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Merit (Buddhism)

Merit (Sanskrit: puṇya; Pali: puñña) is a concept considered fundamental to Buddhist ethics. It is a beneficial and protective force which accumulates as a result of good deeds, acts, or thoughts. Merit-making is important to Buddhist practice: merit brings good and agreeable results, determines the quality of the next life and contributes to a person's growth towards enlightenment. In addition, merit is also shared with a deceased loved one, in order to help the deceased in their new existence. Despite modernization, merit-making remains essential in traditional Buddhist countries and has had a significant impact on the rural economies in these countries.

Merit, demerit and its retributions at the level of the individual. Based on Spiro.[1]

Merit is connected with the notions of purity and goodness. Before Buddhism, merit was used with regard to ancestor worship, but in Buddhism it gained a more general ethical meaning. Merit is a force that results from good deeds done; it is capable of attracting good circumstances in a person's life, as well as improving the person's mind and inner well-being. Moreover, it affects the next lives to come, as well as the destination a person is reborn. The opposite of merit is demerit (papa), and it is believed that merit is able to weaken demerit. Indeed, merit has even been connected to the path to Nirvana itself, but many scholars say that this refers only to some types of merit.

Merit can be gained in a number of ways, such as giving, virtue and mental development. In addition, there are many forms of merit-making described in ancient Buddhist texts. A similar concept of kusala (Sanskrit: kusala) is also known, which is different from merit in some details. The most fruitful form of merit-making is those good deeds done with regard to the Triple Gem, that is, the Buddha, his teachings, the Dhamma (Sanskrit: Dharma), and the Sangha. In Buddhist societies, a great variety of practices involving merit-making has grown throughout the centuries, sometimes involving great self-sacrifice. Merit has become part of rituals, daily and weekly practice, and festivals. In addition, there is a widespread custom of transferring merit to one's deceased relatives, of which the origin is still a matter of scholarly debate. Merit has been that important in Buddhist societies, that kingship was often legitimated through it, and still is.

In modern society, merit-making has been criticized as materialist, but merit-making is still ubiquitous in many societies. Examples of the impact of beliefs about merit-making can be seen in the Phu Mi Bun rebellions which took place in the last centuries, as well as in the revival of certain forms of merit-making, such as the much discussed merit release.

Definition edit

Translations of
Merit
Sanskritpuṇya
Palipuñña
Burmeseကောင်းမှု
(MLCTS: káʊ̃ m̥ṵ)
Chinese功德
(Pinyin: gōng dé)
Japaneseくどく
(Rōmaji: kudoku)
Laoບຸນ (bun)
Tibetanབསོད་ནམས
(bsod nams)
Thaiบุญ [būn]
(RTGS: bun)
Vietnamesecông đức
Glossary of Buddhism

Puñña literally translates as 'merit, meritorious action, virtue'.[2] It is glossed by the Theravāda Commentator Dhammapāla as "santanaṃ punāti visodheti", meaning 'it cleans or purifies the life-continuity'.[3][4] Its opposites are apuñña (demerit) or pāpa ('infertile, barren, harmful, bringing ill fortune'),[2][4][5] of which the term pāpa has become most common.[3] The term merit, originally a Christian term, has in the latter part of the twentieth century gradually been used as a translation of the Buddhist term puṇya or puñña.[6] The Buddhist term has, however, more of an impermanent character than the English translation implies,[7] and the Buddhist term does not imply a sense of deserving.[8][9]

Before the arising of Buddhism, merit was commonly used in the context of Brahmanical sacrifice, and it was believed that merit accrued through such sacrifice would bring the devotee to an eternal heaven of the 'fathers' (Sanskrit: pitṛ, pitara).[10][11][12] Later, in the period of the Upanishads, a concept of rebirth was established and it was believed that life in heaven was determined by the merit accumulated in previous lives,[13][11][12] but the focus on the pitṛ did not really change.[10] In Buddhism, the idea of an eternal heaven was rejected, but it was believed that merit could help achieve a rebirth in a temporary heaven.[11] Merit was no longer merely a product of ritual, but was invested with an ethical meaning and role.[14][15]

In the Tipiṭaka (Sanskrit: Tripitaka; the Buddhist scriptures), the importance of merit is often stressed. Merit is generally considered fundamental to Buddhist ethics, in nearly all Buddhist traditions.[5][16][17] Merit-making is very important to Buddhist practice in Buddhist societies.[18][19][20]

Merit is a "beneficial and protective force which extends over a long period of time" (B.J. Terwiel)—and is the effect of good deeds (Pali: kamma, Sanskrit: karma) done through physical action, words, or thought.[21][22][23] As its Pāli language (the language of Theravada Buddhism, as practiced in Sri Lanka, Thailand, Myanmar, etc.) definition indicates, this force is associated with goodness and purity of mind.[24] In traditional Buddhist societies, it is believed that merit is more sustainable than that of magical rites, spirit worship or worldly power.[25] The way merit works, is that acts of merit bring good and agreeable results, whereas demeritorious acts bring bad and disagreeable results. A mixture of the two generates mixed results in a person's life. This karmic correspondence (Pali: kamma-sarikkhatā) or "automatic cosmic reaction" (Brokaw) is a common idea found in Buddhist texts and Buddhist societies,[19][26] and explains why people are different and lead different lives in many ways.[18][27] Karma is self-regulatory and natural: it operates without divine intervention and human intention is fundamental to it.[8][6][28] Internally, merit makes the mind happy and virtuous.[29][30][31] Externally, present good circumstances, such as a long life, health and wealth, as well as the character and abilities someone is born with, arise from merits done in the past and vice versa, with demerits.[21][32][33] The merits and demerits a person has done may take a while to bear fruit.[34] Merit or demerit may cause a good or bad future respectively, including in the next lives to come.[6][32] A bad destination after rebirth may be caused by demerit, but merely a lack of merit may also lead a person to be born in an unhappy destination.[35] When someone is reborn in a happy destination, however, one can only stay there as long as merits last.[36] Thus, it is stated in the Tipiṭaka that people cannot take anything with them when they die, except for whatever merit and demerit they have done, which will affect their future.[37][38][39] Merit can be accumulated in different quantities, and stored up, but also has an impermanent character: it can run out.[22][40][41] Summarizing from the Buddhist text Milinda Pañhā, some scholars conclude that merit is inherently stronger than demerit.[42][43] Moreover, many merits together have the power to prevent demerits from having an effect, by pushing them "to the back of the queue" (Richard Gombrich), though demerits can never be undone.[44][45][46]

All these benefits of merit (Pali: ānisaṁsa; Sanskrit: ānuśaṁsa), whether internal or external, are the aim in merit-making, and are often subject of Dharma teachings and texts.[47][48] Thus, merit is the foundation of heavenly bliss in the future,[2] and in some countries merit was also considered to contribute to the good fortune of the country.[49][50] Because merit is understood to have these many beneficial effects, it is sometimes compared with cool water, which is poured or which is bathed in. This symbol is used in merit transfer ceremonies, for example.[51][52]

Discussion in traditional texts edit

General edit

Merit is not only a concept, but also a way of living.[53] The Pāli canon identifies three bases of merit (puññakiriyā-vatthu),[2][38][39] in order of difficulty:[54][note 1]

  • giving (dāna-maya)
  • virtue (sīla-maya)
  • mental development (bhāvanā-maya)

In Buddhist texts and practice, giving is considered the easiest of the three bases of merit.[56] It helps to overcome selfishness and stills the mind; it prepares the mind for the practice of virtue.[17] It is also considered a form of saving, considering there is a rebirth in which people receive back what they have given.[57] As for virtue, this comprises three out of eight aspects of the Noble Eightfold Path, the path central in the Buddhist teaching: right speech, right action and right livelihood. Being the main criterion for moral behavior in Buddhism, virtue is mostly about the undertaking of five precepts,[17][58] although the eight precepts may be kept now and then.[59] The five precepts are part of many Buddhist ceremonies, and are also considered a merit itself, helping the practitioner to become strong and healthy.[17][60][61] The benefits of practicing the three bases of merits are also summarized as three forms of happiness (Pali: sampatti)—happiness as a human being, happiness in heaven, and happiness in Nirvana.[62] When people die, what world they will be reborn into depends on how intense they practice these three bases of merit. It is, however, only mental development that can take someone to the highest heavenly worlds, or to Nirvana.[63]

 
Giving helps to overcome selfishness and stills the mind; it prepares the mind for the practice of virtue.[17]

Post-canonical texts and commentaries[note 2] such as the Dhammasaṅganī and Atthasālinī,[64][65] elaborating on the three bases of merit, state that lay devotees can make merit by performing ten deeds. Seven items are then added to the previous three:

  • Giving (Dāna-maya)
  • Virtue (Sīla-maya)
  • Mental development (Bhāvanā-maya)
  • Honoring others (Apacāyana-maya)
  • Offering service (Veyyāvaca-maya)
  • Dedicating (or transferring) merit to others (Pāli:Pattidāna-maya; Sanskrit: puṇyapariṇāmanā)
  • Rejoicing in others' merit (Pattānumodanā-maya)
  • Listening to Buddha's Teachings (Dhammassavana-maya)
  • Instructing others in the Buddha's Teachings (Dhammadesanā-maya)
  • Straightening one's own views in accordance with the Buddha's Teachings (Diṭṭhujukamma)[2][64][66]

These ten, the Commentator Buddhaghosa says, all fit within the three first bases of merit: 'Giving' includes 'Transferring merit to others' and 'Rejoicing in others' merit' by extension, whereas 'Virtue' includes 'Honoring others' and 'Offering service'. The remaining items 'Listening to Teachings', 'Instructing others in the Teachings' and 'Straightening one's own views' are part of 'Mental development'.[64] Thus, in Theravāda Buddhism, merit is always accrued through morally (good) actions. Such good deeds are also highly valued in the other two Buddhist schools, that is Mahāyāna (China, Japan, etc.) and Vajrayāna (Tibet, Nepal, etc.). In some forms of Mahāyāna or Vajrayāna it is believed, however, that even more merit will accrue from certain ritual actions, sometimes called the 'power of blessed substances' (Standard Tibetan: rdzas). These are considered an addition to the traditional list and can help protect against calamities or other negative events caused by bad karma.[16][67]

A number of scholars have criticized the concepts of merit and karma as amoral, egoist and calculative, citing its quantitative nature and emphasis on personal benefits in observing morality.[47][68][69] Other scholars have pointed out that in Buddhist ethics egoism and altruism may not be as strictly separated as in western thought, personal benefit and that of the other becoming one as the practitioner progresses on the spiritual path.[70][71][72] Buddhist ethics is informed by Buddhist metaphysics, notably, the not-self doctrine, and therefore some western ethical concepts may not apply.[72] Besides, as Keown notices, moral action would not be possible if it was not preceded by moral concern for others, as is illustrated by the example of the Buddha himself. Such moral concern is also part of the Buddhist path, cultivated through loving-kindness and the other sublime attitudes (Pali: brahamavihāra).[73]

 
Merit is a "beneficial and protective force which extends over a long period of time" (Terwiel)—and is the effect of good deeds.[21]

Accumulation and fruition edit

In post-canonical and vernacular Pāli literature, such as the Jātaka stories of the Buddha's previous lives, the Avadānas and Anisaṃsa texts, as well as in many Mahāyāna texts, merit is the main concept. It is regarded as something which can be accumulated throughout different lifetimes in the process of attaining Buddhahood, and is also instrumental in attaining it. The Bodhisatta intent on accomplishing Buddhahood and bringing other beings across the ocean of suffering, must do so by accumulating all sorts of merits, in this context also called perfections (Pali: pāramī; Sanskrit: pāramitā). This form of merit-making is always led by a vow for enlightenment (Pali: panidhāna; Sanskrit: praṇidhāna), and an intention to enlighten others as well, as well as the transferring of merits to all living beings to that effect.[74][75][76] Another aspect of meritorious acts, emphasized more in later literature, is the idea that a single meritorious act done will reap many fruits, as, for example, expressed in the Vimānavatthu. Not only is the quality of people's next rebirth affected by their merits, but also the circumstances in which they are reborn; not only in the next life, but also in adjacent lives after that. Wealth, lifespan, and position are all contingent on merit.[32][33]

In Buddhist texts further details are given in what way and to what extent a meritorious deed will bring results: this depends on the spiritual quality of the recipient, the spiritual attitude of the giver, the manner in which one gives and the object given.[77][43][66] If the recipient is a human, the gift yields more fruits than if the recipient is an animal, but a gift to a sāmaṇera (a young monk), a monk, many monks, and the Buddha yield even more fruits, in ascending order.[78][79] If the giver is motivated by greed or other defilements of the mind, the merit gained will be much less than if the giver is motivated by loving-kindness or other noble intentions.[80] Even the intention of going to heaven, though in itself not considered wrong, is not seen as lofty as the intention to want to develop and purify the mind. If the recipient is spiritually "not worthy of the gift", the gift will still be meritorious provided the giver's intention is good, and this is also valid the other way around.[81][82] Good thoughts must also be maintained after the good deed is done, as regretting the gift will also decrease the merit.[83] Whether the giver pronounces a certain wish or intention also affects the meritorious deed, as the power of the merits can be channeled toward a certain purpose.[84][85][86][note 3] The manner in which people give is also important: whether someone gives respectfully or not, and whether by giving someone is harming anyone. With regard to the size of the gift, a larger gift is usually more meritorious than a smaller one, but purity of mind affects merit more than the gift's size.[87] It is therefore recommended to give as much as you can afford, no more and no less.[88] Such care in choosing whom to give to and how to give, is called being 'skilled in merit' (Pali: puññassa kovidā).[89]

Puñña, kusala and Nirvana edit

A teaching that exists in both Mahāyāna sūtras and Theravādin suttas is the teaching on the Ten Wholesome Ways of Action (Pali: kusaladhamma). In Mahāyāna, this teaching is described as the way in which a Bodhisattva prevents "suffering in all evil destinies". These ten wholesome ways are:

  • In giving up the taking of life, the practitioner will accomplish freedom from vexations;
  • In giving up stealing, the practitioner will find security in life, economically, socially and spiritually;
  • In giving up wrongful (sexual) conduct, the practitioner will find inner peace and peace in the family life;
  • In giving up lying, the practitioner will attain purity of speech and mind;
  • In giving up slander, the practitioner will be protected socially and spiritually;
  • In giving up harsh language, the practitioner's words will be more effective;
  • In giving up frivolous speech, the practitioner will become wise and dignified;
  • In giving up lust, the practitioner finds freedom in life through contentment and simplicity;
  • In giving up hatred, the practitioner will develop kindness and gentleness;
  • In giving up wrong views, the practitioner will not falter in the good and spiritual path.[90][91]

These ten actions are described as akusala ('unwholesome'; Sanskrit: akuśala), and when abstaining from them it is called kusala ('wholesome'; Sanskrit: kuśala).[92][note 4] Moreover, kusala and akusala are depicted as having 'roots' (mūla). Akusalamūla are the roots of evil in the mind (the defilements), whereas the kusalamūla are roots connected with good qualities of the mind. Both of them are called roots because they are qualities that can be cultivated and grown in the mind.[94][95]

