The Kangyur

General Sūtra Section

མདོ་སྡེ།

The principal collection of 266 sūtras, varied in length, subject, interlocutors and origins.

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The Mahāsūtra on the Five and Three [Views]
[no Sanskrit title]
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མདོ་ཆེན་པོ་ལྔ་གསུམ་པ།
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The Sūtra of Throwing Stones
Śilākṣiptasūtra
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རྡོ་འཕངས་པའི་མདོ།
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The Sūtra on Examples of Youth
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གཞོན་ནུའི་དཔེའི་མདོ།
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297
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Multitude of Constituents
Saddharma­puṇḍarīka
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ཁམས་མང་པོ་པ།
In this short discourse, also found in a similar form in the Pali canon, the Buddha gives a teaching to Ānanda in which he confirms the suggestion that all negative experiences arise from being foolish, not from being learned, and goes on to summarize for Ānanda what distinguishes a learned person from a foolish one. The learned person, he says, is learned in the constituents, in the sense fields, in dependent origination, and in knowing what is possible and impossible. He then elaborates briefly on each.
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The Gaṇḍī Sūtra
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གཎ་ཌཱིའི་མདོ།
While the Buddha is dwelling in the Bamboo Grove monastery near Rājagṛha, together with a thousand monks and a host of bodhisattvas, King Prasenajit arises from his seat, bows at the Buddha’s feet, and asks him how to uphold the Dharma in his kingdom during times of conflict. In reply the Buddha instructs the king about the gaṇḍī, a wooden ritual instrument, and tells him how the sound of this instrument, used for Dharma practice in a temple or monastery, quells conflict and strife for all who hear it. He describes how to make, consecrate, and sound the gaṇḍī. He explains that the gaṇḍī symbolizes the Perfection of Insight and describes in detail the many benefits it confers.
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The Sūtra on Timings for the Gaṇḍī
Ratnamegha
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གཎ་ཌཱིའི་དུས་ཀྱི་མདོ།
In this short text, the Buddha instructs monks on the correct timings for sounding the gaṇḍī during each of the twelve months of the year. The timings are given based on the use of a solar clock.
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The Sūtra on Reliance upon a Virtuous Spiritual Friend
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དགེ་བའི་བཤེས་གཉེན་བསྟེན་པའི་མདོ།
Just prior to his passing away, the Buddha Śākyamuni reminds his disciples of the importance of living with a qualified spiritual teacher. Ānanda, the Blessed One’s attendant, attempts to confirm his teacher’s statement, saying that a virtuous spiritual friend is indeed half of one’s spiritual life. Correcting his disciple’s understanding, the Buddha explains that a qualified guide is the whole of, rather than half of, the holy life, and that by relying upon a spiritual friend beings will be released from birth and attain liberation from all types of suffering.
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The Sūtra on Going Forth
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མངོན་པར་འབྱུང་བའི་མདོ།
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What Mendicants Hold Most Dear
Rāṣṭrapāla­paripṛcchā
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དགེ་སློང་ལ་རབ་ཏུ་གཅེས་པ་།
What Mendicants Hold Most Dear contains the Buddha’s answer to a question by Upāli, the Buddha’s foremost disciple in knowledge and mastery of the Vinaya. Upāli asks the Buddha to teach about the nature, types, and obligations of mendicants and about the meaning of this term. For the benefit of the assembled mendicants and mendicants in general, the Buddha explains that their nature is restraint, their obligations consist of disciplined conduct, and their types are the genuine mendicants who abide by disciplined conduct and those who are not genuine and thus do not so abide. When one of the Buddha’s answers given in similes seems obscure, he offers further clarification upon Upāli’s request. The Buddha explains the advantages of maintaining disciplined conduct, thus urging the mendicants to treasure it, and he warns against disregarding it while wearing the mendicant’s robes.
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303
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The Sūtra on Having Moral Discipline
Vajraketuprajñāpāramitā
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ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས་ཡང་དག་པར་ལྡན་པའི་མདོ།
At Prince Jeta’s Grove in Śrāvastī, the Buddha teaches his saṅgha about the benefits of having moral discipline and the importance of guarding it. It is difficult, he says, to obtain a human life and encounter the teachings of a buddha, let alone to then take monastic vows and maintain moral discipline. But unlike just losing that one human life, which comes and then inevitably is gone, the consequences of failing in moral discipline are grave and experienced over billions of lifetimes. The Buddha continues in verse, praising moral discipline and its necessity as a foundation for engaging in the Dharma and attaining nirvāṇa. He concludes his discourse with a reflection on the folly of pursuing fleeting worldly enjoyments.
