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Vajrayana

Vajrayāna (Sanskrit: वज्रयान, "thunderbolt vehicle", "diamond vehicle", or "indestructible vehicle"), along with Mantrayāna, Guhyamantrayāna, Tantrayāna, Secret Mantra, Tantric Buddhism, and Esoteric Buddhism, are names referring to Buddhist traditions associated with Tantra and "Secret Mantra", which developed in the medieval Indian subcontinent and spread to Tibet, Nepal, other Himalayan states, East Asia, and Mongolia.

A vajra and bell (ghanta), which are classic ritual symbols of Vajrayāna

Vajrayāna practices are connected to specific lineages in Buddhism, through the teachings of lineage holders. Others might generally refer to texts as the Buddhist Tantras.[1] It includes practices that make use of mantras, dharanis, mudras, mandalas and the visualization of deities and Buddhas.

Traditional Vajrayāna sources say that the tantras and the lineage of Vajrayāna were taught by Śākyamuni Buddha and other figures such as the bodhisattva Vajrapani. On the other hand, contemporary historians of Buddhist studies argue that Vajrayāna does not predate the tantric era of medieval India (c. 5th century CE onwards).[2]

According to Vajrayāna scriptures, the term Vajrayāna refers to one of three vehicles or routes to enlightenment, the other two being the Śrāvakayāna (also known pejoratively as the Hīnayāna) and Mahāyāna (a.k.a. Pāramitāyāna).

There are several Buddhist tantric traditions that are currently practiced, including Tibetan Buddhism, Chinese Esoteric Buddhism, Shingon Buddhism and Newar Buddhism.

Terminology

In Tibetan Buddhism practiced in the Himalayan regions of India, Nepal, and Bhutan, Buddhist Tantra is most often termed Vajrayāna (Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་ཐེག་པ་, dorje tekpa, Wyl. rdo rje theg pa) and Secret mantra (Skt. Guhyamantra, Tib. གསང་སྔགས་, sang ngak, Wyl. gsang sngags). The vajra is a mythical weapon associated with Indra which was said to be indestructible and unbreakable (like a diamond) and extremely powerful (like thunder). Thus, the term is variously translated as Diamond Vehicle, Thunderbolt Vehicle, Indestructible Vehicle and so on.

Chinese Esoteric Buddhism it is generally known by various terms such as Zhēnyán (Chinese: 真言, literally "true word", referring to mantra), Tángmì or Hanmì (唐密 - 漢密, "Tang Esotericism" or "Han Esotericism"), Mìzōng (密宗, "Esoteric Sect") or Mìjiao (Chinese: 密教; Esoteric Teaching). The Chinese term 密 ("secret, esoteric") is a translation of the Sanskrit term Guhya ("secret, hidden, profound, abstruse").[3]

In Japan, Buddhist esotericism is known as Mikkyō (密教, "secret teachings") or by the term Shingon (a Japanese rendering of Zhēnyán), which also refers to a specific school of Shingon-shū (真言宗).

History

 
Mahasiddhas, Palpung monastery. Note the figure of the great adept Putalipa at center, seated in a cave and gazing at an image of the meditational deity Samvara and the figure at the bottom left holding a skull-staff (khaṭvāṅga) and a flaying knife (kartika).

Mahasiddhas and the tantric movement

Tantric Buddhism is associated with groups of wandering yogis called mahasiddhas in medieval India.[4] According to Robert Thurman, these tantric figures thrived during the latter half of the first millennium CE.[2] According to Reynolds (2007), the mahasiddhas date to the medieval period in North India and used methods that were radically different from those used in Buddhist monasteries, including practicing in charnel grounds.[5]

Since the practice of Tantra focuses on the transformation of poisons into wisdom, the yogic circles came together in tantric feasts, often in sacred sites (pitha) and places (ksetra) which included dancing, singing, consort practices and the ingestion of taboo substances like alcohol, urine, and meat.[6] At least two of the mahasiddhas cited in the Buddhist literature are comparable with the Shaiva Nath saints (Gorakshanath and Matsyendranath) who practiced Hatha Yoga.

According to Schumann, a movement called Sahaja-siddhi developed in the 8th century in Bengal.[7] It was dominated by long-haired, wandering mahasiddhas who openly challenged and ridiculed the Buddhist establishment.[8] The mahasiddhas pursued siddhis, magical powers such as flight and extrasensory perception as well as spiritual liberation.[9]

Ronald M. Davidson states that

Buddhist siddhas demonstrated the appropriation of an older sociological form—the independent sage/magician, who lived in a liminal zone on the borders between fields and forests. Their rites involved the conjunction of sexual practices and Buddhist mandala visualization with ritual accoutrements made from parts of the human body, so that control may be exercised over the forces hindering the natural abilities of the siddha to manipulate the cosmos at will. At their most extreme, siddhas also represented a defensive position within the Buddhist tradition, adopted and sustained for the purpose of aggressive engagement with the medieval culture of public violence. They reinforced their reputations for personal sanctity with rumors of the magical manipulation of various flavors of demonic females (dakini, yaksi, yogini), cemetery ghouls (vetala), and other things that go bump in the night. Operating on the margins of both monasteries and polite society, some adopted the behaviors associated with ghosts (preta, pisaca), not only as a religious praxis but also as an extension of their implied threats.[10]

Tantras

 
Diamond Realm mandala, based on the tantric Vajrasekhara Sutra, and symbolizing the final realization of Vairocana Buddha in Shingon
 
Naked tantrikas dancing and eating from skull cups (kapalas), closeup of a Chakrasamvara mandala

Many of the elements found in Buddhist tantric literature are not wholly new. Earlier Mahāyāna sutras already contained some elements which are emphasized in the Tantras, such as mantras and dharani.[11] The use of protective verses or phrases actually dates back to the Vedic period and can be seen in the early Buddhist texts, where they are termed paritta. The practice of visualization of Buddhas such as Amitābha is also seen in pre-tantric texts like the Longer Sukhāvatīvyūha Sūtra.[12]

There are other Mahāyāna sutras which contain "proto-tantric" material such as the Gandavyuha and the Dasabhumika which might have served as a central source of visual imagery for Tantric texts.[13] Later Mahāyāna texts like the Kāraṇḍavyūha Sūtra (c. 4th–5th century CE) expound the use of mantras such as Om mani padme hum, associated with vastly powerful beings like Avalokiteshvara. The popular Heart Sutra also includes a mantra.

Vajrayāna Buddhists developed a large corpus of texts called the Buddhist Tantras, some of which can be traced to at least the 7th century CE but might be older. The dating of the tantras is "a difficult, indeed an impossible task" according to David Snellgrove.[14]

Some of the earliest of these texts, Kriya tantras such as the Mañjuśrī-mūla-kalpa (c. 6th century), teach the use of mantras and dharanis for mostly worldly ends including curing illness, controlling the weather and generating wealth.[15] The Tattvasaṃgraha Tantra (Compendium of Principles), classed as a "Yoga tantra", is one of the first Buddhist tantras which focuses on liberation as opposed to worldly goals. In another early tantra, the Vajrasekhara (Vajra Peak), the influential schema of the five Buddha families is developed.[16] Other early tantras include the Mahāvairocana Abhisaṃbodhi and the Guhyasamāja (Gathering of Secrets).[17]

The Guhyasamāja is a Mahayoga class of Tantra, which features forms of ritual practice considered "left-hand" (vamachara) such as the use of taboo substances like alcohol, consort practices, and charnel ground practices which evoke wrathful deities.[18] Ryujun Tajima divides the tantras into those which were "a development of Mahāyānist thought" and those "formed in a rather popular mould toward the end of the eighth century and declining into the esoterism of the left",[19] this "left esoterism" mainly refers to the Yogini tantras and later works associated with wandering yogis. This practice survives in Tibetan Buddhism, but it is rare for this to be done with an actual person. It is more common for a yogi or yogini to use an imagined consort (a buddhist tantric deity, i.e. a yidam).[20]

These later tantras such as the Hevajra Tantra and the Chakrasamvara are classed as "Yogini tantras" and represent the final form of development of Indian Buddhist tantras in the ninth and tenth centuries.[15] The Kalachakra tantra developed in the 10th century.[21] It is farthest removed from the earlier Buddhist traditions, and incorporates concepts of messianism and astrology not present elsewhere in Buddhist literature.[8]

According to Ronald M. Davidson, the rise of Tantric Buddhism was a response to the feudal structure of Indian society in the early medieval period (ca. 500-1200 CE) which saw kings being divinized as manifestations of gods. Likewise, tantric yogis reconfigured their practice through the metaphor of being consecrated (abhiśeka) as the overlord (rājādhirāja) of a mandala palace of divine vassals, an imperial metaphor symbolizing kingly fortresses and their political power.[22]

Relationship to Shaivism

 
Vajrayana adopted deities such as Bhairava, known as Yamantaka in Tibetan Buddhism.
 
The central deity of the Cakrasaṃvara Tantra, which according to scholars like David B. Gray and Alexis Sanderson, appropriated numerous elements from nondual Shaiva Tantra

The question of the origins of early Vajrayāna has been taken up by various scholars. David Seyfort Ruegg has suggested that Buddhist tantra employed various elements of a “pan-Indian religious substrate” which is not specifically Buddhist, Shaiva or Vaishnava.[23]

According to Alexis Sanderson, various classes of Vajrayāna literature developed as a result of royal courts sponsoring both Buddhism and Shaivism.[24] The relationship between the two systems can be seen in texts like the Mañjusrimulakalpa, which later came to be classified under Kriya tantra, and states that mantras taught in the Shaiva, Garuda and Vaishnava tantras will be effective if applied by Buddhists since they were all taught originally by Manjushri.[25]

Alexis Sanderson notes that the Vajrayāna Yogini tantras draw extensively from the material also present in Shaiva Bhairava tantras classified as Vidyapitha. Sanderson's comparison of them shows similarity in "ritual procedures, style of observance, deities, mantras, mandalas, ritual dress, Kapalika accouterments like skull bowls, specialized terminology, secret gestures, and secret jargons. There is even direct borrowing of passages from Shaiva texts."[26] Sanderson gives numerous examples such as the Guhyasiddhi of Padmavajra, a work associated with the Guhyasamaja tradition, which prescribes acting as a Shaiva guru and initiating members into Saiva Siddhanta scriptures and mandalas.[27] Sanderson says that the Samvara tantra texts adopted the pitha list from the Shaiva text Tantrasadbhava, introducing a copying error where a deity was mistaken for a place.[28]

Ronald M. Davidson meanwhile, argues that Sanderson's arguments for direct influence from Shaiva Vidyapitha texts are problematic because "the chronology of the Vidyapitha tantras is by no means so well established"[29] and that "the available evidence suggests that received Saiva tantras come into evidence sometime in the ninth to tenth centuries with their affirmation by scholars like Abhinavagupta (c. 1000 c.e.)"[30] Davidson also notes that the list of pithas or sacred places "are certainly not particularly Buddhist, nor are they uniquely Kapalika venues, despite their presence in lists employed by both traditions."[31] Davidson further adds that like the Buddhists, the Shaiva tradition was also involved in the appropriation of Hindu and non-Hindu deities, texts and traditions, an example being "village or tribal divinities like Tumburu".[32]

Davidson adds that Buddhists and Kapalikas as well as other ascetics (possibly Pasupatas) mingled and discussed their paths at various pilgrimage places and that there were conversions between the different groups. Thus he concludes:

The Buddhist-Kapalika connection is more complex than a simple process of religious imitation and textual appropriation. There can be no question that the Buddhist tantras were heavily influenced by Kapalika and other Saiva movements, but the influence was apparently mutual. Perhaps a more nuanced model would be that the various lines of transmission were locally flourishing and that in some areas they interacted, while in others they maintained concerted hostility. Thus the influence was both sustained and reciprocal, even in those places where Buddhist and Kapalika siddhas were in extreme antagonism.[33]

Davidson also argues for the influence of non-Brahmanical and outcaste tribal religions and their feminine deities (such as Parnasabari and Janguli).[34]

Traditional legends

According to several Buddhist tantras as well as traditional Tibetan Buddhist sources, the tantras and the Vajrayana was taught by the Buddha Shakyamuni, but only to some individuals.[35][36] There are several stories and versions of how the tantras were disseminated. The Jñana Tilaka Tantra, for example, has the Buddha state that the tantras will be explained by the bodhisattva Vajrapani.[35] One of the most famous legends is that of king Indrabhuti (also known as King Ja) of Oddiyana (a figure related to Vajrapani, in some cases said to be an emanation of him).[35]

Other accounts attribute the revelation of Buddhist tantras to Padmasambhava, saying that he was an emanation of Amitabha and Avaloketishvara and that his arrival was predicted by the Buddha. Some accounts also maintain Padmasambhava is a direct reincarnation of Buddha Shakyamuni.[36]

Philosophical background

 
The 9th-century Agusan image, a holy Vajrayana Buddhist relic from the Philippines[37][38]

According to Louis de La Vallée-Poussin and Alex Wayman, the philosophical view of the Vajrayana is based on Mahayana Buddhist philosophy, mainly the Madhyamaka and Yogacara schools.[39][40] The major difference seen by Vajrayana thinkers is the superiority of Tantric methods, which provide a faster vehicle to liberation and contain many more skillful means (upaya).

The importance of the theory of emptiness is central to the Tantric Buddhist view and practice. The Buddhist emptiness view sees the world as being fluid, without an ontological foundation or inherent existence, but ultimately a fabric of constructions. Because of this, tantric practice such as self-visualization as the deity is seen as being no less real than everyday reality, but a process of transforming reality itself, including the practitioner's identity as the deity. As Stephan Beyer notes, "In a universe where all events dissolve ontologically into Emptiness, the touching of Emptiness in the ritual is the re-creation of the world in actuality".[41]

The doctrine of Buddha-nature, as outlined in the Ratnagotravibhāga of Asanga, was also an important theory which became the basis for Tantric views.[42] As explained by the Tantric commentator Lilavajra, this "intrinsic secret (behind) diverse manifestation" is the utmost secret and aim of Tantra. According to Alex Wayman this "Buddha embryo" (tathāgatagarbha) is a "non-dual, self-originated Wisdom (jnana), an effortless fount of good qualities" that resides in the mindstream but is "obscured by discursive thought."[43] This doctrine is often associated with the idea of the inherent or natural luminosity (Skt: prakṛti-prabhāsvara-citta, T. ’od gsal gyi sems) or purity of the mind (prakrti-parisuddha).

Another fundamental theory of Tantric practice is that of transformation. In Vajrayāna, negative mental factors such as desire, hatred, greed, pride are used as part of the path. As noted by French Indologist Madeleine Biardeau, the tantric doctrine is "an attempt to place kama, desire, in every meaning of the word, in the service of liberation."[44] This view is outlined in the following quote from the Hevajra tantra:

Those things by which evil men are bound, others turn into means and gain thereby release from the bonds of existence. By passion the world is bound, by passion too it is released, but by heretical Buddhists this practice of reversals is not known.[45]

The Hevajra further states that "one knowing the nature of poison may dispel poison with poison."[44] As Snellgrove notes, this idea is already present in Asanga's Mahayana-sutra-alamkara-karika and therefore it is possible that he was aware of Tantric techniques, including sexual yoga.[46]

According to Buddhist Tantra, there is no strict separation of the profane or samsara and the sacred or nirvana, rather they exist in a continuum. All individuals are seen as containing the seed of enlightenment within, which is covered over by defilements. Douglas Duckworth notes that Vajrayana sees Buddhahood not as something outside or an event in the future, but as immanently present.[47]

Indian Tantric Buddhist philosophers such as Buddhaguhya, Vimalamitra, Ratnākaraśānti and Abhayakaragupta continued the tradition of Buddhist philosophy and adapted it to their commentaries on the major Tantras. Abhayakaragupta's Vajravali is a key source in the theory and practice of tantric rituals. After monks such as Vajrabodhi and Śubhakarasiṃha brought Tantra to Tang China (716 to 720), tantric philosophy continued to be developed in Chinese and Japanese by thinkers such as Yi Xing and Kūkai.

