Difference between revisions of "Traditions"
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Following the rush of new translations in the fifth and sixth centuries, brilliant Chinese thinkers began to systematize the teachings they had received, their ideas and practices coalescing into formal Buddhist schools such as Tiantai, Huayan, and Chan (schools that, it should be remembered, had a great deal of intersection and cross-fertilization). The Tiantai school 天台宗 was established by [[Zhiyi]] (智顗 538–597) using the ''[[Lotus Sūtra]]'' as his scriptural foundation. As part of his teaching that every moment of thought contains the full span of existence, [[Zhiyi]] advocated for the coexistence of buddha-nature and the unenlightened state in all beings, be they buddhas or unfortunate residents of the hell realms. After a period of decline, Tiantai was revitalized by [[People/Jingxi_Zhanran|Zhanran]] (湛然 711–782), who advocated for the buddha-nature not only of sentient beings but also of inanimate objects, an idea that found popular appeal and has confounded philosophers ever since. In Japan the tradition, known there as Tendai, was established by [[Saichō]] (最澄 767–822), who popularized original enlightenment in Japan and incorporated tantric practices into the tradition. | Following the rush of new translations in the fifth and sixth centuries, brilliant Chinese thinkers began to systematize the teachings they had received, their ideas and practices coalescing into formal Buddhist schools such as Tiantai, Huayan, and Chan (schools that, it should be remembered, had a great deal of intersection and cross-fertilization). The Tiantai school 天台宗 was established by [[Zhiyi]] (智顗 538–597) using the ''[[Lotus Sūtra]]'' as his scriptural foundation. As part of his teaching that every moment of thought contains the full span of existence, [[Zhiyi]] advocated for the coexistence of buddha-nature and the unenlightened state in all beings, be they buddhas or unfortunate residents of the hell realms. After a period of decline, Tiantai was revitalized by [[People/Jingxi_Zhanran|Zhanran]] (湛然 711–782), who advocated for the buddha-nature not only of sentient beings but also of inanimate objects, an idea that found popular appeal and has confounded philosophers ever since. In Japan the tradition, known there as Tendai, was established by [[Saichō]] (最澄 767–822), who popularized original enlightenment in Japan and incorporated tantric practices into the tradition. | ||
− | In the Huayan school 華嚴宗, the ''[[Awakening of Faith]]'', alongside the ''[[Texts/Buddhāvataṃsakasūtra|Avataṃsakasūtra]]'', was central in the writings of the great patriarchs [[Fazang]] (法藏 643–712) and [[Zongmi]] (宗密 780–841). [[Fazang]] wrote the definitive commentary on the ''[[Awakening of Faith]]''—it was the starting point of all subsequent commentaries—in which he divided all of Buddhism into four schools: Hīnayāna, Mahāyāna, Yogācāra, and Tathāgatagarbha. Although not officially a Yogācāra tradition, Huayan absorbed earlier Chinese Yogācāra traditions such as the Dilun school 地論宗, named after the Chinese title of [[Vasubandhu]]’s ' | + | In the Huayan school 華嚴宗, the ''[[Awakening of Faith]]'', alongside the ''[[Texts/Buddhāvataṃsakasūtra|Avataṃsakasūtra]]'', was central in the writings of the great patriarchs [[Fazang]] (法藏 643–712) and [[Zongmi]] (宗密 780–841). [[Fazang]] wrote the definitive commentary on the ''[[Awakening of Faith]]''—it was the starting point of all subsequent commentaries—in which he divided all of Buddhism into four schools: Hīnayāna, Mahāyāna, Yogācāra, and Tathāgatagarbha. Although not officially a Yogācāra tradition, Huayan absorbed earlier Chinese Yogācāra traditions such as the Dilun school 地論宗, named after the Chinese title of [[Vasubandhu]]’s ''Daśabhūmivyākhyāna'', a major Yogācāra treatise. Despite the continuing influence of the Huayan writings, the school declined soon after [[Zongmi]]’s time, due to official persecution and waning interest in scholastic exegesis, and also from being replaced in popularity by the meditative traditions of Chan and the Pure Land practices of reciting the name of Buddha Amitābha. |
