Aṅguttara Nikāya


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Aṅguttara Nikāya
Catukka Nipāta
XIII: Bhaya Vagga

Sutta 126

Metta Sutta

Good Will (2)

from the Pali by Ñanamoli Thera
For free distribution only.

 


 

[1][pts][than] Here, bhikkhus, a certain person abides with his heart imbued with loving-kindness extending ...
over the all-encompassing world.

Now whatever therein (during that state of contemplation) exists classifiable as form,
classifiable as a feeling
(of pleasure, pain, or neutrality),
classifiable as perception,
classifiable as determinative acts,
or classifiable as consciousness,
such ideas he sees as impermanent,
as liable to suffering,
as a disease,
as a cancer,
as a barb,
as a calamity,
as an affliction,
as alien,
as being worn away,
as void,
as not-self.

On the dissolution of the body, after death,
he reappears (as a non-returner)
in the retinue of the Gods of the Pure Abodes
(where there are only those who have reached the Noble Path
and where extinction of greed, hate and delusion
is reached in less than seven lives
without return to this world).

And this kind of reappearance is not shared by ordinary men
(who have not reached the Noble Eightfold Path).

...

 


 

References:

See also: AN 4.125

 


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