Likewise in Tibet, Sakya Pandita (1182–28 – 1251), as well as later thinkers like Longchenpa (1308–1364) expanded on these philosophies in their tantric commentaries and treatises. The status of the tantric view continued to be debated in medieval Tibet. Tibetan Buddhist Rongzom Chokyi Zangpo (1012–1088) held that the views of sutra such as Madhyamaka were inferior to that of tantra, which was based on basic purity of ultimate reality.[48] Tsongkhapa (1357–1419) on the other hand, held that there is no difference between Vajrayāna and other forms of Mahayana in terms of prajnaparamita (perfection of insight) itself, only that Vajrayāna is a method which works faster.[49]

Place within Buddhist tradition

 
Tangut Auspicious Tantra of All-Reaching Union

Various classifications are possible when distinguishing Vajrayāna from the other Buddhist traditions. Vajrayāna can be seen as a third yana, next to Śrāvakayāna and Mahayana.[8] Vajrayāna can be distinguished from the Sutrayana. The Sutrayana is the method of perfecting good qualities, where the Vajrayāna is the method of taking the intended outcome of Buddhahood as the path. Vajrayāna can also be distinguished from the paramitayana. According to this schema, Indian Mahayana revealed two vehicles (yana) or methods for attaining enlightenment: the method of the perfections (Paramitayana) and the method of mantra (Mantrayana).[50]

The Paramitayana consists of the six or ten paramitas, of which the scriptures say that it takes three incalculable aeons to lead one to Buddhahood. The tantra literature, however, says that the Mantrayana leads one to Buddhahood in a single lifetime.[50] According to the literature, the mantra is an easy path without the difficulties innate to the Paramitayana.[50] Mantrayana is sometimes portrayed as a method for those of inferior abilities.[50] However the practitioner of the mantra still has to adhere to the vows of the Bodhisattva.[50]

Characteristics

 
Manjushri, the bodhisattva associated with prajñā

Goal

The goal of spiritual practice within the Mahayana and Vajrayāna traditions is to become a Sammāsambuddha (fully awakened Buddha), those on this path are termed Bodhisattvas. As with the Mahayana, motivation is a vital component of Vajrayāna practice. The Bodhisattva-path is an integral part of the Vajrayāna, which teaches that all practices are to be undertaken with the motivation to achieve Buddhahood for the benefit of all sentient beings.

In the vehicle of Sutra Mahayana the "path of the cause" is taken, whereby a practitioner starts with his or her potential Buddha-nature and nurtures it to produce the fruit of Buddhahood. In the Vajrayāna the "path of the fruit" is taken whereby the practitioner takes his or her innate Buddha-nature as the means of practice. The premise is that since we innately have an enlightened mind, practicing seeing the world in terms of ultimate truth can help us to attain our full Buddha-nature.[51] Experiencing ultimate truth is said to be the purpose of all the various tantric techniques practiced in the Vajrayana.

Esoteric transmission

 
Monks attending the 2003 Kalachakra empowerment in Bodhgaya, India. Some empowerment ceremonies can include large numbers of initiates.

Vajrayāna Buddhism is esoteric in the sense that the transmission of certain teachings only occurs directly from teacher to student during an empowerment (abhiṣeka) and their practice requires initiation in a ritual space containing the mandala of the deity.[52] Many techniques are also commonly said to be secret, but some Vajrayana teachers have responded that secrecy itself is not important and only a side-effect of the reality that the techniques have no validity outside the teacher-student lineage.[citation needed]

The secrecy of teachings was often protected through the use of allusive, indirect, symbolic and metaphorical language (twilight language) which required interpretation and guidance from a teacher.[53] The teachings may also be considered "self-secret", meaning that even if they were to be told directly to a person, that person would not necessarily understand the teachings without proper context. In this way, the teachings are "secret" to the minds of those who are not following the path with more than a simple sense of curiosity.[54][55]

Because of their role in giving access to the practices and guiding the student through them, the role of the Vajracharya Lama is indispensable in Vajrayāna.

Affirmation of the feminine, antinomian and taboo

 
Tibetan Chakrasamvara statue in Yab-Yum union with his consort Vajravārāhī

Some Vajrayāna rituals traditionally included the use of certain taboo substances, such as blood, semen, alcohol and urine, as ritual offerings and sacraments, though some of these are often replaced with less taboo substances such as yogurt. Tantric feasts and initiations sometimes employed substances like human flesh as noted by Kahha's Yogaratnamala.[56]

The use of these substances is related to the non-dual (advaya) nature of a Buddha's wisdom (buddhajñana). Since the ultimate state is in some sense non-dual, a practitioner can approach that state by "transcending attachment to dual categories such as pure and impure, permitted and forbidden". As the Guhyasamaja Tantra states "the wise man who does not discriminate achieves Buddhahood".[56]

Vajrayāna rituals also include sexual yoga, union with a physical consort as part of advanced practices. Some tantras go further, the Hevajra tantra states "You should kill living beings, speak lying words, take what is not given, consort with the women of others".[56] While some of these statements were taken literally as part of ritual practice, others such as killing were interpreted in a metaphorical sense. In the Hevajra, "killing" is defined as developing concentration by killing the life-breath of discursive thoughts.[57] Likewise, while actual sexual union with a physical consort is practiced, it is also common to use a visualized mental consort.[citation needed]

Alex Wayman points out that the symbolic meaning of tantric sexuality is ultimately rooted in bodhicitta and the bodhisattva's quest for enlightenment is likened to a lover seeking union with the mind of the Buddha.[58] Judith Simmer-Brown notes the importance of the psycho-physical experiences arising in sexual yoga, termed "great bliss" (mahasukha): "Bliss melts the conceptual mind, heightens sensory awareness, and opens the practitioner to the naked experience of the nature of mind."[59] This tantric experience is not the same as ordinary self-gratifying sexual passion since it relies on tantric meditative methods using the illusory body and visualizations as well as the motivation for enlightenment.[60] As the Hevajra tantra says:

This practice [of sexual union with a consort] is not taught for the sake of enjoyment, but for the examination of one's own thought, whether the mind is steady or waving.[61]

Feminine deities and forces are also increasingly prominent in Vajrayāna. In the Yogini tantras in particular, women and female yoginis are given high status as the embodiment of female deities such as the wild and nude Vajrayogini.[62] The Candamaharosana Tantra (viii:29–30) states:

Women are heaven, women are the teaching (dharma)
Women indeed are the highest austerity (tapas)
Women are the Buddha, women are the Sangha
Women are the Perfection of Wisdom.[62]

In India, there is evidence to show that women participated in tantric practice alongside men and were also teachers, adepts and authors of tantric texts.[63]

Vows and behaviour

Practitioners of Vajrayāna need to abide by various tantric vows or pledges called samaya. These are extensions of the rules of the Prātimokṣa and Bodhisattva vows for the lower levels of tantra, and are taken during initiations into the empowerment for a particular Unsurpassed Yoga Tantra. The special tantric vows vary depending on the specific mandala practice for which the initiation is received and also depending on the level of initiation. Ngagpas of the Nyingma school keep a special non-celibate ordination.

A tantric guru, or teacher is expected to keep his or her samaya vows in the same way as his students. Proper conduct is considered especially necessary for a qualified Vajrayana guru. For example, the Ornament for the Essence of Manjushrikirti states:

Distance yourself from Vajra Masters who are not keeping the three vows
who keep on with a root downfall, who are miserly with the Dharma,
and who engage in actions that should be forsaken.
Those who worship them go to hell and so on as a result.[64]

Tantra techniques

 
Mani stones, stones inscribed with the "om mani padme hum" mantra
 
A Japanese Handscroll depicting various mudras, 11th–12th century

While all the Vajrayāna Buddhist traditions include all of the traditional practices used in Mahayana Buddhism such as developing bodhicitta, practicing the paramitas, and meditations, they also make use of unique tantric methods and Dzogchen meditation which are seen as more advanced. These include mantras, mandalas, mudras, deity yoga, other visualization based meditations, illusory body yogas like tummo and rituals like the goma fire ritual. Vajrayana teaches that these techniques provide faster path to Buddhahood.[65]

A central feature of tantric practice is the use of mantras, and seed syllables (bijas). Mantras are words, phrases or a collection of syllables used for a variety of meditative, magical and ritual ends. Mantras are usually associated with specific deities or Buddhas, and are seen as their manifestations in sonic form. They are traditionally believed to have spiritual power, which can lead to enlightenment as well as supramundane abilities (siddhis).[66]

According to Indologist Alex Wayman, Buddhist esotericism is centered on what is known as "the three mysteries" or "secrets": the tantric adept affiliates his body, speech, and mind with the body, speech, and mind of a Buddha through mudra, mantras and samadhi respectively.[67] Padmavajra (c 7th century) explains in his Tantrarthavatara Commentary, the secret Body, Speech, and Mind of the Buddhas are:[68]

  • Secret of Body: Whatever form is necessary to tame the living beings.
  • Secret of Speech: Speech exactly appropriate to the lineage of the creature, as in the language of the yaksas, etc.
  • Secret of Mind: Knowing all things as they really are.

These elements are brought together in the practice of tantric deity yoga, which involves visualizing the deity's body and mandala, reciting the deity's mantra and gaining insight into the nature of things based on this contemplation. Advanced tantric practices such as deity yoga are taught in the context of an initiation ceremony by tantric gurus or vajracharyas (vajra-masters) to the tantric initiate, who also takes on formal commitments or vows (samaya).[66] In Tibetan Buddhism, advanced practices like deity yoga are usually preceded by or coupled with "preliminary practices" called ngondro, consisting of five to seven accumulation practices and includes prostrations and recitations of the 100 syllable mantra.[69]

Vajrayana is a system of tantric lineages, and thus only those who receive an empowerment or initiation (abhiseka) are allowed to practice the more advanced esoteric methods. In tantric deity yoga, mantras or bijas are used during the ritual evocation of deities which are said to arise out of the uttered and visualized mantric syllables. After the deity's image and mandala has been established, heart mantras are visualized as part of the contemplation in different points of the deity's body.[70]

Deity yoga

 
An 18th century Mongolian miniature which depicts a monk generating a tantric visualization
 
A Japanese depiction of the Amida Triad in Seed Syllable form (Siddham Script). Visualizing deities in the form of seed syllables is a common Vajrayana meditation. In Shingon, one of the most common practices is Ajikan (阿字觀), meditating on the syllable A.

The fundamental practice of Buddhist Tantra is "deity yoga" (devatayoga), meditation on a chosen deity or "cherished divinity" (Skt. Iṣṭa-devatā, Tib. yidam), which involves the recitation of mantras, prayers and visualization of the deity, the associated mandala of the deity's Buddha field, along with consorts and attendant Buddhas and bodhisattvas.[71] According to the Tibetan scholar Tsongkhapa, deity yoga is what separates Tantra from Sutra practice.[72]

In the Unsurpassed Yoga Tantras, the most widespread tantric form in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism, this method is divided into two stages, the generation stage (utpatti-krama) and the completion stage (nispanna-krama). In the generation stage, one dissolves one's reality into emptiness and meditates on the deity-mandala, resulting in identification with this divine reality. In the completion stage, the divine image along with the illusory body is applied to the realization of luminous emptiness.

This dissolution into emptiness is then followed by the visualization of the deity and re-emergence of the yogi as the deity. During the process of deity visualization, the deity is to be imaged as not solid or tangible, as "empty yet apparent", with the character of a mirage or a rainbow.[73] This visualization is to be combined with "divine pride", which is "the thought that one is oneself the deity being visualized."[74] Divine pride is different from common pride because it is based on compassion for others and on an understanding of emptiness.[75]

 
A Tibetan depiction of the perfection stage practices of tummo (Skt. candali, inner heat) and phowa (transference of consciousness)

The Tibetologist David Germano outlines two main types of completion practice: a formless and image-less contemplation on the ultimate empty nature of the mind and various yogas that make use of the illusory body to produce energetic sensations of bliss and warmth.[76]

The illusory body yogas systems like the Six Dharmas of Naropa and the Six Yogas of Kalachakra make use of energetic schemas of human psycho-physiology composed of "energy channels" (Skt. nadi, Tib. rtsa), "winds" or currents (Skt. vayu, Tib. rlung), "drops" or charged particles (Skt. bindu, Tib. thig le) and chakras ("wheels"). These subtle energies are seen as "mounts" for consciousness, the physical component of awareness. They are engaged by various means such as pranayama (breath control) to produce blissful experiences that are then applied to the realization of ultimate reality.[77]

Other methods which are associated with the completion stage in Tibetan Buddhism include dream yoga (which relies on lucid dreaming), practices associated with the bardo (the interim state between death and rebirth), transference of consciousness (phowa) and Chöd, in which the yogi ceremonially offers their body to be eaten by tantric deities in a ritual feast.

Other practices

 
A Newari Buddhist mandala used for Guru Puja, Nepal, 19th century, gilt copper inlaid with semiprecious stones
Video of a Shingon Goma Fire Ritual at Yakuōin Yūkiji, Mount Takao

Another form of Vajrayana practice are certain meditative techniques associated with Mahāmudrā and Dzogchen, often termed "formless practices" or the path of self-liberation. These techniques do not rely on deity visualization per se but on direct pointing-out instruction from a master and are often seen as the most advanced and direct methods.[78]

Another distinctive feature of Tantric Buddhism is its unique and often elaborate rituals. They include pujas (worship rituals), prayer festivals, protection rituals, death rituals, tantric feasts (ganachakra), tantric initiations (abhiseka) and the goma fire ritual (common in East Asian Esotericism).

A video of the Cham dance, a traditional practice in some sects of Tibetan Buddhism

An important element in some of these rituals (particularly initiations and tantric feasts) seems to have been the practice of ritual sex or sexual yoga (karmamudra, "desire seal", also referred to as "consort observance", vidyavrata, and euphemistically as "puja"), as well as the sacramental ingestion of "power substances" such as the mingled sexual fluids and uterine blood (often performed by licking these substances off the vulva, a practice termed yonipuja).[79]

The practice of ingestion of sexual fluids is mentioned by numerous tantric commentators, sometimes euphemistically referring to the penis as the "vajra" and the vagina as the "lotus". The Cakrasamvara Tantra commentator Kambala, writing about this practice, states:

The seats are well-known on earth to be spots within the lotus mandala; by abiding within it there is great bliss, the royal nature of nondual joy. Therefore the lotus seat is supreme: filled with a mixture of semen and uterine blood, one should especially kiss it, and lolling with the tongue take it up. Unite the vajra and lotus, with the rapture of drinking [this] liquor.[80]

According to David Gray, these sexual practices probably originated in a non-monastic context, but were later adopted by monastic establishments (such as Nalanda and Vikramashila). He notes that the anxiety of figures like Atisa towards these practices, and the stories of Virūpa and Maitripa being expelled from their monasteries for performing them, shows that supposedly celibate monastics were undertaking these sexual rites.[81]

Because of its adoption by the monastic tradition, the practice of sexual yoga was slowly transformed into one which was either done with an imaginary consort visualized by the yogi instead of an actual person, or reserved to a small group of the "highest" or elite practitioners. Likewise, the drinking of sexual fluids was also reinterpreted by later commentators to refer illusory body anatomy of the perfection stage practices.[82]

Symbols and imagery

 
Dagchen Rinpoche's hand holds a vajra drawing lines that close the Hevajra Mandala, after the empowerment, Tharlam Monastery of Tibetan Buddhism, Boudha, Kathmandu, Nepal.

