453 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
453 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
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ASCETICISM AND MONASTICISM
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Material comforts which cater to the desires of the body have al-
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ways been recognized as obstacles to finer sensitivity to matters of the
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spirit. Asceticism, austerities, and severe discipline of the body are
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therefore recommended in order to reduce the claims of the body on the
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concerns of the soul. Fasting, chastity, simple food, and control of
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sleep are salutary practices for enriching the spiritual life. One who
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wishes to devote himself purely to a religious goal might wish to sever
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the competing claims of worldly affairs by adopting the secluded and some-
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times solitary life of a monk or nun. The paths of asceticism and monast-
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icism are the topics of this section.
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The first group of passages deal with the ascetic life as defined
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in the religions of South Asia. Hindu tradition--in the passage from the
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Laws of Manu quoted here--advocates that every brahmin spend the last
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quarter of his life, after his children are grown, as a solitary ascetic
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in the forest, devoting himself to meditation and the goal of liberation
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(moksha) as he formerly had devoted himself to success at worldly affairs.
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He would receive his sustenance by begging in the neighboring villages,
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and villagers earn religious merit by offering of their food to the wand-
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ering ascetics.
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This ideal of renunciation in retirement is difficult enough; few
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Hindus actually practice it. But there have always been heroic souls who
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dedicate their entire lives to the solitary path. Rather than a stage of
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life, monkhood may be a religious vocation for anyone serious about reach-
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ing the goal of liberation and Nirvana. Lifelong renunciation is the
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practice of Buddhist and Jain monks, who follow the examples of their
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founders; Buddha and Mahavira began as leaders of monastic orders.
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The next several passages enjoin fasting; it is salutary for all
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people, not only monastics. In Islam, fasting is a duty for every Muslim
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during the month of Ramadan. A text from Native American religion encour-
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ages fasting as a way to gain spiritual support and help in life's trials.
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The Christian teaching on chastity was originally meant for anyone
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who could receive it; many of the early disciples sought to practice this
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ideal by having chaste marriages. Based on this scriptural foundation,
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Christian monasticism grew and took institutional form in order to provide
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a supportive setting for those who wished to take vows of poverty and
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chastity, who valued the love of Christ which surpasses the love of women.
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As a later development, Christian monasticism is not explicitly regulated
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by scripture. It has taken a wide variety of forms, from solitary hermits
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and begging mendicants to orders dedicated to nursing, teaching, scholar-
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ship, and other forms of service to the world.
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The last group of passages is critical of asceticism and monastic-
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ism; such critiques of asceticism are found in nearly every tradition
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where it is practiced. They are of two kinds: first that the ascetic
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practice is fraught with striving for spiritual achievement that is itself
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egotistical and vain. The true spiritual path is self-emptying, but
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accomplishing severe austerities can cause one to be puffed up with pride.
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Without denying the value of asceticism, there are various correctives to
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its abuse: pure faith, devotion, charity, and the inner path of medita-
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tion. The second criticism is that monkhood is incompatible with the gen-
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erative and productive life of the world which is ordained by God. Thus
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Hinduism counterposes to the efficacy of asceticism for spiritual success
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the requirement to have progeny and care for them as the measure of world-
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ly responsibility; there is a proper dharma for each in its own time and
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place. Islam and Sikhism both condemn monasticism, or at least those
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varieties of monasticism which take people out of the economic and social
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life where they should be contributing and leavening the society by their
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godly example.
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The blue-necked peacock which flies through the air never approaches the
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speed of the swan. Similarly, the householder can never resemble the monk
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who is endowed with the qualities of the sage, who meditates, aloof, in
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the jungle.
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Buddhism. Sutta Nipata 221
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They who practice austerity and faith in the forest,
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The peaceful knowers who live on alms,
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Depart passionless through the door of the sun,
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To where is that immortal Person, even the imperishable Spirit.
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Hinduism. Mundaka Upanishad 1.2.11
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"Revile not, harm not, live by rule restrained;
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Of food take little; sleep and sit alone;
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Keep thy mind bent upon the higher thought."
