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Dana
The Practice of Giving
Selected essays edited by
Bhikkhu Bodhi
Giving in the Pali Canon
By Lily de Silva
Dana, giving, is extolled in the Pali Canon as a great virtue.
It is, in fact, the beginning of the path to liberation. When
the Buddha preaches to a newcomer he starts his graduated sermon
with an exposition on the virtues of giving (danakatha,
Vin.i,15,18). Of the three bases for the performance of
meritorious deeds (punnakiriyavatthu), giving is the first, the
other two being virtue and mental culture (A.iv,241). It is also
the first of the ten paramita perfected by a Buddha. Therefore,
on the march towards liberation as an Arahant or a Buddha, one
initially has to practice dana.
Function of Giving
Giving is of prime importance in the Buddhist scheme of mental
purification because it is the best weapon against greed (lobha),
the first of the three unwholesome motivational roots (akusalamula).
Greed is wrapt up with egoism and selfishness, since we hold our
personalities and our possessions as "I" and "mine." Giving
helps make egoism thaw: it is the antidote to cure the illness
of egoism and greed. "Overcome the taint of greed and practice
giving," exhorts the Devatasamyutta (S.i,18). The Dhammapada
admonishes us to conquer miserliness with generosity (jine
kadariyam danena, Dhp. 223).
It is difficult to exercise this virtue of giving proportionate
to the intensity of one's greed and selfishness. As such the
Devatasamyutta equates giving to a battle (danan ca yuddhan ca
samanam ahu, S.i,20). One has to fight the evil forces of greed
before one can make up one's mind to give away something dear
and useful to oneself. The Latukikopama Sutta illustrates how a
man lacking in spiritual strength finds it hard to give up a
thing he has been used to (M.i, 449). A small quail can come to
death when it gets entangled even in a useless rotten creeper.
Though weak, a rotten creeper is a great bond for the small
bird. But even an iron chain is not too big a bond for a strong
elephant. Similarly, a poor wretched man of weak character would
find it difficult to part with his shabby meager belongings,
while a strong-charactered king will even give up a kingdom once
convinced of the dangers of greed.
Miserliness is not the only hindrance to giving. Carelessness
and ignorance of the working of kamma and survival after death
are equally valid causes (macchera ca pamada ca evam danam na
diyati, S.i,18). If one knows the moral advantages of giving,
one will be vigilant to seize opportunities to practice this
great virtue. Once the Buddha said that if people only knew the
value of giving as he does, they would not take a single meal
without sharing their food with others (It.p,18).
Qualities of the Donor
The suttas (e.g. D.i,137) employ a number of terms to describe
the qualities of a donor. He is a man with faith (saddha), he
has faith in the nobility of a morally sound life, in the
teachings of kamma and survival after death. He believes in the
possibility of the moral and spiritual perfection of man. In
short, he is not a materialist, and he has faith in the Buddha,
the Dhamma, and the Sangha. He is not merely a giver (dayako),
he is a lordly giver (danapati). The commentary explains the
concept of "lordly giver" in the following words: "He who
himself enjoys delicious things but gives to others what is not
delicious is a donor who is a slave to the gifts he gives. He
who gives things of the same quality as he himself enjoys is one
who is like a friend of the gift. He who satisfies himself with
whatever he can get but gives delicacies
to others is a lordly giver, a senior and a master of the gifts
given."
The donor is also described as one who keeps an open house for
the needy (anavatadvaro). He is like a wellspring (opanabhuto)
for recluses, Brahmins, the destitute, wayfarers, wanderers and
beggars. Being such a one he does meritorious deeds. He is
munificent (muttacago) and is interested in sharing his
blessings with others (danasamvibhagarato). He is a
philanthropist who understands the difficulties of the poor (vadannu).
He is open-handed and is ready to comply with another's request
(payatapani). He is one fit to be asked from (yacayogo). He
takes delight in distributing gifts to the needy (vossaggarato),
and has a heart bent on giving (cagaparibhavitacitto). Such are
the epithets used in the suttas to describe the qualities of the
liberal-minded.
A noble giver is one who is happy before, during and after
giving (A.iii,336). Before giving he is happy anticipating the
opportunity to exercise his generosity. While giving he is happy
that he is making another happy by fulfilling a need. After
giving he is satisfied that he has done a good deed. The suttas
list generosity as one of the important qualities that go to
make a gentleman (A.iv,220). The Buddha compares the man who
righteously earns his wealth and gives of it to the needy to a
man who has both eyes, whereas the one who only earns wealth but
does no merit is like a one-eyed man (A.i,129-30). The wealthy
man who enjoys his riches by himself without sharing is said to
be digging his own grave (Sn. 102).
