Dhp129-145 β Chapter 11
Minor Collection
Sayings of the Dhamma 129β145
10. The Rod
All tremble at the rod,
all fear death.
Treating others like oneself,
neither kill nor incite to kill.
All tremble at the rod,
all love life.
Treating others like oneself,
neither kill nor incite to kill.
Creatures love happiness,
so if you harm them with a stick
in search of your own happiness,
after death you wonβt find happiness.
Creatures love happiness,
so if you donβt harm them with a stick
in search of your own happiness,
after death you will find happiness.
Donβt speak harshly,
they may speak harshly back.
For aggressive speech is painful,
and the rod may spring back on you.
If you still yourself
like a broken gong,
you reach extinguishment
and know no conflict.
As a cowherd drives the cows
to pasture with the rod,
so too old age and death
drive life from living beings.
The fool does not understand
the evil that they do.
But because of those deeds, that simpleton
is tormented as if burnt by fire.
One who violently attacks
the peaceful and the innocent
swiftly falls
to one of ten bad states:
harsh pain; loss;
the breakup of the body;
serious illness;
mental distress;
hazards from rulers;
vicious slander;
loss of kin;
destruction of wealth;
or else their home
is consumed by fire.
When their body breaks up, that witless person
is reborn in hell.
Not nudity, nor matted hair, nor mud,
nor fasting, nor lying on bare ground,
nor wearing dust and dirt, or squatting on the heels,
will cleanse a mortal not free of doubt.
Dressed up they may be, but if they live wellβ
peaceful, tamed, committed to the spiritual path,
having laid aside violence towards all creaturesβ
they are a brahmin, an ascetic, a mendicant.
Can a person constrained by conscience
be found in the world?
Who shies away from blame,
like a fine horse from the whip?
Like a fine horse under the whip,
be keen and full of urgency.
With faith, ethics, and energy,
immersion, and investigation of principles,
accomplished in knowledge and conduct, mindful,
give up this vast suffering.
While irrigators guide water,
fletchers shape arrows,
and carpenters carve timberβ
those true to their vows tame themselves.
β¦ Connected Across Traditions
The Golden Rule
Matthew 7:12
βDo unto others as you would have them do unto you.β
Hadith (An-Nawawi 13)
βNone of you truly believes until he wishes for his brother what he wishes for himself.β
Leviticus 19:18
βLove your neighbor as yourself.β
Mahabharata 5.1517
βOne should never do to another what one regards as injurious to oneself.β
Impermanence & Letting Go
Tao Te Ching 76
βA man is born gentle and weak. At his death he is hard and stiff. The soft and yielding is the disciple of life.β
Ecclesiastes 3:1-2
βTo everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven.β
Bhagavad Gita 2:22
βAs a person puts on new garments, giving up old ones, the soul similarly accepts new material bodies, giving up the old and useless ones.β
Quran 55:26-27
βEveryone upon the earth will perish, and there will remain the Face of your Lord, Owner of Majesty and Honor.β
The Path to Wisdom
Proverbs 4:7
βWisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom. And in all your getting, get understanding.β
Analects 2:11
βIf you study the past and use it to understand the present, you are worthy of being a teacher.β
Tao Te Ching 33
βKnowing others is intelligence; knowing yourself is true wisdom.β
Quran 39:9
βAre those who know equal to those who do not know?β
Good vs Evil / Light vs Darkness
Yasna 30:3
βNow the two primal Spirits, who reveal themselves as Twins, are the Better and the Bad, in thought and word and action.β
John 1:5
βThe light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.β
Genesis 1:3
βAnd God said, Let there be light: and there was light.β
Bhagavad Gita 16:21
βThere are three gates to self-destructive hell: lust, anger, and greed. Therefore, one must learn to give these up.β