Many thousands of discourses were given by the Buddha and his leading disciples. Here you will find some key teachings that every Buddhist should be familiar with. Some PDF files are framed with a decorative border for printing on a single sheet of A4, to use as a poster for daily reflection.
The Buddha spent the rainy season residing in one particular monastery, in the Bamboo Grove at Rājagaha during the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th years of his dispensation, and he often stayed at the Jeta Grove donated by Anāthapiṇḍika in Sāvatthi during the later years. After the rains he would set off on tour with the monks, travelling to towns and villages on foot. In the last period of his life, he walked from Rājagaha to Kusinārā via Pāṭaliputta and Vesāli. This journey is related in the Mahāparinibbāna Sutta.
The Map of India gives some perspective to the life of the Buddha and the monks as they wandered throughout the Ganges valley, or even further afield, to spread the teaching about the direct path to nibbāna.
To read the Pāḷi texts — edited during the Sixth Buddhist Council, in Rangoon — download the CST4 software from Tipitaka.org. Read my review page for help on installing and using it.
A collection of 423 verses in 26 chapters, with a brief extract from the Commentary explaining the circumstances behind each verse. The verses are often referenced in other texts. The commentaries are sometimes essential to understand their meaning in context. Click the PDF icon to download it.
Order a hard copy from Motilal Banarsidass.
Some discourses commonly recited for protection of danger, disease, and other misfortunes. Includes links to audio and video files.
Selected discourses from the Long Discourses of the Buddha.
Selected discourses from the Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha.
Selected discourses from the Book of Gradual Sayings or the Numerical Discourses of the Buddha.
Selected discourses from the Book of Kindred Sayings or the Collected Discourses of the Buddha.
Selected discourses from the Discourse Collection of the Khuddakanikāya.
Without abandoning nine states it is impossible to realise Arahantship.
Nigaṇṭha Nāṭaputta sends his disciple, Prince Abhaya, to the Buddha with a dilemma that he won’t be able to answer. The Buddha answers the dilemma easily and Prince Abhaya becomes a disciple of the Buddha.
Five facts that should be recollected constantly by a woman or a man, by a householder or by one gone-forth.
Four matters that should not be thought about.
The Buddha’s discourse to 1,000 Fire-worshipping ascetics led by the three Kassapa brothers on the fiery nature of greed, hatred, and delusion. After the Dhammacakka Sutta, the Hemavata Sutta, and the Anattalakkhaṇa Sutta, this is the fourth discourse taught by the Buddha. It is found in the Vinaya, Mahāvagga, and is there called the Ādittapariyāya Sutta, but in the Saṃyuttanikāya it is called the Āditta Sutta — the Ādittapariyāya Sutta in the Saṃyuttanikāya refers to a different discourse on a similar topic, but with a more detailed exposition.
Five methods for getting rid of resentment that has arisen.
Nine grounds for resentment.
A discourse to a wanderer on not clinging to any views.
Six things that make a monk worthy of offerings.
An abusive brahmin approaches the Blessed One and speak to him rudely with abusive words. The Blessed One does not accept his abuse, and tells him that it remains his own property.
The different attitudes of uninstructed ordinary persons and Noble Ones when faced with suffering
The Buddha relates a discourse given by the previous Buddha Kassapa to an ascetic who was a strict vegetarian, who condemned the eating of meat and fish as stench. The Buddha explained that physical, verbal, and mental misdeeds are stench, not the eating of meat or fish.
The Buddha teaches his son, the newly ordained novice Rāhula, about the dangers of telling deliberate lies, and the importance of reflecting well on one’s physical, verbal, and mental actions.
Five perils for the future of the Buddha’s teachings.
Five more perils for the future of the Buddha’s teachings.
The wanderer Vacchagotta approaches the Blessed One and asks him if he has a self or not. The Buddha does not answer, and explains why when the Venerable Ānanda asks him after the wanderer has left.
