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Alms

Alms (/ɑːmz/, /ɑːlmz/) are money, food, or other material goods donated to people living in poverty.[1][2] Providing alms is often considered an act of charity. The act of providing alms is called almsgiving.

Woman giving alms by János Thorma

Etymology Edit

The word alms comes from the Old English ælmesse, ælmes, which comes from Late Latin eleemosyna, from Greek ἐλεημοσύνη eleēmosynē ("pity, alms"), from ἐλεήμων, eleēmōn ("merciful"), from ἔλεος, eleos, meaning "pity or mercy".[3]

Buddhism Edit

 
Three monks seeking alms in Lhasa, Tibet in 1993.

Dāna in Buddhism Edit

In Buddhism, both "almsgiving" and "giving" are called "dāna" (Pāli).[4] Such giving is one of the three elements of the path of practice as formulated by the Buddha for laypeople.[5] This path of practice for laypeople is dāna, sīla, and bhāvanā.[6]

Generosity towards other sentient beings is also emphasized in Mahayana as one of the perfections (paramita). As shown in Lama Tsong Khapa's 'The Abbreviated Points of the Graded Path' (Wylie: lam-rim bsdus-don):

Total willingness to give is the wish-granting gem for fulfilling the hopes of wandering beings.
It is the sharpest weapon to sever the knot of stinginess.
It leads to bodhisattva conduct that enhances self-confidence and courage,
And is the basis for universal proclamation of your fame and repute.
Realizing this, the wise rely, in a healthy manner, on the outstanding path
Of (being ever-willing) to offer completely their bodies, possessions, and positive potentials.
The ever-vigilant lama has practiced like that.
If you too would seek liberation,
Please cultivate yourself in the same way.[7]

The giving of alms is the beginning of one's journey to Nirvana (Pali: nibbana). In practice, one can give anything with or without thought for Nibbana. This would lead to faith (Pali: saddha), one key power (Pali: bala) that one should generate within oneself for the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha.

According to the Pali canon:

Of all gifts [alms], the gift of Dhamma is the highest.

— Dhp. chapter 24, verse 354)[a]

Intentions for giving Edit

The intentions behind giving play an important role in developing spiritual qualities. The suttas record various motives for exercising generosity. For example, the Anguttara Nikaya (A.iv, 236) enumerates the following eight motives:[8]

  1. One gives with annoyance, or as a way of offending the recipient, or with the idea of insulting him.
  2. Fear also can motivate a person to make an offering.
  3. One gives in return for a favor done to oneself in the past.
  4. One also may give with the hope of getting a similar favor for oneself in the future.
  5. One gives because giving is considered good.
  6. "I cook, they do not cook. It is not proper for me who cooks not to give to those who do not cook." (i.e. Some give because they are able to do what others cannot.)
  7. Some give alms to gain a good reputation.
  8. Still others give alms to adorn and beautify the mind.
  1. Asajja danam deti
  2. Bhaya danam deti
  3. Adasi me ti danam deti
  4. Dassati me ti danam deti
  5. Sadhu danan ti danam deti
  6. Aham pacami, ime ne pacanti, na arahami pacanto apacantanam adatun ti danam deti
  7. Imam me danam dadato kalyano kittisaddo abbhuggacchati ti danam deti
  8. Cittalankara-cittaparikkarattham danam deti
 
Alms bowl as used by bhikkhus for going on an alms round

In support of Buddhist monks Edit

In Buddhism, alms or almsgiving is the respect given by a lay Buddhist to a Buddhist monk, nun, spiritually-developed person or other sentient being. It is not charity as presumed by Western interpreters. It is closer to a symbolic connection to the spiritual realm and to show humbleness and respect in the presence of the secular society.[b] The act of almsgiving connects the human to the monk or nun and what he/she represents. As the Buddha has stated:

Householders & the homeless or charity [monastics]
in mutual dependence
both reach the true Dhamma....

 
Pre-packaged alms kits can be bought to donate to monks

In Theravada Buddhism, nuns (Pāli: bhikkhunis) and monks (Pāli: bhikkhus) practice Takuhatsu (pindacara) where they collect food (piṇḍapāta). This is often perceived as allowing the laypeople to make merit (Pāli: puñña). Money cannot be accepted by a Theravadan Buddhist monk or nun in place of or in addition to food, as the Patimokkha training rules make it an offense worth forfeiture and confession.[10]

In countries that follow Mahayana Buddhism, the practice of Takuhatsu has mostly died out. In China, Korea, and Japan, local cultures resisted the idea of giving food to 'begging' clerics, and there was no tradition of gaining 'merit' by donating to practitioners. After periods of persecution, monasteries were situated in remote mountain areas; the distance between the monastery and the nearest towns made this practice impossible. In Japan, the practice of a weekly or monthly Takuhatsu replaced the daily round. In the Himalayan countries, the large number of bhikkhus would have made an alms round a heavy burden on families. Competition with other religions for support also made daily practice difficult and even dangerous; the first Buddhist monks in the Silla dynasty of Korea were said to be beaten due to their minority at the time.[citation needed]

Christianity Edit

 
St. Clare distributes alms; Tennenbach Codex 4, illustrated before c. 1492

In Christianity, the giving of alms is viewed as an act of charity.[11] In the Apostolic age, Christians were taught that giving alms was an expression of love. Such care for the poor was to be understood as love for God, who, in the person of Jesus Christ, sacrificed himself for the salvation of believers.[d]

In nearly all Christian denominations, money is donated to support the church's financial needs and its ministry to the less fortunate. In some churches, the alms are placed near to the altar to symbolize that the offering belongs to God and to represent the unity of the congregation.[e]

In Western Christianity Edit

 
Collecting the Offering in a Scottish Kirk by John Phillip

The offertory is the traditional moment in the Roman Catholic Mass, Lutheran Divine Service, and Anglican Eucharist, when alms are collected. Baptists and Methodists, among other denominations, collect tithes and offerings (alms) during the offertory in church services. A tithe, the first tenth of one's income, is seen as what is owed to God, while an offering (alms) includes anything contributed beyond that.[12][13] Some fellowships practice regular giving for special purposes called "love offerings" for the poor, destitute or victims of catastrophic loss such as home fires or medical expenses. Traditionally, deacons and deaconesses are responsible for distributing these gifts among widows, orphans, and others in need. Many Christians support a plethora of charitable organizations, not all of which claim a Christian religious affiliation. Many American educational and medical institutions were founded by Christian fellowships giving alms.

In Eastern Christianity Edit

In the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Eastern Catholic Churches, the collection of alms and tithes has not been formally united to the offertory in any liturgical action. However, either having a collection plate in the narthex or passing it unobtrusively during the service is not uncommon. In Eastern Orthodox theology, almsgiving is an important part of the spiritual life, and fasting should always be accompanied by increased prayer and almsgiving.[14] Almsgiving in the name of the deceased also frequently accompanies prayer for the dead. Those whose financial circumstances do not permit the giving of monetary alms may give alms in other ways, such as intercessory prayer and acts of mercy such as visiting people in prison, clothing the poor or volunteering in soup kitchens.[15]

In the New Testament Edit

In addition, private acts of charity are a duty and only considered virtuous only if not done for others to admire:

Be careful not to do your 'acts of righteousness' in front of others, to be seen by them. If you do, you will have no reward from your Father in heaven.

