Chotrul Düchen: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Miracles.JPG|frame|]]
[[Image:Miracles.JPG|frame|]]
'''Chotrul Düchen''' ([[Wyl.]] ''cho 'phrul dus chen''), the 'Festival of Miracles' — one of the [[four major Buddhist holidays]]. It occurs on the full moon (the fifteenth day) of the first Tibetan month, which is called Bumgyur Dawa. The first fifteen days of the year celebrate the fifteen days on which, in order to increase the [[merit]] and the devotion of future disciples, [[Buddha]] displayed a different miracle.
'''Chotrul Düchen''' ([[Wyl.]] ''cho 'phrul dus chen''), the 'Festival of Miracles' — one of the [[four major Buddhist holidays]]. It occurs on the full moon (the fifteenth day) of the first Tibetan month, which is called Bumgyur Dawa. The first fifteen days of the year celebrate the fifteen days on which, in order to increase the [[merit]] and the devotion of future disciples, [[Buddha]] displayed a different miracle.
As [[Jikmé Lingpa]] said:
:Through the magical power of your miracles in [[Shravasti]],
:You rendered speechless the [[tirthika]] teachers who,
:With all their analysis and research, drunk on the wine of indulgence, had become oppressive in the extreme.
:In the final contest they were humbled, their prestige all drained away,
:As you triumphed through the ‘the four bases of miraculous powers’.


[[Category:Key Terms]]
[[Category:Key Terms]]
[[Category:Anniversaries]]
[[Category:Anniversaries]]
[[Category:Tibetan Calendar]]
[[Category:Tibetan Calendar]]

Revision as of 22:30, 27 February 2010

Chotrul Düchen (Wyl. cho 'phrul dus chen), the 'Festival of Miracles' — one of the four major Buddhist holidays. It occurs on the full moon (the fifteenth day) of the first Tibetan month, which is called Bumgyur Dawa. The first fifteen days of the year celebrate the fifteen days on which, in order to increase the merit and the devotion of future disciples, Buddha displayed a different miracle.

As Jikmé Lingpa said:

Through the magical power of your miracles in Shravasti,
You rendered speechless the tirthika teachers who,
With all their analysis and research, drunk on the wine of indulgence, had become oppressive in the extreme.
In the final contest they were humbled, their prestige all drained away,
As you triumphed through the ‘the four bases of miraculous powers’.