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Thursday, March 8, 2012

Ovada Patimokkha: Heart of Buddhism


(Attribution:  Sacca)
The Ovada Patimokkha is often associated with Magha Puja - but is actually applicable on all days, and during all moments.

It is not so much a rulebook for monastic training as it is a distillation of what’s really important in Buddhism.  Just as the 613 original Hebrew Bible precepts were given unto Moses as Ten Commandments – and just as Jesus then further distilled these Ten into Two (“Love God” and “Love one another”) – so, too, did Buddha
offer His Heart during a Magha Puja sermon called the Ovada Patimokkha.

Wikipedia reports that these Magha Puja teachings were first shared on a full-moon day nine months after Buddha’s Enlightenment.  On that blessed occasion (approximately 2500 years ago), 1250 Arhantas (advanced spiritual practitioners – each of whom had been ordained by Buddha) were spontaneously drawn to attend this key Ovada Patimokkha sermon.

The essence of what they heard that day went something like this:  Cease to do evil, cultivate that which is good, purify the heart.  This is the Way of the Awakened Ones

Buddha also offered this brief explanation:  Patient endurance is the ultimate asceticism.  Profound liberation… is the supreme goal.  A renunciate should not oppress anyone.

His pithy sermon then came to this swift conclusion:  Not insulting, not harming, cultivating restraint with respect for the training, modesty in eating and contentment with one’s dwelling place, devotion to mindful intent: this is the teaching of the Buddha.

Short - but when faithfully undertaken, incredibly sweet…

Resources

http://www.zhaxizhuoma.net/DHARMA/Tripitaka/OvadaPatimokkha.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magha_Puja

Copyright March 8, 2012 by Linda Van Slyke









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