In Chan and Zen 禪宗 buddha-nature and original-enlightenment teachings are used to explain the value of meditation in a tradition that teaches that there is nothing to be done. Like all Buddhist traditions, Chan and Zen are awash in rituals and ceremonies designed to achieve all sorts of goals, from making rain to attaining enlightenment. Such activities are vital to the functioning of religious communities and their preservation of the teachings; one Chan sect in medieval China took literally the notion that one need do nothing to attain enlightenment, decided to stop performing any rituals, and so vanished from history. Chan is at least rhetorically centered on meditation—the name of the school is the first character in the transliteration of dhyāna, or meditation (禪那). | In Chan and Zen 禪宗 buddha-nature and original-enlightenment teachings are used to explain the value of meditation in a tradition that teaches that there is nothing to be done. Like all Buddhist traditions, Chan and Zen are awash in rituals and ceremonies designed to achieve all sorts of goals, from making rain to attaining enlightenment. Such activities are vital to the functioning of religious communities and their preservation of the teachings; one Chan sect in medieval China took literally the notion that one need do nothing to attain enlightenment, decided to stop performing any rituals, and so vanished from history. Chan is at least rhetorically centered on meditation—the name of the school is the first character in the transliteration of dhyāna, or meditation (禪那). |
Revision as of 15:57, 6 March 2020
The Traditions of Buddha-Nature[edit]
Early Buddhism and Buddhism in India[edit]
Buddha-nature theory does not appear in the Pāli canon. These scriptures were, according to legend, assembled at the First Council soon after the death of the Buddha and preserved orally until they were written down sometime around the turn of the first millennium. They are the sacred literature of early Buddhism and its sole surviving order: the Theravāda traditions of South and Southeast Asia. Buddha-nature is not rejected in these early Buddhist scriptures; it simply is not present. The notion of an innate enlightenment or the idea that the mind is inherently pure would have been unorthodox to traditional Theravāda Buddhist teachers. Early Buddhism, and most of traditional Theravāda Buddhism, teaches that consciousness is one of the five aggregates of conditioned existence and therefore cannot be associated with nirvāṇa, which is unconditioned. In Theravāda Buddhism nirvāṇa is the utter absence of saṃsāra, a state of nonexistence attained only after mahāparinirvāṇa—that is, the death of a fully enlightened person.
Classical and modern scholars have attempted to find buddha-nature teachings in the Pāli canon, but the contemporary Western Theravādin teacher Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu has written that this is misguided. For example, buddha-nature proponents point to a passage from the Aṅguttaranikāya Sutta that reads, "Luminous, monks, is this mind, but sometimes it is defiled by adventitious defilements." Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu interprets the above passage as meaning simply that once the mind is stained, it can be purified; the text, he argues, makes no claim about the fundamental nature of the mind.
We do not know how Buddhists in India engaged with buddha-nature theory; too little is known about the daily lives and practices of Indian Buddhists. The core buddha-nature scriptures such as the Tathāgatagarbhasūtra, the Mahāparinirvāṇasūtra, the Śrīmaladevisūtra, and the Laṅkāvatārasūtra all circulated widely beginning as early as the second century of the Common Era, and scholars believe that the Ratnagotravibhāga, the influential commentary on buddha-nature whose author is unknown, was likely written during the fourth century. Thus the concept of buddha-nature was probably discussed and debated in most Indian Buddhist communities for a good thousand years before Buddhism disappeared in India in the thirteenth century.
Every Mahāyāna tradition teaches that because all phenomena arise in dependence on other phenomena they are empty of any self-nature. How to describe that emptiness is, however, a matter of considerable disagreement. The ideas of buddha-nature and the use of positive language to describe enlightenment and the true nature of reality were widely accepted in Indian Buddhist communities alongside the Madhyamaka philosophy of Nāgārjuna and his disciples. For Madhyamaka adherents, emptiness is the ultimate truth of reality, while conventional appearances—the "form" in the famous line from the Heart Sūtra that "form is emptiness, emptiness is no other than form"—are true only relative to the rest of the phenomenal world. "Because there are no phenomena that are not dependently arisen," Nāgārjuna wrote, "there are no phenomena that are not empty." All Mādhyamikas since have taken this to mean that not even buddha-nature can be said to exist. Language, because it is relativistic and dualistic, can describe only conventional appearances, not the ultimate, and so, for Madhyamaka, any description of the ultimate cannot be accurate or true. Emptiness can be described only in terms of what it is not: it is not conditioned, not permanent, and so forth. For strict Madhyamaka interpreters, buddha-nature must be considered a provisional teaching, useful but not literally true.
