Madhyama Āgama (MA)
The Chinese parallel of the Majjhima Nikāya, believed to stem from the Sarvāstivāda school (Taishō no. 26). A growing selection of its 222 discourses is available in English.
- MA11: The Rock Salt Parable
- MA12: Vāṣpa
- MA13: Crossings
- MA15: Intention
- MA17: Gāminī
- MA25: Water Parables
- MA29: Mahākauṣṭhila
- MA41: The Prominent Man Hastaka (2)
- MA42: What Purpose
- MA43: Don’t Think
- MA44: Mindfulness
- MA45: Conscience and Modesty
- MA46: Conscience and Modesty (2)
- MA47: Precepts
- MA48: Precepts (2)
- MA49: Veneration
- MA50: Veneration (2)
- MA51: The Origin
- MA55: Nirvāṇa
- MA56: Meghiya
- MA57: A Teaching for the Monks
- MA58: The Seven Treasures
- MA72: The Legend of King Dīrghāyu
- MA73: The Gods
- MA74: Eight Thoughts
- MA75: The Pure Way to the Imperturbable
- MA76: [Ugracelā]
- MA77: The Three Clansmen of Saketa
- MA78: Brahmā’s Invitation to the Buddha
- MA79: The Greater Gods
- MA80: The Rough Cloth
- MA82: Crickets
- MA83: A Senior Elder’s Drowsiness
- MA84: Thornless
- MA85: The Genuine Person
- MA92: The Analogy of the Blue and White Lotus Flowers
- MA95: Abiding in Qualities
- MA96: Not Having
- MA101: Progressive Mental States
- MA106: Conceptions
- MA127: Fields of Merit
- MA137: The World
- MA139: The Path of Calming
- MA140: The Extreme
- MA146: Parable of the Elephant’s Footprint
- MA153: Sugandika
- MA159: Agrahana
- MA176: Dhyāna Practitioners
- MA186: Inquiry
- MA204: Raṃbhaka
- MA210: The Nun Dharmadinnā