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...
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Text 5.10 (Commentary)
[Guhyagarbha-Tantra, Text section 5.10]
Substantial things in reality are not substantial.
Contemplation is the mastery of that realisation. [10] ...[Tibetan]
dngos-rnams nyid-na dngos-med-par /
rtogs-pa'i dbang-sgyur ting-'dzin yin / [10]
Commentary:
While all things of phenomenal existence, ²õ²¹á¹ƒsÄå°ù²¹ and ²Ô¾±°ù±¹Äåṇa, appear to be substantial (dngos), illustrated by the appearance of the cloud-mass of syllables during the creation stage, the reality (nyid) of these things (rnams) is naturally uncreated. This nature, in (na) which things are not substantial (dngos-med-par). is known to refer to the primordially pure perfection stage. Once the emanation and absorption (of the ³¾²¹á¹‡á¸²¹±ô²¹) has been refined from the disposition of the creation stage, which appears but is not recognised (to exist inherently), and without attachment to true existence, there follows the contemplation (ting-'dzin) of the wheel of syllables. This is (yin) one which entails repeated training in contemplation or realisation (rtogs-pa'i) of the emanation & absorption of syllables corresponding to a specific ritual; and the display or mastery (dbang-sgyur) of that in awareness.[1]
The second (the detailed exegesis of the nature of contemplation; 216.4-222.5) comprises both the contemplation which is a meditation on discriminative awareness, the buddha-body of reality or emptiness, and the contemplation which is a meditation on skillful means, the buddha-body of form or appearance.
The former (216.4-218.6) Includes a general teaching of instruction on the non-referential truth and a detailed exegesis of the non-dual pristine cognition.
[i. This (comments on Ch. 5.11):]
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Footnotes and references:
[1]:
These aspects of contemplation based respectively on skillful means (thabs) and discriminative awareness (shes-rab) are discussed in the following pages of this chapter from the standpoint of the ground. in terms of the path, see below, Chs. 11-13.