Difference between revisions of "Abhidharma"

From Rangjung Yeshe Wiki - Dharma Dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Mahayana category)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Asanga''' ([[thogs med]]). Asanga was born as the son of an exceedingly learned brahmin woman who was herself the rebirth of a monk blessed by [[Avalokiteshvara]]. Having mastered most of the scriptures of the [[Tripitaka]], before undertaking the study of the Transcendence of Wisdom he decided to take up on actual spiritual practice. Yet, after twelve years of meditation upon Maitreya he still had no signs of realization. Utterly dismayed, he walked away from his cave. Soon, he came across a half-dead bitch whose lower half was infested with worms. Great compassion arose in Asanga. To save the bitch without killing the worms, Asanga cut a strip of his own flesh to feed the worms and closing his eyes set on removing them from the bitch's wounds with his tongue, so as to not harm them. When, doing so, he could not reach them he opened his eyes he beheld not the bitch but Maitreya, radiant, displaying the marks and signs of a perfect Buddha.
+
[[Category:Mahayana]]
Asanga exclaimed, "O my sole father, all those years I have been constantly meditating upon you and calling you, yet you did not come!" [[Maitreya]] spoke: "I was in you presence continually, yet because of your karmic veils you were unable to see me. Now, through your cutting off your own flesh our of great compassion, your obscurations have been purified." Then Maitreya took Asanga for fifty years in [[Tushita]] heaven and gave to Asanga the Mahayana teachings. following which Asanga wrote down the [[Five Teachings of Maitreya]]. Later, having come back on earth he wrote many more treatises, performed countless miracles and converted to the Mahayana his younger brother, [[Vasubandhu]], himself one of the greatest sage and erudite of all times.
+
 
[[Category:Buddhist Masters]]
+
Abhidharma ([[chos mngon pa]]). One of the three parts of the [[Tripitaka]], the Words of the Buddha. Systematic teachings on metaphysics focusing on developing discriminating knowledge by analyzing elements of experience and investigating the nature of existing things. The chief commentaries on Abhidharma are the [[Abhidharma Kosha]] by [[Vasubhandu]] from the Hinayana perspective and the [[Abhidharma Samucchaya]] by [[Asanga]] from the Mahayana point of view.
[[Category:Indian Masters]]
 

Revision as of 04:29, 13 December 2005


Abhidharma (chos mngon pa). One of the three parts of the Tripitaka, the Words of the Buddha. Systematic teachings on metaphysics focusing on developing discriminating knowledge by analyzing elements of experience and investigating the nature of existing things. The chief commentaries on Abhidharma are the Abhidharma Kosha by Vasubhandu from the Hinayana perspective and the Abhidharma Samucchaya by Asanga from the Mahayana point of view.