Puñña and pāpa are close in meaning to kusala and akusala. Both pairs are used for distinguishing between ethically right and wrong. However, even though the negatives akusala and pāpa have almost the same meaning, there are some differences between the positives, kusala and puñña. According to P. D. Premasiri, Kusala is used to describe a more direct path to Nirvana than puñña.[96][97] Damien Keown, however, believes they are merely different angles of the same concept: kusala refers to the moral status of an action, whereas puñña refers to the experience of the consequences of the action.[98] He further points out that in the Pāli suttas (discourses) mental development (bhāvanā) practices such as meditation are also included in the path of merit. It is unlikely that in the Tipiṭaka meditation would be regarded as an indirect path or obstacle to Nirvana,[99][100] and there are passages that directly relate merit to Nirvana.[101][102] Sometimes a distinction is made between worldly (Pali: lokīya) and transcendental (Pali: lokuttara) merit, in which only transcendental merit leads to liberation.[103][104] The Thai scholar and monastic Phra Payutto believes that merit and kusala are both used to describe the 'cleanliness of the mind' (RTGSkhwam sa-at mot chot). But whereas merit aims for the 'beautiful and praiseworthy' (RTGSsuai-ngam na chuenchom) aspect of such cleanliness, with worldly benefits such as wealth, praise and happiness; kusala aims for the 'purity' (RTGSborisut) aspect of cleanliness, with enlightenment as its benefit. Phra Payutto does add that both need to be accumulated on the Buddhist path. In making this comparison, he says this only holds for worldly merit, not for transcendental merit. Collins equates transcendental merit with kusala.[105][106] In the earlier Pāli texts, kusala was much more commonly used than puñña, puñña mostly being used in the context of the practice of giving.[107]

In a widely quoted theory, Melford Spiro and Winston King have distinguished two forms of Buddhism found in traditional Buddhist societies, "kammatic Buddhism" focused on activities such as merit-making, and "nibbanic Buddhism" which focuses on the liberation from suffering and rebirth.[108] In this theory, called the "transcendency thesis" (Keown), Buddhism has two quite separate aims, which are pursued by separate groups, that is, laypeople (kammatic) and monks (nibbanic). This view has, however, been downplayed or criticized by many other scholars, who believe that kammatic practices are in many ways connected to nibbanic practices, and the aims of monks and laypeople cannot be that easily separated.[109][110][111]

This transcendency thesis has also been applied to scriptural interpretation. When discussing the path to the attainment of Nirvana, in some passages in the Tipiṭaka merit is rejected. For example, in the Padhāna Sutta, the Bodhisatta (the Buddha Gotama to be) is tempted by Māra to give up his self-torture practices to do meritorious acts instead. The Bodhisatta replies that even a bit of merit is no use to him (Pali: "anumattenāpi puññena attho mayhaṃ na vijjati"). Some scholars, supporting the transcendency thesis, have interpreted this to mean that merit can only lead to happiness and progress within Saṃsāra, but does not lead to Nirvana, and must in fact be discarded before attaining Nirvana.[112][113][114] Marasinghe believes, however, that the word merit in this passage refers to merit in the pre-Buddhist Brahmanical sense, connected with rituals and sacrifice, and the lay life.[115] Another example often quoted in this context is the simile of the raft, which states that both dhamma and adhamma should be let go of in order to attain liberation. Whereas the term adhamma in the text clearly refers to evil views, the meaning of dhamma is subject to different interpretations. Considering that no other similar passage can be found in the Tipiṭaka, Keown believes that only this passage is not enough to base the transcendency thesis on.[116]

In the Pāli Canon, an enlightened person is said to be neutral in terms of karma, that is, the person no longer generates karma, merit, or demerit.[5][117][118] Some scholars have interpreted this to mean that an enlightened person attains a state where distinctions between good and evil no longer exist. Other scholars have criticized this as making little sense, considering how the Buddha would normally emphasize ethics. The fact that an enlightened person is neutral in terms of karma, does not mean he is ethically neutral.[119][120] Indeed, the Buddha is quoted in the Tipiṭaka as saying he is foremost in 'higher morality' (adhisīla).[121] Keown attempts to overcome this problem by proposing that enlightened people are beyond the accumulative experience of good deeds (merit, puñña), since they are already perfected. They therefore do not need to accumulate goodness and the resulting happiness anymore. They no longer need to strive for a happy rebirth in the next life, because they have gone beyond rebirth. Their enlightenment is, however, an ethical perfection as well, though this is solely described as kusala, not as puñña.[122][123][124]

Field of merit edit

 
The main concept of the field of merit is that good deeds done towards some recipients accrue more merit than good deeds to other recipients. This is compared with a seed planted in fertile ground, which reaps more and better fruits than in infertile ground.[49][125]

In pre-Buddhist Brahmanism, Brahmin priests used to perform yajñas (sacrifices) and thereby generating merit for the donors who provided gifts for the sacrifice. In Buddhism, it was the Buddhist monk who assumed this role, considered qualified to receive generosity from devotees and thereby generating merit for them. He came to be described as āhuneyyo ('worthy of offering'), by analogy with the Brahmanical term āhavanīya ('worthy of sacrifice', used in offerings to the ritual fire); and as dakkhiṇeyyo ('qualified to accept the offering'), by analogy with the Brahmanical dakśiṇā, the sacrificial offering itself.[126][127][128] The Sangha (monastic community) was also described as 'field of merit' (Pali: puññakkhetta; Sanskrit: puṇyakṣetra).[129][130][131] The difference with the Brahmanical tradition was, according to Marasinghe, that Buddhism did recognize other ways of generating merit apart from offerings to the monk, whereas the Brahmanical yajña only emphasized offerings to the Brahmin priest. That is not to say that such offerings were not important in early Buddhism: giving to the Sangha was the first Buddhist activity which allowed for community participation, and preceded the first rituals in Buddhism.[126]

The main concept of the field of merit is that good deeds done towards some recipients accrue more merit than good deeds to other recipients. This is compared with a seed planted in fertile ground which reaps more and better fruits than in infertile ground.[49][125][132] The Sangha is described as a field of merit, mostly because the members of the Sangha follow the Noble Eightfold Path. But in many texts, the Buddha and the Dhamma, and their representations, are also described as fields of merit. For example, Mahāyāna tradition considers production and reverence of Dharma texts very meritorious—this tradition, sometimes referred to as the "cult of the book" (Gregory Schopen), stimulated the development of print technology in China.[133][134][135] In other traditions a Buddha image is also considered a field of merit, and any good deed involving a Buddha image is considered very meritorious.[136][137] A meritorious deed will also be very valuable (and sometimes viewed in terms of a field of merit) if performed to repay gratitude to someone (such as parents), or performed out of compassion for those who suffer.[16][138][139] Deeds of merit done towards the Sangha as a whole (Pali: saṅghadāna) yield greater fruits than deeds done towards one particular recipient (Pali: pāṭipuggalikā dakkhiṇā) or deeds done with favoritism.[77][66][140] Indeed, saṅghadāna yields even more fruits than deeds of merit to the person of the Buddha himself.[78][141]

Practice in Buddhist societies edit

Thus the Buddhist's view of his present activities has a wider basis, they being but one group of incidents in an indefinitely prolonged past, present and future series. They are, as has been said, no mere train of witnesses for or against him, but a stage in a cumulative force of tremendous power. He and his works stand in a mutual relation, somewhat like that of child to parent in the case of past works, of parent to child in the case of future works. Now no normal mother is indifferent as to whether or how she is carrying out her creative potency. Nor can any normal Buddhist not care whether his acts, wrought up hourly in their effect into his present and future character, are making a happy or a miserable successor. And so, without any definite belief as to how, or in what realm of the universe he will re-arise as that successor to his present self, the pious Buddhist, no less than his pious brethren of other creeds, goes on giving money and effort, time and thought to good works, cheerfully believing that nothing of it can possibly forgo its effect, but that it is all a piling up of merit or creative potency, to result, somewhere, somewhere, somehow, in future happiness—happiness which, though he be altruistic the while, is yet more a future asset of his, than of some one in whom he naturally is less interested than in his present self. He believes that, because of what he is now doing, some one now in process of mental creation by him, and to all intents and purposes his future " self," will one day taste less or more of life's trials. To that embryonic character he is inextricably bound ever making or marring it, and for it he is therefore and thus far responsible.

C. A. F. Rhys Davids, A Study of the Buddhist Norm[142]

Merit-making edit

The ten bases of merit are very popular in Buddhist countries.[65] In China, other similar lists are also well-known.[143][144] In Thai Buddhism, the word "merit" (RTGSbun) is often combined with "to do, to make" (RTGStham), and this expression is frequently used, especially in relation to giving.[145][146][147][note 5] In Buddhist societies, such merit-making is common, especially those meritorious deeds which are connected to monks and temples. In this regard, there is a saying in Burma, "Your hands are always close to offering donations".[18][146][149] Contrary to popular conceptions, merit-making is done by both monastics and laypeople alike.[150][151][152] Buddhist monks or lay Buddhists earn merit through mindfulness, meditation, chanting and other rituals. Giving is the fundamental way of making merit for many laypeople, as monks are not allowed to cook by themselves.[31] Monastics in their turn practice themselves to be a good field of merit and make merit by teaching the donors. Merit-making has thus created a symbiotic relationship between laypeople and Sangha,[77][66][153] and the Sangha is obligated to be accessible to laypeople, for them to make merit.[154]

Giving can be done in several ways. Some laypeople offer food, others offer robes and supplies, and others fund ceremonies, build monasteries or persuade a relative to ordain as a monk. Young people often temporary ordain as monks, because they believe this will not only yield fruits of merit for themselves, but also for their parents who have allowed them to ordain.[155][156][157] In China, Thailand and India, it used to be common to offer land or the first harvest to a monastery.[158][153][159] Also, more socially oriented activities such as building a hospital or bridge, or giving to the poor are included in the Tipiṭaka, and by many Buddhists considered meritorious.[112][151][160] In fieldwork studies done by researchers, devotees appreciated the merits of becoming ordained and supporting the building of a temple the most.[157][161] Fisher found that building a temple was considered a great merit by devotees, because they believed they would in that way have part in all the wisdom which would be taught at that temple.[162] People may pursue merit-making for different reasons, as Buddhist orthodoxy allows for various ideals, this-worldly or ultimate.[163] Although many scholars have pointed out that devotees often aim for this-worldly benefits in merit-making,[164][165] it has also been pointed out that in old age, people tend to make merit with a view on the next life and liberation.[165][166] Among lay people, women tend to engage in merit-making more than men, and this may be a way for them to enhance empowerment.[31][167][168] Very often, merit-making is done as a group, and it is believed that such shared merit-making will cause people to be born together in next lives. This belief holds for families, friends, communities and even the country as a whole.[169][170] In some cases, merit-making took the form of a community-wide competition, in which different donors tried to outdo each other to prove their generosity and social status. This was the case during merit-making festivals in nineteenth-century Thailand.[18][171] In modern Thailand, businesses and politicians often make merit to improve their public image and increase confidence among customers or voters.[172] In Burma, lay devotees form associations to engage in merit-making as a community.[173]

 
In Thailand and Laos, a yearly festival is held, focused on the Vessantara Jātaka, a story of a previous life of the Buddha which is held sacred.[174]

People were so intent on merit-making and giving, that in some societies, people would even offer themselves and their family to a Buddhist temple, as one high-ranking minister did in the ancient Pagan Kingdom (ninth until fourteenth century Burma).[175][176] On a similar note, in Sri Lanka, kings and commoners would offer slaves to the temple, and then donate money to pay for their freedom, that way accruing two merits at once. Even more symbolically, kings would sometimes offer their kingdom to a temple, which, returned the gift immediately, together with some Dhamma teaching. Also in Sri Lanka, King Mahakuli Mahatissa disguised himself as a peasant and started to earn his living working on a paddy field, so he would be able to gain more merit by working himself to obtain resources to give to Buddhist monks.[177] In some cases, merit-making was even continued after a person's death: in ancient Thai tradition, it was considered meritorious for people to dedicate their corpses to feed the wild animals after death.[178]

Rituals edit

Many devout Buddhists observe regular "rest days" (Pali: uposatha) by keeping five precepts, listening to teachings, practicing meditation and living at the temple.[179][180] Besides these weekly observances, ceremonies and festivities are yearly held and are often occasions to make merit,[29][181] and are sometimes believed to yield greater merits than other, ordinary days.[182] In Thailand and Laos, a yearly festival (RTGSThet Mahachat) is held focused on the Vessantara Jātaka, a story of a previous life of the Buddha which is held sacred.[181][174] This festival, seven centuries old, played a major role in legitimating kingship in Thai society. (see § Kingship, below) Making merit is the central theme of the festival. Since the period of Rama IV, however, the festival has become less popular.[183][184] Many countries also celebrate the yearly Kaṭhina, when they offer robes, money and other requisites to the Sangha as a way to make merit.[185][186] In Burma, the two yearly Light Festivals are typically occasions to make merit, as gifts are given to elders, and robes are sewn for the Sangha.[187] In South Korea, a Buddha Day (Korean: seog-ga-tan-sin-il) is held, on which Buddhists pray and offer alms.[188] Other kinds of occasions of merit-making are also upheld. A special form of merit-making less frequently engaged in is going on pilgrimage, which is mostly common in Tibet and Japan. This practice is highly regarded and considered very meritorious.[189][190]

Recording edit

In several Buddhist countries, it has been common to record merits done. In China, it was common for many centuries to keep record of someone's meritorious deeds in 'merit ledgers' (pinyin: gōngguò gé). Although a belief in merit and retribution had preceded the merit ledgers by many centuries, during the Ming dynasty, through the ledgers a practice of systematic merit accumulation was established for the first time. The merit ledgers were lists of good deeds and bad deeds, organized in the form of a calendar for users to calculate to what extent they had been practicing good deeds and avoiding bad deeds every day. The ledgers also listed the exact retributions of every number of deeds done, to the detail. Through these ledgers it was believed someone could offset bad karma.[191][192] In the fourth century CE, the Baopuzi, and in the twelfth century the Treatise On the Response of the Tao and the Ledger of Merit and Demerit of the Taiwei Immortal introduced the basics of the system of merit ledgers. In the fourteenth century CE, the Tao master Zhao Yizhen recommended the use of the ledgers to examine oneself, to bring emotion in harmony with reason.[193][194] From the fourth to the sixteenth centuries, many types of ledgers were produced by Buddhist and Tao schools, and the usage of the ledgers grew widespread.[195] The practice of recording merits has survived in China and Japan until the present day.[196] In Theravāda countries, for example in Burma and Sri Lanka, similar customs have been observed.[197][198] In Sri Lanka, a 'book of merit' (Pali: puñña-potthaka, Sanskrit: puṇyapustaka) was sometimes kept by someone for years and read in the last moments of life. This practice was based on the story of King Duṭṭhagāmaṇi, and was mostly practiced by the royalty and rich during the period of the Mahāvaṁsa chronicle.[199][200][201] More recent practice has also been observed, for example, as a form of terminal care.[202][203] or as part of the activities of lay merit-making associations.[204]

