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Classes of Tantra in Tibetan Buddhism

Classes of Tantra in Tibetan Buddhism refers to the categorization of Buddhist tantric scriptures in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism. Tibetan Buddhism inherited numerous tantras and forms of tantric practice from medieval Indian Buddhist Tantra. There were various ways of categorizing these tantras in India. In Tibet, the Sarma (New Translation) schools categorize tantric scriptures into four classes, while the Nyingma (Ancients) school use six classes of tantra.

Sarma ("New Translation") classification edit

The Sarma, "New Translation" schools of Tibetan Buddhism (Gelug, Sakya, Kagyu, Jonang) classify tantric practices and texts into four. In this, they follow Indian Tantric Buddhists such as Abhayākara, who makes this distinction in his Clusters of Quintessential Instructions. Tantras are classified according to the capacity of persons, the deities they use, the specific types of methods they employ and how they use desire (kama).[1][2]

Kriyā edit

 
Illuminated Pages from a Dispersed DharanI Manuscript

Kriyā (Tib. bya ba, Action) tantras were taught for practitioners of lower ability who have an inclination for performing many external ritual activities for protection and purification purposes, such as ritual bathing, the sprinkling of scented water, the creation of a circle of protection, the use of mudras and the chanting of mantras.[1][2] There are also various prescriptions dealing with eating, drinking, and clothing.[3] According to Kongtrul, in Kriyā Yoga, one relates to the deity as a subject relates to their lord and only meditates on an external deity (not on oneself as being the deity).[4]

According to Kongtrul, "the essence of action tantra" is:

to view the profound truth with fear and apprehension due to an inferior intellect and to observe utmost cleanliness and purity, ablution, asceticism, and so forth; to not develop the pride of being the deity since there is no generation of oneself as the pledge deity; to be without the supreme bliss of the pristine awareness deity since the pristine awareness deity has not been invoked to merge into the pledge deity; not to be a receptacle for the sublime teachings since one is unqualified to receive teachings on what is sublime and extraordinary, the deep meanings that were spoken with specific intention; and due to the shortcoming of being unable to fathom the sublime, being conditioned by concepts about the purity or impurity of things, to train thoroughly in rituals of ablution, and so forth, and thereby to practice deity yoga in a subject-to-lord relationship with the deity.[5]

Regarding initiation, The Essence of Pristine Awareness states: "it is widely known that in action tantra there are the water and crown initiations."[6]

Each action tantra text generally centers on a particular Buddha or Bodhisattva, and many are based on dharanis. Some of these texts are actually titled "sutra" or "dharani". Action tantra includes various practices for deities such as Medicine Buddha, "the eleven faced" Chenrezig and Vajrapani. Examples of Action Tantra texts include:[7]

  • Mahāmegha Sutra,
  • Sacred Golden Light Sutra, notably a very popular sutra in East Asia
  • Dharani of the Eleven-Faced Avalokiteshvara
  • Marichi Dharani
  • Ārya-mañjushrī-mūla-kalpa, which notably states that mantras taught in the Saiva, Garuda and Vaisnava tantras will be effective if applied by Buddhists since they were all taught originally by Manjushri.[8]
  • Subhāhu-pariprcchā (Dialogue with Subahu),
  • Secret General Tantra
  • Susidhi Tantra
  • Manjushri Root Tantra
  • Supreme Knowledge of Vajrapani Tantra
  • Aparimitāyur-jñāna-hrdaya-dhāranī.
  • Heart Sutra (Prajñāpāramitāhṛdaya, which contains a mantra).

Regarding the practice of deity yoga in Action Tantra, Kongtrul outlines six main elements or deities, namely "Emptiness, letter, sound, form, Seal, and sign":

First, the deity as emptiness is to remain absorbed in emptiness, the essence of ultimate awakening mind, in which the essential principle of oneself and that of the deity are of an inseparability beyond concepts. Second, the deity as letter is to meditate on the particular deity [one is practicing] in the form of the written letters of the [deity’s] mantra resting on a moon disk (representing one’s mind) visualized in space [in front]. Also considered to be the letter deity is to meditate simply on the moon [omitting the letters]. Third, the deity as sound is to meditate on the resonant sounds of the mantra (on the moon) associated with one of the [three] deities of the three families to which the recitation practice for complete familiarization is directed. Fourth, the deity as form is to meditate on the complete form of the deity. [The first step involves] meditating that light radiating from the letters of the mantra fulfills two aims; then, [as the light reconverges, the letters] transform into the deity’s complete form. Fifth, the deity as seal is to perform the hand mudras for blessing, such as the mudra of the crown protrusion, and while reciting the appropriate mantra, to touch the corresponding places of the body with the mudra. Alternatively, one makes the pledge mudra of that particular [family]. Sixth, the deity as sign is to recall, in all circumstances, the form of the deity as meditated in the state of equipoise so that the appearances of the outer world and its inhabitants are regarded as pure visions, imagined as the deity’s residence, form, and resources.[9]

Caryā edit

 
Panel from a Tibetan Buddhist Ritual Crown Depicting Buddha Vairocana, late 13th–early 14th century.

Caryā (spyod pa, Performance, or Conduct) tantras are meant for practitioners of middle ability. According to Tsongkhapa, it is for "those who balance external activities and internal meditative stabilization without relying on very many activities." The kind of desire it uses is the weakest kind, comparable to a couple looking at each other.[1][2] They are also known as Upa tantra, or Ubhaya tantra.