Vajrayāna uses a rich variety of symbols, terms, and images that have multiple meanings according to a complex system of analogical thinking. In Vajrayāna, symbols, and terms are multi-valent, reflecting the microcosm and the macrocosm as in the phrase "As without, so within" (yatha bahyam tatha ’dhyatmam iti) from Abhayakaragupta's Nispannayogavali.[83]

The vajra

 
Bronze vajras and bell from Itsukushima, Japan

The Sanskrit term "vajra" denoted a thunderbolt like a legendary weapon and divine attribute that was made from an adamantine, or an indestructible substance which could, therefore, pierce and penetrate any obstacle or obfuscation. It is the weapon of choice of Indra, the King of the Devas. As a secondary meaning, "vajra" symbolizes the ultimate nature of things which is described in the tantras as translucent, pure and radiant, but also indestructible and indivisible. It is also symbolic of the power of tantric methods to achieve its goals.[84]

A vajra is also a scepter-like ritual object (Standard Tibetan: རྡོ་རྗེ་ dorje), which has a sphere (and sometimes a gankyil) at its centre, and a variable number of spokes, 3, 5 or 9 at each end (depending on the sadhana), enfolding either end of the rod. The vajra is often traditionally employed in tantric rituals in combination with the bell or ghanta; symbolically, the vajra may represent method as well as great bliss and the bell stands for wisdom, specifically the wisdom realizing emptiness. The union of the two sets of spokes at the center of the wheel is said to symbolize the unity of wisdom (prajña) and compassion (karuna) as well as the sexual union of male and female deities.[85]

Imagery and ritual in deity yoga

 
Chöd ritual, showing the use of Damaru drum and hand-bell, as well as the Kangling (thighbone trumpet)

Representations of the deity, such as statues (murti), paintings (thangka), or mandala, are often employed as an aid to visualization, in deity yoga. The use of visual aids, particularly microcosmic/macrocosmic diagrams, known as mandalas, is another unique feature of Buddhist Tantra. Mandalas are symbolic depictions of the sacred space of the awakened Buddhas and Bodhisattvas as well as of the inner workings of the human person.[86] The macrocosmic symbolism of the mandala then, also represents the forces of the human body. The explanatory tantra of the Guhyasamaja tantra, the Vajramala, states: "The body becomes a palace, the hallowed basis of all the Buddhas."[87]

Mandalas are also sacred enclosures, sacred architecture that house and contain the uncontainable essence of a central deity or yidam and their retinue. In the book The World of Tibetan Buddhism, the Dalai Lama describes mandalas thus: "This is the celestial mansion, the pure residence of the deity." The Five Tathagatas or 'Five Buddhas', along with the figure of the Adi-Buddha, are central to many Vajrayana mandalas as they represent the "five wisdoms", which are the five primary aspects of primordial wisdom or Buddha-nature.[88]

All ritual in Vajrayana practice can be seen as aiding in this process of visualization and identification. The practitioner can use various hand implements such as a vajra, bell, hand-drum (damaru) or a ritual dagger (phurba), but also ritual hand gestures (mudras) can be made, special chanting techniques can be used, and in elaborate offering rituals or initiations, many more ritual implements and tools are used, each with an elaborate symbolic meaning to create a special environment for practice. Vajrayana has thus become a major inspiration in traditional Tibetan art.

Texts

 
Three leaves from a manuscript of the Vajrāvalī, a ritual compendium compiled by Abhayakaragupta, abbot of the Vikramashila monastery around 1100 CE

There is an extended body of texts associated with Buddhist Tantra, including the "tantras" themselves, tantric commentaries and shastras, sadhanas (liturgical texts), ritual manuals (Chinese: 儀軌; Pinyin: Yíguǐ; Rōmaji: Giki), dharanis, poems or songs (dohas), termas and so on. According to Harunaga Isaacson,

Though we do not know precisely at present just how many Indian tantric Buddhist texts survive today in the language in which they were written, their number is certainly over one thousand five hundred; I suspect indeed over two thousand. A large part of this body of texts has also been translated into Tibetan, and a smaller part into Chinese. Aside from these, there are perhaps another two thousand or more works that are known today only from such translations. We can be certain as well that many others are lost to us forever, in whatever form. Of the texts that survive a very small proportion has been published; an almost insignificant percentage has been edited or translated reliably.[89]

Vajrayāna texts exhibit a wide range of literary characteristics—usually a mix of verse and prose, almost always in a Sanskrit that "transgresses frequently against classical norms of grammar and usage," although also occasionally in various Middle Indic dialects or elegant classical Sanskrit.[90]

In Chinese Mantrayana (Zhenyan), and Japanese Shingon, the most influential esoteric texts are the Mahavairocana Tantra and the Vajraśekhara Sūtra.[91][92]

In Tibetan Buddhism, a large number of tantric works are widely studied and different schools focus on the study and practice of different cycles of texts. According to Geoffrey Samuel,

the Sakyapa specialize in the Hevajra Tantra, the Nyingmapa specialize in the various so called Old Tantras and terma cycles, and the most important Kagyudpa and Gelugpa tantras are Guhyasamāja, Cakrasaṃvara and Kālacakra.[93]

Dunhuang manuscripts

The Dunhuang manuscripts also contain Tibetan Tantric manuscripts. Dalton and Schaik (2007, revised) provide an excellent online catalogue listing 350 Tibetan Tantric Manuscripts] from Dunhuang in the Stein Collection of the British Library which is currently fully accessible online in discrete digitized manuscripts.[web 1] With the Wylie transcription of the manuscripts they are to be made discoverable online in the future.[94] These 350 texts are just a small portion of the vast cache of the Dunhuang manuscripts.

Traditions

 
Map showing the dominant Buddhist tradition throughout Asia. Vajrayana (in the form of Tibetan Buddhism) dominates the Himalayan regions and in the Mongolian regions.
 
The Nīlakaṇṭha Dhāraṇī engraved on a stele. Temple Fo Ding Shan Chao Sheng in Sanyi Township, Taiwan. Erected in June 2005.

Although there is historical evidence for Vajrayāna Buddhism in Southeast Asia and elsewhere (see History of Vajrayāna above), today the Vajrayāna exists primarily in the form of the two major traditions of Tibetan Buddhism and Japanese Esoteric Buddhism in Japan known as Shingon (literally "True Speech", i.e. mantra), with a handful of minor subschools utilising lesser amounts of esoteric or tantric materials.

The distinction between traditions is not always rigid. For example, the tantra sections of the Tibetan Buddhist canon of texts sometimes include material not usually thought of as tantric outside the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, such as the Heart Sutra[95] and even versions of some material found in the Pali Canon.[96][a]

Chinese Esoteric Buddhism

Esoteric and Tantric teachings followed the same route into northern China as Buddhism itself, arriving via the Silk Road and Southeast Asian Maritime trade routes sometime during the first half of the 7th century, during the Tang dynasty and received sanction from the emperors of the Tang dynasty. During this time, three great masters came from India to China: Śubhakarasiṃha, Vajrabodhi, and Amoghavajra who translated key texts and founded the Zhenyan (真言, "true word", "mantra") tradition.[97] Zhenyan was also brought to Japan as Shingon during this period. This tradition focused on tantras like the Mahavairocana tantra, and unlike Tibetan Buddhism, it does not employ the antinomian and radical tantrism of the Anuttarayoga Tantras. The prestige of this tradition eventually influenced other schools of Chinese Buddhism such as Chan and Tiantai to adopt various esoteric practices over time, leading to a merging of teachings between the various schools.[98][99][100] During the Yuan dynasty, the Mongol emperors made Tibetan Buddhism the official religion of China, and Tibetan lamas were given patronage at the court.[101] Imperial support of Tibetan Vajrayana continued into the Ming and Qing dynasties.

Today, esoteric traditions are deeply embedded in mainstream Chinese Buddhism and expressed through various rituals which make use of tantric mantra and dhāraṇī and the veneration of certain tantric deities like Cundi and Acala.[102] One example of esoteric teachings still practiced in many Chinese Buddhist monasteries is the Śūraṅgama Sūtra and the dhāraṇī revealed within it, the Śūraṅgama Mantra, which are especially influential in the Chinese Chan tradition.[103]

Another form of esoteric Buddhism in China is Azhaliism, which is practiced among the Bai people of China and venerates Mahakala as a major deity.[104][105]

Japanese Esotericism

 
Portrait of Kobo Daishi (Kukai) holding a vajra and a mala, 14th century, Art Institute of Chicago

Shingon Buddhism

The Shingon school is found in Japan and includes practices, known in Japan as Mikkyō ("Esoteric (or Mystery) Teaching"), which are similar in concept to those in Vajrayana Buddhism. The lineage for Shingon Buddhism differs from that of Tibetan Vajrayana, having emerged from India during the 9th–11th centuries in the Pala Dynasty and Central Asia (via China) and is based on earlier versions of the Indian texts than the Tibetan lineage. Shingon shares material with Tibetan Buddhism – such as the esoteric sutras (called Tantras in Tibetan Buddhism) and mandalas – but the actual practices are not related. The primary texts of Shingon Buddhism are the Mahavairocana Sutra and Vajrasekhara Sutra. The founder of Shingon Buddhism was Kukai, a Japanese monk who studied in China in the 9th century during the Tang dynasty and brought back Vajrayana scriptures, techniques and mandalas then popular in China. The school was merged into other schools in China towards the end of the Tang dynasty but was sectarian in Japan. Shingon is one of the few remaining branches of Buddhism in the world that continues to use the siddham script of the Sanskrit language.

Tendai Buddhism

Although the Tendai school in China and Japan does employ some esoteric practices, these rituals came to be considered of equal importance with the exoteric teachings of the Lotus Sutra. By chanting mantras, maintaining mudras, or practicing certain forms of meditation, Tendai maintains that one is able to understand sense experiences as taught by the Buddha, have faith that one is innately an enlightened being, and that one can attain enlightenment within the current lifetime.

Shugendō

 
Yamabushi priests at Gose, Nara

Shugendō was founded in 7th-century Japan by the ascetic En no Gyōja, based on the Queen's Peacocks Sutra. With its origins in the solitary hijiri back in the 7th century, Shugendō evolved as a sort of amalgamation between Esoteric Buddhism, Shinto and several other religious influences including Taoism. Buddhism and Shinto were amalgamated in the shinbutsu shūgō, and Kūkai's syncretic religion held wide sway up until the end of the Edo period, coexisting with Shinto elements within Shugendō[106]

In 1613 during the Edo period, the Tokugawa Shogunate issued a regulation obliging Shugendō temples to belong to either Shingon or Tendai temples. During the Meiji Restoration, when Shinto was declared an independent state religion separate from Buddhism, Shugendō was banned as a superstition not fit for a new, enlightened Japan. Some Shugendō temples converted themselves into various officially approved Shintō denominations. In modern times, Shugendō is practiced mainly by Tendai and Shingon sects, retaining an influence on modern Japanese religion and culture.[107]

Korean milgyo

Esoteric Buddhist practices (known as milgyo, 密教) and texts arrived in Korea during the initial introduction of Buddhism to the region in 372 CE.[108] Esoteric Buddhism was supported by the royalty of both Unified Silla (668–935) and Goryeo Dynasty (918–1392).[108] During the Goryeo Dynasty esoteric practices were common within large sects like the Seon school, and the Hwaeom school as well as smaller esoteric sects like the Sinin (mudra) and Ch'ongji (Dharani) schools. During the era of the Mongol occupation (1251–1350s), Tibetan Buddhism also existed in Korea though it never gained a foothold there.[109]

During the Joseon dynasty, Esoteric Buddhist schools were forced to merge with the Seon and Kyo schools, becoming the ritual specialists. With the decline of Buddhism in Korea, Esoteric Buddhism mostly died out, save for a few traces in the rituals of the Jogye Order and Taego Order.[109]

There are two Esoteric Buddhist schools in modern Korea: the Chinŏn (眞言) and the Jingak Order (眞 覺). According to Henrik H. Sørensen, "they have absolutely no historical link with the Korean Buddhist tradition per se but are late constructs based in large measures on Japanese Shingon Buddhism."[109]

Indo-Tibetan Buddhism

Vajrayāna Buddhism was initially established in Tibet in the 8th century when various figures like Padmasambhāva (8th century CE) and Śāntarakṣita (725–788) were invited by King Trisong Detsen, some time before 767. Tibetan Buddhism reflects the later stages tantric Indian Buddhism of the post-Gupta Early Medieval period (500 to 1200 CE).[110][111] This tradition practices and studies a set of tantric texts and commentaries associated with the more "left hand" (vamachara) tantras, which are not part of East Asian Esoteric Buddhism. These tantras (sometimes termed 'Anuttarayoga tantras' include many transgressive elements, such as sexual and mortuary symbolism that is not shared by the earlier tantras that are studied in East Asian Buddhism. These texts were translated into Classical Tibetan during the "New translation period" (10th–12th centuries). Tibetan Buddhism also includes numerous native Tibetan developments, such as the tulku system, new sadhana texts, Tibetan scholastic works, Dzogchen literature and Terma literature. There are four major traditions or schools: Nyingma, Sakya, Kagyu, and Gelug.

In the pre-modern era, Tibetan Buddhism spread outside of Tibet primarily due to the influence of the Mongol Yuan dynasty (1271–1368), founded by Kublai Khan, which ruled China, Mongolia and eastern Siberia. In the modern era it has spread outside of Asia due to the efforts of the Tibetan diaspora (1959 onwards). The Tibetan Buddhist tradition is today found in Tibet, Bhutan, northern India, Nepal, southwestern and northern China, Mongolia and various constituent republics of Russia that are adjacent to the area, such as Amur Oblast, Buryatia, Chita Oblast, the Tuva Republic and Khabarovsk Krai. Tibetan Buddhism is also the main religion in Kalmykia. It has also spread to Western countries and there are now international networks of Tibetan Buddhist temples and meditation centers in the Western world from all four schools.

Nepalese Newar Buddhism

Newar Buddhism is practiced by Newars in Nepal. It is the only form of Vajrayana Buddhism in which the scriptures are written in Sanskrit and this tradition has preserved many Vajrayana texts in this language. Its priests do not follow celibacy and are called vajracharya (literally "diamond-thunderbolt carriers").

Indonesian Esoteric Buddhism

 
A painting by G.B. Hooijer (c. 1916–1919) reconstructing the scene of Borobudur during its heyday

Indonesian Esoteric Buddhism refers to the traditions of Esoteric Buddhism found in the Indonesian islands of Java and Sumatra before the rise and dominance of Islam in the region (13-16th centuries). The Buddhist empire of Srivijaya (650 CE–1377 CE) was a major center of Esoteric Buddhist learning which drew Chinese monks such as Yijing and Indian scholars like Atiśa.[112] The temple complex at Borobudur in central Java, built by the Shailendra dynasty also reflects strong Tantric or at least proto-tantric influences, particularly of the cult of Vairocana.[113][114]

Indonesian Esoteric Buddhism may have also reached the Philippines, possibly establishing the first form of Buddhism in the Philippines. The few Buddhist artifacts that have been found in the islands reflect the iconography of Srivijaya's Vajrayana.[115]

Southern Esoteric Buddhism

"Southern Esoteric Buddhism" or Borān kammaṭṭhāna ('ancient practices') is a term for esoteric forms of Buddhism from Southeast Asia, where Theravada Buddhism is dominant. The monks of the Sri Lankan, Abhayagiri vihara once practiced forms of tantra which were popular in the island.[116] Another tradition of this type was Ari Buddhism, which was common in Burma. The Tantric Buddhist 'Yogāvacara' tradition was a major Buddhist tradition in Cambodia, Laos and Thailand well into the modern era.[117] This form of Buddhism declined after the rise of Southeast Asian Buddhist modernism.

This form of esoteric Buddhism is unique in that it developed in Southeast Asia and has no direct connection to the Indian Tantric Movement of the Mahasiddhas and the tantric establishments of Nalanda and Vikramashila Universities. Thus, it does not make use of the classic Buddhist tantras and has its own independent literature and practice tradition.

Academic study difficulties

Serious Vajrayana academic study in the Western world is in early stages due to the following obstacles:[118]

  1. Although a large number of Tantric scriptures are extant, they have not been formally ordered or systematized.
  2. Due to the esoteric initiatory nature of the tradition, many practitioners will not divulge information or sources of their information.
  3. As with many different subjects, it must be studied in context and with a long history spanning many different cultures.
  4. Ritual, as well as doctrine, need to be investigated.

Buddhist tantric practice is categorized as secret practice; this is to avoid misinformed people from harmfully misusing the practices. A method to keep this secrecy is that tantric initiation is required from a master before any instructions can be received about the actual practice. During the initiation procedure in the highest class of tantra (such as the Kalachakra), students must take the tantric vows which commit them to such secrecy.[web 2] "Explaining general tantra theory in a scholarly manner, not sufficient for practice, is likewise not a root downfall. Nevertheless, it weakens the effectiveness of our tantric practice."[web 3]

Terminology

The terminology associated with Vajrayana Buddhism can be confusing. Most of the terms originated in the Sanskrit language of tantric Indian Buddhism and may have passed through other cultures, notably those of Japan and Tibet, before translation for the modern reader. Further complications arise as seemingly equivalent terms can have subtle variations in use and meaning according to context, the time and place of use. A third problem is that the Vajrayana texts employ the tantric tradition of twilight language, a means of instruction that is deliberately coded. These obscure teaching methods relying on symbolism as well as synonym, metaphor and word association add to the difficulties faced by those attempting to understand Vajrayana Buddhism:

In the Vajrayana tradition, now preserved mainly in Tibetan lineages, it has long been recognized that certain important teachings are expressed in a form of secret symbolic language known as saṃdhyā-bhāṣā, 'Twilight Language'. Mudrās and mantras, maṇḍalas and cakras, those mysterious devices and diagrams that were so much in vogue in the pseudo-Buddhist hippie culture of the 1960s, were all examples of Twilight Language [...][119]

The term Tantric Buddhism was not one originally used by those who practiced it. As scholar Isabelle Onians explains:

"Tantric Buddhism" [...] is not the transcription of a native term, but a rather modern coinage, if not totally occidental. For the equivalent Sanskrit tāntrika is found, but not in Buddhist texts. Tāntrika is a term denoting someone who follows the teachings of scriptures known as Tantras, but only in Saivism, not Buddhism [...] Tantric Buddhism is a name for a phenomenon which calls itself, in Sanskrit, Mantranaya, Vajrayāna, Mantrayāna or Mantramahāyāna (and apparently never Tantrayāna). Its practitioners are known as mantrins, yogis, or sādhakas. Thus, our use of the anglicised adjective “Tantric” for the Buddhist religion taught in Tantras is not native to the tradition, but is a borrowed term which serves its purpose.[120]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Skilling, Mahasutras, volume I, parts I & II, 1997, Pali Text Society, page 78, speaks of the tantra divisions of some editions of the Kangyur as including Sravakayana, Mahayana and Vajrayana texts

References

Citations

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  3. ^ Lü, Jianfu (2017). Chinese and Tibetan Esoteric Buddhism. Studies on East Asian Religions. Vol. 1. Brill. pp. 72–82.
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  7. ^ Schumann 1974, p. 163.
  8. ^ a b c Kitagawa 2002, p. 80.
  9. ^ Dowman 1985, Introduction.
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  11. ^ Snellgrove, David. (1987) Indo-Tibetan Buddhism: Indian Buddhists and their Tibetan successors. p 122.
  12. ^ Williams, Wynne, Tribe; Buddhist Thought: A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition, page 225.
  13. ^ Osto, Douglas. “Proto–Tantric” Elements in The Gandavyuha sutra. Journal of Religious History Vol. 33, No. 2, June 2009.
  14. ^ Snellgrove, David. (1987) Indo-Tibetan Buddhism: Indian Buddhists and their Tibetan successors. pp 147.
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  16. ^ Williams, Wynne, Tribe; Buddhist Thought: A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition, page 210.
  17. ^ Wayman, Alex; The Buddhist Tantras: Light on Indo-Tibetan Esotericism, Routledge, (2008), page 19.
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Sources

  • Akira, Hirakawa (1993), Paul Groner (ed.), History of Indian Buddhism, Translated by Paul Groner, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers
  • Banerjee, S. C. (1977), Tantra in Bengal: A Study in Its Origin, Development and Influence, Manohar, ISBN 978-81-85425-63-4
  • Buswell, Robert E., ed. (2004), Encyclopedia of Buddhism, Macmillan Reference USA, ISBN 978-0-02-865910-7
  • Datta, Amaresh (2006), The Encyclopaedia Of Indian Literature (Volume One (A To Devo), Volume 1, Sahitya Akademi publications, ISBN 978-81-260-1803-1
  • Dowman, Keith (tr.) (1985), Masters of Mahāmudrā: Songs and Histories of the Eighty-four Buddhist Siddhas, Ithaca, NY: State University of New York Press, ISBN 9780887061585
  • Harding, Sarah (1996), Creation and Completion - Essential Points of Tantric Meditation, Boston: Wisdom Publications
  • Hawkins, Bradley K. (1999), Buddhism, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-21162-8
  • Hua, Hsuan; Heng Chih; Heng Hsien; David Rounds; Ron Epstein; et al. (2003), , Burlingame, California: Buddhist Text Translation Society, ISBN 978-0-88139-949-3, archived from the original on May 29, 2009
  • Kitagawa, Joseph Mitsuo (2002), The Religious Traditions of Asia: Religion, History, and Culture, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-7007-1762-0
  • Macmillan Publishing (2004), Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism, Macmillan Publishing
  • Mishra, Baba; Dandasena, P.K. (2011), Settlement and urbanization in ancient Orissa
  • Patrul Rinpoche (1994), Brown, Kerry; Sharma, Sima (eds.), kunzang lama'i shelung [The Words of My Perfect Teacher], San Francisco, California, USA: HarperCollinsPublishers, ISBN 978-0-06-066449-7 Translated by the Padmakara Translation Group. With a foreword by the Dalai Lama.
  • Ray, Reginald A (2001), Secret of the Vajra World: The Tantric Buddhism of Tibet, Boston: Shambhala Publications
  • Schumann, Hans Wolfgang (1974), Buddhism: an outline of its teachings and schools, Theosophical Pub. House
  • Snelling, John (1987), The Buddhist handbook. A Complete Guide to Buddhist Teaching and Practice, London: Century Paperbacks
  • Thompson, John (2014). "Buddhism's Vajrayāna: Meditation". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion (2nd ed.). Boston: Springer. pp. 250–255. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-6086-2_9251. ISBN 978-1-4614-6087-9.
  • Thompson, John (2014). "Buddhism's Vajrayāna: Rituals". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion (2nd ed.). Boston: Springer. pp. 255–259. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-6086-2_9347. ISBN 978-1-4614-6087-9.
  • Thompson, John (2014). "Buddhism's Vajrayāna: Tantra". In Leeming, David A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion (2nd ed.). Boston: Springer. pp. 260–265. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-6086-2_9348. ISBN 978-1-4614-6087-9.
  • Wardner, A.K. (1999), Indian Buddhism, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers
  • Williams, Paul; Tribe, Anthony (2000), Buddhist Thought: A complete introduction to the Indian tradition, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-203-18593-3

Further reading

  • Rongzom Chözang; Köppl, Heidi I. (trans) (2008). Establishing Appearances as Divine. Snow Lion. pp. 95–108. ISBN 9781559392884.
  • Kongtrul, Jamgon; Thrangu Rinpoche; Harding, Sarah (2002). Creation and Completion: Essential Points of Tantric Meditation. Wisdom Publications. ISBN 978-0-86171-312-7.
  • Kongtrul, Jamgon; Barron, Richard (1998). Buddhist Ethics. The Treasury of Knowledge (book 5). Ithaca: Snow Lion. pp. 215–306. ISBN 978-1-55939-191-7.
  • Kongtrul, Jamgon; Guarisco, Elio; McLeod, Ingrid (2004). Systems of Buddhist Tantra:The Indestructible Way of Secret Mantra. The Treasury of Knowledge (book 6 part 4). Ithaca: Snow Lion. ISBN 9781559392105.
  • Kongtrul, Jamgon; Guarisco, Elio; McLeod, Ingrid (2008). The Elements of Tantric Practice:A General Exposition of the Process of Meditation in the Indestructible Way of Secret Mantra. The Treasury of Knowledge (book 8 part 3). Ithaca: Snow Lion. ISBN 9781559393058.
  • Kongtrul, Jamgon; Harding, Sarah (2007). Esoteric Instructions: A Detailed Presentation of the Process of Meditation in Vajrayana. The Treasury of Knowledge (book 8 part 4). Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 978-1-55939-284-6.
  • Kongtrul, Jamgon; Barron, Richard (2010). Journey and Goal: An Analysis of the Spiritual Paths and Levels to be Traversed and the Consummate Fruition state. The Treasury of Knowledge (books 9 & 10). Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications. pp. 159–251, 333–451. ISBN 978-1-55939-360-7.
  • Tantric Ethics: An Explanation of the Precepts for Buddhist Vajrayana Practice by Tson-Kha-Pa, ISBN 0-86171-290-0
  • Perfect Conduct: Ascertaining the Three Vows by Ngari Panchen, Dudjom Rinpoche, ISBN 0-86171-083-5
  • Āryadeva's Lamp that Integrates the Practices (Caryāmelāpakapradīpa): The Gradual Path of Vajrayāna Buddhism according to the Esoteric Community Noble Tradition, ed. and trans by Christian K. Wedemeyer (New York: AIBS/Columbia Univ. Press, 2007). ISBN 978-0-9753734-5-3
  • S. C. Banerji, Tantra in Bengal: A Study of Its Origin, Development and Influence, Manohar (1977) (2nd ed. 1992). ISBN 8185425639
  • Arnold, Edward A. on behalf of Namgyal Monastery Institute of Buddhist Studies, fore. by Robert A. F. Thurman. As Long As Space Endures: Essays on the Kalacakra Tantra in Honor of H.H. the Dalai Lama, Snow Lion Publications, 2009.
  • Snellgrove, David L.: Indo-Tibetan Buddhism. Indian Buddhists and Their Tibetan Successors. London: Serindia, 1987.

External links

  •   Media related to Vajrayana at Wikimedia Commons
  • An Introduction to Vajrayana
  • What is Vajrayana Buddhism?

