Way of Oneness: A Sangha Podcast
Religion & Spirituality:Spirituality
Excerpt
When I first started to explore and examine this precept, my first inclination was to feel guilt for taking paper clips from work or printing things for personal uses on my work computer. Funny, that I found ways around it Like buying a ream of paper to replace the 40 pages I used. I started to make sure I paid for all of my Trax rides.
I did start to examine some of my motivations for doing what I was doing, but for me, most of these simple practices were very superficial and more a residual of my old relationships with the Judeo- Christian commandments. Again, we do not practice the precepts to appease a deity, or because it makes us a good Buddhist, but to help us gain insight into the mindset of an awakened being, a state of mind that is grounded in contentment.
A practice-based on any kind of checklist is just a checklist and ultimately non-transformative. There is a much deeper meaning in the second precept than simply not taking something that belongs to someone else. That is a legalistic approach.
Buddhism teaches that there are 10 fetters - mental chains that keep us bound - one of them is the dependence on moral rules and religious observances as an end in themselves – Being circumspect and never “stealing” even paperclips may be laudable but is it transformative in itself. Maybe.
From my life experience, the end of the second precept is not simply about not stealing, about observance a rule but about how we perceive the world and our place in it. It is about cultivating a state of mind of contentment, of enoughness. Gyomay Kubose Sensei teaches us that an agitated mind cannot see things as they are, only a calm mind can. A continual sense of lack, a subtle greed, creates great and subtle waves of agitation. And over time this creates a subtle and pernicious sense of entitlement.
At the heart of the second precept is an antidote to this continual refrain and rationalization of taking something not freely given, “I deserve this” or I deserve more than I am being given. These are all manifestations of the poison of greed."
3rd Foundational Dharma Talk: Mono No Aware - Embracing Impermanence
#2 Foundational Dharma Talk: Way of the Foolish Being
Follow Your Authentic Path
Dharma Highway Sutra: Driving and Buddhist Practice
Sangha As Practice
#1 Attend to All and Each -The Meaning of Come as You Are.
Going for Refuge - Taking Refuge in Buddha
Doing Nothing as Skillful Practice
Juneteenth - a dharma talk by Rachel Koshinyo
Already Broken: A Dharma Talk on Impermanence.
Affirming Life: The First Precept
The Five - The Ethical Foundation of Meditation
What Are You Carrying?
Protective Anger
Authentic Life
Deep Listening a Call to Presence
Taking Refuge in the Dharma
Repentance, Confession and Forgiveness: A Buddhist Take.
Sitting in the Dark
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Hello Heaven Podcast
Devoted To Prayer
Cast The Word
Let Me Be Frank | Bishop Frank Caggiano’s Podcast | Diocese of Bridgeport, CT
Philokalia Ministries
RVVL | David Butler