Although these tantras maintain numerous external ritual actions, the emphasis is now upon obtaining liberation through meditation. It is thus seen as maintaining a balance between inner and outer actions. It is externally similar to Kriyā tantra, and internally similar to Yoga tantra.[10]

According to Kongtrul, the main elements of Conduct tantra are:

To practice and train thoroughly in a vast range of deeds related to activations, which are sets of outer (physical and verbal) [actions] such as mudras and other characteristic focuses as taught in action tantra, and thus [to have] objects of practice that accord with that tantra; to cultivate inner (mental) contemplation that accords with yogatantra and to practice [deity yoga] in what is like a friend-to-friend relation-ship with the deity.[10]

Kongtrul further states, "conduct tantra is known to have five initiations: water, diadem, vajra, bell, and name."[11]

In this class of tantras, Vairochana is a principal deity. In Tibetan Buddhism, this tantra class includes practice lineages for the Mahãvairocanãbhisaṃbodhitantra ('Awakening of Great Vairocana'), for the Vajrapãṇyabhiṣekamahãtantra (Vajrapāṇi Initiation Tantra) and for Manjushri.[12][13]

The presence of Buddha Vairocana is often evident in tantras of this class where he is often depicted in the centre of a mandala with four other Buddhas of his retinue placed to the four quarters, the cardinal directions. Importantly, during the Caryā tantra class and literary period, there developed the salient innovation wherein the sadhaka is to cultivate identification with the deity in meditative absorption (known as "self generation"). This class of literature was also important to Chinese Zhenyan Buddhism and tantric masters such as Śubhakarasiṃha (637-735), Vajrabodhi (671–741) and Amoghavajra (705–774). This focus was later imparted by Amoghavajra's disciple Huiguo (746-805) to the monk Kūkai (774–835), leading to the development of Japanese Shingon Buddhism.

Guarisco & McLeod explain Jamgon Kongtrul's codification of this class as follows:

Conduct tantra, where conduct encompasses both outer ritual activity and inner contemplation, involves training in a vast range of deeds while entering the inner reality that presents itself in visual and audible divine representations. The notion here is that of being close to the state of a perfect divine being, a state not yet fully realized. This limited view is overcome by visualizing oneself as the deity, understanding that form to be the appearance aspect of emptiness.[14]

In Caryā yoga, the yogi visualizes themselves as the 'commitment being' (Sanskrit: samayasattva) and visualizes the 'gnosis being' (jñānasattva), who is envisioned in the relationship of a spiritual friend, in front of them. Various "meditations with signs" are part of this practice including: bija (seed syllable) and mandala visualization, mudra (hand seals), repetition of mantras, etc. as found in Action tantra. Conduct yoga also includes a special "yoga without signs", described by Kongtrul as follows:

The special yoga without signs is cultivated in conjunction with three minds: the minds of entering, abiding, and emerging, the essence of which is the ultimate awakening mind itself. The mind of entering is the realization of the unborn nature of all phenomena (the aggregates, etc.) gained by examining them in terms of the four extremes; the mind of abiding, the direct realization of the unborn nature as the essence of the nonconceptual state; and the mind of emerging, the ensuing great compassion directed to-ward suffering beings who lack such realization.[15]

Yoga edit

Yoga tantra (rnal’byor) is, according to Tsongkhapa, meant for practitioners of high ability who "mainly rely on meditative stabilization and rely on only few external activities." The level of desire they use is said to be similar to a couple holding hands or embracing.[1] "Yoga" refers to the union or yoking of method and wisdom. One sees one's body, speech and mind as inseparably united with those of the deity.[3]

Kongtrul defines Yoga tantra thus:

Yoga tantra is so named because it emphasizes the inner yoga meditation of method and wisdom; or alternatively, because based on knowledge and understanding of all aspects of the profound ultimate truth and the vast relative truth, it emphasizes contemplation that inseparably unites these two truths.[16]

Yoga tantra is the last and highest of the outer tantras, and here external rites are seen as much less important than internal practices. The empowerments given are the empowerment of the 5 Buddha families, and the empowerment of the Vajra master, and disciples must take on the commitments of the 5 buddha families, and take the tantric vows.[17] The path is split into 4 seals; the great seal of body, the seal of the speech of Dharma, the seal of the mind of commitment, and the seal of enlightened actions.

Some Vajrasattva practices fall under this category, as well as the Tattvasaṃgraha Tantra (Summation of Essential Principles) and the Vajraśekhara Tantra (Indestructible Peak).[18][19] Other Yoga tantras include the All-Secret Tantra, the Victorious in the Three Worlds Tantra; and the Glorious Supreme Original Being.[20] While Vairochana maintains his position as principal deity, he is now envisaged as being in the center of 5 buddha families instead of 3, each family belonging to one of the Five Tathagathas.

The Shurangama Sutra and the Shurangama Mantra from which it (called the Shitatapatra Ushnisha Dharani) comes can be included in this category.

