It is said in
Vajrasattva
the Great Space:
Since there is nothing to be done, actions are terminated.
Since there is nothing to be done, actions are terminated.
Dudjom Rinpoche - Fundamentals and History of the Nyingmapa
And in the words of Menyak Jungdra [or Khyungdra]:345
Though the three aspects of creation and perfection are pres- ent in them all, Mahayoga emphatically teaches the creation
360 Fundamentals: Vehicles ofSecret Mantra
Thirdly, Mahayoga is classified according to the six topics, of which the first, the entrance, is twofold: The former refers to the empower_ ment. There are four empowerments which are to be conferred because three higher, supreme uncommon empowerments (thun-min mchog_ dbang gong-ma gsumi46 are added to the common vase empowerment (thun-mong-pa bum-dbang). It is said in the Subsequent Root Tantra of the Magical Net:
There are the master, the secret,
And the discriminating [empowerments], And, immediately afterwards, the fourth.
Five empowerments are also enumerated when the vase empower- ment (bum-dbang) is divided into its aspects of beneficence and ability (phan-nus gnyis). 347 The Sequence of the Activity of Indestructible Reality (Vajrakarmakrama, P 4761) says:
Its aspects become fivefold
Because [the vase empowerment] Confers beneficence and ability on one.
The latter is the actual entrance which is effected by means of three contemplations, namely, the yoga of great emptiness which is dis- criminative awareness (shes-rab stong-pa chen-po'i rnal-'byor) , the illusory compassion which is skilful means (thabs snying-rje sgyu-ma), and the seals which are subtle and coarse (phyag-rgya phra-rags). Therefore, Mahayoga is the path which emphatically teaches the creation stage. In this respect, it is also said in the Tantra of the Great Natural Arising of Awareness:
The entrance is the threefold contemplation.
And in the Miraculous Key ofFurther Discernment: The entrance of Mahayoga
Is effected by the threefold contemplation.
Secondly, the view [of Mahayoga] refers to the ultimate truth as that in which awareness, appearing without conceptual elaboration, is held to be spontaneously present as the essential basis; and all the ideas which are the expressive power of this awareness itself are held to be the relative truth, manifest in and ofthemselves as a maI). <;lala body and pristine cognition. Neither of these truths refers in a biased manner to either appearance or emptiness because their essence is an indivisible sameness. If it is conventionally expressed by the term divisible", its indivisibility is free from the range of perception because it transcends the objects of thought and expressions which apprehend it. In this respect, the Array of the Path of the Magical Net says:
Recapitulation ofResultant Vehicles
The superior, indivisible truth of sameness Th. ough revealed everywhere by synonyms'
Is m truth beyond objects of speech and thought.
361
And in the Sequence of the Path:
And in order to loosen348 attachment to that d
It and inexpressible WIthm the two conventional truths.
' . esCnptIOn,
translations of the secret
the fourteen basic violations of the c uct on the. knowledge of d d (b b " ommltments whIch are to be
guar e srung- ya zdam-tshig rtsa-ltung bcu-bzhi) and to th d based on the knowledge of the nature of the . e con uct meats and the fiv . commItments of the five
tshig sha-lnga are to be practised (spyad-bya'i dam-
In_the terminology of the ancient translations th . Mahayoga are said to number twenty-eight 349 Th of
Further Discernment says: . e
Concerning the guarded by Mahayoga, There are three baSIC commitments
And twenty-five ancillary ones which are kept.
lracu ous Key of
the three basic are those of buddha-body speech the dam-tshig gsum) , As for the ancilla;y ones,
There are those to be practised Those not to be renounced ' And those to be adopted. ' There are those to be known
And those to be attained.
concerning meditation' Th . .
phaSlsmg the class of . . ere are two tradItIOns, one em-
emphaSiSing the class for(attamment (sgrub-sde), and the other classes of means t . antra rgyud-sde). The former includes five namely, the of the deities of pristine cognition, on the Four Centres f' the Body of,the Sugatas by Relying
bZhi-la brten-nas bde_gsOh the Body (Jam-dpal-gyi sku 'khor-lo Lo egssu1sgrub-pa)'th MeA "
tus Speech by R 1 . , e eans lor ttammg the gyi rta-skad thengs- on the Three Neighs of Hayagrlva (rta-mgrin-
Attaining the sgrub-pa);theMeans enuine and Uniqu A . ea Ity of Mmd by Relying on the Present Pristine C e . the Awareness and Naturally
thugS ri ogmtIOn whIch IS Yangdak the Mind (y d . g-pa rang-byung-;gi ye-shes yang-dag grub-pa
362 Fundamentals: Vehicles ofSecret Mantra
thugs rdo-rje'i sgrub-pa); the Means for Attaining Nectar Attributes which Perfectly Reveal All Things of Sarpsara and Nirval)a as the Enlightened Attributes of Mahottara (che-mchog-gi 'khor-'das-kyi chos-thams-cad tan-du rdzogs-par ston-pa bdud-rtsi yon-tan-gyi sgrub-pa); and the Means for Attaining the Enlightened Activity ofVajrakiia which Emphatically Teaches the Skilful Means for Training Malicious Beings by the Rites of Sorcery of Vajrakiia (phur-pa'i mngon-spyod-kyi las-kyis gdug-pa-can 'dul-ba'i thabs gtso-bor ston-pa phur-ba phrin-las-kyi sgrub-pa). Also cluded in this section are the three common classes of means for attain- ment, namely, the Means for Attaining the Liberating Sorcery of aral:1 (ma-mo rbod-gtong), the Malign Mantra (drag-sngags dmod-pa) and the Mundane Praise ()ig-rten mchod-bstod).
