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Difference between revisions of "Ratnasambhava, Dhyani Buddha"

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(Created page with " The name Ratnasambhava means “the Jewel-born One” or “Origin of Jewels.” The Three Jewels are the Buddha, the Dharma and the Sangha. The Buddha is the Enligh...")
 
 
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[[Ratnasambhava ]] (Skt.; Tib. [[Rinchen Jungné]]; Tib. {{BigTibetan|[[རིན་ཆེན་འབྱུང་གནས་]]}} or {{BigTibetan|[[རིན་ཆེན་འབྱུང་ལྡན་]]}}, [[Wyl.]] [[rin chen 'byung gnas]], [[rin chen 'byung ldan]]; Eng. '[[Source of Preciousness]]') — one of the [[buddhas of the five families]].
  
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He is the [[Buddha]] of the [[ratna family]], and is usually depicted as [[yellow]] in {{Wiki|colour}} and holding a [[jewel]].
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The [[name]] [[Ratnasambhava]] means “the [[Jewel-born]] One” or “Origin of [[Jewels]].”
  
The name Ratnasambhava means “the Jewel-born One” or “Origin of Jewels.
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The [[Three Jewels]] are the [[Buddha]], the [[Dharma]] and the [[Sangha]].  
  
The Three Jewels are the Buddha, the Dharma and the Sangha.  
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The [[Buddha]] is the [[Enlightened One]], the [[Guru]], the hub of the [[wheel of the Law]]. The [[Dharma]] is the [[Teaching]], or the Law, and the [[Sangha]] is the {{Wiki|Community}}.
  
The Buddha is the Enlightened One, the Guru, the hub of the wheel of the Law. The Dharma is the Teaching, or the Law, and the Sangha is the Community.
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[[Ratnasambhava]] transmutes the [[poison]] of [[spiritual]], [[intellectual]] and [[human]] [[pride]] into the [[Wisdom of Equality]].
  
Ratnasambhava transmutes the poison of spiritual, intellectual and human pride into the Wisdom of Equality.
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[[Tibetan Buddhists]] teach that with the [[Wisdom of Equality]] one sees all things with [[divine]] impartiality and [[recognizes]] the [[divine]] equality of all [[beings]]. One sees all [[beings]] and the [[Buddha]] as having the same [[nature]]. This is a [[condition]] we need, says author {{Wiki|Giuseppe Tucci}}, “to spur our [[spiritual]] ascension and to acquire the [[trust]] to realize in ourselves the {{Wiki|status}} of a Buddha.”1
  
Tibetan Buddhists teach that with the Wisdom of Equality one sees all things with divine impartiality and recognizes the divine equality of all beings. One sees all beings and the Buddha as having the same nature. This is a condition we need, says author Giuseppe Tucci, “to spur our spiritual ascension and to acquire the trust to realize in ourselves the status of a Buddha.”1
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[[Ratnasambhava]] is the [[Dhyani Buddha]] of the [[south]]. His {{Wiki|color}} is [[yellow]], the {{Wiki|color}} of the {{Wiki|sun}} in its [[zenith]]. He {{Wiki|rules}} over the [[element of earth]] and [[embodies]] the [[skandha of feeling]] or [[sensation]].
  
Ratnasambhava is the Dhyani Buddha of the south. His color is yellow, the color of the sun in its zenith. He rules over the element of earth and embodies the skandha of feeling or sensation.
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[[Ratnasambhava]] and the [[Wish-Fulfilling Jewel]]
  
Ratnasambhava and the Wish-Fulfilling Jewel
 
  
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[[Ratnasambhava]] is sometimes shown holding his [[symbol]], the [[ratna]] ([[jewel]]) or [[chintamani]] ([[wish-fulfilling jewel]] that grants all right [[desires]]). The [[chintamani]] is a [[symbol]] of the {{Wiki|liberated}} [[mind]]. The [[ratna]] is often depicted in a threefold [[form]] as the [[triratna]], signifying the union of [[Buddha]], [[Dharma]] and [[Sangha]].
  
Ratnasambhava is sometimes shown holding his symbol, the ratna (jewel) or chintamani (wish-fulfilling jewel that grants all right desires). The chintamani is a symbol of the liberated mind. The ratna is often depicted in a threefold form as the triratna, signifying the union of Buddha, Dharma and Sangha.
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The [[animal]] that upholds [[Ratnasambhava's]] [[throne]] is the [[horse]], denoting impetus and [[liberation]].
  