Unsurpassable Yoga edit

 
A Hevajra Mandala
 
Deities of the Chakrasamvara Tantra

Anuttarayoga tantras (rnal ’byor bla med, Unexcelled or Unsurpassable yoga tantras), also known as Yoganiruttaratantra, are meant for practitioners of the highest ability who do not rely on external activities. It uses the highest level of desire, sexual union, and is thus also designated the “tantra of union of the two.” According to Kongtrul, only Highest Yoga includes both the generation and completion phases.[1][2] Kongtrul states that these are "supreme among all tantras" and "there is no other tantra above it."[21]

Anuttarayoga is characterized by the practice of Deity Yoga as well as various subtle body yogas (such as the six Dharmas of Naropa), to generate great bliss and attain the subtle clear light (luminous) mind. According to Miranda Shaw, Anuttarayoga Tantra texts "have remained at the forefront of contemplation, ritual, and interpretation throughout the Himalayan Buddhist sphere".[22]

In the classification of the Dzogchen system, used by the Nyingma, it is considered equivalent to the Mahayoga tantras.[23] The Dalai Lama XIV states: "old translation Dzogchen and new translation anuttarayoga tantra offer equivalent paths that can bring the practitioner to the same resultant state of Buddhahood".[24]

Kongtrul describes the essence of Unsurpassed Yoga Tantra as being

In the midst of an entourage of queens, in the form of an all-powerful sovereign such as Heruka (in mother tantra) or Vairochana (in father tantra); and by means of the contemplation of the great bliss of the male and female deities’ union, to be the “king who resides in the castle” (as is said in the tantras), which means to dwell perfectly in the queen’s bhaga, that is, in the divine palace in the source of phenomena; to train according to the sublime vajra words, the statements of six parameters—interpretable, non-interpretable, provisional, definitive, standard, and coined terminology—which are contrary to worldly human customs (as is said in the tantras, “Success is rapidly achieved by relying on one’s mother, sister, or daughter”) by performing extremely base acts; and thereby to effect ordinary and supreme powers.[25]

This statement contains various tantric terms express the nature of Unsurpassed Tantra. Bhaga (ultimately) refers to the source of phenomena (chos ’byung, dharmodaya), or source of all awakened qualities, and also literally to the vagina of a female sexual consort (i.e. the queen, btsun mo).[26] Thus this statement refers to karmamudra, sexual union, which is a key element of the symbolism, thought and practice of Unsurpassed Yoga Tantras and which generates a great blissful consciousness (the "castle of great bliss") that is then directed to understanding ultimate reality.[26] Furthermore, when the tantras speak of relying on one's mothers, sisters etc., this refers to different types of tantric consorts.[26] Regarding the six parameters, this refers to "six levels of meaning in the content of the tantras" which express different ways of interpreting and understanding the tantras.[26]

Tantras edit

Anuttarayoga tantras which became prominent in Tibet include:

In Sarma, they are sometimes further classified into "Father Tantras" (Wyl. pha rgyud), "Mother Tantras" (ma rgyud) and "Non-Dual Tantras" (gnyis med kyi rgyud).

The mahāyoga-tantras of Pala Empire India became known in Tibet as 'Father Tantras' (pha rgyud). According to the Gelug view, following Tsongkhapa's reasoning, Father Tantras emphasize the creation of a Buddha form through the cultivation of an illusory body, on the basis of practices with the energy system of the subtle body. Earlier Sakya masters and Kagyu scholars had viewed Father Tantras as emphasising the practice of blissful awareness.[27] Father Tantras have also been seen as emphasizing the use of anger (pratigha) as the path of practice, focusing on the emptiness aspect of Buddha nature.

The yoginī-tantras which became known in Tibet as 'Mother Tantras' (ma rgyud) emphasize the development of enlightened awareness (the "mind" of the illusory body) through the cultivation of the fundamental pure mind of all beings, known as 'brilliance' (prabhāsvara) (frequently translated, following the Tibetan, as 'clear light'). They are considered to emphasize the utilization of desire (tṛṣṇā) as the path of practice, focusing on the brilliant (prabhāsvara) aspect of Buddha nature. Among the Mother Tantras, the most prominent is the Cakrasaṃvara.[28] The practice of Vajrayogini evolved out of the Cakrasaṃvara and is now a de facto practice in its own right.[29] Other Mother Tantras are Hevajra Tantra and Caṇḍamahāroṣaṇa.

Non-dual tantras utilize both anger and desire as an antidote to delusion (avidyā), focusing on both the physical and mental, void and brilliant, aspects of enlightened mind. The example typically advanced for this category is the Kālacakra Tantra. The Sakya tradition also considers Hevajra to be a non-dual tantra but other traditions classify it as a yoginī-tantra.

Nyingma classification edit

The Nyingma school meanwhile, has six main tantra categories, which make up the last six of the main Nyingma "nine yana" schema. According to Jean-Luc Achard, "in the Nyingma tradition, there are several ways of classifying the teachings of the Buddha into nine, ten, and sometimes twelve Vehicles. Most of these classifications have not survived in practical usage, except for that into nine. In this case, the ninth is considered to be the Vehicle of Dzogchen."[30]

The first three categories are essentially the same as the Sarma classification (Kriyā, Caryā or Ubhaya, and Yoga) and are called "Outer Tantras".[31]

The last three are the "Inner Tantras": Mahāyoga, Anuyoga and Atiyoga.[31]

  • Mahāyoga (rnal ’byor chen po), is a class of tantric texts and practices that emphasize the stage of generation and are sometimes also termed father tantras. The Net of Magical Manifestation (Māyājāla) collection contains the major Mahayoga works, The Guhyagarbha Tantra is the most influential of these.
  • Anuyoga (rjes su rnal ’byor) texts are associated with tantras that emphasize the stage of completion and are associated with mother tantras. They also teach a "principle of instantaneous perfection", which is not found in other tantras. An example of one of these texts is the All-Unifying Pure Presence (Kun ’dus rig pa’i mdo).
  • Atiyoga (Dzogchen). In Nyingma, Dzogchen ("Great Perfection") is seen as a non-gradual method which transcends the two stages of tantric yoga and focuses on direct access to the innate purity of things. Atiyoga is further divided into three main categories: Mind Series (semde), Space Series (longdé) and Instruction Series (menngakde). There are numerous tantras and texts associated with this vehicle, such as the Kunjed Gyalpo and the "Seventeen tantras of the esoteric instruction cycle" (man ngag sde'i rgyud bcu bdun).