The Donations
Practically anything useful can be given as a gift. The Niddesa
(ND.2, 523) gives a list of fourteen items that are fit to be
given for charity. They are robes, alms-food, dwelling places,
medicine and other requisites for the sick, food, drink, cloths,
vehicles, garlands, perfume, unguent, beds, houses and lamps. It
is not necessary to have much to practice generosity, for one
can give according to one's means. Gifts given from one's meager
resources are considered very valuable (appasma dakkhina dinna
sahassena samam mita, S.i,18; dajjappasmim pi yacito, Dhp. 224).
If a person leads a righteous life even though he ekes out a
bare existence on gleanings, looks after his family according to
his means, but makes it a point to give from his limited stores,
his generosity is worth more than a thousand sacrifices (S.i,
19-20). Alms given from wealth righteously earned is greatly
praised by the Buddha (A.iii,354; It.p.66; A.iii,45-46). A
householder who does so is said to be one who is lucky here and
hereafter. In the Magha Sutta of the Sutta Nipata (Sn.p.87) the
Buddha highly appreciates Magha who says that he earns through
righteous means and liberally gives of it to the needy.
Even if one gives a small amount with a heart full of faith one
can gain happiness hereafter. The Vimanavattha supplies ample
examples. According to the Acamadayikavimanavatthu, the alms
given consisted of a little rice crust, but as it was given with
great devotion to an eminent Arahant, the reward was rebirth in
a magnificent celestial mansion. The Dakkhainavibhanga Sutta
states that an offering is purified on account of the giver when
the giver is virtuous, on account of the recipient when the
recipient is virtuous, on account of both the giver and the
recipient if both are virtuous, by none if both happen to be
impious. Dhammadana, the dissemination of the knowledge of the
Dhamma, is said to excel all other forms of giving (sabbadanam
dhammadanam jinati, Dhp.354).
The Anguttara Nikaya mentions five great gifts which have been
held in high esteem by noble-minded men from ancient times
(A.iv,246). Their value was not doubted in ancient times, it is
not doubted at present, nor will it be doubted in the future.
The wise recluses and Brahmins had the highest respect for them.
These great givings comprise the meticulous observance of the
Five Precepts. By doing so one gives fearlessness, love and
benevolence to all beings. If one human being can give security
and freedom from fear to others by his behavior, that is the
highest form of dana one can give, not only to mankind, but to
all living beings.
The Donee
The suttas also describe the person to whom alms should be given
(A.iii, 41). Guests, travelers and the sick should be treated
with hospitality and due consideration. During famines the needy
should be liberally entertained. The virtuous should be first
entertained with the first fruits of fresh crops. There is a
recurrent phrase in the suttas (D.i, 137; ii,354; iii,76)
describing those who are particularly in need of public
generosity. They are recluses (samana), Brahmins (brahmana),
destitutes (kapana), wayfarers (addhika), wanderers (vanibbaka)
and beggars (yacaka). The recluses and Brahmins are religious
persons who do not earn wages. They give spiritual guidance to
the laity and the laity is expected to support them. The poor
need the help of the rich to survive and the rich become
spiritually richer by helping the poor. At a time when transport
facilities were meager and amenities for travelers were not
adequately organized, the public had to step in to help the
wayfarer. Buddhism considers it a person's moral obligation to
give assistance to all these types of people.
In the Anguttara Nikaya the Buddha describes, with sacrificial
terminology, three types of fires that should be tended with
care and honor (A.iv,44). They are ahuneyyaggi, gahapataggi and
dakkhineyyaggi. The Buddha explained that ahuneyyaggi means
one's parents, and they should be honored and cared for.
Gahapataggi means one's wife and children, employees and
dependents. Dakkineyyaggi represents religious persons who have
either attained the goal of Arahantship or have embarked on a
course of training for the elimination of negative mental
traits. All these should be cared for and looked after as one
would tend a sacrificial fire. According to the Mahamangala
Sutta, offering hospitality to one's relatives is one of the
great auspicious deeds a layperson can perform (Sn. 262-63).
