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The [[Buddhist Canon|Tibetan canon]] contains two [[sutra]]s with the title '''''Sutra on Impermanence''''' (Skt. ''Anityatāsūtra''; Tib.མི་རྟག་པ་ཉིད་ཀྱི་མདོ་, ''mitakpa nyi kyi do'', [[Wyl.]] ''mi rtag pa nyid kyi mdo''), both found in the general section of the [[Kangyur]] (Wyl. ''mdo sde'', [[Toh]] 309 and 310).  
The [[Buddhist Canon|Tibetan canon]] contains two [[sutra]]s with the title '''''Sutra on Impermanence''''' (Skt. ''Anityatāsūtra''; Tib.མི་རྟག་པ་ཉིད་ཀྱི་མདོ་, ''mitakpa nyi kyi do'', [[Wyl.]] ''mi rtag pa nyid kyi mdo''), both found in the [[General Sutra]] section of the [[Kangyur]] ([[Toh]] 309 and 310).  


*The first one (Toh 309), which is translated into English, is a brief [[sutra]] in which the [[Buddha]] reminds his followers of one of the principal characteristics of [[samsara|samsaric]] existence: the reality of [[impermanence]]. The four things cherished most in this world, the Buddha says—namely good health, youth, prosperity, and life—are all impermanent. He closes his teaching with a verse, asking how beings, afflicted as they are by impermanence, can take delight in anything desirable, indirectly urging his disciples to practice the [[path]] of [[liberation]].<ref>84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha</ref>
*The first one (Toh 309), which is translated into English, is a brief sutra in which the [[Buddha]] reminds his followers of one of the principal characteristics of [[samsara|samsaric]] existence: the reality of [[impermanence]]. The four things cherished most in this world, the Buddha says—namely good health, youth, prosperity, and life—are all impermanent. He closes his teaching with a verse, asking how beings, afflicted as they are by impermanence, can take delight in anything desirable, indirectly urging his disciples to practice the [[path]] of [[liberation]].<ref>84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha</ref>
 
==Texts==
*The first one can be found in the [[General Sutra]] section of the [[Kangyur]], Toh 309
**English translation: {{84000|http://read.84000.co/translation/UT22084-072-009.html|The Sūtra on Impermanence}}
 
Sutras with equivalent titles are also found in other Buddhist canons, but their contents differ substantially from the one translated here.
*The Chinese Tripiṭaka contains two sutras so entitled (Taishō Nos. 801 and 759)
*In the Samyutta Nikaya of the [[Pali Canon]], the collection of discourses grouped by themes, there are a number of different texts with the title ''Sutta on Impermanence'' (Pali. ''Aniccasutta'').


==References==
==References==
<small><references/></small>
<small><references/></small>
==Canonical Texts==
*The first one can be found in Toh 309, Degé Kangyur vol 72 (''mdo sde, sa''), folios 155a-155b.
Sūtras with equivalent titles are also found in other Buddhist canons, but their contents differ substantially from the one translated here.
*The Chinese Tripiṭaka contains two sūtras so entitled (Taishō Nos. 801 and 759)
*In the Samyutta Nikāya of the Pāli canon, the collection of discourses grouped by themes, there are a number of different texts with the title ''Sutta on Impermanence'' (Pali. ''Aniccasutta'').
==English Translations==
*{{84000|http://read.84000.co/translation/UT22084-072-009.html| ''Anityatāsūtra'', མི་རྟག་པ་ཉིད་ཀྱི་མདོ། The Sūtra on Impermanence}}


[[Category:Texts]]
[[Category:Texts]]
[[Category:Sutras]]
[[Category:Sutras]]
[[Category:General Sutra Section]]
[[Category:Shravakayana Sutras]]
[[Category:84000 Translations]]
[[Category:84000 Translations]]

Latest revision as of 22:44, 9 December 2020

The Tibetan canon contains two sutras with the title Sutra on Impermanence (Skt. Anityatāsūtra; Tib.མི་རྟག་པ་ཉིད་ཀྱི་མདོ་, mitakpa nyi kyi do, Wyl. mi rtag pa nyid kyi mdo), both found in the General Sutra section of the Kangyur (Toh 309 and 310).

  • The first one (Toh 309), which is translated into English, is a brief sutra in which the Buddha reminds his followers of one of the principal characteristics of samsaric existence: the reality of impermanence. The four things cherished most in this world, the Buddha says—namely good health, youth, prosperity, and life—are all impermanent. He closes his teaching with a verse, asking how beings, afflicted as they are by impermanence, can take delight in anything desirable, indirectly urging his disciples to practice the path of liberation.[1]

Texts

Sutras with equivalent titles are also found in other Buddhist canons, but their contents differ substantially from the one translated here.

  • The Chinese Tripiṭaka contains two sutras so entitled (Taishō Nos. 801 and 759)
  • In the Samyutta Nikaya of the Pali Canon, the collection of discourses grouped by themes, there are a number of different texts with the title Sutta on Impermanence (Pali. Aniccasutta).

References

  1. 84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha