Abstract:
According to the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta, desire is the reason for existential
suffering. Throughout the Sutta literature, there are discussions highlighting the
danger of sensuality, an aspect of desire (taṇhā). The Vinaya is meant to restrain
harmful, undesirable, and unconventional patterns of behaviour. Sexual desire is
perceived by early Buddhism as the most intense expression of desire. As such, the
Vinaya enforces 21 rules for the monastic male members to keep sexual desire in
check. The present paper intends to examine various forms of expressions of sexual
desire in the Bhikkhu-vibhanga. In addition to the normal heterosexual behaviours,
monks are reported to have engaged in deviant sexual behaviours such as rape,
masturbation, pedophilia, and bestiality. The presentation of such conventionally
unacceptable behaviours indicates, the potential of desire to confuse the mind to the
extent that a person would not even be able to remain within the moral framework
followed by the ordinary people. In this light, Vinaya can be read as a measure that
was in the course of putting desires in control. To mention a few studies, L.P.N.
Perera in his seminal work Sexuality in India and Chaminda G. Gamage have
attempted to read sexuality in the Vinaya with the objectives of discovering sexuality
in the Vinaya and presenting sexual behaviours as taboos, respectively. The present
paper attempts to read all sexual behaviours as expressions of sensual desire, and the
Vinaya has undertaken the role of illustrating the danger of desire in the form of
narratives serving as the cause of promulgating rules. This function of Vinaya is not
a novel thing but a continuation of the Sutta literature, which is dedicated to
illustrating the problem of suffering by means of direct preachings, similes, and
narratives. Finally, the present study will support the argument that Vinaya is a
development of the Sutta. The study is based on the Bhikkhu-vibhanga of the Pāli
Vinayapiṭaka and secondary sources related to the discussion of sexuality in the
Vinaya.