Articles by alphabetic order
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 Ā Ī Ñ Ś Ū Ö Ō
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0


Difference between revisions of "Drupgyü lineage"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with " {{BigTibetan|སྒྲུབ་བརྒྱུད}} drupgyü; sgrub brgyud/ The lineage of teachings and masters where emphasis is placed on one's perso...")
 
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
+
[[File:0069.JPG|thumb|250px|]]
{{BigTibetan|[[སྒྲུབ་བརྒྱུད]]}}  [[drupgyü]]; [[sgrub brgyud]]/ The [[lineage]] of teachings and [[masters]] where emphasis is placed on one's personal [[experience]] of the teachings as opposed to the {{Wiki|scholastic}} [[lineage]] of expounding the [[scriptures]] ([[bshad brgyud]]). This phrase also refers to the [[Eight Great Chariots of the Practice Lineage]] ([[sgrub brgyud shing rta brgyad]]), the eight [[schools of Buddhism]] that flourished in [[Tibet]]: [[Nyingma]], [[Kadam]], [[Marpa Kagyü]], [[Shangpa Kagyü]], [[Sakya]], [[Jordruk]], Nyendrub, [[Shije]] and Chö. Today only the first five survive as {{Wiki|independent}} [[lineages]]
+
{{BigTibetan|[[སྒྲུབ་བརྒྱུད]]}}  [[drupgyü]]; [[sgrub brgyud]]/ The [[lineage]] of teachings and [[masters]] where emphasis is placed on one's personal [[experience]] of the teachings as opposed to the {{Wiki|scholastic}} [[lineage]] of expounding the [[scriptures]] ([[bshad brgyud]]). This phrase also refers to the [[Eight Great Chariots of the Practice Lineage]] ([[sgrub brgyud shing rta brgyad]]), the eight [[schools of Buddhism]] that flourished in [[Tibet]]: [[Nyingma]], [[Kadam]], [[Marpa Kagyü]], [[Shangpa Kagyü]], [[Sakya]], [[Jordruk]], [[Nyendrub]], [[Shije]] and [[Chö]]. Today only the first five survive as {{Wiki|independent}} [[lineages]]
  
 
Practice [[Lineage]], [[meditative]] [[tradition]], [[sadhana]] [[lineage]], the [[lineage]] of [[accomplishment]]
 
Practice [[Lineage]], [[meditative]] [[tradition]], [[sadhana]] [[lineage]], the [[lineage]] of [[accomplishment]]
  
Practice [[lineage]]. The [[lineage]] of [[masters]] where the emphasis is one's personal [[experience]] of the teachings as opposed to the {{Wiki|scholastic}} [[lineage]] of expounding the [[scriptures]] (bshad brgyud). See [[Eight Practice Lineages]] .
+
Practice [[lineage]]. The [[lineage]] of [[masters]] where the emphasis is one's personal [[experience]] of the teachings as opposed to the {{Wiki|scholastic}} [[lineage]] of expounding the [[scriptures]] ([[bshad brgyud]]). See [[Eight Practice Lineages]] .
  
  
 
practice [[lineage]], [[lineage]] of teachings and [[masters]] where emphasis is placed on one's personal [[experience]] of the teachings, [[Lineage]] of the [[Siddhas]], practice [[lineages]]
 
practice [[lineage]], [[lineage]] of teachings and [[masters]] where emphasis is placed on one's personal [[experience]] of the teachings, [[Lineage]] of the [[Siddhas]], practice [[lineages]]
 +
[http://dictionary.thlib.org/internal_definitions/public_term/6329?list_view=true&mode=browse dictionary.thlib.org]
 +
[[Category:Kagyu Lineages]]

Latest revision as of 07:04, 29 January 2014

0069.JPG

སྒྲུབ་བརྒྱུད drupgyü; sgrub brgyud/ The lineage of teachings and masters where emphasis is placed on one's personal experience of the teachings as opposed to the scholastic lineage of expounding the scriptures (bshad brgyud). This phrase also refers to the Eight Great Chariots of the Practice Lineage (sgrub brgyud shing rta brgyad), the eight schools of Buddhism that flourished in Tibet: Nyingma, Kadam, Marpa Kagyü, Shangpa Kagyü, Sakya, Jordruk, Nyendrub, Shije and Chö. Today only the first five survive as independent lineages

Practice Lineage, meditative tradition, sadhana lineage, the lineage of accomplishment

Practice lineage. The lineage of masters where the emphasis is one's personal experience of the teachings as opposed to the scholastic lineage of expounding the scriptures (bshad brgyud). See Eight Practice Lineages .


practice lineage, lineage of teachings and masters where emphasis is placed on one's personal experience of the teachings, Lineage of the Siddhas, practice lineages dictionary.thlib.org