Although Nāgārjuna and his followers asserted that their unity of the two truths—the ultimate truth of emptiness and the relative truth of dependent phenomena—avoids the extremes of eternalism and nihilism (Madhyamaka means “middle way”), not everyone was convinced, and from the very start Madhyamaka was accused of nihilism. While accepting dependent origination and the doctrine of two truths, adherents of the Yogācāra school, for example, directed their focus to the psychological structures that make ignorance and enlightenment possible. In doing so they were willing to assert the fundamental existence of the mind and its qualities, particularly that of self-reflexive awareness. Buddha-nature theory, which holds that the mind is ultimately empty and at the same time luminous, in the sense of being self-reflexive, was naturally appealing to Yogācāra writers, even though in some ways it conflicted with core beliefs, such as that not all beings are destined for enlightenment.
There is reason to believe that buddha-nature theory had an influence on Indian tantra, which draws on doctrines from multiple Mahāyāna schools and integrates ascetic and antinomian practices into a Buddhist framework. Tantric practice relies on the cultivation of mental experiences of luminosity, which is a Buddhist metaphor for the innate purity of mind, and which came to be equated with buddha-nature and the dharmakāya. Tantra is also often described as a set of techniques to circumvent the lengthy process of purifying defilements and accumulating merit, with the promise of attaining enlightenment in a single lifetime. This is allegedly possible due to the potency of the practices, but it also presumes an already-existing correspondence between the body, speech, and mind of the practitioner and those of a buddha, to which one gains access through complex and often arcane mental and physical practices. Tantric theory does not entirely embrace buddha-nature, however. The often-used metaphor of the lotus arising from mud would suggest a transformation rather than an actualization; the mud and the lotus are not of the same nature.
East Asian Buddhism[edit]
Buddha-nature is a central doctrine in all East Asian Buddhist traditions, although it is of lesser importance in Pure Land teachings. The main Indian buddha-nature scriptures were translated into Chinese starting in the early decades of the fifth century, during a period of renewed interest in Indian scriptures. The Mahāparinirvāṇasūtra in particular provided a scriptural justification for the idea that all beings have the innate capacity for enlightenment. Within a hundred years of most of these translations, a native composition called the Awakening of Faith in the Mahāyāna (Dasheng qixin lun 大乗起信論) placed buddha-nature theory into a framework of original enlightenment (benjue 本覺) and actualized enlightenment (shijue 事覺), which holds that the mind is by nature enlightened and that one need only realize that truth to be liberated. Both terms ultimately refer to the same state; the enlightenment attained is fundamentally the same as the enlightenment that was earlier obscured by ignorance. The Awakening of Faith also accomplished a synthesis of buddha-nature with the Yogācāra doctrine of ālayavijñāna, which it used to explain the origin and perdurance of ignorance.
Following the rush of new translations in the fifth and sixth centuries, brilliant Chinese thinkers began to systematize the teachings they had received, their ideas and practices coalescing into formal Buddhist schools such as Tiantai, Huayan, and Chan (schools that, it should be remembered, had a great deal of intersection and cross-fertilization). The Tiantai school 天台宗 was established by Zhiyi (智顗 538–597) using the Lotus Sūtra as his scriptural foundation. As part of his teaching that every moment of thought contains the full span of existence, Zhiyi advocated for the coexistence of buddha-nature and the unenlightened state in all beings, be they buddhas or unfortunate residents of the hell realms. After a period of decline, Tiantai was revitalized by Zhanran (湛然 711–782), who advocated for the buddha-nature not only of sentient beings but also of inanimate objects, an idea that found popular appeal and has confounded philosophers ever since. In Japan the tradition, known there as Tendai, was established by Saichō (最澄 767–822), who popularized original enlightenment in Japan and incorporated tantric practices into the tradition.
In the Huayan school 華嚴宗, the Awakening of Faith, alongside the Avataṃsakasūtra, was central in the writings of the great patriarchs Fazang (法藏 643–712) and Zongmi (宗密 780–841). Fazang wrote the definitive commentary on the Awakening of Faith—it was the starting point of all subsequent commentaries—in which he divided all of Buddhism into four schools: Hīnayāna, Mahāyāna, Yogācāra, and Tathāgatagarbha. Although not officially a Yogācāra tradition, Huayan absorbed earlier Chinese Yogācāra traditions such as the Dilun school 地論宗, named after the Chinese title of Vasubandhu’s Daśabhūmivyākhyāna, a major Yogācāra treatise. Despite the continuing influence of the Huayan writings, the school declined soon after Zongmi’s time, due to official persecution and waning interest in scholastic exegesis, and also from being replaced in popularity by the meditative traditions of Chan and the Pure Land practices of reciting the name of Buddha Amitābha.
