Dear Bryan,
 
It helps a lot. Thanks.
 
I knew about Matthew 15:11 and wanted to compare both doctrines about food interdictions, which can also be cause of social non-integration and even conflict as can be seen in India, where I am now.
 
Still the Buddha also seems to emphasize the need to be mindful about what and how you eat, which seems quite reasonable. 
 
Metta
 
Jacques  

--- On Tue, 10/11/11, Bryan Levman <bryan.levman@...> wrote:


From: Bryan Levman <bryan.levman@...>
Subject: Re: [Pali] food purity/pollution
To: "Pali@yahoogroups.com" <Pali@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Tuesday, October 11, 2011, 3:48 PM



 



Dear Jacques,

I do not know if there is an exact statement to this effect (reminds me of Matthew 15:11: "What goes into the mouth does not make a man unclean; it is what comes out of the mouth that makes him unclean"), but it is certainly implicit in several parts of the writings, e. g. the Mahāsīhanāda Sutta MN12 (Nanamoli and Bodhi, page 175) where the Buddha refutes the brahmanical doctrine that "Purification comes about through food". The Buddha does however recognize that eating itself can be a source of affliction, either eating too much or when one becomes dependent on almsfood, either a certain type (e. g. meat) or on a certain householder as alms-supplier (MN 55 Jīvaka sutta, page 474 and following). Hope that helps,

Metta, Bryan

________________________________
From: Jacques Huynen <jhuynen@...>
To: Pali@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, October 10, 2011 6:58:36 AM
Subject: [Pali] food purity/pollution

 
Hello Friends,
Would anyone know the ref. in the Pali Tipitaka of a passage where the Buddha states that pollution come from within (mind defilements, greed, anger etc.) not from without (food) ? 
Thanks 

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