Nine Yana (Teaching on the Nine Vehicles according to the Buddhist Philosophy)
Book Specification
Item Code: | NAD727 |
Author: | Khenpo Chimed Rinpoche |
Publisher: | ADITYA PRAKASHAN |
Edition: | 2012 |
Pages: | 241 |
Cover: | Paperback |
Other Details | 8.5 inch X 5.5 inch |
Weight | 350 gm |
Book Description
ISBN: 9788177421217
Khenpo Chimed Rinpoche is an eminent professor of the Nyingmapa lineage. His charisma associated with an immense heart and a tremendous sense of humour give him the capacity to guide nowadays thousands of students and disciples worldwide.
The original version of this book is a transcription of teachings whereby Khenpo Rinpoche presented the nine vehicles (Skt.Yana) within the gradual path that leads to Dzogchen, namely the peak of the spiritual realization. Here we have reached out the very heart of the highest buddhist philosophy that is presented in a very accessible and lively way meant for the public at large as well as advanced practitioners.
By introducing us to the nine vehicles of the Nyingmapa tradition, the purpose of Khenpo Chimed Rinpoche is to bring us closer to the quintessence of the Buddhas's teachings as well as to major commentaries upon them from India, Tibet or Nepal.
Moreover, this book offers many spicy and amazing anecdotes regarding the life of great Indian and Tibetan masters from the past, which will doubtlessly be of great delight for the readers and a daily source of inspiration and reflection.
The "Nine yana" is a guide, a spiritual friend, and we wish it will be a cause of enlightenment for all beings!
Presenting the nine yana of the Nyingmapa Buddhist tradition, the ambition of Khenpo Chimed Rinpoche is to give the quintessence of the Buddha speech as well as the major commentaries of this speech during ages in the ancient India, Nepal, and Tibet. This book offers us also many amazing and edifying anecdotes about the life of the great masters and yogis that will delight the reader and nourish his daily thoughts. This teaching even approached basically, for the simple pleasure of discovery, will give incredible benefits.
This book is the transcription of a cycle of nine oral teachings given in Tibetan language, during the month of September 2008, in Strasbourg, France. Khenpo Rinpoche presented the 9 yana of the progressive spiritual journey that leads to Dzogchen, the pinacle of the spiritual realization. We have touched at the very heart of the highest level of Buddhist philosophy presented here in a very lively and accessible way and aimed at the public at large as well as for advanced practitioners. We also hope that this book may help anyone who reads it: may it become a spiritual friend, a guide, and be a cause of Enlightenment for all beings!
May it be beneficial to all sentient beings!
May the Great tradition of Kbenpo Shantarakshita, Lobpim Padmasambhava and Dharma King Trisong Detsen increase and spread throughout the three realms of the World. May the appearance of the Three Jewels and the mind stream of beings remain inseparable, and bring sublime well-being throughout the three times.
The Tradition of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism
The Lineage of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhist teaching is classified into three different types: The long transmission (Ring Gyu) of the extensive karma. The short transmission (Nye Gyu) of the profound terma. And the extremely short transmission of the pure Vision (Dag Nang) when teachings were directly received by the masters in pure vislon from gurus and deities.
The Dzogchen Nyingthig Lineage of the Long transmission (Kama)
According to the Nine Yana of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, the highest teaching is known as the Great Perfectio (Dzogpa Chenpo or Atiyoga), which is the direct method for realizing the nature of mind and for attaining Buddhahood in this very body. Thus the Dzogchen yingthig, as a teaching, fundamentally deals with the pression of the doctrine of the Three Perfect Bodies vas) of a Fully Awakened being and this tradition has been transmitted through the three lineages of spiritual transmission as follows:
a) The Wisdom mind lineage of the Buddha
This spiritual transmission is from the primordial Buddha Samantabhadra (Kuntuzangpo) of Dharmakaya to five self- manifesting Buddhas of the Sambogkaya. In this Lineage, the teacher transmits the teachings to the disciple, without using words or any other indications, only with his all pervading Wisdom mind.
b) The Symbolic Lineage of the Awareness-Holders (Vidyadhara)
The Sambogakaya Buddha Vajrasattva (Dorje Sempa) transmitted all empowerments and teachings to the Nirmanakaya Prahevajra (Garab Dorje), the first human master. It was from Prahevajra that this transmission was passed on to Manjushrimitra, Shri Simha, ]nanasura, Mahapandita Vimalamitra and Guru Padmasambhava (Guru Rinpoche). Here, an Awareness-Holder, a being who has direct and pure vision of the nature of reality, manifests to a receptive disciple and transmits the teachings by means of pronouncing a mantra or showing a sign.
