- DN 1: Brahmajāla Sutta — The All-embracing Net of Views {D i 1} [Bodhi].In this important sutta, the first in the Tipitaka, the Buddha describes sixty-two philosophical and speculative views concerning the self and the world that were prevalent among spiritual seekers of his day. In rejecting these teachings — many of which thrive to this day — he decisively establishes the parameters of his own.
- DN 2: Samaññaphala Sutta — The Fruits of the Contemplative Life {D i 47} [Thanissaro].King Ajatasattu asks the Buddha, “What are the fruits of the contemplative life, visible in the here and now?” The Buddha replies by painting a comprehensive portrait of the Buddhist path of training, illustrating each stage of the training with vivid similes.
- DN 9: Potthapada Sutta — About Potthapada {D i 178} [Thanissaro].The wandering ascetic Potthapada brings to the Buddha a tangle of questions concerning the nature of perception. The Buddha clears up the matter by reviewing the fundamentals of concentration meditation and showing how it can lead to the ultimate cessation of perception.
- DN 11: Kevatta (Kevaddha) Sutta — To Kevatta {D i 211} [Thanissaro].This discourse explores the role of miracles and conversations with heavenly beings as a possible basis for faith and belief. The Buddha does not deny the reality of such experiences, but he points out that — of all possible miracles — the only reliable one is the miracle of instruction in the proper training of the mind. As for heavenly beings, they are subject to greed, anger, and delusion, and so the information they give — especially with regard to the miracle of instruction — is not necessarily trustworthy. Thus the only valid basis for faith is the instruction that, when followed, brings about the end of one’s own mental defilements. The tale that concludes the discourse is one of the finest examples of the early Buddhist sense of humor. [This summary provided by the translator.]
- DN 12: Lohicca Sutta — To Lohicca {D i 224} [Thanissaro].A non-Buddhist poses some good questions: If Dhamma is something that one must realize for oneself, then what is the role of a teacher? Are there any teachers who don’t deserve some sort of criticism? The Buddha’s reply includes a sweeping summary of the entire path of practice.
- DN 15: Maha-nidana Sutta — The Great Causes Discourse {D ii 55} [Thanissaro].One of the most profound discourses in the Pali canon, which gives an extended treatment of the teachings of dependent co-arising (paticca samuppada) and not-self (anatta) in an outlined context of how these teachings function in practice. An explanatory preface is included.
- DN 16: Maha-parinibbana Sutta — Last Days of the Buddha/The Great Discourse on the Total Unbinding {D ii 137; chapters 5-6} [Vajira/Story (excerpt) | Thanissaro (excerpt)].This wide-ranging sutta, the longest one in the Pali canon, describes the events leading up to, during, and immediately following the death and final release (parinibbana) of the Buddha. This colorful narrative contains a wealth of Dhamma teachings, including the Buddha’s final instructions that defined how Buddhism would be lived and practiced long after the Buddha’s death — even to this day. But this sutta also depicts, in simple language, the poignant human drama that unfolds among the Buddha’s many devoted followers around the time of the death of their beloved teacher.
- DN 20: Maha-samaya Sutta — The Great Assembly/The Great Meeting {D ii 253} [Piyadassi | Thanissaro].A large group of devas pays a visit to the Buddha. This sutta is the closest thing in the Pali canon to a “Who’s Who” of the deva worlds, providing useful material for anyone interested in the cosmology of early Buddhism.
- DN 21: Sakka-pañha Sutta — Sakka’s Questions {D ii 276; chapter 2} [Thanissaro (excerpt)].Sakka, the deva-king, asks the Buddha about the sources of conflict, and about the path of practice that can bring it to an end. This discourse ends with a humorous account about Sakka’s frustration in trying to learn the Dhamma from other contemplatives. It’s hard to find a teacher when you’re a king.
- DN 22: Maha-satipatthana Sutta — The Great Frames of Reference {D ii 290} [Burma Piṭaka Assn. | Thanissaro].This sutta offers comprehensive practical instructions on the development of mindfulness in meditation. The Buddha describes how the development of continuous mindfulness of the four satipatthana(“foundations of mindfulness” or “frames of reference”) — mindfulness of the body, of feelings, of the mind, and of mind-objects — can lead ultimately to full Awakening. [The text of this sutta is identical to that of the Satipatthana Sutta (MN 10), except that the Majjhima version omits the exposition of the Four Noble Truths (sections 5a,b,c and d in part D of this version).]
- DN 26: Cakkavatti Sutta — The Wheel-turning Emperor {D iii 58} [Thanissaro].In this excerpt the Buddha explains how skillful action can result in the best kind of long life, the best kind of beauty, the best kind of happiness, and the best kind of strength.
- DN 31: Sigalovada Sutta — The Buddha’s Advice to Sigalaka/The Discourse to Sigala {D iii 180} [Kelly/Sawyer/Yareham | Narada].The householder’s code of discipline, as described by the Buddha to the layman Sigala. This sutta offers valuable practical advice for householders on how to conduct themselves skillfully in their relationships with parents, spouses, children, pupils, teachers, employers, employees, friends, and spiritual mentors so as to bring happiness to all concerned.
- DN 32: Atanatiya Sutta — Discourse on Atanatiya {D iii 194} [Piyadassi].One of the “protective verses” (paritta) that are chanted to this day for ceremonial purposes by Theravada monks and nuns around the world. See Piyadassi Thera’s The Book of Protection.
- MN 1: Mulapariyaya Sutta — The Root Sequence {M i 1} [Thanissaro].In this difficult but important sutta the Buddha reviews in depth one of the most fundamental principles of Buddhist thought and practice: namely, that there is no thing — not even Nibbana itself — that can rightly be regarded as the source from which all phenomena and experience emerge.
- MN 2: Sabbasava Sutta — All the Fermentations/Discourse on All Āsavas {M i 6} [Thanissaro | Burma Piṭaka Assn.].The Buddha teaches seven methods for eliminating from the mind the deeply rooted defilements (sensuality, becoming, views, and ignorance) that obstruct the realization of Awakening.
- MN 4: Bhaya-bherava Sutta — Fear & Terror {M i 16} [Thanissaro].What would it take to live in solitude in the wilderness, completely free of fear? The Buddha explains.
- MN 7: Vatthupama Sutta — The Simile of the Cloth {M i 36} [Nyanaponika].With a simple simile the Buddha illustrates the difference between a defiled mind and a pure mind.
- MN 8: Sallekha Sutta — The Discourse on Effacement {M i 40} [Nyanaponika].The Buddha explains how unskillful qualities in the heart can be eradicated through meditation.
- MN 9: Sammaditthi Sutta — Right View/The Discourse on Right View {M i 46} [Thanissaro | Ñanamoli/Bodhi].How the four noble truths, dependent co-arising, and the knowledge that ends mental fermentation all build upon the basic dichotomy between skillful and unskillful action.
- MN 10: Satipatthana Sutta — Frames of Reference/The Foundations of Mindfulness/The Discourse on the Arousing of Mindfulness {M i 55} [Thanissaro | Nyanasatta | Soma].The Buddha’s comprehensive practical instructions on the development of mindfulness as the basis for insight. [The text of this sutta is identical to that of the Maha-satipatthana Sutta (DN 22), but without its detailed exposition of the Four Noble Truths (sections 5a,b,c and d in part D of that version).]
- MN 11: Cula-sihanada Sutta — The Shorter Discourse on the Lion’s Roar {M i 63} [Ñanamoli/Bodhi].The Buddha declares that only through practicing in accord with the Dhamma can Awakening be realized. His teaching is distinguished from those of other religions and philosophies through its unique rejection of all doctrines of self.
- MN 12: Maha-sihanada Sutta — The Great Discourse on the Lion’s Roar {M i 68} [Ñanamoli/Bodhi].The Buddha expounds the ten powers of a Tathagata, his four kinds of intrepidity, and other superior qualities which entitle him to “roar his lion’s roar in the assemblies.”
- MN 13: Maha-dukkhakkhandha Sutta — The Great Mass of Stress {M i 83} [Thanissaro].In deliciously graphic terms, the Buddha describes the allures and drawbacks of sensuality, physical form, and feeling. What better incentive could there be to escape samsara once and for all?
- MN 14: Cula-dukkhakkhandha Sutta — The Lesser Mass of Stress {M i 91} [Thanissaro].What mental qualities must be abandoned in order to free oneself of greed, aversion, and delusion? Can painful austerities be used to purify oneself and burn away the karmic fruit of past misdeeds? Through question-and-answer dialogues with the lay follower Mahanama and with a group of Jain ascetics, the Buddha lays these questions to rest.
- MN 18: Madhupindika Sutta — The Ball of Honey {M i 108} [Thanissaro].A man looking to pick a fight asks the Buddha to explain his doctrine. The Buddha’s answer mystifies not only the man, but also a number of monks. Ven. Maha Kaccana finally provides an explanation, and in the course of doing so explains what is needed to bring the psychological sources of conflict to an end.
- MN 19: Dvedhavitakka Sutta — Two Sorts of Thinking {M i 114} [Thanissaro].The Buddha recounts the events leading up to his Awakening, and describes his discovery that thoughts connected with sensuality, ill-will, and harmfulness do not lead one to Awakening, while those connected with their opposites (renunciation, non ill-will, and harmlessness) do.
- MN 20: Vitakkasanthana Sutta — The Removal of Distracting Thoughts/The Relaxation of Thoughts {M i 118} [Soma | Thanissaro].The Buddha offers five practical methods of responding wisely to unskillful thoughts (thoughts connected with desire, aversion, or delusion).
- MN 21: Kakacupama Sutta — The Simile of the Saw/The Parable of the Saw {M i 122} [Thanissaro (excerpt) | Buddharakkhita (excerpt)].The Buddha tells the story of a wise slave who deliberately tests her mistress’s patience. The Buddha invokes several memorable similes here to illustrate the correct way to develop patience.
- MN 22: Alagaddupama Sutta — The Water-Snake Simile/The Snake Simile {M i 130} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika].Using two famous similes, the Buddha shows how the development of right view calls for the skillful application both of grasping and of letting-go. The sutta includes one of the Canon’s most important expositions on the topic of not-self.
- MN 24: Ratha-vinita Sutta — Relay Chariots {M i 145} [Thanissaro].Using the simile of a set of relay chariots, Ven. Punna Mantaniputta explains the relationship of the factors of the path to the goal of the holy life.
- MN 26: Ariyapariyesana Sutta — The Noble Search {M i 160} [Thanissaro].Most of us spend a good part of our lives looking for happiness in all the wrong places. In this sutta the Buddha recounts the story of his own search and points out where a true and lasting happiness can be found.
- MN 27: Cula-hatthipadopama Sutta — The Shorter Elephant Footprint Simile {M i 175} [Thanissaro].At what point do you know for sure that the Buddha’s awakening was genuine?
- MN 28: Maha-hatthipadopama Sutta — The Great Elephant Footprint Simile {M i 184} [Thanissaro].An explanation of the four noble truths, focusing on the aggregate of physical form and showing (1) how all the aggregates are interrelated and (2) how all four noble truths, together with the principle of dependent co-arising, are related to the aggregates.
- MN 33: Maha-gopalaka Sutta — The Greater Cowherd Discourse {M i 220} [Thanissaro].Eleven factors that are conducive to spiritual growth, and eleven that are obstructive. (Apart from the preamble, this sutta is identical to AN 11.18.)
- MN 34: Culagopalika Sutta — The Shorter Discourse on the Cowherd {M i 225} [Olendzki (excerpt)].In this brief excerpt the Buddha urges his monks to cross over to the lasting safety of Nibbana.
- MN 36: Maha-Saccaka Sutta — The Longer Discourse to Saccaka {M i 237} [Thanissaro].In response to an insinuating remark — that his ability not to be overcome by pleasure and pain is due simply to the fact that he never experienced any intense pleasures or pains — the Buddha recounts the pains he endured in his austerities, and the pleasures that attended the path to and his attainment of Awakening.
- MN 39: Maha-Assapura Sutta — The Greater Discourse at Assapura {M i 271} [Thanissaro].he Buddha outlines the full course of training by which a meditator may earn the right to call him- or herself a true contemplative. As presented here, the training begins with conscience and concern for the results of one’s actions, and leads progressively through the cultivation of virtue, sense-restraint, moderation, wakefulness, mindfulness, alertness, the four jhanas, finally culminating in the realization of the insight knowledges.
- MN 41: Saleyyaka Sutta — The Brahmans of Sala {M i 285} [Ñanamoli].The Buddha explains to a group of brahman householders how one’s present actions — by body, speech, and mind — determine one’s future fortune.
- MN 43: Mahavedalla Sutta — The Greater Set of Questions-and-Answers {M i 292} [Thanissaro].Ven. Sariputta answers questions dealing with discernment, right view, and the higher meditative attainments.
- MN 44: Culavedalla Sutta — The Shorter Set of Questions-and-Answers {M i 299} [Thanissaro].Dhammadinna the nun fields a series of Dhamma questions put to her by her former husband: questions on self-identification, cessation, penetration into the true nature of feeling, and the attainment of Nibbana.
- MN 45: Cula-dhammasamadana Sutta — The Shorter Discourse on Taking on Practices {M i 305} [Thanissaro].Is something right because it feels right?
- MN 49: Brahma-nimantanika Sutta — The Brahma Invitation {M i 326} [Thanissaro].The Buddha disarms two powerful antagonists through his profound understanding of the nature of consciousness.
- MN 52: Atthakanagara Sutta — To the Man from Atthakanagara {M i 349} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda describes eleven modes of practice that can lead to the Deathless. (Apart from the preamble, this sutta is identical to AN 11.17.)
- MN 53: Sekha-patipada Sutta — The Practice for One in Training {M i 353} [Thanissaro].“Consummate in clear-knowing and conduct” is a standard epithet for the Buddha. This sutta explains what it means, and shows that it can be used to describe an arahant as well.
- MN 54: Potaliya Sutta — To Potaliya {M i 359} [Thanissaro (excerpt)].Using seven graphic similes for the drawbacks of sensual passions, the Buddha teaches Potaliya the householder what it means, in the discipline of a noble one, to have entirely cut off one’s worldly affairs.
- MN 57: Kukkuravatika Sutta — The Dog-duty Ascetic {M i 387} [Ñanamoli].Act like a dog, and that’s what you’ll become. The moral: choose your actions with care.
- MN 58: Abhaya Sutta — To Prince Abhaya {M i 392} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains the criteria for determining whether or not something is worth saying. This discourse is a beautiful example of the Buddha’s skill as teacher: not only does he talk about right speech, but he also demonstrates right speech in action.
- MN 59: Bahuvedaniya Sutta — The Many Kinds of Feeling/Many Things to be Experienced {M i 396} [Nyanaponika | Thanissaro].The Buddha discusses the range of possible pleasures and joys, and concludes by advocating a pleasure that goes beyond feeling. [The text of this sutta is almost identical to that of SN 36.19.]
- MN 60: Apannaka Sutta — A Safe Bet {M i 400} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to a group of householders how to navigate skillfully through the maze of wrong views.
- MN 61: Ambalatthika-rahulovada Sutta — Instructions to Rahula at Mango Stone {M i 414} [Thanissaro].The Buddha admonishes his son, the novice Rahula, on the dangers of lying and stresses the importance of constant reflection on one’s motives. (This is one of the suttas selected by King Asoka (r. 270-232 BCE) to be studied and reflected upon frequently by all practicing Buddhists. See That the True Dhamma Might Last a Long Time: Readings Selected by King Asoka, by Thanissaro Bhikkhu.)
- MN 62: Maha-Rahulovada Sutta — The Greater Exhortation to Rahula {M i 420} [Thanissaro].The Buddha delivers meditation instructions to his son, the novice Rahula.
- MN 63: Cula-Malunkyovada Sutta — The Shorter Instructions to Malunkya {M i 426} [Thanissaro]. Ven. Malunkyaputta threatens to disrobe unless the Buddha answers all his speculative metaphysical questions. Using the famous simile of a man shot by a poison arrow, the Buddha reminds him that some questions are simply not worth asking.
- MN 66: Latukikopama Sutta — The Quail Simile {M i 447} [Thanissaro].Fetters are strong, not because of their own tensile strength, but because of the tenacity of our unwillingness to let them go.
- MN 70: Kitagiri Sutta — At Kitagiri {M i 473} [Thanissaro].A discourse on the importance of conviction in the Buddhist path. Not only is conviction a prerequisite for listening to the Buddha’s teachings with respect, but — as is shown by the unusual discussion here categorizing the types of noble disciples — it can underlie the practice all the way to the Deathless.
- MN 72: Aggi-Vacchagotta Sutta — To Vacchagotta on Fire {M i 483} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to a wanderer why he does not hold any speculative views. Using the simile of an extinguished fire he illustrates the destiny of the liberated being.
- MN 74: Dighanaka Sutta — To LongNails {M i 497} [Thanissaro].A discussion of how to abandon doctrinaire views of radical acceptance, radical rejection, and any combination of the two.
- MN 75: Magandiya Sutta — To Magandiya {M i 501} [Thanissaro (excerpt)].In this passage, the Buddha teaches a member of a hedonist sect about the nature of true pleasure and true health.
- MN 78: Samana-Mundika Sutta — Mundika the Contemplative {M ii 22} [Thanissaro].The highest attainment is not simply the abandoning of unskillful actions and a reversion to childlike harmlessness. It requires first developing skillful habits and skillful resolves, and then letting them go.
- MN 82: Ratthapala Sutta — About Ratthapala {M ii 54} [Thanissaro].A two-part story about the monk who, the Buddha said, was foremost among his disciples in ordaining on the power of pure conviction. In the first part of the story, Ratthapala deals with his parents’ opposition to his ordaining, and their attempts, after ordination, to lure him back to lay life. In the second part, he recalls the four observations about the world that inspired him, as a healthy and wealthy young man, to ordain in the first place.
- MN 86: Angulimala Sutta — About Angulimala {M ii 97} [Thanissaro].A murderous bandit takes refuge in the Buddha, develops a heart of compassion, and becomes an arahant.
- MN 87: Piyajatika Sutta — From One Who Is Dear {M ii 106} [Thanissaro].King Pasenadi of Kosala figures prominently in many discourses as a devout follower of the Buddha. In this discourse we learn how — thanks to Queen Mallika’s astuteness — the king first became favorably disposed toward the Buddha.
- MN 90: Kannakatthala Sutta — At Kannakatthala {M ii 125} [Thanissaro].A case study in how social advantages can be a spiritual liability. The discussion focuses on the factors needed for release — attainable by all people, regardless of caste or race — while the gently satirical frame story shows how the life of a king, or any highly placed person, presents obstacles to developing those factors.
