The Secrets of the Realized Ones: Difference between revisions
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'''Sutra on the Inconceivable Secret''' (Skt. ''tathagata-acintya-guhya-nirdeśa-sutra''; Tib. དེ་བཞིན་གཤེགས་པའི་གསང་བ་བསམ་གྱིས་མི་ཁྱབ་པབསྟན་པའི་མདོ་) — a [[Mahayana]] [[sutra]] pertaining to the [[Three turnings|third turning]] of the Wheel of Dharma that explores a diversity of topics across 24 chapters and an epilogue. | |||
Skt. ''tathagata-acintya-guhya-nirdeśa-sutra'') | |||
== | Both [[Buddha Shakyamuni]] and [[Vajrapani]] teach, discussing the secrets of the body, speech, and mind of the [[bodhisattva]]s and the [[buddha]]s, nonduality, the relationship of the nature of mind to the qualities of buddhas and bodhisattvas, and other subjects. It follows a consistently nondual —identifying that while an awakened being may seem to be engaged in a conceptual or dualistic action, they never leave the scope of nonconceptual wisdom. It reveals the extraordinary freedom that awakened beings have in their acting in the world.<ref>84000</ref> | ||
==Tibetan Text== | |||
The Tibetan text can be found in the [[Ratnakuta]] section of the [[Kangyur]], [[Toh]] 47. | |||
*{{TBRCW|O1GS12980|O1GS1298001JW13525$W22084|Sutra on the Inconceivable Secret}} | *{{TBRCW|O1GS12980|O1GS1298001JW13525$W22084|Sutra on the Inconceivable Secret}} | ||
[[Category: Sutras]] | ==References== | ||
<small><references/></small> | |||
[[Category:Texts]] | |||
[[Category:Sutras]] | |||
[[Category:Mahayana Sutras]] | |||
[[Category:Heap of Jewels Section]] |
Revision as of 17:20, 26 November 2020
Sutra on the Inconceivable Secret (Skt. tathagata-acintya-guhya-nirdeśa-sutra; Tib. དེ་བཞིན་གཤེགས་པའི་གསང་བ་བསམ་གྱིས་མི་ཁྱབ་པབསྟན་པའི་མདོ་) — a Mahayana sutra pertaining to the third turning of the Wheel of Dharma that explores a diversity of topics across 24 chapters and an epilogue.
Both Buddha Shakyamuni and Vajrapani teach, discussing the secrets of the body, speech, and mind of the bodhisattvas and the buddhas, nonduality, the relationship of the nature of mind to the qualities of buddhas and bodhisattvas, and other subjects. It follows a consistently nondual —identifying that while an awakened being may seem to be engaged in a conceptual or dualistic action, they never leave the scope of nonconceptual wisdom. It reveals the extraordinary freedom that awakened beings have in their acting in the world.[1]
Tibetan Text
The Tibetan text can be found in the Ratnakuta section of the Kangyur, Toh 47.
References
- ↑ 84000