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Such is the message of awakened ones.
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Buddhism. Udana 43, Meghiya
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Go on the begging tour, stay in a forest, eat but a little, speak only
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measured words, put up with misery, conquer sleep, practice friendship
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with all and non-attachment in an excellent manner.
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Jainism. Vattakera, Mulacara 981
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In the first place the sage should relinquish attachments to objects,
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whether animate or inanimate; he should then subdue his mind and senses;
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and finally he should resort to mortification of the flesh in progress-
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ively increasing intensity.... Only on complete obliteration of sensual-
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ity can one forsake violence. This is the truth: realize it.
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Jainism. Acarangasutra 4.40, 45
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To fill life to the brim is to invite [evil] omens.
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If the heart makes calls upon the life-breath, rigidity follows.
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Whatever has a time of vigor also has a time of decay.
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Such things are against the Tao,
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And whatever is against the Tao is soon destroyed.
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Taoism. Tao Te Ching 55
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Mulacara 981: On the Rule for Jain ascetics, see Acarangasutra 2.15, p.
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169. Acarangasutra 4.40, 45: Cf. the description of Mahavira's ascetic
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life in Acarangasutra 9, pp. 657f.
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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The gods themselves for a sight of Thee have done penance, fasted, and
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performed ablutions:
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Yogis and celibates have practiced austerities, and adopted ochre robes.
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For Thee, Lord, are all seekers dyed in devotion.
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Innumerable Thy names, countless Thy forms, inexpressible Thy attributes.
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The devotees questing after Thee have renounced home,
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Mansions luxurious, elephants and chargers,
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And sojourned into strange lands.
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Saints and prophets, seekers and devotees--
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Such have renounced the world and met with Thy acceptance.
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They renounced pleasures, comfort, joys of the palate;
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Gave up clothing and wrapped themselves in hides.
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Ever restless, making agonized search for Thy Portal,
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They dyed themselves in Thy name, and trod the hermit's path.
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Sikhism. Adi Granth, Asa, M.1, p. 358
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But having passed the third part of life in the forest, a man may
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live as an ascetic during the fourth part of his existence, after abandon-
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ing all attachment to worldly objects....
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Worlds, radiant in brilliancy, become the portion of him who re-
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cites [the texts regarding] Brahman and departs from his house as an asce-
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tic, after giving a promise of safety to all created beings.
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For that twice-born man, by whom not the smallest danger even is
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caused to created beings, there will be no danger from any quarter, after
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he is freed from his body.
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Departing from his house fully provided with the means of purifica-
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tion let him wander about absolutely silent, and caring nothing for enjoy-
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ments that may be offered to him.
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Let him always wander alone, without any companion, in order to
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attain [final liberation], fully understanding that the solitary man, who
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neither forsakes nor is forsaken, gains his end.
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He shall neither possess a fire, nor a dwelling; he may go to a
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village for his food, indifferent to everything, firm in purpose, meditat-
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ing and concentrating his mind on God.
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A potsherd [for an alms-bowl], the roots of trees [for a dwelling],
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coarse worn-out garments, life in solitude, and indifference towards
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everything are the marks of one who has attained liberation.
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Let him not desire to die, let him not desire to live; let him wait
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for [his appointed] time, as a servant for the payment of his wages.
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Let him put down his foot purified by his sight [i.e., watching not
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to step on any creature], let him drink water purified by straining with a
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cloth [so as not to swallow any creature], let him utter speech purified
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by truth, let him keep his heart pure.
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Let him patiently bear hard words, let him not insult anybody, and
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let him not become anybody's enemy for the sake of his body.
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Against an angry man let him not in return show anger, let him
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bless when he is cursed, and let him not utter speech, devoid of truth,
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scattered at the seven gates.
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Delighted in what refers to the Soul, sitting [in yoga postures],
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independent, entirely abstaining from sensual enjoyments, with himself for
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his only companion, he shall live in this world, desiring the bliss [of
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liberation]....
