The Golden Rules of Buddhism
Compiled by H.S. Olcott
PREFACE
THE too prevalent ignorance among even adult
Sinhalese Buddhists of the ethical code of their religion heads me to
issue this
little compilation. Similar moral precepts exist by hundreds in
the
Buddhist Scriptures; where, also, all the present quotations will
be found in the places indicated. They should be committed to
memory
and practised by parents and taught to their children, especially when
the latter are being educated under anti-Buddhistic influences.
Orientalists and other impartial persons admit that
no religion in the world contains a more sublime system of moral rules
than Buddhism, but if we wish this to become known to Buddhist
children,
we adult Buddhists must take the task upon ourselves. Many a
Buddhist
boy has beet "converted " to Christianity, or otherwise brought to
despise
his ancestral religion, from ignorance of its merits.
- H. S.
O.
ADYAR, MADRAS
17th November, 1887
AUTHORS CONSULTED
Vinaya Texts..........DAVIDS AND OLDENBERG
Buddhist Literature in China........BEAL
Catena of Buddhist Scriptures.........BEAL
Buddhaghosha's Parables........ROGERS
Buddhist Birth Stories.........FAUSBOLL AND DAVIDS
Legend of Gaudama.........BIGANDET
Chinese Buddhism ..........EDKINS
Kalpa Sutra and Nava Tattva.....STEVENSON
Buddha and Early Buddhism.............LILLIE
Sutta Nipata..........SIR COOMARA SWAMY
Nagananda...........BOYD
Kusa Jataka..........STEELE
Buddhism...............DAVIDS
Dhammapada.............BEAL
Romantic History of Buddha.............BEAL
Udanavarga..........ROCKHILL
Twelve Japanese Buddhist Sects.........B. NANJIO
My Buddhist Catechism was compiled from the same
excellent translations.
The Golden Rules
of Buddhism
Merits and Demerits
LET him [the householder] not destroy, or cause to
be destroyed, any life at all, or sanction the acts of those who do
so.* Let him refrain from even hurting any creature,** both those
that are strong, and those that tremble in the world.
(Dhammika Sutta, v. 19) * One who buys
butcher's meat or poultry violates
this gatha. For, by paying the butcher for meat he has killed,
the
buyer shares his sin by "sanctioning" his act. ** An
inaccurate expression, adopted from Christian
writers. A "creature" is something created (by God), but
Buddhists regard all living organisms as evolved by the process of
natural law.
A disciple
then knowing [the law] should refrain
from stealing anything at any place; should not cause another to
steal
anything, [2] should not consent to the acts of those who steal
anything,
should avoid every kind of theft. (Dhammika Sutta, v. 20)
A wise man
should avoid unchastity as if it were a
burning pit of live coals. One who is not able to live in a state
of
celibacy should not commit adultery.* (Dhammika Sutta, v. 21)
* The history of all monastic
establishments
shows that there are persons temperamentally unfit for celibate life,
and
whose lapses bring great scandal upon their orders. The Sangha
has
not escaped this misery, offenders having been noted even in our Lord's
own
time. Yet the general blamelessness of Buddhist monks has been
acknowledged
even by clerical opponents. A true regard to the honour of the
Sangha
should prompt senior priests to insist upon the relinquishment of the
robe
by such as are not sexually self-masterful. "It is
better
to marry than burn", says St. Paul.
Four things does a reckless man
obtain who covets
his neighbour's wife - a bad reputation; an uncomfortable
bed; thirdly, punishment; lastly, future torment.
(Dhammapada, v. 309)
[3]
Of all the lusts and desires, there is none so
powerful as sexual inclination. This is so strong that there is
no other worth speaking of beyond it. . . . Lust and desire, in respect
of a man, are
like a person who takes a lighted torch and runs with it against the
wind. (Sutra of the
42 Sections, Beal's Catena, p. 198)
When one is come to a royal assembly
[i.e., any
official inquiry], he should not tell lies to anyone, or cause any to
tell lies,
or consent to the acts of those who tell lies; he should avoid
every
kind of untruth. (Dhammika Sutta, v. 22)
The householder who
delights in the Law should not
indulge in intoxicating drinks [or stupefying drugs], should not cause
others to drink, should not sanction the acts of those who drink,*
knowing that it
results in insanity. (Dhammika Sutta, v. 23)
* Then no Buddhist can without grievous sin
become an arrack renter, or seller, or drinker.
