THE KHANDHAKAS
The Khandhakas THE KHANDHAKAS—literally, “Collections”—form the second major portion of the Vinaya Piṭaka, following the Sutta Vibhaṅga and preceding the
Read moreThe Khandhakas THE KHANDHAKAS—literally, “Collections”—form the second major portion of the Vinaya Piṭaka, following the Sutta Vibhaṅga and preceding the
Read morepart one General CHAPTER ONE Personal Grooming A bhikkhu should be clean, neat, and unostentatious in his appearance, as a reflection
Read moreCHAPTER TWO Cloth Requisites A bhikkhu has four primary requisites—robe-cloth, food, lodgings, and medicine—and a variety of secondary ones. This and
Read moreCHAPTER THREE Alms Bowls & Other Accessories Alms bowls The alms bowl is another requisite that a candidate for ordination must
Read moreCHAPTER FOUR Food The three main classes of food—staple foods, non-staple foods, and juice drinks—have already been discussed in BMC1 under
Read moreCHAPTER FIVE Medicine The Great Section on Virtue in the Sāmaññaphala Sutta (DN 2) lists the types of wrong livelihood from which
Read moreCHAPTER SIX Lodgings The Pali word senāsana—literally meaning “sleeping place and sitting place” and translated here as “lodging”—covers outdoor resting spots, buildings
Read moreCHAPTER SEVEN Monastery Buildings & Property Monasteries One of the earliest allowances in the Buddha’s teaching career was for accepting the
Read moreCHAPTER EIGHT Respect An attitude of proper respect is a sign of intelligence. As SN 6:2 indicates, it is a requisite condition for gaining
Read moreCHAPTER NINE Protocols The Pali word vatta, translated here as protocol, is usually translated as duty. There are two reasons for translating it
Read moreCHAPTER TEN Misbehavior The material in this chapter draws on rules scattered widely through the Khandhakas and the Pāṭimokkha, as well
Read moreCHAPTER ELEVEN Rains-residence Well before the Buddha’s time there was a custom in India that wanderers would stay in place for
Read morepart two Community Transactions CHAPTER TWELVE Community Transactions In Chapter 11 of BMC1, Adhikaraṇa-samatha, we discussed the four types of issues (adhikaraṇa)—dispute-issues, accusation-issues, offense-issues, and
Read moreCHAPTER THIRTEEN Territories As stated in the preceding chapter, the unity of a Community transaction depends on the assent—expressed either through
Read moreCHAPTER FOURTEEN Ordination Like so many other aspects of the Vinaya, the procedures for ordination—the patterns to be followed in accepting
Read moreCHAPTER FIFTEEN Uposatha In the Mahāparinibbāna Sutta (DN 16) the Buddha lists seven conditions that will help prevent the decline of the
Read moreCHAPTER SIXTEEN Invitation As we noted in the preceding chapter, the uposatha observance regularly provides an opportunity for bhikkhus to accuse
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