The Economy of Gifts
By Thanissaro Bhikkhu
According to the Buddhist monastic code, monks and nuns are not allowed to accept
money or even to engage in barter or trade with lay people. They live entirely
in an economy of gifts. Lay supporters provide gifts of material requisites for
the monastics, while the monastics provide their supporters with the gift of the
teaching. Ideally -- and to a great extent in actual practice -- this is an exchange
that comes from the heart, something totally voluntary. There are many stories
in the texts that emphasize the point that returns in this economy -- it might
also be called an economy of merit -- depend not on the material value of the
object given, but on the purity of heart of the donor and recipient. You give
what is appropriate to the occasion and to your means, when and wherever your
heart feels inspired. For the monastics, this means that you teach, out of compassion,
what should be taught, regardless of whether it will sell. For the laity, this
means that you give what you have to spare and feel inclined to share. There is
no price for the teachings, nor even a "suggested donation." Anyone
who regards the act of teaching or the act of giving requisites as a repayment
for a particular favor is ridiculed as mercenary. Instead, you give because giving
is good for the heart and because the survival of the Dhamma as a living principle
depends on daily acts of generosity.
The primary symbol of this economy is the alms bowl. If you are a monastic, it
represents your dependence on others, your need to accept generosity no matter
what form it takes. You may not get what you want in the bowl, but you realize
that you always get what you need, even if it's a hard-earned lesson in doing
without. One of my students in Thailand once went to the mountains in the northern
part of the country to practice in solitude. His hillside shack was an ideal place
to meditate, but he had to depend on a nearby hill tribe village for alms, and
the diet was mostly plain rice with some occasional boiled vegetables. After two
months on this diet, his meditation theme became the conflict in his mind over
whether he should go or stay. One rainy morning, as he was on his alms round,
he came to a shack just as the morning rice was ready. The wife of the house called
out, asking him to wait while she got some rice from the pot. As he was waiting
there in the pouring rain, he couldn't help grumbling inwardly about the fact
that there would be nothing to go with the rice. It so happened that the woman
had an infant son who was sitting near the kitchen fire, crying from hunger. So
as she scooped some rice out of the pot, she stuck a small lump of rice in his
mouth. Immediately, the boy stopped crying and began to grin. My student saw this,
and it was like a light bulb turning on in his head. "Here you are, complaining
about what people are giving you for free," he told himself. "You're
no match for a little kid. If he can be happy with just a lump of rice, why can't
you?" As a result, the lesson that came with his scoop of rice that day gave
my student the strength he needed to stay on in the mountains for another three
years.
For a monastic the bowl also represents the opportunity you give others to practice
the Dhamma in accordance with their means. In Thailand, this is reflected in one
of the idioms used to describe going for alms: proad sat, doing a favor for living
beings. There were times on my alms round in rural Thailand when, as I walked
past a tiny grass shack, someone would come running out to put rice in my bowl.
Years earlier, as lay person, my reaction on seeing such a bare, tiny shack would
have been to want to give monetary help to them. But now I was on the receiving
end of their generosity. In my new position I may have been doing less for them
in material terms than I could have done as a lay person, but at least I was giving
them the opportunity to have the dignity that comes with being a donor.
For the donors, the monk's alms bowl becomes a symbol of the good they have done.
On several occasions in Thailand people would tell me that they had dreamed of
a monk standing before them, opening the lid to his bowl. The details would differ
as to what the dreamer saw in the bowl, but in each case the interpretation of
the dream was the same: the dreamer's merit was about to bear fruit in an especially
positive way.
The alms round itself is also a gift that goes both ways. On the one hand, daily
contact with lay donors reminds the monastics that their practice is not just
an individual matter, but a concern of the entire community. They are indebted
to others for the right and opportunity to practice, and should do their best
to practice diligently as a way of repaying that debt. At the same time, the opportunity
to walk through a village early in the morning, passing by the houses of the rich
and poor, the happy and unhappy, gives plenty of opportunities to reflect on the
human condition and the need to find a way out of the grinding cycle of death
and rebirth.