vajrayana, esoteric, buddhism, redirects, here, book, sinnett, esoteric, buddhism, book, vajrayāna, sanskrit, वज, रय, thunderbolt, vehicle, diamond, vehicle, indestructible, vehicle, along, with, mantrayāna, guhyamantrayāna, tantrayāna, secret, mantra, tantric. Esoteric Buddhism redirects here For the book by A P Sinnett see Esoteric Buddhism book Vajrayana Sanskrit वज रय न thunderbolt vehicle diamond vehicle or indestructible vehicle along with Mantrayana Guhyamantrayana Tantrayana Secret Mantra Tantric Buddhism and Esoteric Buddhism are names referring to Buddhist traditions associated with Tantra and Secret Mantra which developed in the medieval Indian subcontinent and spread to Tibet Nepal other Himalayan states East Asia and Mongolia A vajra and bell ghanta which are classic ritual symbols of Vajrayana Vajrayana practices are connected to specific lineages in Buddhism through the teachings of lineage holders Others might generally refer to texts as the Buddhist Tantras 1 It includes practices that make use of mantras dharanis mudras mandalas and the visualization of deities and Buddhas Traditional Vajrayana sources say that the tantras and the lineage of Vajrayana were taught by Sakyamuni Buddha and other figures such as the bodhisattva Vajrapani On the other hand contemporary historians of Buddhist studies argue that Vajrayana does not predate the tantric era of medieval India c 5th century CE onwards 2 According to Vajrayana scriptures the term Vajrayana refers to one of three vehicles or routes to enlightenment the other two being the Sravakayana also known pejoratively as the Hinayana and Mahayana a k a Paramitayana There are several Buddhist tantric traditions that are currently practiced including Tibetan Buddhism Chinese Esoteric Buddhism Shingon Buddhism and Newar Buddhism Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 Mahasiddhas and the tantric movement 2 2 Tantras 2 3 Relationship to Shaivism 2 4 Traditional legends 3 Philosophical background 4 Place within Buddhist tradition 5 Characteristics 5 1 Goal 5 2 Esoteric transmission 5 3 Affirmation of the feminine antinomian and taboo 5 4 Vows and behaviour 6 Tantra techniques 6 1 Deity yoga 6 2 Other practices 7 Symbols and imagery 7 1 The vajra 7 2 Imagery and ritual in deity yoga 8 Texts 8 1 Dunhuang manuscripts 9 Traditions 9 1 Chinese Esoteric Buddhism 9 2 Japanese Esotericism 9 2 1 Shingon Buddhism 9 2 2 Tendai Buddhism 9 2 3 Shugendō 9 3 Korean milgyo 9 4 Indo Tibetan Buddhism 9 5 Nepalese Newar Buddhism 9 6 Indonesian Esoteric Buddhism 9 7 Southern Esoteric Buddhism 10 Academic study difficulties 10 1 Terminology 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksTerminology EditIn Tibetan Buddhism practiced in the Himalayan regions of India Nepal and Bhutan Buddhist Tantra is most often termed Vajrayana Tib ར ར ཐ ག པ dorje tekpa Wyl rdo rje theg pa and Secret mantra Skt Guhyamantra Tib གསང ས གས sang ngak Wyl gsang sngags The vajra is a mythical weapon associated with Indra which was said to be indestructible and unbreakable like a diamond and extremely powerful like thunder Thus the term is variously translated as Diamond Vehicle Thunderbolt Vehicle Indestructible Vehicle and so on Chinese Esoteric Buddhism it is generally known by various terms such as Zhenyan Chinese 真言 literally true word referring to mantra Tangmi or Hanmi 唐密 漢密 Tang Esotericism or Han Esotericism Mizōng 密宗 Esoteric Sect or Mijiao Chinese 密教 Esoteric Teaching The Chinese term mi 密 secret esoteric is a translation of the Sanskrit term Guhya secret hidden profound abstruse 3 In Japan Buddhist esotericism is known as Mikkyō 密教 secret teachings or by the term Shingon a Japanese rendering of Zhenyan which also refers to a specific school of Shingon shu 真言宗 History Edit Mahasiddhas Palpung monastery Note the figure of the great adept Putalipa at center seated in a cave and gazing at an image of the meditational deity Samvara and the figure at the bottom left holding a skull staff khaṭvaṅga and a flaying knife kartika Mahasiddhas and the tantric movement Edit Tantric Buddhism is associated with groups of wandering yogis called mahasiddhas in medieval India 4 According to Robert Thurman these tantric figures thrived during the latter half of the first millennium CE 2 According to Reynolds 2007 the mahasiddhas date to the medieval period in North India and used methods that were radically different from those used in Buddhist monasteries including practicing in charnel grounds 5 Since the practice of Tantra focuses on the transformation of poisons into wisdom the yogic circles came together in tantric feasts often in sacred sites pitha and places ksetra which included dancing singing consort practices and the ingestion of taboo substances like alcohol urine and meat 6 At least two of the mahasiddhas cited in the Buddhist literature are comparable with the Shaiva Nath saints Gorakshanath and Matsyendranath who practiced Hatha Yoga According to Schumann a movement called Sahaja siddhi developed in the 8th century in Bengal 7 It was dominated by long haired wandering mahasiddhas who openly challenged and ridiculed the Buddhist establishment 8 The mahasiddhas pursued siddhis magical powers such as flight and extrasensory perception as well as spiritual liberation 9 Ronald M Davidson states that Buddhist siddhas demonstrated the appropriation of an older sociological form the independent sage magician who lived in a liminal zone on the borders between fields and forests Their rites involved the conjunction of sexual practices and Buddhist mandala visualization with ritual accoutrements made from parts of the human body so that control may be exercised over the forces hindering the natural abilities of the siddha to manipulate the cosmos at will At their most extreme siddhas also represented a defensive position within the Buddhist tradition adopted and sustained for the purpose of aggressive engagement with the medieval culture of public violence They reinforced their reputations for personal sanctity with rumors of the magical manipulation of various flavors of demonic females dakini yaksi yogini cemetery ghouls vetala and other things that go bump in the night Operating on the margins of both monasteries and polite society some adopted the behaviors associated with ghosts preta pisaca not only as a religious praxis but also as an extension of their implied threats 10 Tantras Edit Main article Tantras Buddhism Diamond Realm mandala based on the tantric Vajrasekhara Sutra and symbolizing the final realization of Vairocana Buddha in Shingon Naked tantrikas dancing and eating from skull cups kapalas closeup of a Chakrasamvara mandala Many of the elements found in Buddhist tantric literature are not wholly new Earlier Mahayana sutras already contained some elements which are emphasized in the Tantras such as mantras and dharani 11 The use of protective verses or phrases actually dates back to the Vedic period and can be seen in the early Buddhist texts where they are termed paritta The practice of visualization of Buddhas such as Amitabha is also seen in pre tantric texts like the Longer Sukhavativyuha Sutra 12 There are other Mahayana sutras which contain proto tantric material such as the Gandavyuha and the Dasabhumika which might have served as a central source of visual imagery for Tantric texts 13 Later Mahayana texts like the Karaṇḍavyuha Sutra c 4th 5th century CE expound the use of mantras such as Om mani padme hum associated with vastly powerful beings like Avalokiteshvara The popular Heart Sutra also includes a mantra Vajrayana Buddhists developed a large corpus of texts called the Buddhist Tantras some of which can be traced to at least the 7th century CE but might be older The dating of the tantras is a difficult indeed an impossible task according to David Snellgrove 14 Some of the earliest of these texts Kriya tantras such as the Manjusri mula kalpa c 6th century teach the use of mantras and dharanis for mostly worldly ends including curing illness controlling the weather and generating wealth 15 The Tattvasaṃgraha Tantra Compendium of Principles classed as a Yoga tantra is one of the first Buddhist tantras which focuses on liberation as opposed to worldly goals In another early tantra the Vajrasekhara Vajra Peak the influential schema of the five Buddha families is developed 16 Other early tantras include the Mahavairocana Abhisaṃbodhi and the Guhyasamaja Gathering of Secrets 17 The Guhyasamaja is a Mahayoga class of Tantra which features forms of ritual practice considered left hand vamachara such as the use of taboo substances like alcohol consort practices and charnel ground practices which evoke wrathful deities 18 Ryujun Tajima divides the tantras into those which were a development of Mahayanist thought and those formed in a rather popular mould toward the end of the eighth century and declining into the esoterism of the left 19 this left esoterism mainly refers to the Yogini tantras and later works associated with wandering yogis This practice survives in Tibetan Buddhism but it is rare for this to be done with an actual person It is more common for a yogi or yogini to use an imagined consort a buddhist tantric deity i e a yidam 20 These later tantras such as the Hevajra Tantra and the Chakrasamvara are classed as Yogini tantras and represent the final form of development of Indian Buddhist tantras in the ninth and tenth centuries 15 The Kalachakra tantra developed in the 10th century 21 It is farthest removed from the earlier Buddhist traditions and incorporates concepts of messianism and astrology not present elsewhere in Buddhist literature 8 According to Ronald M Davidson the rise of Tantric Buddhism was a response to the feudal structure of Indian society in the early medieval period ca 500 1200 CE which saw kings being divinized as manifestations of gods Likewise tantric yogis reconfigured their practice through the metaphor of being consecrated abhiseka as the overlord rajadhiraja of a mandala palace of divine vassals an imperial metaphor symbolizing kingly fortresses and their political power 22 Relationship to Shaivism Edit Further information Kashmir Shaivism Vajrayana adopted deities such as Bhairava known as Yamantaka in Tibetan Buddhism The central deity of the Cakrasaṃvara Tantra which according to scholars like David B Gray and Alexis Sanderson appropriated numerous elements from nondual Shaiva Tantra The question of the origins of early Vajrayana has been taken up by various scholars David Seyfort Ruegg has suggested that Buddhist tantra employed various elements of a pan Indian religious substrate which is not specifically Buddhist Shaiva or Vaishnava 23 According to Alexis Sanderson various classes of Vajrayana literature developed as a result of royal courts sponsoring both Buddhism and Shaivism 24 The relationship between the two systems can be seen in texts like the Manjusrimulakalpa which later came to be classified under Kriya tantra and states that mantras taught in the Shaiva Garuda and Vaishnava tantras will be effective if applied by Buddhists since they were all taught originally by Manjushri 25 Alexis Sanderson notes that the Vajrayana Yogini tantras draw extensively from the material also present in Shaiva Bhairava tantras classified as Vidyapitha Sanderson s comparison of them shows similarity in ritual procedures style of observance deities mantras mandalas ritual dress Kapalika accouterments like skull bowls specialized terminology secret gestures and secret jargons There is even direct borrowing of passages from Shaiva texts 26 Sanderson gives numerous examples such as the Guhyasiddhi of Padmavajra a work associated with the Guhyasamaja tradition which prescribes acting as a Shaiva guru and initiating members into Saiva Siddhanta scriptures and mandalas 27 Sanderson says that the Samvara tantra texts adopted the pitha list from the Shaiva text Tantrasadbhava introducing a copying error where a deity was mistaken for a place 28 Ronald M Davidson meanwhile argues that Sanderson s arguments for direct influence from Shaiva Vidyapitha texts are problematic because the chronology of the Vidyapitha tantras is by no means so well established 29 and that the available evidence suggests that received Saiva tantras come into evidence sometime in the ninth to tenth centuries with their affirmation by scholars like Abhinavagupta c 1000 c e 30 Davidson also notes that the list of pithas or sacred places are certainly not particularly Buddhist nor are they uniquely Kapalika venues despite their presence in lists employed by both traditions 31 Davidson further adds that like the Buddhists the Shaiva tradition was also involved in the appropriation of Hindu and non Hindu deities texts and traditions an example being village or tribal divinities like Tumburu 32 Davidson adds that Buddhists and Kapalikas as well as other ascetics possibly Pasupatas mingled and discussed their paths at various pilgrimage places and that there were conversions between the different groups Thus he concludes The Buddhist Kapalika connection is more complex than a simple process of religious imitation and textual appropriation There can be no question that the Buddhist tantras were heavily influenced by Kapalika and other Saiva movements but the influence was apparently mutual Perhaps a more nuanced model would be that the various lines of transmission were locally flourishing and that in some areas they interacted while in others they maintained concerted hostility Thus the influence was both sustained and reciprocal even in those places where Buddhist and Kapalika siddhas were in extreme antagonism 33 Davidson also argues for the influence of non Brahmanical and outcaste tribal religions and their feminine deities such as Parnasabari and Janguli 34 Traditional legends Edit According to several Buddhist tantras as well as traditional Tibetan Buddhist sources the tantras and the Vajrayana was taught by the Buddha Shakyamuni but only to some individuals 35 36 There are several stories and versions of how the tantras were disseminated The Jnana Tilaka Tantra for example has the Buddha state that the tantras will be explained by the bodhisattva Vajrapani 35 One of the most famous legends is that of king Indrabhuti also known as King Ja of Oddiyana a figure related to Vajrapani in some cases said to be an emanation of him 35 Other accounts attribute the revelation of Buddhist tantras to Padmasambhava saying that he was an emanation of Amitabha and Avaloketishvara and that his arrival was predicted by the Buddha Some accounts also maintain Padmasambhava is a direct reincarnation of Buddha Shakyamuni 36 Philosophical background Edit The 9th century Agusan image a holy Vajrayana Buddhist relic from the Philippines 37 38 According to Louis de La Vallee Poussin and Alex Wayman the philosophical view of the Vajrayana is based on Mahayana Buddhist philosophy mainly the Madhyamaka and Yogacara schools 39 40 The major difference seen by Vajrayana thinkers is the superiority of Tantric methods which provide a faster vehicle to liberation and contain many more skillful means upaya The importance of the theory of emptiness is central to the Tantric Buddhist view and practice The Buddhist emptiness view sees the world as being fluid without an ontological foundation or inherent existence but ultimately a fabric of constructions Because of this tantric practice such as self visualization as the deity is seen as being no less real than everyday reality but a process of transforming reality itself including the practitioner s identity as the deity As Stephan Beyer notes In a universe where all events dissolve ontologically into Emptiness the touching of Emptiness in the ritual is the re creation of the world in actuality 41 The doctrine of Buddha nature as outlined in the Ratnagotravibhaga of Asanga was also an important theory which became the basis for Tantric views 42 As explained by the Tantric commentator Lilavajra this intrinsic secret behind diverse manifestation is the utmost secret and aim of Tantra According to Alex Wayman this Buddha embryo tathagatagarbha is a non dual self originated Wisdom jnana an effortless fount of good qualities that resides in the mindstream but is obscured by discursive thought 43 This doctrine is often associated with the idea of the inherent or natural luminosity Skt prakṛti prabhasvara citta T od gsal gyi sems or purity of the mind prakrti parisuddha Another fundamental theory of Tantric practice is that of transformation In Vajrayana negative mental factors such as desire hatred greed pride are used as part of the path As noted by French Indologist Madeleine Biardeau the tantric doctrine is an attempt to place kama desire in every meaning of the word in the service of liberation 44 This view is outlined in the following quote from the Hevajra tantra Those things by which evil men are bound others turn into means and gain thereby release from the bonds of existence By passion the world is bound by passion too it is released but by heretical Buddhists this practice of reversals is not known 45 The Hevajra further states that one knowing the nature of poison may dispel poison with poison 44 As Snellgrove notes this idea is already present in Asanga s Mahayana sutra alamkara karika and therefore it is possible that he was aware of Tantric techniques including sexual yoga 46 According to Buddhist Tantra there is no strict separation of the profane or samsara and the sacred or nirvana rather they exist in a continuum All individuals are seen as containing the seed of enlightenment within which is covered over by defilements Douglas Duckworth notes that Vajrayana sees Buddhahood not as something outside or an event in the future but as immanently present 47 Indian Tantric Buddhist philosophers such as Buddhaguhya Vimalamitra Ratnakarasanti and Abhayakaragupta continued the tradition of Buddhist philosophy and adapted it to their commentaries on the major Tantras Abhayakaragupta s Vajravali is a key source in the theory and practice of tantric rituals After monks such as Vajrabodhi and Subhakarasiṃha brought Tantra to Tang China 716 to 720 tantric philosophy continued to be developed in Chinese and Japanese by thinkers such as Yi Xing and Kukai Likewise in Tibet Sakya Pandita 1182 28 1251 as well as later thinkers like Longchenpa 1308 1364 expanded on these philosophies in their tantric commentaries and treatises The status of the tantric view continued to be debated in medieval Tibet Tibetan Buddhist Rongzom Chokyi Zangpo 1012 1088 held that the views of sutra such as Madhyamaka were inferior to that of tantra which was based on basic purity of ultimate reality 48 Tsongkhapa 1357 1419 on the other hand held that there is no difference between Vajrayana and other forms of Mahayana in terms of prajnaparamita perfection of insight itself only that Vajrayana