dyed yellow, a colour that identified them as
world-renouncers. In India, yellow was the colour of death or
renunciation because before a leaf drops from a tree it turns
yellow. When Prince Siddhartha renounced the world, it seems that
he automatically assumed that the path of the ascetic rather than
the path of the Brahmin would lead him to truth.
37.
After he became the Buddha, he saw the need for a fraternity of
ascetics devoted to helping others attain enlightenment and to
transmit the Dharma throughout space and time. Consequently, like
other teachers, he founded a community of monks (bhikkhu sangha),
an autonomous legal body with its own rules and regulations. The
Buddha changed the structure and rules of the Sangha as new situations
arose and in the Vinaya Pitaka we get a picture of this
gradual evolution. Over the centuries, while great empires have
come and gone, the Sangha has survived and flourished, acting
as a quiet witness to how the Dharma should be lived and as a
medium for the spread of civilisation throughout Asia.
38.
To become a novice (samanera) in the Bhikkhu Sangha, all
that was needed was to approach a monk of at least ten years standing
and ask to be accepted. The realisation that led to the decision
to renounce the world often came as a result of hearing the Buddha's
teaching and was usually expressed like this: "The household
life is confined and dusty, going forth from it is freeing. It
is not easy for one who lives in the home to live the holy life
perfectly complete, perfectly pure and polished like a conch shell.
Suppose that I cut off my hair and beard, put on the yellow robe
and go forth from home into homelessness?"[
N1 ] After the candidate
had shaved his head and put on his robe, he had to live by the
Ten Precepts. The Buddha allowed even small boys to be ordained
as novices. After a novice had received sufficient training and
was at least 20 years of age, he could take his full ordination
(upasampada) and become a monk (bhikkhu). To do this, he
would have to approach an assembly of ten monks or more of at
least ten years standing who were respected for their learning
and virtue. The candidate would then be asked eleven questions
to determine his suitability, his motives and his readiness. (1)
Are you free from disease? (2) Are you a human being? (3) Are
you a man? (4) Are you a free man? (5) Are you free from debt?
(6) Do you have any obligations to the king? (7) Do you have your
parents' permission? (8) Are you at least twenty years of age?
(9) Do you have your bowl and robe? (10) What is your name? (11)
What is your teacher's name? If the candidate answered these questions
satisfactorily, he then requested higher ordination three times
and if no one raised any objections, he was considered a monk.
39.
Buddhist monks called themselves and were known by others as The
Sons of the Sakyan (Sakyaputta). A monk could use property
belonging jointly to the monastic community, but he himself could
only own eight requisites (atthapirika). They were (1)
an outer robe (civara), (2) an inner robe, (3) a thick
robe for the winter, (4) an alms bowl with which he gathered his
food, (5) a razor, (6) a needle and thread, (7) a belt, and (8)
a water strainer to purify water and remove tiny creatures from
it. A monk was expected to take everything he owned with him whenever
he went on a journey "just as a bird takes only its wings
with it whenever it goes".[ N2
]
40.
If people wished to give a gift to a monk, he could accept only
food or any of those eight requisites, anything else - land, a
building, cloth or grain, etc. - could only be accepted on behalf
of the whole community and thus became the property of all. On
becoming a monk, one was obliged to follow the Patimokkha,
the two hundred and twenty-seven rules, which governed the discipline
and functioning of the Sangha. The rules were divided into eight
categories according to the punishment required if they were infringed.
The most important rules were the four Parajika which,
if a monk broke, he was automatically expelled from the Sangha
and could not be ordained again in the future. They were (1) sexual
intercourse, (2) theft, (3) murder, and (4) falsely claiming to
have psychic powers or spiritual attainments. The word parajika
literally means 'defeat' and means that the person who has broken
any of these rules has been defeated by his desire, hatred or
pride. Other important rules were the thirteen Sanghadisesa,
which if infringed, required confession, and Nissaggiya Pacittiya,
thirty rules concerning possessions, which if infringed, were
punished by confiscation of the possessions. Other rules governed
etiquette, settlement of disputes and administration. Because
these rules, all of which are now recorded in the Vinaya Pitaka,
were meant to be ways of maintaining discipline and solving the
problems that always arise when people live together, they are
not absolutes. The Buddha said that they could be changed or modified
according to circumstances. Before he attained final Nirvana,
he said to the monks, "If they wish, the Sangha may abolish
the minor rules after my passing."[ N3
]
41.