Merit and wealth edit

The association of wealth with merits done has deeply affected many Buddhist countries. The relation between giving and wealth is ubiquitous in vernacular Pāli literature, and many stories of exemplary donors exist, such as the stories of Anāthapiṇḍika and Jōtika.[205] In Buddhism, by emphasizing the usage of wealth for generosity, accumulating wealth for giving purposes thus became a spiritual practice.[15] But using wealth in unrighteous ways, or hoarding it instead of sharing and giving it, is condemned extensively. Taṇhā (thirst, desire, greed, craving) is what keeps a person wandering in Saṃsāra (the cycle of rebirth), instead of becoming liberated. It is the attachment to wealth that is an obstacle on the spiritual path, not wealth per se. Stories illustrating these themes in vernacular Buddhist literature, have profoundly influenced popular culture in Buddhist countries.[122][206][205] Several scholars have described merit as a sort of spiritual currency or bookkeeping system.[44][197][207] Though objections have been made against this metaphor,[203][208] it is not new. Similar comparisons have been made in the Milinda Pañhā, and in seventeenth-century China. Moreover, Schopen has shown that Buddhism has had strong connections with the mercantile class, and Rotman thinks that a mercantile ethos may have informed Buddhist texts such as the Divyāvadāna.[102][197] Gombrich objects to calling merit-making "dry metaphysical mercantilism", but he does speculate on a historical relation between the concept of merit and the monetization of ancient India's economy.[209]

Transfer edit

 
Sometimes transferring merit is symbolized by pouring water into a vessel.[51][210]

Description and origins edit

Two practices mentioned in the list of meritorious acts have been studied quite extensively by scholars: dedicating (or transferring) merit to others, and rejoicing in others' merits.[211] Transferring merit is a widespread custom in all Buddhist countries, Mahāyāna, Vajrayāna and Theravāda.[212][213][214] In the Pāli tradition, the word pattidāna is used, meaning 'giving of the acquired'.[215] And in the Sanskrit tradition, the word pariṇāmanā is used for transferring merit, meaning 'bending round or towards, transfer, dedication'.[216] Of these translations, 'transfer of merit' has become commonplace, though objected to by some scholars.[217][218]

Buddhist traditions provide detailed descriptions of how this transfer proceeds. Transferring merit to another person, usually deceased relatives, is simply done by a mental wish. Despite the word transfer, the merit of the giver is in no way decreased during such an act, just like a candle is used to light another candle, but the light does not diminish.[64][74][219] The merit transferred cannot always be received, however. The dead relatives must also be able to sympathize with the meritorious act. If the relatives do not receive the merit, the act of transferring merit will still be beneficial for the giver himself. The transfer of merit is thus connected with the idea of rejoicing.[220] The other person who rejoices in one's meritorious deeds, in that way also receives merit, if he approves of the merit done. Thus, rejoicing in others' merits, apart from being one of the ten meritorious acts mentioned, is also a prerequisite for the transferring of merit to occur.[43][219][221] The purposes for merit transfer differ. In many Buddhist countries, transferring merit is connected to the notion of an intermediate state. The merit that is transferred to the deceased will help them to cross over safely to the next rebirth.[222] Some Mahāyāna traditions believe that it can help deceased relatives to attain the Pure Land.[16] Another way of transferring merit, apart from helping the deceased, is to dedicate it to the devas (deities), since it is believed that these are not able to make merits themselves. In this way it is believed their favor can be obtained.[44][221][223] Finally, many Buddhists transfer merits to resolve a bond of revenge that may exist between people, as it is believed that someone else's vengefulness may create harm in one's life.[196][224]

Initially in the Western study of Buddhism, some scholars believed that the transfer of merit was a uniquely Mahāyāna practice and that it was developed only at a late period after the historical Buddha. For example, Heinz Bechert dated the Buddhist doctrine of transfer of merit in its fully developed form to the period between the fifth and seventh centuries CE.[225] Scholars perceived that it was discordant with early Buddhist understandings of karma,[213][225][226] and noticed that in the Kathāvatthu the idea is partly refuted by Theravādins.[227][228] Other scholars have pointed out that the doctrine of the transfer of merit can be found early in the Theravāda tradition.[214][229][230] Then there also scholars who propose that, although the transfer of merit did not exist as such in early Buddhism, early doctrines did form a basis for it, the transfer of merit being an "inherent consequence" (Bechert) of these early doctrines.[231][232][233]

The idea that a certain power could be transferred from one to another was known before the arising of Buddhism. In religious texts such as the Mahābhārata, it is described that devas can transfer certain powers (Sanskrit: tejas). A similar belief existed with regard to the energy gained by performing austerities (Sanskrit: tapas). Apart from these transfers of power, a second origin is found in Brahamanical ancestor worship.[74] In the period preceding the arising of Buddhism, it was believed that after a person's death he had to be transformed from a wandering preta to reach the blissful world of the pitṛs. This was done through the complex Śrāddha ceremonies, which would secure the destiny of the deceased as a pitṛ. In Buddhism, however, ancestor worship was discontinued, as it was believed that the dead would not reach heavenly bliss through rituals or worship, but only through the law of karma. Nevertheless, the practice of transfer of merit arose by using the ethical and psychological principles of karma and merit, and connect these with the sense of responsibility towards one's parents. This sense of responsibility was typical for pre-Buddhist practices of ancestor worship. As for the veneration of dead ancestors, this was replaced by veneration of the Sangha.[234][235]

Application in the spreading of Buddhism edit

Sree Padma and Anthony Barber note that merit transfer was well-established and a very integral part of Buddhist practice in the Andhra region of southern India.[236] In addition, inscriptions at numerous sites across South Asia provide definitive evidence that the transfer of merit was widely practiced in the first few centuries CE.[237][238] In Theravāda Buddhism, it has become customary for donors to share merits during ceremonies held at intervals, and during a teaching.[239][240][221] In Mahāyāna Buddhism, it is believed that Bodhisattvas in the heavens are capable of transferring merits, and will do so to help relief the suffering of their devotees, who then can dedicate it to others. This concept has led to several Buddhist traditions focused on devotion.[241][242][243] Mahāyāna and Vajrayāna Buddhists transfer merits as part of the 'Seven-part-worship' (Sanskrit: saptāṇgapūjā),[244][245][246][note 6] and there is almost no ceremony without some form of merit transfer.[23][248] Thus, merit transfer has developed to become a standard element in the basic liturgy of all main schools of Buddhism. Indeed, the transfer of merits has grown that important in Buddhism, that it has become a major way for Buddhism to sustain itself.[16] In Japan, some temples are even called ekōdera, which means a temple for merit transfer.[249]

Kingship edit

 
The emperor Asoka (Sanskrit: Aśoka) is featured in later Pāli works as an important patron supporting the Sangha.[250]

In South and South-East Asia, merit-making was not only a practice for the mass, but was also practiced by the higher echelons of society. Kingship and merit-making went together.[175][251] In the Tipiṭaka, ideas about good governance were framed in terms of the ideal of the 'wheel-turning monarch' (Pali: Cakkavatti; Sanskrit: Cakravartin), the king who rules righteously and non-violently according to Dharma.[252] His roles and duties are discussed extensively in Buddhist texts. The Cakkavatti is a moral example to the people and possesses enough spiritual merit. It is through this that he earns his sovereignty, as opposed to merely inheriting it.[253][254] Also, the Buddha himself was born as a prince, and was also a king (Vessantara) in a previous life.[214][255][256] Apart from the models in the suttas, Pāli chronicles such as the Mahāvaṃsa and the Jinakālamālī may have contributed to the ideals of Buddhist kingship. In these vernacular Pāli works, examples are given of royalty performing meritorious acts, sometimes as a form of repentance for previously committed wrongdoings. The emperor Asoka (Sanskrit: Aśoka) is featured as an important patron supporting the Sangha.[250]

Because of these traditions, kings have had an important role in maintaining the Sangha, and publicly performed grand acts of merit, as is testified by epigraphic evidence from South and South-East Asia.[216][251] In Sri Lanka, from the tenth century CE onward, kings have assumed the role of a lay protector of the Sangha, and so have Thai kings, during the periods of Sukhothai and Ayutthaya (fourteenth until eighteenth centuries). In fact, a number of kings in Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Burma have described themselves as Bodhisattas, and epithets and royal language were established accordingly.[175][257][258] In short, kingship in traditional Buddhist societies was connected with the Sangha as a field of merit: the king assumed an exemplary role as a donor to the Sangha, and the Sangha legitimated the king as a leader of the state. Both facilitated one another, and both needed each other.[259] In times of famine or other hardship, it was traditionally believed that the king was failing, and the king would typically perform meritorious activities on a grand scale.[197][260][261] In this way the king would be able to improve the kingdom's conditions, through his "overflow karma" (Walters).[262] A similar role was played by queens.[263]

In the last seven centuries in Thailand, the Vessantara Jātaka has played a significant role in legitimating kingship in Thailand, through a yearly festival known as the 'Preaching of the Great Life' (RTGSThet Mahachat). Merit-making and pāramīs (doing good deeds, developing good habits to become a Buddha) were greatly emphasized in this festival, through the story about Prince Vessantara's generosity. During the reform period of Rama IV, as Thai Buddhism was being modernized, the festival was dismissed as not reflecting true Buddhism. Its popularity has greatly diminished ever since. Nevertheless, the use of merit-making by the Thai monarchy and government, to solidify their position and create unity in society, has continued until the late twentieth century.[264]

In modern society edit

19th–early 20th century edit

Buddhists are not in agreement with regard to the interpretation, role, and importance of merit. The role of merit-making in Buddhism has been discussed throughout Buddhist history, but much more so in the last centuries. In the nineteenth century, during the rise of Buddhist modernism and the Communist regimes, Buddhists in South and Southeast Asia became more critical about merit-making when it became associated with magical practices, privileging, ritualism and waste of resources.[265][266][267][note 7] In pre-modern Thailand, a great deal of the funds of temples were derived from the profits of land that were offered to temples by royalty and nobility. During the period of religious reform and administrative centralization in the nineteenth and early twentieth century, however, Thai temples were no longer supported in this manner and had to find other ways to maintain themselves.[159]

At the beginning of the twentieth century, perspectives of merit-making had changed again, as merit-making was being associated with capitalism and consumerism, which had been rising in South and Southeast Asia.[270][271] Furthermore, in some Buddhist countries, such as Thailand, there is a tendency among teachers and practitioners to dismiss and even revile merit-making in favor of teachings about detachment and attaining Nirvana, for which L. S. Cousins has coined the term "ultimatism".[272][273][274]

From 1960s onward edit

Studies done in the 1960s and 1970s in Thailand, Sri Lanka and Burma showed that a great deal of time, effort and money was invested by people in merit-making, e.g. Spiro described Burma's rural economy as "geared to the overriding goal of the accumulation of wealth as a means of acquiring merit". In some studies done in rural Burma, up to thirty percent of people's income was spent on merit-making.[275] In 2014, when Burma ranked highest on the World Giving Index (tied with the United States, and followed by many other Buddhist countries), scholars attributed this to the Burmese habit of merit-making.[18][276] Studies done in Thailand, however, showed that in the 1980s merit-making was declining, and a significant group did no longer believe in karma—though this was not a majority.[277] Some scholars disagree with these findings, however, saying that Buddhist practices such as merit-making are still very widespread.[271] Similar observations have been made about Cambodia and even about Thai people in the United States.[278][279] As for Buddhist "converts" in the west, for example from the United Kingdom, the interest in merit is less than among Asian Buddhists, but they strongly appreciate the generosity and reverence as exhibited by Asian Buddhists.[280][281]

Average expenses in merit-making per person, in Thailand, 2005.[29]
Region Baht/Person/Year
Bangkok Metropolitan Area 1,512
Central 1,032
North 672
Northeast 492
South 516
National average 804

Discussion by scholars edit

Some scholars have suggested that merit-making may have affected the economies of Buddhist countries in a negative way, because spending savings on the local temple would prevent consumption and investment and therefore stunt economic growth. Other researchers have disagreed, pointing out that spending resources on a Buddhist temple does stimulate economic growth through the investment in goods for the temple.[29][282][note 8] It has also been suggested that even if the economy of Buddhist countries would be better off without merit-making, it would result in an economy that the majority of the population would not prefer. Another criticism often leveled at merit-making in modern times is that it prevents people from using their resources to help the poor and needy. Very often, however, temples do have many social roles in society, and offer help to many groups in society—resources are therefore redistributed widely.[284][285] Moreover, since merit-making is often done as a community, merit-making may strengthen social ties, which Walters calls "sociokarma".[286]

Scholars have often connected the notion of karma to the determinism in the caste system in India.[287] Just like in the case of karma, some scholars believe that a belief in merit can cause social differences to stay unchanged. This would be the case when the poor, who cannot make much merit, resign to their fate.[288][289] Other scholars point out that merit can be used to improve social status in the present, as in the case of someone ordaining as a monk for a few years.[214] And vice versa, if someone's social status quickly deteriorates, for example, due to quick changes in the bureaucratic structure, these changes might be justified in Buddhist societies because someone's store of merit is believed to have run out.[290] Someone's position in society, even in the cosmos, is always subject to the impermanent workings of merit and demerit. In traditional Buddhist societies, quick changes in position, status, or roles are therefore considered part of life, and this insecurity is a motivator in trying to improve the situation through merit-making.[291][292] Findly points out that in Buddhist ideals of merit-making, the earned value gained by doing good deeds is more important than the assigned value gained by social status at birth.[293]

Phu Mi Bun movements edit

The idea of merit is also at the basis of the Phu Mi Bun movements as has been studied in Thailand and other Buddhist societies. Phu Mi Bun are people who are considered to have much merit from past lives, whose influence morally affects society at large.[294][295][296] Phu Mi Bun are in many ways similar to people declared Bodhisattvas in Buddhist societies, and in fact, the word Phu Mi Bun is often used in traditional Thai texts about the previous lives of the Buddha. Besides the example of the king himself, certain monks and shamans have assumed this role throughout history. In Thailand, around the turn of the twentieth century, a millennialist movement arose regarding the coming of a Phu Mi Bun, to the extent of becoming an insurgency which was suppressed by the government.[297][298][299] This insurgency became known to Thai historians as the "rebellion of the Phu Mi Bun" (RTGSKabot Phu Mi Bun), commonly known in English as the Holy Man's Rebellion.[300] Several of such rebellions involving Phu Mi Bun have taken place in the history of Thai, Laos, Cambodia and Burma. For example, in Cambodia, there were Phu Mi Bun–led revolts against the French control of Cambodia.[301] Lucien Hanks has shown that beliefs pertaining to Phu Mi Bun have profoundly affected the way Thai people relate to authority.[40] Indologist Arthur Basham, however, believed that in contemporary Thai society the Phu Mi Bun is more of a label, and merit more of a secular term than a deeply-rooted belief.[302]

 
Merit release is a ritual of releasing animals from captivity, as a way of making merit.[303]