The young deity Anāthapiṇḍika visits the Buddha at the Jeta grove and speaks in praise of the Venerable Sāriputta.
The Buddha’s third discourse (the second was the Hemavata Sutta), given to his first five disciples. After listening to the discourse, they all became Arahants.
Three individuals are found in the world: the blind, the one-eyed, and the two-eyed.
The story of Aṅgulimāla’s conversion and attainment of Arahantship.
Six benefits of attaining Stream-winning.
Eight essential characteristics of a wise man who could fully understand the Buddha’s teaching.
Without abandoning six things it is impossible to attain right-view.
Four occasions when heedfulness should be practised.
Five who sleep little at night.
Five gifts of a bad man.
An extract from a discourse of the Majjhimanikāya, teaching sceptics how to choose a wise course to follow.
Five kinds of forest-dwellers
The Buddha teaches a village headman that one’s destiny after death does not depend on rituals performed at his death-bed or funeral, but on his behaviour during his life.
The Buddha teaches the monks about the bad man and one inferior to the bad man, about the good man and one superior to the good man.
At one time the Buddha’s relatives, the Sakyans, were taking up arms to fight with their neighbours, the Koliyā, over the irrigation waters of the river Rohiṇī, which divided their territories. The Buddha admonished them, asking them which was more valuable, blood or water, and thus the conflict was averted.
Selected chapters from the eighth book of the gradual sayings or numerical discourses (Aṅguttaranikāya).
Five individuals who despise another.
Four things that lead to hell and four that lead to heaven.
Five powers.
Six powers that make a monk worthy of offerings
Eight powers possessed by different kinds of people.
Eight powers of one who has destroyed the outflows.
Eight things that bind a man to a woman
The Buddha teaches how one should not long for the past, anticipate the future, not get caught up in the present.
Eminent lay disciples endows with six things.
The Buddha teaches Sujātā, the daughter-in-law of Anāthapiṇḍika, about the seven kinds of wives.
Wrong-view and right-view are the source of all fruits.
The Buddha relates his renunciation, ascetic practices, and enlightenment to refute the statement by Prince Bodhi that happiness is to be gained through suffering.
Five benefits of giving food.
The Buddha teaches a group of elderly and wealthy brahmins about the noble conduct of the brahmins of ancient times, which had declined by the time of the Buddha.
Brahma Sahampati approaches the Buddha just after his Enlightenment and requests him to teach.
Five losses and five gains: relatives, wealth, health, morality, and view.
Eleven disasters suffered by one who abuses the Noble Ones.
The behaviour that leads to becoming an “outcaste,” a person who should be shunned by good and wise followers of the Buddha.
The five benefits of walking meditation.
An elderly Mahāsāla Brahmin approaches the Buddha with his followers, and a sixteen-year-old student of his engages in a dialogue with the Buddha.
Selected chapters from the fourth book of the gradual sayings or numerical discourses (Aṅguttaranikāya).
The arising of insight is a natural process when suitable conditions are present.
Selected chapters from the sixth book of the gradual sayings or numerical discourses (Aṅguttaranikāya).
The Buddha teaches the monks about restraint of the six sense faculties through cultivating mindfulness of the body.
Five kinds of rag-robe wearers … tree-root dwellers … cemetery dwellers … open-air dwellers … sitters … any bed users … single-session eaters … later food refusers … five kinds of almsfood-eaters. Five reasons why monks observe the ascetic practices including five kinds of forest-dwellers.
The Venerable Bhadda asks the Venerable Ānanda the reasons for the short or long duration of the true Dhamma.
Eight reasons why a great thief does not last long
An explanation of the satisfaction and misery of sensual pleasures.
The exposition of the Buddha’s teaching on ownership of one’s kamma (volitional actions).
The Buddha gives the Simile of the Poisoned Arrow to show that the Dhamma is taught only for the sake of liberation from suffering.
The Buddha teaches the monks the difference between good and bad men.