Concerning the latter [i. e. the class oftantras]: Mahayoga is generally classified according to three kinds of tantra, namely, Father, Mother, and Non-Dual. In the Father tantras such as the Guhyasamaja there is held to be experiential cultivation in a manner which is non-conceptual with respect to radiance and emptiness because they emphasise the area of skilful means according to the creation stage and also the vital energy according to the perfection stage connected with it.
In the Mother tantras such as Cakrasarrzvara, Hevajra and Yangdak (NGB Vol. 25), the conceptual elaboration of the creation stage is diminished, and there is held to be experiential cultivation in a manner which is non-conceptual with respect to bliss and emptiness, and in which the perfection stage of discriminative awareness emphasises the seed or seminal point of enlightened mind.
Then in the Neutral tantras such as the Magical Net (T 832-7, NGB Vols. 14-16) the phases of creation and perfection are coalesced and there is held to be experiential cultivation in a manner which emphasises the blissful, radiant and non-conceptual pristine cognition that is de- veloped through the energy channels, currents and seminal points ac- cording to the perfection stage, and above all, the supreme pristine cognition of inner radiance.
In this context, [meditation] is explained with reference to the Root
, . Recapitulation ofResultant Vehicles 363
is subdIvIded into the devotional meditation (mos-bs ' ive perfection (nges-rdzogs) The f i o ' , gom) and the defimt-
Tantra ofthe Secret Nucleus. Accordingly, the Three Stages (rim-g P 4742)350 says:
There are said to be the two particular kinds of meditation:
The sequence of symbolic meditation And the nature of just what is.
,
o ,IS: supreme nature of the Transcendent Lord
Thus there is both symbolic and non-symbolic meditation.
The former comprises both the creation and perfection stages. ,AS for the creation stage: It refers to the experiential cultivation in whIch
the deity and ideas are meditated on as indivisible by emphasising the gradual creation of the mal)Qala through the three contemplations, It
from the undivided three
the, of pristine cognition, ' e obtamed m thIS very lifetime.
AndinthS,. ,
e emmal Pomt of Pristine Cognition:
Otherwise im d' 1
Th ' ,m e late y after abandoning [this body],
e result WIll be accomplished without any effort.
sum
v. 1I8): y present IS actualIsed. It says in the Guhyasamaja (Ch. 13, Th'
, " . rmer IS exemplIfied b th nal cUltIvatIOn which though firmn ' y
, ' essmcontemplatio h obtamed, completes the ritual branches ofth , n
'
e expenen-
b
Partner's body] ('
og-sgo in the Three Stages:
kh wer ams-gsum rol-p
oor [or sexual centre of one's " ,
a 1 man-ngag). Therefore It says
as not ' e creatIon stage dur'
een h
,, e Iveyogasbelongmgt [h h and connection which are endowed with 0 t, e pat s of]
four kmds of awareness-holders who ' h corruP:IOn, and the
course 0f a smgle evening session of d' . ,m g t e form. 351 The latter refers to th fi me ItatIOn on,a [partIcular divine]
' are WIt out corruptIOn eperectIOnstagerefer t b h h ' , .
which [the energy ch I S O ot t e esotenc mstructions through annes,currentsandse ' 1 ' ]
and trained within the "upper door of ' mlbna pomts are grasped , onesown ody"(t "'d
T h fi
gyl man-ngag), and the esoteric instructio . s eng-sgo ul- of the three realms through "the 10 d ns ,;Vhlch concern the dIsplay
There are oral instructions
According to the upper and lower doors.
meditation refers to the contemplation of real- Then, fifth, as to conduct· A h' b 1 '
practised wi h . . nyt, e ongmg to sarpsara can be skilful lIt IS :;tained by the foundation of
,
lracu ous l,-ey to the Storehouse:
The Mah. ayoga of the creation phase
the rites of "! iberation" and sexual practices352
Th
Ive nectars whIch are sacramental substances roug the conduct which observes great skilful
SIxth, as to the result· In th' l'fi ' , ,
[after death] the emb d' I or m the mtermediate state spontaneousl' ,0 m whIch the five buddha-bodies are
A. nuyoga
[224a 2-2
. 28a. 3] The vehicle of h A
transmissions (lung anu-
Yoga) is Considered under h h t e
t e tree headmgs ofessence, verbal definition
364 Fundamentals: Vehicles ofSecret Mantra
and classification. As to [the essence]: Its nature is such that liberation is obtained through a union of realisation and experience of the. truth in which the expanse [of reality] and pristine cognition. duality, by emphatic reliance on the perfection stage of dlscnmmatlVe awareness.