Merit release edit

One merit-making practice that has received more scholarly attention since the 1990s is the practice of "merit release". Merit release is a ritual of releasing animals from captivity, as a way to make merit. Merit release is a practice common in many Buddhist societies, and has since the 2010s made a comeback in some societies.[303] Its origins are unclear, but traditionally it is said to originate from the Mahāyāna Humane King Sutra, among other sources.[304][305] It often involves a large number of animals which are released simultaneously, as well as chanting, making a resolution, and transfer of merits.[306][307] Though the most common practice is the releasing of fish and birds back in nature, there are also other forms: in Tibet, animals are bought from the slaughterhouse to release.[308] However, the practice has come under criticism by wildlife conservationists and scholars. Studies done in Cambodia, Hong Kong and Taiwan have shown that the practice may not only be fatal for a high percentage of the released animals, but may also affect the survival of threatened species, create a black market for wildlife, as well as pose a threat for public hygiene.[304][309] In Thailand, there are cases where animals are captured for the explicit purpose of being sold to be released—often into unsuitable ecosystems.[310] Some Buddhist organizations have responded to this by adjusting their practices, by working together with conservationist organizations to educate people, and even by pushing for new laws controlling the practice.[311] In 2016, the Society for Conservation Biology (SCB) started discussing possible solutions with religious communities on how the practice could be adapted. According to the SCB, the communities have generally responded positively.[304][312] In the meantime, in some countries, laws have been issued to control the practice. In Singapore, to limit merit release on Vesak celebrations, people were fined.[305]

Despite its critics, merit release continues to grow, and has also developed new forms in western countries. In 2016, it was widely reported that the Canada-based Great Enlightenment Buddhist Institute Society (GEBIS) had released 600 pounds (270 kg) of lobsters in the ocean. The release was planned in agreement with local lobster-men.[313] In the same year, Wendy Cook from Lincoln, United States, bought about 135 rabbits from a farm to raise them under better conditions. The costly release, advertised on Facebook as The Great Rabbit Liberation of 2016, was supported by Buddhist monastics from Singapore and the Tibetan tradition, and was based on the idea of merit-making.[314] In a less successful attempt, two Taiwanese Buddhists released crab and lobsters in the sea at Brighton, United Kingdom, to make merit. They were fined by the authorities for £15,000 for a wildlife offense that could have significant impact on native species.[315]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In the Sangīti Sutta ("Chanting together discourse," Digha Nikaya 33), verse 38, the leading disciple Sāriputta is described as teaching the same triad: dāna, sīla, bhāvanā.[55]
  2. ^ See Digha Nikāya iii.218
  3. ^ The announcing of a certain intention in reference to the actions someone has done (Pali: saccakiriya) is a common theme in all Indian religion [84]
  4. ^ There is some discussion as to the best translation of kusala, some preferring 'skilful' or 'intelligent' instead.[93]
  5. ^ However, the term merit-making may also originate from a translation of Pāli terms. In Pāli texts several of such terms were used.[148]
  6. ^ There are also other forms that are practiced, varying from four to eleven parts.[247]
  7. ^ From the 1980s onward, the communist regimes in Laos and Cambodia no longer viewed Buddhism as an obstacle to the development of the state, and many of the restrictions with regard to Buddhist practice were lifted. [50][268] In Burma, the former military government approached merit-making practices differently: they justified their forced labor camps by citing that the labor there yielded merit. At the same time, Aung San Suu Kyi referred to the struggle for democracy as meritorious.[269]
  8. ^ Since the 2000s, studies in China have shown a growing interest among local government officials to promote merit-making activities, believing it to stimulate local economy.[283]

Citations edit

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  2. ^ a b c d e Rhys Davids & Stede 1921, p. 86.
  3. ^ a b Marasinghe 2003, p. 461.
  4. ^ a b Harvey 2012, p. 44.
  5. ^ a b c Nyanatiloka 1980b.
  6. ^ a b c Pye & Strong 1987, pp. 5870, 5873.
  7. ^ Hanks 1962, p. 1247.
  8. ^ a b Harvey 2000, p. 18.
  9. ^ Cousins 1996, p. 155.
  10. ^ a b Holt 1981.
  11. ^ a b c Marasinghe 2003, pp. 457–8.
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Further reading edit

  • Field research study on how merit-making practices benefit disabled people in a traditional Buddhist country

External links edit

Lay Theravada practices for a fortunate rebirth

FAITH (Saddhā) GIVING (Dāna) VIRTUE (Sīla) MIND (Bhāvanā) DISCERNMENT (Paññā)

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Charity ·
Almsgiving

5 precepts ·
8 precepts

Mettā ·
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4 Noble Truths ·
3 Characteristics