For the donors, the alms round is a reminder that the monetary economy is not
the only way to happiness. It helps to keep a society sane when there are monastics
infiltrating the towns every morning, embodying an ethos very different from the
dominant monetary economy. The gently subversive quality of this custom helps
people to keep their values straight.
Above all, the economy of gifts symbolized by the alms bowl and the alms round
allows for specialization, a division of labor, from which both sides benefit.
Those who are willing can give up many of the privileges of home life and in return
receive the free time, the basic support, and the communal training needed to
devote themselves fully to Dhamma practice. Those who stay at home can benefit
from having full-time Dhamma practitioners around on a daily basis. I have always
found it ironic that the modern world honors specialization in almost every area
-- even in things like running, jumping, and throwing a ball -- but not in the
Dhamma, where it is denounced as "dualism," "elitism," or
worse. The Buddha began the monastic order on the first day of his teaching career
because he saw the benefits that come with specialization. Without it, the practice
tends to become limited and diluted, negotiated into the demands of the monetary
economy. The Dhamma becomes limited to what will sell and what will fit into a
schedule dictated by the demands of family and job. In this sort of situation,
everyone ends up poorer in things of the heart.
The fact that tangible goods run only one way in the economy of gifts means that
the exchange is open to all sorts of abuses. This is why there are so many rules
in the monastic code to keep the monastics from taking unfair advantage of the
generosity of lay donors. There are rules against asking for donations in inappropriate
circumstances, from making claims as to one's spiritual attainments, and even
from covering up the good foods in one's bowl with rice, in hopes that donors
will then feel inclined to provide something more substantial. Most of the rules,
in fact, were instituted at the request of lay supporters or in response to their
complaints. They had made their investment in the merit economy and were interested
in protecting their investment. This observation applies not only to ancient India,
but also to the modern-day West. On their first contact with the Sangha, most
people tend to see little reason for the disciplinary rules, and regard them as
quaint holdovers from ancient Indian prejudices. When, however, they come to see
the rules in the context of the economy of gifts and begin to participate in that
economy themselves, they also tend to become avid advocates of the rules and active
protectors of "their" monastics. The arrangement may limit the freedom
of the monastics in certain ways, but it means that the lay supporters take an
active interest not only in what the monastic teaches, but also in how the monastic
lives -- a useful safeguard to make sure that teachers walk their talk. This,
again, insures that the practice remains a communal concern. As the Buddha said,
Monks, householders are very helpful to you, as they provide you with the requisites
of robes, alms-food, lodgings, and medicine. And you, monks, are very helpful
to householders, as you teach them the Dhamma admirable in the beginning, admirable
in the middle, and admirable in the end, as you expound the holy life both in
its particulars and in its essence, entirely complete, surpassingly pure. In this
way the holy life is lived in mutual dependence, for the purpose of crossing over
the flood, for making a right end to suffering and stress.
-- Iti 107
Periodically, throughout the history of Buddhism, the economy of gifts has broken
down, usually when one side or the other gets fixated on the tangible side of
the exchange and forgets the qualities of the heart that are its reason for being.
And periodically it has been revived when people are sensitive to its rewards
in terms of the living Dhamma. By its very nature, the economy of gifts is something
of a hothouse creation that requires careful nurture and a sensitive discernment
of its benefits. I find it amazing that such an economy has lasted for more than
2,600 years. It will never be more than an alternative to the dominant monetary
economy, largely because its rewards are so intangible and require so much patience,
trust, and discipline in order to be appreciated. Those who demand immediate return
for specific services and goods will always require a monetary system. Sincere
Buddhist lay people, however, have the chance to play an amphibious role, engaging
in the monetary economy in order to maintain their livelihood, and contributing
to the economy of gifts whenever they feel so inclined. In this way they can maintain
direct contact with teachers, insuring the best possible instruction for their
own practice, in an atmosphere where mutual compassion and concern are the medium
of exchange; and purity of heart, the bottom line.
Thanissaro Bhikkhu
