Words of the Buddha
Explore the Buddha’s earliest teachings through his words. Access over 1,122 texts with parallel Pāli-English translations and built-in study tools.
Reflection of the Day
“I do not see any other form that so completely obsesses a man’s mind as the form of a woman.”
— AN 1.1 ·

Fire: Investigating Recurrent Experience
The Buddha cast his entire framework of liberation in the language of fire and its cessation. This essay traces that structure using what we now understand about how fire actually works.
Experience is examined starting with the texture of a single moment, to the cascade of experience, across the terrain where consciousness takes root, and to the extinguishing that is Nibbāna.
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Parallel Texts
Read Pāli and English side-by-side or interleaved, with line-by-line fidelity to the source.
Contextual Tooltips
Click any Pāli word or translated term for on-the-spot explanations that deepen understanding.
Bookmarks & Highlights
Save discourses and highlight key passages to build your personal collection of insights.
Discourses by Text Collections
Over 2,300 discourses, verses, sayings, passages, and utterances from 1,122 texts with parallel Pāli-English translations
| Collection | |
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| The Path of Dhamma | 423 verses 100 %
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| As It Was Said | 112 sayings 100 %
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| Inspired Utterances | 80 utterances 100 %
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| Middle Length Discourses | 105 discourses 69 %
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| The Buddha's Ancient Discourses | 47 teachings 66 %
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| Connected Discourses | 542 discourses 19 %
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| Numerical Discourses | 957 discourses 10 %
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| Long Discourses | 1 discourses 3 %
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| Minor Passages | 9 passages 100 %
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Latest Discourses
View all →The Buddha explains how to completely comprehend the gratification, drawback, and escape in the case of sensual pleasures, form, and feeling.
Last updated on June 23, 2026
By mapping how suffering dynamically depends on internal conditions—including felt experience, craving, clinging, and perturbation—the Buddha demonstrates that liberating knowledge arises from seeing pairs of principles exactly as they are.
Last updated on June 23, 2026
Through a simile of a tree, the Buddha describes the importance of sense restraint as the foundational proximate cause for ethical conduct, collectedness, and knowledge and vision of things as they truly are.
Last updated on June 23, 2026
The Buddha explains what causes the hindrances to arise and how to abandon them.
Last updated on June 23, 2026
Short teachings on the benefits of cultivating mindfulness of the body.
Last updated on June 23, 2026
Anthologies
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An Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Canon
In In the Buddha’s Words, Bhikkhu Bodhi curates a rich anthology of discourses drawn from the Pali Canon that capture the full breadth of the Buddha’s teachings. Through these selected suttas, readers explore key themes such as impermanence, not-self, and the path to awakening, revealing how suffering arises and can ultimately be transcended. Each section is introduced with Bhikkhu Bodhi’s insightful commentary, which clarifies the practical application of the Dhamma in daily life. The book’s thematic structure provides a coherent roadmap to the Buddha’s profound insights, emphasizing their timeless relevance in overcoming the human predicament. In essence, In the Buddha’s Words serves as an invaluable guide for anyone seeking a clear and transformative overview of Early Buddhism.
By Bhikkhu Bodhi
The heart essence of the Buddha’s original teachings
In Noble Truths, Noble Path, Bhikkhu Bodhi brings together key suttas from the Saṁyutta Nikāya that illuminate the essence of the Buddha’s teaching - the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path. Through these discourses, readers see how suffering arises, why it persists, and how it can be ended, culminating in Nibbāna. Each chapter, introduced by Ven. Bodhi, follows the structure of the Four Noble Truths, offering a clear roadmap to understand and overcome the human predicament. The book emphasizes the universal relevance of the Buddha’s radical insights and guides us toward liberation from the cycle of rebirth, making it an invaluable resource for anyone seeking a concise yet profound overview of Early Buddhism.
By Bhikkhu Bodhi
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