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'''Nyingtik Yabshyi''' (Tib. ''snying thig ya bzhi'') literally means the 'Four Parts of the Nyingtik'. It consists of the [[Vima Nyingtik]], [[Lama Yangtik]], [[Khandro Nyingtik]] and [[Khandro Yangtik]]. The Vima Nyingtik and Khandro Nyingtik are known as the 'mother' Nyingtik texts and the Lama Yangtik and Khandro Yangtik are known as 'child' texts.
[[Image:LongchenRabjam.JPG|frame|[[Longchen Rabjam]]]]
'''Nyingtik Yabshyi''' (Tib. སྙིང་ཐིག་ཡ་བཞི, [[Wyl.]] ''snying thig ya bzhi'') literally means the 'Four Parts of the [[Nyingtik]]'.  


[[Longchen Rabjam]] also composed the [[Zabmo Yangtik]], which condenses the important pith-instructions of both Vima Nyingtik and Khandro Nyingtik.
It consists of the
*[[Vima Nyingtik]],
*[[Lama Yangtik]],  
*[[Khandro Nyingtik]] and  
*[[Khandro Yangtik]].  


== Origins and Transmission ==
The Vima Nyingtik and Khandro Nyingtik are known as the 'mother' Nyingtik texts and the Lama Yangtik and Khandro Yangtik are known as 'child' texts, hence another common name for the collection which is the '''Four Mother and Child Sections of Nyingtik''' (Tib. སྙིང་ཐིག་མ་བུ་བཞི་, ''nyingtik ma bu shyi'').
by '''[[Khenpo Namdrol]] Rinpoche'''


''(This brief note on the Nyingtik Yabshyi was composed by Khenpo Namdrol Rinpoche to mark Kyabjé Drubwang [[Penor Rinpoche]]’s granting of the Nyingtik Yabshyi empowerments at the request of Sogyal Rinpoche and Rigpa at Lerab Ling in July 1995.)
[[Longchen Rabjam]] also composed the [[Zabmo Yangtik]], which condenses the important [[pith instructions]] of both Vima Nyingtik and Khandro Nyingtik.
''


The teaching of Dzogpachenpo was first given in the pure realm of Akanishtha, where the teacher [[Samantabhadra]], in Sambhogakaya form, communicates the teaching directly by means of his wisdom mind to disciples who are not different from him in any way-sugatas and bodhisattvas, male and female.
As [[Nyoshul Khen Rinpoche]] explains: “For the purpose of the actual practice of [[Dzogchen]] according to the seventeen main tantras of Dzogpachenpo, Longchenpa gathered his own termas as well as those of [[Chetsün Senge Wangchuk]] (who was later reborn as [[Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo]]), and [[Pema Ledreltsal]] (Longchenpa’s previous incarnation) in the form of the thirteen volume collection known as the Nyingtik Yabshyi. This is the practice aspect of Longchenpa’s writings and the basis of the Old Nyingtik. In it he synthesized the Vima Nyingtik of [[Vimalamitra]] and the Khandro Nyingtik of [[Guru Rinpoche]] and explained all the practical details in the light of his own realization.”<ref>As quoted in ''Dzogchen & Padmasambhava'', Rigpa Publications, page 85.</ref>


Now, in this world of ours, the first to spread the teaching of Dzogpachenpo was the Nirmanakaya emanation [[Garab Dorje]]. Dates given for Garab Dorje put his birth in the year 536BC; by comparison, one popular date for the passing away of Lord Buddha, from the Theravada traditon of Sri Lanka, is 543BC. From the glorious Lord of Secrets, Vajrapani, or it is often said Vajrasattva, Garab Dorje received, in an instant and all together, the empowerments, as well as the tantras, agamas, and upadeshas, of Dzogpachenpo. Then in the north of the western land of Oddiyana, on the rugged mountain-peak of Suryaprakasha, the vidyadhara Garab Dorje, along with the wisdom dakinis, gathered and complied all the tantras in existence, both those that were known and those that were unknown. Together they divided the 20,000 tantras which bore the name of Dzogpachenpo into ‘shlokas’ or verses, and classified them into 6,400,000 verses.
==Alternative Classifications==
There are two alternative traditions of classifying the Four Parts of the Nyingtik, mentioned in the ''Immaculate Oral Instructions'', the Nyingtik teachings of [[Jamgön Kongtrul]]:


[[Garab Dorje]]’s disciple, [[Manjushrimitra]], then divided these 6,400,000 verses of Dzogpachenpo into three categories:
A second classification includes:
the outer category of mind-[[semde]],
#[[Vima Nyingtik]]
the inner category of space-[[longde]], and
#[[Lama Yangtik]]
the secret category of pith instructions-[[mengakde]]. 1
#[[Khandro Nyingtik]] and [[Khandro Yangtik]], counted as one; and
#[[Karma Nyingtik]], which comes from the Third Karmapa, [[Rangjung Dorje]].


===[[Semdé]]===
A third way of classifying the four, according to the Dzogchen masters Kongpo Dzogchenpa and [[Katok Rigdzin Tsewang Norbu]], is as follows:
#Vima Nyingtik;
#Lama Yangtik;
#Khandro Nyingtik and Khandro Yangtik, counted as one; and
#[[Dorsem Nyingtik]] of Kunkyong Lingpa.<ref>See the foreword to ''Great Perfection: Outer and Inner Preliminaries'', by the Third Dzogchen Rinpoche, translated by Cortland Dahl (Ithaca: Snow Lion, 2008), page xi and Dezhung Rinpoche (2005) p. 171</ref>


Looking first at the outer category of mind- when the [[semde]] teachings were translated in Tibet, the land of snows, eighteen ‘mother’ and ‘child' texts of the mind class were indentified, although the Semde’ tantras can also be counted as numbering twenty-one. These eighteen ‘mother’ and ‘child’ texts of Semde’ consist of the first five to be translated, which were translated by [[Vairochana]], and given the name the ‘Five Earlier Translation’s, plus the thirteen texts translated by his disciple [[Yudra Nyingpo]], known as the “Thirteen Later Translations of Semde’. When the ‘Three Major Tantras’ of Semde’ are then added, that makes a total of twenty-one.
==Alternative Translations==
*The Fourfold Heart Essence  (Cortland Dahl)
*The Four Higher Collections of the Heart Drop ([[Lama Chökyi Nyima]])


[[Vairochana]] received the cycle of Semde’ from the master [[Shri Singha]], and then transmitted it to the great Dharma king [[Trisong Detsen]], [[Yudra Nyingpo]], and others as a result of which it spread throughout Tibet.
==The Empowerments of Nyingtik Yabshyi==
 
The [[empowerment]]s have been given many times to the [[About Rigpa|Rigpa]] sangha, including:
===[[Longdé]]===
*Kyabjé [[Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche]], London, 1st July 1987 ([[Lama Yangtik]] and [[Khandro Nyingtik]] only)
 
*Kyabjé [[Penor Rinpoche]], London, 11th - 15th November 1988 (all empowerments including [[Zabmo Yangtik]])
Next, the inner category of space, the [[longdé]], is reckoned to consist of 20,000 ‘volumes.’ These can be classified into three: white space, black space, and variegated space, or they can also be categorized as nine spaces. From [[Shri Singha]], [[Vairochana]] received the Longdé pith instructions, and composed ‘the Vajra Bridgé, a scriptural text, which he transmitted in Tibet to [[Pang Sangyé Gonpo]].
*Kyabjé [[Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche]], [[Prapoutel]], 20th and 21st August 1990 ([[Khandro Nyingtik]] only)
Pang Sangyé Gonpo and the six successive disciples in his lineage left this world by dissolving into a body of light.
*Kyabjé [[Penor Rinpoche]], [[Lerab Ling]], 18th - 21st July 1995 (not including [[Zabmo Yangtik]])
 
*Kyabjé [[Trulshik Rinpoche]], [[Lerab Ling]], 1st July 2003 ([[Lama Yangtik]] only)
===[[Mengakdé]]===
*Kyabjé [[Trulshik Rinpoche]], [[Lerab Ling]], 1st - 3rd December 2005 ([[Lama Yangtik]] and [[Khandro Yangtik]] only)
 
*Kyabjé [[Yangthang Rinpoche]], [[Lerab Ling]], 7-11 August 2013 (all empowerments including [[Zabmo Yangtik]])
Finally, as for the secret category of pith instructions, it was divided by [[Mañjushrimitra]]’s disciple, [[Shri Singha]], into:
the outer cycle, which is like the physical body,
the inner cycle, which is like the eyes,
the secret cycle, which is like the heart, and
the innermost secret Nyingtik, which is like the whole body that contains everything, all complete.
 