c) The Oral Lineage of the Realized beings
Here the complete verbal empowerments and instructions are transmitted by words of mouth from the masters to the disciple. This lineage of spiritual transmission in Tibet initially spread through two traditions in the beginning at the early part of the ninth century. One tradition originated from Mahapandita Vimalamitra and is known as the "Virna Nyingthig". The other tradition originated from Guru Padmasambhava and is known as the "Khandro Nyin jthig". Then, it was later that both these innermost Essence transmission met in Kunkhyen Longchen Rabjampa, from whom the uninterrupted oral transmission of these teachings have extended until the present day.
The Short Transmission of the Terma Tradition
The Terma Teachings are well known to have six lineages, since they possess three special Lineages over and above-mentioned Lineages. These are the Lineage empowered by enlightened aspirations, the lineage of prophetically declared spiritual succession, and the lineage of the dakinis' seal of entrustment. A more detailed description of these lineages can be found in Kyabje Dudjom Rinpoche's The Fundamental and History of the Nyingma School of the Tibetan Buddhism (With the English translation by Gyurme Dorjee and Matthew Kapstein and published by Wisdom Publication).
These Terma teachings were concealed mainly by Guru Rinpoche and his spiritual consort Yeshe Tsogyal, to be revealed at the time most appropriate for their discovery by prophesized "Treasure Revealers" (Tertons), who are themselves incarnations of realized disciples of Guru Rinpoche. Guru Rinpoche first formulated the secret teachings by showing the method of attaining perfection (drub-t'ha) through the tantra, the method of attaining the core techniques (rnen-ngag) through perfection, and instruction on how to put these core techniques into practice (lag-len), with the blessings (rnon-larn), the authority of initiation (wang-kur), credentials of authority (te-gya), future prophecy (lung-ten), and so on. Those secret teachings were then concealed in small boxes of terma. Furthermore Terma teachings (tercho) can be classified into three main types:
1) Lama
The peaceful and wrathful sadhanas on Guru Rinpoche, usually divided up into outer, inner, secret and innermost secret cycles;
2) Dzogchen
Teachings on Ati-yoga (DzogpcChenpo), and
3) Thugje Chenpo (La Dzog Tuk Sum)
Sadhanas of the great compassionate one, Avalokiteshvara.
These Dharma Treasures (Terchos) are the teachings which possess the "warm breath" of Guru Rinpoche himself. As there are nocontaminations and errors in them, so they are extremely powerful, they have almost no obstructions for the practices, their accomplishments are easy to attain, and their fruits are swiftly achieved.
The Dzogchen Longchen Nyingthig Lineage of the Extremely Short Transmission of pure Visions (Dag Nang)
It was in the eighteenth century that the spiritual master Rigzin Rangjung Dorjee Jigme Lingpa (Who was the combined emanation of the Mahapandita Vimalamitra, King Tritsong Detsen and Gyelse Lharje, 1729-1798), received the complete Dzogchen Nyingthig teachings from Manjushrimitra, Humkara, Guru Rinpoche, Yeshe Tsogyal, Vimalamitia and Longchen Rabjampa, through the three lineages of Wisdom Mind, Symbolic and Oral transmissions, in the state of pure visions. In these visions, he saw Longchen Rabjampa three times and received his blessings of body, speech and mind. Thus, he became inseparable from the spiritual Master and attained the realization of the Great Perfection. These Dharma Treasures (Terchos), which were collected into nine volumes, became his own Mind Terma and came to be known as the renowned "Longchen Nyingthig" lineage. His disciples were scattered in all different schools of Tibetan Buddhism.
After his passing away, the "Longchen Nyingthig" lineage was propagated through his two main disciples: Jigmey Thinley Woser (the first Dodrupchen, 1745-1821) and Jigmey Gyalwai Nyugu (1765-1843). His incarnation included: Do Khyentse Yeshe Dorjee (1800-1866), as his body incarnation; Patrul Jigmey Chokyi Wangpo 0800- 1887), as his speech incarnation; and Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo (1820-1892), as his mind incarnation. Now day the 'Dzogchen Nyingthig" and the "Longchen Nyingthig" are known as Earlier and Later Nyingthig traditions respectively.