In Chan and Zen 禪宗 buddha-nature and original-enlightenment teachings are used to explain the value of meditation in a tradition that teaches that there is nothing to be done. Like all Buddhist traditions, Chan and Zen are awash in rituals and ceremonies designed to achieve all sorts of goals, from making rain to attaining enlightenment. Such activities are vital to the functioning of religious communities and their preservation of the teachings; one Chan sect in medieval China took literally the notion that one need do nothing to attain enlightenment, decided to stop performing any rituals, and so vanished from history. Chan is at least rhetorically centered on meditation—the name of the school is the first character in the transliteration of dhyāna, or meditation (禪那).
A doctrinal issue particularly associated with Chan is that of sudden versus gradual enlightenment. The gradual path (jianwu 漸悟) is described as the aeons-long accumulation of merit and purification of saṃsāric stains, while the sudden path (dunwu 頓悟) teaches that all one must do is cease delusion. Or, as a Chinese proverb puts it, “put down your butcher knife and become a buddha right now” (放下屠刀立地成佛), the butcher knife symbolizing the harm we do ourselves and others by believing in a fundamental distinction between self and other. The debate is most famously articulated in the Platform Sutra of the Sixth Patriarch, in which dueling poems express first the gradual and then the sudden position:
- The body is the bodhi tree;
- The mind is like a bright mirror’s stand.
- Be always diligent in rubbing it—
- Do not let it attract any dust.
- Bodhi is fundamentally without any tree;
- The bright mirror is also not a stand.
- Fundamentally there is not a single thing—
- Where could any dust be attracted?
Building on the theory of two truths, the great Japanese Zen teacher Dōgen (道元 1200–1253) taught that all meditation practice is performed not to attain enlightenment but to express one’s innate enlightenment. The famous Zen proverb “If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him” expresses this: if you think that the Buddha is someone or somewhere else, you’re wasting your time; destroy that idea and realize your own innate enlightenment. The Japanese Shingon school (真言宗) founded by the monk Kūkai (空海 774–835) combines the buddha-nature teachings of the mainstream Chinese Mahāyāna with tantric traditions centered around Buddha Vairocana. Shingon’s esoteric practice is a ritual engagement with the body of Vairocana, which is equated with the dharmakāya and thereby with buddha-nature.
Tibet / Mongolia / Bhutan[edit]
Like the Buddhist traditions of East Asia, those of Tibet have always been in close contact, cross-fertilizing each other with innovations and shared practices. The dominant traditions of Nyingma, Sakya, Kagyu and Geluk are better understood as loose categories of affiliation than as closed systems, and leaders often move between monasteries to pursue their education. There is therefore no buddha-nature position that can be said to belong to any one particular tradition. Rather, buddha-nature teachings in Tibet are debated in terms of provisional versus definitive and whether buddha-nature is simply another word for emptiness or has qualities of its own. That is, at issue is whether buddha-nature is empty of all qualities (a position known as rangtong, or “self-emptiness” in Tibetan) or is empty of all but its own qualities (shentong, or “other-emptiness”). These conversations began in India but took on new life in Tibet.
Buddha-nature theory in Tibet is largely based on the fifth-century treatise the Ratnagotravibhāga, popularly known in Tibet as the Uttaratantra, or Gyulama (rgyud bla ma), which was translated into Tibetan in the eleventh century. The two poles of dialogue are traditionally defined in Tibet as the analytic and meditative traditions of Ratnagotravibhāga exegesis. The analytic tradition generally relies on strict Madhyamaka presentations of emptiness and rejects any attempt to describe ultimate reality with positive characteristics. The definitive commentary is that of Ngok Lotsāwa Loden Sherab (Rngog lo tsA ba blo ldan shes rab, 1059–1109), which is still studied today in scholastic institutions, primarily those belonging to the Geluk and Sakya traditions. Among the great thinkers who contributed their voices to this side of the discussion are Sakya Paṇḍita Kunga Gyeltsen (Sa kya paN Di ta kun dga’ rgyal mtshan, 1182–1251), who established doctrinal orthodoxy for the Sakya tradition in the thirteenth century, and Gyeltsabje Darma Rinchen (Rgyal tshab rje dar ma rin chen, 1364–1432), one of several close disciples of Tsongkhapa Lobzang Drakpa (Tsong kha pa blo bzang grags pa, 1357–1419), who together initiated the Geluk tradition in the fourteenth century.