Secondly, [as to the verbal definition]: The [Sanskrit] Anuyoga is rendered [in Tibetan] as rjes-su mal-'byor or it emphatically reveals the path of desire in pursuIt of dlscnmmatlVe awareness (shes-rab ry'es-chags-kyi-lam).
Thirdly, Anuyoga is classified according to the six topics, of the first the entrance, is twofold. The former is empowerment, whIch refers t ; the thirty-six empowerment ceremonies subsumed by four categories of outer, inner, attaining and secret m the mandalas of Anuyoga (phyi-nang-sgrub-gsang-bzhls bsdus-pa l dbang-chog It says in the All-Gathering Awareness:
The outer empowerment and the inner empowerment, The attaining empowerment and the secret
empowerment
Are respectively complete with ten aspects,
With eleven, with thirteen and with two aspects.
According to some, the eight hundred and thirty-one ancillary em- powerments,353 which are derived from the basic thirty-six tioned, are the empowerments ofthe nine vehicles. Therefore, It IS saId in the Summation ofthe Meaning ofEmpowerment (dbang-don bsdus-pa):
Derived from the six vehicles including Yogatantra, The outer empowerment is to be conferred as a
continuous stream.
And in the Analysis ofthe Meaning ofEmpowerment (dbang-don mam-par
'byed-pa):
The ten empowerments bring about Possession of the enlightened family, The eleven empowerments bring about The inner secret meaning,
The thirteen empowerments are known As those of the "great guru",
And the two empowerments perfect The empowerment of the nine vehicles.
How is it, one might then object, that these become the empowerments of Anuyoga [which is only one of the nine f There is indeed no contradiction because, in accord with the 0 learned gurus, they are called the empowerment of the nine vehIcles
Recapitulation ofResultant Vehicles 365
(thetdgu'i in so ,far as they correspond to nine sequences of the
vehIcle. There IS no basIs, however, for the opinion expressed by ordin-
ary of the empowerment for the Sutra which Gathers All
Intentwns [that they actually are the empowerments ofthe nine veh' I ] Ifth "b dl ICes.
, ey It IS a sur y implied that one would have to admit the hIgher Atiyoga empowerment to be gathered within the Anuyoga em- powerment. , By way of illustration, the uncommon doctrinal termino- logy of the mner [tantras] is not found in the outer tantras. The great
awareness-holder Terdak Lingpa has therefore said:
If one must refer to the fusion Of the basic rites of Anuyoga
With the details of the particular doctrines of the eight [other] vehicles,
How these [other vehicles] then define the illustrative basIs of Anuyoga [in particular]?
is therefore no contradiction inasmuch as he is of the former opmIOn [expressed by learned gurus].
,latter [aspect of the entrance into Anuyoga] is the actual entrance W h I C ? , I S e f f e c t e d b y m e a n s o f t h e n o n - d u a l i t y o f t h e e x p a n s e a n d
cogmtIOn. It says m the All-Accomplishing King:
entered into the expanse and pristine cognition WhIch, according to Anuyoga, are held to be
indivisible. . .
What, one might ask, is the nature of the entrance? It is effected in
the manner not of the creation but of the perfection stage. It says in the Lock of the Heart:
expanse itself is pristine cognition. Pnstme cogmtIOn, awareness, is the expanse itself.
The supreme bliss of this non-dual display Is not entered gradually.
In all the [divine] seals of apparitional existence 354
The great seal of apparitional existence is immediately encountered
In the manner of a fish leaping from the water. Secondly as t h ' A .
itself is th ' . 0 t e 11 thmgs are one's own mind, and that natu ' e pure celestIal space of the mother SamantabhadrI whose
I"
SPect th e mal)<;iala (ye Jl-bzhin-pa'i dkyil-'khor). I n this re-
re IS uncreated and fre f·
called th " e • conceptua elaboratIOn. It is also
, e eneral Satra which Gathers All Intentions also says: Since which has emerged from the mind is
emptmess,
All that hfls emerged from it is empty.
366 Fundamentals: Vehicles ofSecret Mantra
This uncreated [reality], unceasing in all respec,ts, is awareness
" ndala of naturally present hght. It IS called the whIch asarna:' bhadraorthespontaneouslypresent
In this ma1f<;lala of the outer, inner and secret arrays,
Apparitional existence is an expanse of pure male and female deities.
And in the Miraculous Key to the Storehouse: According to Anuyoga, the perfection phase,
The components, psychophysical bases and activity fields Are held to be uncreated, in a perfect manner,
In the ma1f<;lala of male and female deities.
Thirdly, concerning moral diScipline, the Summation ofthe Meaning of the Secret Satra says:
It is commitment which apprehends the basis. It guards and attains
The basic and ancillary aspects and so forth, In order to discipline the three media.
In this way, there are basic and ancillary commitments and so forth
which are to be guarded and attained by means of the three media [body, speech and mind].
When these commitments are classified, there are said, according to the sixty-sixth chapter of the General Satra which Gathers All Intentions to be nine enumerations, namely, four commitments definitive to the
important sutras (gal-mdo nges-pa'i dam-tshig bzhi), twenty-eight com- mon commitments (thun-mongs-gi nyi-shu rtsa-brgyad), four superior commitments (lhag-pa'i bzhi), twenty-three relating to discipline (brtul- zhugs-kyi nyer-gsum), twenty concerning attainment (sgrub-pa'i nyi-shu),
four relating to continuity of the path of conduct (spyod-lam rgyun-gyi
bzhz), five Maras which are to be renounced (bdud-Inga spang-ba), four
enemies to be destroyed (dgra-bzhi gzhom-pa), and the commitment of the view (lta-ba'i dam-tshig).
If, on the other hand, these are subsumed, they are gathered into the commitments which are acquired immediately with no limits to be guarded (bsrung-mtshams med-pa cig-car-ba'i dam-tshig) and the commit-
ments which are acquired gradually and have limits to be guarded (bsrung-mtshams-can rim-gyis-pa'i dam-tshig). It says in the General Satra
Which Gathers All Intentions:
pristine cogllltIOn that IS b h' ma1f<;lala of natural expreSSIOn rang- z m
The same text says:
Unseen upon inspection,
It itself appears everywhere.
lhun-grub-kyi dkyil-'khor).
'hd me bliss of their offspnng wherem t e expanse an
(a e _ hub sems-kyi dkyil- 'khor). As the above-cited enhghtened mm b'Yang c
text again says:
That which is called the way of secret mantra is real nature, in which appearance and non-appearance are duality which is liberated from the essence 0 ,t at and does not objectively refer to the mIddle [ground].
Therefore, all things are regarded as primordial, in the fundamental ma1f<;lala of enlightened mind, the l. ndlvlslble nature 0: the three kinds of ma1f<;lala. [The General Satra whzch Gathers All Inten tions] again says:
Since everything is therein identical,
The supreme bliss of primordial ? uddhahood.
Is itself the nucleus without creatIOn or
The three ma1f<;lalas where there is neither actIVIty nor
agent, I Are accomplished from the beginning, spontaneous y
present.
And in the Turquoise Display:
From the celestial space of SamantabhadrI, or apparitional existence, .
The uncreated ma1f<;lala, Samantabha? ra, anses. In its arising, there is nothing that anses. . The supreme bliss of father, mother and offspnng Is spontaneously perfect.
The essence 0 ' "
f these two mandalas, which radiate without differen-
. . ,
IS the r without duality, the fundamental ma1f<;lala of
' d d xpressive It is further held that the Ulllmpe e e .
tabhadra's display arises as the body of a deity. Awareness says:
Sam.
In the primordially evolved great perfection of Samantabhadra,
0 f
aW
That in which there is no pledge to be guarded Is the firm commitment of reality.
This commitment is most amazing, Since it is the most uncommon of all; But for all those of weak volition
There are limits' to be'guarded.
power
The All-Gathertng
And:
Recapitulation ofResultant Vehicles 367
368 Fundamentals: Vehicles ofSecret Mantra
Fourth, on the subject of meditation, the Summation of the Meaning
of the Secret Sutra says:
Its essence is of skilful means
And discriminative awareness.
Meditation therefore comprises both the path of skilful means (thabs-
lam) and the path of liberation (grol-Iam). The former refers to the yoga in which there is meditation connected with the four or six centres forming the "upper door" [of the body, steng-sgo], and to the skilful
means which develops co-emergent, pristine cognition by relying on the meditative absorption associated with the two secret centres [of the male and female consorts] forming the "lower door" ('og-sgo mkha'-gsang
gnyis). As the above text says:
Through skilful means of esoteric instructions,
Such as concerns the "source of all display" ,
One enters therein.
As for the latter, [the path of liberation]: It comprises both the array of truth and the display of its signs (don bkod-pa-dang rtags-kyi rol-pa). The first refers to the non-conceptualising contemplation that is free
from conceptual elaboration. It is an absorption derived from the dis- position of the nucleus of reality, just as it is, uncontrived by the meditating intellect. In this respect, the General Sutra which Gathers
All Intentions says:
Having established the intellect just as it is
In the corresponding reality,
There is an unwavering recollection Derived from that inexpressible disposition.
The second, [the display of its signs], refers to contemplation of the deity that is endowed with conceptual elaboration. It is the experiential cultivation which, by the mere recitation of mantra, emphasises im-
mediate meditation in which the world and its contents distinctly radiate as the mandala of deities, in the [immediate] manner of a fish leaping from the Such is also said in the Miraculous Key to the Storehouse:
In the vehicle of Anuyoga
There is uncreated meditation in a perfect manner, After merely the nucleus [of the mantra syllables] has been
recited.