— Matthew 6:1

Jesus places the primary focus on the motives behind the outward and inward giving of alms, which should be love:

Rather, give as alms what is inside, and then everything will be clean for you!

— Luke 11:41
 
Jesus commends this poor but generous woman in Luke 21:1–4.

Jesus contrasts the giving of the rich and the poor:

He looked up and saw the rich putting their gifts into the treasury. And He saw a poor widow putting in two small copper coins. And He said, 'Truly I say to you, this poor widow put in more than all of them; for they all out of their surplus put into the offering; but she out of her poverty put in all that she had to live on.'

— Luke 21:1–4

Giving should be out of love and not out of duty:

He will reply, 'I tell you the truth, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me.'

— Matthew 25:45


Sharing possessions was practised in the church:

Now the full number of those who believed were of one heart and soul, and no one said that any of the things that belonged to him was his own, but they had everything in common.

— Acts 4:32

..there were no needy persons among them. For from time to time those who owned land or houses sold them, brought the money from the sales and put it at the apostles’ feet, and it was distributed to anyone who had need. Joseph, a Levite from Cyprus, whom the apostles called Barnabas (which means “son of encouragement”), sold a field he owned and brought the money and put it at the apostles’ feet.

— Acts 4:34-37

Hinduism Edit

 
Lady giving alms at the Temple by Raja Ravi Varma (1848–1906)

Dāna in Hinduism Edit

In Hinduism, dāna (Sanskrit: दान) is an ancient concept of almsgiving dating to the Vedic period of Hinduism.[16] Dāna has been defined in traditional texts as any action of relinquishing the ownership of what one considered or identified as one's own, and investing the same in a recipient without expecting anything in return.[17] While dāna is typically given to one person or family, Hinduism also discusses charity or giving aimed at public benefit, which is sometimes called utsarga. This aims at larger projects such as building a rest house, school, investing in drinking water or an irrigation well, planting trees, and building care facilities, among others.[18] The practice of begging for alms is called bhiksha (Sanskrit: भिक्षा).[19][20]

The 11th century Persian historian Abū Rayḥān al-Bīrūnī, who visited and lived in India for 16 years beginning in about 1017 CE, mentions the practice of charity and almsgiving among Hindus as he observed during his stay. He wrote, "It is obligatory with them (Hindus) every day to give alms as much as possible."[21]

After the taxes, there are different opinions on how to spend their income. Some destine one-ninth of it for alms.[22] Others divide this income (after taxes) into four portions. One fourth is destined for common expenses, the second for liberal works of a noble mind, the third for alms, and the fourth for being kept in reserve.

— Abū Rayḥān al-Bīrūnī, Tarikh Al-Hind, 11th century AD[21]

Almsgiving in Hinduism is considered a noble deed to be done without expectation of any return from those who receive the charity.[17] Some texts reason, referring to the nature of social life, that charity is a form of good karma that affects one's future circumstances and environment, and that good charitable deeds leads to good future life because of the reciprocity principle.[17] Other Hindu texts, such as Vyasa Samhita, state that reciprocity may be innate in human nature and social functions but dāna is a virtue in itself, as doing good lifts the nature of one who gives.[23] The texts do not recommend charity to unworthy recipients or where charity may harm or encourage injury to or by the recipient. Dāna is thus a dharmic act, requires an idealistic-normative approach, and has spiritual and philosophical context.[17] Some medieval era authors state that dāna is best done with śraddhā (faith), which is defined as being in good will, cheerful, welcoming the recipient of the charity and giving without anasuya (finding faults in the recipient).[24] Kohler states that these scholars of Hinduism suggest that charity is most effective when it is done with delight, a sense of "unquestioning hospitality", where the dāna ignores the short term weaknesses as well as the circumstances of the recipient and takes a long-term view.[24]

Institutional dāna Edit

Satrams, also called Dharamsala or Chathrams in parts of India, have been one means of almsgiving in Hinduism. Satrams are shelters (rest houses) for travelers and the poor, with many serving water and free food. These were usually established along the roads connecting major Hindu temple sites in south Asia, as well as near major temples.[25][26][27] Hindu temples have also served as institutions for almsgiving.[28][29] The dāna the temples received from Hindus were used to feed people in distress as well as fund public projects such as irrigation and land reclamation.[29][30]

Forms of dāna Edit

Forms of almsgiving in Hinduism include:

  1. go dāna, the donation of a cow[31]
  2. bhu dāna (भू दान), the donation of land
  3. vidya dāna or jñāna dāna (विद्या दान, ज्ञान दान), the giving of knowledge and skills
  4. aushadhā dāna, the giving of care for the sick and diseased
  5. abhay dāna, the giving of freedom from fear (such as asylum or protection for someone facing imminent injury)
  6. anna dāna (अन्ना दान), the giving of food to the poor, needy, and all visitors[32]

Between giving food and giving knowledge, Hindu texts suggest the gift of knowledge is superior.[33][34]

In the Vedas Edit

The Rigveda has the earliest discussion of dāna in the Vedas and offers reasons for the virtue of almsgiving.[35]

The Gods have not ordained hunger to be our death: even to the well-fed man comes death in varied shape,
The riches of the liberal never waste away, while he who will not give finds none to comfort him,
The man with food in store who, when the needy comes in miserable case begging for bread to eat,
Hardens his heart against him, when of old finds not one to comfort him.

Bounteous is he who gives unto the beggar who comes to him in want of food, and the feeble,
Success attends him in the shout of battle. He makes a friend of him in future troubles,
No friend is he who to his friend and comrade who comes imploring food, will offer nothing.

Let the rich satisfy the poor implorer, and bend his eye upon a longer pathway,
Riches come now to one, now to another, and like the wheels of cars are ever rolling,
The foolish man wins food with fruitless labour: that food – I speak the truth – shall be his ruin,
He feeds no trusty friend, no man to love him. All guilt is he who eats with no partaker.

— Rigveda, 10.117[36]

In the Upanishads Edit

The early Upanishads, those composed before 500 BCE, discuss the virtue of almsgiving. For example, Brihadaranyaka Upanishad states in verse 5.2.3 that three characteristics of a good, developed person are self-restraint (dama), compassion or love for all sentient life (daya), and charity (dāna).[37][38][39] Chandogya Upanishad, similarly, states in Book III that a virtuous life requires tapas (meditation, asceticism), dāna (charity), arjava (straightforwardness, non-hypocrisy), ahimsa (non-violence, non-injury to all sentient beings) and satyavacana (truthfulness).[40][f][41][42]

In Mahabharata and Puranas Edit

Bhagavad Gita describes the right and wrong forms of dāna in verses 17.20 through 17.22.[43] The Adi Parva of the Hindu Epic Mahabharata states in Chapter 91 that a person must first acquire wealth by honest means, then embark on charity; be hospitable to those who come to him; never inflict pain on any living being; and share a portion with others whatever he consumes.[44] In the Vana Parva, Chapter 194, the Mahabharata recommends that one must "conquer the mean by charity, the untruthful by truth, the wicked by forgiveness, and dishonesty by honesty".[45]

The Bhagavata Purana discusses when dāna is proper and when it is improper. In Book 8, Chapter 19, verse 36, it states that charity is inappropriate if it endangers and cripples modest livelihood of one's biological dependents or of one's own. Charity from surplus income above that required for modest living is recommended in the Puranas.[46]

Islam Edit

In Islam, the concept of charitable giving is generally divided into voluntary giving, sadaqah (صدقة), and an obligatory practice, the zakat (الزكاة). Zakat is governed by a specific set of rules within Islamic jurisprudence and is intended to fulfill a well-defined set of theological and social requirements. Sadaqah is possibly a better translation of Christian influenced formulations of the notion of 'alms' for that reason, though zakat plays a much larger role within Islamic charity.

