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Saṁyutta Nikāya 22.110 Linked Discourses 22.110

11. Antavagga 11. Sides

Arahantasutta A Perfected One

Sāvatthinidānaṁ. At Sāvatthī.

ā€œPaƱcime, bhikkhave, upādānakkhandhā. ā€œMendicants, there are these five grasping aggregates.

Katame paƱca? What five?

Seyyathidaṁ—rÅ«pupādānakkhandho …pe… viññāṇupādānakkhandho. That is, the grasping aggregates of form, feeling, perception, choices, and consciousness.

Yato kho, bhikkhave, bhikkhu imesaṁ paƱcannaṁ upādānakkhandhānaṁ samudayaƱca atthaį¹…gamaƱca assādaƱca ādÄ«navaƱca nissaraṇaƱca yathābhÅ«taṁ viditvā anupādāvimutto hoti. A mendicant comes to be freed by not grasping after truly understanding these five grasping aggregates’ origin, ending, gratification, drawback, and escape.

Ayaṁ vuccati, bhikkhave, bhikkhu arahaṁ khīṇāsavo vusitavā katakaraṇīyo ohitabhāro anuppattasadattho parikkhīṇabhavasaṁyojano sammadaƱƱāvimuttoā€ti. Such a mendicant is called a perfected one, with defilements ended, who has completed the spiritual journey, done what had to be done, laid down the burden, achieved their own true goal, utterly ended the fetter of continued existence, and is rightly freed through enlightenment.ā€

Aṭṭhamaṁ.
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