Bhasing: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
No edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The forest or [[charnel ground]] of '''Bhasing''' ([[Wyl.]] ''bal po bha sing gi nags'', ''dur khrod bha sing'') is sometimes said to be in Nepal.<ref>See for example [[Dudjom Rinpoche]], ''The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism'', p.540</ref>
The forest or [[charnel ground]] of '''Bhasing''' (Tib. བལ་པོ་བྷ་སིང་གི་ནགས་, དུར་ཁྲོད་བྷ་སིང་, [[Wyl.]] ''bal po bha sing gi nags'', ''dur khrod bha sing'') is sometimes said to be in Nepal.<ref>See for example [[Dudjom Rinpoche]], ''The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism'', p.540</ref>


When [[Shri Singha]] passed into [[parinirvana]], [[Jnanasutra]] cried out to him and Shri Singha's last testament called the ''[[Seven Nails]]'' descended in Jnanasutra's hand. It is at that time that Shri Singha told him: "The texts of the innermost secret [[Nyingtik]] teachings are hidden inside a pillar of the Auspicious Ten-Thousand Gate Temple. Take them and practise them at the Bhasing Charnel Ground".<ref>[[Dudjom Rinpoche]], ''The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism'', p.540; and ''Quintessential Dzogchen'', p.44.</ref>
When [[Shri Singha]] passed into [[parinirvana]], [[Jnanasutra]] cried out to him and Shri Singha's last testament called the ''[[Seven Nails]]'' descended in Jnanasutra's hand. It is at that time that Shri Singha told him: "The texts of the innermost secret [[Nyingtik]] teachings are hidden inside a pillar of the Auspicious Ten-Thousand Gate Temple. Take them and practise them at the Bhasing Charnel Ground".<ref>[[Dudjom Rinpoche]], ''The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism'', p.540; and ''Quintessential Dzogchen'', p.44.</ref>


Vimalamitra later came to Bhasing to receive these instructions from Jnanasutra after he went to China and received the complete oral lineage from Shri Singha on the advice of [[Vajrasattva]]. [[Dakini]]s then told him to go to the Bhasing charnel ground to receive transmission from Jnanasutra. It is after this that he went to Tibet and introduced the Dzogchen teachings.  
[[Vimalamitra]] later came to Bhasing to receive these instructions from Jnanasutra after he went to China and received the complete oral lineage from Shri Singha on the advice of [[Vajrasattva]]. [[Dakini]]s then told him to go to the Bhasing charnel ground to receive transmission from Jnanasutra. It is after this that he went to Tibet and introduced the [[Dzogchen]] teachings.  


It is also the place where [[Vairotsana]] attained [[rainbow body]].<ref>[[Dudjom Rinpoche]], '''The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism''', p.540.</ref>
It is also the place where [[Vairotsana]] attained the [[rainbow body]].<ref>[[Dudjom Rinpoche]], ''The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism'', p.540.</ref>


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 23:39, 22 September 2018

The forest or charnel ground of Bhasing (Tib. བལ་པོ་བྷ་སིང་གི་ནགས་, དུར་ཁྲོད་བྷ་སིང་, Wyl. bal po bha sing gi nags, dur khrod bha sing) is sometimes said to be in Nepal.[1]

When Shri Singha passed into parinirvana, Jnanasutra cried out to him and Shri Singha's last testament called the Seven Nails descended in Jnanasutra's hand. It is at that time that Shri Singha told him: "The texts of the innermost secret Nyingtik teachings are hidden inside a pillar of the Auspicious Ten-Thousand Gate Temple. Take them and practise them at the Bhasing Charnel Ground".[2]

Vimalamitra later came to Bhasing to receive these instructions from Jnanasutra after he went to China and received the complete oral lineage from Shri Singha on the advice of Vajrasattva. Dakinis then told him to go to the Bhasing charnel ground to receive transmission from Jnanasutra. It is after this that he went to Tibet and introduced the Dzogchen teachings.

It is also the place where Vairotsana attained the rainbow body.[3]

References

  1. See for example Dudjom Rinpoche, The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, p.540
  2. Dudjom Rinpoche, The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, p.540; and Quintessential Dzogchen, p.44.
  3. Dudjom Rinpoche, The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, p.540.