- གནས་པར་མི་བགྱི་བ།
- གནས་པར་མི་བགྱིད་པ།
- gnas par mi bgyi ba
- gnas par mi bgyid pa
- asaṃvāsika
- Term
- denied the common living
- གནས་པར་མི་བགྱིད་པ།
- gnas par mi bgyid pa
- asaṃvāsika
A monk is denied the “common living” (Tib. gnas pa; Skt. saṃvāsa) after incurring a “defeat” (Tib. phas pham pa; Skt. pārājikā). Here, “common living” denotes a monk’s right to a share of the saṅgha’s resources, beginning with dwellings, food, robes, and medicine. A monk who incurs a defeat may request and be “given a training” (Tib. bslab pa byin pa; Skt. śikṣādatta), which allows him to share in the saṅgha’s common living but in a position subordinate to monks and nuns. If a defeated monk does not request and receive a training, he forfeits his right to the “common living” and hence his livelihood in the saṅgha.
A monk is denied the “common living” (Tib. gnas pa; Skt. saṃvāsa) after incurring a “defeat” (Tib. phas pham pa; Skt. pārājikā). Here, “common living” denotes a monk’s right to a share of the saṅgha’s resources, beginning with dwellings, food, robes, and medicine. A monk who incurs a defeat may request and be “given a training” (Tib. bslab pa byin pa; Skt. śikṣādatta), which allows him to share in the saṅgha’s common living but in a position subordinate to monks and nuns. If a defeated monk does not request and receive a training, he forfeits his right to the “common living” and hence his livelihood in the saṅgha.