365betÓéÀÖ

Guhyagarbha Tantra (with Commentary)

by Gyurme Dorje | 1987 | 304,894 words

The English translation of the Guhyagarbha Tantra, including Longchenpa's commentary from the 14th century. The whole work is presented as a critical investigation into the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, of which the Guhyagarbhatantra is it's principle text. It contains twenty-two chapters teaching the essence and practice of Mahayoga, which s...

Text 3.10 (Commentary)

[Guhyagarbha-Tantra, Text section 3.10]

The phenomena of mundane bewilderment, as many as they are,
Revolve in a duality of outer and inner dependent origination
Through the subject-object dichotomy of Ignorance and ideas,
And they produce disharmonious experiences of happiness and suffering. [10] ...

[Tibetan]

ji-snyed 'jig-rten 'khrul-pa'i chos /
ma-rig rtog-pa'i gzung-'dzin-gyis /
phyi-nang rten-'brel gnyis-su 'khor /
mi-mthun bde-sdug myong-bar 'gyur / [10]

Commentary:

[The appearance of ²õ²¹á¹ƒsÄå°ù²¹ through ignorance:]

All the phenomena of mundane bewilderment ('jig-rten 'khrul-pa'i chos) subsumed in the container-world and its sentient contents, which appear as the impure outer and inner phenomena, as many as they are (ji-snyad), are like a dream. The essence or abiding nature where Buddha-hood is primordially attained is oppressed by ignorance (ma-rig) with its darkest sleep. Conditioned through the subject-object dichotomy of (-pa'i gzung-'dzin-gyis) dualistic ideas (rtog), the diverse outer (phyi) objects which are flesh-coloured (dkar-dmar) and the immeasurable inner (nang) forms of living beings appear. Sentient beings revolve ('khor) like the wheels of a chariot in a duality of (gnyis-su) outer and inner dependent origination (rten-'brel), through which resultant bewildering appearances emerge from the cause of bewilderment. And these produce ('gyur) the experiences of (myong-bar) diverse happiness and suffering (bde-sdug) which are the particular attributes of disharmonious (mi-mthun) objects and appearances, along with the perpetual appearance (of these beings) which continues from one citadel of ²õ²¹á¹ƒsÄå°ù²¹ to another.

[The third, (teaching that from the very moment of this appearance its nature is reality, comments on Ch. 3.11):]

[Read next page]

Let's grow together!

I humbly request your help to keep doing what I do best: provide the world with unbiased sources, definitions and images. Your donation direclty influences the quality and quantity of knowledge, wisdom and spiritual insight the world is exposed to.

Let's make the world a better place together!

Like what you read? Help to become even better: