• SUBDUE DESIRES AND PASSIONS

    From Jim Singleton@RICKSBBS to All on Wed May 27 06:20:01 2026
    SUBDUE DESIRES AND PASSIONS


    All religions agree that the seeker after Ultimate Reality must
    restrain his desires and subdue the passions of the flesh. But lest the religions be viewed as advocating one uniform position, we should disting-
    uish between the view of Buddhism, Taoism, and Jainism, where any desire, including the desire to be righteous or the desire to annihilate desire,
    is a fetter to be overcome in the path to holiness, and the position of Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Confucianism where Selfish Desire, Lust,
    and Greed, pp. 415-22, are to be subdued while good desires may be encour- aged.

    At the end of this chapter is the motif, found in the texts of many scriptures, that the thought is akin to the deed, for 'everyone who looks
    at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his
    heart.' Therefore, extreme care should be taken to avoid tempting situat-
    ions which would inflame the mind with passion. For even if a person has
    a strong will to restrain his actions, once the mind is inflamed with des-
    ire, how can his soul be tranquil and composed?

    For related passages on the theme of self-conquest and the metaphor
    of the horse, bridle, and reins--in which the desires of the senses must
    be reined in by the mind, or better, be trained to obey the mind with only
    a light tap of the reins--see Self-Control, pp. 731-34.


    Through the abandonment of desire the Deathless is realized.

    Buddhism. Samyutta Nikaya xlvii.37


    Manifest plainness,
    Embrace simplicity,
    Reduce selfishness,
    Have few desires.

    Taoism. Tao Te Ching 19


    Confucius said, "If out of the three hundred Songs I had to take one
    phrase to cover all my teachings, I would say, 'Let there be no evil in
    your thoughts.'"

    Confucianism. Analects 2.2


    Realizing that pleasure and pain are personal affairs, one should subju-
    gate his mind and senses.

    Jainism. Acarangasutra 2.78


    Beloved, I beseech you... to abstain from the passions of the flesh that
    wage war against your soul.

    Christianity. 1 Peter 2.11


    Is he who relies on a clear proof from his Lord like those for whom the
    evil that they do seems pleasing while they follow their own lusts?

    Islam. Qur'an 47.14


    That man is disciplined and happy
    who can prevail over the turmoil
    That springs from desire and anger,
    here on earth, before he leaves his body.

    Hinduism. Bhagavad Gita 5.23


    A man should always incite the good impulse in his soul to fight against
    the evil impulse. If he subdues it, well and good; if not, let him study Torah.... If [by that] he subdues it, well and good; if not, let him pray
    upon his bed.

    Judaism. Talmud, Berakot 5a


    Whoever quenches the fire of desire through the holy Word,
    Spontaneously is his illusion of duality banished.
    Such is he in whose heart the Name dwells, by the Master's guidance.

    Sikhism. Adi Granth, Gauri Ashtpadi, M.1, p. 222





    To whatever extent the five senses, the four taints of emotions, and the
    four instinctive appetites are suppressed by a person who is well establ-
    ished in the path of righteousness, to such extent the doorway for the
    entrance of evil is closed for that person.

    Jainism. Acarangasutra 4.15


    Put to death what is earthly in you: fornication, impurity, passion, evil desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry. On account of these the
    wrath of God is coming. In these you once walked, when you lived in them.
    But now put them all away: anger, wrath, malice, slander, and foul talk
    from your mouth.

    Christianity. Colossians 3.5-8


    From endearment springs grief, from endearment springs fear; for him who
    is wholly free from endearment there is no grief, much less fear.

    From affection springs grief, from affection springs fear; for him who is wholly free from affection there is no grief, much less fear.

    From attachment springs grief, from attachment springs fear; for him who
    is wholly free from attachment there is no grief, much less fear.

    From lust springs grief, from lust springs fear; for him who is wholly
    free from lust there is no grief, much less fear.

    From craving springs grief, from craving springs fear; for him who is
    wholly free from craving there is no grief, much less fear.

    Buddhism. Dhammapada 212-16


    We live in accordance with our deep, driving desire. It is this desire at
    the time of death that determines what our next life is to be. We will
    come back to earth to work out the satisfaction of that desire.