[ 4]
He who destroys
life,
who speaks untruth, who takes in this world what is not given him, who
takes another man's wife, and the man who gives himself up to drinking
intoxicating liquors: he, even in this world, digs up his own
root. (Dhammapada, vv. 246, 247)
The ignorant commit sins in
consequence of
drunkenness, and also make others drink. You should avoid
this: it is the cause of demerit, insanity and ignorance - though
it be pleasing to the
ignorant. (Dhammika Sutta, v. 24)
The fields are damaged by weeds,
mankind by
passion; therefore a gift bestowed on the passionless brings
great reward. (Dhammapada, v. 356)
The virtuous man is happy in this
world, and he is
happy in the next; he is happy in both.
[5] He is happy when he thinks of the good he has done; he is
still more happy when going in the good path. (Dhammapada, v.
18)
What ought to be done is neglected, what ought not
to be done is done; the sins of unruly, thoughtless people are
always increasing. (Dhammapada, v. 292)
Let each man make
himself as he teaches others to
be; he who is well subdued may subdue [others]; one's own
self
is difficult to subdue. (Dhammapada, v. 159)
Whoever, being asked
for what is good, teaches what
is not good, [and] advises [another] concealing something from him,
know him to be a Vasala.* (Vasala
Sutta, v. 11) * A slave.
[6] Passions Hatred is never
quenched by hatred: hatred
ceases by [showing] love; this is an old rule. (Dhammapada,
v. 5)
Let a man overcome anger by love, evil by good, the
greedy by liberality, the liar by truth. (Dhammapada, v.
223)
Do not speak harshly to anybody; those who are
spoken to, will answer thee in the same way. (Dhammapada,
v. 133)
Cut down the whole forest of lust, not one
tree. When thou hast cut down every tree and every shrub, then
thou wilt be free. (Dhammapada, v. 283)
Not nakedness, not
matted hair, not dirt, not
fasting, not lying on the earth, not rubbing with dust, not sitting
motionless,
can purify a mortal who has not overcome desires.
(Dhammapada, v. 141)
[7]
If a man becomes fat and a great eater, if he is
sleepy and rolls himself about, that fool, like a hog fed on slops, is
born again and again. (Dhammapada, v. 325)
The avaricious go not
to the world of the gods
[devas], for the fool commends not charity. (Udanavarga, x.
v. 2)
He who holds back rising anger like a rolling
chariot, him I call a real driver; other people are but holders
of the reins. (Dhammapada, v. 222)
A wicked man who reproaches a
virtuous one, is like
one who looks up and spits at the sky; the spittle soils not the
sky, but comes back and defiles his own person. So again, he is
like
one who flings dirt at another when wind is contrary; the dirt
does
but return on him who threw it. The virtuous man cannot be hurt,
the [8] misery that the other would inflict comes back on himself.
(Sutra of the 42 Sections, Beal's Catena, p. 193)
The fool who is
angered and who thinks to triumph by using abusive language, is always
vanquished by him whose words are patient. (Udanavarga, xx,
v. 14)
The fault of others
is easily perceived, but that of oneself is difficult to
perceive; the faults of others one lays open as much as possible,
but one's own fault
one hides, as a cheat hides the bad die from the gambler. If
a man looks after the faults of others, and is
always inclined to detract, his own weakness will grow.
(Dhammapada, vv. 252, 253)
What is called
"Name"
or "Tribe", in the world, arises from usage only. It is adopted
here
and there by common consent. [9] It comes from long and uninterrupted
usage,
and from the false belief of the ignorant. (Vasettha Sutta,
vv. 55, 56)
Whatever man is
proud
of his caste, is proud of his wealth, is proud of his family [and]
despises his relations, that [man] is a cause of suffering loss.
(Parabhava Sutta, v. 14)
Anger, drunkenness,
obstinacy, bigotry, deception, envy, self-praise, disparaging others,
highmindedness [conceit?], evil communications, these constitute
uncleanness; not verily the eating of flesh. Neither
abstinence from fish or flesh, nor going
naked, nor the shaving of the head, nor matted hair, nor dirt, etc.,
etc., etc., will cleanse a man not free from delusions.*
(Amagandha Sutta, vv. 7,11) * The meaning of
the Teacher is here so obvious that
I cannot understand how this Sutta could have ever been cited as
authority for buying and eating butcher's meat. Nothing herein
lessens the
force of the positive instruction in the Dhammika Sutta (v. ante) to
abstain
both from destroying, causing to be destroyed, or sanctioning the acts
of those who destroy the life of any being. I know a large and
increasing
number of Sinhalese indulge in meat-eating, and quiet their consciences
by quoting the above gathas; and I have listened with amusement
to
the sophistical argument that the sin of the killing is with the
butcher
and not with his sanctioning and abetting customer. Still, I must
hold to my opinion until the problematical future time when black shall
be proved white.
