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Siva Sutta
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The Sīva Sutta (Saṃyutta Nikāya 2.21) is a brief discourse in the Saṃyutta Nikāya of the Pāli Canon. It records an encounter between the Buddha and a deva named Sīva who appears at night in Jetavana, Sāvatthī.[1]
Content
[edit]The deva Sīva addresses the Buddha with four verses praising association with spiritually accomplished persons (sappurisa), intimacy with the virtuous, and learning the true Dhamma. The verses state that such association leads to happiness rather than sorrow.[1]
The Buddha responds with a single concluding verse affirming that following this path results in release from all suffering. After the exchange, the deva pays homage and departs.[2]
Significance of the name Sīva
[edit]The deva is named Sīva (Pāli; Sanskrit Śiva). It is not specified whether this is the Vedic deity Śiva of the Śaiva tradition, which developed centuries after the composition of the early Buddhist texts. In the Sutta, Sīva functions simply as the proper name of a celestial being who reveres the Buddha and extols the Dhamma. The shared name reflects the fact that the term siva/śiva (meaning “auspicious”) was already in use as a positive epithet across early Indian religious traditions, including Vedic/Brahmanical and Buddhist ones.[1]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c "SN 2.21 Sīva Sutta: With Sīva". SuttaCentral. Translated by Sujato Bhikkhu. Retrieved 4 December 2025.
- ^ "SN 2.21 Sīva Sutta". Agama. Retrieved 4 December 2025.