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Let him go to beg once a day, let him not be eager to obtain a
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large quantity of alms; for an ascetic who eagerly seeks alms attaches
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himself also to sensual enjoyments.
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When no smoke ascends from the kitchen, when the pestle lies
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motionless, when the embers have been extinguished, when the people have
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finished their meal, when the remnants in the dishes have been removed,
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let the ascetic always go to beg.
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Let him not be sorry when he obtains nothing, nor rejoice when he
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obtains, let him accept only so much as will sustain life, let him not
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care about the utensils.
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Let him disdain all obtained in consequence of humble salutations,
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for even an ascetic who has attained final liberation is fettered by
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accepting food given in consequence of humble salutations.
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By eating little, and by standing and sitting in solitude, let him
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restrain his sense, if they are attracted to sensual objects.
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By the restraint of his senses, by the destruction of love and
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hatred, and by the abstention from injuring the creatures, he becomes fit
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for immortality.
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Hinduism. Laws of Manu 6.33-60
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O believers, prescribed for you is the Fast, even as it was pre-
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scribed for those that were before you--haply you will be god-fearing--
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for days numbered; and if any of you be sick, or if he be on a
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journey, then a number of other days; and for those who are able to fast,
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a redemption by feeding a poor man. Yet better it is for him who volun-
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teers good, and that you should fast is better for you, if you know;
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the month of Ramadan, wherein the Qur'an was sent down to be a
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guidance to the people, and as clear signs of the Guidance and the Sal-
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vation. So let those of you, who are present at the month, fast it; and
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if any of you be sick, or if he be on a journey, then a number of other
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days; God desires ease for you, and desires not hardship for you; and that
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you fulfill the number, and magnify God that He has guided you, and haply
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you will be thankful.
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Islam. Qur'an 2.183-85
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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Asa, M.1: In Sikhism, devotion to God is the root of all true asceticism.
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Austerities are valueless as exercises in themselves; they have value
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only when done in devotion. Laws of Manu 6.33-60: This is the fundamental
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rule of Hindu asceticism, adopted with only minor variations by Jains and
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Buddhists as well. Cf. Uttaradhyayana Sutra 2.12-13, p. 775; Matthew
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10.1-20, p. 821.
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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My son, you ought to be of some help to your fellow men, and for that rea-
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son I counsel you to fast. Our grandfather who stands in our midst sends
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forth all kinds of blessings. Try then and obtain one of these. Try to
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have one of our grandfathers, one of the War Chiefs, pity you. Then some
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day as you travel along the road [of life], you will know what to do and
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encounter no obstacles. Without any trouble you will then be able to seek
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the prize you desire. Then the honor will be yours to glory in, for with-
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out any exertion have you obtained it. All the war power that exists has
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been donated to our grandfathers who are in control of warfare, and, if,
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reverently, you thirst yourself to death, then they will bestow blessings
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upon you. Now if you do not wear out your feet, if you do not blacken
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your face with charcoal, it will be for naught that you inflict suffering
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upon yourself. These blessings are not obtainable without effort. Try to
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have one of all the spirits created by Earthmaker take pity upon you.
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Whatever he says will come about. If you do not possess a spirit to
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strengthen you, you will be of no consequence and the people will show you
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little respect.
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Native American Religions. A Winnebago Father's
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Precepts
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[Jesus] said to them, "Not all men can receive this saying, but only those
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to whom it is given. For there are eunuchs who have been so from birth,
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and there are eunuchs who have been made eunuchs by men, and there are
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eunuchs who have made themselves eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of
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Heaven. He who is able to receive this, let him receive it."
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Christianity. Matthew 19.12
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It is well for a man not to touch a woman, but because of the temp-
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tation to immorality, each man should have his own wife and each woman her
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own husband.... I say this by way of concession, not of command. I wish
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that all were as I myself am. But each has his own special gift from God,
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one of onekind and one of another....
