Dhammapada Stories - The Self Pampered Monk
Once there was a Man who lived a life free from
any financial worries. After his wife passed away,
he decided to leave home and become a monk. Before
he received his ordination, however, he built for
himself a shelter that included a room to store
beans, cooking oil, butter and other provisions and
a kitchen where his servants could prepare his
favorite dishes.
He even brought his own furniture so he could sit
and sleep in comfort. Seeing him live such a
luxurious life, the other monks went and reported
him to the Buddha. The Buddha then sent for the rich
monk and asked him why he had brought so many things
to the monastery with him. “Haven’t I been teaching
you to live the simple life?” the Buddha asked.
The rich monk got angry. He took off his upper robe
and threw it to the ground, standing half naked in
front of the Buddha. “Is this how you advise me to
live?” he smirked, daring to challenge the Buddha.
The Buddha admonished the self-pampered monk and
told him that even while he was an evil spirit in a
previous lifetime, he still had some sense of shame.
Now, as a monk, however, he did not seem to have any
at all.
In addition, the Buddha told him that discarding his
robe did not make him an austere bhikkhu. It was his
ignorance he had to discard, for it was not by one’s
external appearance that one became holy.
The bhikkhu realized his mistake and asked the
Buddha for forgiveness. He then corrected his ways
and lived according to the Buddha’s admonitions.
Going naked, having matted hair, covering oneself
with mud or dust, fasting sleeping on bare ground,
or squatting (in penance) cannot purify a being if
he has not yet overcome ignorance.
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