And in the All-Gathering Awareness:
Pure apparitional existence is an expanse ofmale and female
deities.
The elements and elemental components
Are spontaneously perfect father and mother consorts.
Concerning path of definitively perfect meditation in general, [the Anuyoga] mcludes both corrupt and uncorrupt corms Th C
. h compnses t
fh . . 11 . e10rmer e yoga 0 t e splntual warrior who aspires ('dun-p k .
Recapitulation ofResultant Vehicles 369
d'
. h 'b d ,. I' amIy
asems- yz by? r); the latter comprises the yoga which
'b )
rnal- an the yoga whIch reveals the great enlightened f: '1
(rzgs-c en -pa. zrna
confers the mspuation (dbugs-chen 'byin-pa'i rnal-'byor),
,;hlCh obtams the great prophetic declaration (lung-chen thob- pa z rnal- byor) and ,the yoga which perfects great expressive power (rtsal-chen rdzogs-pa'z rnal-'byor).
Fifth, as to conduct: The conduct of Anuyoga is one h' h ' I h ' w IC , m
genera, emp aSlses sameness. The Miraculous Key to the Stor h
The Anuyoga of the perfection phase Is the perfect rapture of the expanse And pristine cognition.
If in detail, there are three kinds of conduct n I co_nsecratlOn or blessing, overpowering and skilful means. The Sutra whzch Gathers All Intentions says:
The conduct which consecrates
The conduct which overpowers:
And the conduct of skilful means
Are exemplified respectively by space and by a king And by the water which quenches a fire. '
the result: Within one lifetime the essence is ac-
tua Ised, In which the twenty-five resultant realities are indivisible and
present. This is the body of supreme bliss, which is the
Sem? dl/n;;n,t of t? e four buddha-bodies. The Tantra of the Supreme zna omt (thzg-Ie mchog-gi rgyud) says:
or inner radiance is supreme bliss
WIthout the expanse and pristine in two. Whoever medItates on it will attain
The result of perfect buddhahood in this lifetime.
And in th M' I' . e zracu ous Key to the Storehouse:
The vehicle of Anuyoga
With'n rt' '
I. . one 1 etlme and without interruption,
Defimtlvely proceeds to the buddha level.
A. tiyoga
[228a. 3-229b. 6] T h "
consid d e vehIcle of Auyoga, the esoterIC mstructions is
, ,
ere under three headings of essence, verbal definition
370 Fundamentals: Vehicles ofSecret Mantra
I 'fi t' As to the first [the essence]: It is the skilful means c aSSI lca lon, , h d' d' tl liberated through which the truth of primordial buddha 0 0 IS ,
and I"t IS endowed WI'th a nature which is free from renunCIatIon, accep-
tance, hope and doubt. , ] A ' , Secondly, [the verbal definition] is that [the Sansknt rendered [in Tibetan] as shin-tu rnal-'byor or highest because It IS
the culmination of the perfection stage both the and perfec- , h s and because it is the summIt of all vehIcles.
tIOnpase, , ,fh'hh Thirdly, Atiyoga is classified according to the SIX tOPICS 0 W IC e
first the entrance, I'S twoJ'old• The former refers to empowerment whI,ch 11
her; is the maturation effected by the empowerment 0fslhe ower of awareness (rig-pa'i rtsal-dbang) and so T atter IS ihe actual entrance which is effected by not entenng anythmg. The
All-Accomplishing King says:
Since with respect to the doctrine There is nothing to be done,
It is entered effortlessly.
Secondly, as to the view, it is held that all things by apparitional existence, sarpsara and nirva1). a, are eff? rtlessly the pnmor- dial buddhahood in the essence of a supreme pOInt, body of reality, which is naturally present, supr,eme, is said in Vajrasattva the Great Space (rdo-rye sems-dpa nam m , NGB Vol. 2):
Having been effortlessly liberated , , Through the naturally present pristine cogmtIon, The path of liberation is indeed revealed.
For those who hold to space
There will be the Spatial Class;
For those who do not strive after stages There will be the Esoteric Instructional Class.
In this way, there is the Mental Class (sems-sde) which pertains to the absorption in awareness and emptiness, the disposition of the buddha-body of reality. There is the Spatial Class (klong-sde) which pertains to the absorption in the disposition of reality without activity
or effort; and there is the Esoteric Instructional Class (man-ngag-gi sde) which pertains to the absorption in the disposition of reality, primor- dially liberated and free from renunciation and acceptance.
In general, the meditation which accords with the tradition of the
Great Perfection is gathered into two categories, namely, Cutting
Through Resistance (khregs-chod) and All-Surpassing Realisation (thod- rgal). It is said in the Pearl Necklace:
Cutting Through Resistance And All-Surpassing Realisation Are experientially cultivated.
According to the former [Cutting Through Resistance]: There is absorp- tion without wavering from the disposition of the primordially pure
view. The Great Garucf,a says:
It is established because it spontaneously abides.