Zakat Edit

Zakat is the third of the five pillars of Islam.[47][48] The literal meaning of the word zakat is "to purify", "to develop" and "cause to grow". Zakat is the amount of money that every Muslim, male or female, who is an adult, mentally stable, free, and financially able, has to pay to support specific categories of people. According to shariah, it is an act of worship. Possessions are purified by setting aside a proportion for those in need. This cutting back, like the pruning of plants, balances and encourages new growth. Various rules are attached but, in general terms, it is obligatory to give 2.5% of one's savings and business revenue and 5–10% of one's harvest to the poor. Possible recipients include the destitute, the working poor, those who are unable to pay off their own debts, stranded travelers and others who need assistance, with the general principle of zakat always being that the rich should pay it to the poor. One of the most important principles of Islam is that all things belong to God and wealth is therefore held by human beings in trust.[citation needed]

This category of people is defined in At-Tawbah:

"The alms are only for the poor and the needy, and those who collect them, and those whose hearts are to be reconciled, and to free the captives and the debtors, and for the cause of Allah, and (for) the wayfarers; a duty imposed by Allah. Allah is knower, Wise."

— Qur'an 9:60

The obligatory nature of zakat is firmly established in the Qur'an, the sunnah (or hadith), and the consensus of the companions and the Muslim scholars. Allah states in At-Tawbah:

"O ye who believe! there are indeed many among the priests and anchorites, who in Falsehood devour the substance of men and hinder (them) from the way of Allah. And there are those who bury gold and silver and spend it not in the way of Allah. announce unto them a most grievous penalty – On the Day when heat will be produced out of that (wealth) in the fire of Hell, and with it will be branded their foreheads, their flanks, and their backs.- "This is the (treasure) which ye buried for yourselves: taste ye, then, the (treasures) ye buried!"

— Qur'an 9:34–35

Muslims of each era have agreed upon the obligatory nature of paying zakat from their gold and silver, and from other kinds of currency.[49]

Nisab Edit

Zakat is obligatory when a certain amount of money, called the nisab (or minimum amount), is reached or exceeded. Zakat is not obligatory if the amount owned is less than this nisab. The nisab of gold and golden currency is 20 mithqal, or approximately 85 grams of pure gold. One mithqal is approximately 4.25 grams. The nisab of silver and silver currency is 200 dirhams, which is approximately 595 grams of pure silver. The nisab of other kinds of money and currency is to be scaled to that of gold; the nisab of money is equivalent to the price of 85 grams of 999-type (pure) gold on the day in which zakat is paid.[50]

Zakat is obligatory after the money has been in the control of its owner for the span of one lunar year; a lunar year is approximately 355 days. The owner then needs to pay 2.5% (or 1/40) of the money as zakat. The owner should deduct any amount of money he or she borrowed from others, check if the rest reaches the necessary nisab, then pay zakat for it.[51]

If the owner had enough money to satisfy the nisab at the beginning of the year, but his wealth in any form increased, the owner needs to add the increase to the nisab amount owned at the beginning of the year and then pay zakat, 2.5%, of the total at the end of the lunar year. There are minor differences between fiqh schools on how this is to be calculated. Each Muslim calculates his or her own zakat individually. For most purposes, this involves the payment each year of two and a half percent of one's capital.[citation needed]

Sadaqah Edit

A pious person may also give alms as much as he or she pleases as sadaqah, and does so preferably in secret. Although this word can be translated as 'voluntary charity', it has a wider meaning, as illustrated in the hadiths:

The Messenger of Allah said: "Every good is charity. Indeed among the good is to meet your brother with a smiling face, and to pour what is left in your bucket into the vessel of your brother."

— Jamiʽ at-Tirmidhi 27.76, hadith compiled by Al-Tirmidhi[52]

The Prophet said: "Charity is a necessity for every Muslim." He was asked: "What if a person has nothing?" The Prophet replied: "He should work with his own hands for his benefit and then give something out of such earnings in charity." The Companions asked: "What if he is not able to work?" The Prophet said: "He should help poor and needy persons." The Companions further asked "What if he cannot do even that?" The Prophet said "He should urge others to do good." The Companions said "What if he lacks that also?" The Prophet said "He should check himself from doing evil. That is also charity."

— Riyadh as-Salihin 141, hadith compiled by Al-Nawawi[53]

Judaism Edit

Tzedakah Edit

 
Sandstone vestige of a Jewish gravestone depicting a tzedakah box (pushke) in a Jewish cemetery in Otwock (Karczew-Anielin), Poland.
 
Tzedakah pouch and gelt (Yiddish for coins/money) on fur-like padding.

In Judaism, tzedakah, a Hebrew term literally meaning righteousness but commonly used to signify "charity",[54] refers to the religious obligation to do what is right and just.[55][g] In the Greek Septuagint tzedakah was sometimes translated as ἐλεημοσύνη, "almsgiving".[56][57]

In Judaism, tzedakah is seen as one of the greatest deeds that a person can do. Tzedakah, along with prayer and repentance, is regarded as ameliorating the consequences of bad acts. Contemporary tzedakah is regarded as a continuation of the Biblical Maaser Ani, or poor-tithe, as well as Biblical practices including permitting the poor to glean the corners of a field, harvest during the Shmita (sabbatical year), and other practices.[citation needed] Jewish farmers are commanded to leave the corners of their fields for the starving to harvest for food and are forbidden to pick up any grain that has been dropped during harvesting, as such food shall be left for the starving as well.[citation needed][h]

In the Mishneh Torah, Chapter 10:7–14, Maimonides lists eight "laws about giving to poor people" (hilkhot matanot aniyim), listed in order from most to least righteous, with the most righteous form being allowing an individual to become self-sustaining and capable of giving others charity:[58]

  1. Enabling the recipient to become self-reliant.
  2. Giving when neither party knows the other's identity.
  3. Giving when you know the recipient's identity, but the recipient doesn't know your identity.
  4. Giving when you do not know the recipient's identity, but the recipient knows your identity.
  5. Giving before being asked.
  6. Giving after being asked.
  7. Giving less than you should, but giving it cheerfully.
  8. Giving begrudgingly.

Mandaeism Edit

Zidqa Edit

In Mandaeism, zidqa refers to alms or almsgiving.[59][60] Mandaean priests receive regular financial contributions from laypeople.

The Mandaic term zidqa brika (literally "blessed oblation") refers to a ritual meal blessed by priests. An early self-appellation for Mandaeans is bhiri zidqa, meaning "elect of righteousness".[61]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ In Pali, this line is: "Sabba danam, Dhamma danam jinati." This line can be found in the Dhammapada, Chapter 24, verse 354. Thanissaro (1997)[62] translates this entire verse as:

    A gift of Dhamma conquers all gifts;
    the taste of Dhamma, all tastes;
    a delight in Dhamma, all delights;
    the ending of craving, all suffering
    & stress.