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I want you to be free from anxieties. The unmarried man is anxious
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about the Lord, how to please the Lord; but the married man is anxious
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about worldly affairs, how to please his wife, and his interests are div-
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ided. And the unmarried woman or virgin is anxious about the affairs of
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the Lord, how to be holy in body and spirit; but the married woman is
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anxious about worldly affairs, how to please her husband. I say this for
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your own benefit, not to lay any restraint upon you, but to promote good
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order and to secure your undivided devotion to the Lord.
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Christianity. 1 Corinthians 7.1-2,6-7,32-35
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Winnebago Father's Precepts: The grandfathers are spirits created by
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Earthmaker who are in control of the powers for victory on the journey of
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life, which is metaphorically represented by the warpath. The 'grand-
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father who stands in our midst' is the spirit of the fire around which
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this teaching was given. The expression 'wear out your feet' refers to
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frequent journeys to the fasting lodge, which is of some distance from the
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village. On the value of fasting, cf. Chuang Tzu 19, p. 737. 1 Corin-
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thians 7.1-35: Paul himself lived a celibate life, wholly devoted to the
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Lord. He recognized that his ability to function as a celibate apostle
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was a 'special gift' which he valued highly, and he wished that all could
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live as he did. Celibacy is valuable, because the unmarried person is
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free to devote him or herself totally to God, while the person caught up
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in the affairs of home and family has divided attentions. Paul advises
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those who are able to follow his example, but he also recognizes that it
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is a difficult course that is not for everyone.
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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Some invent harsh penances. Motivated by hypocrisy and egoism, they
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torture their innocent bodies and Me who dwells within. Blinded by their
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strength and passion, they act and think like demons.
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Hinduism. Bhagavad Gita 17.5-6
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Engaged in most difficult fasting, over six years his body became steadily
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emaciated.... But tormenting his body through such austerities availed
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him nothing. "This is not the way to achieve passionlessness, enlighten-
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ment, liberation. How can it be reached by a man who is not calm and at
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ease, who is so exhausted by hunger and thirst that his mind is unba-
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lanced?"
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Buddhism. Ashvaghosha, Buddhacarita 12.95-101
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O brother, wither away your sensuality, passions, and egotism. There is
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no benefit in emaciating this gross body [through penances]. We will
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never praise you merely because of your withered body.
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Jainism. Nisitha-bhasya 3758
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If with Christ you died to the elemental spirits of the universe, why do
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you live as if you still belonged to the world? Why do you submit to
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regulations, "Do not handle, Do not taste, Do not touch" (referring to
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things which all perish as they are used), according to human precepts and
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doctrines? These have indeed an appearance of wisdom in promoting rigor
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of devotion and self-abasement and severity to the body, but they are of
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no value, serving only to indulge the flesh. If then you have been raised
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with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is, seated at
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the right hand of God. Set your minds on things that are above, not on
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things that are on earth.
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Christianity. Colossians 2.20-3.2
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Formerly in the Pine Forest there were brahmins doing austerities, vying
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with each other in various ways, but they did not achieve success. Then
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they thought, "The sages did not speak the truth when they said that
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success in everything is obtained by asceticism." Overcome by impatience,
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they put aside their asceticism and became atheists. But at this time a
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voice said to them, "Do not despise the scriptures, do not blame ascet-
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icism or dharma, but blame yourselves. You strive against each other,
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desiring success, and because of that your asceticism is fruitless,
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destroyed by desire, egoism, anger, and greed. A man achieves perfection
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in asceticism only when he looks upon another man's wife as if she were
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his mother. Propitiate the linga of Shiva and you will obtain success."
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Hinduism. Skanda Purana 5.2.11
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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Bhagavad Gita 17.5-6: This and the following passages condemn ascetic
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striving which is motivated by egoism or infected by pride. Any auster-
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ities done for the purpose of attaining something are futile. Skanda
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Purana 5.2.11: The context of this passage is the story of the sages'
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mistrust of their wives, whom they believed to have been seduced by Shiva.