And the master Garap Dorje says:
The nature of mind is primordially buddha. In the mind, as in the sky,
There is no creation or cessation. Having realised the genuine truth Of the sameness of all things,
If it is established without being sought, That is meditation.
By meditating in that way there are four creative stages of the path:
There are the abiding and unwavering states, Sameness and spontaneous presence.
As for the All-Surpassing Realisation (thod-rgal): Through reliance on the six essentials (gnad-drug), the four visionary appearances gradu- aUy arise, and thereby the goal is reached. These [four] are, namely, the visionary appearance of the direct perception of reality (chos-nyid
the visionary appearance of increasing contemplative ex- (nyams-gong-'phel), the visionary appearance of reaching the hllllltS of awareness (rig-pa tshad-phebs) and the visionary appearance of
t e cessation [of 'apparitional] reality (chos-nyid zad-pa).
And in the Great Garucf,a (khyung-chen, NGB Vol. 1): The naturally present pristine ,
. . Universally abides, without conceptIon, Just as It IS.
Thirdly, on the subject of moral dlSCIP me, t e co include nothingness and plainness are not to be transce Miraculous Key of Further Discernment says:
nded. The
The commitments of Atiyoga
' 356
Are nothingness and pIamness, Uniqueness and spontaneous presence. Their meaning should not be transcended.
Fourth, as to meditation, the Great Array of the Highest says:
For those who hold to the mind There will be the Mental Class;
, 'r h mmitments which
Recapitulation ofResultant Vehicles 371
372 Fundamentals: Vehicles ofSecret Mantra
Fifth, in conduct: There is conduct without acceptance and rejection because all that appears arises as the display of reality.
It is said in Vajrasattva the Great Space:
Since there is nothing to be done, actions are terminated. And in the Miraculous Key to the Storehouse:
Concerning the conduct of Atiyoga:
The forceful conduct practised
By one endowed with the vital force of view and
meditation
Resembles the conduct of a madman.
Anything whatsoever is practised without impediment.
Sixth, as to the result: The goal is reached, abiding from the present moment on the level of the spontaneously perfect Samantabhadra. By reaching the limit of the four assurances (gding-bzhi) , sarpsara is liberated in nirva1). a. This is also said in the Miraculous Key ofFurther Discernment:
Concerning the result of Atiyoga, the Great Perfection:
In the primordial nucleus which is enlightenment, The unattained result is mature in itself.
This completes the anthology which explains the definitive order of the resultant secret mantra, the vehicle of indestructible reality, the fourth and, for the while, the last exegetical part of this book, the Feast in which Eloquence Appears, a definitive ordering of the precious teaching of the vehicle of indestructible reality according to the Ancient Trans- lation School.
Conclusion
1 Concluding Remarks
[229b. 6-232aA] With the hope of somewhat benefitting those persons who pursue the subject-matter of this book with fresh intellects, I have condensed and succinctly emphasised the words of the great, all-know- ing doctrinal master Longcenpa, and those of Locen [DharmasrI] Chopel Gyamtso of Mindroling, the pal)<;iita Gyurme Tsewang Chok- drup ofKatok, Jamgon [Kongtrtil] Lodro Thaye, Dodrup Jikme Tenpei Nyima and Zecen Gyeltsap Gyurme Perna Namgyel. 357
Although the definitive order of the sutras and the mantras may appear repetitive because it has been divided into two parts, one accord- ing to the overall meaning and the other according to the meaning subsumed in their particular sections, it is with a view to easy com- prehension that the opportune recapitulations have been added in a way which will facilitate understanding.
As for those whose intellects are still unsatisfied by this mere [abridge- ment], who wish to thoroughly investigate the limits of study and reflection, the thousand petals of their intellects should be impartially liberated by relying on the extensive eloquent compositions of the prior learned and accomplished masters such as the following: the scriptures of the all-knowing Trime Ozer [Longcenpa] which, in the manner of a. treasury of precious gems containing. the numerous extraordinary fIches of a kingdom, excellently comment on all the definitive, profound essentials of tantra, transmission and esoteric instruction endowed with the six superiorities of the ancient translations, with an insight which Perceives reality independently, just as it is/58 his Mother and Son CYcles ofInnermost Spirituality (snying-thig ma-bu'i skor);359 the writings the Sutra which Gathers All Intentions and the Cycle of the Tantra of t e Magical Net (,dus-pa mdo-dang sgyu-'phrul skor-gyi yig-cha) which \\Tere composed by [Locen DharmasrI], the brother of the great aware- Terdak Lingpa; and the scriptures of Jamgon Mipham
aWel Senge [Mipham Rinpoche].
2 Dedicatory Verses
Dedicatory Verses 377
May the merit obtained herein by my labour
Be to the expansion of the teaching.
long in the world, may the nucleus of the teachmg
Adorn the lands with oceans of enlightened attributes.
May I, too, in all my lives,
In the manner of the spiritual warrior, Lord of Secrets,
Hold the secret repository of the Conqueror's teaching,
And, roaring the lion's roar of the profound truth,
May I the depths of existence by moving therem.
