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'''Yoga tantra''' (Skt. '' | {{Template:9yanas articles | ||
|title=6. Yana of yoga tantra | |||
|sanskrit=yogatantra yāna | |||
|tibetan=[[རྣལ་འབྱོར་རྒྱུད་ཀྱི་ཐེག་པ་]] | |||
|phonetics=naljor gyü kyi tekpa | |||
|wylie=rnal 'byor rgyud kyi theg pa | |||
}} | |||
'''Yoga tantra''' (Skt. ''yogatantra''; Tib. རྣལ་འབྱོར་རྒྱུད་, Tib. ''naljor gyü'', Wyl. ''rnal 'byor rgyud'') — the third of the [[three outer classes of tantra]] and the sixth yana according to the [[nine yanas|nine yana]] classification. | |||
The vehicle of yoga tantra is so-called because it emphasizes the inner yogic meditation upon reality, combining [[skilful means]] and [[wisdom]]. | |||
==Overview Given by [[Alak Zenkar Rinpoche]]<ref>{{LH|tibetan-masters/alak-zenkar/nine-yanas|''A Brief Presentation of the Nine Yanas'' by Alak Zenkar Rinpoche}}</ref>== | ==Overview Given by [[Alak Zenkar Rinpoche]]<ref>{{LH|tibetan-masters/alak-zenkar/nine-yanas|''A Brief Presentation of the Nine Yanas'' by Alak Zenkar Rinpoche}}</ref>== |
Revision as of 16:27, 16 February 2012
The Nine Yanas |
6. Yana of yoga tantra |
Skt. yogatantra yāna |
Tib. རྣལ་འབྱོར་རྒྱུད་ཀྱི་ཐེག་པ་ |
naljor gyü kyi tekpa |
Wyl. rnal 'byor rgyud kyi theg pa |
Read main article for nine yana overview |
Three Outer Yanas Leading From the Origin |
1. Shravaka yana |
2. Pratyekabuddha yana |
3. Bodhisattva yana |
Three Yanas of Vedic Asceticism |
4. Yana of kriya tantra |
5. Yana of charya tantra |
6. Yana of yoga tantra |
Three Yanas of Powerful Transformative Methods |
7. Yana of tantra mahayoga |
8. Yana of scriptural transmission anuyoga |
9. Yana of pith instruction atiyoga |
Yoga tantra (Skt. yogatantra; Tib. རྣལ་འབྱོར་རྒྱུད་, Tib. naljor gyü, Wyl. rnal 'byor rgyud) — the third of the three outer classes of tantra and the sixth yana according to the nine yana classification.
The vehicle of yoga tantra is so-called because it emphasizes the inner yogic meditation upon reality, combining skilful means and wisdom.
Overview Given by Alak Zenkar Rinpoche[1]
Entry Point
Having been matured through the eleven empowerments—the five empowerments of the disciples (water, crown, vajra, bell and name) as well as the six empowerments of the master (the empowerment of irreversibility, empowerment of seeing secret reality, authorization, prophecy, confirmation and praising encouragement)—one keeps the samayas as described in the particular texts.
View
The view is to regard all phenomena as the deity of the vajradhatu, through the blessing of the emptiness and clear light in which all phenomena are realized to be beyond conceptual elaboration on an ultimate level.
Meditation
One meditates on the yoga of skilful means, visualizing oneself as the deity by means of the five aspects of awakening and the four miraculous things,[2] and summons the wisdom being (Skt. jñānasattva), who then dissolves into oneself, and is sealed by means of the four mudras, and so on. There is also the yoga of wisdom, in which one rests in a state in which ultimate non-conceptual wisdom is inseparable from the relative appearance of the deity of the vajradhatu.
Conduct
One practises ritual purification and cleanliness simply as a support.
Results
As a worldly attainment, one becomes a celestial vidyadhara, and as the supermundane accomplishment, one attains enlightenment in Ghanavyuha, as one of the five buddha families (in addition to the four families previously mentioned, there is also Amoghasiddhi’s buddha family of enlightened activity).
Notes
- ↑ A Brief Presentation of the Nine Yanas by Alak Zenkar Rinpoche
- ↑ i.e., samadhi, blessings, empowerment and offering.