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The Sūtra Examining the Virtuous and Non-Virtuous Effects of the Collection of Five Downfalls
Vimaladattaparipṛcchāsūtra
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ལྟུང་བ་སྡེ་ལྔའི་དགེ་བ་དང་མི་དགེ་བའི་འབྲས་བུ་བརྟག་པའི་མདོ།
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The Sūtra “Declaring What Is Supreme”
Tathāgataśrīsamayasūtra
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མཆོག་ཏུ་གདགས་པའི་མདོ།
In The Sūtra “Declaring What Is Supreme”, the Buddha, while spending the rainy season at the Bamboo Grove in Rājagṛha, teaches his saṅgha of śrāvakas that the Buddha is supreme among all beings, the Dharma of being free of attachment is supreme among all dharmas, and the Saṅgha is supreme among all communities and groups. Those who have faith in these three will be reborn as supreme among gods or humans.
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Teaching on the Practice of the Austerities, from The Path of Liberation""
Sarva­buddha­viṣayāvatāra­jñānālokālaṃkāra
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རྣམ་གྲོལ་ལམ་ལས་སྦྱངས་པའི་ཡོན་ཏན་བསྟན་པ།
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The Limits of Life
Ekagāthā
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ཚེའི་མཐའ།
The Sūtra on the Limits of Life presents a detailed and systematic account of the lifespans of different beings that inhabit the universe, progressing from the lower to the higher realms of existence as outlined in early Buddhist cosmology. The Buddha describes the lifespans of beings in terms of the relationship or proportion between the lifespans of the devas of the form realm and the lifespans in the eight major hot hells, the latter being significantly longer than the former.
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Questions Regarding Death and Transmigration
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ཚེ་འཕོ་བ་ཇི་ལྟར་འགྱུར་བ་ཞུས་པ།
Questions Regarding Death and Transmigration contains explanations of Buddhist views on the nature of life and death, and a number of philosophical arguments against non-Buddhist conceptions, notably some based broadly on the Vedas. The sūtra is set in the town of Kapilavastu at the time of the funeral of a young man of the Śākya clan. King Śuddhodana wonders about the validity of the ritual offerings being made for the deceased by the family and asks the Buddha seven questions about current beliefs on death and the afterlife.
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The Sūtra on Impermanence (1)
Aparimitāyur­jñāna­sūtra
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མི་རྟག་པ་ཉིད་ཀྱི་མདོ།
In this brief sūtra, the Buddha reminds his followers of one of the principal characteristics of saṃsāric existence: the reality of impermanence. The four things cherished most in this world, the Buddha says—namely, good health, youth, prosperity, and life—are all impermanent. He closes his teaching with a verse, asking how beings, afflicted as they are by impermanence, can take delight in anything desirable, and indirectly urging his disciples to practice the path of liberation.
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The Sūtra on Impermanence (2)
[no Sanskrit title]
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མི་རྟག་པ་ཉིད་ཀྱི་མདོ།
The Sūtra on Impermanence (Anityatāsūtra) is a short discourse on the impermanence of conditioned states. The Buddha explains that it does not matter what one’s social status is, whether one is born in a heaven, or even if one has realized awakening and is an arhat, a pratyekabuddha, or a buddha. All that lives will eventually die. He concludes with a series of verses on impermanence exhorting the audience to understand that happiness is to bring conditioned states to rest.
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Teaching the Eleven Thoughts
Uṣṇīṣavijayā­dhāraṇī
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འདུ་ཤེས་བཅུ་གཅིག་བསྟན་པ།
Teaching the Eleven Thoughts takes place just before the Buddha attains parinirvāṇa, when he bequeaths his final testament to the assembled monks in the form of a brief discourse on eleven thoughts toward which the mind should be directed at the moment of death. He exhorts his listeners to develop nonattachment, love, freedom from resentment, a sense of moral responsibility, a proper perspective on virtue and vice, courage in the face of the next life, a perception of impermanence and the lack of self, and the knowledge that nirvāṇa is peace.
