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Difference between revisions of "Bhūmisparśa Mudrā"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
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     [[Sjoquist]] p. 33 [[Bhūmisparśa Mudrā]]
 
     [[Sjoquist]] p. 33 [[Bhūmisparśa Mudrā]]
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     [[chùdì yìn]] [[触地印 觸地印]]  
 
     [[chùdì yìn]] [[触地印 觸地印]]  
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     This gesture is literally called “[[touching the earth]].”  
 
     This gesture is literally called “[[touching the earth]].”  
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 +
  
 
It is said that when the [[Buddha]] was [[meditating]] under the [[fig tree]], he was approached by the lord of [[earthly]] [[illusion]], [[Mara]], who sought to divert him from his [[path to enlightenment]].  
 
It is said that when the [[Buddha]] was [[meditating]] under the [[fig tree]], he was approached by the lord of [[earthly]] [[illusion]], [[Mara]], who sought to divert him from his [[path to enlightenment]].  
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This is [[mudrā]] is not seen except in {{Wiki|representations}} of the [[Buddha]] himself.
 
This is [[mudrā]] is not seen except in {{Wiki|representations}} of the [[Buddha]] himself.
 
</poem>
 
</poem>
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{{R}}
 
{{R}}
 
[http://anthro.ucsd.edu/~dkjordan/chin/shoouyinn/MudrasDescribed.html anthro.ucsd.edu]  
 
[http://anthro.ucsd.edu/~dkjordan/chin/shoouyinn/MudrasDescribed.html anthro.ucsd.edu]  

Latest revision as of 13:15, 15 February 2024

BhumisparshaMudra.JPG






Earth-Witness Gesture


    Sjoquist p. 33 Bhūmisparśa Mudrā

    chùdì yìn 触地印 觸地印

    This gesture is literally called “touching the earth.”



It is said that when the Buddha was meditating under the fig tree, he was approached by the lord of earthly illusion, Mara, who sought to divert him from his path to enlightenment.

But the Buddha moved his right hand from his position of meditation (now called the Dhyāna mudrā) and pointed down and called upon the earth itself to witness that he had resolved the problem of suffering.

Thus he turned away Mara and his temptations. (Some say that he called upon earth to testify to his victory over Mara.)

(This is probably a mythologized variant of the story told in chapter 16 of the on-line biography of the Buddha.

This is mudrā is not seen except in representations of the Buddha himself.


Source

anthro.ucsd.edu