Tantric Techniques (72 page)

Read Tantric Techniques Online

Authors: Jeffrey Hopkins

Tags: #Health & Fitness, #Yoga, #Body; Mind & Spirit, #Meditation, #Religion, #Buddhism, #General, #Tibetan

  • Bu-tön introduces the topic by citing a passage in the
    Wisdom Vajra Compendium,
    c
    an explanatory Tantra in the Guhyasam
    ā
    ja cycle and thus a Highest Yoga Tantra, that indicates that there is no imagination of oneself as a deity in Action Tantra:
    d

    Those who are terrified and are very cleanly, who lack the excellent bliss of a wisdom-being and lack pride in themselves as a deity, who are not an object of the unusual practice, and who practice with thoughts on the features of defects abide in Action Tantra.

    Bu-tön elaborates on the meaning:
    e

    “Those who are terrified and are very cleanly” are terrified of the profound meaning [of reality].
    f
    The meaning of “who lack the excellent bliss of a wisdom-being and pride in themselves as a deity” is that they do not generate [that is,

    a
    Extensive Presentation of the General Tantra Sets,
    86.6-88.7.

    b
    Ibid., 54.5-61.7.

    c
    ye shes rdo rje kun las btus pa zhes bya ba’i rgyud, vajrajñ
    ā
    nasamuccaya-n
    ā
    matantra;

    P84, vol. 3.

    d
    Extensive Presentation of the General Tantra Sets,
    84.4; cited by Tsong-kha-pa,
    Deity Yoga,
    47.

    e
    Extensive Presentation of the General Tantra Sets,
    86.5.

    f
    Tsong-kha-pa (
    Deity Yoga,
    58) identifies “One who is terrified” differently as referring to “several types of trainees of Action Tantras who are frightened and terrified by the activity of single-pointed cultivation of deity yoga.”

    304
    Tantric Techniques

    imagine] themselves as deities and do not [perform the practice of ] the wisdom-being [that is, the actual deity] entering into themselves. This is clear in fact and also is what earlier lamas have said. Also, such is explained in Shr
    ī
    dhara’s
    Commentary on the Difficult Points of the “Yam
    ā
    ri Tantra”: Innate Illumination
    a
    as well as a commentary on the
    Vajrapañjara Tantra,
    b
    and so forth. However:

    1. Buddhaguhya in his
      Commentary on the “Concentration Continuation”
      says:
      c

      The
      Glorious Condensed [Tantra of ] Imaginations
      d
      teaches familiarization with the selflessness of phenomena and deity yoga in a great many passages; therefore, I will not cite them here. In such tantras the bodies of deities and the repetition that is performed prior
      e
      to the secret mantra concentrations on sound [that is, before the concentrations of abiding in fire and in sound] are described. Those [rites of deity yoga] that were not described in whatsoever [tantras] due to [the mental outlook of ] trainees were set forth in the
      Questions of Sub
      ā
      hu
      f
      which is a tantra containing the rites of all tantras,
      g
      the
      Glorious Condensed [Tantra of ] Imaginations,
      and so forth.

      [Buddhaguhya] uses as his sources the
      Condensed [Tantra of ]

      a
      gshin rje gshed kyi rgyud kyi dka’ ’grel lhan cig skyes pa’i snang ba, yam
      ā
      ritantrapañjik
      ā
      sahaj
      ā
      loka
      ; P2781, vol. 66. Tsong-kha-pa cites the passage; see
      Deity Yoga,
      48.

      b
      As mentioned in an earlier note, there are three commentaries—by Devakulamah
      ā
      mati (P2326), by K
      ṛṣ
      h

      ap
      ā
      da (P2325), and by Indrabodhi (P2324), the last being Indrabh
      ū
      ti according to the Tohoku catalogue.

      c
      bsam gtan phyi ma rim par phye ba rgya cher bshad pa, dhy
      ā
      nottarapa

      ala
      ṭī
      k
      ā
      ;
      P3495, vol. 78. Tsong-kha-pa cites the first two sentences of this passage; see
      Deity Yoga,
      51.

