Itivuttaka | This was said by the Buddha
- Introduction
The Group of Ones
- Iti 1 Abandon greed, and you’re guaranteed non-return.
- Iti 2 Abandon aversion, and you’re guaranteed non-return.
- Iti 3 Abandon delusion, and you’re guaranteed non-return.
- Iti 4 Abandon anger, and you’re guaranteed non-return.
- Iti 5 Abandon contempt, and you’re guaranteed non-return.
- Iti 6 Abandon conceit, and you’re guaranteed non-return.
- Iti 7 When the mind, cleansed of passion for the All, abandons it, you are capable of putting an end to stress.
- Iti 8 When the mind, cleansed of passion for conceit, abandons it, you are capable of putting an end to stress.
- Iti 9 When the mind, cleansed of passion for greed, abandons it, you are capable of putting an end to stress.
- Iti 10—13 When the mind, cleansed of passion for aversion… delusion… anger… contempt, abandons it, you are capable of putting an end to stress.
- Iti 14 Hindered by the hindrance of ignorance, people go wandering and transmigrating on for a long, long time.
- Iti 15 Fettered with the fetter of craving, beings go wandering and transmigrating on for a long, long time.
- Iti 16 Appropriate attention as the prime internal factor to help those in training.
- Iti 17 Friendship with admirable people as the prime external factor to help those in training.
- Iti 18 Schism in the Sangha leads to the detriment and unhappiness of many beings, both human and divine.
- Iti 19 Concord in the Sangha leads to the welfare and happiness of many beings, both human and divine.
- Iti 20 Corrupt-mindedness leads to rebirth in the planes of deprivation.
- Iti 21 Clear-mindedness leads to rebirth in a heavenly world.
- Iti 22 “Acts of merit” is a synonym for what is blissful, desirable, pleasing, endearing, charming. The Buddha recalls the results he himself has experienced from doing meritorious deeds.
- Iti 23 Heedfulness with regard to skillful qualities keeps both kinds of benefit secure: benefit in this live and benefit in lives to come.
- Iti 24 In this course of transmigrating, one person would leave behind a heap of bones as large as a mountain—if there were someone to collect the bones and the collection were not destroyed.
- Iti 25 A person who tells a deliberate lie is capable of any evil deed.
- Iti 26 If you knew, as the Buddha did, the results of giving and sharing, you wouldn’t eat without having shared.
- Iti 27 Goodwill far outshines all other ways of making merit.
The Group of Twos
- Iti 28 Not guarding the doors of the sense faculties and knowing no moderation in food leads to suffering in this life and the next.
- Iti 29 Guarding the doors of the sense faculties and knowing moderation in food leads to ease in this life and the next.
- Iti 30 Two things that cause remorse.
- Iti 31 Two things that cause lack of remorse.
- Iti 32 A person of evil habits and evil views is as if in hell in this lifetime.
- Iti 33 A person of auspicious habits and auspicious views is as if in heaven in this lifetime.
- Iti 34 To lack ardency and compunction makes you incapable of unbinding.
- Iti 35 The holy life is lived for the purpose of restraint and abandoning.
- Iti 36 The holy life is lived for the purpose of direct knowledge and full comprehension.
- Iti 37 A sense of urgency and appropriate exertion bring ease here-and-now, and lead to the ending of the effluents.
- Iti 38 Two thoughts that often occur to the Buddha as he delights in non-ill will and seclusion.
- Iti 39 Two Dhamma sequences: see evil as evil, and become released from it.
- Iti 40 Ignorance leads to lack of shame and compunction.
- Iti 41 The rewards of noble discernment.
- Iti 42 Shame and compunction safeguard the world.
- Iti 43 The existence of an unfabricated dimension allows for the escape from fabrication.
- Iti 44 Two unbinding properties: with fuel remaining and with no fuel remaining.
- Iti 45 Live enjoying aloofness, delighting in aloofness, inwardly committed to awareness-tranquility, not neglecting jhāna, endowed with clear-seeing insight, and frequenting empty buildings.
- Iti 46 Live with the trainings as your reward, with discernment uppermost, with release the essence, and with mindfulness the governing principle.
- Iti 47 Be wakeful, mindful, alert, centered, sensitive, clear, and calm. And there you should, at the appropriate times, see clearly into skillful mental qualities.
- Iti 48 Two types of behavior that lead to hell.
- Iti 49 How those with vision differ from those who adhere to craving for becoming and those who slip past into craving for non-becoming.
The Group of Threes
- Iti 50 Three roots of what is unskillful.
- Iti 51 Three properties: form, formlessness, cessation.
- Iti 52 Three feelings.
- Iti 53 How the three types of feeling should be viewed.
- Iti 54 Three searches: for sensuality, for becoming, for a holy life.
