Buddhist View Of Marriage

While Buddhist practice varies considerably among its various schools, Marriage is one of the few concepts specifically mentioned in the context of Sila (Buddhist behavior discipline). One of the five precepts that even lay practitioners are expected to follow to the best of their abilities - specifically the third - is a promise to abstain from sexual misconduct. While it is generally understood that what constitutes "misconduct" from a Buddhist perspective is widely dependent from the local cultural reality (e.g. is polygamy "misconduct"?), there are nonetheless some clear and universal guidelines, some of which theoretically apply for all Buddhist schools. One of those is that adultery (as opposed to polygamic marriages or same-sex marriages) is considered wrong. (See also Buddhist views of homosexuality) The Digha Nikaya 31 (Sigalovada Sutta) describes the respect that one is expected to give to one's spouse. De facto Buddhism doesn't encourage or discourage marriage, but it does teach how one can live a happy married life if one does choose to get married.

External links

Marriage, Buddhist view of

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
georges marchais
coat of arms of belarus
samuel nicholas
field trace
hannes kolehmainen
coat of arms of belize
animal language
the gathering demo party
coat of arms of benin
ahmad ibn rustah
morioka hiroyuki
list of british mps: b
studham
alexandre thophile vandermonde
john walker (whisky blender)
hamate bone
a50 road
lunate bone
ray conniff
cayley
zen and the brain
bambrzy
ralf dahrendorf
norval morrisseau
system 6
fen causeway
fiona thornewill
adam ries
pure mathematics
sexual misconduct
baghlan province
balkh province
bamiyan province
hms gibraltar
farah province
faryab province
denver, norfolk
ghazni province
ghowr province
1739 in science
helmand province
jowzjan province
kabul province
kandahar province