Eliminating Ajatashatru’s Remorse: Difference between revisions

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'''Eliminating Ajatashatru’s Remorse''' (Skt. ''Ajātaśatrukaukṛtyavinodana''; Tib. མ་སྐྱེས་དགྲའི་འགྱོད་པ་བསལ་བ།, [[Wyl.]] ''ma skyes dgra’i ‘gyod pa bsal ba'')   narrates how the teachings of the [[bodhisattva]] [[Manjushri]] help King [[Ajatashatru]] overcome the severe negative action of having killed his father, King [[Bimbisara]]. Through instruction, pointed questioning, and a display of miracles, Manjushri and his retinue of bodhisattvas show King Ajatashatru that the remorse he feels for his crime is in fact unreal, just as all phenomena are unreal. The sutra thus demonstrates Manjushri’s superiority in [[wisdom]] and the profound purification that comes from realizing [[emptiness]].<ref>84000 Translating the Words of the Buddha.</ref>
'''Eliminating Ajatashatru’s Remorse''' (Skt. ''Ajātaśatrukaukṛtyavinodana''; Tib. མ་སྐྱེས་དགྲའི་འགྱོད་པ་བསལ་བ།, [[Wyl.]] ''ma skyes dgra’i ‘gyod pa bsal ba'') is a [[Mahayana]] [[sutra]] which narrates how the teachings of the [[bodhisattva]] [[Manjushri]] helped King [[Ajatashatru]] overcome the severe negative action of having killed his father, King [[Bimbisara]]. Through instruction, pointed questioning, and a display of miracles, Manjushri and his retinue of bodhisattvas show King Ajatashatru that the remorse he feels for his crime is in fact unreal, just as all phenomena are unreal. The sutra thus demonstrates Manjushri’s superiority in [[wisdom]] and the profound purification that comes from realizing [[emptiness]].<ref>84000, Translating the Words of the Buddha.</ref>


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Latest revision as of 07:47, 6 March 2024

Eliminating Ajatashatru’s Remorse (Skt. Ajātaśatrukaukṛtyavinodana; Tib. མ་སྐྱེས་དགྲའི་འགྱོད་པ་བསལ་བ།, Wyl. ma skyes dgra’i ‘gyod pa bsal ba) is a Mahayana sutra which narrates how the teachings of the bodhisattva Manjushri helped King Ajatashatru overcome the severe negative action of having killed his father, King Bimbisara. Through instruction, pointed questioning, and a display of miracles, Manjushri and his retinue of bodhisattvas show King Ajatashatru that the remorse he feels for his crime is in fact unreal, just as all phenomena are unreal. The sutra thus demonstrates Manjushri’s superiority in wisdom and the profound purification that comes from realizing emptiness.[1]

Text

The Tibetan translation of this sutra can be found in the General Sutra section of the Tibetan Dergé Kangyur, Toh 216

References

  1. 84000, Translating the Words of the Buddha.