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Jainism · Source book

Kalpa Renunciation And Asceticism

Kalpa Sūtra — Mahāvīra's Renunciation & Asceticism (Lives of the Jinas)

N=1 fine-grained distillation. Source: Jacobi, Jaina Sūtras, SBE XXII (1884) — the Kalpa Sūtra "Lives of the Jinas" narrative of Mahāvīra, which Jacobi also prints as the parallel in Ākārāṅga Book II, Lecture 15 (§§ 23–27) (Archive OCR). Working text pending Phase 7 verification. Method: ../00-methodology.md. Cited Āk II.15 (Kalpa §117 parallel).

Section role

The biographical heart of the canon — recited annually at the festival of Paryuṣaṇa, the most lived-central Jain text. Mahāvīra's renunciation models the path in narrative form: the founder abandons the care of the body, vows to bear "with equanimity… all calamities," lives in saṃvara (the stopping of karmic influx), and after twelve years attains kevala — the "complete, full, unobstructed, infinite, supreme" knowledge that is liberation-in-life. It shows what the doctrines are for.

Atomic statements

Sec4-C1: At his renunciation Mahāvīra paid obeisance to all liberated spirits and vowed to do no sinful act, adopting the holy conduct. (EXHORTATION / ASCETICISM)

  • Āk II.15 (Kalpa §117 parallel), §18: "…he paid obeisance to all liberated spirits, and vowing to do no sinful act, he adopted the holy conduct."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting

Sec4-C2: He resolved to neglect his body for twelve years and to bear, undergo, and suffer with equanimity all calamities from gods, men, or animals. (FOUNDATIONAL / ASCETICISM+SELF_DISCIPLINE)

  • §23: "I shall for twelve years neglect my body and abandon the care of it; I shall with equanimity bear, undergo, and suffer all calamities arising from divine powers, men or animals."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Sec4-C3: Neglecting his body, he meditated on his Self in restraint, kindness, avoidance of sinful influence (saṃvara), chaste life, patience, freedom from passion, and contentment. (FOUNDATIONAL / LIBERATION+ASCETICISM)

  • §24: "…the Venerable Ascetic Mahāvīra meditated on his Self, in blameless lodgings, in blameless wandering, in restraint, kindness, avoidance of sinful influence (saṃvara), chaste life, in patience, freedom from passion, contentment; control, circumspectness…"
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: saṃvara (stopping the influx of karma)

Sec4-C4: He bore all calamities with undisturbed, unafflicted mind, careful of body, speech, and mind. (EXHORTATION / SELF_DISCIPLINE)

  • §24: "Living thus he with equanimity bore, endured, sustained, and suffered all calamities… with undisturbed and unafflicted mind, careful of body, speech, and mind."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting · Depends on: Sec4-C2

Sec4-C5: After twelve years, in deep meditation, he reached Nirvāṇa / kevala — the complete, full, unobstructed, infinite, supreme best knowledge and intuition. (FOUNDATIONAL / LIBERATION)

  • §25: "…in deep meditation, in the midst of abstract meditation, he reached Nirvāṇa, the complete and full, the unobstructed, unimpeded, infinite and supreme, best knowledge and intuition, called Kevala."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: kevala (omniscience)

Sec4-C6: As a Kevalin he knew and saw all conditions of all living beings in the whole world — their comings and goings, deeds, desires, and the thoughts of their minds. (FOUNDATIONAL / LIBERATION+TRUTH)

  • §26: "…he was a Kevalin, omniscient and comprehending all objects, he knew all conditions of the world… he saw and knew all conditions in the whole world of all living beings."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Step 4 — Clusters

Cluster Atomic statements Intent
The renunciant resolution C1, C2 Abandon the body and vow to suffer all with equanimity
Saṃvara — the inner practice C3, C4 Stop the influx of karma through restraint, passionlessness, contentment
Kevala — the attainment C5, C6 Twelve years' austerity culminate in omniscient liberation

Step 5 — Internal tensions

None. The narrative is a single arc: resolution → ascetic practice (saṃvara) → liberation (kevala).

Step 6 — Synthesized section principles

Sec4-P1: Liberation is won by severe, voluntary asceticism and equanimity

The path is bodily renunciation borne with an "undisturbed and unafflicted mind" — to "neglect the body" and bear all hardship from any source "with equanimity." Mahāvīra's twelve years model the cost of the path.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: ASCETICISM+SELF_DISCIPLINE · Covers: C1, C2, C4 · Evidence: Āk II.15 (Kalpa §117) §§18, 23–24

Sec4-P2: Saṃvara — liberation requires stopping the influx of karma

The inner work is "avoidance of sinful influence (saṃvara)" — restraint, kindness, chastity, patience, freedom from passion, and contentment — by which no new karmic matter binds the soul.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: LIBERATION+ASCETICISM · Covers: C3 · Evidence: §24 · Untranslatable: saṃvara

Sec4-P3: The goal is kevala — omniscient liberation in this life

The fruit of the path is kevala: "complete, full, unobstructed, infinite, supreme" knowledge and intuition, by which the liberated knows all beings and all their conditions. Liberation is not annihilation but the soul's full, unobscured knowing.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: LIBERATION+TRUTH · Covers: C5, C6 · Evidence: §§25–26 · Untranslatable: kevala / mokṣa

Sec4-P4: The founder is exemplar, not savior

Mahāvīra reaches liberation by his own austerity, paying obeisance to those liberated before him; he shows the path but does not confer the result. (Implicit throughout; the soul liberates itself by saṃvara and nirjarā.)

  • Tier: EXHORTATION · Domain: LIBERATION+SELF_DISCIPLINE · Covers: C1 · Evidence: §18

Step 7 — Traceability

Principle Atomic statements Citations
Sec4-P1 C1, C2, C4 Āk II.15 (Kalpa §117) §§18, 23–24
Sec4-P2 C3 §24
Sec4-P3 C5, C6 §§25–26
Sec4-P4 C1 §18

Step 8 — Quality

  • Coverage: the renunciation→saṃvara→kevala arc captured.
  • Orphaned: the cosmological/festal frame (gods descending, dating) is summarized as setting, not itemized.
  • Principles: 4.
  • Traceability: 100%.

Step 9 — Validation

  • Standalone comprehension: P1's claim (the spiritual life costs self-denial and equanimity under suffering) converges broadly with ascetic and monastic traditions (Christian desert fathers, Buddhist forest monks, Sufi zuhd). The warrants diverge sharply: (a) saṃvara (P2) presupposes karma-as-matter — austerity literally prevents and burns off physical karmic particles, a mechanism unique to Jainism (a WEAK-distinctive); (b) kevala (P3) is self-attained omniscience, not communion with God (cf. Buddhist nibbāna as cessation, Christian beatitude as union); (c) P4 (no savior; the soul frees itself) diverges fundamentally from grace-centred traditions — a key Atlas axis it shares with Theravāda Buddhism but on a different metaphysics (eternal soul vs anattā).