The Hundred Deeds: Difference between revisions
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'''''The Hundred Deeds''''' (Skt. ''Karmaśataka''; Tib. ལས་བརྒྱ་ཐམ་པ།, [[Wyl.]] ''las brgya tham pa'') or '''''The Hundred Karmas''''' is a [[sutra]] comprising more than 120 individual texts. This sutra is perhaps the best known of the many works in the [[Kangyur]] on the theme of [[karma|karmic ripening of actions]] across multiple lifetimes | '''''The Hundred Deeds''''' (Skt. ''Karmaśataka''; Tib. ལས་བརྒྱ་ཐམ་པ།, [[Wyl.]] ''las brgya tham pa'') or '''''The Hundred Karmas''''' is a [[sutra]] comprising more than 120 individual texts. This sutra is perhaps the best known of the many works in the [[Kangyur]] on the theme of [[karma|karmic ripening of actions]] across multiple lifetimes.<ref>84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha.</ref> | ||
==Text== | ==Text== |
Revision as of 20:56, 15 December 2020
The Hundred Deeds (Skt. Karmaśataka; Tib. ལས་བརྒྱ་ཐམ་པ།, Wyl. las brgya tham pa) or The Hundred Karmas is a sutra comprising more than 120 individual texts. This sutra is perhaps the best known of the many works in the Kangyur on the theme of karmic ripening of actions across multiple lifetimes.[1]
Text
- The original Sanskrit version is no longer extant.
- The Tibetan translation is found in the General Sutra section of the Kangyur, Toh 340.
- English translation: The Hundred Deeds
Quotations
ལུས་ཅན་དག་གི་ལས་རྣམས་ནི། །
བསྐལ་པ་བརྒྱར་ཡང་ཆུད་མི་ཟ། །
ཚོགས་ཤིང་དུས་ལས་བབས་པ་ན། །
When the time arrives—and even if
A hundred eons pass—
Fruit is born of every act
That sentient beings amass.[2]
- Buddha Shakyamuni, The Hundred Deeds, 1.72 (first occurrence)
The ocean, home of creatures fierce,
Could fail to send its tides on time.
But when the time has come to tame
Their offspring, buddhas never fail.
References
- ↑ 84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha.
- ↑ Quoted in The Words of My Perfect Teacher, page 119.