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( From The Buddhist Monastic Code I - The Patimokkha Rules Translated and Explained
by Thanissaro Bhikkhu )
This index lists the summaries of the training rules
given in this book (The
Buddhist Monastic Code I), organized by topic. The Sekhiya rules have not
been included, because they are short, deal almost exclusively with
etiquette, and are already organized by topic in their own chapter. I
have included short summaries of the Adhikarana-Samatha rules, even
though these summaries do not appear in the chapter discussing those
rules.
The rules are divided into five major categories, dealing with
Right Speech, Right Action, Right Livelihood, Communal harmony, and
the etiquette of a contemplative. The first three categories the
factors of the Noble Eightfold Path that make up the training in
heightened virtue show in particular how the training rules relate
to the Buddhist path as a whole.
These five categories are not sharply distinct types. Instead, they
are more like the colors in the band of light thrown off by a prism
discernably different, but shading into one another with no sharp
dividing lines. Right Speech, for instance, often shades into Communal
harmony, just as Right Livelihood shades into personal etiquette. Thus
the placement of a particular rule in one category rather than another
has been a somewhat arbitrary process. There are a few cases such
as Pacittiyas 46 & 85 where the reason for the placement of
the rule will become clear only after a reading of the detailed
discussion of the rule in the text.
Each rule is followed by a two-part code. The first part, before
the slash, gives the rule's number in its section of the Patimokkha.
The second part gives the page number for the discussion of the rule
in this book.
Right Speech
M.117 defines wrong speech as lying, divisive speech,
abusive speech, and idle chatter.
Lying
Making an unfounded charge to a bhikkhu that he has committed
a parajika offense, in hopes of having him disrobed, is a sanghadisesa
offense. (Sg 8/129)
Distorting the evidence while accusing a bhikkhu of having
committed a parajika offense, in hopes of having him disrobed, is a
sanghadisesa offense. (Sg 9/138)
The intentional effort to misrepresent the truth to another
individual is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 1/260)
Making an unfounded charge to a bhikkhu or getting someone else
to make the charge to him that he is guilty of a sanghadisesa
offense is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 76/448)
Divisive speech
Tale-bearing among bhikkhus, in hopes of winning
favor or causing a rift, is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 3/266)
Abusive speech
An insult made with malicious intent to another
bhikkhu is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 2/263)
Idle chatter
Visiting lay families without having informed an
available bhikkhu before or after a meal to which one has been
invited is a pacittiya offense except during the robe season or any
time one is making a robe. (Pc 46/390)
Entering a village, town, or city during the period after noon
until the following dawn, without having taken leave of an available
bhikkhu unless there is an emergency is a pacittiya offense.
(Pc 85/467)
Right Action
M.117 defines wrong action as killing living beings,
taking what is not given, and engaging in sexual misconduct.
Killing
Intentionally bringing about the untimely death of a human
being, even if
it is still a fetus, is a parajika offense. (Pr 3/66)
Pouring water that one knows to contain living beings or having
it poured on grass or clay is a pacittiya offense. Pouring
anything that would kill the beings into such water or having it
poured is also a pacittiya offense. (Pc 20/317)
Deliberately killing an animal or having it killed is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 61/420)
Using water, knowing that it contains living beings that will die
from one's use, is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 62/423)
Taking what is not given
The theft of anything worth 1/24 ounce
troy of gold or more is a parajika offense. (Pr 2/50)
Having given another bhikkhu a robe on a condition and then
angry and displeased snatching it back or having it snatched back
is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 25/246)
Making use of cloth or a bowl stored under shared ownership
unless the shared ownership has been rescinded or one is taking the
item on trust is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 59/415)
Sexual Misconduct
Voluntary sexual intercourse genital, anal,
or oral with a human being, non-human being, or common animal is a
parajika offense. (Pr 1/45)
Intentionally causing oneself to emit semen, or getting someone
else to cause one to emit semen except during a dream is a
sanghadisesa offense. (Sg 1/90)
Lustful bodily contact with a woman whom one perceives to be a
woman is a sanghadisesa offense. (Sg 2/100)
Making a lustful remark to a woman about her genitals, anus or
about performing sexual intercourse is a sanghadisesa offense. (Sg
3/110)
Telling a woman that she would benefit from having sexual
intercourse with oneself is a sanghadisesa offense. (Sg 4/115)
Getting an unrelated bhikkhuni to wash, dye, or beat a robe that
has been used at least once is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP
4/182)
Getting an unrelated bhikkhuni to wash, dye, or card wool that has
not been made into cloth or yarn is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense.
