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Tibetan | |
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Wylie | rgyud gsum |
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English Definition | The three integerations; the three principles. A. {rgyun chags gsum/} The three regular principles of practice at a teaching session:\n1. {phyag 'tshal ba/} making prostration\n2. {mdo 'don pa/} reciting a [sūtra]\n3. {bsngo ba byed pa/} making dedication. B. {sa skya pa'i lam 'bras ltar rgyud gsum skyong tshul/} The integration of the actual path and fruit practice according to Sakya tradition, being the secret mantra vajrayana practice drawn into three principles:\n1. {kun gzhi rgyu rgyud la 'khor 'das dbyer med kyi lta ba skyong ba/} maintaining the view of the inseparability of [saṁsara] and [nirvāṇa] within the fundamental mental continuum (kun-gzhi rgyu-rgyud) as the causal principle.\n2. {lus thabs rgyud la dbang bzhi dang 'brel ba'i lam bsgom pa/} meditating on the paths connected to the fourfold initiations upon one's body as the method principle.\n3. {mthar thug 'bras bu'i rgyud la sku lnga ye shes lnga'i yon tan 'char ba/} artaining the qualities of the five bodies and five primordial wisdoms at the end as the resultant principle. |
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