Seven Profound Cycles: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Chokgyur Lingpa.jpg|thumb|Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa]] | [[Image:Chokgyur Lingpa.jpg|thumb|Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa]] | ||
The '''Seven Profound Cycles''' (ཟབ་པ་སྐོར་བདུན་, [[Wyl.]] ''zab pa skor bdun'') are seven collections of practices revealed by [[Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa]] in 1856. They are: | The '''Seven Profound Cycles''' (ཟབ་པ་སྐོར་བདུན་, ''zabpa kor dün'', [[Wyl.]] ''zab pa skor bdun'') are seven collections of practices revealed by [[Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa]] in 1856. They are: | ||
#[[Web of Magical Illusion|Illusory Net]]: profound [[tantra]]; | #[[Web of Magical Illusion|Illusory Net]]: profound [[tantra]]; | ||
#[[Yangdak]] (Vishuddha): profound eminence; | #[[Yangdak]] (Vishuddha): profound eminence; | ||
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#Manjushri [[Yamantaka]]: profound fierce [[mantra]]; | #Manjushri [[Yamantaka]]: profound fierce [[mantra]]; | ||
#[[Vajrakilaya|Kilaya]]: profound wrathful activity; | #[[Vajrakilaya|Kilaya]]: profound wrathful activity; | ||
#[[three Roots|Guru, Deva, Dakini]]: profound [[Long life practice|long life]]; and | #[[three Roots|Guru, Deva, Dakini]]: profound [[Long life practice|long life]], which includes the [[Pema Khandro]] practice; and | ||
#[[Mamo]]: profound dispeller of obstacles and creator of realization. | #[[Mamo]]: profound dispeller of obstacles and creator of realization. | ||
Latest revision as of 22:37, 6 March 2018
The Seven Profound Cycles (ཟབ་པ་སྐོར་བདུན་, zabpa kor dün, Wyl. zab pa skor bdun) are seven collections of practices revealed by Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa in 1856. They are:
- Illusory Net: profound tantra;
- Yangdak (Vishuddha): profound eminence;
- Hayagriva: profound power;
- Manjushri Yamantaka: profound fierce mantra;
- Kilaya: profound wrathful activity;
- Guru, Deva, Dakini: profound long life, which includes the Pema Khandro practice; and
- Mamo: profound dispeller of obstacles and creator of realization.
References
- Andreas Doctor, Tibetan Treasure Literature: Revelation, Tradition and Accomplishment in Visionary Buddhism (Ithaca: Snow Lion, 2005, p.88)