Based on: Dighajanu Sutta, Velama Sutta, Dhammika Sutta

merit, buddhism, concept, merit, hinduism, punya, hinduism, merit, sanskrit, puṇya, pali, puñña, concept, considered, fundamental, buddhist, ethics, beneficial, protective, force, which, accumulates, result, good, deeds, acts, thoughts, merit, making, importan. For the concept of merit in Hinduism see Punya Hinduism Merit Sanskrit puṇya Pali punna is a concept considered fundamental to Buddhist ethics It is a beneficial and protective force which accumulates as a result of good deeds acts or thoughts Merit making is important to Buddhist practice merit brings good and agreeable results determines the quality of the next life and contributes to a person s growth towards enlightenment In addition merit is also shared with a deceased loved one in order to help the deceased in their new existence Despite modernization merit making remains essential in traditional Buddhist countries and has had a significant impact on the rural economies in these countries Merit demerit and its retributions at the level of the individual Based on Spiro 1 Merit is connected with the notions of purity and goodness Before Buddhism merit was used with regard to ancestor worship but in Buddhism it gained a more general ethical meaning Merit is a force that results from good deeds done it is capable of attracting good circumstances in a person s life as well as improving the person s mind and inner well being Moreover it affects the next lives to come as well as the destination a person is reborn The opposite of merit is demerit papa and it is believed that merit is able to weaken demerit Indeed merit has even been connected to the path to Nirvana itself but many scholars say that this refers only to some types of merit Merit can be gained in a number of ways such as giving virtue and mental development In addition there are many forms of merit making described in ancient Buddhist texts A similar concept of kusala Sanskrit kusala is also known which is different from merit in some details The most fruitful form of merit making is those good deeds done with regard to the Triple Gem that is the Buddha his teachings the Dhamma Sanskrit Dharma and the Sangha In Buddhist societies a great variety of practices involving merit making has grown throughout the centuries sometimes involving great self sacrifice Merit has become part of rituals daily and weekly practice and festivals In addition there is a widespread custom of transferring merit to one s deceased relatives of which the origin is still a matter of scholarly debate Merit has been that important in Buddhist societies that kingship was often legitimated through it and still is In modern society merit making has been criticized as materialist but merit making is still ubiquitous in many societies Examples of the impact of beliefs about merit making can be seen in the Phu Mi Bun rebellions which took place in the last centuries as well as in the revival of certain forms of merit making such as the much discussed merit release Contents 1 Definition 2 Discussion in traditional texts 2 1 General 2 2 Accumulation and fruition 2 3 Punna kusala and Nirvana 3 Field of merit 4 Practice in Buddhist societies 4 1 Merit making 4 2 Rituals 4 3 Recording 4 4 Merit and wealth 5 Transfer 5 1 Description and origins 5 2 Application in the spreading of Buddhism 6 Kingship 7 In modern society 7 1 19th early 20th century 7 2 From 1960s onward 7 3 Discussion by scholars 7 4 Phu Mi Bun movements 7 5 Merit release 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Citations 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksDefinition editTranslations ofMeritSanskritpuṇyaPalipunnaBurmeseက င မ MLCTS kaʊ m ṵ Chinese功德 Pinyin gōng de Japaneseくどく Rōmaji kudoku Laoບ ນ bun Tibetanབས ད ནམས bsod nams Thaibuy bun RTGS bun Vietnamesecong đứcGlossary of BuddhismPunna literally translates as merit meritorious action virtue 2 It is glossed by the Theravada Commentator Dhammapala as santanaṃ punati visodheti meaning it cleans or purifies the life continuity 3 4 Its opposites are apunna demerit or papa infertile barren harmful bringing ill fortune 2 4 5 of which the term papa has become most common 3 The term merit originally a Christian term has in the latter part of the twentieth century gradually been used as a translation of the Buddhist term puṇya or punna 6 The Buddhist term has however more of an impermanent character than the English translation implies 7 and the Buddhist term does not imply a sense of deserving 8 9 Before the arising of Buddhism merit was commonly used in the context of Brahmanical sacrifice and it was believed that merit accrued through such sacrifice would bring the devotee to an eternal heaven of the fathers Sanskrit pitṛ pitara 10 11 12 Later in the period of the Upanishads a concept of rebirth was established and it was believed that life in heaven was determined by the merit accumulated in previous lives 13 11 12 but the focus on the pitṛ did not really change 10 In Buddhism the idea of an eternal heaven was rejected but it was believed that merit could help achieve a rebirth in a temporary heaven 11 Merit was no longer merely a product of ritual but was invested with an ethical meaning and role 14 15 In the Tipiṭaka Sanskrit Tripitaka the Buddhist scriptures the importance of merit is often stressed Merit is generally considered fundamental to Buddhist ethics in nearly all Buddhist traditions 5 16 17 Merit making is very important to Buddhist practice in Buddhist societies 18 19 20 Merit is a beneficial and protective force which extends over a long period of time B J Terwiel and is the effect of good deeds Pali kamma Sanskrit karma done through physical action words or thought 21 22 23 As its Pali language the language of Theravada Buddhism as practiced in Sri Lanka Thailand Myanmar etc definition indicates this force is associated with goodness and purity of mind 24 In traditional Buddhist societies it is believed that merit is more sustainable than that of magical rites spirit worship or worldly power 25 The way merit works is that acts of merit bring good and agreeable results whereas demeritorious acts bring bad and disagreeable results A mixture of the two generates mixed results in a person s life This karmic correspondence Pali kamma sarikkhata or automatic cosmic reaction Brokaw is a common idea found in Buddhist texts and Buddhist societies 19 26 and explains why people are different and lead different lives in many ways 18 27 Karma is self regulatory and natural it operates without divine intervention and human intention is fundamental to it 8 6 28 Internally merit makes the mind happy and virtuous 29 30 31 Externally present good circumstances such as a long life health and wealth as well as the character and abilities someone is born with arise from merits done in the past and vice versa with demerits 21 32 33 The merits and demerits a person has done may take a while to bear fruit 34 Merit or demerit may cause a good or bad future respectively including in the next lives to come 6 32 A bad destination after rebirth may be caused by demerit but merely a lack of merit may also lead a person to be born in an unhappy destination 35 When someone is reborn in a happy destination however one can only stay there as long as merits last 36 Thus it is stated in the Tipiṭaka that people cannot take anything with them when they die except for whatever merit and demerit they have done which will affect their future 37 38 39 Merit can be accumulated in different quantities and stored up but also has an impermanent character it can run out 22 40 41 Summarizing from the Buddhist text Milinda Panha some scholars conclude that merit is inherently stronger than demerit 42 43 Moreover many merits together have the power to prevent demerits from having an effect by pushing them to the back of the queue Richard Gombrich though demerits can never be undone 44 45 46 All these benefits of merit Pali anisaṁsa Sanskrit anusaṁsa whether internal or external are the aim in merit making and are often subject of Dharma teachings and texts 47 48 Thus merit is the foundation of heavenly bliss in the future 2 and in some countries merit was also considered to contribute to the good fortune of the country 49 50 Because merit is understood to have these many beneficial effects it is sometimes compared with cool water which is poured or which is bathed in This symbol is used in merit transfer ceremonies for example 51 52 Discussion in traditional texts editGeneral edit Merit is not only a concept but also a way of living 53 The Pali canon identifies three bases of merit punnakiriya vatthu 2 38 39 in order of difficulty 54 note 1 giving dana maya virtue sila maya mental development bhavana maya In Buddhist texts and practice giving is considered the easiest of the three bases of merit 56 It helps to overcome selfishness and stills the mind it prepares the mind for the practice of virtue 17 It is also considered a form of saving considering there is a rebirth in which people receive back what they have given 57 As for virtue this comprises three out of eight aspects of the Noble Eightfold Path the path central in the Buddhist teaching right speech right action and right livelihood Being the main criterion for moral behavior in Buddhism virtue is mostly about the undertaking of five precepts 17 58 although the eight precepts may be kept now and then 59 The five precepts are part of many Buddhist ceremonies and are also considered a merit itself helping the practitioner to become strong and healthy 17 60 61 The benefits of practicing the three bases of merits are also summarized as three forms of happiness Pali sampatti happiness as a human being happiness in heaven and happiness in Nirvana 62 When people die what world they will be reborn into depends on how intense they practice these three bases of merit It is however only mental development that can take someone to the highest heavenly worlds or to Nirvana 63 nbsp Giving helps to overcome selfishness and stills the mind it prepares the mind for the practice of virtue 17 Post canonical texts and commentaries note 2 such as the Dhammasaṅgani and Atthasalini 64 65 elaborating on the three bases of merit state that lay devotees can make merit by performing ten deeds Seven items are then added to the previous three Giving Dana maya Virtue Sila maya Mental development Bhavana maya Honoring others Apacayana maya Offering service Veyyavaca maya Dedicating or transferring merit to others Pali Pattidana maya Sanskrit puṇyapariṇamana Rejoicing in others merit Pattanumodana maya Listening to Buddha s Teachings Dhammassavana maya Instructing others in the Buddha s Teachings Dhammadesana maya Straightening one s own views in accordance with the Buddha s Teachings Diṭṭhujukamma 2 64 66 These ten the Commentator Buddhaghosa says all fit within the three first bases of merit Giving includes Transferring merit to others and Rejoicing in others merit by extension whereas Virtue includes Honoring others and Offering service The remaining items Listening to Teachings Instructing others in the Teachings and Straightening one s own views are part of Mental development 64 Thus in Theravada Buddhism merit is always accrued through morally good actions Such good deeds are also highly valued in the other two Buddhist schools that is Mahayana China Japan etc and Vajrayana Tibet Nepal etc In some forms of Mahayana or Vajrayana it is believed however that even more merit will accrue from certain ritual actions sometimes called the power of blessed substances Standard Tibetan rdzas These are considered an addition to the traditional list and can help protect against calamities or other negative events caused by bad karma 16 67 A number of scholars have criticized the concepts of merit and karma as amoral egoist and calculative citing its quantitative nature and emphasis on personal benefits in observing morality 47 68 69 Other scholars have pointed out that in Buddhist ethics egoism and altruism may not be as strictly separated as in western thought personal benefit and that of the other becoming one as the practitioner progresses on the spiritual path 70 71 72 Buddhist ethics is informed by Buddhist metaphysics notably the not self doctrine and therefore some western ethical concepts may not apply 72 Besides as Keown notices moral action would not be possible if it was not preceded by moral concern for others as is illustrated by the example of the Buddha himself Such moral concern is also part of the Buddhist path cultivated through loving kindness and the other sublime attitudes Pali brahamavihara 73 nbsp Merit is a beneficial and protective force which extends over a long period of time Terwiel and is the effect of good deeds 21 Accumulation and fruition edit In post canonical and vernacular Pali literature such as the Jataka stories of the Buddha s previous lives the Avadanas and Anisaṃsa texts as well as in many Mahayana texts merit is the main concept It is regarded as something which can be accumulated throughout different lifetimes in the process of attaining Buddhahood and is also instrumental in attaining it The Bodhisatta intent on accomplishing Buddhahood and bringing other beings across the ocean of suffering must do so by accumulating all sorts of merits in this context also called perfections Pali parami Sanskrit paramita This form of merit making is always led by a vow for enlightenment Pali panidhana Sanskrit praṇidhana and an intention to enlighten others as well as well as the transferring of merits to all living beings to that effect 74 75 76 Another aspect of meritorious acts emphasized more in later literature is the idea that a single meritorious act done will reap many fruits as for example expressed in the Vimanavatthu Not only is the quality of people s next rebirth affected by their merits but also the circumstances in which they are reborn not only in the next life but also in adjacent lives after that Wealth lifespan and position are all contingent on merit 32 33 In Buddhist texts further details are given in what way and to what extent a meritorious deed will bring results this depends on the spiritual quality of the recipient the spiritual attitude of the giver the manner in which one gives and the object given 77 43 66 If the recipient is a human the gift yields more fruits than if the recipient is an animal but a gift to a samaṇera a young monk a monk many monks and the Buddha yield even more fruits in ascending order 78 79 If the giver is motivated by greed or other defilements of the mind the merit gained will be much less than if the giver is motivated by loving kindness or other noble intentions 80 Even the intention of going to heaven though in itself not considered wrong is not seen as lofty as the intention to want to develop and purify the mind If the recipient is spiritually not worthy of the gift the gift will still be meritorious provided the giver s intention is good and this is also valid the other way around 81 82 Good thoughts must also be maintained after the good deed is done as regretting the gift will also decrease the merit 83 Whether the giver pronounces a certain wish or intention also affects the meritorious deed as the power of the merits can be channeled toward a certain purpose 84 85 86 note 3 The manner in which people give is also important whether someone gives respectfully or not and whether by giving someone is harming anyone With regard to the size of the gift a larger gift is usually more meritorious than a smaller one but purity of mind affects merit more than the gift s size 87 It is therefore recommended to give as much as you can afford no more and no less 88 Such care in choosing whom to give to and how to give is called being skilled in merit Pali punnassa kovida 89 Punna kusala and Nirvana edit See also Nirvana Buddhism A teaching that exists in both Mahayana sutras and Theravadin suttas is the teaching on the Ten Wholesome Ways of Action Pali kusaladhamma In Mahayana this teaching is described as the way in which a Bodhisattva prevents suffering in all evil destinies These ten wholesome ways are In giving up the taking of life the practitioner will accomplish freedom from vexations In giving up stealing the practitioner will find security in life economically socially and spiritually In giving up wrongful sexual conduct the practitioner will find inner peace and peace in the family life In giving up lying the practitioner will attain purity of speech and mind In giving up slander the practitioner will be protected socially and spiritually In giving up harsh language the practitioner s words will be more effective In giving up frivolous speech the practitioner will become wise and dignified In giving up lust the practitioner finds freedom in life through contentment and simplicity In giving up hatred the practitioner will develop kindness and gentleness In giving up wrong views the practitioner will not falter in the good and spiritual path 90 91 These ten actions are described as akusala unwholesome Sanskrit akusala and when abstaining from them it is called kusala wholesome Sanskrit kusala 92 note 4 Moreover kusala and akusala are depicted as having roots mula Akusalamula are the roots of evil in the mind the defilements whereas the kusalamula are roots connected with good qualities of the mind Both of them are called roots because they are qualities that can be cultivated and grown in the mind 94 95 Punna and papa are close in meaning to kusala and akusala Both pairs are used for distinguishing between ethically right and wrong However even though the negatives akusala and papa have almost the same meaning there are some differences between the positives kusala and punna According to P D Premasiri Kusala is used to describe a more direct path to Nirvana than punna 96 97 Damien Keown however believes they are merely different angles of the same concept kusala refers to the moral status of an action whereas punna refers to the experience of the consequences of the action 98 He further points out that in the Pali suttas discourses mental development bhavana practices such as meditation are also included in the path of merit It is unlikely that in the Tipiṭaka meditation would be regarded as an indirect path or obstacle to Nirvana 99 100 and there are passages that directly relate merit to Nirvana 101 102 Sometimes a distinction is made between worldly Pali lokiya and transcendental Pali lokuttara merit in which only transcendental merit leads to liberation 103 104 The Thai scholar and monastic Phra Payutto believes that merit and kusala are both used to describe the cleanliness of the mind RTGS khwam sa at mot chot But whereas merit aims for the beautiful and praiseworthy RTGS suai ngam na chuenchom aspect of such cleanliness with worldly benefits such as wealth praise and happiness kusala aims for the purity RTGS borisut aspect of cleanliness with enlightenment as its benefit Phra Payutto does add that both need to be accumulated on the Buddhist path In making this comparison he says this only holds for worldly merit not for transcendental merit Collins equates transcendental merit with kusala 105 106 In the earlier Pali texts kusala was much more commonly used than punna punna mostly being used in the context of the practice of giving 107 In a widely quoted theory Melford Spiro and Winston King have distinguished two forms of Buddhism found in traditional Buddhist societies kammatic Buddhism focused on activities such as merit making and nibbanic Buddhism which focuses on the liberation from suffering and rebirth 108 In this theory called the transcendency thesis Keown Buddhism has two quite separate aims which are pursued by separate groups that is laypeople kammatic and monks nibbanic This view has however been downplayed or criticized by many other scholars who believe that kammatic practices are in many ways connected to nibbanic practices and the aims of monks and laypeople cannot be