Ray sets out to accomplish two tasks in this book. The first is to draw more attention to the individuals of early Buddhism as he feels they have fallen into the background of modern Buddhology. This "scholastic repression" occurs due to the methodological bias of the popular focus on doctrine, historical contextualization, comparative work and the like. The second task is to demonstrate how a study of saints can reveal how early Buddhism developed from a forest-based tradition to a monastic-based one.His first contention, that Buddhist saints are under-researched points of evidence strikes me as adding a significant amount of balance to more theoretical approaches. I find it self-evident that Ray is wont to work with data, and remarkable amounts of it at that, rather than work with theories. But the two are intimately related as theories are meaningless without data and data is meaningless without a theory to tie it all together. Ray uses a psychological metaphor of "repression" to explain the lack of popularity of his method, but I will offer a more suiting one. I'll choose Gestalt psychology's foreground and background dichotomy. If his field is "repressed," it has been repressed into the background, which is to say it hasn't really gone anywhere. Through following his research, I find that a more balanced and holistic perspective comes together, which has enriched my understanding of the subject.Ray's second contention is to demonstrate how various points of data shifted values when the Buddhist community shifted from its forest dwelling roots to organized monastic living. Amongst other things, he examines the necessity of organization and rules in light of the irreplaceability of the Buddha's charismatic authority. One of his stronger and more illuminating arguments demonstrates how the values of various saints drifted over time to account for the emerging monastic order."In fact [the scholastic] element of Sariputta's personality begins to emerge only in the more developed strata of the conversion account, gaining momentum in the later, even more developed segments of his legend and reaching a culmination in the Pali canon. This raises the interesting possibility that Sariputta was originally not the champion of the values and preoccupations of settled monasticism at all but was a saint along different lines--that he was, in effect, originally a saint of the forest and was only later monasticized." (135)Ray notes that earlier accounts of Sariputta extolled him for his meditative discipline (a virtue of forest asceticism) whereas later accounts treated him as an ideal monastic saint.In his conclusion, he makes a quick case for a "threefold" rather than "two-tiered" system, adding the forest dwellers to the more commonly accepted dichotomy of laity and monastic monk. Ray proposes that all three of these groups had always functioned together. I wonder; if Ray wanted to make this point, why didn't he centralize it throughout the book? Seems like a contentious point to casually bring up in the last chapter.The long and short of this book is that Ray provides extraordinarily thorough and broad research to bring to the foreground the Buddhist saints and their worship. In a sense, all of his arguments run the same; 1.) identify a data point in early Buddhism, 2.) list as many references as possible and 3.) demonstrate how the values associated with this point changed over time, away from forest values and towards monastic values.I do have a few concerns with this book, however. The first is that Ray is emphasizing "Buddhism" as a religion, as a topic of worship and veneration. In this light, he makes few distinctions between earlier, more authoritative texts and texts developing many centuries later. In this sense, the monks and laity in each generation worshiped and venerated these texts and this is the attitude of religious devotion Ray normalizes for his study, which strikes me at times as sociological. My own disposition gets a little uncomfortable with this. It is also in this sense that what he means by "Buddhism" is the broadest definition of the term imaginable. Although they strike me as odd, these two quirks seem to be necessary to a degree. If he were to address all of the problems that arise if these points where to be addressed, the entire focus of the book would be hopelessly lost.To read this book, I suggest reading chapters 1, 2 & 4 as you'll get the gist of his argument. For the other chapters, read the conclusion at the end of each to get the gist of the sort of arguments Ray provides, or more accurately, get the gist of the topography of the field of data he amasses through his research, to see if it's what you're in the mood for.The bottom line with this book is that Ray assembles great, useful fields of data. This, in and of itself, is an accomplishment and a useful tool for research. My concern is that this may appear a bit cumbersome and perhaps unwieldy for those who have unknowingly "repressed" scholarship of this genus into the background. Nonetheless, it seems self-evident that spending more time investigating the relationship between the background (Buddhist saints) and the foreground (doctrine) is intrinsically valuable.