Difference between revisions of "Anicca Sutta"
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− | + | [[File:773 vement.jpg|thumb|250px|]] | |
− | + | {{Centre|{{Big2x|Anicca Sutta: Impermanent }}<br/> | |
− | translated from the [[Pali]] by | + | translated from the [[Pali]] by <br/> |
− | + | [[Nyanaponika Thera]]}}<br/><br/> | |
− | [[Nyanaponika Thera]] | ||
"The three kinds of [[feelings]], O [[monks]], are [[impermanent]], [[compounded]], dependently arisen, liable to destruction, to evanescence, to fading away, to [[cessation]] namely, [[pleasant]] [[feeling]], [[painful]] [[feeling]], and [[neutral]] [[feeling]]." | "The three kinds of [[feelings]], O [[monks]], are [[impermanent]], [[compounded]], dependently arisen, liable to destruction, to evanescence, to fading away, to [[cessation]] namely, [[pleasant]] [[feeling]], [[painful]] [[feeling]], and [[neutral]] [[feeling]]." |
Revision as of 17:32, 3 April 2014
Anicca Sutta: Impermanent
translated from the Pali by
Nyanaponika Thera
"The three kinds of feelings, O monks, are impermanent, compounded, dependently arisen, liable to destruction, to evanescence, to fading away, to cessation namely, pleasant feeling, painful feeling, and neutral feeling."