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Difference between revisions of "Shravaka yana"

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[[Image:Shravakas.JPG|frame|Shravaka disciples from the [[Longchen Nyingtik]] [[field of merit|Field of Merit]])]
 
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|title=1. [[Shravaka yana]]
 
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|tibetan={{BigTibetan|[[ཉན་ཐོས་ཀྱི་ཐེག་པ་]]}}
 
|tibetan={{BigTibetan|[[ཉན་ཐོས་ཀྱི་ཐེག་པ་]]}}
 
|phonetics=[[nyentö kyi tekpa]]
 
|phonetics=[[nyentö kyi tekpa]]
|wylie=[[snyan thos kyi theg pa]]
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|[[wylie]]=[[snyan thos kyi theg pa]]
 
}}
 
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[[Image:Shravakas.JPG|frame|Shravaka disciples from the [[Longchen Nyingtik]] [[field of merit|Field of Merit]]]]
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'''[[Shravaka yana]]''' — the '[[vehicle]]' (Skt. [[yana]]) of [[Buddhist teachings]] followed by [[shravakas]]; a subdivision of the [[basic yana]] and the first of the [[nine yanas]] according to the [[Nyingma]] {{Wiki|classification}}.
 
'''[[Shravaka yana]]''' — the '[[vehicle]]' (Skt. [[yana]]) of [[Buddhist teachings]] followed by [[shravakas]]; a subdivision of the [[basic yana]] and the first of the [[nine yanas]] according to the [[Nyingma]] {{Wiki|classification}}.
  
Generally {{Wiki|speaking}}, the [[Sanskrit]] [[word]] ‘[[shravaka]]’ has both the meaning of listening and of hearing, so [the [[Tibetan]] translation [[nyenthö]] literally means] ‘listener-hearer.’ Alternatively, the term can be understood to mean ‘listening and proclaiming,’ in the [[sense]] that the [[shravakas]] rely on [[masters]] and then proclaim to others all the words their [[teachers]] have spoken.
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Generally {{Wiki|speaking}}, the [[Sanskrit]] [[word]] ‘[[shravaka]]’ has both the meaning of listening and of hearing, so [the [[Tibetan]] translation [[nyenthö]] literally means] ‘[[listener-hearer]].’  
 +
 
 +
Alternatively, the term can be understood to mean ‘listening and proclaiming,’ in the [[sense]] that the [[shravakas]] rely on [[masters]] and then proclaim to others all the words their [[teachers]] have spoken.
 +
 
  
 
==Overview Given by [[Alak Zenkar Rinpoche]]==
 
==Overview Given by [[Alak Zenkar Rinpoche]]==
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===Entry Point===
 
===Entry Point===
  
The [[shravakas]] are motivated by a [[feeling]] of [[renunciation]], the wish to escape from all the [[realms]] of [[samsara]] by themselves alone. With this [[motivation]], they receive one of the seven sets of [[pratimoksha vows]], those of a {{Wiki|male}} or {{Wiki|female}} lay [[practitioner]], [[novice monk]] or [[nun]], probationary [[nun]], or fully [[ordained]] [[monk]] or [[nun]], and having received these [[vows]], they practise [[moral]] restraint, keeping their [[vows]] unimpaired, repairing any impairments that do occur, and so on.
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 +
The [[shravakas]] are motivated by a [[feeling]] of [[renunciation]], the wish to escape from all the [[realms]] of [[samsara]] by themselves alone.  
 +
 
 +
With this [[motivation]], they receive one of the seven sets of [[pratimoksha vows]], those of a {{Wiki|male}} or {{Wiki|female}} lay [[practitioner]], [[novice monk]] or [[nun]], probationary [[nun]], or fully [[ordained]] [[monk]] or [[nun]], and having received these [[vows]], they practise [[moral]] {{Wiki|restraint}}, keeping their [[vows]] unimpaired, repairing any impairments that do occur, and so on.
 +
 
  
 
===[[View]]===
 
===[[View]]===
  
As the basis of their [[path]], they determine their [[view]] by focusing upon all [[phenomena]] included within the [[five aggregates]] and [[realizing]] that they are devoid of any personal [[self]]. They do not understand that all material and [[conscious]] [[phenomena]] are devoid of true [[reality]], and, asserting a truly real [[partless particle]] in [[perceived]] [[objects]] and an [[indivisible moment of consciousness]], they fail to realize the absence of [[phenomenal]] [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]].
 