[10] Associates and Friends
He who walks in the company of fools, suffers a long
way; company with fools, as with an enemy, is always
painful; company with the wise is pleasure, like meeting with
kinsfolk. (Dhammapada, v. 207)
Therefore one ought to follow the
wise, the
intelligent, the learned, the much-enduring, the dutiful; one
ought to follow
a good and wise man as the moon follows the path of the stars.
(Dhammapada, v. 208) .
[11]
Good people shine from afar like the snowy mountains
[the Himalayas]; bad people are not seen, like arrows shot at
night. (Dhammapada, v. 304)
If a traveller does not meet with one
who is his
better, or equal, let him firmly keep his solitary journey; there
is no companionship with a fool. (Dhammapada, v. 61)
If any intelligent
person be associated for even one
moment with a wise man, he will soon perceive the fact.
(Dhammapada, v. 65)
The Golden Rules of Buddhism - part II
Parents, Teachers and Children
Parents should: 1. Restrain their children from vice.
2. Train them in virtue. 3. Have them taught arts and
sciences.
[12] 4. Provide them with suitable wives or
husbands. 5. Give them an inheritance.
The child should say: 1. I will support them who supported
me. 2. I will perform family duties incumbent upon
them. 3. I will guard their property. 4. I will
make myself worthy to be their heir. 5. When they are gone I
will honour their
memory. (Sigalovada Sutta)
Happy in this world is he who honours
his father, so
likewise he who honours his mother is happy. (Udanavarga,
xxx, v. 23)
The succouring of
mother and father, the cherishing of child and wife, and the following
[13] of a
lawful calling, this is the greatest blessing. (Mahamangala
Sutta, v. 5)
Whoever, being able
[to do so], does not support his feeble and aged mother or father, know
him as
a Vasala.* Whoever strikes, or abuses by words, his mother,
father, brother, sister, or mother-in-law, know him as a Vasala.
(Vasala Sutta, vv. 9, 10) * A slave. Research
Recommended
Extensive knowledge and science, well-regulated
discipline and well-spoken speech, this is the greatest blessing.
(Mahamangala Sutta, v. 4)
The world exists by
cause; all things exist by cause; all beings are bound by
cause, [even] as [14] the rolling cart-wheel by the pin of an axletree.
(Vasettha Sutta, v. 61)
From whomsoever a
man learns the Law, he should worship him, even as the gods worship
Indra. The learned man, being thus honoured, his mind pleased
with [his disciple], makes the Law more manifest. (Nava
Sutta, v. 1) The Moreal Law Inexorable
There exists no spot on the earth, or in the sky, or
in the sea, neither is there any in the mountain-clefts, where an [evil
deed does not bring trouble to the doer].* (Udanavarga, ix,
v. 5) * A man can never escape
punishment for
evil Karma, nor can anyone deprive him of the reward of his good
Karma. A Buddhist friend asks me to here recall the case of the
robber, Angulimala, who, becoming converted by Lord Buddha, attained
the state of Arhat. But this does not alter
the principle here stated. Angulimala's Karma was to be, first a
robber, and then a saint.
[15]
The evil doer suffers in this world, and he suffers
in the next; he suffers in both. He suffers when he thinks
of the evil he has done; he suffers more when going on the evil
path. (Dhammapada, v. 17)
Surely an evil deed does not turn on a sudden like
milk [curdling]; it is like fire smouldering in the ashes, which
burns the fool. . . . . An evil deed kills not instantly, as does a
sword, but it follows the evil doer [even] into the next world.
- (Udanavarga, ix, vv. 16,
17)
All that we are is the result of what we have
thought: it is founded on our thoughts, it is made up of our
thoughts. If a man speaks or acts with a pure thought, happiness
follows him, like a shadow that never leaves him.
(Dhammapada,
v. 2)
[16 ] Adeptship a Fact
The Rahat* is able to fly through the air, change
his appearance, fix the years of his life, shake heaven and earth.
(Sutra of the 42 Sections, Beal's Catena, p. 191)
* Adept or Mahatma.
