Jinsek: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Jinsek''' (Tib. [[སྦྱིན་སྲེག་]], [[Wyl.]] ''sbyin sreg ''; Skt. ''homa''), fire puja, or fire offering, is a ritual practice of offering into fire, a ritual of generously burning offerings, using the fire element to accomplish enlightened action quickly and powerfully<Ref>Instructions given by Lama Tharchin Rinpoche and shared through the presentation text of a Mendrup Drupchen held at Pema Osel Ling, USA, July 2014.</Ref>.  
'''Jinsek''' (Tib. [[སྦྱིན་སྲེག་]], [[Wyl.]] ''sbyin sreg ''; Skt. ''homa''), fire puja, or fire offering, is a ritual practice of offering into fire, a ritual of generously burning offerings, using the fire element to accomplish enlightened action quickly and powerfully.  


According to [[Lama Tharchin Rinpoche]]<Ref>Op. Cit.</Ref>:
According to [[Lama Tharchin Rinpoche]]<Ref>Instructions given by Lama Tharchin Rinpoche and shared through the presentation text of a Mendrup Drupchen held at Pema Osel Ling, USA, July 2014.</Ref>:
:During a [[drupchen]], it is often the case that four jinseks are performed to accomplish the enlightened activities of pacifying, enriching, magnetizing, and wrathful. Each jinsek is performed by a different [[lama]] and corresponds with specific colors, directions and energies.
:During a [[drupchen]], it is often the case that four jinseks are performed to accomplish the enlightened activities of pacifying, enriching, magnetizing, and wrathful. Each jinsek is performed by a different [[lama]] and corresponds with specific colors, directions and energies.
:Through the '''pacifying jinsek''' (''shyiwé jinsek'') imbalances of physical elements that result in sickness are healed; negative energy for us personally and the world in general are removed; karmic defilements of countless lifetimes are pacified and we are liberated from unwanted circumstances.
:Through the '''pacifying jinsek''' (''shyiwé jinsek'') imbalances of physical elements that result in sickness are healed; negative energy for us personally and the world in general are removed; karmic defilements of countless lifetimes are pacified and we are liberated from unwanted circumstances.

Revision as of 13:09, 1 October 2019

Jinsek (Tib. སྦྱིན་སྲེག་, Wyl. sbyin sreg ; Skt. homa), fire puja, or fire offering, is a ritual practice of offering into fire, a ritual of generously burning offerings, using the fire element to accomplish enlightened action quickly and powerfully.

According to Lama Tharchin Rinpoche[1]:

During a drupchen, it is often the case that four jinseks are performed to accomplish the enlightened activities of pacifying, enriching, magnetizing, and wrathful. Each jinsek is performed by a different lama and corresponds with specific colors, directions and energies.
Through the pacifying jinsek (shyiwé jinsek) imbalances of physical elements that result in sickness are healed; negative energy for us personally and the world in general are removed; karmic defilements of countless lifetimes are pacified and we are liberated from unwanted circumstances.
Through the enriching jinsek (gyaybé jinsek), longevity, merit, glory, wealth, splendor, powerful influence, fame, good reputation, wisdom and all enlightened qualities are enriched and expanded.
Through the magnetizing jinsek (wang-gi jinsek), all qualities and beings of the three realms of cyclic existence are brought under one's control: any worldly desirable qualities and glorious qualities of the Dharma path, such as meditative experience, realization and enlightened wisdom qualities are magnetized and brought under one's control.
Through the wrathful jinsek (drakpo jinsek), all enemies, obstructers and those who bring harm both to worldly life and the path of enlightenment, are eliminated and liberated.
The benefits of performing jinseks, or even making a connection with them, are immense, both relatively and ultimately.

Notes

  1. Instructions given by Lama Tharchin Rinpoche and shared through the presentation text of a Mendrup Drupchen held at Pema Osel Ling, USA, July 2014.

Further Reading

Internal Links

External Links