Difference between revisions of "Khenpo Shenga"

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<noinclude><span class=TibUni16>[[མཁན་པོ་གཞན་དགའ།]]</span></noinclude><br>
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<noinclude>[[mkhan po gzhan dga']]</noinclude><br>
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<noinclude>[[Khenchen Zhenphen Chokyi Nangwa]]</noinclude><br>
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<noinclude><span class=TibUni16>[[མཁན་ཆེན་གཞན་ཕན་ཆོས་ཀྱི་སྣང་བ།]]</span></noinclude><br>
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<noinclude>[[mkhan chen gzhan phan chos kyi snang ba]]</noinclude><br>
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[[Image:shenga.jpg|frame|The Great Khenpo Shenga]]
 
===Short Biography===
 
===Short Biography===
'''Khenpo Shenga''', Shenpen Chökyi Nangwa (Tib: mkhan po gzhan dga'; gzhan phan chos kyi snang ba) 1871-1927
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'''Khenpo Shenga, Shenpen Chökyi Nangwa''' (1871-1927). The renowned scholar and adept Khenpo Shenga was the reincarnation of Gyalsé Shenpen Thayé, an influential Nyingma master of the early 19th century associated with the Longchen Nyingthik teachings and Dzogchen monastery. His predecessor's works greatly impacted Nyingma study and practice. Shenpen Thayé founded Dzogchen Monastery's Sri Singha Monastic College, a famed center of Nyingma scholarship. He helped establish an emphasis on monastic discipline within the Nyingma, which has historically been less grounded in monasticism than Tibet's other three lineages. He also gathered the Kama teachings, the Nyingma lineage's canonical scriptures, into one collection. Khenpo Shenga followed in his predecessor's footsteps by further strengthening the Nyingmapa traditions of scholarship and monastic discipline.
[[Image:shenga.jpg|frame|The Great Khenpo Shenga]]
 
The renowned scholar and adept Khenpo Shenga was the reincarnation of Gyalsé Shenpen Thayé, an influential Nyingma master of the early 19th century associated with the Longchen Nyingthik teachings and Dzogchen monastery. His predecessor's works greatly impacted Nyingma study and practice. Shenpen Thayé founded Dzogchen Monastery's Sri Singha Monastic College, a famed center of Nyingma scholarship. He helped establish an emphasis on monastic discipline within the Nyingma, which has historically been less grounded in monasticism than Tibet's other three lineages. He also gathered the Kama teachings, the Nyingma lineage's canonical scriptures, into one collection. Khenpo Shenga followed in his predecessor's footsteps by further strengthening the Nyingmapa traditions of scholarship and monastic discipline.
 
  
 
Khenpo Shenga’s main achievement was the large body of commentarial literature he composed. His most important works concern the Thirteen Great Treatises, texts composed by Indian Buddhist masters concerning core Buddhist topics, from the Vinaya to Madhyamaka. These treatises comprise the main curriculum of Nyingma monastic colleges. Khenpo Shenga's commentaries on these texts remain amongst the most widely studied texts in these institutions.
 
Khenpo Shenga’s main achievement was the large body of commentarial literature he composed. His most important works concern the Thirteen Great Treatises, texts composed by Indian Buddhist masters concerning core Buddhist topics, from the Vinaya to Madhyamaka. These treatises comprise the main curriculum of Nyingma monastic colleges. Khenpo Shenga's commentaries on these texts remain amongst the most widely studied texts in these institutions.
 
*<br>
 
*<br>
 
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<span class=TibUni16>འཕགས་ཡུལ་མཁས་པའི་དབང་ཕྱུག་ཟླ་བ་གྲགས། །</span><br>
འཕགས་ཡུལ་མཁས་པའི་དབང་ཕྱུག་ཟླ་བ་གྲགས། །
 
 
In the noble land of India you were the learned mighty Lord Chandrakirti<br>
 
In the noble land of India you were the learned mighty Lord Chandrakirti<br>
གངས་ལྗོངས་འཇམ་པའི་དབྱངས་དངོས་ཀུན་མཁྱེན་རྗེ། །
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<span class=TibUni16>གངས་ལྗོངས་འཇམ་པའི་དབྱངས་དངོས་ཀུན་མཁྱེན་རྗེ། །</span><br>
 
In the snowy land of Tibet you were the Omniscient Lord, Manjushri manifested in person,<br>
 
In the snowy land of Tibet you were the Omniscient Lord, Manjushri manifested in person,<br>
དབྱེར་མེད་ཐུགས་རྗེའི་ཡང་སྤྲུལ་དགེ་བའི་བཤེས། །
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<span class=TibUni16>དབྱེར་མེད་ཐུགས་རྗེའི་ཡང་སྤྲུལ་དགེ་བའི་བཤེས། །</span><br>
 
Your compassion again manifested as a spiritual guide, inseparable from them,<br>
 
Your compassion again manifested as a spiritual guide, inseparable from them,<br>
གཞན་ཕན་ཆོས་ཀྱི་སྣང་བར་གསོལ་བ་འདེབས།། །།
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<span class=TibUni16>གཞན་ཕན་ཆོས་ཀྱི་སྣང་བར་གསོལ་བ་འདེབས།། །།</span><br>
Shenphen Chökyi Nangwa (Khenpo Shenga), to you I pray!<br>
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Shenphen Chökyi Nangwa <small>''(Khenpo Shenga)''</small>, to you I pray!<br>
  