  2. ^ Indicative of the mutual nature of the almsgiving exchange, in some Theravada countries, if a monk were to refuse alms from someone—a gesture known as "turning over the rice bowl"—this would be interpreted as an act of excommunication of the almsgiver by the monk. An example of such a refusal is the refusal of Buddhist monks to accept offerings by military personnel in military-occupied Myanmar (Mydans, 20 September 2007, NYT).
  3. ^ Almsgiving is also commended by the Buddha in a less prominent way in various other canonical texts such as the Dighajanu Sutta.
  4. ^ James 1:27 (NIV) "Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world."
  5. ^ Compare with Matthew 5:23–24.
  6. ^ Translation: Now Tapas (austerity, meditation), Dāna (charity, alms-giving), Arjava (sincerity, uprightness and non-hypocrisy), Ahimsa (non-violence, don't harm others) and Satya-vacanam (truthfulness), these are the Dakshina (gifts, payment to others) he gives [in life]. – Chandogya Upanishad 3.17.4
  7. ^ "Jews do not practice charity, and the concept is virtually nonexistent in Jewish tradition. Instead of charity, the Jew gives tzedakah, which means 'righteousness' and 'justice.' When the Jew contributes his money, time and resources to the needy, he is not being benevolent, generous or 'charitable.' He is doing what is right and just."
  8. ^ Leviticus 19:9–10 (KJV) "And when ye reap the harvest of your land, thou shalt not wholly reap the corners of thy field, neither shalt thou gather the gleanings of thy harvest. 10 And thou shalt not glean thy vineyard, neither shalt thou gather every grape of thy vineyard; thou shalt leave them for the poor and stranger: I am the LORD your God."

References Edit

  1. ^ "alms". Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
  2. ^ "alms". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d.
  3. ^ "alms". Etymonline. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  4. ^ Nyanatiloka (1980), entry for "dāna". Budsas.org 2007-02-19 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "Buddha Purnima 2021: Date, significance and importance of the day". The Indian Express. 2021-05-26. Retrieved 2021-09-18.
  6. ^ Nyanatiloka (1980), entry for "dāna" Budsas.org 2007-02-19 at the Wayback Machine; and, PTS (1921–25), entry for "Puñña" (merit)Uchicago.edu.
  7. ^ Tsongkhapa & Berzin (2001), verse 15.
  8. ^ . www.accesstoinsight.org. Archived from the original on 2009-02-26. Retrieved 2009-02-22.
  9. ^ Thanissaro (2001).Accesstoinsight.org 2006-12-05 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "Bhikkhu Pāṭimokkha: The Bhikkhus' Code of Discipline". www.accesstoinsight.org. from the original on 2018-05-16.
  11. ^ "Alms and Almsgiving (in the Bible) | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2021-09-18.
  12. ^ Prince, Derek (1 October 2011). The Promise of Provision: Living and Giving from God's Abundant Supply. Baker Books. ISBN 978-1-4412-6328-5.
  13. ^ Claydon, Tony; Clarke, Peter Bernard (2010). God's Bounty?: Papers Read at the 2008 Summer Meeting and the 2009 Winter Meeting of the Ecclesiastical History Society. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 978-0-9546809-6-1.
  14. ^ Kallistos (Ware), Bishop; Mary, Mother (1978). The Lenten Triodion. South Canaan PA: St. Tikhon's Seminary Press (published 2002). pp. 35ff. ISBN 1-878997-51-3.
  15. ^ "Matthew 25:36 - The Sheep and the Goats". Bible Hub. Retrieved 2023-01-02.
  16. ^ Shah et al. (2013), Soulful Corporations: A Values-Based Perspective on Corporate Social Responsibility, Springer, ISBN 978-8132212744, page 125, Quote: "The concept of Daana (charity) dates back to the Vedic period. The Rig Veda enjoins charity as a duty and responsibility of every citizen."
  17. ^ a b c d Krishnan & Manoj (2008), Giving as a theme in the Indian psychology of values, in Handbook of Indian Psychology (Editors: Rao et al.), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-8175966024, pages 361-382
  18. ^ Sanjay Agarwal (2010), Daan and Other Giving Traditions in India, ASIN B00E0R033S, page 54-62
  19. ^ bhikSA 2015-04-27 at the Wayback Machine Sanskrit English Dictionary, University of Koeln, Germany
  20. ^ Alberto Garcia Gomez et al. (2014), Religious Perspectives on Human Vulnerability in Bioethics, Springer, ISBN 978-9401787352, pages 170-171
  21. ^ a b Alberuni's India (v. 2), Chapter LXVII, On Alms and how a man must spend what he earns 2015-04-16 at the Wayback Machine, Columbia University Libraries, London : Kegan Paul, Trübner & Co., (1910), pages 149-150
  22. ^ Al Biruni states that another one-ninth is put into savings/reserve, one-ninth in investment/trade for profits
  23. ^ MN Dutt (1979), The Dharma-shastras at Google Books, Volumes 3, Cosmo Publishers, pages 20-29
  24. ^ a b P Bilimoria et al. (2007), Dana as a Moral Category, in Indian Ethics: Classical traditions and contemporary challenges, Volume 1, ISBN 978-0754633013, pages 196-197 with footnotes
  25. ^ KN Kumari (1998), History of the Hindu Religious Endowments in Andhra Pradesh, ISBN 978-8172110857, page 128
  26. ^ Kota Neelima (2012), Tirupati, Random House, ISBN 978-8184001983, pages 50-52; Prabhavati C. Reddy (2014), Hindu Pilgrimage: Shifting Patterns of Worldview of Srisailam in South India, Routledge, ISBN 978-0415659970, page 190
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Bibliography Edit

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  • Tsongkhapa & Alexander Berzin (trans.) (2001). The Abbreviated Points of the Graded Path. Available on-line at StudyBuddhism.com

alms, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar,. For other uses see Alms disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alms news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alms ɑː m z ɑː l m z are money food or other material goods donated to people living in poverty 1 2 Providing alms is often considered an act of charity The act of providing alms is called almsgiving Woman giving alms by Janos Thorma Contents 1 Etymology 2 Buddhism 2 1 Dana in Buddhism 2 2 Intentions for giving 2 3 In support of Buddhist monks 3 Christianity 3 1 In Western Christianity 3 2 In Eastern Christianity 3 3 In the New Testament 4 Hinduism 4 1 Dana in Hinduism 4 1 1 Institutional dana 4 1 2 Forms of dana 4 1 3 In the Vedas 4 1 4 In the Upanishads 4 1 5 In Mahabharata and Puranas 5 Islam 5 1 Zakat 5 1 1 Nisab 5 2 Sadaqah 6 Judaism 6 1 Tzedakah 7 Mandaeism 7 1 Zidqa 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 BibliographyEtymology EditThe word alms comes from the Old English aelmesse aelmes which comes from Late Latin eleemosyna from Greek ἐlehmosynh eleemosyne pity alms from ἐlehmwn eleemōn merciful from ἔleos eleos meaning pity or mercy 3 Buddhism Edit Three monks seeking alms in Lhasa Tibet in 1993 Dana in Buddhism Edit Main articles Dana Buddhism and Satuditha In Buddhism both almsgiving and giving are called dana Pali 4 Such giving is one of the three elements of the path of practice as formulated by the Buddha for laypeople 5 This path of practice for laypeople is dana sila and bhavana 6 Generosity towards other sentient beings is also emphasized in Mahayana as one of the perfections paramita As shown in Lama Tsong Khapa s The Abbreviated Points of the Graded Path Wylie lam rim bsdus don Total willingness to give is the wish granting gem for fulfilling the hopes of wandering beings It is the sharpest weapon to sever the knot of stinginess It leads to bodhisattva conduct that enhances self confidence and courage And is the basis for universal proclamation of your fame and repute Realizing this the wise rely in a healthy manner on the outstanding path Of being ever willing to offer completely their bodies possessions and positive potentials The ever vigilant lama has practiced like that If you too would seek liberation Please cultivate yourself in the same way 7 The giving of alms is the beginning of one s journey to Nirvana Pali nibbana In practice one can give anything with or without thought for Nibbana This would lead to faith Pali saddha one key power Pali bala that one should generate within oneself for the Buddha Dhamma and Sangha According to the Pali canon Of all gifts alms the gift of Dhamma is the highest Dhp chapter 24 verse 354 a Intentions for giving Edit The intentions behind giving play an important role in developing spiritual qualities The suttas record various motives for exercising generosity For example the Anguttara Nikaya A iv 236 enumerates the following eight motives 8 One gives with annoyance or as a way of offending the recipient or with the idea of insulting him Fear also can motivate a person to make an offering One gives in return for a favor done to oneself in the past One also may give with the hope of getting a similar favor for oneself in the future One gives because giving is considered good I cook they do not cook It is not proper for me who cooks not to give to those who do not cook i e Some give because they are able to do what others cannot Some give alms to gain a good reputation Still others give alms to adorn and beautify the mind Asajja danam deti Bhaya danam deti Adasi me ti danam deti Dassati me ti danam deti Sadhu danan ti danam deti Aham pacami ime ne pacanti na arahami pacanto apacantanam adatun ti danam deti Imam me danam dadato kalyano kittisaddo abbhuggacchati ti danam deti Cittalankara cittaparikkarattham danam deti Alms bowl as used by bhikkhus for going on an alms roundIn support of Buddhist monks Edit In Buddhism alms or almsgiving is the respect given by a lay Buddhist to a Buddhist monk nun spiritually developed person or other sentient being It is not charity as presumed by Western interpreters It is closer to a symbolic connection to the spiritual realm and to show humbleness and respect in the presence of the secular society b The act of almsgiving connects the human to the monk or nun and what he she represents As the Buddha has stated Householders amp the homeless or charity monastics in mutual dependence both reach the true Dhamma Itivuttaka 4 7 9 c Pre packaged alms kits can be bought to donate to monksIn Theravada Buddhism nuns Pali bhikkhunis and monks Pali bhikkhus practice Takuhatsu pindacara where they collect food piṇḍapata This is often perceived as allowing the laypeople to make merit Pali punna Money cannot be accepted by a Theravadan Buddhist monk or nun in place of or in addition to food as the Patimokkha training rules make it an offense worth forfeiture and confession 10 In countries that follow Mahayana Buddhism the practice of Takuhatsu has mostly died out In China Korea and Japan local cultures resisted the idea of giving food to begging clerics and there was no tradition of gaining merit by donating to practitioners After periods of persecution monasteries were situated in remote mountain areas the distance between the monastery and the nearest towns made this practice impossible In Japan the practice of a weekly or monthly Takuhatsu replaced the daily round In the Himalayan countries the large number of bhikkhus would have made an alms round a heavy burden on families Competition with other religions for support also made daily practice difficult and even dangerous the first Buddhist monks in the Silla dynasty of Korea were said to be beaten due to their minority at the time citation needed Christianity Edit St Clare distributes alms Tennenbach Codex 4 illustrated before c 1492In Christianity the giving of alms is viewed as an act of charity 11 In the Apostolic age Christians were taught that giving alms was an expression of love Such care for the poor was to be understood as love for God who in the person of Jesus Christ sacrificed himself for the salvation of believers d In nearly all Christian denominations money is donated to support the church s financial needs and its ministry to the less fortunate In some churches the alms are placed near to the altar to symbolize that the offering belongs to God and to represent the unity of the congregation e In Western Christianity Edit Collecting the Offering in a Scottish Kirk by John PhillipThe offertory is the traditional moment in the Roman Catholic Mass Lutheran Divine Service and Anglican Eucharist when alms are collected Baptists and Methodists among other denominations collect tithes and offerings alms during the offertory in church services A tithe the first tenth of one s income is seen as what is owed to God while an offering alms includes anything contributed beyond that 12 13 Some fellowships practice regular giving for special purposes called love offerings for the poor destitute or victims of catastrophic loss such as home fires or medical expenses Traditionally deacons and deaconesses are responsible for distributing these gifts among widows orphans and others in need Many Christians support a plethora of charitable organizations not all of which claim a Christian religious affiliation Many American educational and medical institutions were founded by Christian fellowships giving alms In Eastern Christianity Edit In the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Eastern Catholic Churches the collection of alms and tithes has not been formally united to the offertory in any liturgical action However either having a collection plate in the narthex or passing it unobtrusively during the service is not uncommon In Eastern Orthodox theology almsgiving is an important part of the spiritual life and fasting should always be accompanied by increased prayer and almsgiving 14 Almsgiving in the name of the deceased also frequently accompanies prayer for the dead Those whose financial circumstances do not permit the giving of monetary alms may give alms in other ways such as intercessory prayer and acts of mercy such as visiting people in prison clothing the poor or volunteering in soup kitchens 15 In the New Testament Edit In addition private acts of charity are a duty and only considered virtuous only if not done for others to admire Be careful not to do your acts of righteousness in front of others to be seen by them If you do you will have no reward from your Father in heaven Matthew 6 1 Jesus places the primary focus on the motives behind the outward and inward giving of alms which