Matanga, the Doctor
of the Law, having before this arrived at the condition of a Rahat,
forthwith, by his miraculous power, ascended up into space and there
exhibited himself, undergoing various spiritual changes, e.g., flying,
walking, sitting, sleeping and so on. Hereupon was a rain of
precious flowers, so that the
feelings of the beholders were deeply moved, etc. (Ming Ti
pen niu chouen. Beal's trans.)
Lord Buddha's aunt, Mahaprajapati,
and five other
holy women, who lived according to the rules, "walked on the water as
on dry [17] land; others leaving the ground, walked in the air,
or sat, or lay
down, or stood still, all in the same element. Fire and water
were seen
flowing from the right side of some, and from the left side of
others. In others it was seen issuing from their mouths." *
(Edkin's Chinese Buddhism, p. 49) *
Bishop Bigandet, in his Legend of
Gaudama, and
Rev. S. Beal, in his Catena of Buddhist Scriptures, give many data with
respect to the powers (iddhi) attained by Rahats (Adepts, or
"Mahatmas").
At a great assembly
of the gods, Buddha, thinking that it would be better if his discourse
was delivered
to them in the form of a dialogue, and finding that the gods were
backward
to join in the dialogue, created a duplicate of himself,** who,
standing
before him put the [18] questions which Gotama has answered in the
Sammaparibbajaniya Sutta. (See translation by Sir Coomara Swamy.)
** Or, as expressed in modern scientific
language, "projected his own double, or astral body." An aged
priest in the Southern Province of Ceylon kindly gave me a small silver
toy representing this phenomenon. It is called Samparana. (For an
account of the wonders, see Bigandet's Legend of Gaudama, Vol.
1). The
True Buddhists Priest
There are four kinds of priests; not a fifth,
O Chunda! Whoever has crossed all his doubts, is freed from the
dart (of sorrow), attached to Nibbana, divested of greediness, the
guide of all the world and the gods, such an one the Buddhas call
Maggajina [the victorious wayfarer]. Whoever, knowing here
the best as the best, preaches
and discourses extensively on it; him [the Buddhas] declare to be
the doubt-cutting sage, who is freed from desire, the second of
priests,
Maggadesi [who teaches the way]. Whoever lives in the paths
which are taught [as] the Paths of the Law, well trained, possessed of
a
good memory, him they call the third priest, Maggajivi [who follows the
blameless
paths]. [19] He who, putting on the garb of well-conducted
men,*
[yet rushes] forward [to acquire different objects], and brings
disgrace on families, [and being] forward, hypocritical, illtrained,
babbling, walks in the garden of good men, is a Maggadusi [who defiles
the way]. (Chunda
Sutta) * The robes of the Buddhist monk.
Whoever,
not being a sanctified person, pretends to
be a saint, he indeed is the lowest Vasala,** the thief in all worlds,
including that of Brahma. (Vasala Sutta, v. 20)
** A slave.
A priest fond of quarrelling - hemmed in by the
attributes of ignorance, understands not the advice [given by others],
nor the Law preached by Buddha; Led away by ignorance, he
knows not that quarrelling
is injurious to those whose hearts [20] are practised in religion, and
that it is sinful, [and] a road to hell. Such a priest, going
to hell, flits [thence] from
womb to womb,* from darkness to darkness, [and] certainly meets with
affliction. (Dhammachariya Sutta, vv. 3, 4, 5)
* In constant rebirths.
Of old there were only three diseases, [viz.],
desire, want of food, decay. Owing to the killing of cattle there
sprang ninety-eight diseases. This old sin of injuring
[living beings] has come
down [to this day]. Innocent cows are killed. Priests have fallen
off from their virtues. Thus this old [and] mean act is
despised by the
wise. Men despise a priest in whom such vice is found.
(Brahmanadhammika Sutta, vv. 29, 30, 31)
Some fortify
themselves for controversy. We praise not those small-minded
persons; temptations from here and there are made to cling to
[21] them and they certainly send their minds very far away when
engaged in it. (Dhammika Sutta, v. 15).
The priest who, like
one who seeks flowers on fig-trees, has not found any more good in
repeated births, gives up Orapara,* as a snake [casts off its] decayed
old skin. The priest in whose heart there are no feelings of
anger [and] who likewise has gone past merit and demerit, gives up
Orapara,
etc. (Uraga Sutta, vv. 5, 6) *
i.e., destroys that yearning for life in
the body which results in rebirth.
Many men whose
shoulders are covered with the orange robes are ill-conditioned and
unrestrained; such evil-doers by their evil deeds go to hell.