Like all ascetics of the time, Buddhist monks spent most of the
year wandering from place to place. This mobility gave the monks
the opportunity to meet with large numbers of people to whom they
could teach the Dharma and it also guaranteed that they could
not accumulate property. However, one of the rules for monks was
that they had to settle down and stay at one location for the
three months of the rainy session (vassa). This period
of staying put was necessitated by the fact that any travel was
difficult during the rainy season, but the monks used it as an
opportunity for intensified meditation. The number of such periods
of meditation retreat a monk had had was a mark of his maturity
and experience and then, as now, when monks met each other they
would ask each other: "How many rains (vassa) have
you had?"
42.
To maintain discipline and strengthen common values in the Sangha,
it was necessary for the monks to have a communal life in which
everyone participated. Certain areas called constituencies (sima)
were demarcated and all monks living within that area would come
together twice a month, the meeting being called the Uposatha.
During the Uposatha, the Patimokkha would be recited,
breaches of discipline were confessed and punishment meted out,
matters concerning the community were dealt with and of course
the Dharma was discussed. If decisions had to be made, each monk
could voice his opinion and had the right to vote on the decisions.
The Uposatha had an important role to play in reaffirming
the Sangha's identity, strengthening fellowship, and in particular,
in preserving and transmitting the Dharma.
43.
At first there were no nuns, but as the Dharma became more popular
and widespread, women gradually became more interested in leading
the monastic life. During one of the Buddha's visits to Kapilavatthu,
just after his father had died, Maha Pajapati Gotami, his foster
mother, approached him and asked if she could be ordained. The
Buddha refused and Maha Pajapati Gotami went away in tears. After
the Buddha left Kapilavatthu for Vesali, she shaved off her hair,
put on a yellow robe and set out for Vesali also. She arrived
covered with dust, with her feet cut and swollen, and with tears
streaming down her cheeks. She asked Ananda to approach the Buddha
and ask him once again if she could be ordained. And again he
refused. Ananda felt sorry for Maha Pajapati Gotami and decided
to intercede on her behalf. First he asked the Buddha if women
had the same spiritual potential as men. The Buddha replied: "Women,
having gone forth from home into homelessness in the Dharma and
discipline taught by the Tathagata, are able to realise the fruits
of Stream-Winning, of Once-Returning, of Non-Returning and of
Arahantship." Then Ananda asked the Buddha to consider how
helpful his foster mother had been to him. "Lord, if women
can realise the same states as men, and as Maha Pajapati Gotami
was of great service to you - she is your aunt, your foster mother,
your nurse, she gave you her milk and suckled you when your mother
died - therefore, it would be good if women would be allowed to
go forth from home into homelessness in the Dharma and discipline
taught by the Tathagata."
44.
The Buddha finally agreed but stipulated that nuns would have
to live by some extra rules. The special rules for nuns were (1)
in matters of respect and deference, a monk always had precedence
over a nun, (2) a nun must spend the rains retreat in a place
separated from monks, (3) nuns must ask monks for the date to
hold the Uposatha and about teaching the Dharma, (4) when a nun
did wrong she must confess it before the community of both nuns
and monks, (5) a nun who broke an important rule must undergo
punishment before both the nuns and the monks, (6) a nun must
be ordained by both an assembly of nuns and of monks, (7) nuns
must not abuse or revile a monk, and (8) a nun must not teach
a monk. Maha Pajapati Gotami accepted these extra rules, and so
the Order of Nuns (bhikkhuni sangha) was inaugurated.[
N4 ]
45.
However, the Buddha seems to have thought that with both males
and females together, maintaining celibacy (brahmacariya),
an important aspect of the monastic life, would be difficult.
He later said that now that there were monks and nuns, a celibate
order would only last for five hundred years. Interestingly enough,
his prediction proved to be fairly accurate. By the 7th century
CE, certain groups of monks were beginning to marry, a trend that,
along with other circumstances, eventually led to the decline
of Buddhism in India. Fortunately, in most Buddhist countries,
monks and nuns continue to practise celibacy and uphold the original
values of the monastic life.
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