Sutta Nipāta
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A poetry collection containing 74 short texts in verse or mixed prose arranged in five chapters, the Suttanipāta contains some of the most popular texts in all of Buddhism, such as the Ratana, Maṅgala, and Mettā Suttas, as well as texts such as the “Rhinoceros Horn Sutta” and the “Way to the Beyond” which are regarded as among the earliest (and most ascetic) of the scriptures.
Caution! Under Construction
Please be aware that this tag is still under construction and as such is missing information and may be changed or removed at any time. For all the content under consideration for this tag, see the “Sutta Nipāta” folder on Google Drive.
Table of Contents
Books (4)
Featured:
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The obsession with seeing portions of the Suttanipāta as early is a holdover of the mid-20th century enthusiasm for discovering a “Buddha before Buddhism”, seeking a “truly authentic” teaching before it was institutionalized as rigid doctrine. Somehow, this search always ends up conflated with the racially-charged effort to divest Buddhism of its “cultural” (read “Asian”) elements.
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The Sutta Nipāta contains older and younger material side by side.
See also: