Cunda Sutta (Uraga Vagga)

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This is a sutta in the Sutta Nipata. For the sutta with the same name in Anguttara Nikaya, see Cunda Sutta.

Cunda the smith:

"I ask the sage of abundant discernment, awakened, lord of the Dhamma, free of craving, supreme among two-legged beings, best of charioteers: "How many contemplatives are there in the world? Pease tell me."

The Buddha:

"Four contemplatives, Cunda. There isn't a fifth. Being asked face-to-face, I'll explain:
the Victor of the path,
the teacher of the path,
one who lives by the path,
and one who corrupts the path."

Cunda the smith:

"Whom do the Awakened call the Victor of the path and who is an unequalled teacher of the path? Tell me the one who lives by the path, and explain to me one who corrupts the path."

The Buddha:

"He's crossed over perplexity, his arrow removed, delighting in Unbinding, free of greed, the leader of the world with its devas: one like this the Awakened call the Victor of the path.
"He here knows the foremost as foremost, who right here shows and analyzes the Dharma, that sage, a cutter-of-doubt unperturbed: he's called the second of monks, the teacher of the path.
"Mindful, restrained, he lives by the well-taught Dharma-principles, path, associating with principles without blame: he's called the third of monks, one who lives by the path.
"Creating a counterfeit of those with good practices, self-asserting, a corrupter of families, intrusive, deceitful, unrestrained, chaff, going around in disguise: he's one who corrupts the path.
"Any householder, having ferreted these out — a discerning disciple of those who are noble — knowing they aren't all the same, seeing this, his conviction's not harmed.
"For how could the corrupt with the un-corrupt, the impure with the pure, be put on a par?"


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