May I ask if the disciples of the Buddha have broken their fasts like this?

Updated on society 2024-04-15
12 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    This is not considered to be a breaking of the vows, but the precepts are opened, covered, held, and committed, and they are lively and lively, not rigid.

    If it's your own desire to eat, then you've broken your vows, and you're not in this situation.

    If you insist on a vegetarian diet, or simply don't eat it, it will make other people who don't understand it have a bad impression, and they will think that you are a person who doesn't study Buddhism and is still human, and you are still easy to get along with, and when you learn Buddhism, you have so many nasty habits, don't eat this, don't eat that, and become a nasty person, which will make them misunderstand the Dharma.

    In this matter, if you do it right, if you do it well, the Dharma is harmonious, and the study of Buddhism is flexible, and the important thing is the intention of learning the Buddha, and where the Bodhisattva is, it always makes all living beings happy, and this is the truth.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Amitabha! You don't count like this, describe your belief in Buddhism, but you still inevitably eat meat, there is a saying: wine and meat through the intestines, the Buddha left in his heart! Of course, if you make a vow in front of the Buddha, it will be broken, because you only said it to your mother, so it is not considered to have broken the vows!

    Amitabha! May the Buddha bless the lost owner, eliminate disasters and prolong life! A good man has a safe life!

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    You wish to be vegetarian, very good, very good.

    In fact, whether to be vegetarian or not depends on your heart. When we have compassion, we will try our best not to eat meat, not because we don't touch it in our mouths.

    For your example, you can eat only leeks, or you can eat yams (meat side dishes). It is not permissible to take vows unless there is a specific reason (e.g. nothing else to eat, concern for life, etc.).

    Think of the meat as boiled, burned animal carcasses, no different from the charred corpses of dead people. Think about the resentment of this meat before it died, think that this meat could be your parents in the last life, can you still eat meat?

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The precepts of Buddhism are self-discipline, and it doesn't matter what you eat separately if your mind is not born. If you have taken refuge, you have broken your vows. There is no refuge, there is no breaking of vows.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    As long as you sincerely repent, you will be fine.

    All the bad karma that I have created in the past.

    It's all from beginningless greed and stupidity.

    Born from body, speech, and mind.

    I repent of all things now.

    Sin begins with the heart and confesses from the heart.

    When the heart dies, sin is destroyed.

    The heart dies and the sin is destroyed.

    Yes, it is called true repentance.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    As long as you're sincere, and you don't know it. Don't worry, the Buddha won't be so stingy.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    It doesn't matter, as long as you're religious.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    It's okay to be pious.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    A happy life every day, harmless to others and oneself, is better than anything else!

    If you focus on fasting in your heart, if you don't think about it, then good and evil will be confused.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Wine and meat pass through the intestines, and the Buddha stays in his heart.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Nothing, the Buddha stays in the heart!!

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Whether a monk breaks his vows or not is an internal affair of the Sangha, and lay monks have no right to participate. As long as he didn't take off his monk's clothes, there was nothing wrong with the layman offering to him. For humanitarian reasons, you can't starve him to death, right?

Related questions
24 answers2024-04-15

There is a story in Buddhism:

One day the Buddha wanted to take a bath and asked a novice to clean the bathtub, and when the novice saw that there were a lot of small insects in the bathtub, if they cleaned, they would inevitably kill, and he couldn't make up his mind, so he asked the Buddha. >>>More

18 answers2024-04-15

If you want to experience the essence of Buddhism, you must start from holding the five precepts, the Buddha said that all living beings are originally Buddhas, and people are Buddhas in the case of pure and no distracting thoughts, and if you want to be pure, you must collect six roots to avoid energy being consumed by foreign objects, the energy of vegetarian meals is relatively high, and the meat is more turbid, after a period of holding the precepts, you will feel a pure and unstained state, and you will feel that things that are unacceptable will feel that it is not a matter at all in a pure state, so you must keep the precepts before learning Buddhism, and learn to be quiet before learning Buddhism.

46 answers2024-04-15

1. Don't be tough on it, which is not conducive to his tolerance of your study of Buddhism; >>>More

7 answers2024-04-15

This is the understanding of ordinary people outside the church, and of course it is possible. >>>More

13 answers2024-04-15

First of all, he praised the initiates for their ability to fast, and suggested that they should take it step by step. >>>More