Aṇguttara Nikāya


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Aṇguttara-Nikāya
III. Tika Nipāta
IX. Samaṇa Vagga

Sutta 89 [DTO 91]

Dutiya Sikkhā Suttaṃ

Trainings (2)

Translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu.
Proofed against and modified in accordance with the revised edition at dhammatalks.org
Provenance, terms and conditons

 


 

[1][pts] "There are these three trainings.

Which three?

The training in heightened virtue,
the training in heightened mind,
the training in heightened discernment.

"And what is the training in heightened virtue?

There is the case where a monk is virtuous.
He dwells restrained in accordance with the Pāṭimokkha,
consummate in his behavior and sphere of activity.

He trains himself,
having undertaken the training rules,
seeing danger in the slightest fault.

This is called the training in heightened virtue.

"And what is the training in heightened mind?

There is the case where a monk
— quite secluded from sensuality,
secluded from unskillful qualities —
enters and remains in the first jhāna:
rapture and pleasure born of seclusion,
accompanied by directed thought and evaluation.

With the stilling of directed thought and evaluations,
he enters and remains in the second jhāna:
rapture and pleasure born of concentration,
unification of awareness
free from directed thought and evaluation
— internal assurance.

With the fading of rapture he remains equanimous,
mindful and alert,
and senses pleasure with the body.

He enters and remains in the third jhāna,
of which the Noble Ones declare,
'Equanimous and mindful,
he has a pleasant abiding.'

With the abandoning of pleasure and pain
— as with the earlier disappearance of elation and distress —
he enters and remains in the fourth jhāna:
purity of equanimity and mindfulness,
neither pleasure nor pain.

This is called the training in heightened mind.

"And what is the training in heightened discernment?

There is the case where a monk,
through the ending of the effluents,
enters and remains in the effluent-free awareness-release and discernment-release,
having directly known and realized them for himself
right in the here and now.

This is called the training in heightened discernment.

"These are the three trainings."

Heightened virtue,
heightened mind,
heightened discernment:
        persistent,
        firm,
        steadfast,
        absorbed in jhāna,
        mindful,
        with guarded faculties
you should practice them —

    as in front,
        so behind;
    as behind,
        so in front;
    as below,
        so above;
    as above,
        so below;
    as by day,
        so by night;
    as by night,
        so by day;
conquering all the directions
with limitless concentration.

This is called
the practice of training,
as well as the pure way of life.
[Following it,] you're called
self-awakened in the world,
enlightened,
one who's taken the path
            to its end.

With the cessation of sensory consciousness
of one released in the stopping of craving,
    the liberation of awareness
of one released in the stopping of craving,
is like the unbinding
                of a flame.[1]

 


[1] For a discussion of this image, see The Mind Like Fire Unbound.

 


 

Of Related Interest:

AN 3.88.

 


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