is a method which works faster 49 Place within Buddhist tradition Edit Tangut Auspicious Tantra of All Reaching Union Various classifications are possible when distinguishing Vajrayana from the other Buddhist traditions Vajrayana can be seen as a third yana next to Sravakayana and Mahayana 8 Vajrayana can be distinguished from the Sutrayana The Sutrayana is the method of perfecting good qualities where the Vajrayana is the method of taking the intended outcome of Buddhahood as the path Vajrayana can also be distinguished from the paramitayana According to this schema Indian Mahayana revealed two vehicles yana or methods for attaining enlightenment the method of the perfections Paramitayana and the method of mantra Mantrayana 50 The Paramitayana consists of the six or ten paramitas of which the scriptures say that it takes three incalculable aeons to lead one to Buddhahood The tantra literature however says that the Mantrayana leads one to Buddhahood in a single lifetime 50 According to the literature the mantra is an easy path without the difficulties innate to the Paramitayana 50 Mantrayana is sometimes portrayed as a method for those of inferior abilities 50 However the practitioner of the mantra still has to adhere to the vows of the Bodhisattva 50 Characteristics Edit Manjushri the bodhisattva associated with prajna Goal Edit The goal of spiritual practice within the Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions is to become a Sammasambuddha fully awakened Buddha those on this path are termed Bodhisattvas As with the Mahayana motivation is a vital component of Vajrayana practice The Bodhisattva path is an integral part of the Vajrayana which teaches that all practices are to be undertaken with the motivation to achieve Buddhahood for the benefit of all sentient beings In the vehicle of Sutra Mahayana the path of the cause is taken whereby a practitioner starts with his or her potential Buddha nature and nurtures it to produce the fruit of Buddhahood In the Vajrayana the path of the fruit is taken whereby the practitioner takes his or her innate Buddha nature as the means of practice The premise is that since we innately have an enlightened mind practicing seeing the world in terms of ultimate truth can help us to attain our full Buddha nature 51 Experiencing ultimate truth is said to be the purpose of all the various tantric techniques practiced in the Vajrayana Esoteric transmission Edit Main article Esoteric transmission Monks attending the 2003 Kalachakra empowerment in Bodhgaya India Some empowerment ceremonies can include large numbers of initiates Vajrayana Buddhism is esoteric in the sense that the transmission of certain teachings only occurs directly from teacher to student during an empowerment abhiṣeka and their practice requires initiation in a ritual space containing the mandala of the deity 52 Many techniques are also commonly said to be secret but some Vajrayana teachers have responded that secrecy itself is not important and only a side effect of the reality that the techniques have no validity outside the teacher student lineage citation needed The secrecy of teachings was often protected through the use of allusive indirect symbolic and metaphorical language twilight language which required interpretation and guidance from a teacher 53 The teachings may also be considered self secret meaning that even if they were to be told directly to a person that person would not necessarily understand the teachings without proper context In this way the teachings are secret to the minds of those who are not following the path with more than a simple sense of curiosity 54 55 Because of their role in giving access to the practices and guiding the student through them the role of the Vajracharya Lama is indispensable in Vajrayana Affirmation of the feminine antinomian and taboo Edit Tibetan Chakrasamvara statue in Yab Yum union with his consort Vajravarahi Some Vajrayana rituals traditionally included the use of certain taboo substances such as blood semen alcohol and urine as ritual offerings and sacraments though some of these are often replaced with less taboo substances such as yogurt Tantric feasts and initiations sometimes employed substances like human flesh as noted by Kahha s Yogaratnamala 56 The use of these substances is related to the non dual advaya nature of a Buddha s wisdom buddhajnana Since the ultimate state is in some sense non dual a practitioner can approach that state by transcending attachment to dual categories such as pure and impure permitted and forbidden As the Guhyasamaja Tantra states the wise man who does not discriminate achieves Buddhahood 56 Vajrayana rituals also include sexual yoga union with a physical consort as part of advanced practices Some tantras go further the Hevajra tantra states You should kill living beings speak lying words take what is not given consort with the women of others 56 While some of these statements were taken literally as part of ritual practice others such as killing were interpreted in a metaphorical sense In the Hevajra killing is defined as developing concentration by killing the life breath of discursive thoughts 57 Likewise while actual sexual union with a physical consort is practiced it is also common to use a visualized mental consort citation needed Alex Wayman points out that the symbolic meaning of tantric sexuality is ultimately rooted in bodhicitta and the bodhisattva s quest for enlightenment is likened to a lover seeking union with the mind of the Buddha 58 Judith Simmer Brown notes the importance of the psycho physical experiences arising in sexual yoga termed great bliss mahasukha Bliss melts the conceptual mind heightens sensory awareness and opens the practitioner to the naked experience of the nature of mind 59 This tantric experience is not the same as ordinary self gratifying sexual passion since it relies on tantric meditative methods using the illusory body and visualizations as well as the motivation for enlightenment 60 As the Hevajra tantra says This practice of sexual union with a consort is not taught for the sake of enjoyment but for the examination of one s own thought whether the mind is steady or waving 61 Feminine deities and forces are also increasingly prominent in Vajrayana In the Yogini tantras in particular women and female yoginis are given high status as the embodiment of female deities such as the wild and nude Vajrayogini 62 The Candamaharosana Tantra viii 29 30 states Women are heaven women are the teaching dharma Women indeed are the highest austerity tapas Women are the Buddha women are the Sangha Women are the Perfection of Wisdom 62 In India there is evidence to show that women participated in tantric practice alongside men and were also teachers adepts and authors of tantric texts 63 Vows and behaviour Edit Main article Samaya Practitioners of Vajrayana need to abide by various tantric vows or pledges called samaya These are extensions of the rules of the Pratimokṣa and Bodhisattva vows for the lower levels of tantra and are taken during initiations into the empowerment for a particular Unsurpassed Yoga Tantra The special tantric vows vary depending on the specific mandala practice for which the initiation is received and also depending on the level of initiation Ngagpas of the Nyingma school keep a special non celibate ordination A tantric guru or teacher is expected to keep his or her samaya vows in the same way as his students Proper conduct is considered especially necessary for a qualified Vajrayana guru For example the Ornament for the Essence of Manjushrikirti states Distance yourself from Vajra Masters who are not keeping the three vows who keep on with a root downfall who are miserly with the Dharma and who engage in actions that should be forsaken Those who worship them go to hell and so on as a result 64 Tantra techniques Edit Mani stones stones inscribed with the om mani padme hum mantra A Japanese Handscroll depicting various mudras 11th 12th century See also Tibetan tantric practice While all the Vajrayana Buddhist traditions include all of the traditional practices used in Mahayana Buddhism such as developing bodhicitta practicing the paramitas and meditations they also make use of unique tantric methods and Dzogchen meditation which are seen as more advanced These include mantras mandalas mudras deity yoga other visualization based meditations illusory body yogas like tummo and rituals like the goma fire ritual Vajrayana teaches that these techniques provide faster path to Buddhahood 65 A central feature of tantric practice is the use of mantras and seed syllables bijas Mantras are words phrases or a collection of syllables used for a variety of meditative magical and ritual ends Mantras are usually associated with specific deities or Buddhas and are seen as their manifestations in sonic form They are traditionally believed to have spiritual power which can lead to enlightenment as well as supramundane abilities siddhis 66 According to Indologist Alex Wayman Buddhist esotericism is centered on what is known as the three mysteries or secrets the tantric adept affiliates his body speech and mind with the body speech and mind of a Buddha through mudra mantras and samadhi respectively 67 Padmavajra c 7th century explains in his Tantrarthavatara Commentary the secret Body Speech and Mind of the Buddhas are 68 Secret of Body Whatever form is necessary to tame the living beings Secret of Speech Speech exactly appropriate to the lineage of the creature as in the language of the yaksas etc Secret of Mind Knowing all things as they really are These elements are brought together in the practice of tantric deity yoga which involves visualizing the deity s body and mandala reciting the deity s mantra and gaining insight into the nature of things based on this contemplation Advanced tantric practices such as deity yoga are taught in the context of an initiation ceremony by tantric gurus or vajracharyas vajra masters to the tantric initiate who also takes on formal commitments or vows samaya 66 In Tibetan Buddhism advanced practices like deity yoga are usually preceded by or coupled with preliminary practices called ngondro consisting of five to seven accumulation practices and includes prostrations and recitations of the 100 syllable mantra 69 Vajrayana is a system of tantric lineages and thus only those who receive an empowerment or initiation abhiseka are allowed to practice the more advanced esoteric methods In tantric deity yoga mantras or bijas are used during the ritual evocation of deities which are said to arise out of the uttered and visualized mantric syllables After the deity s image and mandala has been established heart mantras are visualized as part of the contemplation in different points of the deity s body 70 Deity yoga Edit Main article Deity yoga An 18th century Mongolian miniature which depicts a monk generating a tantric visualization A Japanese depiction of the Amida Triad in Seed Syllable form Siddham Script Visualizing deities in the form of seed syllables is a common Vajrayana meditation In Shingon one of the most common practices is Ajikan 阿字觀 meditating on the syllable A The fundamental practice of Buddhist Tantra is deity yoga devatayoga meditation on a chosen deity or cherished divinity Skt Iṣṭa devata Tib yidam which involves the recitation of mantras prayers and visualization of the deity the associated mandala of the deity s Buddha field along with consorts and attendant Buddhas and bodhisattvas 71 According to the Tibetan scholar Tsongkhapa deity yoga is what separates Tantra from Sutra practice 72 In the Unsurpassed Yoga Tantras the most widespread tantric form in Indo Tibetan Buddhism this method is divided into two stages the generation stage utpatti krama and the completion stage nispanna krama In the generation stage one dissolves one s reality into emptiness and meditates on the deity mandala resulting in identification with this divine reality In the completion stage the divine image along with the illusory body is applied to the realization of luminous emptiness This dissolution into emptiness is then followed by the visualization of the deity and re emergence of the yogi as the deity During the process of deity visualization the deity is to be imaged as not solid or tangible as empty yet apparent with the character of a mirage or a rainbow 73 This visualization is to be combined with divine pride which is the thought that one is oneself the deity being visualized 74 Divine pride is different from common pride because it is based on compassion for others and on an understanding of emptiness 75 A Tibetan depiction of the perfection stage practices of tummo Skt candali inner heat and phowa transference of consciousness The Tibetologist David Germano outlines two main types of completion practice a formless and image less contemplation on the ultimate empty nature of the mind and various yogas that make use of the illusory body to produce energetic sensations of bliss and warmth 76 The illusory body yogas systems like the Six Dharmas of Naropa and the Six Yogas of Kalachakra make use of energetic schemas of human psycho physiology composed of energy channels Skt nadi Tib rtsa winds or currents Skt vayu Tib rlung drops or charged particles Skt bindu Tib thig le and chakras wheels These subtle energies are seen as mounts for consciousness the physical component of awareness They are engaged by various means such as pranayama breath control to produce blissful experiences that are then applied to the realization of ultimate reality 77 Other methods which are associated with the completion stage in Tibetan Buddhism include dream yoga which relies on lucid dreaming practices associated with the bardo the interim state between death and rebirth transference of consciousness phowa and Chod in which the yogi ceremonially offers their body to be eaten by tantric deities in a ritual feast Other practices Edit A Newari Buddhist mandala used for Guru Puja Nepal 19th century gilt copper inlaid with semiprecious stones source source source source source source source source source source source source Video of a Shingon Goma Fire Ritual at Yakuōin Yukiji Mount Takao Another form of Vajrayana practice are certain meditative techniques associated with Mahamudra and Dzogchen often termed formless practices or the path of self liberation These techniques do not rely on deity visualization per se but on direct pointing out instruction from a master and are often seen as the most advanced and direct methods 78 Another distinctive feature of Tantric Buddhism is its unique and often elaborate rituals They include pujas worship rituals prayer festivals protection rituals death rituals tantric feasts ganachakra tantric initiations abhiseka and the goma fire ritual common in East Asian Esotericism source source source source source source source source source source A video of the Cham dance a traditional practice in some sects of Tibetan Buddhism An important element in some of these rituals particularly initiations and tantric feasts seems to have been the practice of ritual sex or sexual yoga karmamudra desire seal also referred to as consort observance vidyavrata and euphemistically as puja as well as the sacramental ingestion of power substances such as the mingled sexual fluids and uterine blood often performed by licking these substances off the vulva a practice termed yonipuja 79 The practice of ingestion of sexual fluids is mentioned by numerous tantric commentators sometimes euphemistically referring to the penis as the vajra and the vagina as the lotus The Cakrasamvara Tantra commentator Kambala writing about this practice states The seats are well known on earth to be spots within the lotus mandala by abiding within it there is great bliss the royal nature of nondual joy Therefore the lotus seat is supreme filled with a mixture of semen and uterine blood one should especially kiss it and lolling with the tongue take it up Unite the vajra and lotus with the rapture of drinking this liquor 80 According to David Gray these sexual practices probably originated in a non monastic context but were later adopted by monastic establishments such as Nalanda and Vikramashila He notes that the anxiety of figures like Atisa towards these practices and the stories of Virupa and Maitripa being expelled from their monasteries for performing them shows that supposedly celibate monastics were undertaking these sexual rites 81 Because of its adoption by the monastic tradition the practice of sexual yoga was slowly transformed into one which was either done with an imaginary consort visualized by the yogi instead of an actual person or reserved to a small group of the highest or elite practitioners Likewise the drinking of sexual fluids was also reinterpreted by later commentators to refer illusory body anatomy of the perfection stage practices 82 Symbols and imagery Edit Dagchen Rinpoche s hand holds a vajra drawing lines that close the Hevajra Mandala after the empowerment Tharlam Monastery of Tibetan Buddhism Boudha Kathmandu Nepal Vajrayana uses a rich variety of symbols terms and images that have multiple meanings according to a complex system of analogical thinking In Vajrayana symbols and terms are multi valent reflecting the microcosm and the macrocosm as in the phrase As without so within yatha bahyam tatha dhyatmam iti from Abhayakaragupta s Nispannayogavali 83 The vajra Edit Bronze vajras and bell from Itsukushima Japan The Sanskrit term vajra denoted a thunderbolt like a legendary weapon and divine attribute that was made from an adamantine or an indestructible substance which could therefore pierce and penetrate any obstacle or obfuscation It is the weapon of choice of Indra the King of the Devas As a secondary meaning vajra symbolizes the ultimate nature of things which is described in the tantras as translucent pure and radiant but also indestructible and indivisible It is also symbolic of the power of tantric methods to achieve its goals 84 A vajra is also a scepter like ritual object Standard Tibetan ར ར dorje which has a sphere and sometimes a gankyil at its centre and a variable number of spokes 3 5 or 9 at each end depending on the sadhana enfolding either end of the rod The vajra is often traditionally employed in tantric rituals in combination with the bell or ghanta symbolically the vajra may represent method as well as great bliss and the bell stands for wisdom specifically the wisdom realizing emptiness The union of the two sets of spokes at the center of the wheel is said to symbolize the unity of wisdom prajna and compassion karuna as well as the sexual union of male and female deities 85 Imagery and ritual in deity yoga Edit Chod ritual showing the use of Damaru drum and hand bell as well as the Kangling thighbone trumpet Representations of the deity such as