According to Longchenpa's Great Chariot:

Mahāyoga, the father tantra, the nature of method [related to] appearance, [is taught] to benefit those whose strongest emotional affliction is aversion and who are subject to excessive discursiveness. Anuyoga, the mother tantra, the wisdom of the completion phase [related to] the essential reality of emptiness, [is taught] to benefit those whose strongest emotional affliction is desire and who delight in stillness of mind. Atiyoga, the nature of nonduality, [is taught] to benefit those whose strongest emotional affliction is delusion and who are tarnished by [attachment to] effort.[32]

Longchenpa's Finding Comfort and Ease in the Nature of Mind states:

Mahayoga emphasizes winds and the methods of the generation phase. Anuyoga emphasizes the constituent [of bliss] and the wisdom of the completion phase; Atiyoga emphasizes pristine awareness from which nothing is separate.[32]

Regarding the alternative schemas which are now rarely used in Nyingma, Achard writes:

In the classification into twelve Vehicles (such as in the surviving proto-doxographical works of O rgyan gling pa), Dzogchen is the ninth Vehicle as usual, but it is composed of three subdivisions which are also styled Vehicles (theg pa). In this case, Dzogchen is equated with Ati yoga. Then, the tenth Vehicle is that of the sPyi ti yoga; the eleventh is that of the Yang ti yoga; and the twelfth is the vehicle of the Great Limit (mtha’ chen). Such references to higher categories of Dzogchen teachings, said to surpass those of Ati yoga stricto sensu, have survived at least down to the revelations of mChog gyur gling pa in the 19th century. Since then, practically no one has used these unusual categories, especially that of the Great Limit which remains more than obscure.[30]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Tsong-kha-pa, The Great Exposition of Secret Mantra, Part One in Tsong-kha-pa et al. (2016), pp. 63 - 155.
  2. ^ a b c d Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), pp. 40, 93.
  3. ^ a b Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), p. 41.
  4. ^ Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), pp. 59, 96.
  5. ^ Jamgon Kongtrul (2005), pp. 100 - 101.
  6. ^ Jamgon Kongtrul (2005), p. 102.
  7. ^ Jamgon Kongtrul (2005), p. 274.
  8. ^ Sanderson, Alexis. "The Śaiva Age: The Rise and Dominance of Śaivism during the Early Medieval Period." In: Genesis and Development of Tantrism, edited by Shingo Einoo. Tokyo: Institute of Oriental Culture, University of Tokyo, 2009. Institute of Oriental Culture Special Series, 23, pp. 129-131.
  9. ^ Jamgon Kongtrul (2005), p. 107.
  10. ^ a b Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), p. 116.
  11. ^ Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), p. 117.
  12. ^ Ringu Tulku (2007) The Ri-Me Philosophy of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great: A Study of the Buddhist Lineages of Tibet, pp. 94-95, Shambhala Publications.
  13. ^ The 14th Dalai Lama, The Heart of Mantra, in Tsong-kha-pa et al. (2017) The Great Exposition of Secret Mantra Volume Two.
  14. ^ Guarisco, Elio (trans.); McLeod, Ingrid (trans., editor); Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Taye, Kon-Sprul Blo-Gros-Mtha-Yas (compiler) (2005). The Treasury of Knowledge: Book Six, Part Four: Systems of Buddhist Tantra. Ithaca, New York, USA: Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1-55939-210-X, p.41
  15. ^ Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), p. 121.
  16. ^ Guarisco, Elio (trans.); McLeod, Ingrid (trans., editor); Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Taye, Kon-Sprul Blo-Gros-Mtha-Yas (compiler) (2005). The Treasury of Knowledge: Book Six, Part Four: Systems of Buddhist Tantra. Ithaca, New York, USA: Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1-55939-210-X, p.128
  17. ^ Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), pp. 129-130.
  18. ^ The 14th Dalai Lama, The Features of Yoga Tantra, in Tsong-kha-pa et al. (2017) The Great Exposition of Secret Mantra, Part Three.
  19. ^ Paul Williams, Anthony Tribe, Alexander Wynne. Buddhist Thought: A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition, page 209
  20. ^ Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), p. 274.
  21. ^ Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), p. 141.
  22. ^ Shaw, Miranda (1995). Passionate Enlightenment::Women in Tantric Buddhism. Princeton University Press. p. 15. ISBN 0-691-01090-0.
  23. ^ Dudjom Rinpoche, The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism: Its Fundamentals and History, Wisdom Publications, 2002. ISBN 0-86171-199-8. page 283
  24. ^ Gyatso, Tenzin; Alexander Berzin (1997). The Gelug/Kagyu Tradition of Mahamudra. New York: Snow Lion Publications. p. 243. ISBN 1-55939-072-7.
  25. ^ Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), p. 142.
  26. ^ a b c d Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), p. 417.
  27. ^ Dalai Lama; Alexander Berzin (1997). The Gelug/Kagyu Tradition of Mahamudra. 9781559399302: Snow Lion Publications. p. 243. ISBN 9781559399302.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  28. ^ Essence of Vajrayana: The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Heruka Body Mandala, Tharpa Publications (1997) ISBN 978-0-948006-48-7
  29. ^ Guide to Dakini Land: The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Buddha Vajrayogini, page 3, Tharpa Publications (2nd. ed., 1996) ISBN 978-0-948006-39-5
  30. ^ a b Achard, Jean-Luc. The View of sPyi ti yoga*. 2021-06-24 at the Wayback Machine CNRS, CRCAO, Paris
  31. ^ a b Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), pp. 307-308.
  32. ^ a b Jamgön Kongtrül (2005), p. 308.