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Devotion to Shiva permits the brahmins to transcend the egoistic motiva-
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tion for their asceticism.
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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If a man should go naked... feed on potherbs, wild rice, or Nivara
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seeds...wear coarse hempen cloth, or carry out any other [ascetic] prac-
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tices... yet the state of blissful attainment in conduct, in heart, in
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intellect, have not been practiced by him, realized by him, then he is far
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from shramanaship, far from brahminship. But from the time, O Kassapa,
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when a monk has cultivated the heart of love that knows no anger, that
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knows no ill will--from the time when, by the destruction of the deadly
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intoxications, he dwells in that emancipation of heart, that emancipation
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of mind, that is free from those intoxications, and that he, while yet in
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this visible world, has come to realize and know--from that time, O
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Kassapa, is it that the monk is called a shramana, is called a brahmin!
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Buddhism. Digha Nikaya i.167, Kassapasihanada Sutta
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Should one perform a million ritual acts and of these be proud,
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they leave him only fatigued, and are of little avail.
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One who performs innumerable austerities and for these bears pride,
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shall remain caught in transmigration, moving between heaven and hell.
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With all a man's effort, should his self not turn compassionate,
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How may he have access to the Divine Portal?
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Sikhism. Adi Granth, Gauri Sukhmani 12, M.5, p. 278
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There was a great seer of strict vows, foremost of those wise in the law,
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the learned ascetic Mandapala. He followed the path of the seers who held
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up their seed [in chastity], austere and master of his senses. After he
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had abandoned his body, he attained to the world of the ancestors. Yet he
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failed to find the fruit of his acts there. Finding his worlds without
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reward, although he had won them with his asceticism, he questioned the
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celestials: "Why are these worlds that I won with my austerities closed to
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me? Where did I fail that this should be the results of my acts?" They
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said, "Men are born indebted to rites, to the study of the Veda, and to
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offspring, doubt it not. You are an ascetic and a sacrificer, but you
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have no offspring; these worlds are closed to you because of this matter
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of offspring. A son saves his father from the hell called Put, Hermit.
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Therefore, O brahmin, strive for the continuity of children!"
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Mahabharata 1.220
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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Digha Nikaya i.167: Asceticism does not help one who has not overcome his
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doubts, according to Sutta Nipata 249, p. 860. Devadatta taught an excessive
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rigorism in order to cause a schism in the order: see Vinaya Pitaka ii.184-98,
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pp. 448f. The 'deadly intoxications' are: lusts of the flesh, craving after
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being (immortality), and the defilements of delusion and ignorance. Gauri
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Sukhmani 12: Cf. Suhi, M.1, p. 964; Var Sarang, M.1, p. 1013; Itivuttaka 19, p.
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969; Precious Garland 406-12, pp. 413f. Mahabharata 1.220: The juxtaposition
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of asceticism and procreation as incompatible yet necessary goods is typical of
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Hindu thought. On the kinds of indebtedness, see Satapatha Brahmana 1.7.2.1-5,
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p. 780. Cf. Laws of Manu 11.10, p. 814.
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We sent Jesus son of Mary, and gave him the Gospel, and placed compassion
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and mercy in the hearts of those who followed him. But monasticism they
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invented--We ordained it not for them--only seeking God's pleasure, and
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they observed it not with right observance. So We give those who believe
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their reward, but many of them are evil-livers.
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Islam. Qur'an 57.27
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Qur'an 57.27: Muslim commentators note that the Qur'an approves of the
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asceticism and humility enjoined by the gospels: see Qur'an 5.82-83,
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p. 64. But monasticism is rejected, inasmuch as in its cloistered forms
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it takes believers out of the world while they should be mingling with
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others and upholding the Truth through service and example. Sikhism has
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a similar critique of otherworldly asceticism; see Suhi, M.1, p. 964.
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Mahayana Buddhism also downplays the value of otherworldliness, as seen in
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the Teaching of Vimalakirti 2, p. 965.
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