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The Mahāsūtra “On Entering the City of Vaiśālī”
Aṣṭā­daśa­sāhasrikā­prajñā­pāramitā
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ཡངས་པའི་གྲོང་ཁྱེར་དུ་འཇུག་པའི་མདོ་ཆེན་པོ།
Invited to visit the city of Vaiśālī, which has been ravaged by a terrible epidemic, the Buddha instructs Ānanda to stand at the city’s gate and recite a proclamation, a long mantra, and some verses that powerfully evoke spiritual well-being. Ānanda does so, and the epidemic comes to an end.
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Auspicious Night
Prajñāpāramitānāmāṣṭaśataka
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མཚན་མོ་བཟང་པོ།
In Auspicious Night, the deity Candana appears before a monk in Rājagṛha and asks if he knows of the Buddha’s teaching called Auspicious Night. Since the monk has never heard of it, the deity encourages the monk to ask the Buddha himself, who is staying nearby. At the monk’s request, the Buddha teaches him how to continuously remain in a contemplative state by following these guidelines: do not follow after the past, do not be anxious about the future, and do not be led astray or become distracted by presently arisen states. The Buddha then teaches several mantras and incantations for the welfare of all sentient beings and explains the apotropaic and salvific benefits of the instructions.
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Entry into the Gloomy Forest
Vimalaprabhā­nāma­kālacakra­tantraṭīkā
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མུན་གྱི་ནགས་ཚལ་གྱི་སྒོ།
Entry into the Gloomy Forest tells the story of the eminent brahmin Pradarśa, who is converted to Buddhism upon receiving teachings from the Buddha and goes on to establish a Buddhist community in the Gloomy Forest. The text describes the exceptional circumstances of Pradarśa’s birth, his going forth as a monk, and the miraculous founding of the monastic community in the Gloomy Forest. This is followed by the Buddha’s account of the deeds and aspirations undertaken by Pradarśa in his previous lives that have resulted in the auspicious circumstances of his present life.
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The Father and Mother Sūtra
Mahā­sāhasra­pramardanī
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ཕ་མའི་མདོ།
This short discourse was taught to an audience of monks in the Jeta Grove in Śrāvastī. In it, the Buddha explains, by means of similes, the importance of venerating and attending to one’s father and mother. The Buddha concludes by stating that those who venerate their father and mother are wise, for in this life they will not be disparaged, and in the next life they will be reborn in the higher realms.
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The Sūtra on the Four Truths
[no Sanskrit title]
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བདེན་པ་བཞིའི་མདོ།
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Toh
317
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36
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Distinctly Ascertaining the Meanings
Candragarbha­prajñāpāramitā
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དོན་རྣམ་པར་ངེས་པ།
The sūtra Distinctly Ascertaining the Meanings begins with an introductory section, offering the context of the teachings. An explanation of twenty-seven topics is then presented by the Buddha, starting with the five aggregates and ending with the eighty minor marks of a great person. The Buddha then concludes by exhorting the bhikṣus to meditate in solitude and avoid negligence.
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The Dharma Discourse on the Vast Meaning
Buddha­hṛdaya­dhāraṇī
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དོན་རྒྱས་པའི་ཆོས་ཀྱི་རྣམ་གྲངས།
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The Marvelous Dharma Discourse
[no Sanskrit title]
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རྨད་དུ་བྱུང་བའི་ཆོས་ཀྱི་རྣམ་གྲངས།
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Describing the Benefits of Producing Representations of the Thus-Gone One
Carmavastu
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དེ་བཞིན་གཤེགས་པའི་གཟུགས་བརྙན་བཞག་པའི་ཕན་ཡོན་ཡང་དག་པར་བརྗོད་པ།
In this sūtra, the Buddha Śākyamuni tells a group of monks how they should respond when asked about the karmic benefits accrued by patrons who create representations of the Buddha. He explains five kinds of benefits that such virtuous deeds bring.
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The Verses on Circumambulating Shrines
Mahāparinirvāṇamahāyānasūtra
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མཆོད་རྟེན་བསྐོར་བའི་ཚིགས་སུ་བཅད་པ།
In response to a question from Śāriputra, the Buddha extols the benefits that result from the practice of circumambulating shrines, that is, walking around them while keeping them on the right-hand side. Such benefits include being reborn in beautiful and healthy bodies with intelligent minds and virtuous qualities, in fortunate and privileged circumstances, and in various heavenly realms. Ultimately, the Buddha says, such practice may even result in the achievement of different types of awakening.