  
=== [[Meditation]] ===
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As the basis of their [[path]], they determine their [[view]] by focusing upon all [[phenomena]] included within the [[five aggregates]] and [[realizing]] that they are devoid of any personal [[self]].
 +
 
 +
They do not understand that all material and [[conscious]] [[phenomena]] are devoid of true [[reality]], and, asserting a truly real [[partless particle]] in [[perceived]] [[objects]] and an [[indivisible moment of consciousness]], they fail to realize the absence of [[phenomenal]] [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
===[[Meditation]]===
 +
 
 +
 
 +
In terms of the [[path]], they practise both [[shamatha]] and [[vipashyana meditation]].
 +
 
 +
They realize the [[state]] of [[shamatha]] by [[abandoning]] {{Wiki|obstacles}} and [[cultivating]] factors conducive to [[samadhi]], according to the [[nine stages of resting the mind]] and so on, and generate the [[wisdom]] of [[vipashyana]] by [[meditating]] on the [[sixteen aspects of the four noble truths]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
===Conduct===
 +
 
  
In terms of the [[path]], they practise both [[shamatha]] and [[vipashyana]] [[meditation]]. They realize the state of [[shamatha]] by [[abandoning]] {{Wiki|obstacles}} and cultivating factors conducive to [[samadhi]], according to the [[nine stages of resting the mind]] and so on, and generate the [[wisdom]] of [[vipashyana]] by [[meditating]] on the [[sixteen aspects of the four noble truths]].
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They keep to the twelve [[ascetic]] practices that avoid the two extreme [[forms]] of [[lifestyle]], over-indulgence in [[sense]] [[pleasures]] and excessive self-punishment.
  
=== Conduct ===
 
  
They keep to the twelve [[ascetic]] practices that avoid the two extreme [[forms]] of lifestyle, over-indulgence in [[sense]] [[pleasures]] and excessive self-punishment.
+
===Results===
  
=== Results ===
 
  
They attain any one of eight levels of [[fruition]], corresponding to the [[degree]] to which they have abandoned the [[kleshas]] of the [[three realms]]. There are eight levels because the four results of [[stream-enterer]], [[once-returner]], [[non-returner]] and [[arhat]] are each divided into the two stages known as the [[emerging]] and the established.  
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They attain any one of eight levels of [[fruition]], [[corresponding]] to the [[degree]] to which they have abandoned the [[kleshas]] of the [[three realms]]. There are eight levels because the four results of [[stream-enterer]], [[once-returner]], [[non-returner]] and [[arhat]] are each divided into the two stages known as the [[emerging]] and the established.  
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{{RigpaWiki}}
 
{{RigpaWiki}}
 
  
 
[[Category:Nine Yanas]]
 
[[Category:Nine Yanas]]

Latest revision as of 12:21, 26 July 2023

126dfhn.jpg




[[Image:Shravakas.JPG|frame|Shravaka disciples from the Longchen Nyingtik Field of Merit)]

The Nine Yanas
1. Shravaka yana
Skt. śrāvaka yāna
Tib. ཉན་ཐོས་ཀྱི་ཐེག་པ་
nyentö kyi tekpa
Wyl. {{{wylie}}}
Read main article for nine yana overview
Three Outer Yanas Leading From the Origin
1. Shravaka yana
2. Pratyekabuddha yana
3. Bodhisattva yana
Three Yanas of Vedic Asceticism
4. Yana of kriya tantra
5. Yana of charya tantra
6. Yana of yoga tantra
Three Yanas of Powerful Transformative Methods
7. Yana of tantra mahayoga
8. Yana of scriptural transmission anuyoga
9. Yana of pith instruction atiyoga

Shravaka yana — the 'vehicle' (Skt. yana) of Buddhist teachings followed by shravakas; a subdivision of the basic yana and the first of the nine yanas according to the Nyingma classification.

Generally speaking, the Sanskrit wordshravaka’ has both the meaning of listening and of hearing, so [the Tibetan translation nyenthö literally means] ‘listener-hearer.’

Alternatively, the term can be understood to mean ‘listening and proclaiming,’ in the sense that the shravakas rely on masters and then proclaim to others all the words their teachers have spoken.


Overview Given by Alak Zenkar Rinpoche

Entry Point

The shravakas are motivated by a feeling of renunciation, the wish to escape from all the realms of samsara by themselves alone.

With this motivation, they receive one of the seven sets of pratimoksha vows, those of a male or female lay practitioner, novice monk or nun, probationary nun, or fully ordained monk or nun, and having received these vows, they practise moral restraint, keeping their vows unimpaired, repairing any impairments that do occur, and so on.


View

As the basis of their path, they determine their view by focusing upon all phenomena included within the five aggregates and realizing that they are devoid of any personal self.

They do not understand that all material and conscious phenomena are devoid of true reality, and, asserting a truly real partless particle in perceived objects and an indivisible moment of consciousness, they fail to realize the absence of phenomenal identity.


Meditation

In terms of the path, they practise both shamatha and vipashyana meditation.

They realize the state of shamatha by abandoning obstacles and cultivating factors conducive to samadhi, according to the nine stages of resting the mind and so on, and generate the wisdom of vipashyana by meditating on the sixteen aspects of the four noble truths.


Conduct

They keep to the twelve ascetic practices that avoid the two extreme forms of lifestyle, over-indulgence in sense pleasures and excessive self-punishment.


Results

They attain any one of eight levels of fruition, corresponding to the degree to which they have abandoned the kleshas of the three realms. There are eight levels because the four results of stream-enterer, once-returner, non-returner and arhat are each divided into the two stages known as the emerging and the established.


Source

RigpaWiki:Shravaka yana