Difference between revisions of "Sutta Nipāta"
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− | The Sutta Nipāta is a book in the Khuddaka Nikāya,the fifth part of the Sutta Piṭaka, the second division of the Tipiṭaka,the sacred scriptures of | + | The [[Sutta]] Nipāta is a book in the [[Khuddaka Nikāya]],the fifth part of the [[Sutta Piṭaka]], the second division of the Tipiṭaka,the sacred scriptures of [[BUDDHISM]]. The [[Name]] [[Sutta]] Nipāta means ‘collection of discourses’ and the work contains 55 discourses and 1149 verses altogether. The [[Sutta]] Nipāta contains some of the most lyrical and evocative [[Poetry]] in the scriptures, much of it drawing on the imagery of the natural environment. For example, a [[Monk]] is urged to give up clinging ‘the way a snake outgrows its worn-out skin’ and to ‘be alone like a rhinoceros.’ |
The Group of Discourses, trans. by K. R. Norman, 1992. | The Group of Discourses, trans. by K. R. Norman, 1992. | ||
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[[Category:Buddhist Terms]] | [[Category:Buddhist Terms]] | ||
[[Category:Khuddaka Nikāya]] | [[Category:Khuddaka Nikāya]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Sutta Nipāta]] |
Revision as of 14:34, 16 May 2013
The Sutta Nipāta is a book in the Khuddaka Nikāya,the fifth part of the Sutta Piṭaka, the second division of the Tipiṭaka,the sacred scriptures of BUDDHISM. The Name Sutta Nipāta means ‘collection of discourses’ and the work contains 55 discourses and 1149 verses altogether. The Sutta Nipāta contains some of the most lyrical and evocative Poetry in the scriptures, much of it drawing on the imagery of the natural environment. For example, a Monk is urged to give up clinging ‘the way a snake outgrows its worn-out skin’ and to ‘be alone like a rhinoceros.’
The Group of Discourses, trans. by K. R. Norman, 1992.