that easily separated 109 110 111 This transcendency thesis has also been applied to scriptural interpretation When discussing the path to the attainment of Nirvana in some passages in the Tipiṭaka merit is rejected For example in the Padhana Sutta the Bodhisatta the Buddha Gotama to be is tempted by Mara to give up his self torture practices to do meritorious acts instead The Bodhisatta replies that even a bit of merit is no use to him Pali anumattenapi punnena attho mayhaṃ na vijjati Some scholars supporting the transcendency thesis have interpreted this to mean that merit can only lead to happiness and progress within Saṃsara but does not lead to Nirvana and must in fact be discarded before attaining Nirvana 112 113 114 Marasinghe believes however that the word merit in this passage refers to merit in the pre Buddhist Brahmanical sense connected with rituals and sacrifice and the lay life 115 Another example often quoted in this context is the simile of the raft which states that both dhamma and adhamma should be let go of in order to attain liberation Whereas the term adhamma in the text clearly refers to evil views the meaning of dhamma is subject to different interpretations Considering that no other similar passage can be found in the Tipiṭaka Keown believes that only this passage is not enough to base the transcendency thesis on 116 In the Pali Canon an enlightened person is said to be neutral in terms of karma that is the person no longer generates karma merit or demerit 5 117 118 Some scholars have interpreted this to mean that an enlightened person attains a state where distinctions between good and evil no longer exist Other scholars have criticized this as making little sense considering how the Buddha would normally emphasize ethics The fact that an enlightened person is neutral in terms of karma does not mean he is ethically neutral 119 120 Indeed the Buddha is quoted in the Tipiṭaka as saying he is foremost in higher morality adhisila 121 Keown attempts to overcome this problem by proposing that enlightened people are beyond the accumulative experience of good deeds merit punna since they are already perfected They therefore do not need to accumulate goodness and the resulting happiness anymore They no longer need to strive for a happy rebirth in the next life because they have gone beyond rebirth Their enlightenment is however an ethical perfection as well though this is solely described as kusala not as punna 122 123 124 Field of merit edit nbsp The main concept of the field of merit is that good deeds done towards some recipients accrue more merit than good deeds to other recipients This is compared with a seed planted in fertile ground which reaps more and better fruits than in infertile ground 49 125 In pre Buddhist Brahmanism Brahmin priests used to perform yajnas sacrifices and thereby generating merit for the donors who provided gifts for the sacrifice In Buddhism it was the Buddhist monk who assumed this role considered qualified to receive generosity from devotees and thereby generating merit for them He came to be described as ahuneyyo worthy of offering by analogy with the Brahmanical term ahavaniya worthy of sacrifice used in offerings to the ritual fire and as dakkhiṇeyyo qualified to accept the offering by analogy with the Brahmanical daksiṇa the sacrificial offering itself 126 127 128 The Sangha monastic community was also described as field of merit Pali punnakkhetta Sanskrit puṇyakṣetra 129 130 131 The difference with the Brahmanical tradition was according to Marasinghe that Buddhism did recognize other ways of generating merit apart from offerings to the monk whereas the Brahmanical yajna only emphasized offerings to the Brahmin priest That is not to say that such offerings were not important in early Buddhism giving to the Sangha was the first Buddhist activity which allowed for community participation and preceded the first rituals in Buddhism 126 The main concept of the field of merit is that good deeds done towards some recipients accrue more merit than good deeds to other recipients This is compared with a seed planted in fertile ground which reaps more and better fruits than in infertile ground 49 125 132 The Sangha is described as a field of merit mostly because the members of the Sangha follow the Noble Eightfold Path But in many texts the Buddha and the Dhamma and their representations are also described as fields of merit For example Mahayana tradition considers production and reverence of Dharma texts very meritorious this tradition sometimes referred to as the cult of the book Gregory Schopen stimulated the development of print technology in China 133 134 135 In other traditions a Buddha image is also considered a field of merit and any good deed involving a Buddha image is considered very meritorious 136 137 A meritorious deed will also be very valuable and sometimes viewed in terms of a field of merit if performed to repay gratitude to someone such as parents or performed out of compassion for those who suffer 16 138 139 Deeds of merit done towards the Sangha as a whole Pali saṅghadana yield greater fruits than deeds done towards one particular recipient Pali paṭipuggalika dakkhiṇa or deeds done with favoritism 77 66 140 Indeed saṅghadana yields even more fruits than deeds of merit to the person of the Buddha himself 78 141 Practice in Buddhist societies editThus the Buddhist s view of his present activities has a wider basis they being but one group of incidents in an indefinitely prolonged past present and future series They are as has been said no mere train of witnesses for or against him but a stage in a cumulative force of tremendous power He and his works stand in a mutual relation somewhat like that of child to parent in the case of past works of parent to child in the case of future works Now no normal mother is indifferent as to whether or how she is carrying out her creative potency Nor can any normal Buddhist not care whether his acts wrought up hourly in their effect into his present and future character are making a happy or a miserable successor And so without any definite belief as to how or in what realm of the universe he will re arise as that successor to his present self the pious Buddhist no less than his pious brethren of other creeds goes on giving money and effort time and thought to good works cheerfully believing that nothing of it can possibly forgo its effect but that it is all a piling up of merit or creative potency to result somewhere somewhere somehow in future happiness happiness which though he be altruistic the while is yet more a future asset of his than of some one in whom he naturally is less interested than in his present self He believes that because of what he is now doing some one now in process of mental creation by him and to all intents and purposes his future self will one day taste less or more of life s trials To that embryonic character he is inextricably bound ever making or marring it and for it he is therefore and thus far responsible C A F Rhys Davids A Study of the Buddhist Norm 142 Merit making edit The ten bases of merit are very popular in Buddhist countries 65 In China other similar lists are also well known 143 144 In Thai Buddhism the word merit RTGS bun is often combined with to do to make RTGS tham and this expression is frequently used especially in relation to giving 145 146 147 note 5 In Buddhist societies such merit making is common especially those meritorious deeds which are connected to monks and temples In this regard there is a saying in Burma Your hands are always close to offering donations 18 146 149 Contrary to popular conceptions merit making is done by both monastics and laypeople alike 150 151 152 Buddhist monks or lay Buddhists earn merit through mindfulness meditation chanting and other rituals Giving is the fundamental way of making merit for many laypeople as monks are not allowed to cook by themselves 31 Monastics in their turn practice themselves to be a good field of merit and make merit by teaching the donors Merit making has thus created a symbiotic relationship between laypeople and Sangha 77 66 153 and the Sangha is obligated to be accessible to laypeople for them to make merit 154 Giving can be done in several ways Some laypeople offer food others offer robes and supplies and others fund ceremonies build monasteries or persuade a relative to ordain as a monk Young people often temporary ordain as monks because they believe this will not only yield fruits of merit for themselves but also for their parents who have allowed them to ordain 155 156 157 In China Thailand and India it used to be common to offer land or the first harvest to a monastery 158 153 159 Also more socially oriented activities such as building a hospital or bridge or giving to the poor are included in the Tipiṭaka and by many Buddhists considered meritorious 112 151 160 In fieldwork studies done by researchers devotees appreciated the merits of becoming ordained and supporting the building of a temple the most 157 161 Fisher found that building a temple was considered a great merit by devotees because they believed they would in that way have part in all the wisdom which would be taught at that temple 162 People may pursue merit making for different reasons as Buddhist orthodoxy allows for various ideals this worldly or ultimate 163 Although many scholars have pointed out that devotees often aim for this worldly benefits in merit making 164 165 it has also been pointed out that in old age people tend to make merit with a view on the next life and liberation 165 166 Among lay people women tend to engage in merit making more than men and this may be a way for them to enhance empowerment 31 167 168 Very often merit making is done as a group and it is believed that such shared merit making will cause people to be born together in next lives This belief holds for families friends communities and even the country as a whole 169 170 In some cases merit making took the form of a community wide competition in which different donors tried to outdo each other to prove their generosity and social status This was the case during merit making festivals in nineteenth century Thailand 18 171 In modern Thailand businesses and politicians often make merit to improve their public image and increase confidence among customers or voters 172 In Burma lay devotees form associations to engage in merit making as a community 173 nbsp In Thailand and Laos a yearly festival is held focused on the Vessantara Jataka a story of a previous life of the Buddha which is held sacred 174 People were so intent on merit making and giving that in some societies people would even offer themselves and their family to a Buddhist temple as one high ranking minister did in the ancient Pagan Kingdom ninth until fourteenth century Burma 175 176 On a similar note in Sri Lanka kings and commoners would offer slaves to the temple and then donate money to pay for their freedom that way accruing two merits at once Even more symbolically kings would sometimes offer their kingdom to a temple which returned the gift immediately together with some Dhamma teaching Also in Sri Lanka King Mahakuli Mahatissa disguised himself as a peasant and started to earn his living working on a paddy field so he would be able to gain more merit by working himself to obtain resources to give to Buddhist monks 177 In some cases merit making was even continued after a person s death in ancient Thai tradition it was considered meritorious for people to dedicate their corpses to feed the wild animals after death 178 Rituals edit See also Buddhist culture and Buddhist devotion Festivals and observance days Many devout Buddhists observe regular rest days Pali uposatha by keeping five precepts listening to teachings practicing meditation and living at the temple 179 180 Besides these weekly observances ceremonies and festivities are yearly held and are often occasions to make merit 29 181 and are sometimes believed to yield greater merits than other ordinary days 182 In Thailand and Laos a yearly festival RTGS Thet Mahachat is held focused on the Vessantara Jataka a story of a previous life of the Buddha which is held sacred 181 174 This festival seven centuries old played a major role in legitimating kingship in Thai society see Kingship below Making merit is the central theme of the festival Since the period of Rama IV however the festival has become less popular 183 184 Many countries also celebrate the yearly Kaṭhina when they offer robes money and other requisites to the Sangha as a way to make merit 185 186 In Burma the two yearly Light Festivals are typically occasions to make merit as gifts are given to elders and robes are sewn for the Sangha 187 In South Korea a Buddha Day Korean seog ga tan sin il is held on which Buddhists pray and offer alms 188 Other kinds of occasions of merit making are also upheld A special form of merit making less frequently engaged in is going on pilgrimage which is mostly common in Tibet and Japan This practice is highly regarded and considered very meritorious 189 190 Recording edit In several Buddhist countries it has been common to record merits done In China it was common for many centuries to keep record of someone s meritorious deeds in merit ledgers pinyin gōngguo ge Although a belief in merit and retribution had preceded the merit ledgers by many centuries during the Ming dynasty through the ledgers a practice of systematic merit accumulation was established for the first time The merit ledgers were lists of good deeds and bad deeds organized in the form of a calendar for users to calculate to what extent they had been practicing good deeds and avoiding bad deeds every day The ledgers also listed the exact retributions of every number of deeds done to the detail Through these ledgers it was believed someone could offset bad karma 191 192 In the fourth century CE the Baopuzi and in the twelfth century the Treatise On the Response of the Tao and the Ledger of Merit and Demerit of the Taiwei Immortal introduced the basics of the system of merit ledgers In the fourteenth century CE the Tao master Zhao Yizhen recommended the use of the ledgers to examine oneself to bring emotion in harmony with reason 193 194 From the fourth to the sixteenth centuries many types of ledgers were produced by Buddhist and Tao schools and the usage of the ledgers grew widespread 195 The practice of recording merits has survived in China and Japan until the present day 196 In Theravada countries for example in Burma and Sri Lanka similar customs have been observed 197 198 In Sri Lanka a book of merit Pali punna potthaka Sanskrit puṇyapustaka was sometimes kept by someone for years and read in the last moments of life This practice was based on the story of King Duṭṭhagamaṇi and was mostly practiced by the royalty and rich during the period of the Mahavaṁsa chronicle 199 200 201 More recent practice has also been observed for example as a form of terminal care 202 203 or as part of the activities of lay merit making associations 204 Merit and wealth edit The association of wealth with merits done has deeply affected many Buddhist countries The relation between giving and wealth is ubiquitous in vernacular Pali literature and many stories of exemplary donors exist such as the stories of Anathapiṇḍika and Jōtika 205 In Buddhism by emphasizing the usage of wealth for generosity accumulating wealth for giving purposes thus became a spiritual practice 15 But using wealth in unrighteous ways or hoarding it instead of sharing and giving it is condemned extensively Taṇha thirst desire greed craving is what keeps a person wandering in Saṃsara the cycle of rebirth instead of becoming liberated It is the attachment to wealth that is an obstacle on the spiritual path not wealth per se Stories illustrating these themes in vernacular Buddhist literature have profoundly influenced popular culture in Buddhist countries 122 206 205 Several scholars have described merit as a sort of spiritual currency or bookkeeping system 44 197 207 Though objections have been made against this metaphor 203 208 it is not new Similar comparisons have been made in the Milinda Panha and in seventeenth century China Moreover Schopen has shown that Buddhism has had strong connections with the mercantile class and Rotman thinks that a mercantile ethos may have informed Buddhist texts such as the Divyavadana 102 197 Gombrich objects to calling merit making dry metaphysical mercantilism but he does speculate on a historical relation between the concept of merit and the monetization of ancient India s economy 209 Transfer editMain article Transfer of merit nbsp Sometimes transferring merit is symbolized by pouring water into a vessel 51 210 Description and origins edit Two practices mentioned in the list of meritorious acts have been studied quite extensively by scholars dedicating or transferring merit to others and rejoicing in others merits 211 Transferring merit is a widespread custom in all Buddhist countries Mahayana Vajrayana and Theravada 212 213 214 In the Pali tradition the word pattidana is used meaning giving of the acquired 215 And in the Sanskrit tradition the word pariṇamana is used for transferring merit meaning bending round or towards transfer dedication 216 Of these translations transfer of merit has become commonplace though objected to by some scholars 217 218 Buddhist traditions provide detailed descriptions of how this transfer proceeds Transferring merit to another person usually deceased relatives is simply done by a mental wish Despite the word transfer the merit of the giver is in no way decreased during such an act just like a candle is used to light another candle but the light does not diminish 64 74 219 The merit transferred cannot always be received however The dead relatives must also be able to sympathize with the meritorious act If the relatives do not receive the merit the act of transferring merit will still be beneficial for the giver himself The transfer of merit is thus connected with the idea of rejoicing 220 The other person who rejoices in one s meritorious deeds in that way also receives merit if he approves of the merit done Thus rejoicing in others merits apart from being one of the ten meritorious acts mentioned is also a prerequisite for the transferring of merit to occur 43 219 221 The purposes for merit transfer differ In many Buddhist countries transferring merit is connected to the notion of an intermediate state The merit that is transferred to the deceased will help them to cross over safely to the next rebirth 222 Some Mahayana traditions believe that it can help deceased relatives to attain the Pure Land 16 Another way of transferring merit apart from helping the deceased is to dedicate it to the devas deities since it is believed that these are not able to make merits themselves In this way it is believed their favor can be obtained 44 221 223 Finally many Buddhists transfer merits to resolve a bond of revenge that may exist between people as it is believed that someone else s vengefulness may create harm in one s life 196 224 Initially in the Western study of Buddhism some scholars believed that the transfer of merit was a uniquely Mahayana practice and that it was developed only at a late period after the historical Buddha For example Heinz Bechert dated the Buddhist doctrine of transfer of merit in its fully developed form to the period between the fifth and seventh centuries CE 225 Scholars perceived that it was discordant with early Buddhist understandings of karma 213 225 226 and noticed that in the Kathavatthu the idea is partly refuted by Theravadins 227 228 Other scholars have pointed out that the doctrine of the transfer of merit can be found early in the Theravada tradition 214 229 230 Then there also scholars who propose that although the transfer of merit did not exist as such in early Buddhism early doctrines did form a basis for it the transfer of merit being an inherent