- Iti 55 Three searches: for sensuality, for becoming, for a holy life.
- Iti 56 Three effluents.
- Iti 57 Three effluents.
- Iti 58 Three cravings.
- Iti 59 Three qualities that lead beyond Māra’s domain.
- Iti 60 Three grounds for meritorious activity.
- Iti 61 Three eyes: the eye of flesh, the divine eye, and the eye of discernment.
- Iti 62 The noble attainments described in terms of three faculties.
- Iti 63 Three time periods and the importance of comprehending signs.
- Iti 64 Three kinds of misconduct.
- Iti 65 Three kinds of good conduct.
- Iti 66 Three kinds of cleanliness: bodily, verbal, and mental.
- Iti 67 Three forms of sagacity: bodily, verbal, and mental.
- Iti 68 One whose passion, aversion, and delusion are abandoned is freed from Māra’s power.
- Iti 69 To abandon passion, aversion, and delusion is like crossing over the dangers of the ocean.
- Iti 70 The Buddha reports having seen, for himself, beings reborn in planes of deprivation in line with their wrong views and evil actions.
- Iti 71 The Buddha reports having seen, for himself, beings reborn in good destinations in line with their right views and good actions.
- Iti 72 Three properties for escape: from sensuality, from form, and from whatever is fabricated and dependently co-arisen.
- Iti 73 Formless phenomena are more peaceful than forms; cessation, more peaceful than formless phenomena.
- Iti 74 Three types of sons and daughters (when compared to their parents): of heightened birth, of similar birth, and of lowered birth.
- Iti 75 Three types of people: one like a cloud without rain, one who rains locally, and one who rains everywhere.
- Iti 76 Aspiring to three forms of bliss, wise people should guard their virtue.
- Iti 77 This body falls apart; consciousness is subject to fading; all acquisitions are inconstant, stressful, subject to change.
- Iti 78 Like attracts like. It’s in accordance with their properties—either low or admirable—that beings come together and associate with one another.
- Iti 79 Three things lead to the falling away of a monk in training.
- Iti 80 Three kinds of unskillful thinking.
- Iti 81 The dangers of letting your mind be overcome by the fact that you either receive offerings or don’t receive offerings.
- Iti 82 Three occasions on which devas give voice to joy over the behavior of human beings.
- Iti 83 Five omens that appear when a deva is about to pass away, and the encouragement that other devas give at that time.
- Iti 84 Three people who appear for the benefit of the world.
- Iti 85 The rewards of focusing on the foulness of the body, of establishing mindfulness of breathing to the fore, and of focusing on the inconstancy of all fabrications.
- Iti 86 Practicing the Dhamma in accordance with the Dhamma.
- Iti 87 Three kinds of unskillful thinking; three kinds of skillful thinking.
- Iti 88 Three inside stains.
- Iti 89 Conquered by three forms of false Dhamma, Devadatta was incurably doomed to deprivation.
- Iti 90 Three supreme objects of confidence: the Buddha, the Dhamma, and the Saṅgha.
- Iti 91 Why reasonable people take up the life of alms-going, and the dangers that lie in wait if they do not train their minds.
- Iti 92 To see the Dhamma is to see the Buddha and to be close to him, even when physically far away.
- Iti 93 The three fires: of passion, aversion, and delusion.
- Iti 94 On having consciousness neither externally scattered and diffused, nor internally positioned.
- Iti 95 Three ways in which devas obtain sensual pleasures.
- Iti 96 The yoke of sensuality and the yoke of becoming.
- Iti 97 Admirable virtue, admirable qualities, and admirable discernment defined.
- Iti 98 Two kinds of gifts, sharing, and assistance: in material things and in Dhamma.
- Iti 99 The three knowledges that characterize a brahman in the Buddha’s sense of the word.
The Group of Fours
- Iti 100 The Buddha as doctor; the monks as his heirs in Dhamma, not in material things.
- Iti 101 The four basic requisites are easy to gain and blameless. To be content with them is a factor of the contemplative life.
- Iti 102 For one knowing and seeing the four noble truths, there is the ending of stress (dukkha).
- Iti 103 To see the four noble truths is to count as a true contemplative.
- Iti 104 The rewards of associating with those who genuinely count as admirable friends.
- Iti 105 Where a monk’s craving takes birth.
- Iti 106 Mother and father as the Brahmās and first teachers of their children.
- Iti 107 The reciprocal ways in which monks and lay supporters benefit one another.
- Iti 108 Monks who are and who are not the Buddha’s true followers.
- Iti 109 An extended metaphor for the dangers of “going with the flow.”
- Iti 110 What it means to have ardency and compunction.
- Iti 111 When one is consummate in virtue, what more is to be done?
- Iti 112 The qualities that entitle the Buddha to be called Tathāgata.