The meditative tradition encompasses a wide span of buddha-nature theory found primarily in the Jonang, Kagyu, and Nyingma traditions. Ngok’s Indian master Sajjana had another disciple, Tsen Khawoche (Btsan kha bo che, born 1021), whose commentary is lost but who set the stage for the definition of buddha-nature as “luminosity,” here a metaphor for reflexive self-awareness. Dolpopa Sherab Gyeltsen (Dol po pa shes rab rgyal mtshan, 1292–1361), a fourteenth-century monk from the Tibetan-Nepali border region who became abbot of the monastery Jonang, is credited in Tibet with the origin of other-emptiness. Few subsequent proponents of the other-emptiness position fully agreed with Dolpopa; most, such as the Third Karmapa, Rangjung Dorje (Karma pa 03 rang ’byung rdo rje, 1284–1339) and the Sakya commentator Śākya Chokden (ShAkya mchog ldan, 1428–1507), sought out a middle ground that would teach a unity of emptiness and luminosity, a view that became standard in Mahāmudrā and Dzogchen. The Dzogchen teachings of the Nyingma tradition can also be placed within the meditative tradition, although Nyingma exegetes before the nineteenth-century philosopher Mipam Gyatso (Mi pham rgya mtsho, 1846–1912) seldom wrote much about buddha-nature. The Buddhisms of Mongolia and Bhutan and other Central Asian and Himalayan regions are, at least doctrinally, faithful to the traditions developed in Tibet.
Western Buddhism[edit]
Western Buddhism is a broad catchall for Buddhist traditions outside of Asia. It encompasses teachings and practices that were brought to Russia, Europe, Australia, and the Americas by both Asian-born teachers and Western-born men and women who studied in Asian Buddhist communities. A list of major figures would include D. T. Suzuki (1870–-1966), translator of the Awakening of Faith; his patron Paul Carus (1852–1919), the author of Gospel of the Buddha; and Dwight Goddard (1861–1939), compiler of A Buddhist Bible. The list would also include Shunryū Suzuki (1904–1971), author of the beloved Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind and founder (in 1967) of Tassajara Zen Mountain Center, the first Buddhist monastery outside of Asia; the charismatic Tibetan teacher Chögyam Trungpa (1939–1987), who founded Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado, in 1974 as well as the worldwide Shambhala organization; and the Burmese Theravādin meditation master Mahāsi Sayādaw (1904–1982), who popularized the modern Vipassana method in Asia and trained the first generation of Western Vipassana teachers. The Vietnamese Zen monk and peace activist Thích Nhất Hạnh (born 1926), the founder of the Plum Village tradition, is perhaps the last living member of the first generations of Asian Buddhist teachers to the West.
The Western students of these and other Asian masters have become some of the most influential Western Buddhist teachers, such as Sharon Salzberg, Joseph Goldstein, and Jack Kornfield in the Vipassana community; Robert Aitken (1917–2010) and Joan Halifax in the American Zen community and Pema Chödron in the Tibetan community (unlike the majority of Western Zen and Vipassana communities, Western Tibetan practitioners continue to rely primarily on Tibetan teachers living in exile). Few of these teachers seem overly concerned with maintaining a separation between their received tradition and the Buddhisms of other regions, and together they have contributed to a new form of Buddhism marked by eclectic assortments of teachings and practices, all of which embrace buddha-nature as a core tenet, explicitly or otherwise. This is true even in the Vipassana community, despite the objection of traditionalists such as the American monk Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu, mentioned at the beginning of this essay. For example, Sharon Salzberg illustrates the value of buddha-nature by telling of a meeting in 1990 with the Dalai Lama during which she asked about self-loathing. The Dalai Lama responded with incredulity that any person would hate themselves: “But you have Buddha nature,” he said. “How could you think of yourself that way?” Jack Kornfield has a teaching series called “Your Buddha Nature” and leads retreats on the topic.
Perhaps more than any other contemporary Western Buddhist, Joseph Goldstein models the modern Western synthesis of disparate Asian Buddhist traditions. His book One Dharma represents the first Western drumta (Tibetan: grub mtha’), or panjiao 叛教—that is, classification of tenet systems, a genre of religious writing that both Tibetans and Chinese engaged in extensively to organize all the received Buddhist teachings. Goldstein’s tenet system unites the Theravāda Vipassana tradition of the Burmese, Thai, and Bengali teachers who provided the major part of his training; the Tibetan tradition of Dzogchen, which he received well after becoming a highly regarded Buddhist teacher himself; and Zen, in which he is evidently well read but in which he does not appear to have received formal training.
