________________
I, 4, 2.
association with the world. There are three things, O Bhikkhus, which, when the Samgha suspects (&c., as before, down to) against him.
'There are other three things, O Bhikkhus, (&c., as before, down to) against him; (that is to say), when he has failed in morality as regards moral things-when he has failed in conduct as regards transgression-when he has failed in opinion as regards the principal matters of opinion'. There are three things, O Bhikkhus, (&c., as before, down to) against him.
336
KULLAVAGGA.
'There are other three things, O Bhikkhus, (&c., as before, down to) against him; (that is to say), when he speaks in dispraise of the Buddha-when he speaks in dispraise of the Dhamma-when he speaks in dispraise of the Samgha. These are three things, O Bhikkhus, (&c., as before, down to) against him.
2. 'There are three kinds of Bhikkhus, O Bhikkhus, against whom, if the Samgha likes, it should carry out the Tagganiya-kamma; (that is to say), one who is a maker of strife (&c., as in § 1, down to) a raiser of legal questions in the Samgha-one who is dull, stupid, full of faults, and devoid of merit-and one who is living in lay society, in unlawful association with the world. These are three kinds of Bhikkhus, O Bhikkhus, (&c., as before, down to) the Tagganiya-kamma.
'There are other three kinds of Bhikkhus, O Bhikkhus, against whom, if the Samgha likes, it should carry out the Tagganiya-kamma; (that is to say), one who has failed in morality in regard to moral matters-one who has failed in conduct
1 Compare Mahâvagga I, 36, 8, and our note there.
Digitized by Google