- MN 93: Assalayana Sutta — With Assalayana {M ii 147} [Thanissaro].The Buddha enters into a debate with a brahman on whether one’s worth as a person is determined by birth or by behavior. Although some of the arguments he presents here deal with the specifics of brahman caste pride, many of them are applicable to issues of racism and nationalism in general.
- MN 95: Canki Sutta — With Canki {M ii 164} [Ñanamoli (excerpt) | Thanissaro (excerpt)].A pompous brahman teenager questions the Buddha about safeguarding, awakening to, and attaining the truth. In the course of his answer, the Buddha describes the criteria for choosing a reliable teacher and how best to learn from such a person.
- MN 97: Dhanañjani Sutta — To Dhanañjani {M ii 184} [Thanissaro].A poignant story of a lay person whose welfare was of special concern to Ven. Sariputta, this discourse teaches two lessons in heedfulness. (1) If you’re engaging in wrong livelihood, don’t expect to escape the karmic consequences even if you’re doing it to fulfil your duties to your family, parents, or friends. (2) Don’t be satisfied with mundane levels of attainment in meditation when there is still more to be done.
- MN 101: Devadaha Sutta — At Devadaha {M ii 214} [Thanissaro].The Buddha refutes a Jain theory of kamma, which claims that one’s present experience is determined solely by one’s actions in past lives, and that the effects of past unskillful actions can be “burned away” through austerity practices. The Buddha here outlines one of his most important teachings on kamma: that it is both the results of past deeds and present actions that shape one’s experience of the present. It is precisely this interaction of present and past that opens up the very possibility of Awakening.
- MN 105: Sunakkhatta Sutta — To Sunakkhatta {M ii 252} [Thanissaro].The Buddha addresses the problem of meditators who overestimate their progress in meditation. The sutta ends with a warning: anyone who claims enlightenment as license for unrestrained behavior is like someone who fails to follow the doctor’s orders after surgery, who knowingly drinks a cup of poison, or who deliberately extends a hand toward a deadly snake.
- MN 106: Aneñja-sappaya Sutta — Conducive to the Imperturbable {M ii 261} [Thanissaro].Advanced meditation instruction: how the fourth jhana and the formless attainments can be developed and used as a basis for the realization of Nibbana.
- MN 107: Ganakamoggallana Sutta — The Discourse to Ganaka-Moggallana {M iii 1} [Horner].The Buddha sets forth the gradual training of the Buddhist monk and describes himself as a “shower of the way.”
- MN 108: Gopaka Moggallana Sutta — Moggallana the Guardsman {M iii 7} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda explains how the Sangha maintains its unity and internal discipline after the passing away of the Buddha [BB]. Interestingly, this sutta also shows that early Buddhist practice had no room for many practices that developed in later Buddhist traditions, such as appointed lineage holders, elected ecclesiastical heads, or the use of mental defilements as a basis for concentration practice.
- MN 109: Maha-punnama Sutta — The Great Full-moon Night Discourse {M iii 15} [Thanissaro].A thorough discussion of issues related to the five aggregates. Toward the end of the discussion, a monk thinks that he has found a loophole in the teaching. The way the Buddha handles this incident shows the proper use of the teachings on the aggregates: not as a metaphysical theory, but as a tool for questioning clinging and so gaining release.
- MN 110: Cula-punnama Sutta — The Shorter Discourse on the Full-moon Night {M iii 20} [Thanissaro].How to recognize — and become — a person of integrity.
- MN 111: Anupada Sutta — One After Another {M iii 25} [Thanissaro].A description of how insight can be developed either while in, or immediately after withdrawing from, the different levels of jhana.
- MN 116: Isigili Sutta — The Discourse at Isigili {M iii 68} [Piyadassi].The Buddha enumerates the many paccekabuddhas who lived on Isigili mountain.
- MN 117: Maha-cattarisaka Sutta — The Great Forty {M iii 71} [Thanissaro].On the nature of noble right concentration, and its interdependence with all the factors of the noble eightfold path.
- MN 118: Anapanasati Sutta — Mindfulness of Breathing {M iii 78} [Thanissaro].One of the most important texts for beginning and veteran meditators alike, this sutta is the Buddha’s roadmap to the entire course of meditation practice, using the vehicle of breath meditation. The simple practice of mindfulness of breathing leads the practitioner gradually through 16 successive phases of development, culminating in full Awakening.
- MN 119: Kayagata-sati Sutta — Mindfulness Immersed in the Body {M iii 88} [Thanissaro].This sutta serves as a companion to the Anapanasati Sutta, and explains the importance of establishing a broad awareness of the body in meditation to develop jhana.
- MN 121: Cula-suññata Sutta — The Lesser Discourse on Emptiness {M iii 104} [Thanissaro].The Buddha instructs Ven. Ananda on the practice that leads to the “entry into emptiness,” the doorway to liberation.
- MN 122: Maha-suññata Sutta — The Greater Discourse on Emptiness {M iii 109} [Thanissaro].The Buddha instructs Ananda on several practical aspects of the meditative dwelling in emptiness, a mode of awareness that can ultimately bring the meditator to the threshold of Awakening.
- MN 125: Dantabhumi Sutta — The Discourse on the ‘Tamed Stage’ {M iii 128} [Horner].By analogy with the taming of an elephant, the Buddha explains how he tames his disciples.
- MN 126: Bhumija Sutta — To Bhumija {M iii 138} [Thanissaro].Does the desire for Awakening get in the way of Awakening? According to this discourse, the question of desiring or not desiring is irrelevant as long as one develops the appropriate qualities that constitute the path to Awakening. The discourse is also very clear on the point that there are right and wrong paths of practice: as a geographer might say, not every river flows to the sea.
- MN 131: Bhaddekaratta Sutta — The Discourse on the Ideal Lover of Solitude/An Auspicious Day {M iii 187} [Ñanananda | Thanissaro].In this stirring discourse the Buddha underscores the vital urgency of keeping one’s attention firmly rooted in the present moment. After all, the past is gone, the future isn’t here; this present moment is all we have.
- MN 135: Cula-kammavibhanga Sutta — The Shorter Exposition of Kamma/The Shorter Analysis of Action {M iii 202} [Ñanamoli | Thanissaro].Why do some people live a long life, but others die young? Why are some people born poor, but others born rich? The Buddha explains how kamma accounts for a person’s fortune or misfortune.
- MN 136: Maha-kammavibhanga Sutta — The Great Exposition of Kamma {M iii 207} [Ñanamoli].The Buddha reveals some of the subtle complexities in the workings of kamma.
- MN 137: Salayatana-vibhanga Sutta — An Analysis of the Six Sense-media {M iii 215} [Thanissaro].A discussion of the emotions: where they come from, how they function in the path of practice, and how they manifest in an awakened person who is fit to teach others.
- MN 138: Uddesa-vibhanga Sutta — An Analysis of the Statement {M iii 223} [Thanissaro].How to attend to outside objects without letting the mind become externally scattered, and how to focus in strong states of absorption without becoming internally positioned. It’s not easy, but it can be done.
- MN 140: Dhatu-vibhanga Sutta — An Analysis of the Properties {M iii 237} [Thanissaro].A poignant story in which a wanderer, searching for the Buddha, meets the Buddha without realizing it. He recognizes his mistake only after the Buddha teaches him a profound discourse on four determinations and the six properties of experience. An excellent illustration of the Buddha’s statement, “Whoever sees the Dhamma sees me.”
- MN 141: Saccavibhanga Sutta — An Analysis of the Truths/Discourse on The Analysis of the Truths {M iii 248} [Thanissaro | Piyadassi].Ven. Sariputta gives a detailed elaboration on the Buddha’s teaching of the Four Noble Truths.
- MN 143: Anathapindikovada Sutta — Instructions to Anathapindika/Advice to A Dying Man {M iii 258} [Thanissaro | Olendzki (excerpt)].Ven. Sariputta offers a deep teaching on non-clinging to the ailing lay-follower Anathapindika.
- MN 146: Nandakovada Sutta — Nandaka’s Exhortation {M iii 270} [Thanissaro].Ven. Nandaka discusses impermanence with a large group of nuns, driving his point home with particularly vivid similes. It was an effective teaching: soon afterwards, these nuns all become enlightened.
- MN 147: Cula-Rahulovada Sutta — The Shorter Exposition to Rahula {M iii 277} [Thanissaro].The Buddha leads his son, Ven. Rahula, to arahantship.
- MN 148: Chachakka Sutta — The Six Sextets {M iii 280} [Thanissaro].How the contemplation of the six senses leads to an understanding of not-self and, ultimately, to Awakening.
- MN 149: Maha-salayatanika Sutta — The Great Six Sense-media Discourse {M iii 287} [Thanissaro].How a clear understanding of the six senses leads to the development of the Wings to Awakening and to final release.
- MN 152: Indriya-bhavana Sutta — The Development of the Faculties {M iii 298} [Thanissaro].What qualifies as full mastery of the senses?
- SN 1.1: Ogha-tarana Sutta — Crossing over the Flood {S i 1; CDB i 89} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how he “crossed over the flood” of craving.
- SN 1.3: Upaneyya.m Sutta — Doomed {S i 2; CDB i 90} [Walshe].
- SN 1.9: Maanakaamo Sutta — Vain Conceits {S i 4; CDB i 93} [Walshe].
- SN 1.10: Arañña Sutta — A Face So Calm/The Wilderness {S i 4; CDB i 93} [Olendzki | Ireland | Thanissaro].Why do monks living in the forest wilderness look so happy?
- SN 1.17: Dukkara.m (Kummo) Sutta — Difficult {S i 7; CDB i 96} [Walshe].
- SN 1.18: Hiri Sutta — Conscience {S i 7; CDB i 96} [Thanissaro].A lovely short teaching on the rarity and value of conscientiousness.
- SN 1.20: Samiddhi Sutta — Samiddhi/About Samiddhi {S i 8; CDB i 97} [Walshe | Thanissaro].A devata wonders: why waste time meditating in the hopes of some future reward, when one can enjoy sensual pleasures right here and now?
- SN 1.25: Araha.m Sutta — The Arahant {S i 14; CDB i 102} [Walshe].
- SN 1.38: Sakalika Sutta — The Stone Sliver {S i 27; CDB i 116} [Thanissaro].After an attempt on his life, the Buddha shows by example how to handle pain.
- SN 1.41: Aditta Sutta — (The House) On Fire {S i 31; CDB i 119} [Thanissaro].A deva visits the Buddha and recites a lovely verse on the urgency of giving.
- SN 1.42: Kindada Sutta — A Giver of What {S i 32; CDB i 120} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to a deva the true value of various kinds of gifts.
- SN 1.69: Iccha Sutta — Desire {S i 40; CDB i 132} [Thanissaro].A brief and elegant summary of the heart of the Buddha’s teaching.
- SN 1.71: Ghatva Sutta — Having Killed {S i 41; CDB i 133} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes one thing that deserves to be killed.
- SN 2.6: Kamada Sutta — Kamada’s Lament {S i 48; CDB i 142} [Olendzki].The Buddha reassures a doubting deva that, though the journey to Awakening may indeed be long and hard, it really can be done.
- SN 2.7: Pañcalacanda Sutta — Pañcalacanda the Deva’s Son {S i 48; CDB i 142} [Thanissaro].Finding an opening to Nibbana.
- SN 2.8: Taayano Sutta — Taayana {S i 49; CDB i 143} [Walshe].
- SN 2.9: Candima Sutta — The Moon Deity’s Prayer for Protection {S i 50; CDB i 144} [Piyadassi]. The Buddha intervenes on behalf of a deva caught in the grips of an evil demon. This sutta belongs to the group of paritta (protection) suttas that are chanted by monastics for devotional and ceremonial purposes.
- SN 2.10: Suriya Sutta — The Sun Deity’s Prayer for Protection {S i 51; CDB i 145} [Piyadassi].The Buddha intervenes on behalf of a deva caught in the grips of an evil demon. This sutta belongs to the group of paritta (protection) suttas that are chanted by monastics for devotional and ceremonial purposes.
- SN 2.19: Uttara Sutta — Uttara the Deva’s Son {S i 54; CDB i 150} [Thanissaro].Doing good and making merit: are these the best one can aim for in this short life?
- SN 2.25: Jantu Sutta — Jantu {S i 61; CDB i 156} [Walshe].
- SN 2.26: Rohitassa Sutta — To Rohitassa {S i 61; CDB i 157} [Thanissaro].A well-traveled deva learns that we don’t have to go to the ends of the world to find an end to suffering; we need look no further than right here, in this very body.
- SN 3.1: Dahara Sutta — Young {S i 68; CDB i 164} [Thanissaro].The Buddha reminds King Pasenadi that one’s age is no measure of one’s wisdom.
- SN 3.4: Piya Sutta — Dear {S i 71; CDB i 167} [Thanissaro].If you truly care about your own and others’ welfare, then choose your actions with care.
- SN 3.5: Atta-rakkhita Sutta — Self-protected {S i 72; CDB i 169} [Thanissaro].The Buddha’s defense policy. [TB]
- SN 3.6: Appaka Sutta — Few {S i 73; CDB i 168} [Thanissaro].The Buddha reminds King Pasenadi of the pitfalls of wealth and luxury.
- SN 3.7: Atthakarana Sutta — In Judgment {S i 74; CDB i 170} [Thanissaro].King Pasenadi discovers what motivates people to tell lies.
- SN 3.8: Mallikaa Sutta — Mallikaa {S i 75; CDB i 170} [Walshe].
- SN 3.13: Do.napaaka Sutta/Donapaka Sutta — A Heavy Meal/King Pasenadi Goes on a Diet {S i 81; CDB i 176} [Walshe | Olendzki].How King Pasenadi learns to use mindfulness to control his overeating
- SN 3.14: Sangama Sutta — A Battle (1) {S i 82; CDB i 177} [Thanissaro].
- SN 3.15: Sangama Sutta — A Battle (2) {S i 84; CDB i 178} [Thanissaro].Two stories about the battles fought between rival kings, poignantly demonstrating how in war there is security neither for the victor nor the vanquished.
- SN 3.17: Appamada Sutta — Heedfulness {S i 86; CDB i 179} [Thanissaro].The Buddha reveals the one quality in the heart that offers real security.
- SN 3.19: Aputtaka Sutta — Heirless (1) {S i 89; CDB i 182} [Thanissaro].The Buddha advises a rich householder on the proper use and enjoyment of wealth.
- SN 3.20: Aputtaka Sutta — Heirless (2) {S i 92; CDB i 183} [Thanissaro].Give generously and without regret, or you may suffer the same sad consequences as this wealthy householder.
- SN 3.23: Loka Sutta — (Qualities of) the World {S i 98; CDB i 189} [Thanissaro].Three common things in the world that inevitably lead to harm and suffering.
- SN 3.24: Issattha Sutta — Archery Skills {S i 98; CDB i 190} [Thanissaro].Generosity yields good results. But to whom should we give to reap the very best results?
- SN 3.25: Pabbatopama Sutta — Irresistible Force/The Simile of the Mountains {S i 100; CDB i 192} [Olendzki | Thanissaro].The Buddha offers a powerful simile to King Pasenadi to underscore the imminence of death and the urgency of Dhamma practice.
- SN 4.8: Nandana Sutta — Delight {S i 107; CDB i 200} [Thanissaro].Mara and the Buddha debate this question: Are possessions a source of joy or of grief?
- SN 4.13: Sakalika Sutta — The Stone Sliver {S i 110; CDB i 203} [Thanissaro].The Buddha, recuperating from an assassination attempt, receives an unwelcome visit from Mara.
- SN 4.19: Kassaka Sutta — The Farmer {S i 114; CDB i 208} [Thanissaro].Mara proclaims his dominion over the sensory world, but the Buddha explains that he (Buddha) dwells in the one place that Mara can never go.
- SN 4.20: Rajja Sutta — Rulership {S i 116; CDB i 209} [Thanissaro].Mara, seeing that the Buddha has developed the four bases of power (iddhipada), tries to persuade him to give up the monastic life and become a powerful world ruler.
- SN 5.1: Alavika Sutta — Alavika/Sister Alavika {S i 128; CDB i 221} [Bodhi | Thanissaro].Mara: Why bother meditating? Why not just relax and enjoy life’s pleasures?
- SN 5.2: Soma Sutta — Soma/Sister Soma/Mara Meets His Match {S i 129; CDB i 222} [Bodhi | Thanissaro | Olendzki].Can women achieve Awakening? Ven. Sister Soma handles this misguided question with ease.
- SN 5.3: Gotami Sutta — Gotami/Sister Gotami {S i 129; CDB i 223} [Bodhi | Thanissaro].Mara: Why bother sitting in solitude in the forest?
- SN 5.4: Vijaya Sutta — Vijaya/Sister Vijaya {S i 130; CDB i 224} [Bodhi | Thanissaro].Mara: Why don’t we just put aside the meditation for awhile and go out dancing?
- SN 5.5: Uppalavanna Sutta — Sister Uppalavanna/Uppalavanna {S i 131; CDB i 225} [Thanissaro | Bodhi].Mara: Why don’t you just give up the dangers of the forest and live somewhere safer?
- SN 5.6: Cala Sutta — Sister Cala/Cala {S i 132; CDB i 226} [Thanissaro | Bodhi].Mara: What’s wrong with being reborn, anyway?
- SN 5.7: Upacala Sutta — Upacala/Sister Upacala {S i 133; CDB i 227} [Bodhi | Thanissaro].Mara: Why not just settle for a happy rebirth among the devas?
- SN 5.8: Sisupacala Sutta — Sister Sisupacala/Sisupacala {S i 133; CDB i 227} [Thanissaro | Bodhi]. Sister Sisupacala shows Mara how following the path of Dhamma doesn’t mean buying into to a fixed philosophy.
- SN 5.9: Sela Sutta — Sela/Sister Sela {S i 134; CDB i 228} [Bodhi | Thanissaro].Mara tries to trip up Ven. Sister Sela with metaphysical questions.
- SN 5.10: Vajira Sutta — Vajira/Sister Vajira {S i 134; CDB i 229} [Bodhi | Thanissaro].Have you ever found yourself getting lured out of meditation by some fascinating, but utterly speculative, train of thought? Ven. Sister Vajira shows how to deal with this.
- SN 6.1: Ayacana Sutta — The Request {S i 136; CDB i 231} [Thanissaro].Immediately after his Awakening, the Buddha receives a visit from Brahma Sahampati, who pleads with the Buddha to teach the Dhamma, for the sake of those “with little dust in their eyes.”
