The Prayer to Guru Rinpoche for Removing Obstacles and Fulfilling Wishes: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 8: Line 8:
==English and Tibetan Texts==
==English and Tibetan Texts==
'''dü sum sangyé guru rinpoché'''<br>
'''dü sum sangyé guru rinpoché'''<br>
[[Guru Rinpoche]], the Buddha of past, present and future,
Embodiment of [[buddha]]s of past, present and future, [[Guru Rinpoche]];


'''ngödrup kun dak déwa chenpö shyap'''<br>
'''ngödrup kun dak déwa chenpö shyap'''<br>
‘Dewa Chenpo’—Guru of Great Bliss—the source of all [[siddhis]],
Master of all [[siddhi]]s, Guru of Great Bliss;


'''barché kun sel düd dul drakpo tsal'''<br>
'''barché kun sel düd dul drakpo tsal'''<br>
‘Düd Dul Drakpo Tsal’—Wrathful One that Subdues Negativity—who removes all obstacles,
Dispeller of all obstacles, Wrathful Subjugator of [[four maras|Māras]];


'''solwa depso chingyi lap tu sol'''<br>
'''solwa depso chingyi lap tu sol'''<br>
Grant your [[blessings]], we pray!
To you I pray: inspire me with your [[blessing]],


'''chi nang sangwé barché shyiwa dang'''<br>
'''chi nang sangwé barché shyiwa dang'''<br>
Through them, may all [[obstacles]]—outer, inner and secret—
So that outer, inner and secret [[obstacles]] are dispelled


'''sampa lhun gyi druppar chin gyi lop'''<br>
'''sampa lhun gyi druppar chin gyi lop'''<br>
Be quelled, and may all our aspirations be fulfilled.
And all my aspirations are spontaneously fulfilled.


''Discovered by the great terma-revealer Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa, from the right hand side of the Sengchen Namdrak rock on Mount Rinchen Tsekpa, ‘The Pile of Jewels’. Because the blessing of this prayer, one intended for this present time, is so immense, it should be treasured by all as their daily practice.''
''Discovered by the great terma-revealer Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa, from the right-hand side of the Sengchen Namdrak rock on Mount Rinchen Tsekpa, ‘The Pile of Jewels’. Because the blessing of this prayer, one intended for this present time, is so immense, it should be treasured by all as their daily practice.''


{{Tibetan}}
{{Tibetan}}
Line 44: Line 44:
==External Links==
==External Links==
*{{LH|tibetan-masters/chokgyur-dechen-lingpa/removing-obstacles-and-fulfilling-wishes|The Prayer to Guru Rinpoche for Removing Obstacles and Fulfilling Wishes}}
*{{LH|tibetan-masters/chokgyur-dechen-lingpa/removing-obstacles-and-fulfilling-wishes|The Prayer to Guru Rinpoche for Removing Obstacles and Fulfilling Wishes}}
*{{LH|tibetan-masters/dudjom-rinpoche/ornament-enlightened-vision|The Ornament of Padmasambhava’s Enlightened Vision, An Explanation of the Vajra Verses Prayer, by Dudjom Rinpoche}}
[[Category: Guru Rinpoche Prayers]]
[[Category: Guru Rinpoche Prayers]]
[[Category: Termas]]
[[Category: Termas]]
[[Category: Tibetan Texts]]
[[Category: Tibetan Texts]]

Latest revision as of 09:24, 10 June 2015

Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa

The Prayer to Guru Rinpoche for Removing Obstacles and Fulfilling Wishes (Wyl. dus babs kyi gsol ‘debs dus gsum sangs rgyas) — this is a very famous prayer, usually called ‘du sum sangye’ (Wyl. dus gsum sangs rgyas) or ‘dorje tsik kang druk’ (Wyl. rdo rje tshig rkang drug; Eng. Six Vajra Lines) to Guru Rinpoche as the embodiment of the buddhas of the three times―past, present, and future―in order to remove obstacles and ensure any aspirations are easily fulfilled. It’s a terma revelation of the great tertön, Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa. As it says in the colophon of the prayer:

“Discovered by the great terma-revealer Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa, from the right hand side of the Sengchen Namdrak rock on Mount Rinchen Tsekpa, ‘The Pile of Jewels’. Because the blessing of this prayer, one intended for this present time, is so immense, it should be treasured by all as their daily practice.”

In the life-story of Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa it tells of the discovery of another very famous terma, where this prayer was recited just before the terma was extracted:

“Everyone went to Karma Taktsang. At the end of town was a big cave where Guru Rinpoche had appeared as Dorje Drollö. There Chokgyur Lingpa sang many songs, saying, “Now I will take some termas. If everything is auspicious, and works out well, I have things to do for Tibet.” Even Khyentse Rinpoche was amazed and sang a lot of songs. Chokling told everyone to recite the Vajra Guru mantra and the Düsum Sangye prayer. He said, “If the three of us work together, we can really do something.” Proceeding to where the terma was located, Chokling Rinpoche put a note on a pine tree telling the guardian of the terma to give it to him. Then they went to a rock. Chokling opened the rock and extracted a vajra, leaving it half out and half in just for show. He removed a terma box and let everyone come and touch it with his head. That was the Lamrim Yeshe Nyingpo.”

English and Tibetan Texts

dü sum sangyé guru rinpoché
Embodiment of buddhas of past, present and future, Guru Rinpoche;

ngödrup kun dak déwa chenpö shyap
Master of all siddhis, Guru of Great Bliss;

barché kun sel düd dul drakpo tsal
Dispeller of all obstacles, Wrathful Subjugator of Māras;

solwa depso chingyi lap tu sol
To you I pray: inspire me with your blessing,

chi nang sangwé barché shyiwa dang
So that outer, inner and secret obstacles are dispelled

sampa lhun gyi druppar chin gyi lop
And all my aspirations are spontaneously fulfilled.

Discovered by the great terma-revealer Chokgyur Dechen Lingpa, from the right-hand side of the Sengchen Namdrak rock on Mount Rinchen Tsekpa, ‘The Pile of Jewels’. Because the blessing of this prayer, one intended for this present time, is so immense, it should be treasured by all as their daily practice.

This section contains Tibetan script. Without proper Tibetan rendering support configured, you may see other symbols instead of Tibetan script.

༈ དུས་གསུམ་སངས་རྒྱས་གུ་རུ་རིན་པོ་ཆེ༔
དངོས་གྲུབ་ཀུན་བདག་བདེ་བ་ཆེན་པོའི་ཞབས༔
བར་ཆད་ཀུན་སེལ་བདུད་འདུལ་དྲག་པོ་རྩལ༔
གསོལ་བ་འདེབས་སོ་བྱིན་གྱིས་བརླབ་ཏུ་གསོལ༔
ཕྱི་ནང་གསང་བའི་བར་ཆད་ཞི་བ་དང༌༔
བསམ་པ་ལྷུན་གྱིས་འགྲུབ་པར་བྱིན་གྱིས་རློབས༔
ཞེས་གཏེར་ཆེན་མཆོག་གྱུར་བདེ་ཆེན་གླིང་པས་སེང་ཆེན་གནམ་བྲག་གི་གཡས་ཟུར་བྲག་རི་རིན་ཆེན་བརྩེགས་པ་ནས་སྤྱན་དྲངས་པའི་དུས་བབས་ཀྱི་གསོལ་འདེབས་འདི་ཉིད་བྱིན་རླབས་ཤིན་ཏུ་ཆེ་བས་ཀུན་གྱིས་ཁ་ཏོན་དུ་གཅེས་པར་ཟུངས་ཤིག། །།

Further Reading

External Links