should be love Rather give as alms what is inside and then everything will be clean for you Luke 11 41 Jesus commends this poor but generous woman in Luke 21 1 4 Jesus contrasts the giving of the rich and the poor He looked up and saw the rich putting their gifts into the treasury And He saw a poor widow putting in two small copper coins And He said Truly I say to you this poor widow put in more than all of them for they all out of their surplus put into the offering but she out of her poverty put in all that she had to live on Luke 21 1 4 Giving should be out of love and not out of duty He will reply I tell you the truth whatever you did not do for one of the least of these you did not do for me Matthew 25 45 Sharing possessions was practised in the church Now the full number of those who believed were of one heart and soul and no one said that any of the things that belonged to him was his own but they had everything in common Acts 4 32 there were no needy persons among them For from time to time those who owned land or houses sold them brought the money from the sales and put it at the apostles feet and it was distributed to anyone who had need Joseph a Levite from Cyprus whom the apostles called Barnabas which means son of encouragement sold a field he owned and brought the money and put it at the apostles feet Acts 4 34 37Hinduism Edit Lady giving alms at the Temple by Raja Ravi Varma 1848 1906 Dana in Hinduism Edit Main article Dana Hinduism In Hinduism dana Sanskrit द न is an ancient concept of almsgiving dating to the Vedic period of Hinduism 16 Dana has been defined in traditional texts as any action of relinquishing the ownership of what one considered or identified as one s own and investing the same in a recipient without expecting anything in return 17 While dana is typically given to one person or family Hinduism also discusses charity or giving aimed at public benefit which is sometimes called utsarga This aims at larger projects such as building a rest house school investing in drinking water or an irrigation well planting trees and building care facilities among others 18 The practice of begging for alms is called bhiksha Sanskrit भ क ष 19 20 The 11th century Persian historian Abu Rayḥan al Biruni who visited and lived in India for 16 years beginning in about 1017 CE mentions the practice of charity and almsgiving among Hindus as he observed during his stay He wrote It is obligatory with them Hindus every day to give alms as much as possible 21 After the taxes there are different opinions on how to spend their income Some destine one ninth of it for alms 22 Others divide this income after taxes into four portions One fourth is destined for common expenses the second for liberal works of a noble mind the third for alms and the fourth for being kept in reserve Abu Rayḥan al Biruni Tarikh Al Hind 11th century AD 21 Almsgiving in Hinduism is considered a noble deed to be done without expectation of any return from those who receive the charity 17 Some texts reason referring to the nature of social life that charity is a form of good karma that affects one s future circumstances and environment and that good charitable deeds leads to good future life because of the reciprocity principle 17 Other Hindu texts such as Vyasa Samhita state that reciprocity may be innate in human nature and social functions but dana is a virtue in itself as doing good lifts the nature of one who gives 23 The texts do not recommend charity to unworthy recipients or where charity may harm or encourage injury to or by the recipient Dana is thus a dharmic act requires an idealistic normative approach and has spiritual and philosophical context 17 Some medieval era authors state that dana is best done with sraddha faith which is defined as being in good will cheerful welcoming the recipient of the charity and giving without anasuya finding faults in the recipient 24 Kohler states that these scholars of Hinduism suggest that charity is most effective when it is done with delight a sense of unquestioning hospitality where the dana ignores the short term weaknesses as well as the circumstances of the recipient and takes a long term view 24 Institutional dana Edit Satrams also called Dharamsala or Chathrams in parts of India have been one means of almsgiving in Hinduism Satrams are shelters rest houses for travelers and the poor with many serving water and free food These were usually established along the roads connecting major Hindu temple sites in south Asia as well as near major temples 25 26 27 Hindu temples have also served as institutions for almsgiving 28 29 The dana the temples received from Hindus were used to feed people in distress as well as fund public projects such as irrigation and land reclamation 29 30 Forms of dana Edit Forms of almsgiving in Hinduism include go dana the donation of a cow 31 bhu dana भ द न the donation of land vidya dana or jnana dana व द य द न ज ञ न द न the giving of knowledge and skills aushadha dana the giving of care for the sick and diseased abhay dana the giving of freedom from fear such as asylum or protection for someone facing imminent injury anna dana अन न द न the giving of food to the poor needy and all visitors 32 Between giving food and giving knowledge Hindu texts suggest the gift of knowledge is superior 33 34 In the Vedas Edit The Rigveda has the earliest discussion of dana in the Vedas and offers reasons for the virtue of almsgiving 35 The Gods have not ordained hunger to be our death even to the well fed man comes death in varied shape The riches of the liberal never waste away while he who will not give finds none to comfort him The man with food in store who when the needy comes in miserable case begging for bread to eat Hardens his heart against him when of old finds not one to comfort him Bounteous is he who gives unto the beggar who comes to him in want of food and the feeble Success attends him in the shout of battle He makes a friend of him in future troubles No friend is he who to his friend and comrade who comes imploring food will offer nothing Let the rich satisfy the poor implorer and bend his eye upon a longer pathway Riches come now to one now to another and like the wheels of cars are ever rolling The foolish man wins food with fruitless labour that food I speak the truth shall be his ruin He feeds no trusty friend no man to love him All guilt is he who eats with no partaker Rigveda 10 117 36 In the Upanishads Edit The early Upanishads those composed before 500 BCE discuss the virtue of almsgiving For example Brihadaranyaka Upanishad states in verse 5 2 3 that three characteristics of a good developed person are self restraint dama compassion or love for all sentient life daya and charity dana 37 38 39 Chandogya Upanishad similarly states in Book III that a virtuous life requires tapas meditation asceticism dana charity arjava straightforwardness non hypocrisy ahimsa non violence non injury to all sentient beings and satyavacana truthfulness 40 f 41 42 In Mahabharata and Puranas Edit Bhagavad Gita describes the right and wrong forms of dana in verses 17 20 through 17 22 43 The Adi Parva of the Hindu Epic Mahabharata states in Chapter 91 that a person must first acquire wealth by honest means then embark on charity be hospitable to those who come to him never inflict pain on any living being and share a portion with others whatever he consumes 44 In the Vana Parva Chapter 194 the Mahabharata recommends that one must conquer the mean by charity the untruthful by truth the wicked by forgiveness and dishonesty by honesty 45 The Bhagavata Purana discusses when dana is proper and when it is improper In Book 8 Chapter 19 verse 36 it states that charity is inappropriate if it endangers and cripples modest livelihood of one s biological dependents or of one s own Charity from surplus income above that required for modest living is recommended in the Puranas 46 Islam EditIn Islam the concept of charitable giving is generally divided into voluntary giving sadaqah صدقة and an obligatory practice the zakat الزكاة Zakat is governed by a specific set of rules within Islamic jurisprudence and is intended to fulfill a well defined set of theological and social requirements Sadaqah is possibly a better translation of Christian influenced formulations of the notion of alms for that reason though zakat plays a much larger role within Islamic charity Zakat Edit Main article Zakat Zakat is the third of the five pillars of Islam 47 48 The literal meaning of the word zakat is to purify to develop and cause to grow Zakat is the amount of money that every Muslim male or female who is an adult mentally stable free and financially