- SN 6.2: Garava Sutta — Reverence {S i 138; CDB i 233} [Thanissaro].Shortly after his Awakening, the Buddha reviews the world around him, searching for another being whom he can now rightly call his teacher.
- SN 6.13: Andhakavinda Sutta — Let the Wilderness Serve! {S i 154; CDB i 248} [Olendzki].Brahma Sahampati offers up verses of praise for the Buddha, who sits meditating alone in the wilderness.
- SN 6.15: Parinibbana Sutta — Total Unbinding {S i 157; CDB i 251} [Thanissaro].Four eyewitness accounts of the passing away of the Buddha.
- SN 7.1: Dhanañjaanii Sutta — Dhanañjaani {S i 160; CDB i 254} [Walshe].
- SN 7.2: Akkosa Sutta/Akkoso Sutta — Insult/Abuse {S i 161; CDB i 255} [Buddharakkhita | Thanissaro | Walshe].What is your best response when someone is angry with you? Hint: if you offer some food to a guest, but the guest declines the offer, to whom does the food belong?
- SN 7.6: Jata Sutta — The Tangle {S i 165; CDB i 259} [Thanissaro].The Buddha answers Jata Bharadvaja’s famous question, “Who can untangle this tangle [of craving]?”
- SN 7.11: Kasi Bharadvaja Sutta — Discourse to Bharadvaja, the Farmer/To the Plowing Bharadvaja {S i 171; CDB i 266} [Piyadassi | Thanissaro].The Buddha answers a farmer who asserts that monks do no useful work, and thus don’t deserve to eat.
- SN 7.12: Udaya Sutta — Breaking the Cycle {S i 173; CDB i 268} [Olendzki].In delightfully alliterative Pali verse, the Buddha tells how, without true wisdom, the cycle of death and re-becoming are doomed to drone on and on and on.
- SN 7.14: Maha-sala Sutta — Very Rich {S i 175; CDB i 271} [Thanissaro].A touching glimpse into the sorrow that a father feels when his ungrateful children fail to honor him in his old age. Treat your parents well.
- SN 7.17: Navakammika Sutta — The Builder {S i 179; CDB i 274} [Thanissaro].What useful work can one possibly accomplish by sitting in meditation under a tree in the forest?
- SN 7.18: Katthaharaka Sutta — Firewood-gathering/Buddha in the Forest {S i 180; CDB i 275} [Thanissaro | Olendzki].How does the Buddha practice jhana in the forest? [TB]
- SN 7.21: Sangaarava Sutta — Sangaarava {S i 182; CDB i 278} [Walshe].
- SN 8.4: Ananda Sutta — Ananda {S i 188; CDB i 283} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda offers advice to Ven. Vangisa on how to subdue lust.
- SN 9.1: Viveka Sutta — Seclusion {S i 197; CDB i 294} [Thanissaro].A deva comes to the aid of a forest monk whose mind had been wandering during meditation.
- SN 9.6: Anuruddha Sutta — Anuruddha {S i 200; CDB i 297} [Thanissaro].One of Ven. Anuruddha’s consorts from a previous life as a deva, visits him and invites him back.
- SN 9.9: Vajjiputta Sutta — The Vajjian Princeling {S i 201; CDB i 300} [Thanissaro].If you’ve ever wondered, “Why bother meditate?”, listen to this devata’s advice.
- SN 9.11: Ayoniso-manasikara Sutta — Inappropriate Attention {S i 203; CDB i 301} [Thanissaro].Food for thought for a monk being gnawed away by his thoughts.
- SN 9.14: Gandhatthena Sutta — The Thief of a Scent/Stealing the Scent {S i 204; CDB i 303} [Thanissaro | Olendzki].Have you ever wished for a guardian angel to warn you before you do something foolish? Here’s one with an important lesson.
- SN 10.8: Sudatta Sutta — About Sudatta (Anathapindika) {S i 210; CDB i 311} [Thanissaro].Anathapindika, the wealthy benefactor who would later donate the famous Jeta’s Grove monastery to the Sangha, meets the Buddha for the first time.
- SN 10.12: Alavaka Sutta — Discourse to Alavaka/To the Alavaka Yakkha {S i 213; CDB i 314} [Piyadassi | Thanissaro].A yakkha challenges the Buddha with riddles and threatens to beat him up.
- SN 11.3: Dhajagga Sutta — Banner Protection/The Top of the Standard {S i 218; CDB i 319} [Piyadassi | Thanissaro].Are you ever overcome by fear? The Buddha offers an antidote.
- SN 11.4: Vepacitti Sutta — Calm in the Face of Anger {S i 220; CDB i 321} [Olendzki].Sakka, king of the devas, explains to a skeptic how forbearance is the best response to another’s anger.
- SN 11.5: Subhasita-jaya Sutta — Victory Through What is Well Spoken {S i 222; CDB i 323} [Thanissaro].Marvelous account of a debating contest between two deities concerning the best way to respond to an angry person.
- SN 12.2: Paticca-samuppada-vibhanga Sutta — Analysis of Dependent Co-arising {S ii 2; CDB i 534} [Thanissaro].A summary of the causal chain of dependent co-arising.
- SN 12.10: Mahaa Sakyamuni Gotamo Sutta — Gotama the Great Sage of the Sakya {S ii 10; CDB i 537} [Walshe].
- SN 12.11: Ahara Sutta — Nutriment {S ii 11; CDB i 540} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika].The Buddha explains how the teachings on the four nutriments (ahara) fits in with dependent co-arising.
- SN 12.12: Phagguna Sutta — To Phagguna {S ii 13; CDB i 541} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika].Questions that presuppose the existence of an abiding “self,” are fundamentally invalid. The Buddha shows how to re-frame these questions in a way that conduces to liberation.
- SN 12.15: Kaccayanagotta Sutta/Kaccaayanagotto Sutta — To Kaccayana Gotta (on Right View)/Kaccaayana {S ii 16; CDB i 544} [Thanissaro | Walshe].The Buddha explains to Ven. Kaccayana Gotta how dependent co-arising applies in the development of right view.
- SN 12.16: Dhammakathiko Sutta — The Teacher of the Dhamma {S ii 18; CDB i 545} [Walshe].
- SN 12.17: Acela Sutta — Naked Kassapa/To the Clothless Ascetic {S ii 18; CDB i 545} [Walshe (excerpt) | Thanissaro].A perplexed ascetic asks the Buddha: “Is dukkha created by the self? By other? By both? By neither?” The Buddha’s answers at first baffle, then inspire, Kassapa, who eventually gains Awakening.
- SN 12.19: Bala-pandita Sutta — The Fool & the Wise Person {S ii 23; CDB i 549} [Thanissaro].What is the difference between a fool and a wise person?
- SN 12.20: Paccaya Sutta — Requisite Conditions {S ii 25; CDB i 550} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains that when dependent co-arising is clearly seen and understood, wrong views and confusion disappear.
- SN 12.22: Dasabalaa (2) Sutta — Ten Powers {S ii 28; CDB i 553} [Walshe (excerpt)].
- SN 12.23: Upanisa Sutta/Upanisaa Sutta — Discourse on Supporting Conditions/Prerequisites/Upanisaa {S ii 29; CDB i 553} [Bodhi | Thanissaro | Walshe (excerpt)].The Buddha explains how seeing deeply into dependent co-arising leads to Awakening. The causal chain here includes an additional set of factors not present in the “standard” chain of dependent co-arising.
- SN 12.25: Bhumija Sutta — To Bhumija {S ii 37; CDB i 559} [Thanissaro].What is the origin of pleasure and pain? Ven. Sariputta clears up some misconceptions.
- SN 12.31: Bhutamidam Sutta — This Has Come Into Being {S ii 47; CDB i 566} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika (excerpt)].What characterizes the difference between a run-of-the-mill person, one who practices the Dhamma, and one who has fully realized the Dhamma?
- SN 12.35: Avijjapaccaya Sutta — From Ignorance as a Requisite Condition {S ii 60; CDB i 573} [Thanissaro].Is there someone or something that lies behind the processes described in dependent co-arising?
- SN 12.38: Cetanaa Sutta/Cetana Sutta — Volition/Intention {S ii 65; CDB i 576} [Walshe | Thanissaro].The Buddha explains the causal link between mental fabrications and consciousness.
- SN 12.44: Loka Sutta — The World {S ii 73; CDB i 581} [Thanissaro].How the world arises and falls according to the law of dependent co-arising.
- SN 12.46: Aññatra Sutta — A Certain Brahman {S ii 75; CDB i 583} [Thanissaro].A brahman wonders: When I perform an action (kamma), am I the same person when I experience its results, or am I a different person? The Buddha helps to clear up this man’s confused thinking.
- SN 12.48: Lokayatika Sutta — The Cosmologist {S ii 77; CDB i 584} [Thanissaro].The Oneness of all being is sometimes taught as a basic Buddhist principle, but this discourse shows that the Buddha himself rejected the idea. It is simply one of the extremes that he avoided by teaching dependent co-arising.
- SN 12.52: Upadana Sutta — Clinging {S ii 84; CDB i 589} [Thanissaro].The Buddha uses a marvelous fire simile to describe the nature of clinging.
- SN 12.60: Nidaana.m Sutta — Aananda’s Mistake {S ii 92; CDB i 593} [Walshe (excerpt)].
- SN 12.61: Assutava Sutta — Uninstructed {S ii 94; CDB i 595} [Thanissaro].With a striking simile, the Buddha points out the folly of taking this fickle mind to be “self.”
- SN 12.63: Puttamansa Sutta — A Son’s Flesh {S ii 97; CDB i 597} [Nyanaponika | Thanissaro].A meditation on inter-relatedness, showing with four striking similes the suffering inherent in everything the body and mind depend upon for nourishment. [TB]
- SN 12.64: Atthi Raga Sutta — Where There is Passion {S ii 101; CDB i 599} [Nyanaponika | Thanissaro].The Buddha describes four factors to which the mind habitually clings. Those who succeed in abandoning passion for these “nutriments” can realize the cessation of birth, aging, and death.
- SN 12.65: Nagara Sutta — The City {S ii 104; CDB i 601} [Thanissaro].The Buddha retells the story of how, on the eve of his Awakening, he re-discovered the long-forgotten laws of dependent co-arising and the Four Noble Truths.
- SN 12.67: Nalakalapiyo Sutta — Sheaves of Reeds {S ii 112; CDB i 607} [Thanissaro].In a discussion about dependent co-arising with Ven. Maha Kotthita, Ven. Sariputta invokes a helpful simile to illustrate the relationship between consciousness and name-and-form.
- SN 12.68: Kosambi Sutta — At Kosambi (On Knowing Dependent Co-arising) {S ii 115; CDB i 609} [Thanissaro].Four good friends share a frank discussion about their grasp of dependent co-arising. One uses a memorable simile to describe the difference between stream-entry and arahatship.
- SN 12.70: Susima Sutta — About Susima {S ii 119; CDB i 612} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to Susima that development of psychic powers is not a prerequisite for enlightenment.
- SN 13.1: Nakhasikha Sutta — The Tip of the Fingernail {S ii 133; CDB i 621} [Thanissaro].
- SN 13.2: Pokkharani Sutta — The Pond {S ii 133; CDB i 621} [Thanissaro].
- SN 13.8: Samudda Sutta — The Ocean {S ii 137; CDB i 624} [Thanissaro].These three suttas offer vivid similes that give a sense of how much suffering one totally puts behind oneself upon attaining the stream to Nibbana. Good encouragement for putting some extra effort into the practice.
- SN 14.11: Sattadhatu Sutta — Seven Properties {S ii 150; CDB i 634} [Thanissaro].An alternative way of looking at the stages of concentration practice
- SN 15.3: Assu Sutta — Tears {S ii 179; CDB i 652} [Thanissaro].“Which is greater, the tears you have shed while transmigrating and wandering this long, long time… or the water in the four great oceans?”
- SN 15.9: Danda Sutta — The Stick {S ii 184; CDB i 656} [Thanissaro].We bounce from one birth to the next, as a thrown stick bounces along the ground.
- SN 15.11: Duggata Sutta — Fallen on Hard Times {S ii 186; CDB i 657} [Thanissaro].When you encounter an unfortunate person, remember: you’ve been there, too.
- SN 15.12: Sukhita Sutta — Happy {S ii 186; CDB i 658} [Thanissaro].When you encounter a fortunate person, remember: you’ve been there, too.
- SN 15.13: Timsa Sutta — Thirty {S ii 187; CDB i 658} [Thanissaro].Which is greater, the blood you have shed in your long journey in samsara, or the water in the four great oceans?
- SN 15.14-19: Mata Sutta — Mother {S ii 189; CDB i 659} [Thanissaro].It’s hard to meet someone who has not been, at some time in the distant past, your mother, father, son, daughter, sister, or brother.
- SN 16.1: Santu.t.tha.m Sutta — Contentment {S ii 194; CDB i 662} [Walshe].
- SN 16.2: Anottaapi Sutta — Carelessness {S ii 195; CDB i 663} [Walshe].
- SN 16.5: Jinna Sutta — Old {S ii 202; CDB i 666} [Thanissaro].Ven. Maha Kassapa explains why he chooses to continue meditating in the forest wilderness even though he has long since attained arahantship.
- SN 16.13: Saddhammapatirupaka Sutta/Saddhamma-pa.tiruupaka.m Sutta — A Counterfeit of the True Dhamma/False Dhamma {S ii 223; CDB i 680} [Thanissaro | Walshe].The Buddha issues a warning: a society that fails to show respect for these five things contributes to the eventual decline and disappearance of the Dhamma.
- SN 17.3: Kumma Sutta — The Turtle {S ii 227; CDB i 683} [Thanissaro].To seek fame and status: like walking around with a harpoon stuck in your back.
- SN 17.5: Piḷhika Sutta/Pilahaka Sutta — The Dung Beetle {S ii 228; CDB i 684} [Walshe | Thanissaro].To seek fame and status: like carrying around a ball of dung.
- SN 17.8: Sigala Sutta — The Jackal {S ii 230; CDB i 685} [Thanissaro].To seek fame and status is like being a mangy jackal.
- SN 20.2: Nakhasikha Sutta — The Tip of the Fingernail {S ii 263; CDB i 706} [Thanissaro].The Buddha offers a simile for the preciousness of this human birth.
- SN 20.4: Okkha Sutta — Serving Dishes {S ii 264; CDB i 707} [Thanissaro].
- SN 20.5: Satti Sutta — The Spear {S ii 265; CDB i 707} [Thanissaro].Two suttas on the extraordinary power of metta (goodwill).
- SN 20.6: Dhanuggaha Sutta — The Archer {S ii 265; CDB i 708} [Thanissaro].How quickly life passes! Knowing this, how should we conduct our lives?
- SN 20.7: Ani Sutta — The Peg {S ii 266; CDB i 708} [Thanissaro].Be careful: there are many popular teachings nowadays that may sound good, but they’re not necessarily consistent with the Buddha’s teachings.
- SN 21.2: Upatissa Sutta — About Upatissa (Sariputta) {S ii 274; CDB i 714} [Thanissaro].Is there anything in the world whose loss would sadden an arahant?
- SN 21.8: Nando Sutta — Nanda {S ii 281; CDB i 719} [Walshe].A primer for monks on what not to wear.
- SN 21.10: Theranama Sutta — [A Monk] by the Name of Elder {S ii 282; CDB i 720} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to a wandering monk the true meaning of solitude.
- SN 22.1: Nakulapita Sutta — To Nakulapita {S iii 1; CDB i 853} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to the aging householder Nakulapita how one need not be sick in mind even though one may be sick in body.
- SN 22.2: Devadaha Sutta — At Devadaha {S iii 5; CDB i 856} [Thanissaro].Ven. Sariputta explains the best way to introduce the Buddha’s teachings to inquisitive, intelligent people.
- SN 22.3: Haliddakani Sutta — To Haliddakani {S iii 9; CDB i 859} [Thanissaro].Ven. Maha Kaccana explains to a householder what it means to live as a monk, free of society, free of sensual passion, free of yearning, and free of quarreling.
- SN 22.5: Samadhi Sutta — Concentration {S iii 13; CDB i 863} [Thanissaro].How the development of concentration leads to discernment.
- SN 22.7: Upaadaaparitassanaa Sutta — Grasping and Worry {S iii 15; CDB i 865} [Walshe].The Buddha describes how ideas about the self lead to worry, and how to be free of such worry.
- SN 22.22: Bhaara.m Sutta/Bhara Sutta — The Burden {S iii 25; CDB i 871} [Walshe | Thanissaro].The Buddha describes the burdens we carry, and how to cast them off.
- SN 22.23: Pariñña Sutta — Comprehension {S iii 26; CDB i 872} [Thanissaro].True comprehension means the end of passion, aversion, and delusion.
- SN 22.36: Bhikkhu Sutta — The Monk {S iii 36; CDB i 879} [Thanissaro].How we define ourselves in terms of the aggregates, and how we don’t have to do so.
- SN 22.39: Anudhamma Sutta — In Accordance with the Dhamma (1) {S iii 40; CDB i 882} [Thanissaro].Towards the end of his life, the Buddha stated that the proper way to pay homage to him was to “practice the Dhamma in accordance with the Dhamma.” This sutta explains what that means, in terms of cultivating disenchantment (nibbida). [TB]
- SN 22.40: Anudhamma Sutta — In Accordance with the Dhamma (2) {S iii 41; CDB i 882} [Thanissaro].Towards the end of his life, the Buddha stated that the proper way to pay homage to him was to “practice the Dhamma in accordance with the Dhamma.” This sutta explains what that means, in terms of focusing on inconstancy (anicca). [TB]
- SN 22.41: Anudhamma Sutta — In Accordance with the Dhamma (3) {S iii 41; CDB i 882} [Thanissaro].Towards the end of his life, the Buddha stated that the proper way to pay homage to him was to “practice the Dhamma in accordance with the Dhamma.” This sutta explains what that means, in terms of focusing on stress/suffering (dukkha). [TB]
- SN 22.42: Anudhamma Sutta — In Accordance with the Dhamma (4) {S iii 41; CDB i 882} [Thanissaro].Towards the end of his life, the Buddha stated that the proper way to pay homage to him was to “practice the Dhamma in accordance with the Dhamma.” This sutta explains what that means, in terms of focusing on not-self (anatta). [TB]
- SN 22.43: Attadiipaa Sutta — An Island to Oneself {S iii 42; CDB i 882} [Walshe].Presaging the famous words he would utter in his final days, the Buddha elaborates on his advice to “be an island unto yourself.”