Goldstein acknowledges that buddha-nature teachings are not present in Theravāda Buddhism, save for in the Thai Forest tradition, which developed in the late nineteenth century and which holds that the mind preexists the five aggregates and survives the attainment of nirvāṇa. With support from the Thai masters, Goldstein is able to put forward buddha-nature (or its synonyms) as the definition of wisdom in his One Dharma synthesis: In Buddhism there are many names for ultimate freedom: Buddha-Nature, the Unconditioned, Dharmakaya, the Unborn, the Pure Heart, Mind Essence, Nature of Mind, Ultimate Bodhicitta, Nirvana.
Goldstein acknowledges the fundamental philosophical divide between Pāli Buddhism and the Mahāyāna traditions, between consciousness understood as a conditioned aggregate that is left behind at liberation and mind as the ground of enlightenment. In the face of this, and as a strategy of permitting an otherwise untenable synthesis, he states that he can only recommend humility; he can’t square them, but he knows that both are correct. I suspect that he does not want to insult his beloved teachers by relegating the early Buddhist teachings to the categories of skillful means and provisional truth. But the suggestion is there, both in his introduction, where he offers the two truths as one of four basic principles of One Dharma (“what is called in Buddhism ‘the two truths’—the relative and the ultimate perspectives of reality—together provide a framework for holding divergent points of view”) and later in the first pages of chapter 8, on compassion, where he calls them “a matrix of seeing all of the varied teachings as part of the 'One Dharma of freedom.” The book, our first Western systematization of the tenets, might not be entirely successful at reconciling contradictions among the teachings, but it is nonetheless the clearest expression of contemporary Western Buddhism’s intention of integrating everything all the same—with buddha-nature ever unspoken at the peripheries, if not smack in the middle.
Jack Kornfield:
Series of teachings on buddha-nature
https://www.spiritrock.org/buddha-nature
10 minute meditation instruction on buddha-nature: https://jackkornfield.com/finding-buddha-nature-in-the-midst-of-difficulty/
He teaches a course: https://jackkornfield.com/your-buddha-nature/
https://www.soundstrue.com/store/your-buddha-nature-507.html
Let's create a listing closer to this style here: https://treasuryoflives.org/tradition - but with Chinese and Japanese traditions represented as well. THen we can have a page for each that can include further readings and a specific essay on the tradition's perspective on buddha-nature. Marcus (talk) 21:52, 3 May 2018 (UTC)
Chinese Traditions[edit]
Japanese Traditions[edit]
Indian Traditions[edit]
Korean Traditions[edit]
Tibetan Traditions[edit]
Bodong - བོ་དོང།[edit]
https://treasuryoflives.org/tradition/Bodong
The Bodong (bo dong) tradition has a long and complicated history. The seat of what would become the institutionally independent Bodong lineage was the monastery Bodong E, which was founded in 1049 by Geshe Mudrapa Chenpo. What teachings were current there is difficult to know, save that in the twelfth century Kodrakpa Sonam Gyeltsen invited the Nepali yogin Vibhūticandra to Tibet and received from him a new transmission of the six-branch practice of the Kālacakra. Kodrakpa also propagated a lineage of Lamdre which was later subsumed into the Sakya tradition by Sonam Gyeltsen and Ngorchen Kunga Zangpo. Its greatest representative was Bodong Paṇchen Chokle Namgyel, with whom the unique Bodong Tradition is commonly said to have begun. It is important to avoid confusing Bodong Panchen with Jonang Chokle Namgyel, a teacher of Tsongkhapa and proponent of the Zhentong view.