able has to pay to support specific categories of people According to shariah it is an act of worship Possessions are purified by setting aside a proportion for those in need This cutting back like the pruning of plants balances and encourages new growth Various rules are attached but in general terms it is obligatory to give 2 5 of one s savings and business revenue and 5 10 of one s harvest to the poor Possible recipients include the destitute the working poor those who are unable to pay off their own debts stranded travelers and others who need assistance with the general principle of zakat always being that the rich should pay it to the poor One of the most important principles of Islam is that all things belong to God and wealth is therefore held by human beings in trust citation needed This category of people is defined in At Tawbah The alms are only for the poor and the needy and those who collect them and those whose hearts are to be reconciled and to free the captives and the debtors and for the cause of Allah and for the wayfarers a duty imposed by Allah Allah is knower Wise Qur an 9 60 The obligatory nature of zakat is firmly established in the Qur an the sunnah or hadith and the consensus of the companions and the Muslim scholars Allah states in At Tawbah O ye who believe there are indeed many among the priests and anchorites who in Falsehood devour the substance of men and hinder them from the way of Allah And there are those who bury gold and silver and spend it not in the way of Allah announce unto them a most grievous penalty On the Day when heat will be produced out of that wealth in the fire of Hell and with it will be branded their foreheads their flanks and their backs This is the treasure which ye buried for yourselves taste ye then the treasures ye buried Qur an 9 34 35 Muslims of each era have agreed upon the obligatory nature of paying zakat from their gold and silver and from other kinds of currency 49 Nisab Edit Main article Nisab Zakat is obligatory when a certain amount of money called the nisab or minimum amount is reached or exceeded Zakat is not obligatory if the amount owned is less than this nisab The nisab of gold and golden currency is 20 mithqal or approximately 85 grams of pure gold One mithqal is approximately 4 25 grams The nisab of silver and silver currency is 200 dirhams which is approximately 595 grams of pure silver The nisab of other kinds of money and currency is to be scaled to that of gold the nisab of money is equivalent to the price of 85 grams of 999 type pure gold on the day in which zakat is paid 50 Zakat is obligatory after the money has been in the control of its owner for the span of one lunar year a lunar year is approximately 355 days The owner then needs to pay 2 5 or 1 40 of the money as zakat The owner should deduct any amount of money he or she borrowed from others check if the rest reaches the necessary nisab then pay zakat for it 51 If the owner had enough money to satisfy the nisab at the beginning of the year but his wealth in any form increased the owner needs to add the increase to the nisab amount owned at the beginning of the year and then pay zakat 2 5 of the total at the end of the lunar year There are minor differences between fiqh schools on how this is to be calculated Each Muslim calculates his or her own zakat individually For most purposes this involves the payment each year of two and a half percent of one s capital citation needed Sadaqah Edit Main article Sadaqah A pious person may also give alms as much as he or she pleases as sadaqah and does so preferably in secret Although this word can be translated as voluntary charity it has a wider meaning as illustrated in the hadiths The Messenger of Allah said Every good is charity Indeed among the good is to meet your brother with a smiling face and to pour what is left in your bucket into the vessel of your brother Jamiʽ at Tirmidhi 27 76 hadith compiled by Al Tirmidhi 52 The Prophet said Charity is a necessity for every Muslim He was asked What if a person has nothing The Prophet replied He should work with his own hands for his benefit and then give something out of such earnings in charity The Companions asked What if he is not able to work The Prophet said He should help poor and needy persons The Companions further asked What if he cannot do even that The Prophet said He should urge others to do good The Companions said What if he lacks that also The Prophet said He should check himself from doing evil That is also charity Riyadh as Salihin 141 hadith compiled by Al Nawawi 53 Judaism EditTzedakah Edit Main article Tzedakah Sandstone vestige of a Jewish gravestone depicting a tzedakah box pushke in a Jewish cemetery in Otwock Karczew Anielin Poland Tzedakah pouch and gelt Yiddish for coins money on fur like padding In Judaism tzedakah a Hebrew term literally meaning righteousness but commonly used to signify charity 54 refers to the religious obligation to do what is right and just 55 g In the Greek Septuagint tzedakah was sometimes translated as ἐlehmosynh almsgiving 56 57 In Judaism tzedakah is seen as one of the greatest deeds that a person can do Tzedakah along with prayer and repentance is regarded as ameliorating the consequences of bad acts Contemporary tzedakah is regarded as a continuation of the Biblical Maaser Ani or poor tithe as well as Biblical practices including permitting the poor to glean the corners of a field harvest during the Shmita sabbatical year and other practices citation needed Jewish farmers are commanded to leave the corners of their fields for the starving to harvest for food and are forbidden to pick up any grain that has been dropped during harvesting as such food shall be left for the starving as well citation needed h In the Mishneh Torah Chapter 10 7 14 Maimonides lists eight laws about giving to poor people hilkhot matanot aniyim listed in order from most to least righteous with the most righteous form being allowing an individual to become self sustaining and capable of giving others charity 58 Enabling the recipient to become self reliant Giving when neither party knows the other s identity Giving when you know the recipient s identity but the recipient doesn t know your identity Giving when you do not know the recipient s identity but the recipient knows your identity Giving before being asked Giving after being asked Giving less than you should but giving it cheerfully Giving begrudgingly Mandaeism EditZidqa Edit Main article Zidqa In Mandaeism zidqa refers to alms or almsgiving 59 60 Mandaean priests receive regular financial contributions from laypeople The Mandaic term zidqa brika literally blessed oblation refers to a ritual meal blessed by priests An early self appellation for Mandaeans is bhiri zidqa meaning elect of righteousness 61 See also Edit Look up alms in Wiktionary the free dictionary Almshouse Begging Bhiksha Freegan Mendicant Meshulach Pittance Qard al Hassan Satuditha ZayatNotes Edit In Pali this line is Sabba danam Dhamma danam jinati This line can be found in the Dhammapada Chapter 24 verse 354 Thanissaro 1997 62 translates this entire verse as A gift of Dhamma conquers all gifts the taste of Dhamma all tastes a delight in Dhamma all delights the ending of craving all suffering amp stress Indicative of the mutual nature of the almsgiving exchange in some Theravada countries if a monk were to refuse alms from someone a gesture known as turning over the rice bowl this would be interpreted as an act of excommunication of the almsgiver by the monk An example of such a refusal is the refusal of Buddhist monks to accept offerings by military personnel in military occupied Myanmar Mydans 20 September 2007 NYT Almsgiving is also commended by the Buddha in a less prominent way in various other canonical texts such as the Dighajanu Sutta James 1 27 NIV Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world Compare with Matthew 5 23 24 Translation Now Tapas austerity meditation Dana charity alms giving Arjava sincerity uprightness and non hypocrisy Ahimsa non violence don t harm others and Satya vacanam truthfulness these are the Dakshina gifts payment to others he gives in life Chandogya Upanishad 3 17 4 Jews do not practice charity and the concept is virtually nonexistent in Jewish tradition Instead of charity the Jew gives tzedakah which means righteousness and justice When the Jew contributes his money time and resources to the needy he is not being benevolent generous or charitable He is doing what is right and just Leviticus 19 9 10 KJV And when ye reap the harvest of your land thou shalt not wholly reap the corners of thy field neither shalt thou gather