SN 16.13 Pañca khome, kassapa, okkamaniyā dhammā saddhammassa sammosāya antaradhānāya saṃvattanti. There are five detrimental things that lead to the decline and disappearance of the true Dharma. Katame pañca? What five? Idha, kassapa, bhikkhū bhikkhuniyo upāsakā upāsikāyo satthari agāravā viharanti appatissā, dhamme agāravā viharanti appatissā, saṅghe agāravā viharanti appatissā, sikkhāya agāravā viharanti appatissā, samādhismiṃ agāravā viharanti appatissā— It’s when the monks, nuns, laymen, and laywomen lack respect and reverence for the Teacher, The Dharma, the Saṅgha, the training, and undistractible-lucidity. ime kho, kassapa, pañca okkamaniyā dhammā saddhammassa sammosāya antaradhānāya saṃvattanti. These five detrimental things lead to the decline and disappearance of the true Dharma. Early Buddhism Meditation Preservation Society
People often study, almost exclusively, Sati-'paṭṭhāna 🐘Sutta (MN 10, DN 22), told by authorities that it's one of the most, if not the most important sutta on meditation and "mindfulness". They're wrong, very wrong. There is over reliance in modern times on that one sutta for the subject of Sati-'paṭṭhāna. MN 10 can be useful and interesting as additional supplemental material on the subject, but what you really should use as your basis and foundation on Sati-'paṭṭhāna, is the first 10 suttas of SN 47, as the Theras (elder keepers of Dhamma) intended. If you repeatedly study these 10 suttas, as was designed in the oral tradition, you're going to get a much more comprehensive and holistic understanding of "Mindfulness meditation" (sati), how it integrates with jhāna and 7 awakening factors, how all the noble 8 factors and 7 awakening factors are to be done all the time. Provided you read a correct translation. If you read Sujato's for e...