  
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===Main Lineages===
 
===Main Lineages===
*[[Longchen Nyingthig]]<br>
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*[[Nyingma Kama]]
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*[[Nyingthig Yazhi]]
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*[[Longchen Nyingthig]]
 
*[[Khandro Nyingthig]]
 
*[[Khandro Nyingthig]]
 
 
===Alternate Names & Spellings===
 
===Alternate Names & Spellings===
 
*[[Fill in the blanks]]<br>
 
*[[Fill in the blanks]]<br>
  
 
===Other Reference Sources===
 
===Other Reference Sources===
*[[Fill in the blanks]]<br>
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*Dharmachakra Translation Committee [[http://www.dharmachakra.net/upcoming.php]]
 
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*[[Middle Beyond Extremes]] by Maitreya, Ju Mipham, and Khenpo Shenga [http://www.snowlionpub.com/search.php?isbn=MIBEEX]<br>
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*Khenpo Shenga's commentary ([[dbus dang mtha’ rnam par ‘byed pa’i tshig le’ur bas pa’i mchan ‘grel]])[http://www.dharmachakra.net/download.php?file=Middle%20Beyond%20Extremes%20-%20Khenpo%20Shenga.pdf]
 
===Internal Links===
 
===Internal Links===
 
*[[Dzogchen Monastery]]<br>
 
*[[Dzogchen Monastery]]<br>
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===External Links===
 
===External Links===
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*Intro to the famous [[spyod ‘jug ‘mchan ‘grel]]; [http://www.rigpawiki.org/index.php?title=Annotated_Commentary_on_the_Bodhicharyavatara]
 
*[http://www.lotsawahouse.org/id82.html Khenpo Shenga Series on Lotsawa House]
 
*[http://www.lotsawahouse.org/id82.html Khenpo Shenga Series on Lotsawa House]
 
*[http://www.lotsawahouse.org/id83.html Biography of Khenpo Shenga on Lotsawa House]
 
*[http://www.lotsawahouse.org/id83.html Biography of Khenpo Shenga on Lotsawa House]
 
*[http://www.tbrc.org/cgi-bin/tbrcdatx?do=so&resource=P699 TBRC on Khenpo Shenga]
 
*[http://www.tbrc.org/cgi-bin/tbrcdatx?do=so&resource=P699 TBRC on Khenpo Shenga]
  
[[Category:kha]]
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[[Category:Key Terms]]
 
[[Category:Buddhist Masters]]
 
[[Category:Buddhist Masters]]
 
[[Category:Nyingma Masters]]
 
[[Category:Nyingma Masters]]
[[Category:Longchen Nyingthig]]
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[[Category:Dzogchen Masters]]
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[[Category:Longchen Nyingthig Masters]]
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[[Category:Rime Masters]]

Revision as of 00:12, 29 November 2008

མཁན་པོ་གཞན་དགའ།
mkhan po gzhan dga'
Khenchen Zhenphen Chokyi Nangwa
མཁན་ཆེན་གཞན་ཕན་ཆོས་ཀྱི་སྣང་བ།
mkhan chen gzhan phan chos kyi snang ba

The Great Khenpo Shenga

Short Biography[edit]

Khenpo Shenga, Shenpen Chökyi Nangwa (1871-1927). The renowned scholar and adept Khenpo Shenga was the reincarnation of Gyalsé Shenpen Thayé, an influential Nyingma master of the early 19th century associated with the Longchen Nyingthik teachings and Dzogchen monastery. His predecessor's works greatly impacted Nyingma study and practice. Shenpen Thayé founded Dzogchen Monastery's Sri Singha Monastic College, a famed center of Nyingma scholarship. He helped establish an emphasis on monastic discipline within the Nyingma, which has historically been less grounded in monasticism than Tibet's other three lineages. He also gathered the Kama teachings, the Nyingma lineage's canonical scriptures, into one collection. Khenpo Shenga followed in his predecessor's footsteps by further strengthening the Nyingmapa traditions of scholarship and monastic discipline.

Khenpo Shenga’s main achievement was the large body of commentarial literature he composed. His most important works concern the Thirteen Great Treatises, texts composed by Indian Buddhist masters concerning core Buddhist topics, from the Vinaya to Madhyamaka. These treatises comprise the main curriculum of Nyingma monastic colleges. Khenpo Shenga's commentaries on these texts remain amongst the most widely studied texts in these institutions.


འཕགས་ཡུལ་མཁས་པའི་དབང་ཕྱུག་ཟླ་བ་གྲགས། །
In the noble land of India you were the learned mighty Lord Chandrakirti
གངས་ལྗོངས་འཇམ་པའི་དབྱངས་དངོས་ཀུན་མཁྱེན་རྗེ། །
In the snowy land of Tibet you were the Omniscient Lord, Manjushri manifested in person,
དབྱེར་མེད་ཐུགས་རྗེའི་ཡང་སྤྲུལ་དགེ་བའི་བཤེས། །
Your compassion again manifested as a spiritual guide, inseparable from them,
གཞན་ཕན་ཆོས་ཀྱི་སྣང་བར་གསོལ་བ་འདེབས།། །།
Shenphen Chökyi Nangwa (Khenpo Shenga), to you I pray!


Literary Works[edit]

See Writings of Khenpo Shenga
http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php?title=Khenpo_Shenga&action=edit Edit

Main Teachers[edit]

Main Students[edit]

Main Lineages[edit]

Alternate Names & Spellings[edit]

Other Reference Sources[edit]

Internal Links[edit]

External Links[edit]