Dedication and thanks | XI |
Foreword | XIII |
Introduction | XV |
The Buddha's teaching | 1 |
Investigation and analysis | 4 |
Trust and devotion | 5 |
Eighty four thousands stanzas, nine «vehicles» | 7 |
The three pillars | 9 |
Causal vehicle and fruition vehicle | 10 |
Sutrayana and Vajrayana | 11 |
Summary table | 12 |
Eight vehi :fes that conduct to the peak | 12 |
Three circles | 13 |
The nine yana | 17 |
How can we integrate the yana into our daily life | 20 |
Classification by understanding levels | 22 |
Four baskets, eighty-four thousands stanzas | 23 |
The three sacred things. | 24 |
Shravakayana, the yana of the hearers | 27 |
The mind of the hearer | 27 |
Etymology | 28 |
The six major linking points | 28 |
The three teachings about the Four Noble Truths | 31 |
Causality panern to explain Samsara | 33 |
Causality panern to explain Nirvana | 34 |
The four subdivisions of the Four Noble Truths | 35 |
Five categories of vows | 42 |
Nine stages of samatha | 44 |
Metaphors related to the sarnatha's stages | 46 |
Pratyekabuddhayana, the yana of the «self-Buddha» | 51 |
The proper state of mind to receive the teachings | 51 |
The path of «self-Buddha» | 52 |
A spiritual desert | 52 |
Etymology | 53 |
The six major linking points | 53 |
The 12 links of interdependant origination at the outer level | 53 |
The 12 links of interdependant origination at the inner level | 54 |
The Four Noble Truths under the light of the twelve links of interdependant origination… | 59 |
Suffering arising and eliminating | 59 |
Two types ofPratyekabuddhas | 61 |
Deer park | 61 |
Mudra, a sacred gesture to realise the mind | 62 |
Differences and similarities between Pratyekabuddhas and Shravakas | 63 |
Mahayana, the bodhisattvayana | 64 |
Aspiration Bodhicitta and application Bodhicitta | 64 |
The Mahayana, the last of the three rising vehicles through emanation | 64 |
Meaning of Mahayana | 65 |
Seven features of the Mahayana | 65 |
Like a never extinguished nuclear station engine | 69 |
Essence of a Bodhisattva | 69 |
Etymology | 69 |
The six major linking points | 70 |
Two truths | 71 |
Relative truth, the expression of consciousness within misunderstanding | 71 |
Absolute truth, the expression of emptiness | 72 |
The view during the meditation stage | 72 |
The view during the subsequent stage | 73 |
Emptiness accordin to the madhyamakavatara by Candrakirti | 74 |
Root misdeeds of a Bodhisattva | 76 |
The 37 factors of Enlightenment | 79 |
The four "skills" of stabilizing the attention | 79 |
The four perfect giving ups | 79 |
The four grounds | 81 |
The six paramitas | 84 |
Kriya Tantra, the yana of ritual action | 86 |
Renouncement and non-self. | 86 |
The eight extremes and the four immeasurables | 86 |
Three purities | 87 |
Integration process in the three yana | 88 |
Difference between outer and inner Tantra | 89 |
Difference between Sutra and Tantra | 90 |
The four reasons that makes Vajrayana a superior path | 90 |
The tantric consort | 92 |
The four qualities of disciples | 92 |
Introduction to the nature of mind | 93 |
The Kriya Tantra, the yana of ritual action | 94 |
The six major linking points | 95 |
The non-existence of good and bad | 97 |
The king-to-subject-like relationship with the deity | 9 |
Difference between the Bodhisattva of Sutras and practitioners of the first Tantra | 99 |
The four being-as-it -is | 100 |
The subject/object relationship | 101 |
Charya Tantra, the yana of the behaviour | 109 |
The specificity of Charya Tantra | 110 |
Etymology | 110 |
The six linking points | 110 |
The five prajna empowerments | 111 |
Meditation with and without sign | 114 |
Out of this letter, let's make another one! | 115 |
A fully justified secret | 116 |
At the crossroads: outer and inner yoga | 118 |
Towards the very deepest one | 119 |
Personal practice makes the difference | 119 |
What does deep mean? | 119 |
Deep for one and not deep for another | 120 |
An infinite number of paths for infinity of beings | 120 |
Like beggars collecting as much as possible | 121 |
