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Mundane Mother Deities. One of the Eight Sadhana Teachings. Female divinities manifested out of dharmadhatu but appearing in ways that correspond to mundane appearances through the interrelationship between the mundane world and the channels, winds, and essences within our body. They have both an ultimate and relative aspect. The chief figure in this mandala is Chemchok Heruka, the wrathful form of Buddha Samantabhadra in the form known as Ng�ndzok Gyalpo, the King of True Perfection. See [[ma mo]] [RY] | Mundane Mother Deities. One of the Eight Sadhana Teachings. Female divinities manifested out of dharmadhatu but appearing in ways that correspond to mundane appearances through the interrelationship between the mundane world and the channels, winds, and essences within our body. They have both an ultimate and relative aspect. The chief figure in this mandala is Chemchok Heruka, the wrathful form of Buddha Samantabhadra in the form known as Ng�ndzok Gyalpo, the King of True Perfection. See [[ma mo]] [RY] | ||
[[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:ja]] | [[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:ja]] |
Latest revision as of 21:20, 4 May 2021
This is the RYI Dictionary content as presented on the site http://rywiki.tsadra.org/, which is being changed fundamentally and will become hard to use within the GoldenDict application. If you are using GoldenDict, please either download and import the rydic2003 file from DigitalTibetan (WayBack Machine version as the site was shut down in November 2021).
Or go directly to http://rywiki.tsadra.org/ for more upcoming features.
འཇིག་རྟེན་མ་མོ
Mundane Mother Deities. One of the Eight Sadhana Teachings. Female divinities manifested out of dharmadhatu but appearing in ways that correspond to mundane appearances through the interrelationship between the mundane world and the channels, winds, and essences within our body. They have both an ultimate and relative aspect. The chief figure in this mandala is Chemchok Heruka, the wrathful form of Buddha Samantabhadra in the form known as Ng�ndzok Gyalpo, the King of True Perfection. See ma mo [RY]