May fundamental reality in its natural state,
Free Jro. m the Fears (Jikdrel) of change,
the nucleus of Pristine Cognition (Yeshe)
W? lch encompasses all worlds, animate and manimate,
Secure all things in supreme bliss
By the seal of imperishable mind's Indestructible Reality (Dorje). 361
Again it might be said:
From the taintless ocean, profound and wide, of the tradition Ofthe ancient translations which are the ultimate perfection
of the Conqueror's teaching,
I have extracted the essence, an excellent vase of exegesis, A nectar stream satisfying the lot of those new students
who wish to know it.
The Feast in which the teaching's definitive order is narrated
By relying on the sacred Eloquence of the past, Approaching with smiles of superior aspiration, which
Appears,
Brings forth a springtime of supreme delight to a host of fortunate beings.
If there are mistaken points herein, the fault is mine. May those who are learned and honest be kind to
show restraint.
All that is eloquent, through the grace of the guru, Is but my respect and service for the teaching.
May the grievous clouds which thunder with the verses of indestructible reality,360
Profound essentials of the highest unsurpassed vehicle,
And nakedly expose their mysteries and so forth, Be dispelled by the whirlwind of t,he three roots'
blessing
In the inexpressible space of reality's expanse.
3 Colophon
This book, the abridged definitive ordering of the teaching of the Nying- mapa, or Ancient Translation School of the secret mantra, entitled Feast in which Eloquence Appears, begun by the vagabond Jikdrel Yeshe Dorje in his sixty-third year on Friday 3 June 1966 (fifteenth day of the fourth month (sa-ga) of the Fire Horse Year or zil-gnon), was com- posed with effort at all times; and it was brought to completion on Thursday 29 September (fifteenth day of the auspicious eighth month or khrum-stod) in the Citadel of Lotus Light (padma 'od-kyi grong-khyer) on the summit of Mount Rincen Pung, known as the supreme pilgrim- age place of Kalimpong, which is an extension of the secret land of Sikkim. The first draft was prepared by the scribe Rikdzin Dorje, a venerable mantrin from Kurelung in Bhutan. May the nucleus of the teaching thereby secure the destiny of abiding long without decline. Sarvada mangala-sri jayantu! ["May glorious good auspices ever be victorious. "]
01? 1 Svasti:
This definitive order of the ocean-like teaching
Of the Ancient Translation School,
Which reveals the extensive meaning with few words, Was prepared in its final xylographic edition Through the unending generosity to the doctrine
362
Of the faithful Pelhun Ytilgyel
By virtue of this merit may the precious teaching Multiply and increase until the end of time, without
decline.
May the great drumbeat of the doctrine
Of definitively secret exegesis and attainment Resound throughout the whole world.
Above all, may the father and mother
Who gave birth to this benefactor,
Along with his relations and all living beings,
of Tingri.
Become naturally liberated of the two obscurations And then swiftly complete the two provisions
And actualise the two buddha-bodies.
May the two benefits resplendently blaze
With spontaneously present good auspices.
'
.
ous: IS xy ograph IS preserved at the monastery of Zangdok P l ' . Kahmpong.
May these meaningful expressions of Jikdrel Yeshe DorJ'e b Th' I .
.
e VIctOrI-
Colophon 379
. e rI III
Book Two
History of the Nyingma School
Dudjom Rinpoche, Jikdrel Yeshe Dorje
Translated and edited by Gyurme Dorje with the collaboration of Matthew Kapstein
Detailed Contents of Book Two
TRANSLA TORS' INTRODUCTION 393
THE TEXT
VERSES OF INVOCA TION 403
P ART ONE: THE ORIGIN OF THE PRECIOUS TEACHING OF THE CONQUEROR IN THIS WORLD [1]
INTRODUCTION 409
THE COMING OF BUDDHA, TEACHER OF THE DOCTRINE [1. 1] 411
The Opinion ofthe Adherents ofthe Lesser Vehicle [1. 1. 1] 411 The Ordinary Opinion ofthe Greater Vehicle and ofthe Tantras
[1. 1. 2] 412
The Special Position of the Nyingma Tradition [1. 1. 3] 413 The Body of Emanation [1. 1. 4] 415
The Life of Sakyamuni [1. 1. 5] 416
2 THE COLLECTING OF TRANSMITTED PRECEPTS BY COUNCILS [1. 2] 428
The First Council [1. 2. 1] 428
The Second Council [1. 2. 2] 429
The Third Council [1. 2. 3] 429
The Councils of the Greater Vehicle [1. 2. 4] 430
3
THE P A TRIARCHS OF THE TEACHING [1. 3] 432
Mahakasyapa [1. 3. 1] 432 Ananda [1. 3. 2] 434 Sa1). avasika U. 3. 3] 435
384
Detailed Contents ofBook Two
4
Upagupta [1. 3. 4] 436 . .