Saccaka dares to debate with the Buddha about the soul and suffers a humiliating defeat.
The Buddha teaches King Pasenadi of Kosala about four things that should be respected in spite of their youth.
The Buddha explains to Mahāpajāpatī Gotamī the relative benefit of gifts to different individuals and to the Saṅgha.
Eight kinds of gift.
Eight reasons for giving.
Five advantages of using a tooth stick to clean the teeth.
The first of two nearly identical discourses comparing reaching the goal of nibbāna to a drifting log in the Ganges reaching the ocean if nothing intervenes to prevent it.
Selected chapters from the tenth book of the gradual sayings or numerical discourses (Aṅguttaranikāya).
The Buddha teaches the monks about the five heavenly messengers.
This discourse from the Suttanipāta describes the correct practice for a disciple who is a monk or a householder. It covers the observance of the Uposatha for householders during the Rains Retreat.
The brahmin student Dhotaka asks the Blessed One to liberate him from doubt.
The Buddha teaches “Long Nails,” the nephew of the Venerable Sāriputta, about relinquishing views.
The Buddha relates a story from the distant past in an attempt to reconcile the monks of Kosambī, who were disputing over a minor rule of discipline.
The least results of eight unwholesome deeds if reborn again as a human being.
Selected chapters from the second book of the gradual sayings or numerical discourses (Aṅguttaranikāya).
Selected chapters from the first book of the gradual sayings or numerical discourses (Aṅguttaranikāya).
The body has nine orifices like abscesses.
While wandering in the Kosala kingdom, the Buddha smiles at a point beside the path, and when questioned by the Venerable Ānanda, relates his previous life as Jotipāla when he was a dear friend of Ghaṭikāra, and when he went forth as a monk.
The Buddha teaches the ten perceptions to the Venerable Ānanda, which he repeats to the Venerable Girimānanda, who is thus cured of a serious disease.
A warning by the Buddha on how not to chant the sacred discourses. When recited as they often are these days, the audience fails to pay attention to the meaning, and becomes distracted by listening to the sound only.
Mahāpajāpatī Gotamī requests the going-forth and eventually obtains it by accepting the eight weighty rules after the intervention of Ānanda on her behalf.
Three individuals are found in the world: a speaker of excrement, a speaker of flowers, and a speaker of honey.
To Hatthaka Devaputta after his rebirth in the Pure Abode of Avihā.
The Venerable Isidatta teaches the householder Citta about the origin of the sixty-two wrong-views.
On giving gifts to gain great fruit, to King Pasenadi
The Brahmin Jāṇussoṇi visits the Buddha and asks whether gifts and rites for the departed are of any benefit.
One who lives a hundred years lives for a long time, but all must die of old age. Therefore avoid the household life and do not cling to anything thinking, “It is mine.”
A matted-hair brahmin approaches the Blessed One and asks him in verse who can disentangle the tangle in which the current generation is entangled.
Two discourses given to the physician of King Bimbisāra (and later the physician of the Buddha and Saṅgha). The first is on the eating of meat; the second on the good practice for a lay disciple.
The Buddha teaches the Venerable Moliya Phagguna about the importance of practising patience, even when spoken to harshly by others.
A brahmin farmer, having promised to offer alms, has his crop destroyed by a flood, and is greatly disappointed at his lost opportunity. The Buddha teaches him about the dangers of sensual pleasures, and he becomes a Stream-winner.
Five strands of sensual pleasure and four things to develop to overcome them.
Ten kinds of unwholesome kamma, each with three origins.
The Buddha teaches a farmer how he ploughs and farms the fruit of the deathless.
How to decide if someone is fit to discuss with or unfit to discuss with.
More commonly known as the “Kālāma Sutta,” this is the Buddha’s advice on how to make a thorough investigation of the teachings. It is often misquoted as a “free-thinker’s charter” to reject any teaching that doesn’t agree with logical reasoning, or with “common-sense.” A closer examination of this discourse shows that “logical reasoning” and “common-sense” are not to be trusted either. One should make a thorough inquiry by experimentation.