(NP 17/214)
Lying down at the same time in the same lodging with a woman is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 6/276)
Teaching more than six sentences of Dhamma to a woman, except in
response to a question, is a pacittiya offense unless a knowledgeable
man is present. (Pc 7/280)
Exhorting a bhikkhuni about the eight vows of respect except
when one has been authorized to do so by the Community is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 21/320)
Exhorting a bhikkhuni on any topic at all after sunset except
when she requests it is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 22/323)
Going to the bhikkhunis' quarters and exhorting a bhikkhuni about
the eight vows of respect except when she is ill or has requested
the instruction is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 23/325)
Giving robe-cloth to an unrelated bhikkhuni without receiving
anything in exchange is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 25/326)
Sewing a robe or having one sewn for an unrelated bhikkhuni
is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 26/327)
Traveling by arrangement with a bhikkhuni from one village to
another except when the road is risky or there are other dangers
is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 27/329)
Traveling by arrangement with a bhikkhuni upriver or downriver in
the same boat except when crossing a river is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 28/331)
Sitting or lying down alone with a bhikkhuni in a place out of
sight and out of hearing with no one else present is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 30/335 & 45/389)
Sitting or lying down with a woman or women in a private, secluded
place with no other man present is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 44/385)
Sitting or lying down alone with a woman in an unsecluded but
private place with no one else present is a pacittiya offense. (Pc
45/389)
Traveling by arrangement with a woman from one village to another
is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 67/432)
Right Livelihood
M.117 defines wrong livelihood as dissembling,
persuading, hinting, belittling, and pursuing gain with gain.
General
Deliberately lying to another person that one has attained
a superior human state is a parajika offense. (Pr 4/79)
Acting as a go-between to arrange a marriage, an affair, or a date
between a man and a woman not married to each other is a sanghadisesa
offense. (Sg 5/117)
Engaging in trade with anyone except one's co-religionists is a
nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 20/225)
Persuading a donor to give to oneself a gift that he or she had
planned to give to the Community when one knows that it was
intended for the Community is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP
30/256)
Telling an unordained person of one's actual superior human
attainments is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 8/285)
Persuading a donor to give to another individual a gift that he or
she had planned to give to a Community when one knows that it was
intended for the Community is a pacittiya offense. (NP 30/256
& Pc 82/461)
Robes
Keeping a piece of robe-cloth for more than ten days without
determining it for use or placing it under dual ownership except
when the end-of-vassa or kathina privileges are in effect is a
nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 1/163)
Being in a separate zone from any of one's three robes at dawn
except when the end-of-vassa or kathina privileges are in effect, or
one has received formal authorization from the Community is a
nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 2/172)
Keeping out-of-season cloth for more than 30 days when it is not
enough to make a requisite and one has expectation for more except
when the end-of-vassa and kathina privileges are in effect is a
nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 3/179)
Accepting robe-cloth from an unrelated bhikkhuni without giving her
anything in exchange is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. NP 5/184)
Asking for and receiving robe-cloth from an unrelated lay person,
except when one's robes have been stolen or destroyed, is a nissaggiya
pacittiya offense. (NP 6/186)
Asking for and receiving excess robe-cloth from unrelated lay
people when one's robes have been stolen or destroyed is a nissaggiya
pacittiya offense. (NP 7/189)
When a lay person who is not a relative is planning to get a robe
for one, but has yet to ask one what kind of robe one wants: Receiving
the robe after making a request that would raise its cost is a
nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 8/193)
When two or more lay people who are not one's relatives are
planning to get separate robes for one, but have yet to ask one what
kind of robe one wants: Receiving a robe from them after asking them
to pool their funds to get one robe out of a desire for something
fine is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 9/195)
Making a felt blanket/rug with silk mixed in it for one's own use
or having it made is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP
11/206)
Making a felt blanket/rug entirely of black wool for one's own use
or having it made is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP
12/208)
Making a felt blanket/rug that is more than one-half black wool for
one's own use or having it made is a nissaggiya pacittiya
offense. (NP 13/208)
Unless one has received authorization to do so from the Community,
making a felt blanket/rug for one's own use or having it made
less than six years after one's last one was made is a nissaggiya
pacittiya offense. (NP 14/209)
Making a felt sitting rug for one's own use or having it made
without incorporating a one-span piece of old felt is a nissaggiya
pacittiya offense. (NP 15/211)
Seeking and receiving a rains-bathing cloth before the fourth month
of the hot season is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. Using a
