Mawkish1983 wrote:(Not rhetorical)
Should any monk steal what has not been given to him, whether from a village or from the jungle, in circumstances such that a king would have arrested, flogged, imprisoned, or banished him with the words, "You are a robber, you are a fool, you are benighted, you are a thief," that monk who took what has not been given to him is defeated and is no longer in communion.
"Spk: There are four modes of monks using their requisites:
(i) by theft (theyyaparibhoga): the use made by a morally depraved monk;
(ii) as a debtor (iṇaparibhoga): the unreflective use made by a virtuous monk;
(iii) as an heir (dāyajjaparibhoga): the use made by the seven sekha(trainees);
(iv) as an owner (sāmiparibhoga): the use made by an arahant.
Thus only an arahant uses the requisites as an owner, without debt."
daverupa wrote:Mawkish1983 wrote:(Not rhetorical)
Hmm.
The text in the Vinaya runs something like this:Should any monk steal what has not been given to him, whether from a village or from the jungle, in circumstances such that a king would have arrested, flogged, imprisoned, or banished him with the words, "You are a robber, you are a fool, you are benighted, you are a thief," that monk who took what has not been given to him is defeated and is no longer in communion.
This seems to hook the definition to secular law; so, in the UK case, there is no debt.
Translated from the Pâli by T. W. Rhys Davids and Hermann Oldenberg [1881] wrote:At that time a certain person who was in debt, ran away and was ordained with the Bhikkhus. When his creditors saw him, they said: 'There is our debtor; come, let us lead him (to prison).' But some people replied: 'Do not say so, Sirs. A decree has been issued by the Magadha king Seniya Bimbisâra: 'No one is to do any harm to those who are ordained with the Sakyaputtiya Samanas; well taught is their doctrine; let them lead a holy life for the sake of the complete extinction of suffering.'
People were annoyed, murmured, and became angry: 'Indeed these Sakyaputtiya Samanas are secure from anything; it is not allowed to do anything to them. How can they ordain a debtor?'
They told this thing to the Blessed One.
'Let no debtor, O Bhikkhus, receive the pabbaggâ ordination. He who confers the pabbaggâ ordination (on a debtor), is guilty of a dukkata offence.'
Cittasanto wrote:the issue is if the government/law/the lender sees it as debt not other money lenders.
Cittasanto wrote:the issue is if the government/law/the lender sees it as debt not other money lenders.
Mal wrote:And if the government retrospectively tries to change the law then it's not a government that monks or anyone else should respect, and it's time to break laws.
daverupa wrote:Right; I was citing the other rule simply for its use of language with respect to defining theft according to secular understandings (e.g. the king). If this confused anyone, sorry about that.
So, it isn't the same rule, but the one which is directly related to debt is built on a foundation of lay complaint... that means the people might choose, later, to not care about this particular dukkata in reference to student loans... seems they've done something like that in the UK...
Mawkish1983 wrote:Cittasanto wrote:the issue is if the government/law/the lender sees it as debt not other money lenders.
Okay, then consider this: the government does not expect the money back and does not chase people for it. If one dies having never paid back even a penny, no next of kin are expected to pay. I calculated, based on my repayment as dictated by the government which is proportional to income (not amount of money 'borrowed') that it would take 170 years to pay it back at my present income. The 'lender' here is fully aware of this because I'm following their instructions. Clearly they do not expect the money back, clearly this isn't a problem. The government would not EVER ask for the money back from those not earning enough if those who are won't even be able to pay it off in one lifetime. How could that be considered a debt that would keep one from ordaining? Because its been [mis]named a loan? No, realistically, I don't see how the vinaya can exclude people with UK student loans based on the quoted text.
Mal wrote:Cittasanto wrote:the issue is if the government/law/the lender sees it as debt not other money lenders.
The lender and government, surely, have nothing to do with it. If the CEO of Lloyds TSB or the Prime Minister grumble about too many students "running away to be monks" then such grumbling should be ignored. The law determines the situation. And if the government retrospectively tries to change the law then it's not a government that monks or anyone else should respect, and it's time to break laws (like those Burmese monks who march in the streets against the bad laws of the Generals.)
The government issues the UK student 'loan' (via the SLC, a third party organisation acting on the government'Cittasanto wrote:So what I said still stands, it is an issue of the one who is owed the money and the law, not another money lender.Mawkish1983 wrote:Cittasanto wrote:the issue is if the government/law/the lender sees it as debt not other money lenders.
Okay, then consider this: the government does not expect the money back and does not chase people for it. If one dies having never paid back even a penny, no next of kin are expected to pay. I calculated, based on my repayment as dictated by the government which is proportional to income (not amount of money 'borrowed') that it would take 170 years to pay it back at my present income. The 'lender' here is fully aware of this because I'm following their instructions. Clearly they do not expect the money back, clearly this isn't a problem. The government would not EVER ask for the money back from those not earning enough if those who are won't even be able to pay it off in one lifetime.
Mawkish1983 wrote:The government issues the UK student 'loan' (via the SLC, a third party organisation acting on the government's behalf - privatisation is the norm now) and does not expect it back, not chase for the money, so by what you say, a UK student loan would not inhibit ordination.Cittasanto wrote:So what I said still stands, it is an issue of the one who is owed the money and the law, not another money lender.
Mawkish1983 wrote:(Just look at how attached to the view 'a UK student loan is not a debt' I am! Regardless of whether it'd inhibit ordination or not, I'm a long way off being ready anyway!)
Mal wrote:Mawkish1983 wrote:(Just look at how attached to the view 'a UK student loan is not a debt' I am! Regardless of whether it'd inhibit ordination or not, I'm a long way off being ready anyway!)
You cannot be attached to Right View.
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