Dhp256-272 โ Chapter 8
Minor Collection
Sayings of the Dhamma 256โ272
19. The Just
You donโt become just
by passing hasty judgment.
An astute person evaluates both
what is pertinent and what is irrelevant.
A wise one judges others without haste,
justly and impartially;
that guardian of the law
is said to be just.
Youโre not an astute scholar
just because you speak a lot.
One who is secure, free of enmity and fear,
is said to be astute.
Youโre not one who has memorized the teaching
just because you recite a lot.
Someone who directly sees the teaching
after hearing only a little
is truly one who has memorized the teaching,
for they can never forget it.
You donโt become a senior
by getting some grey hairs;
for one ripe only in age,
is said to have aged in vain.
One who is truthful and principled,
harmless, restrained, and self-controlled,
attentive, purged of stains,
is said to be a senior.
Not by mere enunciation,
or a beautiful complexion
does a person become holy,
if theyโre jealous, stingy, and devious.
But if theyโve cut that out,
dug it up at the root, eradicated it,
that wise one, purged of vice,
is said to be holy.
A liar and breaker of vows is no ascetic
just because they shave their head.
How on earth can one be an ascetic
whoโs full of desire and greed?
One who stops all wicked deeds,
great and small,
because of stopping wicked deeds
is said to be an ascetic.
You donโt become a mendicant
just by begging from others.
One who has undertaken domestic duties
has not yet become a mendicant.
But one living a spiritual life,
who has banished both merit and evil,
who wanders having appraised the world,
is said to be a mendicant.
You donโt become a sage by being sagelike,
while still confused and ignorant.
The astute one who holds the scales,
taking only the best,
and shunning the badโ
that is a sage, and that is how one becomes a sage.
One who sagely weighs both in the world,
is thereby said to be a sage.
You donโt become a noble one
by harming living beings.
One harmless towards all living beings
is said to be a noble one.
Not by precepts and observances,
nor by much learning,
nor by meditative immersion,
nor by living in seclusion,
do I experience the bliss of renunciation
not frequented by ordinary people.
A mendicant cannot rest confident
without attaining the end of defilements.
โฆ Connected Across Traditions
Impermanence & Letting Go
Tao Te Ching 76
โA man is born gentle and weak. At his death he is hard and stiff. The soft and yielding is the disciple of life.โ
Ecclesiastes 3:1-2
โTo everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven.โ
Bhagavad Gita 2:22
โAs a person puts on new garments, giving up old ones, the soul similarly accepts new material bodies, giving up the old and useless ones.โ
Quran 55:26-27
โEveryone upon the earth will perish, and there will remain the Face of your Lord, Owner of Majesty and Honor.โ
The Path to Wisdom
Proverbs 4:7
โWisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom. And in all your getting, get understanding.โ
Analects 2:11
โIf you study the past and use it to understand the present, you are worthy of being a teacher.โ
Tao Te Ching 33
โKnowing others is intelligence; knowing yourself is true wisdom.โ
Quran 39:9
โAre those who know equal to those who do not know?โ
Good vs Evil / Light vs Darkness
Yasna 30:3
โNow the two primal Spirits, who reveal themselves as Twins, are the Better and the Bad, in thought and word and action.โ
John 1:5
โThe light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.โ
Genesis 1:3
โAnd God said, Let there be light: and there was light.โ
Bhagavad Gita 16:21
โThere are three gates to self-destructive hell: lust, anger, and greed. Therefore, one must learn to give these up.โ