A warning to his disciples on always remaining open to instruction and admonishment by one’s fellow monks and well-wishers.
The Buddha teaches about the three kinds of mystic wonder to a devout follower from Nāḷandā.
Two Arahants, Khema and Sumana, come to the Buddha and ask him if Arahants consider themselves superior, inferior, or equal to others. The Buddha approves of their statements.
The Buddha teachings the headman Asibandhakaputta how he is compassionate to all beings although teaching in greater detail to his ordained disciples than to lay-disciples or those of other views.
This is the first book of the Khuddakanikāya. It is a collection of verses and discourses that a newly ordained novice should be taught.
The six causes for the decline of the Buddha’s teaching, and six for its longevity.
The seven causes for the decline of the Buddha’s teaching, and seven for its longevity.
A discourse to the shameless group of monks who were followers of Assaji and Punabbasu. They were guilty of many kinds of misbehaviour such as growing flowers, making garlands, giving them as presents to women, eating at the wrong time, using perfumes, visiting shows, singing, and playing games. They were admonished as “Corrupters of families,” who liked their behaviour.
The headman Asibandhakaputta, a disciple of Nigaṇṭha Nāṭaputta, dares to question the Buddha’s compassion for families when begging for alms during a famine.
The Buddha teaches the monks nine reasons why families are not worth approaching, or having approached not sitting down with to teach Dhamma.
Three kinds of individuals: one like writing carved in stone, one like writing scratched on the ground, one like writing traced in water.
An important discourse on how kamma gives different results for different individuals.
A brahmin offers his daughter in marriage to the Blessed One. He rejects the offer and teaches this discourse. The brahmin and his wife attain Arahantship, but their daughter harbours a grudge.
An explanation of wrong-view, mundane right-view, and supramundane right-view.
Mahācunda admonishes learned monks not to disparage meditators, and meditators not to disparage learned monks, but to praise each other.
The Buddha teaches the six recollections to Mahānāma the Sakyan.
See An Exposition of the Mahāparinibbāna Sutta
The Buddha teaches the monks the only way to nibbāna.
The Buddha declares his Ten Powers of a Tathāgata after Sunakkhatta leaves the Order and makes public claims that the Buddha has no direct knowledge (abhiññā), but relies on reasoning.
A brief extract from the »» Mahasuññata Suttaṃ, with the Buddha’s advice to Ānanda for monks to cultivate seclusion, and to avoid socialising.
The Buddha admonishes Bhikkhu Sāti who clings to an eternalistic view regarding the transmigration of consciousness.
Eight stains of sacred verses, of houses, of beauty, of a guard, of a woman, of a donor, etc.
Queen Mallikā, the beloved young queen of King Pasenadi of Kosala, approached the Buddha and asked him about the causes of beauty, wealth, and influence.
An elderly monk comes to the Buddha and asks for brief meditation instructions. The Buddha teaches him the practice of bare awareness: “When you see, just know that you see it …”
On the acceptance of money by monks.
The seven corruptions of the celibate life.
The eleven benefits of constantly practising loving-kindness.
The female lay disciple Migasālā asks the Venerable Ānanda why her father, who was a celibate priest, and Isidatta, who was not celibate, both Once-returners attained the Tusita heaven after death. The Buddha explains to Venerable Ānanda that an ordinary person cannot judge others.
The Buddha shows by comparing the dust on the tip of a fingernail to the entire earth how few human beings regain human rebirth again after death, and how little suffering remains for one who has attained Stream-winning compared to one who has not.
Nakulamātā exhorts her husband who is ill with a serious disease, and he recovers.
The Venerable Sāriputta declares his faith that there has never been, will never be, nor is there now any recluse or priest more enlightened than the Blessed One.