The animal that upholds Ratnasambhava's throne is the horse, denoting impetus and liberation.
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[[Ratnasambhava's]] [[mudra]] is the [[varada mudra]]. It is the gesture of giving, or [[charity]], which portrays him [[offering]] [[compassion]] and [[protection]] to his [[disciples]]. (The right palm faces outward and the fingers are directed downward.)
  
Ratnasambhava's mudra is the varada mudra. It is the gesture of giving, or charity, which portrays him offering compassion and protection to his disciples. (The right palm faces outward and the fingers are directed downward.)
 
  
  
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His [[bija]] is Tram and his [[mantra]] is [[Om Ratnasambhava Tram]].
  
His bija is Tram and his mantra is Om Ratnasambhava Tram.
 
  
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<poem>
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[[mandala]] of the jinas
  
  
1. Giuseppe Tucci, The Temples of Western Tibet and Their Artistic Symbolism, ed. Lokesh Chandra (New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan, 1988), p. 152.
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position in [[mandala]] [[south]]
  
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{{Wiki|Colour}} -                 [[yellow]]
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[[Family]] -                 [[Ratna]]
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[[Mudra]] -                 giving
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[[Wisdom]] -                 [[Wisdom of sameness]]
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Emblem -               [[jewel]]
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[[Consort]] -  [[prajñā]]      [[Māmakī]]
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Other- Jinas: [[Vairocana]] | [[Akṣobhya]] | [[Amitābha]] | [[Amoghasiddhi]]
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[[Bodhisattvas]]: [[Ākāśagarbha]]
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</poem>
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1. [[Giuseppe Tucci]], The [[Temples]] of [[Western Tibet]] and Their Artistic [[Symbolism]], ed. [[Lokesh Chandra]] ({{Wiki|New Delhi}}: [[Aditya Prakashan]], 1988), p. 152.
  
  

Latest revision as of 18:48, 2 February 2021

A94f0.jpg



Ratnasambhava (Skt.; Tib. Rinchen Jungné; Tib. རིན་ཆེན་འབྱུང་གནས་ or རིན་ཆེན་འབྱུང་ལྡན་, Wyl. rin chen 'byung gnas, rin chen 'byung ldan; Eng. 'Source of Preciousness') — one of the buddhas of the five families.

He is the Buddha of the ratna family, and is usually depicted as yellow in colour and holding a jewel.

The name Ratnasambhava means “the Jewel-born One” or “Origin of Jewels.”

The Three Jewels are the Buddha, the Dharma and the Sangha.

The Buddha is the Enlightened One, the Guru, the hub of the wheel of the Law. The Dharma is the Teaching, or the Law, and the Sangha is the Community.

Ratnasambhava transmutes the poison of spiritual, intellectual and human pride into the Wisdom of Equality.

Tibetan Buddhists teach that with the Wisdom of Equality one sees all things with divine impartiality and recognizes the divine equality of all beings. One sees all beings and the Buddha as having the same nature. This is a condition we need, says author Giuseppe Tucci, “to spur our spiritual ascension and to acquire the trust to realize in ourselves the status of a Buddha.”1

Ratnasambhava is the Dhyani Buddha of the south. His color is yellow, the color of the sun in its zenith. He rules over the element of earth and embodies the skandha of feeling or sensation.

Ratnasambhava and the Wish-Fulfilling Jewel


Ratnasambhava is sometimes shown holding his symbol, the ratna (jewel) or chintamani (wish-fulfilling jewel that grants all right desires). The chintamani is a symbol of the liberated mind. The ratna is often depicted in a threefold form as the triratna, signifying the union of Buddha, Dharma and Sangha.

The animal that upholds Ratnasambhava's throne is the horse, denoting impetus and liberation.

Ratnasambhava's mudra is the varada mudra. It is the gesture of giving, or charity, which portrays him offering compassion and protection to his disciples. (The right palm faces outward and the fingers are directed downward.)


His bija is Tram and his mantra is Om Ratnasambhava Tram.



1. Giuseppe Tucci, The Temples of Western Tibet and Their Artistic Symbolism, ed. Lokesh Chandra (New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan, 1988), p. 152.



Source

[1]