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| Alphabetical [« »] monk 5 monks 9 monster 2 moral 20 morality 11 morally 1 more 57 | Frequency [« »] 20 action 20 course 20 meditation 20 moral 20 t 20 would 19 economic | VV.AA. (R. Bogoda, Susan Elbaum Jootla, & M.O'C. Walshe) The Buddhist Layman IntraText - Concordances moral |
Essay
1 1| in worldly matters with moral principles. He strives to 2 1| fronts - the economic, the moral and the spiritual, the first 3 1| the working of kamma - the moral law of cause and effect. 4 1| Buddhism teaches, above all, moral responsibility -- to be 5 1| steady progress towards moral and spiritual perfection. 6 1| the finding of science, no moral blindness for its ethics 7 1| great prosperity: material, moral and spiritual. It is the 8 1| which one was born but the moral quality of one's actions. 9 1| each, as all are capable of moral and spiritual progress, 10 1| with the Dhamma and the moral law of kamma, to that extent 11 1| emotional qualities), the moral and the spiritual, through 12 1| hindrances to both material and moral progress. It is the active 13 1| frame of mind to develop his moral and spiritual life. The 14 1| understanding. Lastly, a blameless moral and spiritual life should 15 1| on the character and the moral qualities. Under their baneful 16 1| exercise physical, mental and moral control. Such a one has 17 1| from debt; and a blameless moral and spiritual life. Yet 18 1| cannot be developed, and moral and spiritual progress is 19 2| which are the very basic moral rules for the Buddhist layman. 20 2| further of the Law of Kamma or moral cause and effect, and the