sn 55.1
SN

The Cakkavatti Sutta (Cakkavatti Sutta)

First published: February 20, 2026

What you learn

The four factors that traditional texts describe as defining a stream-enterer: confidence in the Buddha, Dhamma, Sangha, and ethical conduct.

Where it sits

The opening sutta of the Sotapatti Samyutta, which collects teachings on stream-entry—the first stage of enlightenment.

Suggested use

Reflect on each factor. Where is your confidence strong? Where does doubt remain? What virtues are still broken or blemished?

Guidance

Start here. Read the original text in the other tabs.

SN 55.1 — The Wheel-Turner (Cakkavatti Sutta)

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Guidance (not part of the sutta)

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What this discourse is really about

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Learning spiritual practice initially feels overwhelming—meditation techniques, ethical guidelines, studying teachings, understanding concepts. But there comes a moment when something clicks. You're not just fumbling around anymore; you're actually practicing effectively. You still have much to learn, but you've crossed a threshold. You're not someone who can't practice—you're a practitioner who's getting better.

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The texts describe a threshold in spiritual development called "stream-entry." Spiritual awakening appears to require specific foundations to be established. Four specific qualities are identified that, when genuinely present, mark this crossing point. You're not just hoping the teachings might work—you know they do because you've tasted the results yourself.

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This isn't about blind faith or wishful thinking. It's about the kind of confidence that comes from direct experience—knowing something works because you've experienced the results. When these four foundations are solid, you've entered the stream that naturally flows toward complete awakening.

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Key teachings

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  • Confirmed confidence in the Buddha: Recognition based on experience that the Buddha's understanding and teaching method actually work for liberation
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  • Confirmed confidence in the Dhamma: The teachings aren't just philosophy—they're practical instructions that produce visible results when applied
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  • Confirmed confidence in the Sangha: The community of practitioners provides living proof that the path works and offers essential support for the journey
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  • Noble virtues: Ethical conduct that flows naturally from wisdom rather than rigid rule-following, creating the mental clarity needed for deeper insights
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  • Stream-entry threshold: A definitive shift where doubt about the path's effectiveness dissolves, making continued progress likely
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Common misunderstandings

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  • "This is about blind faith": These are actually evidence-based confidences that arise from seeing real results in your own experience
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  • "You need perfect virtue first": The virtues here are "unbroken" but not necessarily perfect—they're consistent enough to support clear seeing
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  • "Stream-entry is a dramatic mystical experience": It's more a quiet certainty settling in—you simply know the path works because you've seen it working
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Try this today

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  • Confidence inventory: Reflect on one way Buddhist practice has actually helped you—maybe more patience with family, or less anxiety. Notice how direct experience builds real confidence differently than belief
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  • Virtue check-in: Choose one ethical guideline and pay attention to how following it affects your mental clarity and peace throughout the day
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If this landed, read next

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  • SN 55.5 for more on how these factors develop in daily life
  • MN 48 for understanding what stream-entry actually feels like
  • AN 3.65 for how the three refuges connect to spiritual confidence
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Related Suttas