(Dhammapada,
v. 307)
He whose head is
shaven, and who wears the saffron-coloured robe, but who seeks only for
[22] food, drink, clothes and bedding, is his [own] greatest enemy.
(Udanavarga, xiii, v. 14)
He who smites will
be smitten; he who shows rancour will find rancour; so
likewise from reviling,
comes reviling and to him who is angered comes anger.
(Udanavarga, xiv, v. 3)
Those foolish
priests who
know not the holy law, though this life be brief, in the foolishness of
their hearts they give themselves to wrangling.
(Udanavarga, xiv, vi 4)
"He abused me, he
reviled me, he beat me, he subdued me"; who keeps this in
his mind, and
who feels resentment, will find no peace. (Dhammapada, xiv,
v. 4)
Like a beautiful
flower full of colour but without scent, are the fine but fruitless
words of him who does not act accordingly. (Dhammapada, v.
51)
[23]
One is the road that
heads to Wealth, another the road that leads to Nirvana.
(Dhammapada, v. 75)
If a man consorting
with me [Buddha] does not conform his life to my commandments, what
benefit will ten thousand precepts be to him? (Sutra of the
42 Sections, Beal's Catena, p. 202)
Better it would be
that a man should eat a hump of flaming iron than that one who is
unrestrained and who has broken his vows should live on the charity of
the land. (Udanavarga, ix, v. 2)
If thou hast done
evil deeds, if thou wouldst do them, thou mayest arise and run where'er
thou wilt,
but thou canst not free thyself of thy suffering.
(Udanavarga,
ix, v. 4)
[24]
The thoughtless man even if he can recite Many
gathas, but is not a doer of the law, has no part in the priesthood,
but is like a cowherd counting the cows of others.
(Dhammapada,
v. 19)
Who is the good
man? The religious man only is good. Who is the great
man? He who is strongest in the exercise of patience. He
who patiently endures injury, and maintains a blameless life - he is a
man indeed! (Sutra of the
42 Sections, Beal's Catena, p. 196)
When a fire is
placed under
a pot, and the water within it made to boil, then whoever looks down
upon
it will see no shadow of himself. So the three poisons
(covetousness, anger, delusion), and the five obscurities (envy,
passion, sloth, vacillation, unbelief) which embrace it, effectually
prevent one attaining supreme reason. (Sutra of the 42
Sections, Beal's Catena, p. 196)
[25]
A man who is under
the influence of religious principle may be compared to a single
warrior opposed to ten thousand in a fight. (Sutra of the 42
Sections, Beal's Catena, p. 200)
If one man conquer
in battle a thousand times thousand men, and if another conquer
himself, he is the
greatest of conquerors. (Dhammapada,
v. 103)
By oneself evil is
done, by oneself one suffers; by oneself evil is left undone, by
oneself one
is purified. Purity and impurity belong to oneself, no one can
purify
another. (Dhammapada, v. 165)
Self is the lord of
self; who else could be the lord? With self well subdued, a
man finds a master such as few can find. (Dhammapada, v. 160)
[26]
That priest whose
[ideas of] omens, meteors, dreams and signs are destroyed, and who is
released from
[a belief in] the evil consequences of omens, conducts himself well in
the
world. That priest who, not quarrelling in word, thought or deed,
[and]
knowing the Law well looks forward to Nirvana, conducts himself well in
the
world. (Sammaparibbajaniya Sutta, vv. 2. 7)
Kinsfolk, friends
and lovers salute a man who has been long away, and returns from
afar. In like manner his good works receive him who has done
good, and has gone from this world to the other; as kinsmen
receive a friend on his return. (Dhammapada, vv. 219, 220)
Even a good man sees
evil days, as long as his good deed is not ripened: but when his
good deed has ripened, then does the good man see happy days.
(Dhammapada, v. 120)
[27]
In fit time, observe
kindness, impartiality, mercy, freedom from sin, delight at the
prosperity of others; unopposed to the whole world, let one walk
alone like the rhinoceros. (Khaggavisana Sutta, 39)
If a man's thoughts
are not dissipated, if his mind is not perplexed, if he has ceased to
think of good and evil, then there is no fear for him while he is
watchful. (Dhammapada, v. 39)
Procrastination is
[moral] defilement, continued procrastination is defilement. By
nonprocrastination [punctuality] and knowledge, root out your darts [of
sin]. (Utthana Sutta, v. 4)
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