References edit

  • Mkhas-grub-rje (compiler); Lessing, R.D (senior translator) & Wayman, Alex (journeyman translator, annotations) (1968, 1993). 'Introduction to The Buddhist Tantric Systems' (Wylie: rgyud sde spyi'i rnam par gzhag pa rgyas par brjod). Tibetan transliterated in Wylie with English Translation. Second edition. Delhi, India: Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 81-208-0834-7
  • Guarisco, Elio (trans.); McLeod, Ingrid (trans., editor); Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Taye, Kon-Sprul Blo-Gros-Mtha-Yas (compiler) (2005). The Treasury of Knowledge: Book Six, Part Four: Systems of Buddhist Tantra. Ithaca, New York, USA: Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1-55939-210-X

classes, tantra, tibetan, buddhism, refers, categorization, buddhist, tantric, scriptures, indo, tibetan, buddhism, tibetan, buddhism, inherited, numerous, tantras, forms, tantric, practice, from, medieval, indian, buddhist, tantra, there, were, various, ways,. Classes of Tantra in Tibetan Buddhism refers to the categorization of Buddhist tantric scriptures in Indo Tibetan Buddhism Tibetan Buddhism inherited numerous tantras and forms of tantric practice from medieval Indian Buddhist Tantra There were various ways of categorizing these tantras in India In Tibet the Sarma New Translation schools categorize tantric scriptures into four classes while the Nyingma Ancients school use six classes of tantra Contents 1 Sarma New Translation classification 1 1 Kriya 1 2 Carya 1 3 Yoga 1 4 Unsurpassable Yoga 1 4 1 Tantras 2 Nyingma classification 3 See also 4 Notes 5 ReferencesSarma New Translation classification editThe Sarma New Translation schools of Tibetan Buddhism Gelug Sakya Kagyu Jonang classify tantric practices and texts into four In this they follow Indian Tantric Buddhists such as Abhayakara who makes this distinction in his Clusters of Quintessential Instructions Tantras are classified according to the capacity of persons the deities they use the specific types of methods they employ and how they use desire kama 1 2 Kriya edit nbsp Illuminated Pages from a Dispersed DharanI ManuscriptKriya Tib bya ba Action tantras were taught for practitioners of lower ability who have an inclination for performing many external ritual activities for protection and purification purposes such as ritual bathing the sprinkling of scented water the creation of a circle of protection the use of mudras and the chanting of mantras 1 2 There are also various prescriptions dealing with eating drinking and clothing 3 According to Kongtrul in Kriya Yoga one relates to the deity as a subject relates to their lord and only meditates on an external deity not on oneself as being the deity 4 According to Kongtrul the essence of action tantra is to view the profound truth with fear and apprehension due to an inferior intellect and to observe utmost cleanliness and purity ablution asceticism and so forth to not develop the pride of being the deity since there is no generation of oneself as the pledge deity to be without the supreme bliss of the pristine awareness deity since the pristine awareness deity has not been invoked to merge into the pledge deity not to be a receptacle for the sublime teachings since one is unqualified to receive teachings on what is sublime and extraordinary the deep meanings that were spoken with specific intention and due to the shortcoming of being unable to fathom the sublime being conditioned by concepts about the purity or impurity of things to train thoroughly in rituals of ablution and so forth and thereby to practice deity yoga in a subject to lord relationship with the deity 5 Regarding initiation The Essence of Pristine Awareness states it is widely known that in action tantra there are the water and crown initiations 6 Each action tantra text generally centers on a particular Buddha or Bodhisattva and many are based on dharanis Some of these texts are actually titled sutra or dharani Action tantra includes various practices for deities such as Medicine Buddha the eleven faced Chenrezig and Vajrapani Examples of Action Tantra texts include 7 Mahamegha Sutra Sacred Golden Light Sutra notably a very popular sutra in East Asia Dharani of the Eleven Faced Avalokiteshvara Marichi Dharani Arya manjushri mula kalpa which notably states that mantras taught in the Saiva Garuda and Vaisnava tantras will be effective if applied by Buddhists since they were all taught originally by Manjushri 8 Subhahu pariprccha Dialogue with Subahu Secret General Tantra Susidhi Tantra Manjushri Root Tantra Supreme Knowledge of Vajrapani Tantra Aparimitayur jnana hrdaya dharani Heart Sutra Prajnaparamitahṛdaya which contains a mantra Regarding the practice of deity yoga in Action Tantra Kongtrul outlines six main elements or deities namely Emptiness letter sound form Seal and sign First the deity as emptiness is to remain absorbed in emptiness the essence of ultimate awakening mind in which the essential principle of oneself and that of the deity are of an inseparability beyond concepts Second the deity as letter is to meditate on the particular deity one is practicing in the form of the written letters of the deity s mantra resting on a moon disk representing one s mind visualized in space in front Also considered to be the letter deity is to meditate simply on the moon omitting the letters Third the deity as sound is to meditate on the resonant sounds of the mantra on the moon associated with one of the three deities of the three families to which the recitation practice for complete familiarization is directed Fourth the deity as form is to meditate on the complete form of the deity The first step involves meditating that light radiating from the letters of the mantra fulfills two aims then as the light reconverges the letters transform into the deity s complete form Fifth the deity as seal is to perform the hand mudras for blessing such as the mudra of the crown protrusion and while reciting the appropriate mantra to touch the corresponding places of the body with the mudra Alternatively one makes the pledge mudra of that particular family Sixth the deity as sign is to recall in all circumstances the form of the deity as meditated in the state of equipoise so that the appearances of the outer world and its inhabitants are regarded as pure visions imagined as the