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'''Sampa Lhundrupma''' ([[Wyl.]] ''bsam pa lhun grub ma''), '''The Prayer to Guru Rinpoche That Spontaneously Fulfills All Wishes''', is a prayer that forms the seventh chapter of [[Le'u Dünma]]. It was given to the prince [[Mutri Tsenpo]], the King of Gungthang, and son of [[King Trisong Detsen]], by [[Padmasambhava]] as he was leaving for the land of the [[rakshasa]] ogres in the southwest. | '''Sampa Lhundrupma''' (Tib. བསམ་པ་ལྷུན་གྲུབ་མ་, [[Wyl.]] ''bsam pa lhun grub ma''), '''The Prayer to Guru Rinpoche That Spontaneously Fulfills All Wishes''', is a prayer that forms the seventh chapter of [[Le'u Dünma]]. It was given to the prince [[Mutri Tsenpo]], the King of Gungthang, and son of [[King Trisong Detsen]], by [[Padmasambhava]] as he was leaving for the land of the [[rakshasa]] ogres in the southwest. | ||
==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== | ||
*See ''A Great Treasure of Blessings: A Book of Prayers to Guru Rinpoche'', pages 215-241, and the ''Supplement to “A Great Treasure of Blessings”''—''The Origins of the Le’u Dün Ma: The History, the Background and How the Prayers Came into Being'', pages 22-32. | *See ''A Great Treasure of Blessings: A Book of Prayers to Guru Rinpoche'', pages 215-241, and the ''Supplement to “A Great Treasure of Blessings”''—''The Origins of the Le’u Dün Ma: The History, the Background and How the Prayers Came into Being'', pages 22-32. | ||
==External Links== | |||
*{{LH|tibetan-masters/tulku-zangpo-drakpa/leu-dunma-chapter-7|''Le'u Dünma'', Chapter Seven: Sampa Lhundrupma—“The Prayer to Guru Rinpoche that Spontaneously Fulfills all Wishes”}} | |||
[[Category:Guru Rinpoche Prayers]] | [[Category:Guru Rinpoche Prayers]] |
Revision as of 14:59, 27 December 2012
Sampa Lhundrupma (Tib. བསམ་པ་ལྷུན་གྲུབ་མ་, Wyl. bsam pa lhun grub ma), The Prayer to Guru Rinpoche That Spontaneously Fulfills All Wishes, is a prayer that forms the seventh chapter of Le'u Dünma. It was given to the prince Mutri Tsenpo, the King of Gungthang, and son of King Trisong Detsen, by Padmasambhava as he was leaving for the land of the rakshasa ogres in the southwest.
Further Reading
- See A Great Treasure of Blessings: A Book of Prayers to Guru Rinpoche, pages 215-241, and the Supplement to “A Great Treasure of Blessings”—The Origins of the Le’u Dün Ma: The History, the Background and How the Prayers Came into Being, pages 22-32.