Difference between revisions of "འགོག་པའི་བདེན་པ།"

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(Created page with 'adapted from "Shangpa Masters" on [http://www.paldenshangpa.org/ShangpaMasters.html] Sangye Tönpa Tsondrü Senge (1213-1285) was born to a Bonpo family. At his birth, the adept…')
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adapted from "Shangpa Masters" on [http://www.paldenshangpa.org/ShangpaMasters.html]
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Sangye Tönpa Tsondrü Senge (1213-1285) was born to a Bonpo family. At his birth, the adept Amogha flew down from the sky to offer wondrous prophecies about the new born. He wanted to practice Dharma from a very young age and became a monk at the age of thirteen. He took his vows from the famous Lama Tsarirepa and he was given the name Tsondrü Senge. But Sangye Tönpa was able to serve Tsarirepa only for a short time before he died. After studying with several Lamas, he felt the need to receive teachings from a genuine secret yogi. He set out to meet Lama [[Rigongpa]] who was recommended by both Lama Zhupa Nakpo and the teacher Dokton. Sangye Tönpa then became the sole lineage holder of Rigongpa's oral instructions. He received the Dream Yoga, Inner Heat, Illusory Form passed down through all the lineage masters from Vajradara to Rigongpa. He perfected very powerful Dream Yoga and was able to perform the Dream Yoga practices of training, multiplication, emanation and transformation, a feat even the Lamas of the lineage could not match. He had the vision of [[Vajrayogini]], who gave him both common and extraordinary siddhis and gained the siddhis to transform foul-tasting barley beer into the finest flavor, multiply its quantity and change its nutrition and potency. All those who drank his transformed beer were cured of illness, evil spirits and their practice immediately improved. Sangye Tönpa had a vision of the five deity mandala of [[Chakrasamvara]] and practiced virtue by reading and writing as much dharma as possible. He set up both a school and meditation center. To his patrons both men and women, Sangye Tönpa propounded the vinaya code of discipline and oral teachings from both the new and old traditions. Because of his pervasive activity he gathered many disciples from China and India. Among his disciples Shantönpa and Kedrup Zhonnu were the best. Before his death Sangye Tönpa's disciples asked what they should do, and he replied, "Do not cling to fame, glory or happiness in either this life, or in future lives, don't get mixed up in the eight worldly concerns. Instead go to the mountains and practice Dharma! The extremes of mental imputation do not need to be cleared from the outside, rather the qualities of enlightenment will arise from within." He kept practicing, teaching and giving empowerments until his death. According to his Lama Rigongpa's last wish Sangye Tönpa left for Rigong to die near the relics of his lama.
 
 
 
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[[Category:Buddhist Masters]]
 
[[Category:Shangpa Kagyu]]
 

Revision as of 12:49, 23 June 2009

'gog pa'i bden pa འགོག་པའི་བདེན་པ།


  • the truth of cessation [IW]
  • the truth of cessation; truth of cessation (of suffering).

Def. Jamgon Kongtrul:

༼ ཆོས་མངོན་པ་ལས།
འགོག་པའི་བདེན་པ་གང་ཞེ་ན།
མཚན་ཉིད་དང།
ཟབ་པ་དང།
བརྡ་དང།
དོན་དམ་པ་དང།
ཡོངས་སུ་མ་རྫོགས་པ་དང།
ཡོངས་སུ་རྫོགས་པ་དང།
རྒྱན་མེད་པ་དང།
རྒྱན་དང་བཅས་པ་དང།
ལྷག་མ་དང་བཅས་པ་དང།
ལྷག་མ་མེད་པ་དང།
ཁྱད་པར་འཕགས་པ་དང།
རྣམ་གྲངས་ཀྱིས་ཀྱང་འགོག་པའི་བདེན་པ་བསྟན་པར་རིག་པར་བྱ།། ༽

- chos mngon pa las/ 'gog pa'i bden pa gang zhe na/ mtshan nyid dang/ zab pa dang/ brda dang/ don dam pa dang/ yongs su ma rdzogs pa dang/ yongs su rdzogs pa dang/ rgyan med pa dang/ rgyan dang bcas pa dang/ lhag ma dang bcas pa dang/ lhag ma med pa dang/ khyad par 'phags pa dang/ rnam grangs kyis kyang 'gog pa'i bden pa bstan par rig par bya. RY

  • truth of cessation (of suffering) [RB]
  • the truth of cessation [3rd of the Four noble truths. [R] IW
  • the truth of cessation [one of the four noble truths, rang rgyu lam la brten nas that which is to be abandoned, the source of suffering karma and the kleshas is made never to arise te spangs pa. As for the cessation that cuts the continuity of the cause and fruition of samsara. That which is to be attained is like health without sickness. Since one is not deceived about the viewpoint of the noble ones, that is the noble truth of cessation.] [IW]