The five precepts were part of
Early Buddhism and are common to nearly all schools of Buddhism. In Early Buddhism, the five precepts were regarded as an ethic of restraint, to restrain unwholesome tendencies and thereby purify one's being to attain enlightenment. The five precepts were based on the
pañcaśīla, prohibitions for pre-Buddhist
Brahmanic priests, which were adopted in many Indic religions around 6th century BCE. The first four Buddhist precepts were nearly identical to these
pañcaśīla, but the fifth precept, the prohibition on intoxication, was new in Buddhism: the Buddha's emphasis on
awareness () was unique. In some schools of ancient Indic Buddhism, Buddhist devotees could choose to adhere to only a number of precepts, instead of the complete five. The schools that would survive in later periods, however, that is Theravāda and Mahāyāna Buddhism, were both ambiguous about this practice. Some early Mahāyāna texts allow it, but some do not;
Theravāda texts do not discuss such selective practice at all. The prohibition on killing had motivated
early Buddhists to form a stance against animal sacrifice, a common religious ritual practice in ancient India. According to the Pāli Canon, however, early Buddhists did not adopt a vegetarian lifestyle. In
Early Buddhist Texts, the role of the five precepts gradually develops. First of all, the precepts are combined with a
declaration of faith in the Triple Gem (the Buddha,
his teaching and
the monastic community). Next, the precepts develop to become the foundation of lay practice. The precepts are seen as a preliminary condition for the higher development of the mind. At a third stage in the texts, the precepts are actually mentioned together with the triple gem, as though they are part of it. Lastly, the precepts, together with the triple gem, become a required condition for the practice of Buddhism, as laypeople have to undergo a formal initiation to become a member of the Buddhist religion. When Buddhism spread to different places and people, the role of the precepts began to vary. In countries in which Buddhism was adopted as the main religion without much competition from other religious disciplines, such as Thailand, the relation between the initiation of a layperson and the five precepts has been virtually non-existent. In such countries, the taking of the precepts has become a sort of ritual cleansing ceremony. People are presumed Buddhist from birth without much of an initiation. The precepts are often committed to by new followers as part of their installment, yet this is not very pronounced. However, in some countries like China, where Buddhism was not the only religion, the precepts became an ordination ceremony to initiate laypeople into the Buddhist religion. , people held strict attitudes about abstinence of alcohol. |alt=Map marking part of China In China, the five precepts were introduced in the first centuries CE, both in their
śrāvakayāna and
bodhisattva formats. During this time, it was particularly Buddhist teachers who promoted abstinence from alcohol (the fifth precept), since
Daoism and other thought systems emphasized moderation rather than full abstinence. Chinese Buddhists interpreted the fifth precept strictly, even more so than in Indic Buddhism. For example, the monk
Daoshi ( 600–683) dedicated large sections of
his encyclopedic writings to abstinence from alcohol. However, in some parts of China, such as
Dunhuang, considerable evidence has been found of alcohol consumption among both lay people and monastics. Later, from the 8th century onward, strict attitudes of abstinence led to a development of a distinct
tea culture among Chinese monastics and lay intellectuals, in which tea gatherings replaced gatherings with alcoholic beverages, and were advocated as such. These strict attitudes were formed partly because of the religious writings, but may also have been affected by the bloody
An Lushan Rebellion of 775, which had a sobering effect on
8th-century Chinese society. When the five precepts were integrated in Chinese society, they were associated and connected with karma,
Chinese cosmology and
medicine, a Daoist worldview, and
Confucian virtue ethics. == Ceremonies ==