Prayer to Sakya Pandita: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Sakya Pandita.JPG|frame|'''Sakya Pandita Kunga Gyaltsen''']]'''Prayer to [[Sakya Pandita]]''' | [[Image:Sakya Pandita.JPG|frame|'''Sakya Pandita Kunga Gyaltsen''']]'''Prayer to [[Sakya Pandita]]''' — This four-line prayer to [[Manjushri]], which appears at the beginning of [[Sakya Pandita]]’s ''Treasury of Valid Reasoning'' (Wyl. ''Tshad ma rigs gter'') was later adopted as a prayer to Sakya Paṇḍita himself: | ||
'''shé ja tamché zikpé chen yang shing'''<br> | '''shé ja tamché zikpé chen yang shing'''<br> |
Revision as of 08:18, 19 October 2017
Prayer to Sakya Pandita — This four-line prayer to Manjushri, which appears at the beginning of Sakya Pandita’s Treasury of Valid Reasoning (Wyl. Tshad ma rigs gter) was later adopted as a prayer to Sakya Paṇḍita himself:
shé ja tamché zikpé chen yang shing
You who have the eye of wisdom that sees all that is knowable,
dro kun gelek drubpé tukjé chen
The compassion that brings about the welfare of all beings,
samyé trinlé dzepé top nga wa
The strength that accomplishes inconceivable enlightened action,
jamgön lamé shyap la solwa dep
Lama, you who are Manjushri in person, at your feet I pray!
Tibetan text
This section contains Tibetan script. Without proper Tibetan rendering support configured, you may see other symbols instead of Tibetan script. |
༈ ཤེས་བྱ་ཐམས་ཅད་གཟིགས་པའི་སྤྱན་ཡངས་ཤིང༌། །
འགྲོ་ཀུན་དགེ་ལེགས་སྒྲུབ་པའི་ཐུགས་རྗེ་ཅན། །
བསམ་ཡས་ཕྲིན་ལས་མཛད་པའི་སྟོབས་མངའ་བ། །
འཇམ་མགོན་བླ་མའི་ཞབས་ལ་གསོལ་བ་འདེབས། །
Additional Information
- Gatön Ngawang Lekpa recited this prayer 4,100,000 times accompanied by the same number of prostrations.[1]
Notes
- ↑ David P. Jackson, A Saint in Seattle, page 16.