The Vinaya and Codes of Conduct
Creating codes of conduct inspired by the Vinaya
Teacher Experience
A contemplative invitation for educators to reflect on before teaching.How do you create agreements within your family, among friends, and in community groups? Which groups have you been part of where the rules felt more rigid or more flexible and naturally evolving? What types of authority figures have you encountered—those who seemed more self-righteous versus those motivated more by ensuring mutual benefit? What might it look like when students co-create and embody principles of non-harm and mutual benefit?
Student Experience
A contemplative invitation for students to connect with this learning goal.Reflect on codes of conduct and what it feels to follow their rules—your personal ethics, your family or community norms, your local or national laws, or other rules.
Understanding
Students will understand...Codes of conduct for both lay and monastic practitioners can be used to bring about harmony, equity, tolerance, and mutual benefit, and these help remove obstacles for communities to work together for the greater good. Methods, such as discipline, morality, and ethics, without wisdom, lead to righteousness and puritanical attitudes.
Action
Students are able to...Analyze the purpose and structure of the Vinaya as both monastic discipline and community harmony framework, evaluate contemporary ethical conventions using Buddhist principles of non-harm and mutual benefit, and collaborate in creating community agreements that reflect dharmic values while addressing modern contexts.
Content Knowledge
Students will know...The Vinaya was the way the Buddha’s sangha created harmony 2500 years ago, and it is still used today in lay and monastic communities. The Vinaya is not in and of itself the dharma; rather, it is a set of codes of conduct that help lay and monastic practitioners remove obstacles to studying and practicing the dharma and working together for the greater good.
The Vinaya-Pratimoksha is a list of rules for eight types of practitioners: those fasting for one day, laymen and laywomen, male and female novices, probationer nuns, fully ordained nuns, and fully ordained monks.
Monks and nuns from all three yanas take the Pratimoksha vows and practice Buddhism full-time in a disciplined way, free from the responsibilities of household life. The Pratimoksha vows are the basic rules of monastic discipline from the Vinaya. Novice monks and nuns take 36, while fully-ordained monks/bhikkhus and nuns/bhikkhunis take 227 to 354 vows, depending on their school and tradition. Mahayana traditions add 18 bodhisattva vows. In the Vajrayana, monastics also take tantric vows, depending on the tradition and teachings received.
Codes of conduct are sets of rules and guidelines—just like the Vinaya—that outline the expectations and responsibilities of a group of people or an organization. Community rules can be created by the group, considering what behaviors best support the community’s purpose and well-being. By following codes of conduct and avoiding actions that harm others, the group’s well-being can be improved.
Guiding Questions