- SN 22.47: Samanupassana Sutta/Samanupassanaa Sutta — Assumptions/Ways of Regarding {S iii 46; CDB i 885} [Thanissaro | Walshe].The Buddha speaks on the assumptions that underlie self-view.
- SN 22.48: Khandha Sutta — Aggregates {S iii 47; CDB i 886} [Thanissaro].The Buddha gives a summary of the teaching on the five aggregates.
- SN 22.49: So.no Sutta — So.na {S iii 48; CDB i 887} [Walshe].How can you tell when you’re seeing things as they really are?
- SN 22.53: Upaya Sutta — Attached {S iii 53; CDB i 890} [Thanissaro].When passion for each of the five aggregates is completely abandoned, Awakening ensues.
- SN 22.54: Bija Sutta — Means of Propagation {S iii 54; CDB i 891} [Thanissaro].This sutta is nearly identical to the preceding one (SN 22.53), and illustrates the same point with a striking image.
- SN 22.55: Udana Sutta — Exclamation {S iii 55; CDB i 892} [Thanissaro].What does it take to break free of the five lower fetters?
- SN 22.56: Parivatta Sutta — The (Fourfold) Round {S iii 58; CDB i 895} [Thanissaro].Awakening results from direct knowledge of the “fourfold round” with respect to the aggregates (i.e., knowledge of the aggregate, its origination, its cessation, and the path leading to its cessation).
- SN 22.57: Sattatthana Sutta — Seven Bases {S iii 61; CDB i 897} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how one becomes an arahant through mastery of the seven-fold skill of analyzing the five aggregates.
- SN 22.58: Buddha Sutta — Awakened {S iii 65; CDB i 900} [Thanissaro].Some schools of Buddhism teach that there is a qualitative difference between the liberation of a Buddha and that of an arahant disciple — namely, that a Buddha awakens to one level of truth, whereas an arahant awakens to another. This sutta shows that the Buddha saw the distinction in different terms. [TB]
- SN 22.59: Pañcavaggi Sutta/Anatta-lakkhana Sutta — Five Brethren/The Discourse on the Not-self Characteristic {S iii 66; CDB i 901} [Thanissaro | Mendis | Ñanamoli].The Buddha’s second discourse, in which he discusses the principle of anatta (not-self) with the group of five ascetics. By means of a question-and-answer dialogue with his audience, the Buddha demonstrates that there can be no abiding self in any of the five aggregates that we tend to identify as “self.” The sutta illustrates the Buddha’s skillfulness as teacher: at the end of the discourse, all five monks attain full Awakening.
- SN 22.60: Mahali Sutta — To Mahali {S iii 68; CDB i 903} [Thanissaro].The Buddha points out that attachment to things comes from paying more attention to the pleasure they give than to the stress and pain (dukkha) they cause. By turning your attention to the dukkha, however, you can gain release.
- SN 22.63: Upaadiyamaano Sutta — Clinging {S iii 73; CDB i 906} [Walshe].Cling to anything at all, and you are in bondage to Mara.
- SN 22.79: Khajjaniya Sutta — Chewed Up {S iii 86; CDB i 914} [Thanissaro].How to gain release from identification with the five aggregates.
- SN 22.80: Pi.n.dolya.m Sutta/Pindolya Sutta — Going Begging/Almsgoers {S iii 91; CDB i 918} [Walshe | Thanissaro].A monk who is half-hearted in his meditation misses out on the rewards of both lay life and monastic life.
- SN 22.81: Parileyyaka Sutta — At Parileyyaka {S iii 94; CDB i 921} [Thanissaro].Despite having heard many teachings from the Buddha, a monk still wonders how to bring his meditation practice to a speedy conclusion. The Buddha explains that the goal can be reached by a deep understanding of the five aggregates.
- SN 22.83: Ananda Sutta — Ananda {S iii 105; CDB i 928} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda recalls the teachings that led him to stream-entry.
- SN 22.84: Tisso Sutta/Tissa Sutta — Tissa the Waverer/Tissa {S iii 106; CDB i 929} [Walshe (excerpt) | Thanissaro].Ven. Tissa, mired in laziness, receives a wake-up call from the Buddha.
- SN 22.85: Yamaka Sutta — To Yamaka {S iii 109; CDB i 931} [Thanissaro].Ven. Yamaka claims that when an arahant dies, he/she is utterly annihilated. Ven. Sariputta pulls him out of this wrong view, and in so doing leads him to Awakening.
- SN 22.86: Anuraadho Sutta/Anuradha Sutta — Anuraadha is Caught Out/To Anuradha {S iii 116; CDB i 936} [Walshe | Thanissaro].Ven. Anuradha learns that if you can’t even locate the Tathagata in space when he’s sitting right in front of you, how can you ever hope to answer questions about his fate after death?
- SN 22.87: Vakkali Sutta — Vakkali {S iii 119; CDB i 938} [Walshe (excerpt)].The Buddha gives an ailing Ven. Vakkali a timeless teaching: “He who sees Dhamma, sees me.”
- SN 22.89: Khemo Sutta/Khemaka Sutta — Khemaka/About Khemaka {S iii 126; CDB i 942} [Walshe (excerpt) | Thanissaro].Although dis-identification with the five aggregates is necessary for becoming a noble disciple, full Awakening calls for even more.
- SN 22.90: Channa Sutta — To Channa {S iii 132; CDB i 946} [Thanissaro].Ven. Channa, formerly the bodhisattha’s horseman, receives a teaching on dis-identification with the five aggregates.
- SN 22.93: Nadi Sutta — The River {S iii 137; CDB i 949} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains that a person who incorrectly takes the five aggregates to be “self” is like a person swept away by a swift river, who grasps in vain at the passing trees and branches.
- SN 22.95: Phena Sutta — Foam {S iii 140; CDB i 951} [Thanissaro].The Buddha invokes a series of vivid similes to illustrate the voidness of the five aggregates.
- SN 22.97: Nakhasikha Sutta — The Tip of the Fingernail {S iii 147; CDB i 955} [Thanissaro].Not even the slightest trace of the aggregates is exempt from stress and suffering.
- SN 22.99: Gaddula Sutta — The Leash (1) {S iii 149; CDB i 957} [Thanissaro].
- SN 22.100: Gaddula Sutta — The Leash (2) {S iii 151; CDB i 958} [Thanissaro].Those who don’t penetrate the not-self nature of the five aggregates are doomed to go round and round in circles, like a dog tied to a post.
- SN 22.101: Nava Sutta — The Ship {S iii 152; CDB i 959} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains that Awakening comes about not by wishful thinking, but only through deliberate effort.
- SN 22.109: Sotaapanno Sutta — The Sotaapanna (‘Stream-winner’) {S iii 160; CDB i 965} [Walshe].What is a Stream-winner?
- SN 22.110: Araha.m Sutta — The Arahant {S iii 161; CDB i 966} [Walshe].What is an Arahant?
- SN 22.121: Upadana Sutta — Clinging {S iii 167; CDB i 970} [Thanissaro].What are the phenomena to which we cling? Answer: each one of the five aggregates.
- SN 22.122: Silavant Sutta — Virtuous {S iii 167; CDB i 970} [Thanissaro].Ven. Sariputta explains how every meditator, from beginner to arahant, should contemplate the five aggregates (khandha).
- SN 23.2: Satta Sutta — A Being {S iii 189; CDB i 985} [Thanissaro].The Buddha invokes a dramatic simile to explain how to dismantle attachment to the five aggregates.
- SN 25.1: Cakkhu Sutta — The Eye {S iii 225; CDB i 1004} [Thanissaro].How conviction in, and understanding of, inconstancy of the six senses can lead to stream-entry.
- SN 25.2: Rupa Sutta — Forms {S iii 225; CDB i 1004} [Thanissaro].How conviction in, and understanding of, inconstancy of sense objects can lead to stream-entry.
- SN 25.3: Viññana Sutta — Consciousness {S iii 226; CDB i 1005} [Thanissaro].How conviction in, and understanding of, inconstancy of sense consciousness can lead to stream-entry.
- SN 25.4: Phassa Sutta — Contact {S iii 226; CDB i 1005} [Thanissaro].How conviction in, and understanding of, inconstancy of contact can lead to stream-entry.
- SN 25.5: Vedana Sutta — Feeling {S iii 226; CDB i 1005} [Thanissaro].How conviction in, and understanding of, inconstancy of feeling can lead to stream-entry.
- SN 25.6: Sañña Sutta — Perception {S iii 227; CDB i 1006} [Thanissaro].How conviction in, and understanding of, inconstancy of perception can lead to stream-entry.
- SN 25.7: Cetana Sutta — Intention {S iii 227; CDB i 1006} [Thanissaro].How conviction in, and understanding of, inconstancy of intentions can lead to stream-entry.
- SN 25.8: Tanha Sutta — Craving {S iii 227; CDB i 1006} [Thanissaro].How conviction in, and understanding of, inconstancy of craving can lead to stream-entry.
- SN 25.9: Dhatu Sutta — Properties {S iii 227; CDB i 1006} [Thanissaro].How conviction in, and understanding of, inconstancy of the six elements (earth, liquid, fire, wind, space, and consciousness) can lead to stream-entry.
- SN 25.10: Khandha Sutta — Aggregates {S iii 227; CDB i 1006} [Thanissaro].How conviction in, and understanding of, inconstancy of the five aggregates can lead to stream-entry.
- SN 27.1-10: Upakkilesa Samyutta — Defilements {S iii 232; CDB i 1012} [Thanissaro].These ten suttas explain why it is worth abandoning desire that is associated with: (1) the six sense bases; (2) their objects; (3) consciousness; (4) contact; (5) feeling; (6) perception; (7) intentions; (8) craving; (9) the six elements (earth, liquid, fire, wind, space, and consciousness); and (10) the five aggregates.
- SN 35.23: Sabba Sutta — The All {S iv 15; CDB ii 1140} [Thanissaro].What is the “All”?
- SN 35.24: Pahanaya Sutta — To Be Abandoned {S iv 15; CDB ii 1140} [Thanissaro].What, exactly, is it that we must let go of?
- SN 35.28: Adittapariyaya Sutta — The Fire Sermon {S iv 19; CDB ii 1143} [Ñanamoli | Thanissaro].Several months after his Awakening, the Buddha delivers this sermon to an audience of 1,000 fire-worshipping ascetics. The Buddha uses the metaphor of fire to illustrate the nature of clinging. Upon hearing the sermon, the entire audience attains full Awakening.
- SN 35.63: Migajala Sutta/Migajaalena Sutta — To Migajala/Migajaala {S iv 35; CDB ii 1150} [Thanissaro | Walshe].Why is true solitude so hard to find? The Buddha explains why, no matter where you go, your most annoying companions always tag along.
- SN 35.69: Upasena Sutta — Upasena {S iv 35; CDB ii 1150} [Thanissaro].Ven. Upasena, mortally wounded by a venomous snake, remains perfectly composed as he utters his dying words to Ven. Sariputta.
- SN 35.74: Gilana Sutta — Ill (1) {S iv 46; CDB ii 1157} [Thanissaro].An ailing monk attains stream-entry when the Buddha engages him in a dialogue about not-self.
- SN 35.75: Gilana Sutta — Ill (2) {S iv 47; CDB ii 1159} [Thanissaro].An ailing monk attains arahatship when the Buddha engages him in a dialogue about not-self.
- SN 35.80: Avijja Sutta — Ignorance {S iv 50; CDB ii 1161} [Thanissaro].What one thing must be abandoned in order to overcome ignorance?
- SN 35.82: Loka Sutta — The World {S iv 52; CDB ii 1162} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how all things in the world share one inevitable and unfortunate characteristic. Do you want to remain bound to a world like this?
- SN 35.85: Suñña Sutta — Empty {S iv 54; CDB ii 1163} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to Ven. Ananda in what way the world is devoid of anything that can rightly be called “self.”
- SN 35.88: Punna Sutta — To Punna {S iv 60; CDB ii 1167} [Thanissaro].What would you do with your mind while you’re being beaten and stabbed? Consider the Buddha’s advice to Punna.
- SN 35.93: Dvaya Sutta — A Pair {S iv 69; CDB ii 1172} [Thanissaro].On the arising of sense-consciousness.
- SN 35.95: Maalunkyaputta Sutta/Malunkyaputta Sutta — Maalunkyaputta/To Malunkyaputta {S iv 72; CDB ii 1175} [Walshe | Thanissaro].An aging Ven. Malunkyaputta receives from the Buddha a short teaching regarding dispassion towards the senses (“In reference to the seen, there will be only the seen…”), and soon thereafter becomes an arahant.
- SN 35.97: Pamadaviharin Sutta — Dwelling in Heedlessness {S iv 79; CDB ii 1179} [Thanissaro].The benefits of living with heedfulness (appamada).
- SN 35.99: Samadhi Sutta — Concentration {S iv 80; CDB ii 1181} [Thanissaro].The Buddha recommends concentration practice as a way to develop discernment.
- SN 35.101: Na Tumhaka Sutta — Not Yours {S iv 81; CDB ii 1181} [Thanissaro].Do you usually think of “grass” or “leaves” as being “you”? Of course not. In the same way, the sense of “self” cannot be found anywhere within the realm of the senses.
- SN 35.115: Marapasa Sutta — Mara’s Power {S iv 93; CDB ii 1188} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains that once one is completely freed from chasing after sense pleasures, one is then finally safe from Mara.
- SN 35.120: Saariputto Sutta — Saariputta {S iv 103; CDB ii 1193} [Walshe].Ven. Sariputta’s advice on how to guard the sense-doors, be moderate in eating, and remain steadfast in heedfulness.
- SN 35.127: Bhaaradvaajo Sutta/Bharadvaja Sutta — Bhaaradvaaja Instructs a King/About Bharadvaja {S iv 110; CDB ii 1197} [Walshe | Thanissaro].Ven. Pindola Bharadvaja explains to a king how to maintain one’s resolve towards celibacy.
- SN 35.132: Lohicco Sutta — Lohicca {S iv 116; CDB ii 1201} [Walshe].Ven. Mahakaccana’s advice on guarding the sense doors.
- SN 35.133: Verahaccaani Sutta — Verahaccaani {S iv 121; CDB ii 1204} [Walshe].For one withholding respect for the Dhamma, Ven. Udayi withholds a Dhamma teaching.
- SN 35.135: Khana Sutta — The Opportunity {S iv 126; CDB ii 1207} [Thanissaro].This human realm — neither too pleasurable nor too painful — is the best place to practice Dhamma.
- SN 35.145: Kamma.m Sutta/Kamma Sutta — Kamma/Action {S iv 132; CDB ii 1211 (corrresponds to CDB 35.146)} [Walshe | Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how the results of “old” kamma (the actions we performed in the past) and “new” kamma (the ones we perform now) are both experienced in the present.
- SN 35.152: Atthinukhopariyaayo Sutta — Is There a Criterion? {S iv 138; CDB ii 1214 (corresponds to CDB 35.153)} [Walshe].The Buddha offers a method for ascertaining whether one has attained enlightenment.
- SN 35.153: Indriya Sutta — Faculties {S iv 140; CDB ii 1216} [Thanissaro].A monk asks the Buddha: “What does it mean to be ‘consummate in faculties’”?
- SN 35.187: Samuddo (1) Sutta — The Ocean (1) {S iv 157; CDB ii 1226 (corresponds to CDB 35.228)} [Walshe].What does it mean to cross over the ocean of the six senses?
- SN 35.189: Balisika Sutta — The Fisherman {S iv 158; CDB ii 1228} [Thanissaro].How to avoid getting caught, like a fish, on Mara’s hooks.
- SN 35.191: Kotthita Sutta/Ko.t.thiko Sutta — To Kotthita/Ko.t.thika {S iv 162; CDB ii 1230 (corresponds to CDB SN 35.232)} [Thanissaro | Walshe].Ven. Sariputta explains to Ven. Maha Kotthita that our problem lies neither in the senses themselves nor in the objects to which the senses cling. Suffering comes from the passion that arises in dependence on both.
- SN 35.193: Udayin Sutta — With Udayin {S iv 166; CDB ii 1232} [Thanissaro].Since none of the five aggregates can arise on their own, independent of their objects, how can we identify any one of them as “self”?
- SN 35.197: Asivisa Sutta — Vipers {S iv 172; CDB ii 1237} [Thanissaro].The Buddha uses some vivid imagery to illustrate the life-and-death urgency of Dhamma practice.
- SN 35.199: Kumma Sutta — The Tortoise {S iv 177; CDB ii 1240} [Thanissaro].If we guard the senses wisely, as a tortoise guards against attack by withdrawing into the safety of its shell, we are safely out of Mara’s reach.
- SN 35.200: Daruka-khandha Sutta — The Log {S iv 179; CDB ii 1241} [Thanissaro].A lowly cowherd overhears the Buddha speak of the many hazards that lurk in the stream to Nibbana. He takes it to heart and soon succeeds in reaching the goal.
- SN 35.202: Avassuta Sutta — Soggy {S iv 182; CDB ii 1244} [Thanissaro].How to guard your concentration against Mara’s onslaughts.
- SN 35.203: Dukkhadhammaa Sutta — Things Productive of Suffering {S iv 188; CDB ii 1248 (corresponds to CDB SN 35.244)} [Walshe (excerpt)].One practiced in sense restraint dispels evil states just as water drops evaporate from a hot iron pot.
- SN 35.204: Ki.msukaa Sutta/Kimsuka Sutta — The ‘What’s It’ Tree (Ki.msuka)/The Riddle Tree {S iv 191; CDB ii 1251 (corresponds to CDB SN 35.245)} [Walshe | Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how tranquillity (samatha) and insight (vipassana) function together as a “swift pair of messengers” to guide the meditator onwards to Nibbana.
- SN 35.205: Vina Sutta/Vii.naa Sutta — The Lute {S iv 195; CDB ii 1253 (corresponds to CDB SN 35.246)} [Thanissaro | Walshe (excerpt)].The heart of insight (vipassana): When you take apart a lute in search of its music, what do you find? When you take apart the five aggregates in search of “self,” what do you find?
- SN 35.206: Chappana Sutta/Chapaa.na Sutta — The Six Animals {S iv 198; CDB ii 1255 (corresponds to CDB SN 35.247)} [Thanissaro | Walshe (excerpt)].The Buddha explains how training the mind is like keeping six unruly animals tied together on a leash.
- SN 35.207: Yavakalapi Sutta — The Sheaf of Barley {S iv 201; CDB ii 1257} [Thanissaro].This sutta, though disjointed, offers some fine similes to illustrate the mind’s tendency to create suffering for itself.