DhItika, Sudarsana, Madhyahmka and the SIXteen Elders
[1. 3. 5] 437
THE PRESERV A TION OF THE TEACHING AND SPREAD OF THE GREA TER VEHICLE [1. 4] 440
PART TWO: THE RISE OF THE PRECIOUS TEACHING OF SECRET MANTRA [2]
INTRODUCTION 445
THE TURNING OF THE SECRET MANTRA WHEEL [2. 1] 447 The Intentional Lineage of the Conquerors [2. 1. 1] 447
THE COLLECTING OF TRANSMITTED PRECEPTS BY DIFFERENT COMPILERS [2. 2] 451
THE EMERGENCE OF THIS TEACHING IN THE HUMAN WORLD [2. 3] 452
The Symbolic Lineage of the [2. 3. 1] 452n The Origination ofthe Symbolic Lmeage among Non-Huma
Awareness-holders [2. 3. 1. 1] 452 d The Origination of the Symbolic Lineage among Human an
History 385
Vimalamitra and the Transmitted Precept of Vajramrta [2. 5. 4] 480 .
Prabhahasti, Padmasambhava and the Transmitted Precept of VajrakIla [2. 5. 5] 481
The Revealed Treasures [2. 5. 6] 482
6
THE LINEAGE OF ANUYOGA, THE PERFECTION STAGE [2. 6]
1
2
3
8
4
THE LINEAGE OF MAHA YOGA, 458
THE
CLASS
OF
T ANTRAS
[2. 4]
5
THE LINEAGE OF MAHAYOGA, THE CLASS OF MEANS FOR ATTAINMENT [2. 5] 475 f, k )
Humkara and the Transmitted Precept 0f Yangdak a . [2. 5. 1) 475 _ k [252)
Manjusrlmitra and the Transmitted Precept ofYamanta a . .
477 _ [53] 479 Nagarjuna and the Transmitted Precept ofHayagnva 2. .
Non-Human Awareness-holders [2. 3. 1. 2] 454 The Aural Lineage of Mundane Individuals [2. 3. 2] 456
King Ja and Kukkuraja [2. 4. 1] 458 LIlavajra [2. 4. 2] 463
Buddhaguhya [2. 4. 3] 464 Vajrahasya [2. 4. 4] 466
Prabhahasti [2. 4. 5] 467 Padmasambhava [2. 4. 6] 468
2
3
485
Kambalapada or the Younger Indrabhuti [2. 6. 1] 485 The Successors of the Younger Indrabhuti [2. 6. 2] 487
THE LINEAGE OF A TIYOGA, THE GREA T PERFECTION [2. 7J 490
Garap Dorje and Mafijusrlmitra [2. 7. 1] 490 Buddhajfianapada [2. 7. 2] 494
SrI Si111ha, Jfianasutra and Vimalamitra [2. 7. 3] 497 CONCLUDING REMARKS [2. 8] 502
PART THREE: THE ORIGIN OF THE CONQUEROR'S TEACHING IN TIBET [3]
INTRODUCTION [3. 1] 507
THE THREE ANCESTRAL RELIGIOUS KINGS [3. 2] 510
King Songtsen Gampo [3. 2. 1] 510
King Trhisong Detsen and the Coming ofPadmasambhava [3. 2. 2] 512
King Relpacen [3. 2. 3] 521
THE DECLINE AND EXPANSION OF THE DOCTRINE DURING THE INTERMEDIATE PERIOD [3. 3] 523
THE REVIV AL AND LA TER EXP ANSION OF THE TEACHING [3. 4J 524
PART FOUR: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE THREE INNER CLASSES OF TANTRA IN TIBET [4]
INTRODUCTION 531
MAHA YOGA AND ANUYOGA [4. 1/2] 533 Mahayoga, the Stage of Creation [4. 1] 533
7
386
Detailed Contents ofBook Two
2
THE MENT AL AND 538
CLASSES OF
3
THE ESOTERIC INSTRUCTIONAL CLASS OF ATIYOGA, THE INNERMOST SPIRITUALITY [4. 3. 3] 554
The Tradition of Padmasambhava [4. 3. 3. 1] 554 The Tradition of Vimalamitra [4. 3. 3. 2] 555
Vimalamitra [4. 3. 3. 2. 1] 555
Nyang Tingdzin Zangpo [4. 3. 3. 2. 2] 555 Dangma Lhtindrup Gyeltsen [4. 3. 3. 2. 3] 556 Cetstin Senge Wangcuk [4. 3. 3. 2. 4] 557 ZhangtOn [4. 3. 3. 2. 5] 559
Nyibum [4. 3. 3. 2. 6] 561
Guru Cober [4. 3. 3. 2. 7] 563
Trhtizhi Sengegyap [4. 3. 3. 2. 8] 564
Melong Dorje [4. 3. 3. 2. 9] 566
Kumaradza [4. 3. 3. 2. 10] 568
Karmapa III, Rangjung Dorje [4. 3. 3. 2. 11] 572
4
LONGCEN
RAPJAMP A
[4. 4] 575
1
INTRODUCTION
THE LINEAGE OF
599 NY AK
[5. 1] 601
6
Katokpa Tampa Deshek [S.
