Toh 1-1
“The Chapter on Going Forth” from The Chapters on Monastic Discipline
འདུལ་བ་གཞི་ལས། རབ་ཏུ་འབྱུང་བའི་གཞི།
Vinayavastu Pravrajyāvastu
《 律儀根本 》 之《出家根本》
’dul ba gzhi las/ rab tu ’byung ba’i gzhi
Translator: Translated by Robert Miller and teamunder the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha
Read time: 8 hr 40 min
Version: v1.37.22
The KangyurDisciplineChapters on Monastic Discipline
Summary
“The Chapter on Going Forth” is the first of seventeen chapters in The Chapters on Monastic Discipline, a four-volume work that outlines the statutes and procedures that govern life in a Buddhist monastic community. This first chapter traces the development of the rite by which postulants were admitted into the monastic order, from the Buddha Śākyamuni’s informal invitation to “Come, monk,” to the more elaborate “Present Day Rite.” Along the way, the posts of preceptor and instructor are introduced, their responsibilities defined, and a dichotomy between elders and immature novices described. While the heart of the chapter is a transcript of the “Present Day Rite,” the text is interwoven with numerous narrative asides, depicting the spiritual ferment of the north Indian region of Magadha during the Buddha’s lifetime, the follies of untrained and unsupervised apprentices, and the need for a formal system of tutelage.