    But not for those who are free from desire; they are free because all
    their desires have found fulfillment in the Self. They do not die like
    the others; but realizing Brahman, they merge in Brahman. So it is said:

    When all the desires that surge in the heart
    Are renounced, the mortal becomes immortal.

    When all the knots that strangle the heart
    Are loosened, the mortal becomes immortal,
    Here in this very life.

    Hinduism. Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.4.6-7


    The craving of a person addicted to careless living grows like a creeper.
    He jumps from life to life like a fruit-loving monkey in the forest.
    Whomsoever in this world this base clinging thirst overcomes, his sorrows flourish like well-watered birana grass. Whoso in the world overcomes
    this base unruly craving, from him sorrows fall away like water drops from
    a lotus leaf. This I say to you: Dig up the root of craving like one in
    quest of the birana's sweet root. Let not Mara crush you again and again
    as a flood crushes a reed.

    Buddhism. Dhammapada 334-37


    What is meant by saying that cultivation of the personal life depends on
    the rectification of the mind is that when one is affected by wrath to
    any extent, his mind will not be correct. When one is affected by fear to
    any extent, his mind will not be correct. When he is affected by fondness
    to any extent, his mind will not be correct. When he is affected by
    worries and anxieties, his mind will not be correct. When the mind is not present, we look but do not see, listen but do not hear, and eat but do
    not know the taste of food. This is what is meant by saying that the cultivation of the personal life depends on the rectification of the mind.

    Confucianism. Great Learning 7


    Wipe out the delusions of the will, undo the snares of the heart, rid
    yourself of the entanglements to virtue; open up the roadblocks in the
    Way. Eminence and wealth, recognition and authority, fame and profit--
    these six are the delusions of the will. Appearances and carriage, compl- exion and features, temperament and attitude--these six are the snares of
    the heart. Loathing and desire, joy and anger, grief and happiness--these
    six are the entanglements of virtue. Rejecting and accepting, taking and giving, knowledge and ability--these six are the roadblocks of the Way.
    When these four sixes no longer seethe within the breast, then you will
    achieve uprightness; being upright, you will be still; being still, you
    will be enlightened; being enlightened, you will be empty; and being
    empty, you will do nothing, and yet there will be nothing that is not
    done.

    Taoism. Chuang Tzu 23


    - - - - - - - - - - - -
    Bhagavad Gita 5.23: Cf. Bhagavad Gita 3.41, p. 417; 6.23-26, pp. 843f.; 16.21-13, p. 417; Maitri Upanishad 6.34.7, p. 722; Mahabharata, Santi
    Parva 177, p. 199. Acarangasutra 2.78: Cf. Uttaradhyayana Sutra 9.34-36,
    p. 732. Berakot 5a: Cf. Kiddushin 30b, p. 390; Qur'an 29.45, p. 826.
    1 Peter 2.11: Cf. Proverbs 16.32, p. 732; 2 Timothy 2.21-22, p. 729;
    Jerusalem Talmud, Sanhedrin 10.1, p. 733. Qur'an 47.14: Cf. Qur'an 4.25,
    p. 260. Dhammapada 212-16: Cf. Dhammapada 338-47, p. 418; Itivuttaka 47,
    p. 934. Dhammapada 334-37: Cf. Dhammapada 338-47, p. 418; Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life 4.28-35, p. 392. Great Learning 7: Cf. James
    4.1-3, p. 416; Chuang Tzu 11, p. 421. Chuang Tzu 23: Cf. Tao Te Ching 56,
    p. 840.
    - - - - - - - - - - - -


    Confucius said, "There are three things against which a gentleman is on
    his guard. In his youth, before his blood and vital humors have settled
    down, he is on his guard against lust. Having reached his prime, when the blood and vital humors have finally hardened, he is on his guard against strife. Having reached old age, when the blood and vital humors are
    already decaying, he is on his guard against avarice."