rains-bathing cloth before the last two weeks of the fourth month of
the hot season is also a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 24/242)
Taking thread that one has asked for improperly and getting weavers
to weave cloth from it when they are unrelated and have not made a
previous offer to weave is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP
26/248)
When donors who are not relatives and have not invited one to
ask have arranged for weavers to weave robe-cloth intended for
one: Receiving the cloth after getting the weavers to increase the
amount of thread used in it is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP
27/250)
Keeping robe-cloth offered in urgency past the end of the robe
season after having accepted it during the last eleven days of the
Rains Retreat is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 28/252)
When one is living in a dangerous wilderness abode during the month
after the fourth Kattika full moon and has left one of one's robes in
the village where one normally goes for alms: Being away from the
abode and the village for more than six nights at a stretch except
when authorized by the Community is a nissaggiya pacittiya
offense. (NP 29/253)
Wearing an unmarked robe is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 58/413)
Acquiring an overly large sitting cloth after making it or
having it made for one's own use is a pacittiya offense requiring
that one cut the cloth down to size before confessing the offense. (Pc
89/475)
Acquiring an overly large skin-eruption covering cloth after making
it or having it made for one's own use is a pacittiya offense
requiring that one cut the cloth down to size before confessing the
offense. (Pc 90/477)
Acquiring an overly large rains-bathing cloth after making it
or having it made for one's own use is a pacittiya offense
requiring that one cut the cloth down to size before confessing the
offense. (Pc 91/478)
Acquiring an overly large robe after making it or having it
made for one's own use is a pacittiya offense requiring that one
cut the robe down to size before confessing the offense. (Pc 92/478)
Food
Eating any of the five staple foods that a lay person has
offered as the result of a bhikkhuni's prompting unless the lay
person was already planning to offer the food before her prompting
is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 29/333)
Eating food obtained from the same public alms center two days
running, unless one is too ill to leave the center, is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 31/340)
Eating a meal to which four or more individual bhikkhus have been
specifically invited except on special occasions is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 32/342))
Eating a meal before going to another meal to which one was
invited, or accepting an invitation to one meal and eating elsewhere
instead, is a pacittiya offense except when one is ill or at the time
of giving cloth or making robes. (Pc 33/348)
Accepting more than three bowlfuls of food that the donors prepared
for their own use as presents or as provisions for a journey is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 34/352)
Eating staple or non-staple food that is not left-over, after
having earlier in the day finished a meal during which one turned down
an offer to eat further staple food, is a pacittiya offense. (Pc
35/355)
Eating staple or non-staple food in the period after noon until the
next dawn is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 37/362)
Eating food that a bhikkhu oneself or another formally
received on a previous day is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 38/364)
Eating finer foods, after having asked for them for one's own sake
except when ill is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 39/367)
Eating food that has not been formally given is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 40/370)
Eating staple or non-staple food, after having accepted it from the
hand of an unrelated bhikkhuni in a village area, is a patidesaniya
offense. (Pd 1/480)
Eating staple food accepted at a meal to which one has been invited
and where a bhikkhuni has given directions, based on favoritism, as to
which bhikkhu should get which food, and none of the bhikkhus have
dismissed her, is a patidesaniya offense. (Pd 2/483)
Eating staple or non-staple food, after accepting it when one
is neither ill nor invited at the home of a family formally
designated as "in training," is a patidesaniya offense. (Pd
3/484)
Eating an unannounced gift of staple or non-staple food after
accepting it in a dangerous wilderness abode when one is not ill is a
patidesaniya offense. (Pd 4/485)
Lodgings
Building a plastered hut or having it built
without a sponsor, destined for one's own use, without having obtained
the Community's approval, is a sanghadisesa offense. Building a
plastered hut or having it built without a sponsor, destined
for one's own use, exceeding the standard measurements, is also a
sanghadisesa offense. (Sg 6/120)
Building a hut with a sponsor or having it built destined
for one's own use, without having obtained the Community's approval,
is a sanghadisesa offense. (Sg 7/128)
When a bhikkhu is building or repairing a large dwelling for his
own use, using resources donated by another, he may not reinforce the
window or door frames with more than three layers of roofing material
or plaster. To exceed this is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 19/315)
Acquiring a bed or bench with legs longer than eight Sugata
fingerbreadths after making it or having it made for one's own
use is a pacittiya offense requiring that one cut the legs down before
confessing the offense. (Pc 87/471)
Acquiring a bed or bench stuffed with cotton down after making it
or having it made for one's own use is a pacittiya offense
requiring that one remove the stuffing before confessing the offense.