King Kosala once asked the Buddha to whom alms should be given
(S.i,98). The Buddha replied that alms should be given to those
by giving to whom one becomes happy. Then the king asked another
question: To whom should alms be offered to obtain great fruit?
The Buddha discriminated the two as different questions and
replied that alms offered to the virtuous bears great fruit. He
further clarified that offerings yield great fruit when made to
virtuous recluses who have eliminated the five mental hindrances
(nivarana) and cultivated moral habits, concentration, wisdom,
emancipation and knowledge and vision of emancipation (sila,
samadhi, panna, vimutti, vimuttinanadassana).
In the Sakkasamyutta (S.i,233) Sakka asked the same question
from the Buddha: Gifts given to whom bring the greatest result?
The Buddha replied that what is given to the Sangha bears great
results. Here the Buddha specifies that what he means by "Sangha"
is the community of those upright noble individuals who have
entered the path and who have established themselves in the
fruit of saintship, and who are endowed with morality,
concentration, and wisdom. It is important to note that "Sangha"
according to the Vinaya means a sufficient group of monks to
represent the Order of monks for various ecclesiastical purposes
(Vin. i,319). But in the suttas "Sangha" means the four pairs of
noble individuals or the eight particular individuals (cattari
purisayugani, attha purisapuggala), i.e., those who are on the
path to streamentry, once-returning, non-returning, and
Arahantship, and those who have obtained the fruits thereof. The
Magha Sutta (Sn.p.86) gives a detailed account of the virtues of
the Arahant to show to whom alms should be offered by one
desiring merit. The Brahmanasamyutta (S.i,175) maintains that
offerings bear greatest results when they are made to those who
know their previous lives, who have seen heavens and hells, who
have put an end to birth and who have realized ultimate
knowledge. Thus the Sangha comprising morally perfect, worthy
personages as described in the suttas constitutes the field of
merit (punnakkhetta, M.i,447). Just as seeds sown in fertile
well-watered fields yields bountiful crops, alms given to the
virtuous established on the Noble Eightfold Path yield great
results (A.iv,238; i,162). The Dhammapada maintains that fields
have weeds as their blemish; lust, hatred, delusion and desire
are the blemishes of people and therefore what is given to those
who have eliminated those blemishes bears great fruit (Dhp.
356-59). The results of generosity are measured more by the
quality of the field of merit represented by the recipient than
by the quantity and value of the gift given.
The Anguttara Nikaya (A.iv,392-95) records a fabulous
alms-giving conducted by the Bodhisattva when he was born as a
Brahmin named Velama. Lavish gifts of silver, gold, elephants,
cows, carriages, etc., not to mention food, drink and clothing,
were distributed among everybody who came forward to receive
them. But this open-handed munificence was not very valuable as
far as merit was concerned because there were no worthy
recipients. It is said to be more meritorious to feed one person
with right view, a stream-enterer (sotapanna), than to give
great alms such as that given by Velama. It is more meritorious
to feed one once-returner than a hundred stream-enterers. Next
in order come non-returners, Arahants, Paccekabuddhas and
Sammasambuddhas. Feeding the Buddha and the Sangha is more
meritorious than feeding the Buddha alone. It is even more
meritorious to construct a monastery for the general use of the
Sangha of the four quarters of all times. Taking refuge in the
Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha is better still. Abiding by the Five
Precepts is even more valuable. But better still is the
cultivation of metta, lovingkindness, and best of all, the
insight into impermanence, which leads to Nibbana.
The Motivation for Giving
The suttas record various motives for exercising generosity. The
Anguttara Nikaya (A.iv,236) enumerates the following eight
motives:
1. Asajja danam deti: one gives with annoyance, or as a way of
offending the recipient, or with the idea of insulting him.[5]
2. Bhaya danam deti: fear also can motivate a person to make an
offering.
3. Adasi me ti danam deti: one gives in return for a favor done
to oneself in the past.
4. Dassati me ti danam deti one also may give with the hope of
getting a similar favor for oneself in the future.
5. Sadhu danan ti danam deti: one gives because giving is
considered good.
6. Aham pacami, ime ne pacanti, na arahami pacanto apacantanam
adatun ti danam deti: "I cook, they do not cook. It is not
proper for me who cooks not to give to those who do not cook."
Some give urged by such altruistic motives.
7. Imam me danam dadato kalyano kittisaddo abbhuggacchati ti
danam deti: some give alms to gain a good reputation.