Selected chapters from the ninth book of the gradual sayings or numerical discourses (Aṅguttaranikāya).
The five hindrances and the four things to develop to overcome them.
Six things that drag one to hell.
Practising meditation on loving-kindness is more meritorious than giving alms.
Ten facts that one gone-forth should recollect constantly.
The Buddha exhorts Mahāmoggallāna, teaching him seven methods for staying awake. He then attains Arahantship just seven days after his ordination.
Striving to remove and prevent unwholesome states, to arouse and maintain wholesome states.
The Bodhisatta battles with Māra on the eve of his Enlightenment.
Five factors for striving.
Selected chapters from the fifth book of the gradual sayings or numerical discourses (Aṅguttaranikāya).
Five kinds of miserliness regarding dwellings, families, gains, praise, and the Dhamma.
The antithesis to the Maṅgala Sutta on Blessings, also taught to a deity at Sāvatthi.
Eight causes for the decline of a monk in training.
A wandering debater is defeated by Venerable Sāriputta, ordains, defeats the Venerable Lāḷudāyī, then dares to debate with the Buddha, but cannot utter a word.
Four individuals with concentration.
The four reasons for taking the wrong course of action.
Endowed with four things a fool remains uprooted and destroyed.
The Buddha relates the events leading to Sunakkhatta leaving the Order.
Six things that rarely appear in the world
Eight reasons to overturn the almsbowl for a lay disciple.
This is the introduction to the Paṭṭhāna of the Abhidhamma Piṭaka, enumerating the twenty-four types of conditional relations: Root Condition (hetupaccayo), Object Condition (ārammaṇapaccayo), etc.
Kumāra Kassapa debates with the sceptical Prince Pāyāsi and persuades him to renounce his pernicious wrong-view that there is no after-life and no result of kamma.
A wanderer is annoyed when the Buddha refers to him as a householder, as he has abandoned a householder’s way of life. The Buddha explains how one cuts off all the affairs of a householder in the discipline of the Noble Ones.
Seven kinds of individuals who are worthy of offerings, worthy of hospitality, etc.
Venerable Puṇṇa asks the Buddha for a brief admonishment before setting off for his home district of Sunāparanta. The Buddha questions him to see if he has the necessary qualities to live in that hostile region.
A discourse between the Venerable Sāriputta and the Venerable Puṇṇa Mantāṇiputta on the seven stages of purification.
A discourse on how to abandon all of the outflows (āsavā) using seven different methods.
A charming story of a previous life (Jātaka) from the Gradual Sayings advising how to do things thoroughly, not hastily.
Five things leading to the decline and disappearance of the true Dhamma.
Ten demeritorious deeds, and ten meritorious deeds.
The Buddha urges his relatives, the Sakyans, to fully observe the Uposatha.
A teaching on the unrighteous conduct that leads to rebirth in the lower realms after death, and the righteous conduct that leads to rebirth wherever one wishes.
A discourse from the Suttanipāta on the removal of grief.
Three perceptions that fulfil seven things.
The Buddha’s advice to his step-mother, who was the first Bhikkhuṇī, on how to distinguish Dhamma from what is not Dhamma.
The four holy sites to be visited by Buddhists.
The five lower and higher fetters.
The wanderer Moḷiyasīvaka visits the Buddha and asks how the Dhamma’s qualities are verifiable.
Ten factors constituting a schism in the community
The Buddha questions the Venerable Ānanda about the schism at Kosambī and relates the four advantages seen in schism by a wicked monk.
The three characteristics of the conditioned. The following discourse, the Asaṅkhatalakkhaṇa Suttaṃ gives the three opposite characteristics of the unconditioned. Bhikkhu Bodhi’s translation combines these two suttas (47 and 48) into one, so the numbering of suttas in the Tikanipāta misaligns after this.
Five perceptions of great benefit.
Five more perceptions of great benefit.
Seven perceptions of great benefit.
Four qualities that distinguish a good man and a bad man.