statues murti paintings thangka or mandala are often employed as an aid to visualization in deity yoga The use of visual aids particularly microcosmic macrocosmic diagrams known as mandalas is another unique feature of Buddhist Tantra Mandalas are symbolic depictions of the sacred space of the awakened Buddhas and Bodhisattvas as well as of the inner workings of the human person 86 The macrocosmic symbolism of the mandala then also represents the forces of the human body The explanatory tantra of the Guhyasamaja tantra the Vajramala states The body becomes a palace the hallowed basis of all the Buddhas 87 Mandalas are also sacred enclosures sacred architecture that house and contain the uncontainable essence of a central deity or yidam and their retinue In the book The World of Tibetan Buddhism the Dalai Lama describes mandalas thus This is the celestial mansion the pure residence of the deity The Five Tathagatas or Five Buddhas along with the figure of the Adi Buddha are central to many Vajrayana mandalas as they represent the five wisdoms which are the five primary aspects of primordial wisdom or Buddha nature 88 All ritual in Vajrayana practice can be seen as aiding in this process of visualization and identification The practitioner can use various hand implements such as a vajra bell hand drum damaru or a ritual dagger phurba but also ritual hand gestures mudras can be made special chanting techniques can be used and in elaborate offering rituals or initiations many more ritual implements and tools are used each with an elaborate symbolic meaning to create a special environment for practice Vajrayana has thus become a major inspiration in traditional Tibetan art Texts Edit Three leaves from a manuscript of the Vajravali a ritual compendium compiled by Abhayakaragupta abbot of the Vikramashila monastery around 1100 CE See also Tantras Buddhism and Tibetan Buddhist canonThere is an extended body of texts associated with Buddhist Tantra including the tantras themselves tantric commentaries and shastras sadhanas liturgical texts ritual manuals Chinese 儀軌 Pinyin Yiguǐ Rōmaji Giki dharanis poems or songs dohas termas and so on According to Harunaga Isaacson Though we do not know precisely at present just how many Indian tantric Buddhist texts survive today in the language in which they were written their number is certainly over one thousand five hundred I suspect indeed over two thousand A large part of this body of texts has also been translated into Tibetan and a smaller part into Chinese Aside from these there are perhaps another two thousand or more works that are known today only from such translations We can be certain as well that many others are lost to us forever in whatever form Of the texts that survive a very small proportion has been published an almost insignificant percentage has been edited or translated reliably 89 Vajrayana texts exhibit a wide range of literary characteristics usually a mix of verse and prose almost always in a Sanskrit that transgresses frequently against classical norms of grammar and usage although also occasionally in various Middle Indic dialects or elegant classical Sanskrit 90 In Chinese Mantrayana Zhenyan and Japanese Shingon the most influential esoteric texts are the Mahavairocana Tantra and the Vajrasekhara Sutra 91 92 In Tibetan Buddhism a large number of tantric works are widely studied and different schools focus on the study and practice of different cycles of texts According to Geoffrey Samuel the Sakyapa specialize in the Hevajra Tantra the Nyingmapa specialize in the various so called Old Tantras and terma cycles and the most important Kagyudpa and Gelugpa tantras are Guhyasamaja Cakrasaṃvara and Kalacakra 93 Dunhuang manuscripts Edit The Dunhuang manuscripts also contain Tibetan Tantric manuscripts Dalton and Schaik 2007 revised provide an excellent online catalogue listing 350 Tibetan Tantric Manuscripts from Dunhuang in the Stein Collection of the British Library which is currently fully accessible online in discrete digitized manuscripts web 1 With the Wylie transcription of the manuscripts they are to be made discoverable online in the future 94 These 350 texts are just a small portion of the vast cache of the Dunhuang manuscripts Traditions Edit Map showing the dominant Buddhist tradition throughout Asia Vajrayana in the form of Tibetan Buddhism dominates the Himalayan regions and in the Mongolian regions The Nilakaṇṭha Dharaṇi engraved on a stele Temple Fo Ding Shan Chao Sheng in Sanyi Township Taiwan Erected in June 2005 Main article Chinese Esoteric Buddhism Although there is historical evidence for Vajrayana Buddhism in Southeast Asia and elsewhere see History of Vajrayana above today the Vajrayana exists primarily in the form of the two major traditions of Tibetan Buddhism and Japanese Esoteric Buddhism in Japan known as Shingon literally True Speech i e mantra with a handful of minor subschools utilising lesser amounts of esoteric or tantric materials The distinction between traditions is not always rigid For example the tantra sections of the Tibetan Buddhist canon of texts sometimes include material not usually thought of as tantric outside the Tibetan Buddhist tradition such as the Heart Sutra 95 and even versions of some material found in the Pali Canon 96 a Chinese Esoteric Buddhism Edit Main article Chinese Esoteric Buddhism Esoteric and Tantric teachings followed the same route into northern China as Buddhism itself arriving via the Silk Road and Southeast Asian Maritime trade routes sometime during the first half of the 7th century during the Tang dynasty and received sanction from the emperors of the Tang dynasty During this time three great masters came from India to China Subhakarasiṃha Vajrabodhi and Amoghavajra who translated key texts and founded the Zhenyan 真言 true word mantra tradition 97 Zhenyan was also brought to Japan as Shingon during this period This tradition focused on tantras like the Mahavairocana tantra and unlike Tibetan Buddhism it does not employ the antinomian and radical tantrism of the Anuttarayoga Tantras The prestige of this tradition eventually influenced other schools of Chinese Buddhism such as Chan and Tiantai to adopt various esoteric practices over time leading to a merging of teachings between the various schools 98 99 100 During the Yuan dynasty the Mongol emperors made Tibetan Buddhism the official religion of China and Tibetan lamas were given patronage at the court 101 Imperial support of Tibetan Vajrayana continued into the Ming and Qing dynasties Today esoteric traditions are deeply embedded in mainstream Chinese Buddhism and expressed through various rituals which make use of tantric mantra and dharaṇi and the veneration of certain tantric deities like Cundi and Acala 102 One example of esoteric teachings still practiced in many Chinese Buddhist monasteries is the Suraṅgama Sutra and the dharaṇi revealed within it the Suraṅgama Mantra which are especially influential in the Chinese Chan tradition 103 Another form of esoteric Buddhism in China is Azhaliism which is practiced among the Bai people of China and venerates Mahakala as a major deity 104 105 Japanese Esotericism Edit Portrait of Kobo Daishi Kukai holding a vajra and a mala 14th century Art Institute of Chicago Shingon Buddhism Edit Main article Shingon Buddhism The Shingon school is found in Japan and includes practices known in Japan as Mikkyō Esoteric or Mystery Teaching which are similar in concept to those in Vajrayana Buddhism The lineage for Shingon Buddhism differs from that of Tibetan Vajrayana having emerged from India during the 9th 11th centuries in the Pala Dynasty and Central Asia via China and is based on earlier versions of the Indian texts than the Tibetan lineage Shingon shares material with Tibetan Buddhism such as the esoteric sutras called Tantras in Tibetan Buddhism and mandalas but the actual practices are not related The primary texts of Shingon Buddhism are the Mahavairocana Sutra and Vajrasekhara Sutra The founder of Shingon Buddhism was Kukai a Japanese monk who studied in China in the 9th century during the Tang dynasty and brought back Vajrayana scriptures techniques and mandalas then popular in China The school was merged into other schools in China towards the end of the Tang dynasty but was sectarian in Japan Shingon is one of the few remaining branches of Buddhism in the world that continues to use the siddham script of the Sanskrit language Tendai Buddhism Edit Main article Tendai Although the Tendai school in China and Japan does employ some esoteric practices these rituals came to be considered of equal importance with the exoteric teachings of the Lotus Sutra By chanting mantras maintaining mudras or practicing certain forms of meditation Tendai maintains that one is able to understand sense experiences as taught by the Buddha have faith that one is innately an enlightened being and that one can attain enlightenment within the current lifetime Shugendō Edit Yamabushi priests at Gose Nara Main article Shugendō Shugendō was founded in 7th century Japan by the ascetic En no Gyōja based on the Queen s Peacocks Sutra With its origins in the solitary hijiri back in the 7th century Shugendō evolved as a sort of amalgamation between Esoteric Buddhism Shinto and several other religious influences including Taoism Buddhism and Shinto were amalgamated in the shinbutsu shugō and Kukai s syncretic religion held wide sway up until the end of the Edo period coexisting with Shinto elements within Shugendō 106 In 1613 during the Edo period the Tokugawa Shogunate issued a regulation obliging Shugendō temples to belong to either Shingon or Tendai temples During the Meiji Restoration when Shinto was declared an independent state religion separate from Buddhism Shugendō was banned as a superstition not fit for a new enlightened Japan Some Shugendō temples converted themselves into various officially approved Shintō denominations In modern times Shugendō is practiced mainly by Tendai and Shingon sects retaining an influence on modern Japanese religion and culture 107 Korean milgyo Edit Esoteric Buddhist practices known as milgyo 密教 and texts arrived in Korea during the initial introduction of Buddhism to the region in 372 CE 108 Esoteric Buddhism was supported by the royalty of both Unified Silla 668 935 and Goryeo Dynasty 918 1392 108 During the Goryeo Dynasty esoteric practices were common within large sects like the Seon school and the Hwaeom school as well as smaller esoteric sects like the Sinin mudra and Ch ongji Dharani schools During the era of the Mongol occupation 1251 1350s Tibetan Buddhism also existed in Korea though it never gained a foothold there 109 During the Joseon dynasty Esoteric Buddhist schools were forced to merge with the Seon and Kyo schools becoming the ritual specialists With the decline of Buddhism in Korea Esoteric Buddhism mostly died out save for a few traces in the rituals of the Jogye Order and Taego Order 109 There are two Esoteric Buddhist schools in modern Korea the Chinŏn 眞言 and the Jingak Order 眞 覺 According to Henrik H Sorensen they have absolutely no historical link with the Korean Buddhist tradition per se but are late constructs based in large measures on Japanese Shingon Buddhism 109 Indo Tibetan Buddhism Edit Main article Tibetan Buddhism Vajrayana Buddhism was initially established in Tibet in the 8th century when various figures like Padmasambhava 8th century CE and Santarakṣita 725 788 were invited by King Trisong Detsen some time before 767 Tibetan Buddhism reflects the later stages tantric Indian Buddhism of the post Gupta Early Medieval period 500 to 1200 CE 110 111 This tradition practices and studies a set of tantric texts and commentaries associated with the more left hand vamachara tantras which are not part of East Asian Esoteric Buddhism These tantras sometimes termed Anuttarayoga tantras include many transgressive elements such as sexual and mortuary symbolism that is not shared by the earlier tantras that are studied in East Asian Buddhism These texts were translated into Classical Tibetan during the New translation period 10th 12th centuries Tibetan Buddhism also includes numerous native Tibetan developments such as the tulku system new sadhana texts Tibetan scholastic works Dzogchen literature and Terma literature There are four major traditions or schools Nyingma Sakya Kagyu and Gelug In the pre modern era Tibetan Buddhism spread outside of Tibet primarily due to the influence of the Mongol Yuan dynasty 1271 1368 founded by Kublai Khan which ruled China Mongolia and eastern Siberia In the modern era it has spread outside of Asia due to the efforts of the Tibetan diaspora 1959 onwards The Tibetan Buddhist tradition is today found in Tibet Bhutan northern India Nepal southwestern and northern China Mongolia and various constituent republics of Russia that are adjacent to the area such as Amur Oblast Buryatia Chita Oblast the Tuva Republic and Khabarovsk Krai Tibetan Buddhism is also the main religion in Kalmykia It has also spread to Western countries and there are now international networks of Tibetan Buddhist temples and meditation centers in the Western world from all four schools Nepalese Newar Buddhism Edit Main article Newar Buddhism Newar Buddhism is practiced by Newars in Nepal It is the only form of Vajrayana Buddhism in which the scriptures are written in Sanskrit and this tradition has preserved many Vajrayana texts in this language Its priests do not follow celibacy and are called vajracharya literally diamond thunderbolt carriers Indonesian Esoteric Buddhism Edit Main article Indonesian Esoteric Buddhism A painting by G B Hooijer c 1916 1919 reconstructing the scene of Borobudur during its heyday Indonesian Esoteric Buddhism refers to the traditions of Esoteric Buddhism found in the Indonesian islands of Java and Sumatra before the rise and dominance of Islam in the region 13 16th centuries The Buddhist empire of Srivijaya 650 CE 1377 CE was a major center of Esoteric Buddhist learning which drew Chinese monks such as Yijing and Indian scholars like Atisa 112 The temple complex at Borobudur in central Java built by the Shailendra dynasty also reflects strong Tantric or at least proto tantric influences particularly of the cult of Vairocana 113 114 Indonesian Esoteric Buddhism may have also reached the Philippines possibly establishing the first form of Buddhism in the Philippines The few Buddhist artifacts that have been found in the islands reflect the iconography of Srivijaya s Vajrayana 115 Southern Esoteric Buddhism Edit Main article Southern Esoteric Buddhism Southern Esoteric Buddhism or Boran kammaṭṭhana ancient practices is a term for esoteric forms of Buddhism from Southeast Asia where Theravada Buddhism is dominant The monks of the Sri Lankan Abhayagiri vihara once practiced forms of tantra which were popular in the island 116 Another tradition of this type was Ari Buddhism which was common in Burma The Tantric Buddhist Yogavacara tradition was a major Buddhist tradition in Cambodia Laos and Thailand well into the modern era 117 This form of Buddhism declined after the rise of Southeast Asian Buddhist modernism This form of esoteric Buddhism is unique in that it developed in Southeast Asia and has no direct connection to the Indian Tantric Movement of the Mahasiddhas and the tantric establishments of Nalanda and Vikramashila Universities Thus it does not make use of the classic Buddhist tantras and has its own independent literature and practice tradition Academic study difficulties EditSerious Vajrayana academic study in the Western world is in early stages due to the following obstacles 118 Although a large number of Tantric scriptures are extant they have not been formally ordered or systematized Due to the esoteric initiatory nature of the tradition many practitioners will not divulge information or sources of their information As with many different subjects it must be studied in context and with a long history spanning many different cultures Ritual as well as doctrine need to be investigated Buddhist tantric practice is categorized as secret practice this is to avoid misinformed people from harmfully misusing the practices A method to keep this secrecy is that tantric initiation is required from a master before any instructions can be received about the actual practice During the initiation procedure in the highest class of tantra such as the Kalachakra students must take the tantric vows which commit them to such secrecy web 2 Explaining general tantra theory in a scholarly manner not sufficient for practice is likewise not a root downfall Nevertheless it weakens the effectiveness of our tantric practice web 3 Terminology Edit The terminology associated with Vajrayana Buddhism can be confusing Most of the terms originated in the Sanskrit language of tantric Indian Buddhism and may have passed through other cultures notably those of Japan and Tibet before translation for the modern reader Further complications arise as seemingly equivalent terms can have subtle variations in use and meaning according to context the time and place of use A third problem is that the Vajrayana texts employ the tantric tradition of twilight language a means of instruction that is deliberately coded These obscure teaching methods relying on symbolism as well as synonym metaphor and word association add to the difficulties faced by those attempting to understand Vajrayana Buddhism In the Vajrayana tradition now preserved mainly in Tibetan lineages it has long been recognized that certain important teachings are expressed in a form of secret symbolic language known as saṃdhya bhaṣa Twilight Language Mudras and mantras maṇḍalas and cakras those mysterious devices and diagrams that were so much in vogue in the pseudo Buddhist hippie culture of the 1960s were all examples of Twilight Language 119 The term Tantric Buddhism was not one originally used by those who practiced it As scholar Isabelle Onians explains Tantric Buddhism is not the transcription of a native term but a rather modern coinage if not totally occidental For the equivalent Sanskrit tantrika is found but not in Buddhist texts Tantrika is a term denoting someone who follows the teachings of scriptures known as Tantras but only in Saivism not Buddhism Tantric Buddhism is a name for a phenomenon which calls itself in Sanskrit Mantranaya Vajrayana Mantrayana or Mantramahayana and apparently never Tantrayana Its practitioners are known as mantrins yogis or sadhakas Thus our use of the anglicised adjective Tantric for the Buddhist religion taught in Tantras is not native to the tradition but is a borrowed term which serves its purpose 120 See also Edit Religion portalBuddhism in Bhutan Buddhism in Nepal Buddhism in Russia Buddhism in the Maldives Malaysian VajrayanaNotes Edit Skilling Mahasutras volume I parts