deity s residence form and resources 9 Carya edit nbsp Panel from a Tibetan Buddhist Ritual Crown Depicting Buddha Vairocana late 13th early 14th century Carya spyod pa Performance or Conduct tantras are meant for practitioners of middle ability According to Tsongkhapa it is for those who balance external activities and internal meditative stabilization without relying on very many activities The kind of desire it uses is the weakest kind comparable to a couple looking at each other 1 2 They are also known as Upa tantra or Ubhaya tantra Although these tantras maintain numerous external ritual actions the emphasis is now upon obtaining liberation through meditation It is thus seen as maintaining a balance between inner and outer actions It is externally similar to Kriya tantra and internally similar to Yoga tantra 10 According to Kongtrul the main elements of Conduct tantra are To practice and train thoroughly in a vast range of deeds related to activations which are sets of outer physical and verbal actions such as mudras and other characteristic focuses as taught in action tantra and thus to have objects of practice that accord with that tantra to cultivate inner mental contemplation that accords with yogatantra and to practice deity yoga in what is like a friend to friend relation ship with the deity 10 Kongtrul further states conduct tantra is known to have five initiations water diadem vajra bell and name 11 In this class of tantras Vairochana is a principal deity In Tibetan Buddhism this tantra class includes practice lineages for the Mahavairocanabhisaṃbodhitantra Awakening of Great Vairocana for the Vajrapaṇyabhiṣekamahatantra Vajrapaṇi Initiation Tantra and for Manjushri 12 13 The presence of Buddha Vairocana is often evident in tantras of this class where he is often depicted in the centre of a mandala with four other Buddhas of his retinue placed to the four quarters the cardinal directions Importantly during the Carya tantra class and literary period there developed the salient innovation wherein the sadhaka is to cultivate identification with the deity in meditative absorption known as self generation This class of literature was also important to Chinese Zhenyan Buddhism and tantric masters such as Subhakarasiṃha 637 735 Vajrabodhi 671 741 and Amoghavajra 705 774 This focus was later imparted by Amoghavajra s disciple Huiguo 746 805 to the monk Kukai 774 835 leading to the development of Japanese Shingon Buddhism Guarisco amp McLeod explain Jamgon Kongtrul s codification of this class as follows Conduct tantra where conduct encompasses both outer ritual activity and inner contemplation involves training in a vast range of deeds while entering the inner reality that presents itself in visual and audible divine representations The notion here is that of being close to the state of a perfect divine being a state not yet fully realized This limited view is overcome by visualizing oneself as the deity understanding that form to be the appearance aspect of emptiness 14 In Carya yoga the yogi visualizes themselves as the commitment being Sanskrit samayasattva and visualizes the gnosis being jnanasattva who is envisioned in the relationship of a spiritual friend in front of them Various meditations with signs are part of this practice including bija seed syllable and mandala visualization mudra hand seals repetition of mantras etc as found in Action tantra Conduct yoga also includes a special yoga without signs described by Kongtrul as follows The special yoga without signs is cultivated in conjunction with three minds the minds of entering abiding and emerging the essence of which is the ultimate awakening mind itself The mind of entering is the realization of the unborn nature of all phenomena the aggregates etc gained by examining them in terms of the four extremes the mind of abiding the direct realization of the unborn nature as the essence of the nonconceptual state and the mind of emerging the ensuing great compassion directed to ward suffering beings who lack such realization 15 Yoga edit Yoga tantra rnal byor is according to Tsongkhapa meant for practitioners of high ability who mainly rely on meditative stabilization and rely on only few external activities The level of desire they use is said to be similar to a couple holding hands or embracing 1 Yoga refers to the union or yoking of method and wisdom One sees one s body speech and mind as inseparably united with those of the deity 3 Kongtrul defines Yoga tantra thus Yoga tantra is so named because it emphasizes the inner yoga meditation of method and wisdom or alternatively because based on knowledge and understanding of all aspects of the profound ultimate truth and the vast relative truth it emphasizes contemplation that inseparably unites these two truths 16 Yoga tantra is the last and highest of the outer tantras and here external rites are seen as much less important than internal practices The empowerments given are the empowerment of the 5 Buddha families and the empowerment of the Vajra master and disciples must take on the commitments of the 5 buddha families and take the tantric vows 17 The path is split into 4 seals the great seal of body the seal of the speech of Dharma the seal of the mind of commitment and the seal of enlightened actions Some Vajrasattva practices fall under this category as well as the Tattvasaṃgraha Tantra Summation of Essential Principles and the Vajrasekhara Tantra Indestructible Peak 18 19 Other Yoga tantras include the All Secret Tantra the Victorious in the Three Worlds Tantra and the Glorious Supreme Original Being 20 While Vairochana maintains his position as principal deity he is now envisaged as being in the center of 5 buddha families instead of 3 each family belonging to one of the Five Tathagathas The Shurangama Sutra and the Shurangama Mantra from which it called the Shitatapatra Ushnisha Dharani comes can be included in this category Unsurpassable Yoga edit nbsp A Hevajra Mandala nbsp Deities of the Chakrasamvara TantraAnuttarayoga tantras rnal byor bla med Unexcelled or Unsurpassable yoga tantras also known as Yoganiruttaratantra are meant for practitioners of the highest ability who do not rely on external activities It uses the highest level of desire sexual union and is thus also designated the tantra of union of the two According to Kongtrul only Highest