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Verses for Prasenajit
Sarvāntarāyikasaṃgrāsa­dhāraṇīmantra
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གསལ་རྒྱལ་གྱི་ཚིགས་བཅད།
In The Verses for Prasenajit, the Buddha proclaims the benefits of constructing, beautifying, maintaining, and worshiping the stūpas and images of awakened beings who have passed away.
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The Single Stanza
[no Sanskrit title]
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ཚིགས་སུ་བཅད་པ་གཅིག་པ།
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The Four Stanzas
Kāraṇḍa­vyūha
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ཚིགས་སུ་བཅད་པ་བཞི་པ།
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The Verses of Nāga King Drum
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ཀླུའི་རྒྱལ་པོ་རྔ་སྒྲའི་ཚིགས་སུ་བཅད་པ།
The Verses of Nāga King Drum contains the Buddha’s narration of a tale from one of his past lives as the nāga king Drum. While traveling with his younger brother Tambour, they come under verbal attack by another nāga named Drumbeat. Tambour’s anger at their mistreatment and desire for retaliation prompts Drum to counsel Tambour on the virtues of patience and nonviolence in the face of aggression and abusiveness. Through a series of didactic aphorisms, he advises his brother to meet disrespect and persecution with serenity, patience, compassion, and insight, in order to accomplish what is best for oneself and others. The Buddha now recounts King Drum’s wise counsel as a helpful instruction for his own followers.
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Chapters of Utterances on Specific Topics
Maitreya­prasthāna
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ཆེད་དུ་བརྗོད་པའི་ཚོམས།
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327
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Sūtra of the True Person
Maṅgalagāthā
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སྐྱེས་བུ་དམ་པའི་མདོ།
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The Sūtra of Nanda’s Going Forth
Dharmadhātu­prakṛtyasambheda­nirdeśa
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དགའ་བོ་རབ་ཏུ་བྱུང་བའི་མདོ།
In this sūtra, the Buddha Śākyamuni, accompanied by Ānanda, visits the house of Nanda during his stay in Banyan Grove near Kapilavastu. A discourse ensues in which the Buddha explains to Nanda the importance and benefits of going forth as a monk. Nanda expresses hesitation about going forth, so the Buddha explains by means of analogies how fortunate Nanda is to have obtained an auspicious human birth, to have met the Buddha, and to have the opportunity to become a monk. Nanda is deeply impressed by the Buddha’s teaching and decides to renounce worldly life and go forth.
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329
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The Devatā Sūtra
Tathāgata­guṇa­jñānācintya­viṣayāvatāra­nirdeśa
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ལྷའི་མདོ།
A radiant divine being appears before the Buddha shortly before dawn and asks a series of questions, in the form of riddles, about how best to live a good life. The Buddha’s responses constitute a concise and direct teaching on some of the core orientations and values of Buddhism, touching on the three poisons, the virtues of body, speech, and mind, and providing wisdom for daily life.
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330
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The Shorter Devatā Sūtra
Dharmaketusūtra
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ལྷའི་མདོ་ཉུང་ངུ།
While staying in Śrāvastī, the Buddha is approached by an unnamed “divine being,” who inquires as to what behavior merits rebirth in the higher realms. In response, the Buddha explains, in a series of concise and powerful verses, that abandoning each of the ten nonvirtues—killing, taking what is not given, sexual misconduct, telling lies, slander, harsh words, idle talk, covetousness, ill will, and wrong views—and embracing their opposites, the ten virtues, will lead to rebirth in the higher realms.
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The Sūtra of the Moon (2)
Vikurvāṇarājaparipṛcchāsūtra
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ཟླ་བའི་མདོ།
The Sūtra of the Moon (2) is a short text that presents a Buddhist description of a lunar eclipse. On one occasion, while the Buddha is residing in Campā, the moon is covered by Rāhu, lord of the asuras, which causes an eclipse. The god of the moon asks the Buddha for refuge, after which the Buddha urges Rāhu to release the moon. Seeing this, Bali, another lord of the asuras, asks Rāhu why he did so. Rāhu explains that if he had not released the moon, his head would have split into seven pieces. Thereafter, Bali utters a verse praising the emergence of buddhas. Besides being included in the Kangyur, in the Chinese Āgamas, and the Pali Nikāyas, The Sūtra of the Moon (2) was included in collections of texts recited for protection.