- SN 36.1: Samadhi Sutta — Concentration {S iv 204; CDB ii 1260} [Nyanaponika].How an understanding of feeling leads to Nibbana.
- SN 36.2: Sukha Sutta — Happiness {S iv 204; CDB ii 1260} [Nyanaponika].How an understanding of feeling leads to the ending of passion.
- SN 36.3: Pahana Sutta — Giving Up {S iv 205; CDB ii 1261} [Nyanaponika].True freedom is found by abandoning the mind’s underlying habitual tendencies (anusaya).
- SN 36.4: Patala Sutta — The Bottomless Chasm/The Bottomless Pit {S iv 206; CDB ii 1262} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika].The Buddha teaches that by meeting intense physical pain with mindfulness, we can spare ourselves from falling into a bottomless pit of anguish and suffering.
- SN 36.5: Datthabba Sutta — To Be Known {S iv 207; CDB ii 1263} [Nyanaponika].Behind even the happiest and most pleasant of feelings lurks a persistent pain that can, through practice, be overcome.
- SN 36.6: Sallatha Sutta — The Dart/The Arrow {S iv 207; CDB ii 1263} [Nyanaponika | Thanissaro].When shot by the arrow of physical pain, an unwise person makes matters worse by piling mental anguish on top of it, just as if he had been shot by two arrows. A wise person feels the sting of one arrow alone.
- SN 36.7: Gelañña Sutta — The Sick Ward (1)/At the Sick Room (1) {S iv 210; CDB ii 1266} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika].The Buddha visits a sick ward, and offers advice to the monks on how to approach death with mindfulness.
- SN 36.8: Gelañña Sutta — At the Sick Room (2) {S iv 213; CDB ii 1268} [Nyanaponika].(This sutta is nearly identical to the preceding one, except here the feeling of pleasure, etc., is said to be dependent on contact rather than on the body.)
- SN 36.9: Anicca Sutta — Impermanent {S iv 214; CDB ii 1269} [Nyanaponika].The impermanence of feeling.
- SN 36.10: Phassamulaka Sutta — Rooted in Sense-impression {S iv 215; CDB ii 1270} [Nyanaponika].How sense-impression gives rise to feeling.
- SN 36.11: Rahogata Sutta — Alone/Secluded {S iv 216; CDB ii 1270} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika]. The Buddha explains how the practice of jhana leads to progressive stages of cessation and stillness. Only when the defilements are finally extinguished, however, is true peace and stillness achieved.
- SN 36.12: Akasa Sutta — In the Sky (1) {S iv 218; CDB ii 1272} [Nyanaponika].Feelings rise and fall, like winds blowing across the skies.
- SN 36.13: Akasa Sutta — In the Sky (2) {S iv 219; CDB ii 1273}[This sutta repeats the prose section of the preceding sutta, without the verse.]
- SN 36.14: Agara Sutta — The Guest House {S iv 219; CDB ii 1273} [Nyanaponika].Feelings come and go, like house-guests.
- SN 36.15: Santaka Sutta — To Ananda (1) {S iv 219; CDB ii 1273} [Nyanaponika].The Buddha explains to Ven. Ananda the origin of, danger in, and escape from feeling.
- SN 36.16: Santaka Sutta — To Ananda {S iv 221; CDB ii 1274}[The Buddha puts to Ven. Ananda the same questions as in the preceding sutta, and answers them in the same way.]
- SN 36.17-18: Atthaka Sutta — Eightfold (1 & 2) {S iv 221; CDB ii 1274}[In these two suttas the same questions and answers found in SN 36.15 are repeated in the case of "many monks."]
- SN 36.19: Pañcakanga Sutta — With Pañcakanga/Carpenter Fivetools {S iv 223; CDB ii 1274} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika].The Buddha describes the many kinds of happiness that can be experienced through sustained practice. Which kind of happiness do you seek?
- SN 36.20: Bhikkhu Sutta — Monks {S iv 228; CDB ii 1278}[This discourse, addressed to some bhikkhus, repeats the main part of the preceding sutta, without its introductory section.]
- SN 36.21: Sivaka Sutta — To Sivaka {S iv 230; CDB ii 1278} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika].The Buddha explains that present experience cannot be described solely in terms of the results of past actions (kamma).
- SN 36.22: Atthasata Sutta/Atthasatapariyaya Sutta — The One-hundred-and-eight Exposition/One Hundred Eight Feelings {S iv 231; CDB ii 1280} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika].A summary and enumeration of the different ways that the Buddha has analyzed feeling (hint: 3x6x6=108).
- SN 36.23: Bhikkhu Sutta — To a Certain Bhikkhu {S iv 232; CDB ii 1281} [Thanissaro].A discussion of the ways that feeling must be understood in order to gain freedom from attachment to feeling. Includes an interesting reference to craving as an unskillful “path of practice.”
- SN 36.30: Suddhikavedana Sutta — Purified of Feeling {S iv 235; CDB ii 1283}One of the shortest suttas in the Tipitaka. In its entirety it reads: “Bhikkhus, there are these three feelings. What three? Pleasant feeling, unpleasant feeling, and neither-painful-nor-pleasant feeling.”]
- SN 36.31: Niramisa Sutta — Not of the Flesh/Unworldly {S iv 235; CDB ii 1283} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika].The Buddha describes the various grades of potential happiness and freedom, ranging from the worldly to the transcendent.
- SN 37.4: Vaddha Sutta — Growth {S iv 250; CDB ii 1293} [Thanissaro].This brief sutta, which encourages education for women, may account for the fact that in the pre-modern world Theravada Buddhist countries had the highest rates of female literacy. [TB]
- SN 38.14: Dukkha Sutta — Stress {S iv 259; CDB ii 1299} [Thanissaro].
- Ven. Sariputta describes three kinds of stress (dukkha) and how they should be comprehended.
- SN 40.9: Animitto Sutta — The Signless {S iv 268; CDB ii 1308} [Walshe].Ven. Moggallana describes the concentration attainment beyond the eighth jhana.
- SN 41.3: Isidatta Sutta — About Isidatta {S iv 285; CDB ii 1316} [Thanissaro].On the origin of self-view. In this touching story, Ven. Isidatta, a wise young forest monk, declines his elders’ invitation to become a Dhamma teacher, and instead quietly slips off into the forest and disappears.
- SN 41.4: Mahaka Sutta — About Mahaka {S iv 288; CDB ii 1319} [Thanissaro].How one monk misused his psychic powers.
- SN 41.6: Kamabhu Sutta — With Kamabhu {S iv 293; CDB ii 1322} [Thanissaro].Ven. Kamabhu answers a layperson’s detailed questions concerning cessation-attainment (nirodha-samapatti), a state of profound — and potentially liberating — concentration whose prerequisite is full mastery of the jhanas.
- SN 41.7: Godatta Sutta — To Godatta {S iv 295; CDB ii 1325} [Thanissaro].A layperson points out the similarities and differences between several states of concentration.
- SN 41.10: Gilaana-dassana.m Sutta/Gilana Sutta — Seeing the Sick (Citta)/Sick {S iv 302; CDB ii 1330} [Walshe | Thanissaro].While on his deathbed, Citta delivers an inspiring teaching on generosity to his friends, his family, and a gathering of devas.
- SN 42.2: Talaputa Sutta — To Talaputa the Actor {S iv 306; CDB ii 1333} [Thanissaro].Comedians and actors take heed: making others laugh may not always be a particularly commendable occupation, as Talaputa learns.
- SN 42.3: Yodhajiva Sutta — To Yodhajiva (The Warrior) {S iv 308; CDB ii 1334} [Thanissaro].The Buddha cautions a soldier against expecting a favorable rebirth because of his battlefield heroics.
- SN 42.6: Paccha-bhumika Sutta — [Brahmans] of the Western Land {S iv 311; CDB ii 1336} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how the principles of kamma and rebirth are as inviolable as the law of gravity. Choose your actions with care, lest you sink like a stone!
- SN 42.7: Desanaa Sutta — Teaching {S iv 314; CDB ii 1338} [Walshe].
- SN 42.8: Sankha Sutta — The Conch Trumpet {S iv 317; CDB ii 1340} [Thanissaro].The Buddha clarifies a crucial point about kamma: although you can never undo a past misdeed, there are ways you can mitigate its inevitable harmful results.
- SN 42.9: Kula Sutta — Families {S iv 322; CDB ii 1345} [Thanissaro].A questioner challenges the Buddha: “If you’re so supportive of familial harmony, then how can you justify accepting alms from poor families in times of famine?”
- SN 42.10: Maniculaka Sutta — To Maniculaka {S iv 325; CDB ii 1346} [Thanissaro].A questioner asks the Buddha: “Are monks allowed to use money?”
- SN 42.11: Gandhabhaka (Bhadraka) Sutta — To Gandhabhaka (Bhadraka) {S iv 327; CDB ii 1348} [Thanissaro].Why do we experience suffering and stress? Using simple analogies, the Buddha offers a clear and penetrating answer.
- SN 44.1: Khema Sutta — With Khema {S iv 374; CDB ii 1380} [Thanissaro].Ven. Sister Khema explains to King Pasenadi why questions about the fate of the Tathagata after death are unanswerable.
- SN 44.2: Anuradha Sutta — To Anuradha {S iv 381; CDB ii 1383} [Thanissaro].Ven. Anuradha learns that if one can’t even locate the Tathagata in the present life, how can one ever hope to answer questions about his fate after death?
- SN 44.3: Sariputta-Kotthita Sutta — Sariputta and Kotthita (1) {S iv 384; CDB ii 1383} [Thanissaro].The Buddha takes no position on questions about the fate of the Tathagata after death because each question is bound up in the five khandhas.
- SN 44.4: Sariputta-Kotthita Sutta — Sariputta and Kotthita (2) {S iv 386; CDB ii 1384} [Thanissaro].Questions regarding the fate of the Tathagata do not arise in those who see the aggregates as they actually are.
- SN 44.5: Sariputta-Kotthita Sutta — Sariputta and Kotthita (3) {S iv 387; CDB ii 1385} [Thanissaro].Questions regarding the fate of the Tathagata do not arise in those who have abandoned passion for the aggregates.
- SN 44.6: Sariputta-Kotthita Sutta — Sariputta and Kotthita (4) {S iv 388; CDB ii 1386} [Thanissaro].Questions regarding the fate of the Tathagata do not arise in those who no longer take delight in the aggregates, in clinging, in becoming, or in craving.
- SN 44.7: Moggallana Sutta — With Moggallana {S iv 391; CDB ii 1388} [Thanissaro].The Buddha takes no position on the ten speculative views because he does not identify any of the six senses as “self.”
- SN 44.8: Vacchagotta Sutta — With Vacchagotta {S iv 395; CDB ii 1390} [Thanissaro].The Buddha takes no position on the ten speculative views because he does not identify any of the five aggregates as “self.”
- SN 44.9: Kutuhalasala Sutta — With Vacchagotta {S iv 398; CDB ii 1392} [Thanissaro].The Buddha uses the image of a fire to explain what carries a being over into its next rebirth.
- SN 44.10: Ananda Sutta — To Ananda {S iv 400; CDB ii 1393} [Thanissaro].Why the Buddha did not take a position on the question of whether or not there is a self.
- SN 44.11: Sabhiya Sutta — With Sabhiya {S iv 401; CDB ii 1394} [Thanissaro].The fate of the Tathagata after death cannot be described because the causes for any worldly description of his fate would have totally ceased.
- SN 45.1: Avijja Sutta — Ignorance {S v 1; CDB ii 1523} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains that ignorance is the cause of wrong view, wrong resolve, wrong speech, etc., whereas clear knowing gives rise to right view and all the factors of the eightfold path.
- SN 45.2: Upaddha Sutta — Half (of the Holy Life) {S v 2; CDB ii 1524} [Thanissaro].In this famous sutta the Buddha corrects Ven. Ananda, pointing out that having “admirable” friends, companions, and comrades is not half but the whole of the holy life. (For more about this special kind of friendship, see the page on kalyanamittata.)
- SN 45.8: Magga-vibhanga Sutta — An Analysis of the Path {S v 2; CDB ii 1524} [Thanissaro].A summary of the Noble Eightfold Path.
- SN 45.159: Agantuka Sutta — For All Comers {S v 51; CDB ii 1557} [Walshe].The states that are to be comprehended, abandoned, experienced, and cultivated through the practice of the Eightfold Path.
- SN 45.165: Dukkhata Sutta — Suffering {S v 56; CDB ii 1561} [Walshe].The three kinds of suffering.
- SN 45.171: Ogha Sutta — Floods (1) {S v 59; CDB ii 1563} [Thanissaro].Many discourses speak of “crossing over the flood.” This discourse lists the floods that should be crossed over, and how it should be done. [TB]
- SN 46.1: Himavanta Sutta — The Himalayas {S v 63; CDB ii 1567} [Thanissaro].A summary of the seven Factors for Awakening.
- SN 46.14: Gilana Sutta — Ill {S v 79; CDB ii 1580} [Piyadassi | Thanissaro].The Buddha instructs a very ill Ven. Maha Kassapa on the seven Factors for Awakening.
- SN 46.16: Gilana Sutta — Ill {S v 81; CDB ii 1581} [Piyadassi].The Buddha, who is very ill, asks Ven. Maha Cunda to recite for him the seven Factors of Awakening.
- SN 46.51: Ahara Sutta — Food {S v 102; CDB ii 1597} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes how we can either “feed” or “starve” the wholesome and unwholesome tendencies in the mind according to how we apply our attention.
- SN 46.53: Aggi Sutta — Fire {S v 112; CDB ii 1605} [Walshe].The right and wrong times to cultivate each of the seven enlightenment factors.
- SN 46.54: Mettam Sutta — The Brahma-viharas {S v 115; CDB ii 1607} [Walshe (excerpt)].How to practice the four brahma-viharas.
- SN 46.55: Sangaravo Sutta — Sangarava {S v 121; CDB ii 1611} [Walshe].Why do some sacred texts seem clear, while others are muddled?
- SN 47.6: Sakunagghi Sutta — The Hawk {S v 146; CDB ii 1632} [Thanissaro].The Buddha uses a lovely parable — that of a hawk catching a quail far outside the quail’s familiar hunting ground — to reveal the need for keeping the mind in its proper territory: the four frames of reference.
- SN 47.7: Makkata Sutta — The Foolish Monkey/The Monkey {S v 148; CDB ii 1633} [Olendzki | Thanissaro].Keep your mind in its proper territory — the four frames of reference — lest you lose it altogether, like this pitiful monkey stuck in a tar trap.
- SN 47.8: Suda Sutta — The Cook {S v 149; CDB ii 1634} [Thanissaro].How is meditation like cooking? The Buddha explains.
- SN 47.10: Bhikkhunivasako Sutta/Bhikkhunupassaya Sutta — Mindfulness/Directed and Undirected Meditation {S v 154; CDB ii 1638} [Walshe (excerpt) | Olendzki].How to respond skillfully to distracted states of mind that interfere with concentration.
- SN 47.13: Cunda Sutta — About Cunda {S v 161; CDB ii 1642} [Thanissaro | Nyanaponika].Ven. Ananda grieves over Ven. Sariputta’s death, and the Buddha consoles him with Dhamma: make the Dhamma your island, your true refuge!
- SN 47.14: Cunda Sutta — At Ukkacela {S v 163; CDB ii 1644} [Nyanaponika].The Buddha’s reaction to the death of Ven. Sariputta.
- SN 47.19: Sedaka Sutta — At Sedaka/The Bamboo Acrobat {S v 168; CDB ii 1648} [Thanissaro | Olendzki].Is meditation a selfish endeavor? Using a famous simile of two acrobats, the Buddha resolves this question decisively.
- SN 47.20: Sedaka Sutta — At Sedaka {S v 169; CDB ii 1649} [Thanissaro].How solid is your concentration? Try this test, proposed by the Buddha: Can you keep a glass of oil balanced on your head while your favorite movie star is singing and dancing right in front of you?
- SN 47.40: Satipatthana-vibhanga Sutta — Analysis of the Frames of Reference {S v 183; CDB ii 1659} [Thanissaro].A summary of the four Frames of Reference, and how they are to be developed.
- SN 47.46: Paa.timokkha Sutta — Obligation {S v 187; CDB ii 1662} [Walshe].Success in meditation depends upon laying skillful foundations.
- SN 48.10: Indriya-vibhanga Sutta — Analysis of the Mental Faculties {S v 197; CDB ii 1671} [Thanissaro].A summary of the five mental faculties: conviction, persistence, mindfulness, concentration, and discernment.
- SN 48.38: Vibhanga Sutta — An Analysis {S v 211; CDB ii 1682; Thai: SN 48.37} [Thanissaro].On the Buddha’s five-fold classification of feelings.
- SN 48.39: Katthopama Sutta — The Fire-stick {S v 211; CDB ii 1682; Thai: SN 48.38} [Thanissaro].On the Buddha’s five-fold classification of feelings.
- SN 48.41: Jara Sutta — Old Age {S v 216; CDB ii 1686} [Thanissaro].The Buddha, now a wrinkled old man, issues a stirring rebuke against old age.
- SN 48.42: Unnabho Brahmano Sutta — The Brahman Unnabha {S v 217; CDB ii 1687} [Walshe].
- SN 48.44: Pubbakotthaka Sutta — Eastern Gatehouse {S v 220; CDB ii 1689} [Thanissaro].The Buddha and Ven. Sariputta discuss conviction, and whether it is present in those who have seen the Deathless. They concur that until one experiences the Deathless for oneself, one can only take its existence on faith.
- SN 48.53: Sekha Sutta — The Learner {S v 229; CDB ii 1696} [Thanissaro].How can one tell if one is a “learner” (sekha; one who has attained at least stream-entry, but not yet arahantship) or an arahant?
- SN 48.54: Pade Sutta — In the Foot {S v 231; CDB ii 1697} [Walshe].
- SN 48.56: Patitthita Sutta — Established {S v 232; CDB ii 1698} [Thanissaro].Heedfulness: the cornerstone upon which all other skillful qualities are based.
- SN 51.15: Brahmana Sutta — To Unnabha the Brahman {S v 271; CDB ii 1732} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda explains to Unnabha that the path of Dhamma is one with a definite goal — the abandoning of desire — which can only be attained by developing a strong desire to end desire.
- SN 51.20: Iddhipada-vibhanga Sutta — Analysis of the Bases of Power {S v 276; CDB ii 1736} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how the four bases of power are to be developed.
- SN 52.10: Gilana Sutta — Illness {S v 302; CDB ii 1757} [Thanissaro].Ven. Anuruddha explains to the other monks how he keeps the pain of his physical illness from invading the mind.