(Pc 88/473)
Medicine
Keeping any of the five tonics ghee, fresh butter,
oil, honey, or sugar/molasses for more than seven days, unless one
determines to use them only externally, is a nissaggiya pacittiya
offense. (NP 23/236)
When a supporter has made an offer to supply medicines to the
Community: Asking the him/her for medicine outside of the terms of the
offer when one is not ill, or for medicine to use for a non-medicinal
purpose, is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 47/393)
Money
When a fund has been set up with a steward indicated by a
bhikkhu: Obtaining an article from the fund as a result of having
prompted the steward more than the allowable number of times is a
nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 10/196)
Taking gold or money, having someone else take it, or consenting to
its being placed down as a gift for oneself, is a nissaggiya pacittiya
offense. (NP 18/214)
Obtaining gold or money through trade is a nissaggiya pacittiya
offense. (NP 19/220)
Bowls and other requisites
Carrying wool that has not been made
into cloth or yarn for more than three leagues is a nissaggiya
pacittiya offense. (NP 16/212)
Keeping an alms bowl for more than ten days without determining it
for use or placing it under dual ownership is a nissaggiya pacittiya
offense. (NP 21/231)
Asking for a new alms bowl when one's current bowl is not beyond
repair is a nissaggiya pacittiya offense. (NP 22/234)
Acquiring a needle box made of bone, ivory, or horn after making it
or having it made for one's own use is a pacittiya offense
requiring that one break the box before confessing the offense. (Pc
86/470)
Communal Harmony
To persist in one's attempts at a schism, after
the third announcement of a formal rebuke in a meeting of the
Community, is a sanghadisesa offense. (Sg 10/140)
To persist in supporting a potential schismatic, after the third
announcement of a formal rebuke in a meeting of the Community, is a
sanghadisesa offense. (Sg 11/147)
To persist in being difficult to admonish, after the third
announcement of a formal rebuke in the Community, is a sanghadisesa
offense. (Sg 12/148)
To persist after the third announcement of a formal rebuke in
the Community in criticizing an act of banishment performed
against oneself is a sanghadisesa offense. (Sg 13/150)
When a trustworthy female lay follower accuses a bhikkhu of having
committed a parajika, sanghadisesa, or pacittiya offense while sitting
alone with a woman in a private, secluded place, the Community should
investigate the charge and deal with the bhikkhu in accordance with
whatever he admits to having done. (Ay 1/157)
When a trustworthy female lay follower accuses a bhikkhu of having
committed a sanghadisesa or pacittiya offense while sitting alone with
a woman in a private place, the Community should investigate the
charge and deal with the bhikkhu in accordance with whatever he admits
to having done. (Ay 2/161)
Telling an unordained person of another bhikkhu's serious offense
unless one is authorized by the Community to do so is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 9/288)
Persistently replying evasively or keeping silent in order to
conceal one's own offenses when being questioned in a meeting of the
Community after a formal charge of evasiveness or
uncooperativeness has been brought against one is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 12/300)
If a Community official is innocent of prejudice: Criticizing him
within earshot of another bhikkhu is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 13/303)
When one has set a bed, bench, mattress, or stool belonging to the
Community out in the open: Leaving its immediate vicinity without
putting it away or arranging to have it put away is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 14/305)
When one has spread bedding out in a dwelling belonging to the
Community: Departing from the monastery without putting it away or
arranging to have it put away is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 15/307)
Encroaching on another bhikkhu's sleeping or sitting place in a
dwelling belonging to the Community, with the sole purpose of making
him uncomfortable and forcing him to leave, is a pacittiya offense.
