Collections of Minor Discourses
Collections of sutta texts outside the four main collections.
The Buddha as doctor; the monks as his heirs in Dhamma, not in material things.
The four basic requisites are easy to gain and blameless. To be content with them is a factor of the contemplative life.
For one knowing and seeing the four noble truths, there is the ending of suffering.
To see the four noble truths is to count as a true contemplative.
The rewards of associating with those who genuinely count as admirable friends.
Where a monk's craving takes birth.
Mother and father as the Brahmās and first teachers of their children.
The reciprocal ways in which monks and lay supporters benefit one another.
Monks who are and who are not the Buddha's true followers.
An extended metaphor for the dangers of "going with the flow."
What it means to have ardency and compunction.
When one is consummate in virtue, what more is to be done?
The qualities that entitle the Buddha to be called Tathāgata.