1. [The same nine cases of the throwing back is carried by unlawful proceeding, 
though the Mânatta and the rehabilitation are by a lawful proceeding.]
2. 'And in case, O Bhikkhus, a Bhikkhu is guilty of a number of Samghâdisesa 
offences--definite, and not definite--of one designation, and of various 
designations--similar to each other, and dissimilar--connected with each other, 
and disconnected 1. He asks the Samgha for an inclusive probation on account of 
those offences. The Samgha imposes upon him an additional probation on account 
of those offences. He undergoing that probation is guilty meanwhile of a number 
of Samghâdisesa offences, definite ones, which he does conceal. He asks the 
Samgha to throw him back on account
p. 438
of those intervening offences to the commencement of his term of probation. The 
Samgha [does so] by an unlawful proceeding that is liable to be quashed, and 
unfit for the occasion; and it also imposes an inclusive probation upon him, but 
by an unlawful proceeding. He thinking, "I am undergoing that probation," is 
guilty meanwhile of a number of Samghâdisesa offences, definite ones, which he 
does conceal. When he has arrived at this condition he calls to mind the other 
offences committed while the first offences were being committed, and he calls 
to mind also the other offences committed while the latter offences were being 
committed.
Then it occurs to him, "I have been guilty of a number of Samghâdisesa offences 
(&c., as in the whole of the section from the beginning to the end of the last 
paragraph, down to) and I called to mind also the. other offences committed 
while the latter offences were being committed. Let me now ask the Samgha to 
throw me back on account of those offences committed while the former offences, 
and while the latter offences, were being committed, to the commencement of my 
term of probation, by a lawful proceeding that cannot be quashed, and is fit for 
the occasion; and let me ask for an inclusive probation to be imposed by a 
lawful proceeding, and for a Mânatta to be imposed by a lawful proceeding, and 
then for rehabilitation by a lawful proceeding."
'And he asks the Samgha [accordingly], and the Samgha [does so]. That Bhikkhu, O 
Bhikkhus, is purified from those offences.'
[The same if some of the offences in each case have been concealed and some not 
concealed.]
p. 439
3, 4. [The Bhikkhu is not purified from such intervening and remembered offences 
as are specified in the last section, if the Samgha has proceeded, as in the 
first section of this chapter, by an unlawful proceeding.]
__________________
Here ends the Third Khandhaka, on the Accumulation of Offences.
Footnotes
437:1 These offences must be understood to be offences committed while under 
probation, and concealed. See the note on chap. 35, § 1.
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