Post-30

From Buddha-Nature
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|blogContent=Gampopa Sonam Rinchen was undoubtedly one of the earliest scholarly masters of the Kagyu school. He effectively combined the monastic and mind training tradition of Kadam, in which he received his first training, with the tantric meditative tradition, which he received from Milarepa. He left behind a rich collection of teachings and meditation instructions, among which his teachings known as the Four Dharmas of Gampopa (སྒམ་པོའི་ཆོས་བཞི་) stand out as very well-known axiomatic teachings.
 
|blogContent=Gampopa Sonam Rinchen was undoubtedly one of the earliest scholarly masters of the Kagyu school. He effectively combined the monastic and mind training tradition of Kadam, in which he received his first training, with the tantric meditative tradition, which he received from Milarepa. He left behind a rich collection of teachings and meditation instructions, among which his teachings known as the Four Dharmas of Gampopa (སྒམ་པོའི་ཆོས་བཞི་) stand out as very well-known axiomatic teachings.
  
His learned disciple Jangchub Ngödup wrote down the four axiomatic instructions as it was taught to him in his work entitled ''Treatise Known as Four Dharmas of Incomparable Gampopa''. Jangchub Ngödup, from the southern region of Layak, also authored an extensive commentary on the instructions entitled ''Ornament Illuminating the Essence: A Commentary on the Famous Text, the Four Dharmas of the Incomparable Dakpo'' in which he presents buddha-nature as a definitive teaching and directly links it to Mahāmudrā. The four dharmas are presented as:
+
His learned disciple [[People/La_yag_pa_byang_chub_dngos_grub|Jangchub Ngödup]] wrote down the four axiomatic instructions as it was taught to him in his work entitled ''Treatise Known as Four Dharmas of Incomparable Gampopa''. Jangchub Ngödup, from the southern region of Layak, also authored an extensive commentary on the instructions entitled ''Ornament Illuminating the Essence: A Commentary on the Famous Text, the Four Dharmas of the Incomparable Dakpo'' in which he presents buddha-nature as a definitive teaching and directly links it to Mahāmudrā. The four dharmas are presented as:
  
 
:1. ཆོས་ཆོས་སུ་འགྲོ་བ། Making dharma a [genuine] dharma practice
 
:1. ཆོས་ཆོས་སུ་འགྲོ་བ། Making dharma a [genuine] dharma practice

Revision as of 11:17, 19 May 2021

Gampopa’s Four Dharmas[edit]

[[ |300px|thumb| ]] Gampopa Sonam Rinchen was undoubtedly one of the earliest scholarly masters of the Kagyu school. He effectively combined the monastic and mind training tradition of Kadam, in which he received his first training, with the tantric meditative tradition, which he received from Milarepa. He left behind a rich collection of teachings and meditation instructions, among which his teachings known as the Four Dharmas of Gampopa (སྒམ་པོའི་ཆོས་བཞི་) stand out as very well-known axiomatic teachings.

His learned disciple Jangchub Ngödup wrote down the four axiomatic instructions as it was taught to him in his work entitled Treatise Known as Four Dharmas of Incomparable Gampopa. Jangchub Ngödup, from the southern region of Layak, also authored an extensive commentary on the instructions entitled Ornament Illuminating the Essence: A Commentary on the Famous Text, the Four Dharmas of the Incomparable Dakpo in which he presents buddha-nature as a definitive teaching and directly links it to Mahāmudrā. The four dharmas are presented as:

1. ཆོས་ཆོས་སུ་འགྲོ་བ། Making dharma a [genuine] dharma practice
2. ཆོས་ལམ་དུ་འགྲོ་བ། Turning dharma into the path
3. ལམ་འཁྲུལ་པ་སེལ་བ། Clearing confusion on the path
4. འཁྲུལ་པ་ཡེ་ཤེས་སུ་ཤར་བ། Seeing confusion as pristine wisdom

Jangchub Ngödup elaborates on these four points in great detail, providing a very rich array of citations and arguments to underscore his points.

Weekly quote[edit]

 
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