The Chapter on Lifting Restrictions
Repetition
Toh 1-3
Degé Kangyur, vol. 1 (’dul ba, ka), folios 221.b–237.b
Imprint
First published 2024
Current version v 1.0.10 (2024)
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Table of Contents
Summary
The Chapter on Lifting Restrictions is the third of The Chapters on Monastic Discipline’s seventeen chapters. It recounts the origins, timing, and procedures for a rite—held at the end of the rains retreat as an adjunct to the Rite of Restoration (poṣadha)—known as the Rite of Lifting Restrictions (pravāraṇa). During this rite, monastics invite other monastics who have passed the rainy season with them to speak of any unconfessed offenses they have seen, heard, or suspected the inviting monastic of committing during the rains retreat. If a monk thus prompted recalls an offense, he must make amends before the members of the saṅgha can communally verify their purity. This rite helps to ensure harmony in the saṅgha by providing monks with a forum in which they may air and address concerns about their fellow monks’ conduct before they disperse, either to wander the countryside or go to another monastery. This semi-public affirmation of the saṅgha’s purity would also help preserve its reputation among the laypeople. At the conclusion of the rite, goods that have been offered to the saṅgha during the rains are distributed to those monastics who are entitled to a share, that is, those who stayed on site for the duration of the rains.
The Rite of Lifting Restrictions is the second of the “Three Rites,” along with the Rite of Restoration and the Rite of Pledging to Settle for the Rains, as set out in The Chapter on the Restoration Rite and The Chapter on the Rains respectively. The regular observance of the “Three Rites” at an officially demarcated monastic site is considered a crucial component in ensuring the integrity of the monastics living there and nearby.
Acknowledgements
This text was translated from Tibetan and checked against the Sanskrit original and Yijing’s Chinese translation by Robert Miller. Matthew Wuethrich served as style and editorial consultant to the translator. Paul Thomas reviewed the translation against the extant Sanskrit. Ven. Hejung Seok, Dr. Alex von Rospatt, and Dr. Sally Sutherland Goldman all provided useful insight into the term pravāraṇā.
The translation was completed under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha. Nathaniel Rich and John Canti edited the translation and the introduction, and Ven. Konchog Norbu copyedited the text. André Rodrigues was in charge of the digital publication process.
Text Body
The Chapter on Lifting Restrictions
Repetition
A summary:
“On the fifteenth, the day of lifting restrictions, five or more resident monks, seated and having a quorum, may think, ‘There are monks who have not yet arrived but it is still valid for us to make a motion and then perform the lifting of restrictions.’
“If those monks, with fabricated aims and fabricated preparations, make a motion and then perform the lifting of restrictions, and later a smaller number of resident monks arrive, they too should make a motion and perform the lifting of restrictions. The earlier group of monks will be guilty of a breach because of their fabricated attempts.”
The rest should be expressed as in The Chapter on the Restoration Rite’s summary verse104 yet with one difference: where The Chapter on the Restoration Rite reads “four or more resident monks may be seated and in a quorum,” and so forth, here one should read “five or more.”
Bibliography
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