compassion doeth not judge.

.if a man needth shelter and food for a thousand nights that is what must be 
done in the name of universal love and compassion.

..none of us know another man's journey...

merle

  
On 12/10/2012 6:00 PM, Merle Lester wrote: 
his understandable decision NOT to 'care for and share with' every wandering 
rice-bag who wanted to live off the charity of those who supported the 
monastery."RAF..... Please explain what you mean by this RAF...?....    
What it means is that the abbots of religious institutions did not always 
feed/shelter every wandering mendicant who showed up at the gate; those they 
did feed and shelter were expected to move on within a few days at the most, 
and often after one night and a meal or two. THEY coined the term "rice-bags" 
for those who took advantage of the religious institutions to live without 
doing much work and/or not being serious about their efforts to attain 
realization. The story to which I referred illustrates this; the gatekeeper 
closed the gate on a wandering monk and broke his leg. It is my contention that 
this was not done by the dharma-master, out of a desire to shock him into 
kensho, but by an ordinary monk (or perhaps even a servant) as part of a policy 
(which would have been set by an authority of that institution) not to let 
every wandering monk gain entry.

RAF


 

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