Easily seen is the fault of others, but one’s own fault is difficult to see. Like chaff one winnows another’s faults, but hides one’s own, even as a crafty fowler hides behind sham branches.
Easily seen is the fault of others, but one’s own is difficult to see. Like chaff one winnows another’s faults, but hides one’s own, even as a crafty fowler hides behind sham branches.

Deep Commentary

The Buddha delivered this verse near Bhaddiya in relation to the householder Ram. When Ram attempted to visit the Buddha, he was accosted by sectarians who slandered the Buddha. Upon meeting the Buddha, Ram reported their criticisms, prompting the Buddha to observe that these individuals were adept at exposing others' faults while concealing their own—likening them to winnowers of chaff or gamblers hiding their cards. This verse serves as a profound psychological diagnostic for the human condition: the tendency to be 'fault-finders' of others while remaining blind to our own failings. This ego-driven behavior (concealing one's own 'bad' and projecting it onto others) stems from attachment to the self. The Buddha teaches that true moral integrity requires the inverse practice: rigorous introspection regarding one's own shortcomings and the cultivation of patience and objectivity toward others. By 'hiding one's own' faults through ego, one obscures the path to liberation, whereas the awakened practitioner reverses this, becoming acutely aware of their own mental impurities while showing compassion for the defects of others.

🌿

Zen Assistant

Online

Welcome. I am your Zen AI companion, here to help you reflect on Verse 252. Do you have any questions or wish to explore its meaning further?