Yoga includes both the generation and completion phases 1 2 Kongtrul states that these are supreme among all tantras and there is no other tantra above it 21 Anuttarayoga is characterized by the practice of Deity Yoga as well as various subtle body yogas such as the six Dharmas of Naropa to generate great bliss and attain the subtle clear light luminous mind According to Miranda Shaw Anuttarayoga Tantra texts have remained at the forefront of contemplation ritual and interpretation throughout the Himalayan Buddhist sphere 22 In the classification of the Dzogchen system used by the Nyingma it is considered equivalent to the Mahayoga tantras 23 The Dalai Lama XIV states old translation Dzogchen and new translation anuttarayoga tantra offer equivalent paths that can bring the practitioner to the same resultant state of Buddhahood 24 Kongtrul describes the essence of Unsurpassed Yoga Tantra as being In the midst of an entourage of queens in the form of an all powerful sovereign such as Heruka in mother tantra or Vairochana in father tantra and by means of the contemplation of the great bliss of the male and female deities union to be the king who resides in the castle as is said in the tantras which means to dwell perfectly in the queen s bhaga that is in the divine palace in the source of phenomena to train according to the sublime vajra words the statements of six parameters interpretable non interpretable provisional definitive standard and coined terminology which are contrary to worldly human customs as is said in the tantras Success is rapidly achieved by relying on one s mother sister or daughter by performing extremely base acts and thereby to effect ordinary and supreme powers 25 This statement contains various tantric terms express the nature of Unsurpassed Tantra Bhaga ultimately refers to the source of phenomena chos byung dharmodaya or source of all awakened qualities and also literally to the vagina of a female sexual consort i e the queen btsun mo 26 Thus this statement refers to karmamudra sexual union which is a key element of the symbolism thought and practice of Unsurpassed Yoga Tantras and which generates a great blissful consciousness the castle of great bliss that is then directed to understanding ultimate reality 26 Furthermore when the tantras speak of relying on one s mothers sisters etc this refers to different types of tantric consorts 26 Regarding the six parameters this refers to six levels of meaning in the content of the tantras which express different ways of interpreting and understanding the tantras 26 Tantras edit Anuttarayoga tantras which became prominent in Tibet include Cakrasaṃvara Tantra Manjusrinamasaṃgiti Reciting the names of Manjushri Sampuṭodbhavaḥ Emergence from Samputa Caṇḍamaha roṣaṇa Tantra Guhyasamaja Esoteric Community Vajramahabhairava Tantra Great Vajra Terrifier Tantra Hevajra Tantra Kṛṣnayamari Tantra Black Yamari Raktayamari Tantra Red Yamari Maha maya Tantra Mahakala Tantra Kalacakra Tantra Ekajaṭa TantraIn Sarma they are sometimes further classified into Father Tantras Wyl pha rgyud Mother Tantras ma rgyud and Non Dual Tantras gnyis med kyi rgyud The mahayoga tantras of Pala Empire India became known in Tibet as Father Tantras pha rgyud According to the Gelug view following Tsongkhapa s reasoning Father Tantras emphasize the creation of a Buddha form through the cultivation of an illusory body on the basis of practices with the energy system of the subtle body Earlier Sakya masters and Kagyu scholars had viewed Father Tantras as emphasising the practice of blissful awareness 27 Father Tantras have also been seen as emphasizing the use of anger pratigha as the path of practice focusing on the emptiness aspect of Buddha nature The yogini tantras which became known in Tibet as Mother Tantras ma rgyud emphasize the development of enlightened awareness the mind of the illusory body through the cultivation of the fundamental pure mind of all beings known as brilliance prabhasvara frequently translated following the Tibetan as clear light They are considered to emphasize the utilization of desire tṛṣṇa as the path of practice focusing on the brilliant prabhasvara aspect of Buddha nature Among the Mother Tantras the most prominent is the Cakrasaṃvara 28 The practice of Vajrayogini evolved out of the Cakrasaṃvara and is now a de facto practice in its own right 29 Other Mother Tantras are Hevajra Tantra and Caṇḍamaharoṣaṇa Non dual tantras utilize both anger and desire as an antidote to delusion avidya focusing on both the physical and mental void and brilliant aspects of enlightened mind The example typically advanced for this category is the Kalacakra Tantra The Sakya tradition also considers Hevajra to be a non dual tantra but other traditions classify it as a yogini tantra Nyingma classification editThe Nyingma school meanwhile has six main tantra categories which make up the last six of the main Nyingma nine yana schema According to Jean Luc Achard in the Nyingma tradition there are several ways of classifying the teachings of the Buddha into nine ten and sometimes twelve Vehicles Most of these classifications have not survived in practical usage except for that into nine In this case the ninth is considered to be the Vehicle of Dzogchen 30 The first three categories are essentially the same as the Sarma classification Kriya Carya or Ubhaya and Yoga and are called Outer Tantras 31 The last three are the Inner Tantras Mahayoga Anuyoga and Atiyoga 31 Mahayoga rnal byor chen po is a class of tantric texts and practices that emphasize the stage of generation and are sometimes also termed father tantras The Net of Magical Manifestation Mayajala collection contains the major Mahayoga works The Guhyagarbha Tantra is the most influential of these Anuyoga rjes su rnal byor texts are associated with tantras that emphasize the stage of completion and are associated with mother tantras They also teach a principle of instantaneous perfection which is not found in other tantras An example of one of these texts is the All Unifying Pure Presence Kun dus rig pa i mdo Atiyoga Dzogchen In Nyingma Dzogchen Great Perfection is seen as a non gradual method which transcends the two stages of tantric yoga and focuses on direct access to the innate purity of things Atiyoga is further divided into three main categories Mind Series semde Space Series