PADMA-SAMBHAVA eighth century
Padma-Sambhava (T: Padma-’byun-gnas, also known as Guru Rinpoche [Precious Guru] and Padmakara) is one of the most renowned and revered figures in the religious history of Tibet: one of his many honorific titles is no less than ‘Second Buddha’, and it is partly as a result of his influence that Tant...
Saved in:
Published in | Thirty-Five Oriental Philosophers pp. 115 - 119 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , |
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
Routledge
|
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
Cover
Loading…
Summary: | Padma-Sambhava (T: Padma-’byun-gnas, also
known as Guru Rinpoche [Precious Guru] and
Padmakara) is one of the most renowned and
revered figures in the religious history of Tibet:
one of his many honorific titles is no less than
‘Second Buddha’, and it is partly as a result of his
influence that Tantric Buddhism took so firm a
hold in that country. He is said to have founded
the first Buddhist monastery in Tibet (bSam-yas),
and his followers formed a school of Buddhism
which has endured to the present, the rNying ma
pa (the Old Ones), more popularly called the Red
Hats. The members of this school hold that
Padma-Sambhava and other masters buried
sacred texts in secret locations, these buried texts
(T: gter-ma) to be found by ‘takers-out of the
treasures’ (T: gter-ston, pron. ter-ton) when they
are needed to help the world towards
enlightenment. (A taker-out is always a person of
the highest spiritual attainments, and never more
than one incarnates at a given time.) Again, the
rNying ma pa have preserved the doctrine of the
bardo, i.e. the experience a person undergoes
between death and the next reincarnation. The
Tibetan Book of the Dead (Bardo Thodol), on
which Padma-Sambhava wrote a commentary,
contains a detailed description of the experiences
of the individual on the bardo plane. In the present
context, however, the principal concern will be
the Mahayanist metaphysics and associated
yogas set out in Padma-Sambhava’s work The
Yoga of Knowing the Mind, called SelfLiberation, a sub-section of the work The
Profound Doctrine of Self-Liberation by
Meditation Upon the Peaceful and Wrathful
Deities (T: Zab chos zhi khro dgongs pa rang
grol), together with recommendations for
practice set out in certain gter-ma texts.1 |
---|---|
DOI: | 10.4324/9780203029350-20 |