    Confucianism. Analects 16.7


    Thus I have heard. At one time when the Lord was staying in the Jeta
    Grove, the venerable Kassapa the Boy was staying in Blind Men's Grove.
    One night, a certain being, having illuminated the grove, spoke thus to
    Kassapa the Boy, "Monk, this anthill smokes by night and blazes up by day.
    A wise brahmin says, 'Clever one, bring a spade and dig into it.' He digs
    into it and finds a bolt and tells the brahmin, who says, 'Take out the
    bolt, and dig on.' The clever one digs into it again and finds in turn a
    frog, a pitchfork, a basket, a tortise, a butcher knife, and a piece of
    meat, and each time the brahmin instructs him to take it out. He digs
    into it again and finds a cobra, and the brahmin says, 'Let the cobra be,
    do not touch the cobra, do reverence to the cobra.'"

    Then Kassapa the Boy approached the Lord and described the parable
    to him, asking for its interpretation. The Lord replied, "The anthill is
    a symbol for the body made of the four elements, originated from mother
    and father, nourished on gruel... Whatever one thinks upon and ponders
    upon during the night concerning the day's affairs, this is smoking by
    night. Whatever affairs one sets going by day, having reflected the prev-
    ious night, this is blazing up by day. The wise brahmin is the Tathagata,
    and the clever one is a monk who is a learner. The spade symbolizes
    intuitive wisdom, and digging means putting out effort.

    "Among the things which the man digs up and takes out, the bolt symbolizes ignorance, the frog is the turbulence of wrath, the pitchfork
    is perplexity, and the basket is the five hindrances--the holding on to
    desire for sense pleasures, hatred, laziness, restlessness, delusion. The tortoise is the five Aggregates, the butcher knife is five sense pleas-
    ures, and the piece of meat is the resulting desire that causes one to
    covet satisfaction. These are all to be taken out and thrown away.

    "The cobra means the person whose cankers are destroyed. If one
    digs into himself with the spade of wisdom, he will finally come to his
    cobra. It is worthy of reverence."

    Buddhism. Majjhima Nikaya i.142-45, Parable of the
    Anthill


    The greatest problem of any man is woman.

    African Traditional Religions. Igala Proverb (Nigeria)


    Confucius said, "I have never seen anyone whose desire to build up his
    moral power was as strong as sexual desire."

    Confucianism. Analects 9.17 and 15.12


    The Buddha said, "Of all longings and desires, there is none stronger than
    sex. Sex as a desire has no equal. Rely on the Oneness. No one under
    heaven is able to become a follower of the Way if he accepts dualism [the attraction of opposites]."

    Buddhism. Sutra of Forty-two Sections 25


    - - - - - - - - - - - -
    Majjhima Nikaya i.142-45: The five 'Aggregates' are the skandhas; the
    'five sense pleasures,' are the pleasures of sight, sound, smell,
    taste, and touch. Cf. Mahaparinirvana Sutra 8.12, p. 147; Matthew
    5.29-30, p. 663; Samyutta Nikaya iii.68, p. 640.

    Igala Proverb: This means that a wife or lover leads to unforeseen troub-
    les, hence the desire for sex should be disciplined.

    Sutra of Forty-two Sections: This may be a criticism of Tantric Buddhism,
    with its "secret yoga" of sexual union as the way to enlightenment.
    For an example of a dualistic Tantric conception of enlightenment,
    see Hevajra Tantra 8.26-29, p. 118.
    - - - - - - - - - - - -


    Those who abstain from sex,
    Except with those joined to them in the marriage bond...
    [But those whose desires exceed those limits are transgressors]...
    These will be the heirs
    Who will inherit paradise.

    Islam. Qur'an 23.5-11


    He who delights in subduing evil thoughts, who meditates on the loathsome-
    ness of the body, who is ever mindful--it is he who will make an end of craving. He will sever Mara's bond.

    Buddhism. Dhammapada 350


    The mouth is a vessel filled with foul
    Saliva and filth between the teeth,
    The nose with fluids, snot, and mucus,
    The eyes with their own filth and tears.

    The body is a vessel filled
    With excrement, urine, lungs, and liver;
    He whose vision is obscured and does not see
    A woman thus, lusts for her body.

    This filthy city of a body,
    With protruding holes for the elements
    Is called by stupid beings
    An object of pleasure.

    Why should you lust desirously for this
    While recognizing it as a filthy form
    Produced by a seed whose essence is filth,
    A mixture of blood and semen?