These four great cycles present the [[Trekcho]] teachings in a similar way, but where they differ is in the clarity, explicitness and detail of how the [[Togal]] techings are given. [[Shri Singha]] gave the outer, inner and secret cycles of the category of pith instructions to both [[Vimalamitra]] and [[Jnanasutra]]. He transmitted the innermost secret cycle to Jnanasutra, who then passed it on to Vimalamitra.
 
The first four masters in the lineage left this world in a characteristic way. At the end of his life, the first human Dzogchen master [[Garab Dorje]] disappeared into a sphere of rainbow light, leaving his disciple [[Mañjushrimitra]] his last testament ‘Hitting the Essence in Three Words’, [[Tsik Sum Ne Dek]].
 
When [[Mañjushrimitra]] departed from this world, vanishing in a cloud of light, he gave his last testament to his disciple [[Shri Singha]], entitled ‘Six Experiences of Meditation’, Gom Nyam Drukpa.
 
When [[Shri Singha]] passed away and dissolved into a body of light, he bestowed his testament ‘Seven Nails’, Zerbu Dun, on [[Jnanasutra]]. He too left this world by disappearing into a sphere of light, leaving his disciple [[Vimalamitra]] his own testament ‘Four Methods of Contemplation’, Shyak Tab Shyipa.
 
===Three transmissions according to the tradition of Vimalamitra===
 
'The lineage which passed from the primordial buddha [[Samantabhadra]] through [[Vajrapani]] or [[Vajrasattva]] to the vidyadhara [[Garab Dorje]] is known as the [[Mind Direct Transmission of the Buddhas]] - Gyalwa Gong Gyu.
 
From [[Garab Dorje]] down through [[Mañjushrimitra]], [[Shri Singha]] and [[Jnanasutra]] to [[Vimalamitra]], the lineage is known as the [[Sign Transmission of the Vidyadharas]]-Rigdzin Da Gyu.


Then from [[Vimalamitra]] onwards, the lineage is called the [[Oral Transmission from Special Individuals]]-Gangzak Nyen Gyu. These are the three transmissions according to the tradition of Vimalamitra.  
==Tibetan Texts==
* {{TBRC|W1KG9720|སྙིང་ཐིག་ཡ་བཞི།}}, [[Adzom Drukpa]] edition
* {{TBRC|W1KG12048|སྙིང་ཐིག་ཡ་བཞི།}}, [[Tarthang Tulku]] edition (Yeshe De).


===Nineteen Tantras===
==Notes==
<small><references/></small>


Within the [[Innermost Secret Cycle of Nyingtik]] are the Seventeen Tantras. The tradition of [[Vimalamitra]] adds to them the ‘Tantra of the Wrathful Mother, Protectress of Mantras’, to make eighteen in all, while the tradition of [[Padmasambhava]] also arrives at a total of eighteen by adding the ‘Tantra of the Blazing Expanse of Luminosity’. Generally, however, both the ‘Tantra of the Wrathful Mother, Protectress of Mantras’, from Vimalamitra’s tradition and the ‘Tantra of the Blazing Expanse of Luminosity’ from Padmasambhava’s tradition and the ‘Tantra of the Blazing Expanse of Luminosity’ from Padmasambhava’s tradition are added to the Seventeen Tantras of the Innermost Secret Nyingtik Cycle, making a total of nineteen altogether.
==Teachings Given to the [[About Rigpa|Rigpa]] Sangha==
*[[Orgyen Tobgyal Rinpoche]], [[Lerab Ling]], 3 August 2013


In Tibet, the ones who made this Nyingtik teaching of Clear Light spread were the great masters who possessed their special direct transmission, chiefly the great pandita [[Vimalamitra]], and Guru [[Padmasambhava]].
==Further Reading==
 
*[[Cortland Dahl]], in ''Entrance to the Great Perfection, A Guide to the [[Dzogchen]] Preliminary Practices'' (Snow Lion Publications), Appendix III, 'The Fourfold Heart Essence'.
===[[Vima Nyingtik]]===
*[[Dezhung Rinpoche]], ''snying thig ya bzhi'i rnam bshad'' in kun dga' bstan pa'i nyi ma, gsung 'bum, Dharamsala, 2005, pp.169-179
 