- SN 54.6: Arittha Sutta — To Arittha {S v 314; CDB ii 1768} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains that success in meditation calls for more than simply being mindful; there are specific skills that must be developed.
- SN 54.8: Dipa Sutta — The Lamp {S v 316; CDB ii 1770} [Thanissaro].No matter how far along you are in your meditation practice, the basic principle is the same: you should develop and sustain mindfulness of breathing.
- SN 54.9: Vesali Sutta — At Vesali {S v 320; CDB ii 1773} [Thanissaro].How the practice of concentration through mindfulness of breathing clarifies the underlying purpose of other meditation practices.
- SN 54.13: Ananda Sutta — To Ananda {S v 328; CDB ii 1780} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to Ven. Ananda how the sustained practice of mindfulness of breathing (anapanasati) leads, by stages, to full Awakening.
- SN 55.1: Raja Sutta — The Emperor {S v 342; CDB ii 1788} [Thanissaro].Which is better: being a world leader, or gaining the four factors of stream-entry?
- SN 55.21: Mahanama Sutta — To Mahanama (1) {S v 369; CDB ii 1808} [Thanissaro].
- SN 55.22: Mahanama Sutta — To Mahanama (2) {S v 371; CDB ii 1809} [Thanissaro].Sometimes it is said that the last moment of consciousness is all-important in determining one’s rebirth, but these suttas show that well-developed virtues in the mind can override even a muddled mind-state at death.
- SN 55.24: Sarakaani Sutta — Sarakaani (Who Took to Drink) {S v 375; CDB ii 1811} [Walshe].
- SN 55.30: Licchavi Sutta — To the Licchavi {S v 389; CDB ii 1821} [Thanissaro].The Buddha instructs the layman Nandaka on the four factors of stream-entry.
- SN 55.31: Abhisanda Sutta — Bonanzas (1) {S v 391; CDB ii 1821} [Thanissaro].
- SN 55.32: Abhisanda Sutta — Bonanzas (2) {S v 391; CDB ii 1822} [Thanissaro].
- SN 55.33: Abhisanda Sutta — Bonanzas (3) {S v 392; CDB ii 1822} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes three variations on the four factors of stream-entry.
- SN 55.40: Nandiya Sutta — To Nandiya {S v 397; CDB ii 1826} [Thanissaro].On what it means to live with heedfulness (appamada).
- SN 56.9: Viggahika Sutta — Wordy Warfare {S v 419; CDB ii 1842} [Walshe].Some kinds of speech are counterproductive.
- SN 56.11: Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta — The Discourse on the Setting in Motion of the Wheel (of Vision) of the Basic Pattern: the Four True Realities for the Spiritually Ennobled Ones/Setting in Motion the Wheel of Truth/Setting Rolling the Wheel of Truth/Setting the Wheel of Dhamma in Motion {S v 420; CDB ii 1843} [Harvey | Piyadassi | Ñanamoli | Thanissaro].This is the Buddha’s first discourse, delivered shortly after his Awakening to the group of five monks with whom he had practiced the austerities in the forest for many years. The sutta contains the essential teachings of the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path. Upon hearing this discourse, the monk Kondañña attains the first stage of Awakening, thus giving birth to the ariya sangha (Noble Sangha).
- SN 56.22: Vijja Sutta — Knowledge {S v 432; CDB ii 1853} [Walshe (excerpt)].
- SN 56.31: Simsapa Sutta — The Simsapa Leaves {S v 437; CDB ii 1857} [Thanissaro | Walshe]. The Buddha compares the knowledge he gained in his Awakening to all the leaves in the forest, and his teachings to a mere handful of leaves. He then explains why he didn’t reveal the remainder.
- SN 56.42: Papata Sutta — The Drop-off {S v 448; CDB ii 1865} [Thanissaro].The Buddha reminds an anxious monk who stands with him at the brink of a high cliff that there are some dangers far more worrisome than this precipice.
- SN 56.44: Kuta Sutta — Gabled {S v 452; CDB ii 1868} [Thanissaro].Practicing Dhamma is like building a house: you have to start at the bottom and work your way up. You just can’t do it the other way round.
- SN 56.45: Vala Sutta — The Horsehair {S v 453; CDB ii 1869} [Thanissaro].It’s easy to admire the skill required to master a sport or a feat of manual dexterity. But even more difficult is the skill required to master the four noble truths.
- SN 56.46: Andhakara Sutta — Darkness {S v 454; CDB ii 1870} [Thanissaro].A monk ponders the darkness of deep space and asks the Buddha: “Is there any darkness more frightening than this?” The Buddha asserts that yes, there most certainly is.
- SN 56.48: Chiggala Sutta — The Hole {S v 456; CDB ii 1872} [Thanissaro].The Buddha’s famous simile of the blind sea-turtle, illustrating the precious rarity of this human birth.
- AN 1.21-40: Ekadhamma Suttas — A Single Thing {A i 5; I,iii,1-10; I,iv,1-10} [Thanissaro].The Buddha enumerates twenty things of singular importance to the spiritual path.
- AN 1.31-40: Adanta Suttas — Untamed {A i 5; I,iii,1-4 and iv,9-10} [Woodward (excerpt)].There’s nothing so conducive to happiness as a mind that has been tamed.
- AN 1.45-46: Udakarahaka Suttas — A Pool of Water {A i 9; I,v,5-6} [Thanissaro].The difference between a clear mind and a muddy one.
- AN 1.47: Mudu Sutta — Soft {A i 8; I,v,7} [Thanissaro].A simile for a mind that’s pliant.
- AN 1.48: Lahu-parivatta Sutta — Quick to Reverse Itself {A i 10; I,v,8} [Thanissaro].The Buddha, normally so adept at finding similes, is here at a loss.
- AN 1.49-52: Pabhassara Sutta — Luminous {A i 10; (I,v,9-10; I,vi,1-2)} [Thanissaro].The mind is inherently luminous; the unwise person can’t even see that it is obscured by defilements.
- AN 2.5: Appativana Sutta — Relentlessly {A i 50} [Thanissaro].What is the one thing regarding which the Buddha does not recommend contentment?
- A i 51} [Ireland | Thanissaro].Conscience and concern — two qualities that keep one from harm.
- AN 2.18: Ekamsena Sutta — Categorically {A i 57; II,ii,8} [Thanissaro].The drawbacks of unskillful conduct and the rewards of skillful conduct.
- AN 2.19: Kusala Sutta — Skillful {A i 58; II,ii,9} [Thanissaro].Yes, it really is possible to abandon unskillful habits and to develop skillful ones.
- AN 2.21: Bala-pandita Sutta — Fools & Wise People {A i 59; II,iii,1} [Thanissaro].What’s the difference between a fool and a wise person?
- AN 2.23: Abhasita Sutta — What Was Not Said {A i 59; II,iii,3} [Thanissaro].
- AN 2.25: Neyyatha Sutta — A Meaning to be Inferred {A i 60; II,iii,5} [Thanissaro].Two short reminders not to misquote or misrepresent the Buddha’s teachings.
- AN 2.30: Vijja-bhagiya Sutta — A Share in Clear Knowing {A i 61; II,iii,10} [Thanissaro].How tranquillity (samatha) and insight (vipassana) function together to uproot passion and ignorance.
- AN 2.31-32: Kataññu Suttas — Gratitude {A i 61; II,iv,1-2} [Thanissaro].We owe a great debt to our parents. The gratitude we show to them is a measure of our personal integrity.
- AN 2.33: Aññataro Brāhmaṇo Sutta — A Certain Brahman {A i 62; II,iv,3} [Nizamis].The Buddha answers the question, “What do you teach?”.
- AN 2.38: Kandarayana Sutta — To Kandarayana {A i 67; II,iv,8} [Thanissaro].What makes a person an elder worthy of respect?
- AN 2.46: Ukkacita Sutta — Bombast {A i 72; II,v,6} [Thanissaro].Two kinds of people: those who listen attentively and critically to the Dhamma, and those who listen uncritically to other teachings.
- AN 2.98: Bala Sutta — Fools {A i 83; II,x,1} [Thanissaro].Two kinds of fools.
- AN 2.119: Dullabha Sutta — Hard to Find {A i 87; II,xi,2} [Thanissaro].A grateful person is hard to find.
- AN 2.125-126: Ghosa Suttas — Voice {A i 87; II,xi,8-9} [Thanissaro].Appropriate attention (yoniso manasikara) is a condition for Right View.
- AN 3.2: Lakkhana Sutta — Characterized (by Action) {A i 102} [Thanissaro].How to recognize a wise person and a fool.
- AN 3.15: Rathakara (Pacetana) Sutta — The Chariot Maker {A i 110} [Thanissaro].The Buddha recalls a previous lifetime during which he was a chariot-maker “skilled in dealing with the crookedness of wood.” Now, as the Buddha, he is skilled in dealing with the crookedness of thought, word, and deed.
- AN 3.22: Gilana Sutta — Sick People {A i 120} [Thanissaro].The Buddha compares the Dhamma to good medicine.
- AN 3.33: Nidana Sutta — Causes {A i 134; Thai III.34; BJT III.34} [Thanissaro].An action (kamma) performed by an arahant bears no kammic fruit. This sutta explains why.
- AN 3.34: Hatthaka Sutta — To Hatthaka {A i 136; Thai III.35; BJT III.35} [Thanissaro (excerpt)].Is a comfortable home the best guarantee for a good night’s sleep?
- AN 3.38: Sukhamala Sutta — Refinement {A i 145; Thai III.39; BJT III.39} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes the insights that led him as a young man to go forth, and how those insights apply to the conduct of our own lives.
- AN 3.40: Adhipateyya Sutta — Governing Principles {A i 147} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes three governing principles that keep one’s Dhamma practice on-track. Beware: there’s nowhere to hide from your unskillful actions!
- AN 3.47: Sankhata Sutta — Fabricated {A i 152} [Thanissaro].The marks by which fabricated and unfabricated experiences can be recognized.
- AN 3.48: Pabbata Sutta — A Mountain {A i 152} [Thanissaro].A parent’s responsibility to his or her family. If you want your family to prosper, then be like a mountain of virtue, conviction, and discernment.
- AN 3.51: Dvejana Sutta — Two People (1) {A i 155; Thai III.52; BJT III.52} [Thanissaro].
- AN 3.52: Dvejana Sutta — Two People (2) {A i 156; Thai III.53; BJT III.53} [Thanissaro].The Buddha offers advice to two aging brahmans who are facing the end of life.
- AN 3.57: Vaccha Sutta — To Vaccha {A i 160; Thai: III.58} [Thanissaro].Every act of generosity is meritorious, but some are more so than others.
- AN 3.60: Sangarava Sutta — To Sangarava {A i 168; Thai III.61} [Thanissaro].The Buddha answers the accusation that the spiritual path he teaches is a selfish one.
- AN 3.61: Tittha Sutta — Sectarians {A i 173; Thai III.62} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how three common views about pain and pleasure can, if followed to their logical conclusion, lead to a life of inaction. He then shows how pain and pleasure actually do come about and how they can be transcended.
- AN 3.62: Bhaya Sutta — Dangers {A i 178; Thai: AN 3.63} [Thanissaro].Although fire, flood, and war may threaten to divide families, the world is fraught with even greater dangers. Here is a surefire way to overcome them all.
- A i 188; Thai III.66} [Soma | Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to a group of skeptics the proper criteria for accepting a spiritual teaching.
- AN 3.66: Salha Sutta — To Salha {A i 193; Thai III.67} [Ñanamoli].The arahant Ven. Nandaka engages the layman Salha in a dialogue that ranges from elementary principles all the way to the nature of arahantship.
- AN 3.67: Kathavatthu Sutta — Topics for Discussion {A i 197} [Thanissaro].This short discourse contains detailed practical instructions on how to answer questions skillfully. A valuable teaching for politicians, debaters, and the rest of us.
- AN 3.68: Titthiya Sutta — Sectarians {A i 199} [Thanissaro].How appropriate attention (yoniso manasikara) lies at the heart of any effort to abandon the roots of greed, hatred, and delusion.
- AN 3.69: Mula Sutta — Roots {A i 201} [Thanissaro].What motivates a person to wrongly imprison people and subject them to beatings? The answer lies right here, in your own heart.
- AN 3.70: Muluposatha Sutta — The Roots of the Uposatha {A i 205; Thai III.71} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes to Visakha, the laywoman, right and wrong ways of observing the Uposatha days. Those who observe the Uposatha correctly are reap great rewards.
- AN 3.71: Channa Sutta — To Channa the Wanderer {A i 215; Thai III.72} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda instructs Channa on abandoning the mental defilements of passion, aversion, and delusion.
- AN 3.72: Ajivaka Sutta — To the Fatalists’ Student {A i 217; Thai III.73} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda gives a skillful answer to the questions, “Whose teaching is right? Whose practice is right?”
- AN 3.73: Sakka Sutta — To the Sakyan {A i 219; Thai III.74} [Thanissaro].Mahanama asks the Buddha, “Which comes first: concentration or wisdom?” Ven. Ananda answers on behalf of the Buddha, who is recovering from an illness.
- AN 3.76: Bhava Sutta — Becoming (1) {A i 223; Thai III.77} [Thanissaro].The three levels on which becoming (bhava) operates, in relation to consciousness.
- AN 3.77: Bhava Sutta — Becoming (2) {A i 224; Thai III.78} [Thanissaro].The three levels on which becoming (bhava) operates, in relation to intention.
- AN 3.78: Silabbata Sutta — Precept & Practice {A i 225; Thai III.79} [Thanissaro].Are all religious paths fruitful? Ven. Ananda answers.
- AN 3.81: Gadrabha Sutta — The Donkey {A i 229; Thai III.83} [Thanissaro].Practicing the Dhamma means more than simply acting the part.
- AN 3.88: Sikkha Sutta — Trainings (1) {A i 235; Thai III.90} [Thanissaro].
- AN 3.89: Sikkha Sutta — Trainings (2) {A i 235; Thai III.91} [Thanissaro].The Buddha summarizes the three aspects of Dhamma practice that should be developed.
- AN 3.91: Accayika Sutta — Urgent {A i 239; Thai III.93} [Thanissaro].Just as a farmer can’t predict when the fruit will ripen, so we can’t predict when Awakening will occur. So just keep your practice strong; the rest will take care of itself.
- AN 3.94: Ajaniya Sutta — The Thoroughbred {A i 244; Thai III.97} [Thanissaro].What qualities make a monk worthy of respect?
- AN 3.99: Lonaphala Sutta — The Salt Crystal {A i 249; Thai III.101} [Thanissaro].A Buddhist response to the question, “Why do bad things happen to good people?”
- AN 3.100 (i-x): Pansadhovaka Sutta — The Dirt-washer {A i 256; Thai III.102} [Thanissaro].
- AN 3.100 (xi-xv): Nimitta Sutta — Themes {A i 255; Thai III.103} [Thanissaro].The Buddha compares the skillful training of one’s mind to the way a goldsmith purifies gold ore.
- AN 3.105: Kuta Sutta — The Peak of the Roof {A i 261; Thai III.110} [Thanissaro].Protect your mind, and you guard yourself from harm.
- AN 3.120: Moneyya Sutta — Sagacity {A i 273; Thai III.123} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes three kinds of wisdom: bodily, verbal, and mental. (This is one of the suttas selected by King Asoka (r. 270-232 BCE) to be studied and reflected upon frequently by all practicing Buddhists. See That the True Dhamma Might Last a Long Time: Readings Selected by King Asoka, by Thanissaro.)
- AN 3.123: Gotamaka-cetiya Sutta — At Gotamaka Shrine {A i 276; Thai III.126} [Thanissaro].What more do you want from the Buddha’s teachings?
- AN 3.126: Katuviya Sutta — Putrid {A i 279; Thai III.129} [Thanissaro].When you let your concentration slip and your mindfulness falter, there’s no telling what nasty sorts of flies will start swarming around you.
- AN 3.130: Lekha Sutta — Inscriptions {A i 283; Thai III.133} [Thanissaro].Why hold on to your anger? Beware you don’t let it get carved deep into your psyche, like an inscription in solid rock.
- AN 3.134: Dhamma-niyama Sutta — The Discourse on the Orderliness of the Dhamma {A i 286; Thai III.137} [Thanissaro].Whether or not a Buddha arises in the world, the three characteristics of existence always remain: impermanence, stress, and not-self.
- AN 4.1: Anubuddha Sutta — Understanding {A ii 1} [Thanissaro].Why do we wander aimlessly in samsara? It’s because we haven’t yet realized four noble qualities.
- AN 4.5: Anusota Sutta — With the Flow {A ii 5} [Thanissaro].A reminder that the popular advice to “just go with the flow” finds no support in the Buddha’s teachings.
- A ii 10} [Nizamis | Thanissaro].In many discourses, the Buddha speaks of “the unexcelled rest from the yoke.” In this discourse he explains what yokes he is referring to, and how that rest comes about. [TB]
- AN 4.19: Agati Sutta — Off Course {A ii 18} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains the difference between staying “on course” and straying “off course” in one’s Dhamma practice.
- AN 4.24: Kalaka Sutta — At Kalaka’s Park {A ii 23} [Thanissaro].Even though the Buddha has deep understanding, he doesn’t take a stance on any of it.
- AN 4.28: Ariya-vamsa Sutta — The Discourse on the Traditions of the Noble Ones {A ii 27} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes four good qualities in a monk: contentment with regard to robes, almsfood, and lodging, and finding pleasure in cultivating wholesome mental states. (This is one of the suttas selected by King Asoka (r. 270-232 BCE) to be studied and reflected upon frequently by all practicing Buddhists. See That the True Dhamma Might Last a Long Time: Readings Selected by King Asoka, by Thanissaro.)
- AN 4.31: Cakka Sutta — Wheels {A ii 32} [Thanissaro].Here is one kind of four-wheel drive that is sure to keep you on the road.
- AN 4.32: Sangaha Sutta — The Bonds of Fellowship {A ii 32} [Thanissaro].The qualities that help hold together a family — or any community.
- AN 4.35: Vassakara Sutta — With Vassakara {A ii 35} [Thanissaro].Four distinguishing qualities of a wise person.
- AN 4.36: Dona Sutta — With Dona {A ii 37} [Thanissaro].A passerby, struck by the Buddha’s serene presence, asks him, “What are you? Are you a deva? A spirit? A human being?” The Buddha’s now-famous reply has made this one of the most oft-quoted passages in the entire Canon.
- AN 4.37: Aparihani Sutta — No Falling Away {A ii 39} [Thanissaro].If one is sincere in one’s aspirations to realize Awakening, these four aspects of Dhamma practice should be constantly developed.