Practitioners suffering from three kinds of loss | 122 |
Like molten metal | 122 |
Precepts of Kadampa masters | 122 |
The eighty prayer forms of a Bodhisattva | 123 |
The way we go to bed | 123 |
The tenth yana, the yana of great spontaneity! | 123 |
Yoga Tantra, the union yana | 125 |
A quotation of Tsongkapa | 125 |
The early morning positive thought | 126 |
Everybody except my neighbour | 127 |
The difference between a holy person and an ordinary person | 127 |
Inner conversion | 128 |
The six linking points | 129 |
The three levels of the nine progressive yana | 129 |
Being in the excellence of thought | 130 |
Etymology | 130 |
The five ernpowermems of the disciple | 130 |
Saying good bye to Samsara | 133 |
The vajra master empowerment | 135 |
The four seals | 142 |
Holding the vajra of the five families | 143 |
Maha yoga, the yana of the great union | 144 |
The three inner Tantra | 145 |
The sound of the drilling machine | 145 |
Vajra sisters and brothers | 146 |
Giving up pride | 146 |
Sitting on the floor | 147 |
Like a wolf in a sheepfold | 148 |
Vajra pride | 148 |
Conflicting emotions related to the four lineages | 148 |
Foreword about the three inner Tantra | 150 |
Father Tantra, mother Tantra and non-dual Tantra | 151 |
Introduction to Rigpa | 152 |
The wisdom of the five dhyani Buddhas | 152 |
The nature of the mind is emptiness | 153 |
Liberation within one of the three bardos. | 153 |
Rainbow body of great transfer and small transfer | 153 |
Five upper features. | 154 |
Meaning of the term "secret mantra" | 155 |
Affixing the three seals. | 157 |
Path as unfolding of the base. | 158 |
The three ways for wisdom to manifest | 159 |
Three yogas associated to the three poisons | 159 |
Two specials truths | 159 |
Etymology | 160 |
The six linking points | 160 |
Sevenfold cycle of the absolute. | 161 |
Breaking out the stream of Samsara | 165 |
Gametes, winds and consciousness | 165 |
The painful bardo of dying | 166 |
Kyerim. A way to stop re-birthlng. | 166 |
Anu Yoga, the Yana that follows the Yana of great union | 168 |
Being in the Vajrayana pure vision to be able to follow the tpachings | 168 |
Keepi 19 the connection | 169 |
Anu Yoga: main features | 171 |
Etymology | 172 |
The six linking points | 172 |
The genuine secret empowerment | 173 |
A dog can not judge a lion. | 175 |
The "tchang" drinker | 175 |
When Milarepa met Marpa | 175 |
Do Khyentse Yeshe, the crazy wisdom | 176 |
Dielgo Khyentse Rinpoche | 177 |
A spot of red paste on the throat of the disciple | 178 |
Being introduced to Rigpa trough examples | 179 |
Thirty-six empowennents within Anu yoga | 180 |
The three mandalas: father, mother and child | 180 |
Samaya with and without upholding | 182 |
Dzogchen, the yana of the Great Perfection | 186 |
Clear Light | 187 |
Dzogchen, the non-dual Tantra | 187 |
The three characteristics of Dzogchen | 188 |
Etymology | 189 |
The six linking points | 189 |
The precious speech empowerment | 190 |
A crystal-like reality | 191 |
«This is the way it is for the fourth empowerment! » | 191 |
What do they awaken «in» and «to»? | 192 |
The Great Sphere | 192 |
Beseeching the three Kayas | 192 |
Mental liberation | 193 |
The magic of recognizing Enlightenment or not | 193 |
At the beginning a base, then two paths and hence two fruits | 194 |
Three great types of practices within Dzogchen | 194 |
Once Rigpa has been recognized. | 195 |
What is the mind like? | 196 |
An interplaying magical mind | 197 |
Turning consciousness into an object | 197 |
Like clouds appearing in the sky | 197 |
Trekcho and Thogyal. | 199 |
Conclusion | 202 |
Listening, thinking, and meditating | 202 |
Integrating the three yana within ourselves | 202 |
The entire path | 203 |
Within Dzogchen, no doubt. | 204 |
The 5th Dzogchen Rinpoche and the «yakboy» | 205 |
Blind faith. | 205 |
The awakened awareness of scholars | 205 |
The precious human life | 206 |
A good dharma practitioner … | 206 |
Khenpo Chimed Rinpoche biography | 208 |
Glossary | 211 |