longde and Instruction Series menngakde There are numerous tantras and texts associated with this vehicle such as the Kunjed Gyalpo and the Seventeen tantras of the esoteric instruction cycle man ngag sde i rgyud bcu bdun According to Longchenpa s Great Chariot Mahayoga the father tantra the nature of method related to appearance is taught to benefit those whose strongest emotional affliction is aversion and who are subject to excessive discursiveness Anuyoga the mother tantra the wisdom of the completion phase related to the essential reality of emptiness is taught to benefit those whose strongest emotional affliction is desire and who delight in stillness of mind Atiyoga the nature of nonduality is taught to benefit those whose strongest emotional affliction is delusion and who are tarnished by attachment to effort 32 Longchenpa s Finding Comfort and Ease in the Nature of Mind states Mahayoga emphasizes winds and the methods of the generation phase Anuyoga emphasizes the constituent of bliss and the wisdom of the completion phase Atiyoga emphasizes pristine awareness from which nothing is separate 32 Regarding the alternative schemas which are now rarely used in Nyingma Achard writes In the classification into twelve Vehicles such as in the surviving proto doxographical works of O rgyan gling pa Dzogchen is the ninth Vehicle as usual but it is composed of three subdivisions which are also styled Vehicles theg pa In this case Dzogchen is equated with Ati yoga Then the tenth Vehicle is that of the sPyi ti yoga the eleventh is that of the Yang ti yoga and the twelfth is the vehicle of the Great Limit mtha chen Such references to higher categories of Dzogchen teachings said to surpass those of Ati yoga stricto sensu have survived at least down to the revelations of mChog gyur gling pa in the 19th century Since then practically no one has used these unusual categories especially that of the Great Limit which remains more than obscure 30 See also editBuddhist texts Tantras Hinduism Notes edit a b c d e Tsong kha pa The Great Exposition of Secret Mantra Part One in Tsong kha pa et al 2016 pp 63 155 a b c d Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 pp 40 93 a b Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 41 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 pp 59 96 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 pp 100 101 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 102 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 274 Sanderson Alexis The Saiva Age The Rise and Dominance of Saivism during the Early Medieval Period In Genesis and Development of Tantrism edited by Shingo Einoo Tokyo Institute of Oriental Culture University of Tokyo 2009 Institute of Oriental Culture Special Series 23 pp 129 131 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 107 a b Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 116 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 117 Ringu Tulku 2007 The Ri Me Philosophy of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great A Study of the Buddhist Lineages of Tibet pp 94 95 Shambhala Publications The 14th Dalai Lama The Heart of Mantra in Tsong kha pa et al 2017 The Great Exposition of Secret Mantra Volume Two Guarisco Elio trans McLeod Ingrid trans editor Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Taye Kon Sprul Blo Gros Mtha Yas compiler 2005 The Treasury of Knowledge Book Six Part Four Systems of Buddhist Tantra Ithaca New York USA Snow Lion Publications ISBN 1 55939 210 X p 41 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 121 Guarisco Elio trans McLeod Ingrid trans editor Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Taye Kon Sprul Blo Gros Mtha Yas compiler 2005 The Treasury of Knowledge Book Six Part Four Systems of Buddhist Tantra Ithaca New York USA Snow Lion Publications ISBN 1 55939 210 X p 128 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 pp 129 130 The 14th Dalai Lama The Features of Yoga Tantra in Tsong kha pa et al 2017 The Great Exposition of Secret Mantra Part Three Paul Williams Anthony Tribe Alexander Wynne Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 209 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 274 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 141 Shaw Miranda 1995 Passionate Enlightenment Women in Tantric Buddhism Princeton University Press p 15 ISBN 0 691 01090 0 Dudjom Rinpoche The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism Its Fundamentals and History Wisdom Publications 2002 ISBN 0 86171 199 8 page 283 Gyatso Tenzin Alexander Berzin 1997 The Gelug Kagyu Tradition of Mahamudra New York Snow Lion Publications p 243 ISBN 1 55939 072 7 Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 142 a b c d Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 417 Dalai Lama Alexander Berzin 1997 The Gelug Kagyu Tradition of Mahamudra 9781559399302 Snow Lion Publications p 243 ISBN 9781559399302 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Essence of Vajrayana The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Heruka Body Mandala Tharpa Publications 1997 ISBN 978 0 948006 48 7 Guide to Dakini Land The Highest Yoga Tantra Practice of Buddha Vajrayogini page 3 Tharpa Publications 2nd ed 1996 ISBN 978 0 948006 39 5 a b Achard Jean Luc The View of sPyi ti yoga Archived 2021 06 24 at the Wayback Machine CNRS CRCAO Paris a b Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 pp 307 308 a b Jamgon Kongtrul 2005 p 308 References editMkhas grub rje compiler Lessing R D senior translator amp Wayman Alex journeyman translator annotations 1968 1993 Introduction to The Buddhist Tantric Systems Wylie rgyud sde spyi i rnam par gzhag pa rgyas par brjod Tibetan transliterated in Wylie with English Translation Second edition Delhi India Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 81 208 0834 7 Guarisco Elio trans McLeod Ingrid trans editor Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Taye Kon Sprul Blo Gros Mtha Yas compiler 2005 The Treasury of Knowledge Book Six Part Four Systems of Buddhist Tantra Ithaca New York USA Snow Lion Publications ISBN 1 55939 210 X Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Classes of Tantra in Tibetan Buddhism amp oldid 1166319747 Unsurpassable Yoga, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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