-
contained in the Suttavibhaṅga, a
division of the
Vinaya Piṭaka. The four
pārājikas (lit. "defeats") are
rules entailing expulsion from the
sangha for life...
-
restrain himself and
kills sentient beings without mercy, he
commits a
Parajika (major) offense. A
disciple of the
Buddha must not
himself steal or encourage...
- Phra
Apichart Punnajanto (who
called for the
burning down of mosques—a
pārājika offence), have been
forced to
leave the
monastic order.
Beginning in 2023...
- very
similar to the most
fundamental rules of
monastic discipline (Pali:
pārajika), and may have
influenced their development. In conclusion, the five precepts...
- Buddhism, siyi (四夷) or
siyijie (四夷戒)
abbreviates the si
boluoyi (四波羅夷) "Four
Parajikas" (grave
offenses that
entail expulsion of a monk or nun from the sangha)...
- all
schools of Buddhism. Also
compare the
above admonishments with the
Pārājika Pāḷi.Ajahn Brahmavamso. "Vinaya The Four
Disrobing Offences". BuddhaSasana...
- Canon,
including in the "Code of Ethics" (that is, in the
Vinaya Pitaka's
Parajika) as well as in each of the "Discourse Basket" (Sutta Pitaka) collections...
- code of
monastic rules binding on
members of the
Buddhist monastic order Parajika (defeats) — four
rules entailing expulsion from the
sangha for life ****ual...
- interpretations.
Thanissaro Bhikkhu (1994).
Buddhist Monastic Code I:
Chapter 4,
Parajika Archived 2009-04-27 at the
Wayback Machine.
Retrieved 2007-11-11. "Religious...
- affiliation. With this,
Buddha later expanded the
precept in the
third parajika,
adding the
punishment of
excommunication for life from the
Sangha after...