I amp II 1997 Pali Text Society page 78 speaks of the tantra divisions of some editions of the Kangyur as including Sravakayana Mahayana and Vajrayana textsReferences EditCitations Edit Macmillan Publishing 2004 pp 875 876 a b David B Gray ed 2007 The Cakrasamvara Tantra The Discourse of Sri Heruka Sriherukabhidhana Thomas F Yarnall American Institute of Buddhist Studies at Columbia University pp ix x ISBN 978 0 9753734 6 0 Lu Jianfu 2017 Chinese and Tibetan Esoteric Buddhism Studies on East Asian Religions Vol 1 Brill pp 72 82 Ray Reginald A Indestructible Truth The Living Spirituality of Tibetan Buddhism 2000 Reynolds John Myrdhin The Mahasiddha Tradition in Tibet Vajranatha Vajranatha Retrieved 18 June 2015 Snellgrove David 1987 Indo Tibetan Buddhism Indian Buddhists and their Tibetan successors pp 168 Schumann 1974 p 163 a b c Kitagawa 2002 p 80 Dowman 1985 Introduction Davidson Ronald M 2002 Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement Columbia University Press p 228 234 Snellgrove David 1987 Indo Tibetan Buddhism Indian Buddhists and their Tibetan successors p 122 Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 225 Osto Douglas Proto Tantric Elements in The Gandavyuha sutra Journal of Religious History Vol 33 No 2 June 2009 Snellgrove David 1987 Indo Tibetan Buddhism Indian Buddhists and their Tibetan successors pp 147 a b Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 205 206 Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 210 Wayman Alex The Buddhist Tantras Light on Indo Tibetan Esotericism Routledge 2008 page 19 Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 212 Tajima R Etude sur le Mahavairocana Sutra Mullin Glenn H Tsong Kha Pa 2005 The Six Yogas Of Naropa Tsongkhapa s Commentary Entitled A Book Of Three Inspirations A Treatise On The Stages Of Training In The Profound Path Of Naro s Six Dharmas p 70 Snow Lion Publications ISBN 1 55939 234 7 Schumann 1974 Gordon White David Review of Indian Esoteric Buddhism by Ronald M Davidson University of California Santa Barbara JIATS no 1 October 2005 THL T1223 11 pp Davidson Ronald M Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement p 171 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 124 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 Sanderson Alexis Vajrayana Origin and Function 1994 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 144 145 Huber Toni 2008 The holy land reborn pilgrimage amp the Tibetan reinvention of Buddhist India Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 94 95 ISBN 978 0 226 35648 8 Davidson Ronald M Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement p 204 Davidson Ronald M Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement p 206 Davidson Ronald M Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement p 207 Davidson Ronald M Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement p 214 Davidson Ronald M Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement p 217 Davidson Ronald M Indian Esoteric Buddhism A Social History of the Tantric Movement p 228 231 a b c Verrill Wayne 2012 The Yogini s Eye Comprehensive Introduction to Buddhist Tantra Chapter 7 Origin of Guhyamantra a b Khenchen Palden Sherab Rinpoche The Eight Manifestations of Guru Rinpoche Translation and transcription of a teaching given in May 1992 Orlina Roderick 2012 Epigraphical evidence for the cult of Mahapratisara in the Philippines Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 35 1 2 165 166 ISSN 0193 600X Archived from the original on 2019 05 30 Retrieved 2019 05 30 This image was previously thought to be a distorted Tara but was recently correctly identified as a Vajralasya Bodhisattva of amorous dance one of the four deities associated with providing offerings to the Buddha Vairocana and located in the southeast corner of a Vajradhatumaṇḍala Weinstein John Agusan Gold Vajralasya Google Arts amp Culture Archived from the original on 1 June 2019 Scholars think that the statue may represent an offering goddess from a three dimensional Vajradhatu Diamond World mandala Wayman Alex The Buddhist Tantras Light on Indo Tibetan Esotericism 2013 page 3 L de la Vallee Poussin Bouddhisme etudes et materiaux pp 174 5 Beyer Stephan The Cult of Tara Magic and Ritual in Tibet 1978 page 69 Snellgrove David 1987 Indo Tibetan Buddhism Indian Buddhists and their Tibetan successors pp 125 Wayman Alex Yoga of the Guhyasamajatantra The arcane lore of forty verses a Buddhist Tantra commentary 1977 page 56 a b Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 202 Snellgrove David 1987 Indo Tibetan Buddhism Indian Buddhists and their Tibetan successors pp 125 126 Snellgrove David 1987 Indo Tibetan Buddhism Indian Buddhists and their Tibetan successors pp 126 Duckworth Douglas Tibetan Mahayana and Vajrayana in A companion to Buddhist philosophy page 100 Koppl Heidi Establishing Appearances as Divine Snow Lion Publications 2008 chapter 4 Wayman Alex The Buddhist Tantras Light on Indo Tibetan Esotericism 2013 page 5 a b c d e Macmillan Publishing 2004 p 875 Palmo Tenzin 2002 Reflections on a Mountain Lake Teachings on Practical Buddhism Snow Lion Publications pp 224 5 ISBN 978 1 55939 175 7 Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition pages 198 231 Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 198 Morreale Don 1998 The Complete Guide to Buddhist America ISBN 1 57062 270 1 p 215 Trungpa Chogyam and Chodzin Sherab 1992 The Lion s Roar An Introduction to Tantra ISBN 0 87773 654 5 p 144 a b c Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 236 Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 237 Wayman Alex The Buddhist Tantras Light on Indo Tibetan esotericism page 39 Simmer Brown Judith Dakini s Warm Breath The Feminine Principle in Tibetan Buddhism 2002 page 217 Simmer Brown Judith Dakini s Warm Breath The Feminine Principle in Tibetan Buddhism 2002 page 217 219 Simmer Brown Judith Dakini s Warm Breath The Feminine Principle in Tibetan Buddhism 2002 page 219 a b Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition pages 198 240 Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition pages 198 242 Tsongkhapa Tantric Ethics An Explanation of the Precepts for Buddhist Vajrayana Practice ISBN 0 86171 290 0 page 46 Hopkins Jeffrey Tantric Techniques 2008 pp 220 251 a b Gray David 2007 The Cakrasamvara Tantra The Discourse of Sri Heruka Sriherukabhidhana A Study and Annotated Translation Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences p 132 Wayman Alex Yoga of the Guhyasamajatantra The arcane lore of forty verses a Buddhist Tantra commentary 1977 page 63 Wayman Alex The Buddhist Tantras Light on Indo Tibetan esotericism page 36 Ray Reginald A Secret of the Vajra World The Tantric Buddhism of Tibet Shambala page 178 Williams Wynne and Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition pp 223 224 Garson Nathaniel DeWitt Penetrating the Secret Essence Tantra Context and Philosophy in the Mahayoga System of rNying ma Tantra 2004 p 37 Power John 2007 Introduction to Tibetan Buddhism p 271 Ray Reginald A Secret of the Vajra World The Tantric Buddhism of Tibet Shambala page 218 Cozort Daniel Highest Yoga Tantra page 57 Power John Introduction to Tibetan Buddhism page 273 Gray David 2007 The Cakrasamvara Tantra The Discourse of Sri Heruka Sriherukabhidhana A Study and Annotated Translation Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences pp 73 74 Garson Nathaniel DeWitt Penetrating the Secret Essence Tantra Context and Philosophy in the Mahayoga System of rNying ma Tantra 2004 p 45 Ray Reginald A Secret of the Vajra World The Tantric Buddhism of Tibet Shambala page 112 113 Gray David 2007 The Cakrasamvara Tantra The Discourse of Sri Heruka Sriherukabhidhana A Study and Annotated Translation Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences pp 108 118 Gray David 2007 The Cakrasamvara Tantra The Discourse of Sri Heruka Sriherukabhidhana A Study and Annotated Translation Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences p 118 Gray David 2007 The Cakrasamvara Tantra The Discourse of Sri Heruka Sriherukabhidhana A Study and Annotated Translation Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences p 126 Gray David 2007 The Cakrasamvara Tantra The Discourse of Sri Heruka Sriherukabhidhana A Study and Annotated Translation Treasury of the Buddhist Sciences pp 121 127 Wayman Alex Yoga of the Guhyasamajatantra The arcane lore of forty verses a Buddhist Tantra commentary 1977 page 62 Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 217 Williams Wynne Tribe Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition page 219 Garson Nathaniel DeWitt Penetrating the Secret Essence Tantra Context and Philosophy in the Mahayoga System of rNying ma Tantra 2004 p 42 Wayman Alex The Buddhist Tantras Light on Indo Tibetan esotericism page 83 Ray Reginald A Secret of the Vajra World The Tantric Buddhism of Tibet Shambala page 130 Isaacson Harunaga 1998 Tantric Buddhism in India from c 800 to c 1200 In Buddhismus in Geschichte und Gegenwart Band II Hamburg pp 23 49 Internal publication of Hamburg University pg 3 PDF Isaacson citation needed Griffin David Ray 1990 Sacred Interconnections Postmodern Spirituality Political Economy and Art SUNY Press p 199 Emmanuel Steven M 2015 A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy John Wiley amp Sons p 120 Samuel Geoffrey 1993 Civilized shamans Buddhism in Tibetan societies Smithsonian Institution Press p 226 Dalton Jacob amp van Schaik Sam 2007 Catalogue of the Tibetan Tantric Manuscripts from Dunhuang in the Stein Collection Online Second electronic edition International Dunhuang Project Source 1 accessed Tuesday February 2 2010 Conze The Prajnaparamita Literature Peter Skilling Mahasutras volume I 1994 Pali Text Society 2 Lancaster page xxiv Baruah Bibbhuti 2008 Buddhist Sects and Sectarianism p 170 Orzech Charles D general editor 2011 Esoteric Buddhism and the Tantras in East Asia Brill Page 296 Sharf Robert 2001 Coming to Terms With Chinese Buddhism A Reading of the Treasure Store Treatise p 268 Faure Bernard 1997 The Will to Orthodoxy A Critical Genealogy of Northern Chan Buddhism p 85 Nan Huaijin Basic Buddhism Exploring Buddhism and Zen York Beach Samuel Weiser 1997 p 99 Orzech Charles D 1989 Seeing Chen Yen Buddhism Traditional Scholarship and the Vajrayana in China History of Religions 29 2 87 114 doi 10 1086 463182 ISSN 0018 2710 JSTOR 1062679 S2CID 162235701 Shi Hsuan Hua 1977 The Shurangama Sutra pp 68 71 Sino American Buddhist Association Buddhist Text Translation Society ISBN 978 0 917512 17 9 Huang Zhengliang Zhang Xilu 2013 Research Review of Bai Esoteric Buddhist Azhali Religion Since the 20th Century Journal of Dali University Wu Jiang 2011 Enlightenment in Dispute The Reinvention of Chan Buddhism in Seventeenth Century China USA Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199895564 p 441 Miyake Hitoshi Shugendo in History pp45 52 密教と修験道 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 a b Georgieva Russ Nelly Esoteric Buddhist Ritual Objects of the Koryŏ Dynasty 936 1392 PDF a b c Sorensen Esoteric Buddhism under the Koryŏ in the Light of the Greater East Asian Tradition International Journal of Buddhist Thought amp Culture September 2006 Vol 7 pp 55 94 White David Gordon ed 2000 Tantra in Practice Princeton University Press p 21 ISBN 0 691 05779 6 Davidson Ronald M 2004 Indian Esoteric Buddhism Social History of the Tantric Movement p 2 Motilal Banarsidass Publ J Takakusu 2005 A Record of the Buddhist Religion As Practised in India and the Malay Archipelago A D 671 695 I Tsing New Delhi AES ISBN 81 206 1622 7 Levenda Peter Tantric Temples Eros and Magic in Java page 99 Fontein Jan Entering the Dharmadhatu A Study of the lt Gandavyuha Reliefs of Borobudur page 233 Laszlo Legeza Tantric Elements in Pre Hispanic Gold Art Arts of Asia 1988 4 129 133 Cousins L S 1997 Aspects of Southern Esoteric Buddhism in Peter Connolly and Sue Hamilton eds Indian Insights Buddhism Brahmanism and Bhakd Papers from the Annual Spalding Symposium on Indian Religions Luzac Oriental London 185 207 410 ISBN 1 898942 153 Kate Crosby Traditional Theravada Meditation and its Modern Era Suppression Hong Kong Buddha Dharma Centre of Hong Kong 2013 ISBN 978 9881682024 Akira 1993 p 9 Bucknell Roderick amp Stuart Fox Martin 1986 The Twilight Language Explorations in Buddhist Meditation and Symbolism Curzon Press London ISBN 0 312 82540 4 Isabelle Onians Tantric Buddhist Apologetics or Antinomianism as a Norm D Phil dissertation Oxford Trinity Term 2001 pg 8 Web citations IDP Database Dalton vanSchaik 2005 Catalogue Overview idp bl uk Information for Beginners kalachakranet org Common Root Tantric Vows studybuddhism com Sources Edit Akira Hirakawa 1993 Paul Groner ed History of Indian Buddhism Translated by Paul Groner Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Banerjee S C 1977 Tantra in Bengal A Study in Its Origin Development and Influence Manohar ISBN 978 81 85425 63 4 Buswell Robert E ed 2004 Encyclopedia of Buddhism Macmillan Reference USA ISBN 978 0 02 865910 7 Datta Amaresh 2006 The Encyclopaedia Of Indian Literature Volume One A To Devo Volume 1 Sahitya Akademi publications ISBN 978 81 260 1803 1 Dowman Keith tr 1985 Masters of Mahamudra Songs and Histories of the Eighty four Buddhist Siddhas Ithaca NY State University of New York Press ISBN 9780887061585 Harding Sarah 1996 Creation and Completion Essential Points of Tantric Meditation Boston Wisdom Publications Hawkins Bradley K 1999 Buddhism Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 21162 8 Hua Hsuan Heng Chih Heng Hsien David Rounds Ron Epstein et al 2003 The Shurangama Sutra Sutra Text and Supplements with Commentary by the Venerable Master Hsuan Hua Burlingame California Buddhist Text Translation Society ISBN 978 0 88139 949 3 archived from the original on May 29 2009 Kitagawa Joseph Mitsuo 2002 The Religious Traditions of Asia Religion History and Culture Routledge ISBN 978 0 7007 1762 0 Macmillan Publishing 2004 Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism Macmillan Publishing Mishra Baba Dandasena P K 2011 Settlement and urbanization in ancient Orissa Patrul Rinpoche 1994 Brown Kerry Sharma Sima eds kunzang lama i shelung The Words of My Perfect Teacher San Francisco California USA HarperCollinsPublishers ISBN 978 0 06 066449 7 Translated by the Padmakara Translation Group With a foreword by the Dalai Lama Ray Reginald A 2001 Secret of the Vajra World The Tantric Buddhism of Tibet Boston Shambhala Publications Schumann Hans Wolfgang 1974 Buddhism an outline of its teachings and schools Theosophical Pub House Snelling John 1987 The Buddhist handbook A Complete Guide to Buddhist Teaching and Practice London Century Paperbacks Thompson John 2014 Buddhism s Vajrayana Meditation In Leeming David A ed Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion 2nd ed Boston Springer pp 250 255 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 6086 2 9251 ISBN 978 1 4614 6087 9 Thompson John 2014 Buddhism s Vajrayana Rituals In Leeming David A ed Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion 2nd ed Boston Springer pp 255 259 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 6086 2 9347 ISBN 978 1 4614 6087 9 Thompson John 2014 Buddhism s Vajrayana Tantra In Leeming David A ed Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion 2nd ed Boston Springer pp 260 265 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 6086 2 9348 ISBN 978 1 4614 6087 9 Wardner A K 1999 Indian Buddhism Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Williams Paul Tribe Anthony 2000 Buddhist Thought A complete introduction to the Indian tradition Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 18593 3Further reading EditThis further reading section may contain inappropriate or excessive suggestions that may not follow Wikipedia s guidelines Please ensure that only a reasonable number of balanced topical reliable and notable further reading suggestions are given removing less relevant or redundant publications with the same point of view where appropriate Consider utilising appropriate texts as inline sources or creating a separate bibliography article February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Rongzom Chozang Koppl Heidi I trans 2008 Establishing Appearances as Divine Snow Lion pp 95 108 ISBN 9781559392884 Kongtrul Jamgon Thrangu Rinpoche Harding Sarah 2002 Creation and Completion Essential Points of Tantric Meditation Wisdom Publications ISBN 978 0 86171 312 7 Kongtrul Jamgon Barron Richard 1998 Buddhist Ethics The Treasury of Knowledge book 5 Ithaca Snow Lion pp 215 306 ISBN 978 1 55939 191 7 Kongtrul Jamgon Guarisco Elio McLeod Ingrid 2004 Systems of Buddhist Tantra The Indestructible Way of Secret Mantra The Treasury of Knowledge book 6 part 4 Ithaca Snow Lion ISBN 9781559392105 Kongtrul Jamgon Guarisco Elio McLeod Ingrid 2008 The Elements of Tantric Practice A General Exposition of the Process of Meditation in the Indestructible Way of Secret Mantra The Treasury of Knowledge book 8 part 3 Ithaca Snow Lion ISBN 9781559393058 Kongtrul Jamgon Harding Sarah 2007 Esoteric Instructions A Detailed Presentation of the Process of Meditation in Vajrayana The Treasury of Knowledge book 8 part 4 Ithaca NY Snow Lion Publications ISBN 978 1 55939 284 6 Kongtrul Jamgon Barron Richard 2010 Journey and Goal An Analysis of the Spiritual Paths and Levels to be Traversed and the Consummate Fruition state The Treasury of Knowledge books 9 amp 10 Ithaca NY Snow Lion Publications pp 159 251 333 451 ISBN 978 1 55939 360 7 Tantric Ethics An Explanation of the Precepts for Buddhist Vajrayana Practice by Tson Kha Pa ISBN 0 86171 290 0 Perfect Conduct Ascertaining the Three Vows by Ngari Panchen Dudjom Rinpoche ISBN 0 86171 083 5 Aryadeva s Lamp that Integrates the Practices Caryamelapakapradipa The Gradual Path of Vajrayana Buddhism according to the Esoteric Community Noble Tradition ed and trans by Christian K Wedemeyer New York AIBS Columbia Univ Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 9753734 5 3 S C Banerji Tantra in Bengal A Study of Its Origin Development and Influence Manohar 1977 2nd ed 1992 ISBN 8185425639 Arnold Edward A on behalf of Namgyal Monastery Institute of Buddhist Studies fore by Robert A F Thurman As Long As Space Endures Essays on the Kalacakra Tantra in Honor of H H the Dalai Lama Snow Lion Publications 2009 Snellgrove David L Indo Tibetan Buddhism Indian Buddhists and Their Tibetan Successors London Serindia 1987 External links Edit Wikiversity has learning resources about Vajrayana Media related to Vajrayana at Wikimedia Commons An Introduction to Vajrayana What is Vajrayana Buddhism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vajrayana amp oldid 1141971276, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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