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5 Major Buddhist Sutras For Greater Mindfulness And Peace

The sutras are an important part of Buddhist practice. They connect Buddhists with the ancient teachings and remind them of the core disciplines of the masters that came long before. <br>So, what can you learn from the Buddhist sutras? Quite a lot, actually. Even though these Buddhist texts are now thousands of years old, their messages are as crucial today as they were when they were first recorded.

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5 Major Buddhist Sutras For Greater Mindfulness And Peace

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  1. 5MajorBuddhistSutrasForGreater Mindfulness AndPeace The sutras are an important part of Buddhist practice. They connect Buddhists with the ancient teachings and remind them of the core disciplines of the masters that came longbefore. So, what can you learn from the Buddhist sutras? Quite a lot, actually. Even though these Buddhist textsare now thousands of years old, their messages are as crucial today as they were when they were firstrecorded. What Is A BuddhistSutra? Before we take a closer look at the Buddhist sutras themselves, it might be helpful to learn more about what sutras actuallyare. A sutra is a short passage that contains a powerful teaching. Think of them as sacred messages from ancient gurus, sages, and teachers of theage.

  2. Deborah King, Author of Mindvalley’s Be A Modern Master Programexplains: “Sutras are powerful words and phrases that raise your consciousness between spiritual planes. The sutra practice is so compelling and forceful. You have no idea where it could takeyou.” In Sanskrit, the word sutra literally means thread. Ancient teachers used the threads of the sutras to weave together tapestries of great lessons andideas. Sutras can be found in Buddhism, Hinduism, and Jainism. Today, we’ll be looking at five major Buddhist sutras. Where Do The Buddhist Sutras ComeFrom? If sutras are the recorded words of ancient teachers, who recorded them? And who were the teachers? In Buddhism, many of the important sutras practiced today come from the Buddha himself and the holy teachers, or bodhisattvas, ofBuddhism. Monks first preserved the teachings by passing them down by word of mouth before recorded them in the followingyears.

  3. 5 Buddhist Sutras For DeeperMindfulness Each sutra carries a profound wisdom. They often take the form of conversations between a teacher and a student. It’s this conversational simplicity that makes the Buddhist sutras so easy to approach. Buddhist practitioners sing, chant and use sutras in meditation. You don’t have to practice Buddhism to benefit from these ancient teachings as the wisdom of the Buddha is accessible to all. Here are five Buddhist sutras to increase your mindfulness and encourage innerstillness: “So you should view this fleeting world – A star at dawn, a bubble in astream, A flash of lightning in a summercloud, A flickering lamp, a phantom, and a dream.” —The DiamondSutra “When appearances and names are put away and all discrimination ceases, that which remains is the true and essential nature of things.” —The LankavataraSutra “Thought is like a water-wheel or a machine: it goes on rolling the wheel of transmigration, carrying varieties of bodies and forms… causing the wooden figures to move as a magician moves them.” —The LankavataraSutra “Form does not differ from emptiness; emptiness does not differ fromform. Form itself is emptiness; emptiness itself isform. So too are feeling, cognition, formation, and consciousness.” —The HeartSutra “All dharmas (teachings) are marked with emptiness; they do not appear or disappear, are not tainted or pure, do not increase or decrease.” —The HeartSutra

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