*[[Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche]], in ''Great Perfection – Outer & Inner Preliminaries''', translated by Cortland Dahl (Snow Lion Publications), Foreword pp.x-xi.
In the room known as Utse’ Barkhang in [[Samye]], [[Vimalamitra]] gave the cycle of the [[Innermost Secret Nyingtik]] of [[Dzogpachenpo]] in strictest secrecy to five disciples: the King [[Trisong Detsen]], [[Nyangben Tingdzin Zangpo]], [[Prince Muni Tsepo]], [[Kawa Paltsek]] and [[Chokro Luyi Gyaltsen]]. The tradition of Nyingtik which came down from this transmission is known as the '''[[Vima Nyingtik]]'''.
*[[Khenchen Namdrol Rinpoche]], ''Nyingtik Yabshyi, Its Origins and Transmission''
The Vima Nyingtik itself can be categorized into tantras, agamas, and upadeshas, which are all taught within it. The tantras here refer to the Seventeen Tantras of the pith instruction. The agamas found in the Vima Nyingtik are the golden lettered instructions, the turquoise lettered instructions, the copper lettered instructions, and the conch lettered instructions. These are what are called the ‘four volumes of profound instructions’. Then the upadeshas refer to the 119 treatises of essential pith instructions.
 
[[Vimalamitra]] spent thirteen years in Tibet, and then promising to return to Tibet every hundred years as an emanation to further the Clear Light teaching of [[Dzogpachenpo]], he left for the [[Wutaishan]] mountain in China. There he will remain until all of the 1000 buddhas of this Fortunate Kalpa have appeared. When they have all done so, he will once again go to [[Vajrasana]] in India, where he will manifest the state of complete and perfect enlightenment.
 
Fifty-five years after Vimalamitra’s departure for Wutaishan, [[Nyangben Tingdzin Zangpo]], having given the transmission of the Vima Nyingtik cycle to [[Be Lodro Wangchuk]], attained the rainbow body. 2  Be Lodro Wangchuk gave the pith instructions cycle of Nyingtik to [[Dangma Lhundrup Gyaltsen]], who in turn passed it on to [[Chetsun Senge Wangchuk]]. He transmitted it to [[Gyalwa Shyangton Tashi Dorje]], and then left this world in a rainbow body. Gyalwa Shyangton passed it on to the great siddha [[Khepa Nyimabum]], who gave the teachings to his principal disciple [[Guru Jober]]. Then Guru Jober transmitted them to [[Trulshik Senge Gyabpa]]. He in turn gave them to the great siddha [[Drupchen Melong Dorje]], who passed them on to the vidyadhara [[Kumaradza]]. Kumaradza gave the teachings to the Omniscient [[Longchen Rabjam]], and so this is how the lineage flowed down to the Omniscient Longchenpa, who was born in the year 1308.
 
===[[Lama Yangtik]]===
 
In terms of what are called the ‘old’ and ‘new Nyingtiks, the [[Vima Nyingtik]] came to be known as the old Nyingtik, and in terms of [[kama]] and [[terma]], it was classified as kama. This is how it is popularly defined. The Vima Nyingtik is also called the ‘mother text’ (ma yik). Later on, Longchenpa composed his own commentary on the Vima Nyingtik, which was mainly based on the Dzogchen Tantra ‘Garland of Pearls’. It was called the [[Lama Yangtik]], ‘Wish Fulfilling Jewel’, and is subdivided into fiftyone different treatises. Since it is a commentary on the Vima Nyingtik, it is referred to as the ‘child text’ (bu yik). This is how Vimalamitra’s lineage came to be passed down.
 