- AN 4.41: Samadhi Sutta — Concentration {A ii 44} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how concentration, when fully developed, can bring about any one of four different desirable results.
- AN 4.42: Pañha Sutta — Questions {A ii 46} [Thanissaro].The Buddha’s teachings on skillfulness and speech extend to mastering the art of answering questions.
- AN 4.45: Rohitassa Sutta — To Rohitassa {A ii 47} [Thanissaro].A well-traveled deva learns that we don’t have to go to the ends of the world to find an end to suffering; we need look no further than right here, in this very body.
- A ii 52} [Thanissaro | Olendzki].Four kinds of misperceptions that keep us bound to the cycle of rebirths.
- AN 4.50: Upakkilesa Sutta — Obscurations {A ii 53} [Thanissaro].Four unskillful activities that prevent a monk from shining with Dhamma.
- AN 4.55: Samajivina Sutta — Living in Tune {A ii 61} [Thanissaro].Would you like to live with your current spouse in future lives, too? Here’s how.
- AN 4.62: Anana Sutta — Debtless {A ii 69} [Thanissaro].The Buddha tells the wealthy lay-follower Anathapindika about four kinds of happiness that a householder may enjoy. Some require wealth, but the best is free of charge.
- A ii 72} [Thanissaro | Piyadassi].How the practice of metta (loving-kindness) can serve as a protection against harm.
- AN 4.73: Sappurisa Sutta — A Person of Integrity {A ii 77} [Thanissaro].Are you a person of integrity? How you speak about yourself and others reveals much about your personal integrity.
- AN 4.77: Acintita Sutta — Unconjecturable {A ii 80} [Thanissaro].If you spend too much time pondering these four things you will surely drive yourself crazy.
- AN 4.79: Vanijja Sutta — Trade {A ii 81} [Thanissaro].One reason why some people succeed and others fail in their trades.
- AN 4.85: Tamonata Sutta — Darkness {A ii 85} [Thanissaro].A person’s goodness is measured not by his or her wealth, beauty, or status, but by the goodness of his or her actions.
- AN 4.94: Samadhi Sutta — Concentration (Tranquillity and Insight) {A ii 93} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how correct meditation practice consists of the development of both insight (vipassana) and tranquillity (samatha).
- A ii 95} [Thanissaro | Buddharakkhita].Which is better: to practice Dhamma for one’s own benefit or for another’s? The answer may surprise you.
- AN 4.96: Raga-vinaya Sutta — The Subduing of Passion {A ii 96} [Thanissaro].What does it mean to practice Dhamma for one’s own benefit — and for another’s?
- AN 4.99: Sikkha Sutta — Trainings {A ii 98} [Thanissaro].It is best of all if you not only follow the precepts yourself, but can support others in following them, too.
- AN 4.102: Valahaka Sutta — Thunderheads {A ii 103} [Thanissaro].Reading suttas is good, but there is more to be done. Go meditate!
- AN 4.111: Kesi Sutta — To Kesi the Horsetrainer {A ii 111} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to Kesi, a horsetrainer, how he teaches Dhamma. This brilliant exposition warrants close study by every teacher, as it reveals the multiple levels in which effective teaching operates: the Buddha speaks in terms that the listener understands (horsetraining), he uses similes to great effect, and he deftly answers the real question that lies behind the student’s query (“Please, can you train me?”).
- A ii 114} [Woodward | Thanissaro].How much dukkha does it take to motivate you to practice the Dhamma in earnest? The Buddha illustrates his point with the famous simile of a thoroughbred horse stirred to action by its rider.
- AN 4.115: Thana Sutta — Courses of Action {A ii 118} [Thanissaro].When faced with a choice, how does one decide which course of action to follow? The Buddha here offers some helpful advice.
- AN 4.123: Jhana Sutta — Mental Absorption (1) {A ii 126} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes four possible courses of rebirth open to someone who practices jhana.
- AN 4.124: Jhana Sutta — Mental Absorption (2) {A ii 128} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes another possible course of rebirth open to someone who practices jhana.
- A ii 128} [Ñanamoli | Thanissaro].The Buddha describes four possible courses of rebirth open to someone who practices the brahma-vihara (good will, compassion, appreciative joy, and equanimity).
- A ii 129} [Ñanamoli | Thanissaro].The Buddha describes another possible course of rebirth open to someone who practices the brahma-vihara (good will, compassion, appreciative joy, and equanimity).
- AN 4.144: Obhasa Sutta — Brightness {A ii 139} [Thanissaro].What provides the most brightness in life?
- AN 4.159: Bhikkhuni Sutta — The Nun {A ii 144} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda teaches a nun that, although craving can be used to overcome craving, and conceit to overcome conceit, the same principle does not hold for sexual intercourse.
- AN 4.170: Yuganaddha Sutta — In Tandem {A ii 156} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda describes the paths to arahantship by which insight (vipassana) and tranquillity (samatha) work hand-in-hand.
- AN 4.174: Kotthita Sutta — To Kotthita {A ii 161; Thai IV.173} [Thanissaro].How the Buddha answers the question, “What lies beyond Nibbana?”
- AN 4.178: Jambali Sutta — The Waste-water Pool {A ii 165} [Thanissaro].The Buddha uses some memorable similes to describe the overcoming of self-identification and ignorance.
- AN 4.179: Nibbana Sutta — Unbinding {A ii 167} [Thanissaro].Why do some people gain Awakening in this life, while others don’t?
- AN 4.181: Yodhajiva Sutta — The Warrior {A ii 170} [Thanissaro].An accomplished meditator — like a great warrior — develops these four qualities.
- AN 4.183: Suta Sutta — On What is Heard {A ii 172} [Thanissaro].Why the principle of truthfulness does not imply total frankness or openness.
- AN 4.184: Abhaya Sutta — Fearless {A ii 173} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to Janussonin four ways to overcome the fear of death.
- AN 4.192: Thana Sutta — Traits {A ii 187} [Thanissaro].How can you recognize a good and wise person? The Buddha explains what qualities to look for and how to spot them.
- AN 4.199: Tanha Sutta — Craving {A ii 211} [Thanissaro].The Buddha enumerates the many kinds of tangled thoughts experienced by a mind not yet free of craving. Sound familiar?
- AN 4.200: Pema Sutta — Affection {A ii 213} [Thanissaro].The opinions of our friends and enemies often influence our own thoughts and feelings about others. This kind of thinking is rooted in craving, and the Buddha offers a cure.
- AN 4.235: Ariyamagga Sutta — The Noble Path {A ii 235} [Thanissaro].Skillful actions (kamma) eventually bring good results, while unskillful ones bring bad. But best of all are the actions that lead to the ending of kamma altogether.
- AN 4.252: Pariyesana Sutta — Searches {A ii 247} [Thanissaro].What are you searching for? Are you looking for happiness in all the wrong places? Are you looking for a lasting, noble happiness?
- AN 4.255: Kula Sutta — On Families {A ii 249} [Thanissaro].How a family loses or preserves its wealth.
- AN 4.259: Araññika Sutta — A Wilderness Dweller {A ii 252; Thai IV.263} [Thanissaro].What sort of person is fit to live in the wilderness?
- AN 5.2: Vitthara Sutta — (Strengths) in Detail {A iii 2} [Thanissaro].A summary of the five “strengths” (bala) to be developed in Dhamma practice.
- AN 5.20: Hita Sutta — Benefit {A iii 14} [Thanissaro].How to practice Dhamma for the benefit of both oneself and others.
- AN 5.25: Anuggahita Sutta — Supported {A iii 20} [Thanissaro].Five factors that lead to the fulfillment of right view.
- AN 5.27: Samadhi Sutta — (Immeasurable) Concentration {A iii 24} [Thanissaro].The Buddha encourages the practice of the brahmavihara (sublime states of metta, karuna, mudita, and upekkha) as a basis for concentration practice, as it leads to five important realizations.
- AN 5.28: Samadhanga Sutta — The Factors of Concentration {A iii 25} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how the progressive development of jhana (absorption) leads to the development of the supranormal powers and Awakening.
- AN 5.30: Nagita Sutta — To Nagita {A iii 30} [Thanissaro].The raucous carryings-on of a group of brahmans lead the Buddha to reflect on the rewards of detachment.
- AN 5.34: Siha Sutta — To General Siha (On Generosity) {A iii 38} [Thanissaro].General Siha, known for his generosity, asks the Buddha about the fruits of generosity that one can experience in this life. The Buddha describes four such fruits; a fifth (a happy rebirth) Siha can only take on faith.
- AN 5.36: Kaladana Sutta — Seasonable Gifts {A iii 41} [Thanissaro].Gifts given at the proper time bear the greatest fruit. Here the Buddha describes five such occasions. [Often chanted by monks as a blessing after receiving food or other offerings.]
- AN 5.37: Bhojana Sutta — A Meal {A iii 42} [Thanissaro].Whenever one gives the gift of food, five wonderful things are also given, automatically, to both giver and recipient alike. [Often chanted by monks as a blessing after receiving food or other offerings.]
- AN 5.38: Saddha Sutta — Conviction {A iii 42} [Thanissaro].The five rewards that a layperson can expect for having conviction (faith) in the Triple Gem.
- AN 5.41: Adiya Sutta — Benefits to be Obtained (from Wealth) {A iii 45} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes for the wealthy householder Anathapindika five skillful ways of using one’s money that bring immense benefits to the giver — benefits that last long after all the wealth is gone. [Often chanted by monks as a blessing after receiving food or other offerings.]
- AN 5.43: Ittha Sutta — What is Welcome {A iii 47} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to Anathapindika how true happiness can never be achieved merely by wishing for it.
- A iii 57} [Thanissaro | Hecker/Khema].When Queen Mallika dies, her husband, King Pasenadi, is overcome with grief. The Buddha advises the king on how to free himself of obsessive grieving.
- AN 5.51: Avarana Sutta — Obstacles {A iii 63} [Thanissaro].The Buddha invokes a vivid simile to illustrate the hazards posed by the hindrances.
- AN 5.53: Anga Sutta — Factors (for Exertion) {A iii 65} [Thanissaro].The five factors that sustain the proper level of exertion toward the goal.
- AN 5.57: Upajjhatthana Sutta — Subjects for Contemplation {A iii 71} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes the “five facts that one should reflect on often, whether one is a woman or a man, lay or ordained.”
- AN 5.64: Vuddhi Sutta — Growth {A iii 80} [Thanissaro].What does it mean to grow in the Dhamma?
- AN 5.73: Dhamma-viharin Sutta — One Who Dwells in the Dhamma {A iii 86} [Thanissaro].What does it mean to be truly committed to the Dhamma?
- AN 5.76: Yodhajiva Sutta — The Warrior (2) {A iii 93} [Thanissaro].Two suttas on how a monk intent on reaching the goal must steadfastly guard his celibacy in the face of all temptation.
- AN 5.80: Anagata-bhayani Sutta — The Discourse on Future Dangers (4) {A iii 108} [Thanissaro].The Buddha reminds the monks that the practice of Dhamma should not be put off for a later date, for there are no guarantees that the future will provide any opportunities for practice. (These suttas are among those selected by King Asoka (r. 270-232 BCE) to be studied and reflected upon frequently by all practicing Buddhists. See That the True Dhamma Might Last a Long Time: Readings Selected by King Asoka, by Thanissaro.)
- AN 5.98: Arañña Sutta — Wilderness {A iii 121} [Thanissaro].Three short suttas that describe five qualities a meditator should develop in order to reach the goal.
- AN 5.114: Andhakavinda Sutta — At Andhakavinda {A iii 138} [Thanissaro].Five things that the Buddha exhorted his newly ordained monks to do. Laypeople should take heed, too!
- AN 5.121: Gilana Sutta — To a Sick Man {A iii 142} [Thanissaro].The Buddha reminds a sick monk that by keeping five particular themes of meditation well established, even a sick person can realize Awakening.
- AN 5.129: Parikuppa Sutta — In Agony {A iii 146} [Thanissaro].Five grave deeds that prevent one from realising any of the noble attainments in this lifetime.
- AN 5.130: Sampada Sutta — Being Consummate {A iii 147} [Thanissaro].Which of life’s many kinds of losses should we be truly concerned about? Which of life’s many kinds of rewards should we truly aspire toward?
- AN 5.139: Akkhama Sutta — Not Resilient {A iii 157} [Thanissaro].The Buddha uses powerful imagery from the battlefield to underscore the importance of developing mastery over the senses.
- AN 5.140: Sotar Sutta — The Listener {A iii 161} [Thanissaro].Five qualities one should develop to gain mastery of the senses and become a truly worthy person.
- AN 5.148: Sappurisadana Sutta — A Person of Integrity’s Gifts {A iii 172} [Thanissaro].Five attributes of gift-giving that distinguish a person of integrity.
- AN 5.159: Udayi Sutta — About Udayin {A iii 184} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to Ven. Ananda the five prerequisites for teaching Dhamma to others.
- A iii 185} [Thanissaro | Ñanamoli].Five skillful ways of dealing with people who annoy you.
- AN 5.162: Aghatavinaya Sutta — Subduing Hatred (2) {A iii 186} [Thanissaro].Sariputta describes five skillful ways of dealing with feelings of hatred toward others.
- AN 5.165: Pañhapuccha Sutta — On Asking Questions {A iii 191} [Thanissaro].Five possible motives behind asking a question.
- AN 5.175: Candala Sutta — The Outcaste {A iii 206} [Thanissaro].This discourse lists — first in negative and then in positive form — the basic requirements for being a Buddhist lay follower in good standing.
- AN 5.176: Piti Sutta — Rapture {A iii 206} [Thanissaro].Instructions to a generous lay person: Generosity is good, but there is still more to be done. An even greater happiness awaits if you practice meditation to attain an internal state of seclusion and rapture.
- AN 5.177: Vanijja Sutta — Business (Wrong Livelihood) {A iii 208} [Thanissaro].Five kinds of wrong livelihood for lay followers.
- AN 5.179: Gihi Sutta — The Householder {A iii 211} [Thanissaro].How to recognize a lay stream-winner.
- AN 5.180: Gavesin Sutta — About Gavesin {A iii 214} [Thanissaro].How the pursuit of excellence — and a competitive spirit — led a layman and his friends to attain arahantship. This story made even the Buddha smile.
- AN 5.196: Supina Sutta — Dreams {A iii 240} [Thanissaro].Five dreams that appeared to the Buddha before his Awakening, together with their interpretation.
- AN 5.198: Vaca Sutta — A Statement {A iii 243} [Thanissaro].The secret to blameless speech.
- AN 5.199: Kula Sutta — A Family {A iii 243} [Thanissaro].On the rewards of being attentive and hospitable to a visiting monk/nun.
- AN 5.200: Nissaraniya Sutta — Leading to Escape {A iii 245} [Thanissaro].Five qualities of mind that lead to true freedom.
- AN 5.202: Dhammassavana Sutta — Listening to the Dhamma {A iii 248} [Thanissaro].The five rewards in listening to the Dhamma.
- AN 5.254-271: Macchariya Suttas — Stinginess {A iii 272} [Thanissaro].Generosity isn’t just a nice idea: it is a requisite for progress along the Buddha’s Path.
- AN 6.12: Saraniya Sutta — Conducive to Amiability {A iii 289} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes how to behave with one’s peers in ways that engender mutual feelings of fellowship, friendship, and respect.
- AN 6.13: Nissaraniya Sutta — Means of Escape {A iii 290} [Thanissaro].Six qualities that, when fully developed, lead to liberation.
- AN 6.16: Nakula Sutta — Nakula’s Parents {A iii 295} [Thanissaro].A wise female householder consoles her worried husband as he faces death from a grave illness.
- AN 6.20: Maranassati Sutta — Mindfulness of Death (2) {A iii 306} [Thanissaro].Death could come at any time. Are you ready?
- AN 6.37: Dana Sutta — Giving {A iii 335} [Thanissaro].The six factors with which to make the most of giving.
- AN 6.38: Attakārī Sutta — The Self-Doer {A iii 337} [Nizamis].The Buddha corrects a brahman who believes that we are not responsible for our actions.
- AN 6.41: Daruka-khandha Sutta — The Wood Pile {A iii 340} [Thanissaro].If you ever wanted to know how psychic transformation works, here’s a brief primer.
- AN 6.42: Nagita Sutta — To Nagita {A iii 341} [Thanissaro].While dwelling in a forest grove, the Buddha speaks in praise of modesty, contentment, unentanglement, and seclusion in the wilderness. (See AN 8.86 for a longer version of this conversation.)
- AN 6.45: Ina Sutta — Debt {A iii 351} [Thanissaro].Falling under the grip of sensuality is like falling heavily into debt.
- AN 6.46: Cunda Sutta — Cunda {A iii 355} [Thanissaro].Why the world needs both meditators and those who devote themselves to the study of Dhamma.
- AN 6.47: Sanditthika Sutta — Visible Here-&-Now {A iii 356} [Thanissaro].A few of the more obvious ways in which the Dhamma is visible here-&-now.
- AN 6.49: Khema Sutta — With Khema {A iii 358} [Thanissaro].Having abandoned all sense of self, arahants don’t regard themselves as better than, worse than, or equal to anyone else.
- AN 6.51: Ananda Sutta — Ven. Ananda {A iii 359} [Thanissaro].Six ways for a monk’s understanding of Dhamma to grow.
- AN 6.54: Dhammika Sutta — Dhammika {A iii 366} [Olendzki (excerpt)].In the first of these excerpts, the Buddha uses a telling simile to explain the meaning of his most common epithet, Tathagata — “the Thus-Gone one.” In the second, the Buddha tells a story illustrating how patient endurance is the best response to the insults of others.
- AN 6.55: Sona Sutta — About Sona {A iii 374} [Thanissaro].In this famous sutta the Buddha explains to Ven. Sona that balancing one’s effort in meditation practice is like tuning a musical instrument.
- AN 6.63: Nibbedhika Sutta — Penetrative {A iii 410} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains that mastery of the Dhamma comes from meditating on six factors in the mind, each of which should be understood deeply in six different ways. This sutta contains a lovely short verse pointing out the true cause of attachment based on sensuality.
- AN 6.85: Siti Sutta — Cooled {A iii 435} [Thanissaro].Six qualities required to achieve Awakening.
- AN 6.86: Avaranata Sutta — Obstructions {A iii 435} [Thanissaro].Six qualities that prevent, and six that foster, the development of skillful states of mind.
- AN 6.87: Kammavaranata Sutta — Kamma Obstructions {A iii 436} [Thanissaro].Six things that can render one incapable of developing skillful mental qualities.