Geluk - དགེ་ལུགས།[edit]
https://treasuryoflives.org/tradition/Geluk
The Geluk (dge lugs) tradition follows the teachings of the fifteenth-century scholar monk Tsongkhapa Lobzang Drakpa. Like the Kadam tradition which the Geluk absorbed and supplanted, the Geluk place an emphasis on monastic discipline and scholarship, central to which is their understanding and explication of the Mādhyamaka Prāsaṅgika philosophical position. They also maintain a strong, if somewhat less public, tradition of tantric transmission, scholarship, and practice. Followers of the Geluk tradition practice an extensive system of Lamrim and Lojong, both of which have their origins with Atisha and the Kadampa tradition. The Geluk also maintain a lineage of Mahāmudrā teachings. The primary tantric teachings studied and practiced in the Geluk are the tantric cycles of Yamāntaka, Cakrasaṃvara, and Guhyasamāja. The Kālacakra Tantra is also commonly practiced among many Geluk practitioners, as is the tantra of Vajrayoginī. The Geluk tradition became the dominant religious order in Tibet in the seventeenth century when the Fifth Dalai Lama, with the aid of the recently converted Mongols, orchestrated a defeat of the Kagyu king of Tsang and set himself up as political leader of Tibet. Since that time the Dalai Lamas' seat of government, the Ganden Podrang, has been the nominal seat of political power in Tibet, even if for most of the last four hundred years real power shifted among a number of players.
Jonang - ཇོ་ནང།[edit]
https://treasuryoflives.org/tradition/Jonang
The Jonang (jo nang) tradition was founded by Dolpopa Sherab Gyeltsen, who ascended to the throne of Jonang Monastery in 1326. Trained in the Sakya tradition, Dolpopa’s controversial teachings, especially his emphasis on the view known as Zhentong (gzhan stong) or emptiness of other, and the institutional independence of Jonang monastery, established the Jonang tradition apart as an independent tradition, although many members of the Sakya tradition continue to consider Jonang to be a subsect of that tradition. Dolpopa, like his predecessors at Jonang, particularly emphasized the teachings of the Kālacakra Tantra and its completion-stage practices known as the six-branch yoga, while also transmitting many other systems of Vajrayāna and Mahāyāna Buddhism. Following the death of the great Jonang scholar Tāranātha, the Jonang tradition was suppressed in the seventeenth century by the Fifth Dalai Lama; its monasteries were converted to the Geluk tradition and the teachings banned. The tradition has survived in the Dzamtang region of Amdo.
Marpa Kagyu - མར་པ་བཀའ་བརྒྱུད།[edit]
https://treasuryoflives.org/tradition/Marpa-Kagyu
The Marpa Kagyu (mar pa bka’ brgyud) tradition originated in the eleventh century with the Tibetan translator Marpa Chokyi Lodro, who studied in India with Nāropa. Marpa’s disciple Milarepa famously attained enlightenment in the caves of southern Tibet after renouncing a life of violent revenge; his disciple Gampopa merged the lay siddha practice of his master with the Kadampa monasticism and scholarship that he had previously studied. Gampopa founded the first Kagyu monastery, Daklha Gampo in southern Tibet. Following Gampopa the tradition split into multiple autonomous subsects known as the four primary (Barom, Pakdru, Karma, and Tselpa), and eight secondary traditions (Drigung, Drukpa, Martsang, Shukseb, Taklung, Tropu, Yabzang, and Yelpa Kagyu). In addition to the above system, the Ngok (rngog) lineage begun by Ngok Choku Dorje, a disciple of Marpa, was a distinct Marpa Kagyu tradition that existed independently for several centuries. Also often considered an independent tradition was the Rechung Nyengyu (ras chung snyan brgyud), initiated by the disciples of Milarepa’s disciple Rechung Dorje Drakpa. All Marpa Kagyu traditions claim allegiance to the tantric teachings of the Indian Mahāsiddha tradition, primarily that of Nāropa, in the form of the Six Doctrines of Nāropa (nA ro chos drug) and the doctrine of Mahāmudrā. The Kagyu were also heavily involved in the transmission of the Cakrasaṃvara, Hevajra, among other tantras of the Second Propagation era.
Nyingma - རྙིང་མ།[edit]
https://treasuryoflives.org/tradition/Nyingma
The Nyingma (rnying ma) - literally the "ancient" - is considered the oldest tradition of Tibetan Buddhism, although when the disparate institutions and strands of transmission were first conceived as belonging to a singlular and coherent entity is not clear. According to legend, the Nyingma teachings were brought to Tibet in the eighth century by Padmasambhava, a tantric ritual specialist invited to Tibet to subjugate native deities that were obstructing the dissemination of Buddhism. Padmasambhava and other Indian masters such as Vimalamitra, and select Tibetan translators such as Vairocana, propagated the tradition's primary teaching, Dzogchen, a tantric system that has also been adopted to varying degree by other traditions. The Indic scriptures that were translated in the eighth and ninth centuries and the teachings by the masters of that era have come to be known as the "Kama," or spoken word tradition. Since at least the twelfth century Nyingma teachers known as terton, or "treasure revealers" have produced new scriptures said to have been concealed by Padmasambhava or others for the benefit of future eras. The Nyingma maintains both lay and monastic traditions, with six mother monasteries: Dorje Drak and Mindroling in central Tibet, and Katok, Pelyul, Dzogchen and Zhechen in Kham.
