Material terma: Difference between revisions
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'''Material | '''Material terma''' (Tib. གཏེར་རྫས་, ''ter dzé'', [[Wyl.]] ''gter rdzas'') or '''[[terma]] object''' is a physical object like a statue, [[kutsab]], [[phurba]], robes and so on revealed as [[earth terma]]s. | ||
[[Tulku Thondup]] says:<ref>Tulku Thondup, ''Hidden Teachings of Tibet: An Explanation of the Terma Tradition of Tibetan Buddhism'', edited by Harold Talbott (Wisdom Publications, 1999), n.258 p.261.</ref><br> | [[Tulku Thondup]] says:<ref>Tulku Thondup, ''Hidden Teachings of Tibet: An Explanation of the Terma Tradition of Tibetan Buddhism'', edited by Harold Talbott (Wisdom Publications, 1999), n.258 p.261.</ref><br> | ||
Some of the discovered objects are made of unimaginable materials, sometimes eight or sixteen precious materials formed into an image with wonderful artistery. [[Guru Padmasambhava]] made many of them miraculously and instructed gods, [[naga]]s and [[yaksha]]s to make others. Some are simple in nature and design, and many were made by human beings. | :Some of the discovered objects are made of unimaginable materials, sometimes eight or sixteen precious materials formed into an image with wonderful artistery. [[Guru Padmasambhava]] made many of them miraculously and instructed gods, [[naga]]s and [[yaksha]]s to make others. Some are simple in nature and design, and many were made by human beings. | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Latest revision as of 05:48, 3 July 2017
Material terma (Tib. གཏེར་རྫས་, ter dzé, Wyl. gter rdzas) or terma object is a physical object like a statue, kutsab, phurba, robes and so on revealed as earth termas.
Tulku Thondup says:[1]
- Some of the discovered objects are made of unimaginable materials, sometimes eight or sixteen precious materials formed into an image with wonderful artistery. Guru Padmasambhava made many of them miraculously and instructed gods, nagas and yakshas to make others. Some are simple in nature and design, and many were made by human beings.
References
- ↑ Tulku Thondup, Hidden Teachings of Tibet: An Explanation of the Terma Tradition of Tibetan Buddhism, edited by Harold Talbott (Wisdom Publications, 1999), n.258 p.261.