    He who lies on the filthy mass
    Covered by skin moistened with
    Those fluids, merely lies
    On top of a woman's bladder.

    Nagarjuna, Precious Garland 149-57


    - - - - - - - - - - - -
    Dhammapada 350: On 'meditating on the loathsomeness of the body,' see the following passages; also Sutta Nipata 205-06, p. 914, and the story of Subha, Therigatha 366-99, pp. 934-35. For the setting up of 'mindfulness,' see Majjhima Nikaya i.55-63, Satipatthanasutta, pp. 845ff. Precious Garland 149-57: Vv. 149-50, 154, 156-57. Gautama Buddha himself came to such a realization about the body's loathsomeness one evening when his father tempted him with courtesans in an effort to keep him from leaving home and beginning his spiritual quest. This is an excerpt from a meditation about bodies in general, and is not intended to denigrate women. Cf. Sutta Nipata 205-06, p. 914; Therigatha 366-99, pp. 934-35.
    - - - - - - - - - - - -


    Get back, I hate you!
    Don't hold my sari, you fool!
    A she-buffalo is worried of its life,
    And the butcher, of its killing!
    The pious think of virtues,
    And the wicked, of vices;
    I am worried of my soul,
    And you, of lust....

    Fie on this body!
    Why do you damn yourself
    In love of it--this pot of excrement,
    The vessel of urine, the frame of bones,
    This stench of purulence!
    Think of Lord Shiva,
    You fool!

    Hinduism. Akkamahadevi, Vachana 15 and 33


    Continence is to regard the wife of another as one's own sister or daugh-
    ter, and to realize that the bodies of women are full of impurity and that charm can only delude the mind.

    Jainism. Kartikeya, Anupreksa 337-39


    Treat younger men like brothers, older women like mothers, younger women
    like sisters, all in purity.

    Christianity. 1 Timothy 5.1-2


    The Buddha said, "Be careful not to look at women and do not talk with
    them. If you must speak with them, be properly mindful and think, 'I am a shramana living in a turbid world. I should be like the lotus flower and
    not be defiled by the mud.' Regard old women the way you regard your
    mother. Regard those who are older than you the way you regard your elder sisters; regard those who are younger than you as your younger sisters,
    and regard children as your own. Bring forth thoughts to rescue them, and
    put an end to bad thoughts."

    Buddhism. Sutra of Forty-two Sections 29


    You have heard that it was said, "You shall not commit adultery." But I
    say to you that every one who looks at a woman lustfully has already
    committed adultery with her in his heart.

    Christianity. Matthew 5.27-28


    He who excites himself by lustful thoughts will not be allowed to enter
    the division of the Holy One.

    Judaism. Talmud, Nidda 13b


    The adultery of the eye is the lustful look, and the adultery of the
    tongue is the licentious speech, and the heart desires and yearns, which
    the parts may or may not put into effect.

    Islam. Hadith of Muslim


    It is true that you commit no actual crimes; but when you meet a beautiful woman in another's home and cannot banish her from your thoughts, you have committed adultery with her in your heart. Consider a moment! Would you
    have sufficient control over yourself to imitate the sage Lu Nan-tze if
    you were placed in a similar position? When he once found himself obliged
    to pass the night in a house whose only other occupant was a woman, he
    lighted a lamp and read aloud until morning to avoid exposing her to un-
    just suspicions.

    Taoism. Treatise on Response and Retribution,
    Appended Tales


    - - - - - - - - - - - -
    Akkamahadevi, Vachana 33: Akkamahadevi (12th century) was a Virashaiva
    woman saint. Once, when a certain king tried to molest her, she suddenly
    threw away all her clothes and stepped out into the streets nude. This
    act of purity so stunned the king that he repented of his foolish lust. Akkamahadevi wandered about as a naked ascetic, clad only in her long
    hair, enduring the taunts of the men and teaching an example of purity
    and devotion to God Shiva. See the previous notes. Anupreksa 337-39:
    Cf. Skanda Purana 5.2.11, p. 949. Nidda 13b: cf. Aboda Zara 20ab, p. 474.
    - - - - - - - - - - - -


    Jim Singleton
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
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