Amitabha: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (added ref for new quote)
No edit summary
Line 3: Line 3:


On a deeper level, as [[Sogyal Rinpoche]] says, Amitabha "represents our pure nature and symbolizes the transmutation of desire, the predominant emotion of the human realm. More intrinsically, Amitabha is the limitless, luminous nature of our mind."
On a deeper level, as [[Sogyal Rinpoche]] says, Amitabha "represents our pure nature and symbolizes the transmutation of desire, the predominant emotion of the human realm. More intrinsically, Amitabha is the limitless, luminous nature of our mind."
==Amitabha Empowerments==
When we practise [[phowa]] based on the [[Longchen Nyingtik]] tradition, there is a specific Amitabha empowerment associated with the text entitled: ''The Swift Path of Amitabha: A Ritual for Travelling to the Realm of Great Bliss'' (Tib. ཆོ་ག་ - བདེ་བ་ཅན་དུ་བགྲོད་པའི་ཆོ་ག་དཔག་མེད་མྱུར་ལམ་, Wyl. ''cho ga - bde ba can du bgrod pa'i cho ga dpag med myur lam'').<ref>Oral teaching of [[Khenchen Pema Sherab Rinpoche]], Lerab Ling 20 March 2023.</ref>


==Notes==
==Notes==
Line 13: Line 16:
==Internal Links==
==Internal Links==
*[[Brief Amitabha Mönlam]]
*[[Brief Amitabha Mönlam]]
*[[phowa]]


==External Links==
==External Links==

Revision as of 13:57, 26 February 2024

Amitabha from a thangka in the personal collection of Sogyal Rinpoche

Amitabha (Skt. Amitābha; Tib. འོད་དཔག་མེད་, Öpamé or སྣང་བ་མཐའ་ཡས་, Nangwa Tayé; སྣང་བ་མཐའ་ཡས་, Wyl. snang ba mtha' yas) — the Buddha of Boundless Light, belonging to the lotus family (one of the five buddha families). He's called ‘Amitābha’ (Immeasurable Light) because his light shines unimpeded throughout all buddha realms[1]. The Amitabhavyuha Sutra tells us that many aeons ago, as the monk Dharmakara, he generated bodhichitta in the presence of the Buddha Lokeshvara. At that time, he made fifty-one vows to lead all beings to his pure realm of Sukhavati.

On a deeper level, as Sogyal Rinpoche says, Amitabha "represents our pure nature and symbolizes the transmutation of desire, the predominant emotion of the human realm. More intrinsically, Amitabha is the limitless, luminous nature of our mind."

Amitabha Empowerments

When we practise phowa based on the Longchen Nyingtik tradition, there is a specific Amitabha empowerment associated with the text entitled: The Swift Path of Amitabha: A Ritual for Travelling to the Realm of Great Bliss (Tib. ཆོ་ག་ - བདེ་བ་ཅན་དུ་བགྲོད་པའི་ཆོ་ག་དཔག་མེད་མྱུར་ལམ་, Wyl. cho ga - bde ba can du bgrod pa'i cho ga dpag med myur lam).[2]

Notes

Teachings Given to the Rigpa Sangha

Internal Links

External Links