consequence Bechert of these early doctrines 231 232 233 The idea that a certain power could be transferred from one to another was known before the arising of Buddhism In religious texts such as the Mahabharata it is described that devas can transfer certain powers Sanskrit tejas A similar belief existed with regard to the energy gained by performing austerities Sanskrit tapas Apart from these transfers of power a second origin is found in Brahamanical ancestor worship 74 In the period preceding the arising of Buddhism it was believed that after a person s death he had to be transformed from a wandering preta to reach the blissful world of the pitṛs This was done through the complex Sraddha ceremonies which would secure the destiny of the deceased as a pitṛ In Buddhism however ancestor worship was discontinued as it was believed that the dead would not reach heavenly bliss through rituals or worship but only through the law of karma Nevertheless the practice of transfer of merit arose by using the ethical and psychological principles of karma and merit and connect these with the sense of responsibility towards one s parents This sense of responsibility was typical for pre Buddhist practices of ancestor worship As for the veneration of dead ancestors this was replaced by veneration of the Sangha 234 235 Application in the spreading of Buddhism edit Sree Padma and Anthony Barber note that merit transfer was well established and a very integral part of Buddhist practice in the Andhra region of southern India 236 In addition inscriptions at numerous sites across South Asia provide definitive evidence that the transfer of merit was widely practiced in the first few centuries CE 237 238 In Theravada Buddhism it has become customary for donors to share merits during ceremonies held at intervals and during a teaching 239 240 221 In Mahayana Buddhism it is believed that Bodhisattvas in the heavens are capable of transferring merits and will do so to help relief the suffering of their devotees who then can dedicate it to others This concept has led to several Buddhist traditions focused on devotion 241 242 243 Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhists transfer merits as part of the Seven part worship Sanskrit saptaṇgapuja 244 245 246 note 6 and there is almost no ceremony without some form of merit transfer 23 248 Thus merit transfer has developed to become a standard element in the basic liturgy of all main schools of Buddhism Indeed the transfer of merits has grown that important in Buddhism that it has become a major way for Buddhism to sustain itself 16 In Japan some temples are even called ekōdera which means a temple for merit transfer 249 Kingship editSee also Buddhist kingship nbsp The emperor Asoka Sanskrit Asoka is featured in later Pali works as an important patron supporting the Sangha 250 In South and South East Asia merit making was not only a practice for the mass but was also practiced by the higher echelons of society Kingship and merit making went together 175 251 In the Tipiṭaka ideas about good governance were framed in terms of the ideal of the wheel turning monarch Pali Cakkavatti Sanskrit Cakravartin the king who rules righteously and non violently according to Dharma 252 His roles and duties are discussed extensively in Buddhist texts The Cakkavatti is a moral example to the people and possesses enough spiritual merit It is through this that he earns his sovereignty as opposed to merely inheriting it 253 254 Also the Buddha himself was born as a prince and was also a king Vessantara in a previous life 214 255 256 Apart from the models in the suttas Pali chronicles such as the Mahavaṃsa and the Jinakalamali may have contributed to the ideals of Buddhist kingship In these vernacular Pali works examples are given of royalty performing meritorious acts sometimes as a form of repentance for previously committed wrongdoings The emperor Asoka Sanskrit Asoka is featured as an important patron supporting the Sangha 250 Because of these traditions kings have had an important role in maintaining the Sangha and publicly performed grand acts of merit as is testified by epigraphic evidence from South and South East Asia 216 251 In Sri Lanka from the tenth century CE onward kings have assumed the role of a lay protector of the Sangha and so have Thai kings during the periods of Sukhothai and Ayutthaya fourteenth until eighteenth centuries In fact a number of kings in Sri Lanka Thailand and Burma have described themselves as Bodhisattas and epithets and royal language were established accordingly 175 257 258 In short kingship in traditional Buddhist societies was connected with the Sangha as a field of merit the king assumed an exemplary role as a donor to the Sangha and the Sangha legitimated the king as a leader of the state Both facilitated one another and both needed each other 259 In times of famine or other hardship it was traditionally believed that the king was failing and the king would typically perform meritorious activities on a grand scale 197 260 261 In this way the king would be able to improve the kingdom s conditions through his overflow karma Walters 262 A similar role was played by queens 263 In the last seven centuries in Thailand the Vessantara Jataka has played a significant role in legitimating kingship in Thailand through a yearly festival known as the Preaching of the Great Life RTGS Thet Mahachat Merit making and paramis doing good deeds developing good habits to become a Buddha were greatly emphasized in this festival through the story about Prince Vessantara s generosity During the reform period of Rama IV as Thai Buddhism was being modernized the festival was dismissed as not reflecting true Buddhism Its popularity has greatly diminished ever since Nevertheless the use of merit making by the Thai monarchy and government to solidify their position and create unity in society has continued until the late twentieth century 264 In modern society editSee also Buddhist modernism 19th early 20th century edit Buddhists are not in agreement with regard to the interpretation role and importance of merit The role of merit making in Buddhism has been discussed throughout Buddhist history but much more so in the last centuries In the nineteenth century during the rise of Buddhist modernism and the Communist regimes Buddhists in South and Southeast Asia became more critical about merit making when it became associated with magical practices privileging ritualism and waste of resources 265 266 267 note 7 In pre modern Thailand a great deal of the funds of temples were derived from the profits of land that were offered to temples by royalty and nobility During the period of religious reform and administrative centralization in the nineteenth and early twentieth century however Thai temples were no longer supported in this manner and had to find other ways to maintain themselves 159 At the beginning of the twentieth century perspectives of merit making had changed again as merit making was being associated with capitalism and consumerism which had been rising in South and Southeast Asia 270 271 Furthermore in some Buddhist countries such as Thailand there is a tendency among teachers and practitioners to dismiss and even revile merit making in favor of teachings about detachment and attaining Nirvana for which L S Cousins has coined the term ultimatism 272 273 274 From 1960s onward edit Studies done in the 1960s and 1970s in Thailand Sri Lanka and Burma showed that a great deal of time effort and money was invested by people in merit making e g Spiro described Burma s rural economy as geared to the overriding goal of the accumulation of wealth as a means of acquiring merit In some studies done in rural Burma up to thirty percent of people s income was spent on merit making 275 In 2014 when Burma ranked highest on the World Giving Index tied with the United States and followed by many other Buddhist countries scholars attributed this to the Burmese habit of merit making 18 276 Studies done in Thailand however showed that in the 1980s merit making was declining and a significant group did no longer believe in karma though this was not a majority 277 Some scholars disagree with these findings however saying that Buddhist practices such as merit making are still very widespread 271 Similar observations have been made about Cambodia and even about Thai people in the United States 278 279 As for Buddhist converts in the west for example from the United Kingdom the interest in merit is less than among Asian Buddhists but they strongly appreciate the generosity and reverence as exhibited by Asian Buddhists 280 281 Average expenses in merit making per person in Thailand 2005 29 Region Baht Person YearBangkok Metropolitan Area 1 512Central 1 032North 672Northeast 492South 516National average 804Discussion by scholars edit Some scholars have suggested that merit making may have affected the economies of Buddhist countries in a negative way because spending savings on the local temple would prevent consumption and investment and therefore stunt economic growth Other researchers have disagreed pointing out that spending resources on a Buddhist temple does stimulate economic growth through the investment in goods for the temple 29 282 note 8 It has also been suggested that even if the economy of Buddhist countries would be better off without merit making it would result in an economy that the majority of the population would not prefer Another criticism often leveled at merit making in modern times is that it prevents people from using their resources to help the poor and needy Very often however temples do have many social roles in society and offer help to many groups in society resources are therefore redistributed widely 284 285 Moreover since merit making is often done as a community merit making may strengthen social ties which Walters calls sociokarma 286 Scholars have often connected the notion of karma to the determinism in the caste system in India 287 Just like in the case of karma some scholars believe that a belief in merit can cause social differences to stay unchanged This would be the case when the poor who cannot make much merit resign to their fate 288 289 Other scholars point out that merit can be used to improve social status in the present as in the case of someone ordaining as a monk for a few years 214 And vice versa if someone s social status quickly deteriorates for example due to quick changes in the bureaucratic structure these changes might be justified in Buddhist societies because someone s store of merit is believed to have run out 290 Someone s position in society even in the cosmos is always subject to the impermanent workings of merit and demerit In traditional Buddhist societies quick changes in position status or roles are therefore considered part of life and this insecurity is a motivator in trying to improve the situation through merit making 291 292 Findly points out that in Buddhist ideals of merit making the earned value gained by doing good deeds is more important than the assigned value gained by social status at birth 293 Phu Mi Bun movements edit See also Faith in Buddhism Millenarianism The idea of merit is also at the basis of the Phu Mi Bun movements as has been studied in Thailand and other Buddhist societies Phu Mi Bun are people who are considered to have much merit from past lives whose influence morally affects society at large 294 295 296 Phu Mi Bun are in many ways similar to people declared Bodhisattvas in Buddhist societies and in fact the word Phu Mi Bun is often used in traditional Thai texts about the previous lives of the Buddha Besides the example of the king himself certain monks and shamans have assumed this role throughout history In Thailand around the turn of the twentieth century a millennialist movement arose regarding the coming of a Phu Mi Bun to the extent of becoming an insurgency which was suppressed by the government 297 298 299 This insurgency became known to Thai historians as the rebellion of the Phu Mi Bun RTGS Kabot Phu Mi Bun commonly known in English as the Holy Man s Rebellion 300 Several of such rebellions involving Phu Mi Bun have taken place in the history of Thai Laos Cambodia and Burma For example in Cambodia there were Phu Mi Bun led revolts against the French control of Cambodia 301 Lucien Hanks has shown that beliefs pertaining to Phu Mi Bun have profoundly affected the way Thai people relate to authority 40 Indologist Arthur Basham however believed that in contemporary Thai society the Phu Mi Bun is more of a label and merit more of a secular term than a deeply rooted belief 302 nbsp Merit release is a ritual of releasing animals from captivity as a way of making merit 303 Merit release edit Main article Life release One merit making practice that has received more scholarly attention since the 1990s is the practice of merit release Merit release is a ritual of releasing animals from captivity as a way to make merit Merit release is a practice common in many Buddhist societies and has since the 2010s made a comeback in some societies 303 Its origins are unclear but traditionally it is said to originate from the Mahayana Humane King Sutra among other sources 304 305 It often involves a large number of animals which are released simultaneously as well as chanting making a resolution and transfer of merits 306 307 Though the most common practice is the releasing of fish and birds back in nature there are also other forms in Tibet animals are bought from the slaughterhouse to release 308 However the practice has come under criticism by wildlife conservationists and scholars Studies done in Cambodia Hong Kong and Taiwan have shown that the practice may not only be fatal for a high percentage of the released animals but may also affect the survival of threatened species create a black market for wildlife as well as pose a threat for public hygiene 304 309 In Thailand there are cases where animals are captured for the explicit purpose of being sold to be released often into unsuitable ecosystems 310 Some Buddhist organizations have responded to this by adjusting their practices by working together with conservationist organizations to educate people and even by pushing for new laws controlling the practice 311 In 2016 update the Society for Conservation Biology SCB started discussing possible solutions with religious communities on how the practice could be adapted According to the SCB the communities have generally responded positively 304 312 In the meantime in some countries laws have been issued to control the practice In Singapore to limit merit release on Vesak celebrations people were fined 305 Despite its critics merit release continues to grow and has also developed new forms in western countries In 2016 it was widely reported that the Canada based Great Enlightenment Buddhist Institute Society GEBIS had released 600 pounds 270 kg of lobsters in the ocean The release was planned in agreement with local lobster men 313 In the same year Wendy Cook from Lincoln United States bought about 135 rabbits from a farm to raise them under better conditions The costly release advertised on Facebook as The Great Rabbit Liberation of 2016 was supported by Buddhist monastics from Singapore and the Tibetan tradition and was based on the idea of merit making 314 In a less successful attempt two Taiwanese Buddhists released crab and lobsters in the sea at Brighton United Kingdom to make merit They were fined by the authorities for 15 000 for a wildlife offense that could have significant impact on native species 315 See also editThree Refuges Noble Eightfold Path Sukha Karma in BuddhismNotes edit In the Sangiti Sutta Chanting together discourse Digha Nikaya 33 verse 38 the leading disciple Sariputta is described as teaching the same triad dana sila bhavana 55 See Digha Nikaya iii 218 The announcing of a certain intention in reference to the actions someone has done Pali saccakiriya is a common theme in all Indian religion 84 There is some discussion as to the best translation of kusala some preferring skilful or intelligent instead 93 However the term merit making may also originate from a translation of Pali terms In Pali texts several of such terms were used 148 There are also other forms that are practiced varying from four to eleven parts 247 From the 1980s onward the communist regimes in Laos and Cambodia no longer viewed Buddhism as an obstacle to the development of the state and many of the restrictions with regard to Buddhist practice were lifted 50 268 In Burma the former military government approached merit making practices differently they justified their forced labor camps by citing that the labor there yielded merit At the same time Aung San Suu Kyi referred to the struggle for democracy as meritorious 269 Since the 2000s studies in China have shown a growing interest among local government officials to promote merit making activities believing it to stimulate local economy 283 Citations edit Spiro 1982 p 141 a b c d e Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 p 86 a b Marasinghe 2003 p 461 a b Harvey 2012 p 44 a b c Nyanatiloka 1980b a b c Pye amp Strong 1987 pp 5870 5873 Hanks 1962 p 1247 a b Harvey 2000 p 18 Cousins 1996 p 155 a b Holt 1981 a b c Marasinghe 2003 pp 457 8 a b Premasiri 1976 p 66 Shohin V K 2010 PAPA PUNYa papa punna New Encyclopedia of Philosophy in Russian Institute of Philosophy of the Russian Academy of Sciences National public and Science Foundation Norman K R 1992 Theravada Buddhism and Brahmanical Hinduism Brahmanical Terms in a Buddhist Guise In Skorupski Tadeusz ed The Buddhist forum Seminar Papers 1988 90 New Delhi Heritage Publishers pp 197 8 ISBN 978 81 7026 179 7 a b Findly 2003 p 2 a b c d e Tanabe 2004 p 532 a b c d e McFarlane 1997 p 409 a b c d e Fuller Paul 4 September 2015 The act of giving what makes Myanmar so charitable Myanmar Times Retrieved 13 October 2016 a b Marasinghe 2003 Basham 1989 p 126 a b c Terwiel B J 1 January 1976 A Model for the Study of Thai Buddhism The Journal of Asian Studies 35 3 391 403 doi 10 2307 2053271 JSTOR 2053271 S2CID 162810180 a b Egge 2013 p 21 a b Gutschow 2004 p 14 Gombrich 2009 p 44 Hanks 1962 p 1254 Brokaw 2014 p 28 Keyes 1973 p 96 Gombrich 1971 pp 204 5 a b c d Thai Merit Making Bt3 3 Billion Cashflow for Merchants Kasikorn Research Center 22 February 2005 Archived from the original on 18 October 2016 Retrieved 13 October 2016 Keyes 1983 p 268 a b c Cate amp Lefferts 2006 p 589 a b c Scott 2009 p 29 a b Williams 2008 p 158 Rao K Ramakrishna Paranjpe Anand C 2015 Cultural Climate and Conceptual Roots of Indian Psychology Springer India pp 47 8 doi 10 1007 978 81 322 2440 2 2 ISBN 978 81 322 2440 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Elucidation of the intrinsic meaning so named the Commentary on the Vimana stories Paramattha dipani nama Vimanavatthu aṭṭhakatha Translated by Masefield Peter Jayawickrama N A 1 ed Oxford Pali Text Society 1989 pp xxxv xlv ISBN 978 0 86013 272 1 Gutschow 2004 p 2 The connected discourses of the Buddha a new translation of the Saṃyutta Nikaya PDF Translated by Bodhi Bhikkhu Boston Wisdom Publications 2001 p 78 ISBN 978 0 86171 188 8 a b Marasinghe 2003 p 460 a b Harvey 2000 p 19 a b Hanks 1962 Keyes 1983 pp 267 8 Marasinghe 2003 p 471 a b c Harvey 2000 p 20 a b c Langer Rita 2007 Buddhist Rituals of Death and Rebirth Contemporary Sri Lankan Practice and Its Origins Routledge Introduction ISBN 978 1 134 15872 0 Gombrich 2006 p 127 Gutschow 2004 p 15 a b Patrick Jory 1996 A History of the Thet Maha Chat and its Contribution to a Thai Political Culture original Ph D Thesis Australian National University p 74 Skilling 2005 pp 9832 3 a b c Salguero 2013 p 342 a b Cate amp Lefferts 2006 p 590 a b Calkowski Marcia 2006b Thailand PDF In Riggs Thomas ed Worldmark Encyclopedia of Religious Practices Vol 3 Farmington Hills Thomson Gale p 447 ISBN 978 0 7876 6614 9 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Anusaraṇasasanakiarti Phra Khru Keyes Charles F 1980 Funerary rites and the Buddhist meaning of death An interpretative text from Northern Thailand PDF Journal of the Siam Society 68 1 18 Mulder 1969 p 109 Mulder 1969 pp 109 10 Walshe 1995 p 485 Findly 2003 pp 185 250 Lehman F K 1 January 1972 Doctrine Practice and Belief in Theravada Buddhism Review of Buddhism and Society A Great Tradition and its Burmese Vicissitudes by Melford E Spiro The Journal of Asian Studies 31 2 373 380 doi 10 2307 2052605 JSTOR 2052605 S2CID 162817978 Jones 1979 p 372 Namchoom amp Lalhmingpuii 2016 p 47 Jones 1979 p 374 Salguero 2013 p 344 Skilling 2005 p 9832 Marasinghe 2003 pp 460 462 a b c d Marasinghe 2003 p 470 a b Nyanatiloka 1980c p 275 a b c d Pye amp Strong 1987 p 5873 Gutschow 2004 pp 14 5 Spiro 1982 pp 105 7 Keown 1992 p 13 Neusner Jacob Chilton Bruce 2008 The golden rule the ethics of reciprocity in world religions London Continuum p 117 ISBN 978 1 4411 9012 3 Harris Stephen E 2015 On the Classification of Santideva s Ethics in the Bodhicaryavatara Philosophy East and West 65 1 249 275 doi 10 1353 pew 2015 0008 S2CID 170301689 a b Perrett Roy W March 1987 Egoism altruism and intentionalism in Buddhist ethics Journal of Indian Philosophy 15 1 71 85 doi 10 1007 BF00213993 S2CID 170376011 Keown 1992 pp 74 6 a b c Pye amp Strong 1987 p 5874 Williams 2008 pp 45 57 59 Skilling 2005 pp 9833 9839 a b c Heim Maria 2004 Dana PDF In Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism Vol 2 New York u a Macmillan Reference USA Thomson Gale p 196 ISBN 978 0 02 865720 2 Archived from the original PDF on 12 September 2015 a b Brekke 1998 p 301 Spiro 1982 pp 108 9 Scott 2009 p 94 Harvey 2000 pp 19 21 2 Brekke 1998 pp 301 309 10 de La Vallee Poussin Louis 1917 The way to Nirvana Six lectures on ancient Buddhism as a discipline of salvation Hibbert lectures Library of Alexandria ISBN 978 1 4655 7944 7 a b Marasinghe 2003 p 468 Walters 2003 pp 23 4 Gomez 2002 pp 30 1 Harvey 2000 pp 20 1 192 Spiro 1982 p 110 Findly 2003 p 260 Bhikkhu Saddhaloka The Discourse on the Ten Wholesome Ways of Action Buddhistdoor Retrieved 13 November 2014 The discourse on the ten wholesome ways of action Undumbara Garden 23 September 2009 Retrieved 13 November 2014 Marasinghe 2003 pp 459 464 Cousins 1996 pp 137 8 Gomez 2002 pp 324 5 Thomas 1953 p 120 Premasiri 1976 Marasinghe 2003 pp 463 5 Keown 1992 p 123 Marasinghe 2003 p 467 Keown 1992 p 90 Egge 2013 pp 55 6 a b Collins 1997 p 290 Spiro 1982 p 95 Collins 1997 p 482 Collins 1997 p 495 Payutto Phra 1993 phcnanukrmphuththsasn chbbpramwlsphth phcnanukrmphuththsastr chbbpramalsphth Dictionary of Buddhism Vocabulary PDF in Thai 7 ed Bangkok Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University pp 25 6 179 ISBN 978 974 575 029 6 Cousins 1996 pp 154 5 Spiro 1982 Aronson Harvey B 1 January 1979 The Relationship of the Karmic to the Nirvanic in Theravada Buddhism The Journal of Religious Ethics 7 1 28 36 JSTOR 40018241 Swearer 1995 p 10 Keown 1992 pp 85 105 a b Premasiri 1976 p 68 Keown 1992 p 89 Egge 2013 p 23 Marasinghe 2003 pp 462 3 Keown 1992 pp 94 105 Marasinghe 2003 pp 466 471 McDermott 1975 pp 431 2 Premasiri 1976 p 73 Marasinghe 2003 pp 465 6 Keown 1992 p 113 a b Goodman Charles 2009 Consequences of Compassion An Interpretation and Defense of Buddhist Ethics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 988845 0 Keown 1992 pp 90 124 127 8 Spiro 1982 p 43 a b Brekke 1998 pp 299 300 a b Marasinghe 2003 p 459 Egge 2013 pp 19 20 Findly 2003 pp 217 8 222 Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 p 87 Brekke 1998 p 299 Egge 2013 p 20 Adamek 2005 p 141 Gummer Nathalie 2005 Buddhist Books and Texts Ritual Uses of Books PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 2 2 ed Detroit Thomson Gale pp 1261 4 ISBN 978 0 02 865735 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Williams 2008 pp 45 145 149 Kieschnick John 2003 The impact of Buddhism on Chinese material culture New Jersey University Presses of California Columbia and Princeton pp 180 1 ISBN 978 0 691 09676 6 Morgan David 2005 Buddhism Buddhism in Tibet PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 14 2 ed Detroit Thomson Gale p 9623 ISBN 978 0 02 865983 1 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Skilling 2005 p 9829 Salguero 2013 p 345 Harvey 2000 p 23 Harvey 2000 p 22 Adamek 2005 p 140 Rhys Davids C A F 1912 A Study of the Buddhist Norm London T Butterworth pp 148 9 Walsh 2007 p 361 Lamotte 1988 p 72 Keyes Charles F 1987 Thai religion PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 2 2 ed Detroit Thomson Gale p 9094 ISBN 978 0 02 865735 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 a b Seeger Martin 2006 Die thailandische Wat Phra Thammakai Bewegung The Thai Wat Phra Dhammakaya Movement PDF In Mathes Klaus Dieter Freese Harald eds Buddhism in the Past and Present in German Vol 9 Asia Africa Institute University of Hamburg Mulder 1969 p 110 Findly 2003 pp 256 7 Marston 2006 p 171 Egge 2013 p 61 a b Mulder 1969 p 115 Schopen 1997 pp ix x 31 a b Namchoom amp Lalhmingpuii 2016 p 52 Findly 2003 p 226 Kinnard Jacob 2006 Buddhism PDF In Riggs Thomas ed Worldmark Encyclopedia of Religious Practices Vol 1 Farmington Hills Thomson Gale p 68 ISBN 978 0 7876 6612 5 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Kapstein Maththew T 2005 Buddhism Buddhism in Tibet PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 2 2 ed Detroit Thomson Gale p 1155 ISBN 978 0 02 865735 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 a b Scott 2009 p 95 Walsh 2007 pp 362 6 a b Fuengfusakul 1998 pp 53 4 Scott 2009 p 126 Mulder 1969 Fisher 2008 p 148 Swearer 1995 p 6 Scott 2009 p 101 a b Mulder 1979 p 127 Swearer 1995 p 22 Bao 2005 p 124 Marston 2006 p 172 Appleton 2014 pp 127 135 6 Walters 2003 pp 20 2 Jory 2002 p 61 Fuengfusakul 1998 pp 54 5 Schober 1996 passim a b Jory 2002 p 37 a b c Aung Thwin amp Aung Thwin 2013 p 84 Bowie 2017 p 19 Rahula 1966 pp 255 6 Igunma Jana 2015 Meditations on the Foul in Thai Manuscript Art PDF Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Universities V 69 70 Holt John C 2006 Sri Lanka PDF In Riggs Thomas ed Worldmark Encyclopedia of Religious Practices Vol 3 Farmington Hills Thomson Gale p 379 ISBN 978 0 7876 6614 9 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Ledgerwood Judy 2008 Kent Alexandra Chandler David eds Buddhist Practice in Rural Kandal Province 1960 and 2003 PDF People of virtue Reconfiguring religion power and moral order in Cambodia today Copenhagen NIAS p 149 ISBN 978 87 7694 036 2 a b Swearer Donald K 1987 Buddhist Religious Year PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 2 2 ed Detroit Thomson Gale p 1306 ISBN 978 0 02 865735 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Powers John 2007 Introduction to Tibetan Buddhism PDF 2nd ed Ithaca N Y Snow Lion Publications p 219 ISBN 978 1 55939 835 0 Jory 2002 pp 63 4 Bowie 2017 p 45 Swearer 1995 pp 19 22 3 Rahula 1966 p 285 Calkowski 2006 p 105 Reinschmidt Michael C 2006 South Korea PDF In Riggs Thomas ed Worldmark Encyclopedia of Religious Practices Vol 3 Farmington Hills Thomson Gale p 363 ISBN 978 0 7876 6614 9 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Pommaret Francoise 2005 Worship and devotional life Buddhist devotional life in Tibet PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 14 2 ed Detroit Thomson Gale pp 9840 1 ISBN 978 0 02 865983 1 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Reader amp Tanabe 1998 p 200 Brokaw 2014 pp 3 4 31 2 Robinson Richard H Johnson Willard L 1977 The Buddhist religion a historical introduction 4th ed Belmont California Cengage p 215 ISBN 978 0 534 20718 2 Bokenkamp Stephen R 2005 Daoism An overview PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 4 2 ed Detroit Thomson Gale p 2187 ISBN 978 0 02 865737 0 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Brokaw 2014 pp 31 2 Brokaw 2014 pp 3 4 a b Tanabe 2004 p 533 a b c d Rotman 2008 Spiro 1982 pp 111 2 454 Lamotte 1988 pp 430 1 Gombrich 2006 p 140 Rahula 1966 pp xxii iii 254 5 Pandita P amp Berkwitz S C 2007 The History of the Buddha s Relic Shrine A Translation of the Sinhala Thupavamsa Oxford University Press Quoted in Langer Rita 2007 Buddhist Rituals of Death and Rebirth Contemporary Sri Lankan Practice and Its Origins Routledge Introduction ISBN 978 1 134 15872 0 a b Schlieter Jens October 2013 Checking the heavenly bank account of karma cognitive metaphors for karma in Western perception and early Theravada Buddhism Religion 43 4 463 86 doi 10 1080 0048721X 2013 765630 S2CID 171027951 Schober 1996 p 205 a b Scott 2009 pp 30 2 97 Davis Winston 1987 Wealth PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 14 2 ed Detroit Thomson Gale p 9708 ISBN 978 0 02 865983 1 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Spiro 1982 p 111 Keyes 1983 pp 18 9 Gombrich 2006 pp 127 8 Gombrich 1971 p 208 Gethin 1998 pp 109 10 Buddhism An Outline of its Teachings and Schools by Schumann Hans Wolfgang trans by Georg Fenerstein Rider 1973 p 92 Cited in The Notion of Merit in Indian Religions by Tommi Lehtonen Asian Philosophy Vol 10 No 3 2000 pg 193 a b Williams 2008 p 203 a b c d Keyes 1977 p 287 Nyanatiloka 1980a a b Marasinghe 2003 p 472 Masefield Peter 2004 Ghosts and spirits PDF In Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism Vol 2 New York u a Macmillan Reference USA Thomson Gale pp 309 10 ISBN 978 0 02 865720 2 Archived from the original PDF on 12 September 2015 Gombrich 2006 p 126 a b Malalasekera 1967 p 85 Gombrich 1971 pp 209 10 a b c Harvey 2012 p 45 Cuevas Brian J 2004 Intermediate state PDF In Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism Vol 2 New York u a Macmillan Reference USA Thomson Gale p 379 ISBN 978 0 02 865720 2 Archived from the original PDF on 12 September 2015 Gombrich 2009 p 36 Harvey 2000 p 335 a b Bechert 1992 note 34 pp 99 100 Gombrich 1971 p 204 Marasinghe 2003 p 469 Gombrich 1971 p 216 Egge 2013 p 96 Malalasekera 1967 p 89 Analayo Bhikkhu 2010 Saccaka s Challenge A Study of the Saṃyukta agama Parallel to the Cuḷasaccaka sutta in Relation to the Notion of Merit Transfer PDF Chung Hwa Buddhist Journal 23 60 2 ISSN 1017 7132 Gombrich 1971 p 210 Bechert 1992 p 105 Holt 1981 pp 5 10 17 19 20 Bechert 1992 pp 99 100 Padma amp Barber 2009 p 116 Fogelin Lars 2006 Archaeology of Early Buddhism p 43 Basham A L 1981 The evolution of the concept of the Bodhisattva PDF In Kawamura Leslie S ed The Bodhisattva Doctrine in Buddhism Bibliotheca Indo Buddhica Vol 186 1 ed Sri Satguru Publications pp 33 37 Archived from the original PDF on 3 April 2017 Keyes Charles F 1975 Tug of war for merit cremation of a senior monk Journal of the Siam Society 63 54 Deegalle Mahinda 2003 Preacher as a Poet In Holt John Clifford Kinnard Jacob N Walters Jonathan S eds Constituting communities Theravada Buddhism and the religious cultures of South and Southeast Asia Albany State University of New York Press p 158 ISBN 978 0 7914 5691 0 permanent dead link Abe Masao 1997 Buddhism in Japan PDF In Carr Brian Mahalingam Indira eds Companion encyclopedia of Asian philosophy London Routledge p 693 ISBN 978 0 203 01350 2 Reynolds Frank 2006 Mahayana In Doniger Wendy Eliade Mircea eds Britannica encyclopedia of world religions Chicago Illinois Encyclopaedia Britannica p 683 ISBN 978 1 59339 491 2 Pye amp Strong 1987 pp 5874 5 Tuladhar Douglas William 2005 Puja Buddhist Puja PDF In Jones Lindsay ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 11 2 ed Detroit Thomson Gale pp 7496 7 ISBN 978 0 02 865740 0 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Lamotte 1988 p 433 Thomas 1953 p 196 Skilling 2005 p 9839 Gomez 2002 p 293 Reader amp Tanabe 1998 p 85 a b Salguero 2013 p 346 a b Scott 2009 pp 98 102 Harvey 2000 pp 114 5 Strong John S 2003 Toward a Theory of Buddhist Queenship PDF In Holt John Clifford Kinnard Jacob N Walters Jonathan S eds Constituting communities Theravada Buddhism and the religious cultures of South and Southeast Asia Albany State University of New York Press p 47 ISBN 978 0 7914 5691 0 Archived from the original PDF on 14 April 2020 Retrieved 15 October 2016 Harvey 2000 p 115 Rahula 1966 p 256 Jory 2002 Keyes 1977 p 288 Jory 2002 p 52 Harvey 2000 p 117 Jory 2002 p 53 Aung Thwin amp Aung Thwin 2013 p 183 Walters 2003 p 19 Holt John Clifford Kinnard Jacob N Walters Jonathan S 2003 Constituting communities Theravada Buddhism and the religious cultures of South and Southeast Asia PDF Albany State University of New York Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 7914 5691 0 Archived from the original PDF on 14 April 2020 Retrieved 15 October 2016 Jory 2016 pp 20 181 2 Kleinod Michael 2015 Laos In Athyal Jesudas M ed Religion in Southeast Asia An Encyclopedia of Faiths and Cultures ABC CLIO p 152 ISBN 978 1 61069 250 2 Scott 2009 pp 90 1 Cate amp Lefferts 2006 p 588 Marston 2006 p 169 Calkowski 2006 pp 106 7 Scott 2009 pp 90 1 126 a b Skilling 2005 p 9833 Cousins L S 1997 Aspects of Esoteric Southern Buddhism PDF In Connolly Peter Hamilton Sue eds Indian insights Buddhism Brahamanism and bhakti London Luzac Oriental p 188 ISBN 978 1 898942 15 3 Archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2016 Retrieved 13 October 2016 McCargo Duncan 2016 Haynes Jeff ed The politics of Buddhism in Southeast Asia Springer p 219 ISBN 978 1 349 27038 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Cousins L S 1996b Skorupski T ed The Origins of Insight Meditation London University of London School of Oriental and African Studies p 39 n 10 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Harvey 2000 p 192 Cole Diane You ll Never Guess The Most Charitable Nation In The World NPR Retrieved 13 October 2016 Basham 1989 pp 128 9 133 Kent amp Chandler 2008 p 13 Bao 2005 Bell Sandra 25 June 2008 British theravada Buddhism Otherworldly theories and the theory of exchange Journal of Contemporary Religion 13 2 156 doi 10 1080 13537909808580828 Heine Steven Wright Dale S 2008 Zen ritual studies of Zen theory in practice PDF New York Oxford University Press p 64 ISBN 978 0 19 530467 1 Harvey 2000 p 193 Fisher 2008 p 152 Harvey 2000 pp 193 4 Fisher 2008 passim Fuengfusakul 1998 pp 53 57 Harvey 2000 pp 193 194 Walters 2003 p 3 Hanks 1962 p 1248 Nissen Christine J 2008 Buddhist Practice in Rural Kandal Province 1960 and 2003 PDF In Kent Alexandra Chandler David eds People of virtue Reconfiguring religion power and moral order in Cambodia today Reprint ed Copenhagen NIAS p 276 ISBN 978 87 7694 036 2 Gutschow 2004 p 18 Basham 1989 pp 127 8 Hanks 1962 pp 1247 8 1252 Keyes 1973 p 97 Findly 2003 pp 261 2 Harvey 2000 pp 261 2 Keyes 1983 p 269 Mulder 1979 p 117 Keyes 1977 pp 288 90 Keyes 1973 pp 101 2 Jory 2002 pp 45 6 Murdoch John B 1967 The 1901 1902 Holy Man s Rebellion PDF Journal of the Siam Society 5 78 86 Kent amp Chandler 2008 p 5 Basham 1989 pp 134 5 n 1 a b A religious revival Animal spirits The Economist Originally from China print edition 12 September 2015 Retrieved 13 October 2016 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint others link a b c Nuwer Rachel 8 January 2012 Buddhist Ceremonial Release of Captive Birds May Harm Wildlife Scientific American Retrieved 13 October 2016 a b Shiu amp Stokes 2008 p 184 Severinghaus Lucia Liu Chi Li 1999 Prayer animal release in Taiwan Biological Conservation 89 3 301 doi 10 1016 S0006 3207 98 00155 4 Shiu amp Stokes 2008 p 186 Darlington 2016 25 min Darlington 2016 30 min Mahavongtrakul Melalin 7 October 2019 Human cruelty for a false belief Opinion Bangkok Post Retrieved 9 October 2019 Darlington 2016 29 32 33 min Religion and Conservation Biology conbio org Society for Conservation Biology Retrieved 13 October 2016 Ross Shane 13 July 2016 P E I monks buy 600 lbs of lobster to release them into ocean CBC News CBC Radio Canada Retrieved 17 October 2016 Wangsness Lisa 17 September 2016 The great rabbit pardon of 2016 Boston Globe Retrieved 17 October 2016 Two Buddhists fined 15 000 for releasing crustaceans into sea The Guardian 23 September 2017 Retrieved 20 November 2017 References editAdamek Wendi L 1 January 2005 The Impossibility of the Given Representations of Merit and Emptiness in Medieval Chinese Buddhism History of Religions 45 2 135 180 doi 10 1086 502698 JSTOR 10 1086 502698 S2CID 170244626 Appleton Naomi 2014 Narrating karma and rebirth Buddhist and Jain multi life stories Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 03393 1 Bao Jiemin 2005 Merit Making Capitalism Re territorializing Thai Buddhism in Silicon Valley California Journal of Asian American Studies 8 2 115 142 doi 10 1353 jaas 2005 0035 S2CID 143789655 Basham Richard 1989 False Consciousness and the Problem of Merit and Power in Thailand Mankind 19 2 126 137 doi 10 1111 j 1835 9310 1989 tb00101 x Bechert Heinz July 1992 Buddha field and transfer of merit in a Theravada source Indo Iranian Journal 35 2 3 Brill 95 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archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2017 Spiro Melford E 1982 Buddhism and society a great tradition and its Burmese vicissitudes 2 ed Berkeley u a University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 04672 6 Swearer Donald K 1995 The Buddhist world of Southeast Asia Rev and expanded ed Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 2459 9 Reader Ian Tanabe George J Jr 1998 Practically religious worldly benefits and the common religion of Japan online ed Honolulu University of Hawai i Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2090 9 Tanabe George J Jr 2004 Merit and merit making PDF in Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism vol 2 New York u a Thomson Gale ISBN 978 0 02 865720 2 archived from the original PDF on 12 September 2015 The Group of Ones 22 Itivuttaka 1 22 translated by Bhikkhu Thanissaro 2001 Thomas Edward J 1953 The History Of Buddhist Thought 2nd ed Routledge OCLC 923624252 Aung Thwin Michael Aung Thwin Maitrii 2013 A History of Myanmar since Ancient Times Traditions and Transformations 2nd ed London Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1 86189 939 2 Uppalavanna Sister Danavaggo On giving gifts Anguttara Nikaya 8 4 retrieved 9 November 2007 Walsh Michael J 24 May 2007 The Economics of Salvation Toward a Theory of Exchange in Chinese Buddhism Journal of the American Academy of Religion 75 2 353 382 doi 10 1093 jaarel lfm002 S2CID 143298553 Walshe Maurice O C 1995 The Long Discourses of the Buddha A Translation of the Digha Nikaya PDF Somerville MA Wisdom Publications ISBN 978 0 86171 103 1 Walters Jonathan S 2003 Communal Karma and Karmic Community in Theravada Buddhist History PDF in Holt John Clifford Kinnard Jacob N Walters Jonathan S eds Constituting communities Theravada Buddhism and the religious cultures of South and Southeast Asia Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 5691 0 archived from the original PDF on 14 April 2020 retrieved 15 October 2016 Williams Paul 2008 Mahayana Buddhism The Doctrinal Foundations PDF 2 ed Taylor amp Francis e Library ISBN 978 0 203 42847 4 archived from the original PDF on 5 June 2018 retrieved 30 September 2016Further reading editField research study on how merit making practices benefit disabled people in a traditional Buddhist countryExternal links editTen ways of making merit by Mahinda Wijesinghe and Ven Naṇadassana What are the benefits of making merit by Luang Por Dattajivo DMC tv Merit A Study Guide by Thanissaro Bhikkhu Access to Insight Legacy Edition 30 November 2013 Merit Does Happiness Need to Be Earned by Dr Alexander Berzin Study Buddhism May All Beings Be Happy by Sharon Salzberg BeliefnetLay Theravada practices for a fortunate rebirthFAITH Saddha GIVING Dana VIRTUE Sila MIND Bhavana DISCERNMENT Panna Buddha Dhamma Sangha Charity Almsgiving 5 precepts 8 precepts Metta Vipassana 4 Noble Truths 3 CharacteristicsBased on Dighajanu Sutta Velama Sutta Dhammika Sutta viewtalkedit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Merit Buddhism amp oldid 1216755080, 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