User Tools

Site Tools


Translations of this page?:
en:tipitaka:sut:sn:sn36:sn36.001.nypo

This is an old revision of the document!


Preperation of htmls into ATI.eu currently in progress. Please visit the corresponding page at ZzE. If inspired to get involved in this merits here, one may feel invited to join best here: [ATI.eu] ATI/ZzE Content-style

Samadhi Sutta: Concentration

Samadhi Sutta

Summary: How an understanding of feeling leads to Nibbana.

SN 36.1 PTS: S iv 204 CDB ii 1260

Samadhi Sutta: Concentration

translated from the Pali by

Nyanaponika Thera

“There are, O monks, these three feelings: pleasant feelings, painful feelings, and neither-painful-nor-pleasant feelings.”

A disciple of the Buddha, mindful, clearly comprehending, with his mind collected, he knows the feelings(1) and their origin,(2) knows whereby they cease(3) and knows the path that to the ending of feelings lead.(4) And when the end of feelings he has reached, such a monk, his thirsting quenched, attains Nibbana.“(5)

Notes

<dl>

1.

Comy.: He knows the feelings by way of the Truth of Suffering.

2.

Comy.: He knows them by way of the Truth of the Origin of Suffering.

3.

Comy.: He knows, by way of the Truth of Cessation, that feelings cease in Nibbana.

4.

Comy.: He knows the feelings by way of the Truth of the Path leading to the Cessation of Suffering.

5.

Parinibbuto, “fully extinguished”; Comy.: through the full extinction of the defilements (kilesa-parinibbanaya).

</dl>


Help | About | Contact | Scope of the Dhamma gift | Collaboration
Anumodana puñña kusala!

en/tipitaka/sut/sn/sn36/sn36.001.nypo.1572438443.txt.gz · Last modified: 2019/10/30 13:27 by Johann