Five royal sutras: Difference between revisions

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'''Five royal sutras''' (Tib. རྒྱལ་པོ་མདོ་ལྔ།, [[Wyl.]] ''rgyal po mdo lnga'') are one of two sets of profound, relatively short, and pithy works traditionally said to have been translated on [[Padmasambhava]]’s recommendation and used for daily practice by the eighth century Tibetan king [[Trisong Detsen]]. Their use is said to have contributed, along with other practices, to the king’s life being prolonged by thirteen years beyond the limit predicted by astrological reckoning. These accounts together with the list of the sutras are found in the biographies of Guru Padmasambhava, e.g. in the 18th chapter of the [[Zanglingma]] and 70th chapter of the [[Pema Kathang]]. The other set is [[the ten royal sutras]] in which these are included.
<noinclude>'''Five royal sutras''' (Tib. རྒྱལ་པོ་མདོ་ལྔ།, [[Wyl.]] ''rgyal po mdo lnga'') are one of two sets of profound, relatively short, and pithy works traditionally said to have been translated on [[Padmasambhava]]’s recommendation and used for daily practice by the eighth century Tibetan king [[Trisong Detsen]]. Their use is said to have contributed, along with other practices, to the king’s life being prolonged by thirteen years beyond the limit predicted by astrological reckoning. These accounts together with the list of the sutras are found in the biographies of Guru Padmasambhava, e.g. in the 18th chapter of the [[Zanglingma]] and 70th chapter of the [[Pema Kathang]]. The other set is [[the ten royal sutras]] in which these are included.


#[[Samantabhadra's Aspiration to Good Actions|The King of Aspiration Prayers]] which is in chapter 44 of the [[Avatamsaka Sutra]], for aspiration, and described as vast.  
</noinclude>#[[Samantabhadra's Aspiration to Good Actions|The King of Aspiration Prayers]] which is in chapter 44 of the [[Avatamsaka Sutra]], for aspiration, and described as vast.  
#*English translation: {{LH|topics/aspiration-prayers/samantabhadra-aspiration-good-actions|The King of Aspiration Prayers: Samantabhadra’s “Aspiration to Good Actions”}}
#*English translation: {{LH|topics/aspiration-prayers/samantabhadra-aspiration-good-actions|The King of Aspiration Prayers: Samantabhadra’s “Aspiration to Good Actions”}}
#[[Dorje Namjom]] or Vajra Conqueror for cleansing and purification.
#[[Dorje Namjom]] or Vajra Conqueror for cleansing and purification.
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#*English translation: {{LH|words-of-the-buddha/sutra-wisdom-hour-of-death|The Noble Mahāyāna Sūtra The Wisdom of the Hour of Death}}
#*English translation: {{LH|words-of-the-buddha/sutra-wisdom-hour-of-death|The Noble Mahāyāna Sūtra The Wisdom of the Hour of Death}}
#[[Tung Shak|The Confession of Downfalls]], which is part of ‘’Ascertaining the Discipline: the Sutra of Upali’s Questions’’ (Skt. Vinaya-viniścayopāli-paripṛcchā, Toh 68); for purification of [[karmic obscurations]].
#[[Tung Shak|The Confession of Downfalls]], which is part of ‘’Ascertaining the Discipline: the Sutra of Upali’s Questions’’ (Skt. Vinaya-viniścayopāli-paripṛcchā, Toh 68); for purification of [[karmic obscurations]].
#*English translation: {{LH|words-of-the-buddha/confession-of-downfalls-nyingma| The Bodhisattva’s Confession of Downfalls}}
#*English translation: {{LH|words-of-the-buddha/confession-of-downfalls-nyingma| The Bodhisattva’s Confession of Downfalls}}<noinclude>


==Internal Links==
==Internal Links==
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[[Category: Canon]]
[[Category: Canon]]
[[Category: Texts]]
[[Category: Texts]]
[[Category: Enumerations]]
[[Category: Enumerations]]</noinclude>
[[Category: 05-Five]]
[[Category: 05-Five]]

Revision as of 21:42, 6 February 2022

Five royal sutras (Tib. རྒྱལ་པོ་མདོ་ལྔ།, Wyl. rgyal po mdo lnga) are one of two sets of profound, relatively short, and pithy works traditionally said to have been translated on Padmasambhava’s recommendation and used for daily practice by the eighth century Tibetan king Trisong Detsen. Their use is said to have contributed, along with other practices, to the king’s life being prolonged by thirteen years beyond the limit predicted by astrological reckoning. These accounts together with the list of the sutras are found in the biographies of Guru Padmasambhava, e.g. in the 18th chapter of the Zanglingma and 70th chapter of the Pema Kathang. The other set is the ten royal sutras in which these are included.

  1. The King of Aspiration Prayers which is in chapter 44 of the Avatamsaka Sutra, for aspiration, and described as vast.
  2. Dorje Namjom or Vajra Conqueror for cleansing and purification.
  3. Heart Sutra for the view, and described as profound.
  4. The Sūtra on Wisdom at the Hour of Death for meditation and described as of definitive meaning.
  5. The Confession of Downfalls, which is part of ‘’Ascertaining the Discipline: the Sutra of Upali’s Questions’’ (Skt. Vinaya-viniścayopāli-paripṛcchā, Toh 68); for purification of karmic obscurations.

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