8. Cittalankara-cittaparikkarattham danam deti: still others
give alms to adorn and beautify the mind.
Favoritism (chanda), ill will (dosa) and delusion (moha) are
also listed as motives for giving. Sometimes alms are given for
the sake of maintaining a long-standing family tradition. Desire
to be reborn in heaven after death is another dominant motive.
Giving pleases some and they give with the idea of winning a
happy frame of mind (A.iv, 236).
But it is maintained in the suttas (A.iv,62) that alms should be
given without any expectations (na sapekho danam deti). Nor
should alms be given with attachment to the recipient. If one
gives with the idea of accumulating things for later use, that
is an inferior act of giving. If one gives with the hope of
enjoying the result thereof after death, that is also an
inferior act of giving. The only valid motive for giving should
be the motive of adorning the mind, to rid the mind of the
ugliness of greed and selfishness.
The Manner of Giving
The suttas (e.g. A.iii,172) lay much emphasis on the manner of
giving. The attitude of the donor in the act of giving makes a
world of difference for the goodwill between the donor and
recipient irrespective of whether the gift given is big or
small. Sakkaccam danam deti: alms should be given in such a way
that the donee does not feel humiliated, belittled or hurt. The
needy ask for something with a sense of embarrassment, and it is
the duty of the donor not to make him feel more embarrassed and
make his already heavy burden still heavier. Cittikatva danam
deti: alms should be given with due consideration and respect.
The recipient should be make to feel welcome. It is when a gift
is given with such warmth that a cohesive mutually enriching
friendliness emerges between the donor and donee. Sahattha deti:
one should give with one's own hand. The personal involvement in
the act of giving is greatly beneficial. This promotes rapport
between the donor and donee and that is the social value of
giving. Society is welded in unity with care and concern for one
another when generosity is exercised with a warm sense of
personal involvement. Na apaviddham deti: one should not give as
alms what is only fit to be thrown away. One should be careful
to give only what is useful and appropriate. Na
anagamanaditthiko deti: one should not give in such a callous
manner so as to make the donee not feel like coming again.
Giving with faith (saddhaya deti) is much extolled in the suttas
(A.iii,172). Especially when offering alms to the clergy one
should do so with due deference and respect, taking delight in
the opportunity one has got to serve them. Once should also give
at the proper time to meet a dire need (kalena deti). Such
timely gifts are most valuable as they relieve the anxiety and
stress of the supplicant. One should give with altruistic
concerns, with the sole intention of helping another in
difficulty (anuggahacitto danam deti). In the act of giving one
should take care not to hurt oneself or another (attanan ca
paran ca anupahacca danam deti). Giving with understanding and
discretion is praised by the Buddha (viceyyadanam
sugatappasattham). If a gift contributes to the well-being of
the donee it is wise to give. But if the gift is detrimental to
the welfare of the donee one should be careful to exercise one's
discretion. Giving as described above is highly commended as
noble giving (sappurisadana). More than what is given, it is the
manner of giving that makes a gift valuable. One may not be able
to afford a lavish gift, but one can always make the recipient
feel cared for by the manner of giving.
The Value of Giving
Many suttas enumerate the various benefits of giving. Giving
promotes social cohesion and solidarity. It is the best means of
bridging the psychological gap, much more than the material
economic gap, that exists between haves and have-nots. The Magha
Sutta maintains that hates gets eliminated when one is
established in generosity (Sn. 506). The one with a generous
heart earns the love of others and many associate with him
(A.iii,40). Giving also cements friendships (Sn. 187).
It is maintained that if a person makes an aspiration to be born
in a particular place after giving alms, the aspiration will be
fulfilled only if he is virtuous, but not otherwise (A.iv,239).
According to one sutta (A.iv,241-43), if one practices giving
and morality to a very limited degree and has no idea about
meditation, one obtains an unfortunate birth in the human world.
One who performs meritorious deeds such as giving and morality
to a considerable degree, but does not understand anything about
meditation, meets a fortunate human birth. But those who
practice giving and morality to a great extent without any
knowledge of meditation find rebirth in one of the heavens. They
excel other deities in the length of life, beauty, pleasure,
fame and the five strands of sense pleasure.