the gleanings of thy harvest 10 And thou shalt not glean thy vineyard neither shalt thou gather every grape of thy vineyard thou shalt leave them for the poor and stranger I am the LORD your God References Edit alms Merriam Webster Dictionary alms Dictionary com Unabridged Online n d alms Etymonline Retrieved 21 November 2021 Nyanatiloka 1980 entry for dana Budsas org Archived 2007 02 19 at the Wayback Machine Buddha Purnima 2021 Date significance and importance of the day The Indian Express 2021 05 26 Retrieved 2021 09 18 Nyanatiloka 1980 entry for dana Budsas org Archived 2007 02 19 at the Wayback Machine and PTS 1921 25 entry for Punna merit Uchicago edu Tsongkhapa amp Berzin 2001 verse 15 Dana The Practice of Giving www accesstoinsight org Archived from the original on 2009 02 26 Retrieved 2009 02 22 Thanissaro 2001 Accesstoinsight org Archived 2006 12 05 at the Wayback Machine Bhikkhu Paṭimokkha The Bhikkhus Code of Discipline www accesstoinsight org Archived from the original on 2018 05 16 Alms and Almsgiving in the Bible Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2021 09 18 Prince Derek 1 October 2011 The Promise of Provision Living and Giving from God s Abundant Supply Baker Books ISBN 978 1 4412 6328 5 Claydon Tony Clarke Peter Bernard 2010 God s Bounty Papers Read at the 2008 Summer Meeting and the 2009 Winter Meeting of the Ecclesiastical History Society Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 0 9546809 6 1 Kallistos Ware Bishop Mary Mother 1978 The Lenten Triodion South Canaan PA St Tikhon s Seminary Press published 2002 pp 35ff ISBN 1 878997 51 3 Matthew 25 36 The Sheep and the Goats Bible Hub Retrieved 2023 01 02 Shah et al 2013 Soulful Corporations A Values Based Perspective on Corporate Social Responsibility Springer ISBN 978 8132212744 page 125 Quote The concept of Daana charity dates back to the Vedic period The Rig Veda enjoins charity as a duty and responsibility of every citizen a b c d Krishnan amp Manoj 2008 Giving as a theme in the Indian psychology of values in Handbook of Indian Psychology Editors Rao et al Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 8175966024 pages 361 382 Sanjay Agarwal 2010 Daan and Other Giving Traditions in India ASIN B00E0R033S page 54 62 bhikSA Archived 2015 04 27 at the Wayback Machine Sanskrit English Dictionary University of Koeln Germany Alberto Garcia Gomez et al 2014 Religious Perspectives on Human Vulnerability in Bioethics Springer ISBN 978 9401787352 pages 170 171 a b Alberuni s India v 2 Chapter LXVII On Alms and how a man must spend what he earns Archived 2015 04 16 at the Wayback Machine Columbia University Libraries London Kegan Paul Trubner amp Co 1910 pages 149 150 Al Biruni states that another one ninth is put into savings reserve one ninth in investment trade for profits MN Dutt 1979 The Dharma shastras at Google Books Volumes 3 Cosmo Publishers pages 20 29 a b P Bilimoria et al 2007 Dana as a Moral Category in Indian Ethics Classical traditions and contemporary challenges Volume 1 ISBN 978 0754633013 pages 196 197 with footnotes KN Kumari 1998 History of the Hindu Religious Endowments in Andhra Pradesh ISBN 978 8172110857 page 128 Kota Neelima 2012 Tirupati Random House ISBN 978 8184001983 pages 50 52 Prabhavati C Reddy 2014 Hindu Pilgrimage Shifting Patterns of Worldview of Srisailam in South India Routledge ISBN 978 0415659970 page 190 Sanctuaries of times past The Hindu June 27 2010 SK Aiyangar Ancient India Collected Essays on the Literary and Political History Asian Educational Services ISBN 978 8120618503 pages 158 164 a b Burton Stein The Economic Function of a Medieval South Indian Temple The Journal of Asian Studies Vol 19 February 1960 pp 163 76 Burton Stein February 4 1961 The state the temple and agriculture development The Economic Weekly Annual pp 179 187 Padma 1993 The Position of Women in Mediaeval Karnataka Prasaranga University of Mysore Press page 164 Abbe Dubois and Henry Beauchamp 2007 Hindu Manners Customs and Ceremonies ISBN 978 1602063365 pages 223 483 495 Maria Heim 2004 Theories of the Gift in South Asia Hindu Buddhist and Jain Reflections Routledge ISBN 978 0415970303 pages xv xxvi 141 149 and Chapter 2 The Gift of Knowledge Archived 2015 09 26 at the Wayback Machine Chitrapur Matha India R Hindery Comparative ethics in Hindu and Buddhist traditions The Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Vol 2 Number 1 page 105 The Rig Veda Mandala 10 Hymn 117 Ralph T H Griffith Translator PV Kane Samanya Dharma History of Dharmasastra Vol 2 Part 1 page 5 major works in Devanagari script Sanskrit Documents sanskritdocuments org Archived from the original on 2014 12 14 Retrieved 2015 06 04 Brihadaranyaka Upanishad Translator S Madhavananda page 816 For discussion pages 814 821 अथ यत तप द नम र जवमह स सत यवचनम त त अस य दक ष ण Source Chandogya Upanishad Sanskrit Archived 2018 05 15 at the Wayback Machine Verse 3 17 4 Wikisource Robert Hume Chandogya Upanishad 3 17 The Thirteen Principal Upanishads Oxford University Press pages 212 213 Chandogya Upanishad with Shankara Bhashya Ganganath Jha Translator pages 165 166 Christopher Key Chapple The Bhagavad Gita Twenty fifth Anniversary Edition State University of New York Press ISBN 978 1438428420 pages 653 655 M N Dutt Translator Adi Parva Chapter XCI verses 3 4 page 132 MN Dutt Translator Vana Parva Chapter CXCIV verse 6 page 291 Agarwal Sanjay 2010 Daan and Other Giving Traditions in India p 43 ASIN B00E0R033S Five Pillars PBS Archived from the original on 2011 06 28 Retrieved 2010 11 17 Hooker Richard 14 July 1999 Arkan ad Din the five pillars of religion Washington State University Archived from the original on 2010 12 03 Retrieved 2010 11 17 Mufti Imam The Third Pillar of Islam Compulsory Charity www islamreligion com Retrieved 2021 09 17 What is Zakat on money and When is it required Donate your Zakat Beyaz Eller Association 2017 05 13 Retrieved 2022 01 19 Islamic Aid Zakat Zakah Donate your Zakat to Fight Poverty in Asia and Africa Islamic Aid changing lives for good Donate Now Zakat Zakah Sadaqah Refugee Services Flood amp Disaster Relief Worldwide Retrieved 2022 01 19 Ibn Isa at Tirmidhi Muhammad Imam 1970 Jamiʽ at Tirmidhi via Sunnah com a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Ibn Sharaf an Nawawi Yahya Imam 16 June 2014 Riyadh as Salihin Reprint Bilingual ed Tughra Books pp 120 121 ISBN 978 1597843331 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Donin Hayim Halevy Rabbi 1972 To Be A Jew New York Basic Books p 48 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Tzedakah vs The Myth of Charity Archived 2012 03 13 at the Wayback Machine by Yanki Tauber Retrieved 03 11 2012 As per Gesenius Lexicon Deuterony 6 25 kaὶ ἐlehmosynh ἔstai derived from the Greek ἐlehmosynh mercifulness used by Greek speaking Jews to denote almost exclusively the offering of charity to the needy from a feeling of both compassion and righteousness ẓedaḳah See LXX note Septuagint on Prov xxi 21 and Dan iv 24 Kohler Kaufmann Alms 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia Retrieved November 26 2018 Maimonides Eight Levels of Charity Mishneh Torah Laws of Charity 10 7 14 www chabad org Archived from the original on 2016 08 07 Gelbert Carlos 2011 Ginza Rba Sydney Living Water Books ISBN 9780958034630 Drower Ethel Stefana 1937 The Mandaeans of Iraq and Iran Oxford At The Clarendon Press Rudolph Kurt 7 April 2008 MANDAEANS ii THE MANDAEAN RELIGION Encyclopaedia Iranica Archived from the original on 2011 04 29 Retrieved 8 January 2022 Tanhavagga Craving www accesstoinsight org Archived from the original on 2006 10 14 Bibliography EditMydans Seth 20 September 2007 Monks Pressure Myanmar Junta New York Times Retrieved 20 September 2007 from The New York Times Nyanatiloka Mahathera 4th ed 1980 Buddhist Dictionary Manual of Buddhist Terms and Doctrines Kandy Sri Lanka Buddhist Publication Society ISBN 955 24 0019 8 Available on line at Budsas org Pali Text Society PTS 1921 1925 The Pali Text Society s Pali English dictionary London Chipstead Available on line at Uchicago edu Archived 2021 07 25 at the Wayback Machine Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1997 Tanhavagga Craving Dhp XXIV Available on line at Accesstoinsight org Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 2001 The Group of Fours Itivuttaka 4 Available on line at Accesstoinsight org Tsongkhapa amp Alexander Berzin trans 2001 The Abbreviated Points of the Graded Path Available on line at StudyBuddhism com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alms amp oldid 1169733051, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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