      d
      rdo rje khro bo’i rgyal po’i rtog pa bsdus pa’i rgyud, vajrakrodhar
      ā
      jakalpalaghutantra;

      P319, vol. 7.

      e
      bsam gtan du byas
      (87.2) should read
      bsam gtan
      sngon
      du byas
      in accordance with Buddhaguhya’s text (P3495, vol. 78, 71.1.5).

      f
      dpung bzang gis zhus pa’i rgyud, sub
      ā
      huparip

      cch
      ā
      tantra;
      P428, vol. 9.

      g
      The
      Questions of Sub
      ā
      hu
      is a
      general
      Action Tantra, applicable to all lineages of trainees, as opposed to Tantras spoken only for a specific lineage, and thus contains “the rites of
      all
      tantras.”

      Controversy over Deity Yoga in Action Tantra
      305

      Imaginations,
      the
      Vairochan
      ā
      bhisambodhi Tantra,
      a
      the
      Vajra-p
      āṇ
      i Initiation Tantra ,
      b
      and so forth. Also, he describes deity yoga as being generation of oneself as a deity by way of the six deities. Moreover, his description is similar in his
      Commentary on the

      Vajravi
      ḍā
      ra

      a Tantra.”
      c

    2. The master Varabodhi, in his
      Condensed Means of Achievement of Susiddhi
      describes generation of oneself as a deity:
      d

    Do not think that the stages of the yoga of achieving a deity are not taught in Action Tantras. Though the Supramundane Victor did not teach these in most [Action Tantras], they are taught as main subjects in the
    Vajrap
    āṇ
    i Initiation
    and the
    En-try to the Ten Principles.
    e
    In brief, all feats depend on a secret mantra deity and on suchness; if these are deficient, activities of pacification and so forth will not be achieved. Hence, these should be understood through a guru’s explanations and through a little analysis of the features of tantras. Thus, a divine body is to be generated through these stages.

    These two masters do not speak of the entry of a wisdom-being [that is, an actual deity entering into the imagined deity].

    The master N
    ā
    g
    ā
    rjuna speaks of self-generation and en-try of a wisdom-being as well as initiation in his
    Means of Achievement of the Retention of the Thousand-Armed Avalokiteshvara.
    f
    Also, self-generation, entry of a wisdom-

    a
    rnam par snang mdzad chen po mngon par rdzogs par byang chub pa rnam par sprul ba, mah
    ā
    vairocan
    ā
    bhisa

    bodhivikurvat
    ī
    ;
    P126, vol. 5. Tsong-kha-pa holds that this is a Performance Tantra.

    b
    lag na rdo rje dbang bskur ba’i rgyud chen po, vajrap
    āṇ
    i-abhi

    ekamah
    ā
    tantra;
    P130, vol. 6. Tsong-kha-pa considers this a Performance Tantra.

    c
    rdo rje rnam par ’joms pa zhes bya ba’i bzungs kyi rgya cher ’grel pa rin po che gsal ba, vajravid
    ā
    ra

    i
    [or
    vid
    ā
    ra

    a
    ]
    n
    ā
    madh
    ā
    ra
    ṇīṭī
    k
    ā
    ratn
    ā
    bh
    ā
    svar
    ā
    ;
    P3504, vol. 78. The tantra itself is not extant in Tibetan, nor has the Sanskrit been located to date.

    d
    Tsong-kha-pa cites the same passage, except for the last sentence; see
    Deity Yoga,

    52. Varabodhi’s text is
    legs par grub par byed pa’i sgrub pa’i thabs bsdus pa, susiddhikaras
    ā
    dhanasa

    graha;
    P3890, vol. 79.

    e
    de kho na nyid bcu la ’jug pa, *da
    ś
    atattv
    ā
    tara
    .

    f
    spyan ras gzigs dbang phyug phyag stong sgrub thabs, sahasrabhuj
    ā
    valokite
    ś
    varas
    ā
    dha—

    306
    Tantric Techniques

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