(Pc 16/310)
Causing a bhikkhu to be evicted from a dwelling belonging to the
Community when one's primary motive is anger is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 17/312)
Sitting or lying down on a bed or bench with detachable legs on an
unplanked loft in a dwelling belonging to the Community, is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 18/314)
Saying that a properly authorized bhikkhu exhorts the bhikkhunis
for the sake of personal gain when in fact that is not the case
is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 24/325)
Deliberately tricking another bhikkhu into breaking Pacittiya 35,
in hopes of finding fault with him, is a pacittiya offense. (Pc
36/360)
Speaking or acting disrespectfully when being admonished by another
bhikkhu for a breach of the training rules is a pacittiya offense. (Pc
54/407)
Agitating to re-open an issue, knowing that it was properly dealt
with, is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 63/424)
Not informing other bhikkhus of a serious offense that one knows
another bhikkhu has committed out of a desire to protect him
either from having to undergo the penalty or from the jeering remarks
of other bhikkhus is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 64/426)
Acting as the preceptor in the ordination of a person one knows to
be less than 20 years old is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 65/428)
Refusing after the third announcement of a formal rebuke in a
meeting of the Community to give up the wrong view that there is
nothing wrong in intentionally transgressing the Buddha's ordinances
is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 68/434)
Consorting, joining in communion, or lying down under the same roof
with a bhikkhu who has been suspended and not been restored
knowing that such is the case is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 69/437)
Supporting, receiving services from, consorting, or lying down
under the same roof with an expelled novice knowing that he has
been expelled is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 70/439)
Saying something as a ploy to excuse oneself from training under a
training rule when being admonished by another bhikkhu for a breach of
the rule is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 71/442)
Criticizing the discipline in the presence of another bhikkhu, in
hopes of preventing its study, is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 72/443)
Using half-truths to deceive others into believing that one is
ignorant of the rules in the Patimokkha, after one has already heard
the Patimokkha in full three times, and a formal act exposing one's
deceit has been brought against one, is a pacittiya offense. (Pc
73/445)
Giving a blow to another bhikkhu, when motivated by anger, is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 74/446)
Making a threatening gesture against another bhikkhu when motivated
by anger is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 75/448)
Saying to another bhikkhu that he may have broken a rule
unknowingly, simply for the purpose of causing him anxiety, is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 77/449)
Eavesdropping on bhikkhus involved in an argument over an issue
with the intention of using what they say against them is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 78/451)
Complaining about a formal act of the Community to which one gave
one's consent if one knows that the act was carried out in
accordance with the rule is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 79/452)
Getting up and leaving a meeting of the Community in the midst of a
valid formal act without having first given one's consent to the
act and with the intention of invalidating it is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 80/455)
After participating in a formal act of the Community giving
robe-cloth to a Community official: Complaining that the Community
acted out of favoritism is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 81/458)
When the Community is dealing formally with an issue, the full
Community must be present, as must all the individuals involved in the
issue; the proceedings must follow the patterns set out in the Dhamma
and Vinaya. (As 1/511)
If the Community unanimously believes that a bhikkhu is innocent of
a charge made against him, they may declare him innocent on the basis
of his memory of the events. (As 2/512)
If the Community unanimously believes that a bhikkhu was insane
while committing offenses against the rules, they may absolve him of
any responsibility for the offenses. (As 3/513)
If a bhikkhu commits an offense, he should willingly undergo the
appropriate penalty in line with what he actually did and the actual
seriousness of the offense. (As 4/513)
If an important dispute cannot be settled by a unanimous decision,
it should be submitted to a vote. The opinion of the majority, if in
accord with the Dhamma and Vinaya, is then considered decisive. (As
5/513)
If a bhikkhu admits to an offense only after being interrogated in
a formal meeting, the Community should carry out an act of censure
against him, rescinding it only when he has mended his ways. (As
6/514)
If, in the course of a dispute, both sides act in ways unworthy of
contemplatives, and the sorting out of the penalties would only
prolong the dispute, the Community as a whole may make a blanket
confession of its light offenses. (As 7/515)
The Etiquette of a Contemplative
Training a novice or lay person to
recite passages of Dhamma by rote is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 4/267)
Lying down at the same time, in the same lodging, with a novice or
layman for more than three nights running is a pacittiya offense. (Pc
5/271)
Digging soil or commanding that it be dug is a pacittiya offense.
