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Passages similar to: Dhammapada — Chapter XXVI: The Brâhmana (Arhat)
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Buddhist
Dhammapada
Chapter XXVI: The Brâhmana (Arhat) (390)
It advantages a Brâhmana not a little if he holds his mind back from the pleasures of life; when all wish to injure has vanished, pain will cease.
Hindu
Mokṣha Sanyāsa Yoga (18.51)
Endowed with a pure understanding, restraining the self with firmness, turning away from sound and other sense-objects, and abandoning love and...
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Hindu
Karma Sanyāsa Yoga (5.20)
The man of steady intellect, undeluded, knower of Brahman, established in Brahman, should not be elated having obtained the pleasant and should not...
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Hindu
Brahmana 4 (4.4.23)
This very [doctrine] has been declared in the verse: — This eternal greatness of a Brahman Is not increased by deeds (karma), nor diminished. One...
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Buddhist
Chapter 6: The Perfect Long-Suffering (1)
ALL the righteousness, the charity, the worship of the Blessed, that have been wrought in thousands of aeons, are destroyed by ill-will. There is no...
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Tibetan Buddhist
The Tibetan Book of the Dead
Book II: Characteristics of Existence in the Intermediate State (24.9)
Others who have accumulated merit, and devoted themselves sincerely to religion, will experience various delightful pleasures and happiness and ease...
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Hindu
Sankhya Yoga (2.38)
Having an equal mind in pain and pleasure, gain and loss, victory and defeat, engage in battle and thereby you will not incur sin.
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Hindu
First Vallī (8)
'A Brâhmana that dwells in the house of a foolish man without receiving food to eat, destroys his hopes and expectations, his possessions, his...
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Hindu
Sankhya Yoga (2.56)
He whose mind is not troubled in sorrow, who does not hanker after pleasures and is free from attachment fear and hatred, is called the sage of...
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Buddhist
Chapter 8: The Perfect Contemplation (9)
Mark how fortune brings endless misfortune by the miseries of winning it, guarding it, and losing it; men's thoughts cling altogether to their...
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Hindu
Brahmana 4 (4.4.6)
On this point there is this verse: Where one's mind is attached — the inner self Goes thereto with action, being attached to it alone. Obtaining the...
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Buddhist
Chapter 6: The Perfect Long-Suffering (7)
In no place and by naught can the mind be destroyed, for it is unembodied; but from imaginations clinging to the body it suffers with the body's...
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Hindu
Mokṣha Sanyāsa Yoga (18.54)
Becoming Brahman, serene-minded, neither grieving nor desiring, the same to all beings, (he) obtain supreme devotion to Me.
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Hindu
Sixth Vallī (14)
'When all desires that dwell in his heart cease, then the mortal becomes immortal, and obtains Brahman.'
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Hindu
Jnana Yoga (4.22)
Content with whatsoever he gets without efforts, free from the pains of opposites, free from malice, balanced in success and failure, though acting,...
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Hindu
Karma Sanyāsa Yoga (5.19)
Even here (while living in this body) birth and death (samsara) are overcome by those whose mind is established in equality; Brahman is untainted and...
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Hindu
First Mundaka, Second Khanda (12)
Let a Brâhmana, after he has examined all these worlds which are gained by works, acquire freedom from all desires. Nothing that is eternal (not...
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Hindu
Bhakti Yoga (12.3)
Those who, having restrained well all the senses, even-minded everywhere, rejoicing in the welfare of all beings, meditate on the indefinable,...
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Hindu
Sankhya Yoga (2.64)
But the self-controlled man free from attraction and repulsion, with his senses under restraint though moving among objects, attains peace.
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Hindu
Prapathaka VIII, Khanda 4 (3)
And that world of Brahman belongs to those only who find it by abstinence--for them there is freedom in all the worlds.
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Buddhist
Chapter 6: The Perfect Long-Suffering (18)
These praises and honours destroy my welfare and horror of the flesh; they arouse envy of the worthy and anger at their fortune. Then they who rise...
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