In 1907, the German monk Ñaṇatiloka Mahathera published a groundbreaking little book that distilled the core teachings of the Buddha entirely from the Pali Canon. Now, over a century later, Ajahn Brahm - Cambridge-educated theoretical physicist turned Theravada monk of more than 50 years - has reimagined that classic for a modern audience.
The Word of the Buddha is not just another translation. It is a fresh rendering of the Buddha's own words, organized around the framework of the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path. Drawing from the suttas of the Pali Canon, Ajahn Brahm presents each teaching sentence by sentence rather than word by word, prioritizing clarity and lived meaning over scholarly convention. The result is a compact sourcebook that reads with a directness and force that early students of this work have described as both frightening and compelling - as if hearing the suttas for the very first time.
From dependent origination to the jhanas, from the doctrine of anatta to the gradual training, every major strand of the Buddha's teaching is faithfully represented here in the Buddha's own words. Key Pali terms are reconsidered with care - samadhi rendered as "stillness" rather than "concentration," for instance - reflecting Ajahn Brahm's decades of meditation mastery and strict monastic training under Ajahn Chah.
Whether you are new to Early Buddhism and want a reliable map of the territory, or a long-time practitioner looking to reconnect with the source texts in plain, powerful English, this book belongs on your shelf.
Approximately 26,000 words. Second edition, updated and revised 2025.