The Anguttara Nikaya (A.iv,79) enumerates a number of
this-worldly benefits of giving. The generous person, and not
the miser, wins the sympathy of others. Arahants approach him,
accept alms and preach to him first. A good reputation spreads
about him. He can attend any assembly with confidence and
dignity. He is reborn in a state of happiness after death.
Another sutta (A.iii,41) adds that a generous person wins
popularity; people of noble character associate with him and he
has the satisfaction of having fulfilled a layperson's duties (gihidhamma
anapeto hoti).
It is said that an almsgiver bestows on others life, beauty,
happiness, strength and intelligence. Having bestowed them on
others, he becomes a beneficiary of them himself (A.iii,42). The
same idea is expressed by the succinct statement that one reaps
what one sows (yadisam vapate bijam tadisam harate phalam,
S.i,227). Giving with faith results in the attainment of riches
and beauty whenever the fruition of the gift occurs. By giving
alms with due deference one gains, in addition, children, wives,
subordinates and servants who are obedient, dutiful and
understanding. By giving alms at the proper time not only does
one obtain great wealth but also timely fulfillment of needs. By
giving alms with the genuine desire to help others, one gains
great wealth and the inclination to enjoy the best of sense
pleasures. By giving alms without hurting oneself and others,
one gains security from dangers such as fire, floods, thieves,
kings and unloved heirs (A. iii,172).
Alms given to recluses and Brahmins who follow the Noble
Eightfold Path yield wonderful results just as seeds sown on
fertile, well-prepared, well-watered fields produce abundant
crops (A.iv,238). Alms given without any expectations whatsoever
can lead to birth in the Brahma-world, at the end of which one
may become a non-returner (A.iv,62).
The Dakkhinavibhanga Sutta enumerates a list of persons to whom
alms can be offered and the merit accruing there-from in
ascending order. A thing given to an animal brings a reward a
hundredfold. A gift given to an ordinary person of poor moral
habit yields a reward a thousand-fold; a gift given to a
virtuous person yields a reward a hundred thousand-fold. When a
gift is given to a person outside the dispensation of Buddhism
who is without attachment to sense pleasures, the yield is a
hundred thousand-fold of crores. When a gift is given to one on
the path to stream-entry the yield is incalculable and
immeasurable. So what can be said of a gift given to a
stream-enterer, a once-returner, a non-returner, an Arahant, a
Paccekabuddha, and a Fully Enlightened Buddha?
The same sutta emphasizes that a gift given to the Sangha as a
group is more valuable than a gift offered to a single monk in
his individual capacity. It is said that in the distant future
there will be Buddhist monks who wear only a yellow collar as a
distinguishing clerical mark, who are immoral and of evil
character. If a gift is offered even to such monks in the name
of the Order, it yields much more merit than a gift given to a
monk in his individual capacity. But it should be observed that
this statement is contradictory to ideas expressed elsewhere,
that what is given to the virtuous is greatly beneficial but not
what is given to the immoral. It is evident here that a later
interpolation cannot be altogether ruled out. The Buddha once
explained that it is a meritorious act even to throw away the
water after washing one's plate with the generous thought: "May
the particles of food in the washing water be food to the
creatures on the ground." When that is so, how much more
meritorious it is to feed a human being! But the sutta hastens
to add that it is more meritorious to feed a virtuous person
(A.i,161).
Another sutta (A.iii,336) maintains that it is not possible to
estimate the amount of merit that accrues when an offering is
endowed with six particular characteristics. Three of the
characteristics belong to the donor while three belong to the
donee. The donor should be happy at the thought of giving prior
to making the offering. He should be pleased at the time of
making the offering, and he should be satisfied after the
offering is made. Thus the nobility of thought -- without a
trace of greed before, during and after the offering -- makes a
gift truly great. The recipients also should be free from lust,
hatred and delusion, or they should have embarked on a course of
training for the elimination of these mental depravities. When
an almsgiving is endowed with these qualities of the donor and
donee, the merit is said to be as
immeasurable as the waters in the ocean.
Once Visakha gave a learned explanation of the benefits she
expected from her munificence when the Buddha questioned her as
to what she saw as the advantages of her great generosity
(Vin.i,293-94). She said that when she hears that a particular
monk or nun has attained any of the fruits of recluse-ship, and
if that monk or nun has visited Savatthi, she would be certain
that he or she has partaken of the offerings she constantly
makes. When she reflects that she has contributed in some
measure to his or her spiritual distinction, great delight (pamujja)
arises in her. Joy (piti) arises in the mind that is delighted.
