Upvote:0
The Buddha discovered the Middle way before He attained Nibbana. The middle way is also in the first sermon of the 'turning of the wheel'. Its an important aspect of following the path.
The point I am making is, to attain to Nibbana you have to live as the Zen says 'on the razor's edge'. You have to balance the Eightfold path.
This means that you don't have to live on the extremes of moral behaviour. So the trivial acts you should learn to ignore.
In modern times creating work-life balance, we do a lot of things which strictly speaking won't be moral but can be trivial. If you end up being pedantic to every action you will become paralysed. You don't have to be critical but you do have to be aware and mindful of every action.
So as long as your actions don't cause suffering to others and yourself it is fine.
Edit: There will be another set of answers pointing the obvious references to Karma, but one has to understand there is a difference between 'do-gooders' and the current generation of 'Stream-enterers'.
Upvote:1
...a person does certain acts that are not in line with the precepts but he does not feel remorse... (i.e., delusion/ignorance)
A child, craving a memory of love might steal from parents. A person once slandered might gossip. A person once betrayed might lie. And these actions perpetuate suffering. This is suffering.
Like gravity, kamma happens. Always and eventually. Consequences do arise. For lying, trust is lost. For stealing, fear of loss arises. However, we tend to consider solutions only when we know suffering.
Upvote:2
Bikkhu bodhi issues a video mentioning precisely the topic of discussion
Anguttara Nikaya: Duka NipΔta, The Book of the Two (2018.07.07) Bhikkhu Bodhi
Sutta 77-
I do not recall at what time he talks about that. But his answer is that the kamma of somebody who does not feel shame of doing bad things as exposed by the buddha is worse than the karma of the guy who feels shame for the same acts.
This answer leads to the conclusion that dangerous are the people who claim that the feeling of shame must be avoided once you follow the path, and that other people who follow the path must not judge other followers.