When a good man is born into a family it brings blessings to many.
He gives a gift with faith, he gives a gift with respect, he gives a gift at the right time, he gives a gift without clinging, unreservedly, he gives a gift without harming himself or others.
Five treasures that are rare and difficult to get in the world.
The Buddha teaches the Licchavī about the seven factors of non-decline
King Pasenadi of Kosala pays respects to a group of ascetics who pass by while he is attending on the Buddha and asks if they are Arahants.
Selected chapters from the seventh book of the gradual sayings or numerical discourses (Aṅguttaranikāya).
The Buddha teaches the monks about the bad man and the good man.
The Buddha teaches Upāli in brief
An acrobat and his apprentice perform tricks on a bamboo pole. The Buddha instructs the monks to protect themselves by practising mindfulness, thus they will protect others.
Six things leading to the decline of a trainee.
Four ways of lying down: that of the hungry ghost, the sensualist, the lion, and the Tathāgata.
The Buddha teaches General Sīha, a disciple of the Nigaṇṭhā (Jains), who then becomes a disciple and a Stream-winner. He invites the Saṅgha for the meal and offers them various kinds of hard and soft food including meat. The Nigaṇṭhā blame him, but he is indifferent to their slander.
The Buddha gives ten reasons why he makes the lion’s roar in assemblies.
Five weaknesses and four things to develop to overcome them.
An important discourse on social responsibilities.
The Buddha teaches the wanderer Sīvaka, refuting the wrong view of fatalism.
When Bhikkhuṇī Somā enters the Blind Man’s grove for meditation, Māra approaches her and tries to frighten her to disrupt her concentration.
Five ancient Brahmin practices maintained by dogs, but not by Brahmins of the Buddha’s era.
Venerable Sāriputta teaches a wanderer what is happiness and what is suffering.
The Buddha describes three sights that led to his renunciation of the life of extreme delicacy and comfort that he enjoyed as a Bodhisatta.
The four benefits gained by a giver.
Nine things that an Arahant cannot possibly do (includes the Sajjha Suttaṃ with a different list of nine things).
Four pairs that are very distant from each other.
An actor asks the Buddha about the destiny of actors after death.
The nine things rooted in craving.
Tapussa, the first lay disciple is endowed with six things
Selected chapters from the third book of the gradual sayings or numerical discourses (Aṅguttaranikāya).
The Buddha refutes the three wrong-views of fatalism, creationism, and nihilism, and declares his own teaching, which cannot be refuted.
Seven kinds of individuals submerged in water.
Five things to establish before teaching the Dhamma.
The four perils faced by newly ordained monks.
Defiled by four defilements the sun and moon do not shine; defiled by four defilements, recluses do not shine.
The Buddha teaches Upāli ten reasons for laying down the training rules.
The Buddha teaches Visākhā about the three kinds of Uposatha, how to observe it properly, and what the benefits are.
Five attributes of well-spoken speech.
When Bhikkhuṇī Vajirā enters the Blind Man’s grove for meditation, Māra approaches her and tries to frighten her to disrupt her concentration.
Four individuals like four storm clouds.
Four kinds of storm clouds.
The reasons for failure and success in business.
Five wrong-livelihood for Buddhists.
Five things that determine whether a monk should live alone.
The Buddha teaches a fire-worship brahmin about the moral defects that make someone an outcaste.
The Buddha gives similes of hatching eggs, wearing away the handle of an adze, and the rotting of a ship’s rigging to describe the progress of purification.
The Buddha teaches Anāthapiṇḍika about the benefits of giving even poor quality almsfood.
A large number of monks commit suicide, or murder one another, due to disgust with the human body. This is also the introductory story to the third offence of defeat for monks — killing a human being.
The Buddha teaches the monks the six roots of contention.
The Buddha teaches Upāli the ten roots of contention.
See footnote 1 to the Tālapuṭa Sutta.
Four possible ways to reach Arahantship