Dhammapada Stories - The Great Pretenders
Once there was a Time of great hardship in the
country and the monks who were spending the vassa
near a poor village found themselves with very
little lay support.
In order to get enough food, the bhikkhus addressed
each other in such a way that the people in the
village, never suspecting that they would be
deceived by monks, believed that they had attained
sainthood. And as the news of them spread, they
gained even more respect.
So the villagers, although themselves struggling to
survive, mangaged to pool together enough food to
keep their “saints” well fed and comfortable. When
the vassa came to a close and all the bhikkhus who
had spent their vassa away from the Buddha went back
to pay their respects to him, as was the custom, the
well-fed bhikkhus stood out like a sore thumb.
Everyone else looked so thin and pale next to them.
The Buddha asked the healthy bhikkhus how they had
managed to do so well when the other monks could
barely get by. The bhikkhus, expecting praise for
their cleverness, recounted how they had misled the
poor villagers into believing that they were saints.
“And are you really saints?”
the Buddha asked them, knowing full well that they
were not. When they admitted that they were not, the
Buddha warned them that to accept requisites from
lay supporters, if they did not truly merit them,
was indeed very unwholesome action and should be
refrained from.
It is better for one to eat a red hot lump of
iron burning like a flame than to eat almsfood
offered by the pious if one is without morality and
unrestrained in thought, word, and deed.
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