When the mind is joyful the body relaxes (kayo passambhissati).
When the body relaxes a sense of ease (sukha) is experienced
which helps the mind to be concentrated (cittam samadhiyissati).
That will help the development of the spiritual faculties (indriyabhavana),
spiritual powers (balahbavana), and factors of enlightenment (bojjhangabhavana).
These are the advantages she hopes for by her munificence. The
Buddha was so pleased with her erudite reply that he exclaimed,
"Sadhu sadhu sadhu" in approbation. It is evident that giving
alone is not sufficient for one to make an end of suffering.
Anathapindika, who was pronounced by the Buddha as the foremost
among almsgivers, became only a stream-enterer. It is
specifically said that dana has to be fortified by sila,
morality, if it is to produce good results. Though Anathapindika
practiced unblemished virtue, it is nowhere stated that he
practiced mental culture or meditation (bhavana). Therefore, in
spite of all his magnanimous munificence, he had to remain a
streamenterer. The Ghatikara Sutta (M.ii,52) records a unique
almsgiving where even the donor was not present. Chatikara the
potter was the chief benefactor of the Buddha Kassapa. He was a
non-returner who did not want to enter the Order as he was
looking after his blind, aged parents. He had greatly won the
trust of the Buddha by the nobility of his conduct and devotion.
One day the Buddha Kassapa went to his house on his alms round
but Ghatikara was out. He asked the blind parents where the
potter had gone. They replied that he had gone out, but invited
the Buddha to serve himself from the pots and pans and partake
of a meal. The Buddha did so. When Ghatikara returned and
inquired who had taken from the food, the parents informed him
that the Buddha had come and they had requested him to help
himself to a meal. Ghatikara was overjoyed to hear this as he
felt that the Buddha had so much trust in him. It is said that
the joy and happiness (pitisukha) he experienced did not leave
him for two weeks, and the parents' joy and happiness did not
wane for a whole week.
The same sutta reports that on another occasion the roof of the
Buddha Kassapa's monastery started leaking. He sent the monks to
Ghatikara's house to fetch some straw, but Ghatikara was out at
the time. Monks came back and said that there was no straw
available there except what was on the roof. The Buddha asked
the monks to get the straw from the roof there. Monks started
stripping the straw from the roof and the aged parents of
Ghatikara asked who was removing the straw. The monks explained
the matter and the parents said, "Please do take all the straw."
When Ghatikara heard about this he was deeply moved by the trust
the Buddha reposed in him. The joy and happiness that arose in
him did not leave him for a full fortnight and that of his
parents did not subside for a week. For three months Ghatikara's
house remained without a roof with only the sky above, but it is
said that the rain did not wet the house. Such was the great
piety and generosity of Ghatikara.
As mentioned at the beginning of this essay, dana is the first
of the meritorious deeds. It is also one of the four benevolent
ways of treating others (cattari sangahavatthuni), A.iv,219).
But is noteworthy that in the lists of virtues required for
liberation such as those included among the thirty-seven
requisites of enlightenment (bodhipakkhiya dhamma), dana never
occurs as a required virtue. Instead of dana, caga or generosity
is included in some of the lists, such as the five qualities --
faith virtue, learning, generosity and wisdom. Perhaps there is
a slight difference between dana and caga when considered as
virtues ingrained in the mind. Dana is the very practical act of
giving, caga is the generous attitude ingrained in the mind by
the repeated practice of dana. The word caga literally means
giving up, abandonment, and it is an indication that the
close-fitted selfish grip one has on one's possessions is
loosened by caga. It is possible to give alms even out of
negative motives such as favoritism (chanda), ill will (dosa),
fear (bhaya), delusion (moha), desire for a good reputation,
etc., but caga is the positive virtue of a generous disposition.
Buddhism teaches a gradual process of emptying oneself. It
starts with giving away one's external possessions. When the
generous dispositional trait sets in and is fortified by the
deepening insight into the real nature of things, one grows
disenchanted with sense pleasures (nibbindati). At this stage
one gives up household life and seeks ordination. Next comes the
emptying of sensory inputs by guarding the sense doors. Through
meditation (bhavana) one empties oneself of deep-seated
defilements and fills oneself with positive noble qualities. But
this whole process of bailing out negativities starts with dana,
the practice of giving.
May the merits of this gift
of the Dhamma
be shared by all beings! |