โ† Buddhism
โ˜ธ๏ธDhp256-272

Dhp256-272 โ€” Chapter 4

โœฆ
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Minor Collection

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Sayings of the Dhamma 256โ€“272

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19. The Just

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You donโ€™t become just

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by passing hasty judgment.

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An astute person evaluates both

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what is pertinent and what is irrelevant.

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A wise one judges others without haste,

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justly and impartially;

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that guardian of the law

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is said to be just.

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Youโ€™re not an astute scholar

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just because you speak a lot.

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One who is secure, free of enmity and fear,

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is said to be astute.

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Youโ€™re not one who has memorized the teaching

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just because you recite a lot.

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Someone who directly sees the teaching

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after hearing only a little

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is truly one who has memorized the teaching,

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for they can never forget it.

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You donโ€™t become a senior

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by getting some grey hairs;

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for one ripe only in age,

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is said to have aged in vain.

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One who is truthful and principled,

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harmless, restrained, and self-controlled,

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attentive, purged of stains,

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is said to be a senior.

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Not by mere enunciation,

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or a beautiful complexion

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does a person become holy,

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if theyโ€™re jealous, stingy, and devious.

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But if theyโ€™ve cut that out,

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dug it up at the root, eradicated it,

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that wise one, purged of vice,

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is said to be holy.

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A liar and breaker of vows is no ascetic

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just because they shave their head.

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How on earth can one be an ascetic

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whoโ€™s full of desire and greed?

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One who stops all wicked deeds,

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great and small,

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because of stopping wicked deeds

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is said to be an ascetic.

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You donโ€™t become a mendicant

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just by begging from others.

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One who has undertaken domestic duties

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has not yet become a mendicant.

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But one living a spiritual life,

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who has banished both merit and evil,

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who wanders having appraised the world,

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is said to be a mendicant.

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You donโ€™t become a sage by being sagelike,

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while still confused and ignorant.

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The astute one who holds the scales,

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taking only the best,

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and shunning the badโ€”

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that is a sage, and that is how one becomes a sage.

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One who sagely weighs both in the world,

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is thereby said to be a sage.

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You donโ€™t become a noble one

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by harming living beings.

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One harmless towards all living beings

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is said to be a noble one.

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Not by precepts and observances,

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nor by much learning,

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nor by meditative immersion,

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nor by living in seclusion,

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do I experience the bliss of renunciation

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not frequented by ordinary people.

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A mendicant cannot rest confident

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without attaining the end of defilements.

โœฆ Connected Across Traditions