Thursday, July 23, 2020
A Religeon of Priests
When they discussed the precepts, Upali was the
head of the group, and he recited what Buddha had said. When the Sutras were
discussed, Ananda, who was Buddha's jisha, discussed what Buddha said. In that
way, they set up some teaching: “This is what Buddha told us, and these are the
precepts Buddha set up.” Naturally, they became rigidly attached to the
teaching, and, of course, those who studied this kind of teaching had a special
position among Buddhists. Buddha's disciples were classified in four groups: laymen,
laywomen, nuns, and priests. And the distinction between laymen and laywomen
and priests and nuns became more and more strict. Buddhism at that time already
had become a religion of priests, not ordinary people or laymen. ----------------------------- Excerpt from Shunryu Suzuki lecture - 68-10-21 as found on shunryusuzuki.com. Edited by DC - Going through Suzuki lectures and posting anything that can stand on its own. Not looking for zingers or "the best of." I find that following these excerpts daily provides another way to experience Suzuki's teaching. - DC