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1. Anuruddha Sutta.Preached by Anuruddha
Thera to Pańcakanga, the king's carpenter, at
Sāvatthi, on the conclusion of a meal given by him to the Elder and three
others. It explains the two kinds of emancipation of mind, the "boundless" and
the "vast," and the results of developing them, which produce birth among the
Brilliant Gods.
Abhiya-Kaccana, who was evidently one of
Anuruddha's companions on this occasion, asks him the reason for the difference
in degree of the brilliance of the gods; he is answered to his satisfaction.
M.iii.144-52.
2. Anuruddha Sutta. Records the incident of
Jālinī's visit to Anuruddha Thera, and her
unsuccessful efforts to tempt him with the joys of heaven. S. i.200.
3. Anuruddha Sutta. The Buddha explains to Anuruddha, in answer to his
questions, why beings are born as women. A.i.281.
4. Anuruddha Sutta. Two Suttas on how Sāriputta admonished Anuruddha
to give up boasting about his attainments and concentrate on amata-dhātu, and
how Anuruddha following the advice became an arahant. A.i.281-3.
5. Anuruddha Sutta.On the eight thoughts of a great
being (mahāpurisa vitakka).
Anuruddha had acquired seven of them and the Buddha paid him a special visit
to teach him the eighth, which brought him arahantship. Later the Buddha
repeated the sermon to the monks. A.iv.228ff.
6. Anuruddha Sutta. The Buddha explains to Anuruddha how women may be
born among the Manāpakāyikadevā.
A.iv.262ff.
Anuruddha Samyutta. The fifty-second section of the Samyutta Nikāya.
It forms the eighth section of the Mahāvagga, and contains accounts of incidents
connected with Anuruddha, his meditations in the Jetavana on the satipatthāna
and the benefits of their development, his admonition to the monks on the banks
of the Sutana River, his conversations with Sāriputta and Moggallāna in Sāketa
and in the Ambapāli Grove, his sermon in the Salalāgāra, his illness while
staying in Andhavana, and his accounts of how he came by his psychical powers,
etc. S. v.294ff.

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