Sakya - ས་སྐྱ།[edit]
https://treasuryoflives.org/tradition/Sakya
The Sakya (sa skya) tradition was founded by Khon Konchok Gyelpo in 1073, a date marked by his founding of Sakya temple in the Sakya valley in Tsang. Konchok Gyelpo’s son Sachen Kunga Nyingpo combined his Khon family’s lineage of Yangdak and Vakrakīla, which his ancestor Khon Lui Wangpo received during the Imperial era, with new teachings. These include the Sakya Lojong teachings of the Zhenpa Zhidrel (zhan pa bzhi bral), obtained in a vision of Manjuśrī, and the Lamdre teachings that are based on the Hevajra tantra. The Sakya Lamdre teachings were transmitted by the Indian Mahāsiddha Virupa via a long line of teachers to the Tibetan yogin Zhangton Chobar, who transmitted them to Sachen. Sachen also received Cakrasaṃvara, Vajrabhairava, the Vajrayoginī of Nāropa, and Pañjaranātha Mahākāla from Mel Lotsāwa Lodro Drakpa. Sachen’s two sons, Sonam Tsemo and Drakpa Gyeltsen were the next to lead the temple. Drakpa Gyeltsen’s nephew, Sakya Paṇḍita Kunga Gyeltsen, one of the greatest scholars of his day, was the fourth in the lineage. The fifth was Sakya Paṇḍita’s nephew, Pakpa Lodro Gyeltsen, who traveled with his uncle when the Mongolian leader Godem Khan summoned him. In 1253 Pakpa met Qubilai Khan, who three years later conquered China and initiated the Yuan Dynasty. Borrowing from Tangut-Kagyu alliance of the previous century, Qubilai and Pakpa entered into a relationship of “patron and priest,” with Pakpa being made guoshi, or Imperial Preceptor. With Mongolian support, the Sakya Khon family ruled Tibet until the rise of the Pakmodru Dynasty in the middle of the fourteenth century. Three branches of the Sakya tradition are the Ngor (ngor), founded by Ngorchen Kunga Zangpo and based at Ngor Evam Choden monastery, and Tsar (tshar), established by Tsarchen Losel Gyatso and based at Dar Drangmoche. The Ngor tradition became influential in the dissemination of the Sakya tantric teachings, and the Tsarpa in the esoteric transmission known as the Lobshe, which contrasts to the more widely taught Tsokshe, both being teaching traditions of Lamdre. A third branch is the Dzongpa, which is based at Gongkar Chode in Gyangtse. There are several independent institutions that share Sakya doctrinal tradition, including Jonang (jo nang), Bodong (bo dong), and Bulug / Zhalu (bu lugs / zhwa lu), and which are frequently considered part of the Sakya tradition.
Shangpa Kagyu - ཤངས་པ་བཀའ་བརྒྱུད།[edit]
https://treasuryoflives.org/tradition/Shangpa-Kagyu
The Shangpa Kagyu (shangs pa bka’ brgyud) tradition was initiated in the eleventh century by Khyungpo Neljor, who received the Mahāmudrā teachings in India from Niguma, the wife or sister of Nāropa. He established the monastery of Zhangzhong Dorjeden in the Shang valley in Tsang. A single line of transmission, said to have been initiated by the Buddha Vajradhara and taught first to Niguma, and which passed from Khyungpo Neljor through Mokchokpa, Wonton Kyergangwa Chokyi Sengge, Nyenton Rigung Chokyi Sherab, and Sanggye Tonpa Tsondru Senge, was known as the transmission of the seven precious Shangpa. In the thirteenth century Sanggye Tonpa passed the lineage on to multiple disciples and the Shangpa teachings were written down. The Shangpa lineages were largely absorbed into the institutional organizations of the Marpa Kagyu, Geluk, Sakya and Jonang, although it was partially revived in the nineteenth century by Jamgon Kongtrul; his two personal hermitages, Tsadra Rinchen Drak and Dzongsho Deshek Dupa are both Shangpa Kagyu institutions. The Shangpa teachings are known as the Five Golden Doctrines, which include the Nigu Chodruk, a grouping similar to the Nāro Chodruk of the Marpa Kagyu.