===[[Khandro Nyingtik]]===
 
It was from [[Shri Singha]] that the great master [[Padmasambhava]] received the teachings of Nyingtik. In Tibet, Padmasambhava taught his own complete Nyingtik cycle of the Clear Light teaching of Dzogpachenpo in secret to [[Yeshe Tsogyal]], along with 100,000 wisdom dakinis, at the Shyoto Til Dro cave. Then one day, king [[Trisong Detsen]]’s daughter, the [[Princess Pema Sel]], died unexpectedly at
the age of only eight. The king was distraught with grief, and so to console him. Guru Rinpoche drew a syllable NRI over the little princess’s heart, caught her consciousness with the hook of his samadhi, and brought her back to life. As soon as she opened her eyes and could speak again, he gave her the whole cycle of the [[Khandro Nyingtik]] by means of the power he had to transfer blessings directly.
He empowered Princess Pema Seal to reveal this teaching in a future life, and then the complete Khandro Nyingtik cycle was hidden as a terma. Princess Pema Sel was reborn much later as [[Pema Ledrel Tsal]], who withdrew the terma of Khandro Nyingtik from its place of concealment at the [[Daklha Tramo Drak rock]] in the province of Dakpo. He then transmitted it to his main disciple [[Gyalsé Lekden]]. Pema Ledrel Tsal was reincarnated as the Omniscient [[Longchenpa]], who received the whole cycle of Khandro Nyingtik from Gyalsé Lekden, and by so doing ensured that the authentic lineage was kept alive.
 
According to the [[Khandro Nyingtik]] then, the ''Mind Direct Transmission of the Buddhas'' is the same primordial expression of the Dzogchen teachings in the [[Akanishtha]] heaven. The ''Sign Transmission of the Vidyadharas'' is that which passed from [[Vajrapani]] to [[Garab Dorje]], [[Shri Singha]], [[Guru Rinpoche]], [[Yeshe Tsogyal]] and [[Princess Pema Sel]]. From [[Pema Ledrel Tsal]] on, to [[Gyalse Lekden]] and the Omniscient [[Longchen Rabjam]], is the ''Oral Transmission from Special Individuals''. 3
 
The [[Khandro Nyingtik]] cycle itself consists of the Twelve ‘mother’ and ‘child’ Tantras of the ''Takdrol Gyu'', the ''Three Last Testaments of the Buddha'', and other teachings amounting to a total of sixty-five different categories. When the pith-instructions are given according to the Khandro Nyingtik, it is these ''Twelve Tantras of the Takdrol Gyu'' and ''Three Last Testaments'' which are quoted as references.
 
Guru Rinpoche’s ''Khandro Nyingtik'' came to be known as the ‘new’ Nyingtik, and is classified as terma. As it was first taught to Yeshe Tsogyal and Pema Sel, who were both dakinis, and the guardian of the teaching was the protectress [[Shaza Khamoché]], it was given the name ‘Khandro’ Nyingtik. Guru Rinpoche’s ''Khandro Nyingtik'' is called the ‘mother text’, as is the ''Vima Nyingtik'', and so these two are known as the two ‘mother’s. The commentary on the ''Khandro Nyingtik'' composed by the Omniscient Longchen Rabjam is the ''Khandro Yangtik''-’the Cloud-bank of Ocean-like Profound Meanings’, which is called the ‘child text’.
 
===Yabshyi===
 
The two mother texts and two child texts of the Nyingtik were called the ‘four parts’ - ''Yabshyi'', and so became known together as the [[Nyingtik Yabshyi]]. Longchen Rabjam also composed the [[Zabmo Yangtik]], which condenses the important pith-instructions of both Vima Nyingtik and Khandro Nyingtik, but it is not comprehensive. 4
 
Most of the cycles of the Innermost Secret Nyingtik are famous as being termas, and they can be categorized into elaborate, middle-length and condense cycles of teachings. The most elaborate Nyingtik is the Nyingtik Yabshyi itself. The middle-length Nyingtik is said to be the Northern Treasure [[Gongpa Zangtal]], ‘All-penetrating Wisdom Mind’, and the condense one is said to be [[Minling Terchen]]’s terma ''[[Ati Zapdon Nyingpo]]'' ‘Essence of the Profound Truth of Ati’.
 
===The Continuing Lineage===
 
Between [[Longchen Rabjam]] and the vidyadhara [[Jikmé Lingpa]], there are fourteen masters in the lineage of transmission, However, when Jikme Lingpa practised, focusing on the Omniscient Longchenpa, for three years in the Sangchen Metok Cave at [[Samye Chimphu]], Longchenpa actually appeared to him in a vision three times, and gave them the entire blessing of the transmission of his wisdom mind. So this was a short lineage which came directly and immediately down from Longchenpa to Jikme Lingpa.
 
From Jikmé Lingpa, the teaching passed to [[Jikmé Gyalwé Nyugu]], then to [[Jikmé Chokyi Wangpo]] ([[Patrul Rinpoche]]), and then to [[Nyoshul Lungtok Tenpé Nyima]], who gave it to the great Khenchen [[Ngakgi Wangpo]] ([[Khenpo Ngaga]]). In turn, he transmitted it to his disciple, [[Shedrup Lungtok Tenpé Nyima]], the incarnation of Nyoshul Lungtok. From this great master, Kyabjé [[Penor Rinpoche]] received, it is said, almost all of the teachings of the Nyingtik cycle. The transmission which Nyoshul Lungtok Tenpe Nyima gave to Khenchen Ngaga was in turn passed on by him to the vidyadhara [[Palchen Dupa]], the second Pema Norbu Rinpoche. Khenpo Ngaga and Palchen Dupa were as teacher and student to one another. So Palchen Dupa would offer Khenchen Ngaga many teachings from the Nyingtik cycle, and likewise he received a considerable number of Nyingtik teachings from the great khenpo. Now, Palchen Dupa gave the transmission to [[Thubten Chökyi Dawa]], the second [[Choktrul Rinpoche]], who passed it on to Kyabjé Drubwang [[Penor Rinpoche]]. In this way, the two lineages from Khenpo Ngaga merged into one.
 
Finally, [[Penor Rinpoche]] received the entire transmission of [[Nyingtik Yabshyi]], along with the detailed explanation of the texts, from Kyabjé [[Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche]].
 
===Notes===
 
1  The Dzogchen teachings of Mengakde are also differentiated according to whether they belong to the ‘Shé Gyü’ or ‘Nyen Gyü,’ the explanatory Tantras or oral transmission. It is sometimes said that the Shé Gyü mainly contains the instructions for enlightement in this lifetime and the Nyen Gyü for enlightenment in the intermediate state. Another way in which this is explained is that the Outer, Inner and Secret cycles are Nyen Gyü, and the Innermost Secret Cycle belongs to Shé Gyü.
 
2 The special fruition of the practice of the Innermost Secret Cycle, the Nyingtik teachings, is to attain the ‘rainbow body.’ Through the perfection of the practice of Trekcho, the physical body can be dissolved completely at death into particles, while through the Togal practice, it is dissolved into a body of light or rainbow body. There are two kinds of rainbow body: the general rainbow body, where
the body dissolves completely into light, and the ‘Rainbow Body of the Great Transference’, Jalu Phowa Chenpo, where the ordinary body is transformed into a rainbow-like body and the individual lives for centuries for as long as they can benefit beings, appearing to them from time to time. Such was the case with both Vimalamitra and Guru Rinpoche.
A famous example: this extraordinary accomplishment can be found in the lineage of Kathok. Kadampa Deshek established the Kathok monastery in Kham in 1159, and his five principal disciples all attained the rainbow body. From them down to Nyala Pema Dudul at the end of the last century, one hundred thousand individuals associated with Kathok are said to have attained the rainbow body.
 
3 The guidance on the Khandro Nyingtik indicates that Guru Rinpoche came to Tibet primarily to subjugate negative forces, and that it was Vimalamitra who would first spread the teaching of Dzogchen there. however, it declares that the Dzogchen teachings of Guru Rinpoche would expand when human life-span had reached fifty years, and this was said to be at the time of Pema Ledrel Tsal.
 
4 On this occasion, Kyabjé Drubwang Penor Rinpoche will be giving the empowerments of Vima Nyingtik Lama Yangtik, Khandro Nyingtik and Khandro Yangtik. If you have already received these first four empowerments, it is not necessary to receive the Zabmo Yangtik
separately, since it is included within them.
 
==The Empowerments of Nyingtik Yabshyi==
The empowerments have been given many times to the Rigpa sangha, including:
*Kyabjé [[Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche]], London, 1st July 1987 ([[Lama Yangtik]] and [[Khandro Nyingtik]] only)
*Kyabjé [[Penor Rinpoche]], London, 11th - 15th November 1988
*Kyabjé [[Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche]], [[Prapoutel]], 20th and 21st August 1990 ([[Khandro Nyingtik]] only)
*Kyabjé [[Penor Rinpoche]], [[Lerab Ling]], 18th - 21st July 1995
*Kyabjé [[Trulshik Rinpoche]], [[Lerab Ling]], 1st July 2003 ([[Lama Yangtik]] only)
*Kyabjé [[Trulshik Rinpoche]], [[Lerab Ling]], 1st - 3rd December 2005 ([[Lama Yangtik]] and [[Khandro Nyingtik]] only)


==Internal Links==
==Internal Links==
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[[Category:Texts]]
[[Category:Texts]]
[[Category:Dzogchen]]
[[Category:Dzogchen]]
[[Category:Empowerments]]
[[Category:Nyingtik Yabshyi]]

Revision as of 13:00, 2 September 2018

Longchen Rabjam

Nyingtik Yabshyi (Tib. སྙིང་ཐིག་ཡ་བཞི, Wyl. snying thig ya bzhi) literally means the 'Four Parts of the Nyingtik'.

It consists of the

The Vima Nyingtik and Khandro Nyingtik are known as the 'mother' Nyingtik texts and the Lama Yangtik and Khandro Yangtik are known as 'child' texts, hence another common name for the collection which is the Four Mother and Child Sections of Nyingtik (Tib. སྙིང་ཐིག་མ་བུ་བཞི་, nyingtik ma bu shyi).

Longchen Rabjam also composed the Zabmo Yangtik, which condenses the important pith instructions of both Vima Nyingtik and Khandro Nyingtik.

As Nyoshul Khen Rinpoche explains: “For the purpose of the actual practice of Dzogchen according to the seventeen main tantras of Dzogpachenpo, Longchenpa gathered his own termas as well as those of Chetsün Senge Wangchuk (who was later reborn as Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo), and Pema Ledreltsal (Longchenpa’s previous incarnation) in the form of the thirteen volume collection known as the Nyingtik Yabshyi. This is the practice aspect of Longchenpa’s writings and the basis of the Old Nyingtik. In it he synthesized the Vima Nyingtik of Vimalamitra and the Khandro Nyingtik of Guru Rinpoche and explained all the practical details in the light of his own realization.”[1]

Alternative Classifications

There are two alternative traditions of classifying the Four Parts of the Nyingtik, mentioned in the Immaculate Oral Instructions, the Nyingtik teachings of Jamgön Kongtrul:

A second classification includes:

  1. Vima Nyingtik
  2. Lama Yangtik
  3. Khandro Nyingtik and Khandro Yangtik, counted as one; and
  4. Karma Nyingtik, which comes from the Third Karmapa, Rangjung Dorje.

A third way of classifying the four, according to the Dzogchen masters Kongpo Dzogchenpa and Katok Rigdzin Tsewang Norbu, is as follows:

  1. Vima Nyingtik;
  2. Lama Yangtik;
  3. Khandro Nyingtik and Khandro Yangtik, counted as one; and
  4. Dorsem Nyingtik of Kunkyong Lingpa.[2]

Alternative Translations

  • The Fourfold Heart Essence (Cortland Dahl)
  • The Four Higher Collections of the Heart Drop (Lama Chökyi Nyima)

The Empowerments of Nyingtik Yabshyi

The empowerments have been given many times to the Rigpa sangha, including:

Tibetan Texts

Notes

  1. As quoted in Dzogchen & Padmasambhava, Rigpa Publications, page 85.
  2. See the foreword to Great Perfection: Outer and Inner Preliminaries, by the Third Dzogchen Rinpoche, translated by Cortland Dahl (Ithaca: Snow Lion, 2008), page xi and Dezhung Rinpoche (2005) p. 171

Teachings Given to the Rigpa Sangha

Further Reading

  • Cortland Dahl, in Entrance to the Great Perfection, A Guide to the Dzogchen Preliminary Practices (Snow Lion Publications), Appendix III, 'The Fourfold Heart Essence'.
  • Dezhung Rinpoche, snying thig ya bzhi'i rnam bshad in kun dga' bstan pa'i nyi ma, gsung 'bum, Dharamsala, 2005, pp.169-179
  • Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche, in Great Perfection – Outer & Inner Preliminaries', translated by Cortland Dahl (Snow Lion Publications), Foreword pp.x-xi.
  • Khenchen Namdrol Rinpoche, Nyingtik Yabshyi, Its Origins and Transmission

Internal Links