- AN 6.88: Sussusa Sutta — Listening Well {A iii 437} [Thanissaro].The Buddha’s instructions on how to listen to the Dhamma so that it can be truly taken to heart.
- AN 6.97: Anisansa Sutta — Rewards {A iii 441} [Thanissaro].Six rewards of stream-entry.
- AN 6.104: Anodhi Sutta — Without Exception (3) {A iii 444} [Thanissaro].What six things motivate one to see the three characteristics of anicca, dukkha, and anatta?
- AN 7.6: Dhana Sutta — Treasure {A iv 5} [Thanissaro].Possess these seven treasures and your life will not have been lived in vain.
- AN 7.7: Ugga Sutta — To Ugga {A iv 6} [Thanissaro].The Buddha teaches Ugga of seven treasures that are always safe from “fire, flood, kings, thieves, or hateful heirs.”
- AN 7.11: Anusaya Sutta — Obsessions (1) {A iv 9} [Thanissaro].An enumeration of the seven anusaya (obsessions or latent tendencies).
- AN 7.12: Anusaya Sutta — Obsessions (2) {A iv 9} [Thanissaro].On abandoning the seven anusaya (obsessions or latent tendencies).
- AN 7.15: Udakupama Sutta — The Water Simile {A iv 10} [Thanissaro].In a beautiful progression of metaphors, the Buddha illustrates the various levels to which people allow their grasp of Dhamma to take them. How far are you willing to go?
- AN 7.21: Bhikkhu-aparihaniya Sutta — Conditions for No Decline Among the Monks {A iv 21} [Thanissaro].The seven conditions that lead to the long-term welfare of the Sangha.
- AN 7.35: Mitta Sutta — A Friend {A iv 31} [Thanissaro].What is a true friend?
- AN 7.46: Sañña Sutta — Perceptions {A iv 46} [Thanissaro].Seven inner reflections that are well worth pursuing.
- AN 7.48: Saññoga Sutta — Bondage {A iv 57} [Thanissaro].How dwelling on one’s sexual identity only leads to greater suffering.
- AN 7.49: Dana Sutta — Giving {A iv 59} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes some of the motivations one might have for being generous. The karmic fruits of giving depend heavily on one’s motives.
- AN 7.51: Avyakata Sutta — Undeclared {A iv 67} [Thanissaro].Why does doubt not arise in the mind of a stream-enterer?
- AN 7.56: Kimila Sutta — To Kimila {A iv 84} [Thanissaro].You say you want Buddhism to thrive in the West? In this sutta the Buddha explains to Ven. Kimila what is required of those who wish to see the Dhamma last a long, long time.
- AN 7.58: Capala (Pacala) Sutta — Nodding {A iv 85} [Thanissaro].Do you nod off during meditation? Here the Buddha catches Ven. Maha Moggallana nodding off, and offers him a prescription for overcoming drowsiness.
- A iv 94} [Ñanamoli | Thanissaro].Seven dangers of giving in to anger.
- AN 7.63: Nagara Sutta — The Fortress {A iv 106} [Thanissaro].Seven qualities that must be developed for the truest kind of homeland security.
- AN 7.64: Dhammaññu Sutta — One With a Sense of Dhamma {A iv 113} [Thanissaro].Do you want to be worthy of other people’s respect? Here are seven qualities of a respectable and honorable individual.
- AN 7.68: Aggikkhandopama Sutta — The Mass of Fire Comparison {A iv 128} [Yahoo! Pali Group].The Buddha warns a group of monks about the danger of abusing the generosity and good faith of their lay supporters.
- AN 7.70: Arakenanusasani Sutta — Araka’s Teaching {A iv 136} [Thanissaro].Seven beautiful similes on the brevity of the human lifespan. Use your short time here well!
- AN 7.79: Satthusasana Sutta — To Upali {A iv 143} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to Ven. Upali how to recognize authentic teachings of Dhamma.
- AN 8.2: Pañña Sutta — Discernment {A iv 151} [Thanissaro].The Buddha outlines the skills that one must develop in order for wisdom to unfold.
- AN 8.6: Lokavipatti Sutta — The Failings of the World {A iv 157} [Thanissaro].The eight worldly conditions. The difference between an ordinary person and an Awakened one manifests in how they respond to life’s inevitable ups and downs.
- AN 8.7: Devadatta Sutta — About Devadatta {A iv 160} [Thanissaro].On the hazards of allowing the mind to get caught up in the worldly ups and down of life (the eight ‘untrue dhammas’)
- AN 8.8: Uttara Sutta — About Uttara {A iv 161} [Thanissaro].Sakka, the king of the devas, repeats the Buddha’s teaching on the eight ‘untrue dhammas’ for the benefit of Ven. Uttara.
- AN 8.9: Nanda Sutta — About Nanda {A iv 166} [Thanissaro].Ven. Nanda sets a good example of how to take care of the mind.
- AN 8.13: Ajañña Sutta — The Thoroughbred {A iv 188} [Thanissaro].Eight praiseworthy qualities that a good monk possesses.
- AN 8.14: Khalunga Sutta — Unruly {A iv 190} [Thanissaro].The eight unskillful ways we react to accusations are like the eight ways a horse can be unruly.
- AN 8.23: Hatthaka Sutta — About Hatthaka (1) {A iv 216} [Thanissaro].Eight qualities rarely found in people of power and wealth.
- AN 8.24: Hatthaka Sutta — About Hatthaka (2) {A iv 218} [Thanissaro].The Buddha’s advice on how to win a large following.
- AN 8.25: Mahanama Sutta — Being a Lay Buddhist {A iv 220} [Kumara].What is a lay follower? A virtuous one? One engaged in his own welfare? His own and others’?
- AN 8.26: Jivaka Sutta — To Jivaka {A iv 222} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains how a lay follower can best work for the welfare of others.
- AN 8.28: Bala Sutta — Strengths {A iv 223} [Thanissaro].The eight strengths enjoyed by the awakened mind.
- AN 8.30: Anuruddha Sutta — To Anuruddha {A iv 228} [Thanissaro].The Buddha tells of eight good qualities that, if actively cultivated, lead us toward the goal.
- AN 8.39: Abhisanda Sutta — Rewards {A iv 245} [Thanissaro].The Buddha tells of eight rewards that can be expected from skillful conduct.
- AN 8.40: Vipaka Sutta — Results {A iv 247} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes the unpleasant consequences of not sticking to the precepts.
- AN 8.41: Uposatha Sutta — The Uposatha Observance {A iv 248} [Ñanavara/Kantasilo].The Buddha summarizes the eight uposatha day observances.
- AN 8.43: Visakhuposatha Sutta — The Discourse to Visakha on the Uposatha with the Eight Practices {A iv 255} [Khantipalo].The Buddha explains to Visakha, a devout laywoman, the benefits of following the uposatha day (observance day) practices.
- AN 8.53: Gotami Sutta — To Gotami {A iv 280} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to Mahapajapati Gotami (his aunt) how to recognize authentic teachings of Dhamma.
- A iv 281} [Thanissaro | Narada].The Buddha’s instructions for householders on how to preserve and increase wealth and happiness, in both the mundane and spiritual senses.
- AN 8.59: Pathama Atthapuggala Sutta — Eight Individuals (a) {A iv 292} [Kumara (excerpt)].The eight individuals who are worthy of gifts.
- AN 8.63: Sankhitta Sutta — In Brief {A iv 299} [Thanissaro].The Buddha describes the practices of the four sublime states (metta, karuna, mudita, and upekkha) and of the four frames of reference (satipatthana) as a basis for concentration practice.
- AN 8.80: Kusita-Arambhavatthu Sutta — The Grounds for Laziness & the Arousal of Energy {A iv 332} [Thanissaro].“I’m too tired too meditate! I’m too hungry! I’m too full!” Sound familiar? The Buddha offers sound advice for overcoming this kind of laziness.
- AN 8.86: Yasa Sutta — Honor {A iv 340} [Thanissaro].While dwelling in a forest grove, the Buddha speaks in praise of modesty, contentment, unentanglement, and seclusion in the wilderness. (This sutta is a longer version of the conversation reported in AN 6.42.)
- AN 9.1: Sambodhi Sutta — Self-awakening {A iv 351} [Thanissaro].Having admirable friends, companions, and comrades is an essential part of the path to Awakening.
- AN 9.7: Sutava Sutta — To Sutavan {A iv 369} [Thanissaro].Nine unskillful acts an Awakened one is incapable of doing.
- AN 9.13: Kotthita Sutta — With Kotthita {A iv 382} [Thanissaro].The holy life is lived, not with the purpose of altering the results of past actions, but with the purpose of gaining direct knowledge of the four noble truths.
- AN 9.14: Samiddhi Sutta — About Samiddhi {A iv 385} [Thanissaro].Where do thoughts and intentions come from?
- AN 9.15: Ganda Sutta — A Boil {A iv 386} [Thanissaro].Nine good reasons not to get enchanted with the body.
- AN 9.16: Sañña Sutta — Perception {A iv 387} [Thanissaro].Nine useful perceptions.
- AN 9.34: Nibbana Sutta — Unbinding {A iv 414} [Thanissaro].Ven. Sariputta explains to Ven. Udayin how even the most exquisitely refined and beautiful mental states are beset with dukkha; only Nibbana itself can truly be called “pleasant.”
- AN 9.35: Gavi Sutta — The Cow {A iv 418} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains that if you try to move on to the next level of concentration before you’ve mastered the last, you’re sure to stumble, like a foolish cow on a steep hill.
- AN 9.36: Jhana Sutta — Mental Absorption {A iv 422} [Thanissaro].Meditation, like archery, is a skill that develops over time, through practice, practice, practice.
- AN 9.37: Ananda Sutta — With Ananda {A iv 426} [Thanissaro].In subtle states of concentration the sense spheres are present to one’s awareness, but one is not taking mental note of them.
- AN 9.40: Naga Sutta — The Tusker {A iv 435} [Thanissaro].With gentle humor, the Buddha tells how to allay the itch in your mind.
- AN 9.41: Tapussa Sutta — To Tapussa {A iv 438} [Thanissaro].The Buddha tells how the long road of meditation practice begins with appreciating the value of renunciation.
- AN 9.42: Pañcala Sutta — Pañcala’s Verse {A iv 448} [Thanissaro].How jhana leads the meditator out from the confines of the mind.
- AN 9.45: Ubhatobhaga Sutta — (Released) Both Ways {A iv 453} [Thanissaro].In this group of short suttas, Ven. Ananda answers Ven. Udayin’s lingering questions about the meaning of several key terms that the Buddha uses in other suttas: What is a “bodily witness”? What is “discernment-release”? What is “released both ways”? Ven. Ananda shows here that the development of jhana plays an integral part in the development of wisdom.
- AN 9.62: Bhabba Sutta — Capable {A iv 456} [Thanissaro].Nine barriers to arahantship.
- AN 9.63: Sikkha-dubbalya Sutta — Things That Weaken the Training {A iv 457} [Thanissaro].How to overcome the obstructions to one’s progress in meditation.
- AN 9.64: Nivarana Sutta — Hindrances {A iv 457} [Thanissaro].How to overcome the five hindrances.
- AN 10.7: Sariputta Sutta — With Sariputta {A v 8} [Thanissaro].Two descriptions of the concentration in which the mind is inclined toward the Deathless.
- AN 10.13: Sanyojana Sutta — Fetters {A v 17} [Thanissaro].The ten fetters that bind us to the cycle of birth and death.
- AN 10.15: Appamada Sutta — Heedfulness {A v 21} [Thanissaro].Ten similes to illustrate the point that heedfulness is the foremost of all skillful qualities.
- AN 10.17: Natha Sutta — Protectors {A v 23} [Thanissaro].Ten qualities that provide protection for the mind.
- AN 10.20: Ariyavasa Sutta — Dwellings of the Noble Ones {A v 29} [Thanissaro].Qualities of mind in which noble ones are at home.
- AN 10.24: Cunda Sutta — Cunda {A v 41} [Thanissaro].Anyone who claims to know the Dhamma, and yet still has a mind overcome by defilement, is like a person who talks about wealth but can produce none when it’s needed.
- AN 10.27: Mahapañha Sutta — The Great Questions {A v 48} [Nyanaponika (excerpt)].One thing to become dispassionate towards.
- AN 10.29: Kosala Sutta — The Kosalan {A v 59} [Thanissaro].Like supremacy in the human and deva worlds, exalted states of mind — even experiences of all-encompassing white light and non-dual consciousness — are all subject to change and aberration. Some people criticized the Buddha for showing the way to freedom from this change and aberration. In this sutta the Buddha offers a series of contemplations for inducing disenchantment and dispassion for even the most supreme things in the cosmos. [TB]
- AN 10.46: Sakka Sutta — To the Sakyans (on the Uposatha) {A v 86} [Thanissaro].Money can’t buy you happiness, but practicing Dhamma can.
- A v 87} [Piyadassi | Thanissaro].Ten things that an ordained monk must reflect on often.
- AN 10.51: Sacitta Sutta — One’s Own Mind {A v 92} [Thanissaro].How to read your own mind.
- AN 10.54: Samatha Sutta — With Regard to Tranquility {A v 98} [Thanissaro].More on how to read your own mind.
- AN 10.58: Mula Sutta — Rooted {A v 106} [Thanissaro].What is the root of all phenomena (sabbe dhamma)? Is Nibbana itself a phenomenon, or is it the end of all phenomena?
- A v 108} [Thanissaro | Piyadassi].The Buddha instructs Ven. Girimananda, who is ill, on the ten themes of meditation that can heal both mind and body.
- AN 10.69: Kathavatthu Sutta — Topics of Conversation (1) {A v 128} [Thanissaro].Ten wholesome topics of conversation as an alternative to gossip.
- AN 10.70: Kathavatthu Sutta — Topics of Conversation (2) {A v 129} [Thanissaro].Right speech is most praiseworthy when you embody the good things you talk about.
- AN 10.71: Akankha Sutta — Wishes {A v 131} [Thanissaro].This discourse lists ten reasons, in ascending worth, for perfecting the precepts and being committed to the development of calm (samatha) and insight (vipassana). An interesting feature of this discussion is that the Buddha does not separate insight and jhana into separate paths of practice, and actually cites insight, together with tranquillity, as a prerequisite for mastering the four jhanas. [TB]
- AN 10.80: Aghata Sutta — Hatred {A v 150} [Thanissaro].When hatred arises in the mind what do you do? Here are ten possible antidotes.
- AN 10.81: Bahuna Sutta — To Bahuna {A v 151} [Thanissaro].Of what is an Awakened being freed?
- AN 10.92: Vera Sutta — Animosity {A v 182} [Thanissaro].What it takes for a lay person to become a stream-winner.
- AN 10.93: Ditthi Sutta — Views {A v 185} [Thanissaro].The householder Anathapindika instructs a group of non-Buddhist wanderers on the nature of Right View.
- AN 10.94: Vajjiya Sutta — About Vajjiya {A v 189} [Thanissaro].A lay disciple answers the charge that the Buddha doesn’t have any straightforward teachings.
- AN 10.95: Uttiya Sutta — To Uttiya {A v 193} [Thanissaro].Is the goal of the Buddha’s teachings to liberate all beings?
- AN 10.96: Kokanuda Sutta — To Kokanuda {A v 196} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda explains that wisdom is not based on subscribing to this or that point of view.
- AN 10.103: Micchatta Sutta — Wrongness {A v 211} [Thanissaro].Success or failure on the Path hinges on the extent to which one has right view.
- AN 10.104: Bija Sutta — The Seed {A v 212} [Thanissaro].Two similes illustrate how success or failure on the Path hinges on right view.
- AN 10.108: Virecana (Tikicchaka) Sutta — A Purgative {A v 218} [Thanissaro].Sometimes even the best medicines for the body don’t work. Here, the Buddha offers a “noble purgative” for the mind that never fails.
- AN 10.118: Orimatīra Sutta — The Near Shore {A v 233} [Nizamis].What is the near shore? What is the far shore?
- AN 10.176: Cunda Kammaraputta Sutta — To Cunda the Silversmith {A v 263} [Thanissaro].The Buddha explains to Cunda that genuine self-purification comes about not from performing sacred rites, but by cultivating skillfulness in one’s thoughts, words, and deeds.
- AN 10.177: Janussonin Sutta — To Janussonin {A v 269} [Thanissaro].Who stands to benefit most from a gift given in another’s honor?
- AN 10.208: Brahmavihara Sutta — The Sublime Attitudes {A v 299} [Thanissaro].The Buddha’s instructions on the practice and rewards of the four sublime attitudes: metta (goodwill, loving-kindness), karuna (compassion), mudita (appreciative joy), and upekkha (equanimity).
- AN 11.1: Kimattha Sutta — What is the Purpose? {A v 311} [Thanissaro].Why does the Buddha repeatedly implore us to cultivate sila (virtue)?
- AN 11.2: Cetana Sutta — An Act of Will {A v 312} [Thanissaro].Good qualities in the heart naturally lead to the development of other good qualities. And it all starts with sila (virtue).
- AN 11.10: Sandha Sutta — To Sandha {A v 322} [Thanissaro].What makes the arahant’s experience of jhana unique?
- AN 11.12: Mahanama Sutta — To Mahanama (1) {A v 328} [Thanissaro].The Buddha instructs the householder Mahanama on the importance of developing the six recollections (recollection of the Buddha, Dhamma, Sangha, one’s own virtues, one’s own generosity, and the devas).
- AN 11.13: Mahanama Sutta — To Mahanama (2) {A v 332} [Thanissaro].The Buddha further instructs the householder Mahanama on the importance of developing the six recollections, reminding him to develop these recollections in every posture, even “while you are busy at work, while you are resting in your home crowded with children.”
- A v 342; BJT calls this the Mettanisamsa Sutta; Thai, Burmese, and PTS call it Metta Sutta.} [Piyadassi | Thanissaro].Eleven benefits arising from the practice of metta (loving kindness, or good-will) meditation.
- AN 11.17: Dasama Sutta — To Dasama {A v 342} [Thanissaro].Ven. Ananda describes eleven modes of practice that can lead to the Deathless. (This sutta is identical to MN 52, but without the preamble.)
- AN 11.18: Gopalaka Sutta — The Cowherd {A v 347} [Thanissaro].Eleven factors that are conducive to spiritual growth, and eleven that are obstructive. (This sutta is identical to MN 33, but without the preamble.)
- The difference of whitelotus sutta and theravadin sutta is we don;t use khuddhaka nikaya section, because most parts of khuddaka nikaya are not words of Buddha.
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