(Pc 10/292)
Intentionally cutting, burning, or killing a living plant is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 11/294)
Handing food or medicine to a mendicant ordained outside of
Buddhism is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 41/381)
When on almsround with another bhikkhu: Sending him back so that he
won't witness any misconduct one is planning to indulge in is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 42/383)
To sit down intruding on a man and a woman in their private
quarters when one or both are sexually aroused, and when another
bhikkhu is not present is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 43/384)
Watching a field army or similar large military force on
active duty, unless there is a suitable reason, is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 48/397)
Staying more than three consecutive nights with an army on active
duty even when one has a suitable reason to be there is a
pacittiya offense. (Pc 49/399)
Going to a battlefield, a roll call, an array of the troops in
battle formation, or to see a review of the battle units while one is
staying with an army is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 50/400)
Taking an intoxicant is a pacittiya offense regardless of whether
one is aware or not that it is an intoxicant. (Pc 51/402)
Tickling another bhikkhu is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 52/405)
Jumping and swimming in the water for fun is a pacittiya offense.
(Pc 53/406)
Attempting to frighten another bhikkhu is a pacittiya offense. (Pc
55/409)
Lighting a fire to warm oneself or having it lit when one
does not need the warmth for one's health is a pacittiya offense. (Pc
56/409)
Bathing more frequently than once a fortnight when residing in the
middle Ganges Valley, except on certain occasions, is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 57/411)
Hiding another bhikkhu's bowl, robe, sitting cloth, needle case, or
belt or having it hid either as a joke or with the purpose of
annoying him, is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 60/419)
Traveling by arrangement with a group of thieves from one village
to another knowing that they are thieves is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 66/430)
Entering a king's sleeping chamber unannounced, when both the king
and queen are in the chamber, is a pacittiya offense. (Pc 83/461)
Picking up a valuable, or having it picked up, with the intent of
putting it in safe keeping for the owner except when one finds it
in a monastery or in a dwelling one is visiting is a pacittiya
offense. (Pc 84/463)
A .... Anguttara Nikaya
As .... Adhikarana-samatha
Ay .... Aniyata
BD .... Book of Discipline
Cv .... Cullavagga
D .... Digha Nikaya
Dhp .... Dhammapada
M .... Majjhima Nikaya
Mv .... Mahavagga
NP .... Nissaggiya Pacittiya
Pc .... Pacittiya
Pd .... Patidesaniya
Pr .... Parajika
Pv .... Parivara
S .... Samyutta Nikaya
Sg .... Sanghadisesa
Sk .... Sekhiya
Vism .... Visuddhi Magga
Numbers in the references to Mv, Cv, and Pv denote
chapter, section and sub-section; in the references to D and M,
discourse (sutta); in the references to S and A, section (samyutta
or nipata) and discourse; in the references to Dhp, verse; in the
references to Vism, chapter and paragraph.
Copyright © 1994 Thanissaro Bhikkhu. Access to
Insight edition © 1994 For free distribution. This work may be
republished, reformatted, reprinted, and redistributed in any
medium. It is the author's wish, however, that any such
republication and redistribution be made available to the public on
a free and unrestricted basis and that translations and other
derivative works be clearly marked as such.
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