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The Penthouse Sūtra
Bhikṣuṇīvinayavibhaṅga
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ཁང་བརྩེགས་མདོ།
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The Sūtra of Vasiṣṭha
[no Sanskrit title]
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གནས་འཇོག་གི་མདོ།
While residing in Nyagrodha Park in Kapilavastu, the Buddha meets an emaciated, long-haired brahmin named Vasiṣṭha. When the Buddha asks Vasiṣṭha why he looks this way, Vasiṣṭha explains that it is because he is observing a month-long fast. The Buddha then asks him if he maintains the eightfold observance of the noble ones, prompting an exchange between the two about what the eightfold observance entails and how much merit is to be gained by maintaining it. After outlining the eightfold observance, the Buddha tells Vasiṣṭha that there is far more merit to be had in maintaining it, even just once, than there is to be gained by making offerings. At the end of the sūtra, Vasiṣṭha takes refuge in the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Saṅgha, and he pledges to maintain the eightfold observance and practice generosity in tandem.
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The Sūtra of Nandika
Poṣadhavastu
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དགའ་བ་ཅན་གྱི་མདོ།
While staying at the Vulture Peak Mountain in Rājagṛha, the Buddha describes the negative consequences of breaking each one of the five basic precepts to the layman Nandika and five hundred other lay practitioners. This sūtra is often mentioned and quoted in traditional Buddhist works, mostly concerning the consequences of inebriation by alcohol.
By:
Toh
335
Chapter
7
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Sūtra on the Ringing Staff
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འཁར་གསིལ་གྱི་མདོ།
In this short sūtra, the Buddha first instructs the monks to carry the ringing staff and then provides a brief introduction to its significance. In response to Venerable Mahākāśyapa’s queries, the Buddha gives a more detailed explanation of the attributes of the staff and the benefits that can be derived from holding it. In the course of his exposition, he also elucidates the rich symbolism of its parts, such as the four prongs and the twelve rings. Finally, the Buddha explains that while the ringing staff is carried by all buddhas of the past, present, and future, the number of prongs on the staff might vary.
By:
Toh
336
Chapter
3
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Rite for the Protocols Associated with Carrying the Ringing Staff
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འཁར་གསིལ་འཆང་བའི་ཀུན་སྤྱོད་པའི་ཆོ་ག
The Rite for the Protocols Associated with Carrying the Ringing Staff is a short text that deals with the practical matters relating to the use of the mendicant’s staff known in Sanskrit as a khakkhara, or “rattling staff.” It begins with a simple ritual during which a Buddhist monk ceremoniously takes up the ringing staff in front of his monastic teacher. The text then provides a list of twenty-five rules governing the proper use of the staff. The rules stipulate how a Buddhist monk should or should not handle it in his daily life, especially when he goes on alms rounds and when he travels.
By:
Toh
337
Chapter
5
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Sūtra of the Wheel of Dharma
[no Sanskrit title]
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ཆོས་ཀྱི་འཁོར་ལོའི་མདོ།
The Sūtra of the Wheel of Dharma contains the Buddha’s teaching to his five former spiritual companions on the four truths that he had discovered as part of his awakening: (1) suffering, (2) the origin of suffering, (3) the cessation of suffering, and (4) the path leading to the cessation of suffering. According to all the Buddhist traditions, this is the first teaching the Buddha gave to explain his awakened insight to others.
By:
Toh
338
Chapter
44
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Exposition of Karma
Buddhakṣetravyūhanirdeśasūtra
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ལས་རྣམ་པ་འབྱེད་པ།
In The Exposition of Karma, the Buddha presents to the brahmin youth Śuka Taudeyaputra a discourse on the workings of karma. This is enlivened by many examples drawn from the rich heritage of Buddhist narrative literature, providing a detailed analysis of how deeds lead to specific consequences in the future. For the Buddhist, this treatise answers many questions pertaining to moral causation, examining specific life situations and their underlying karmic causes and emphasizing the key role that intention plays in the Buddhist ethic of responsibility.
By:
Toh
339
Chapter
24
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
Transformation of Karma
Mahābherīhārakaparivartasūtra
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ལས་ཀྱི་རྣམ་པར་འགྱུར་བ།
In Transformation of Karma the Buddha is staying in Prince Jeta’s Grove in Śrāvastī, where he is visited by the brahmin youth Śuka, who asks the Blessed One to explain the reason why living beings appear so diversely. The Buddha answers Śuka’s question with a discourse on various categories of actions as well as rebirth and the actions leading to it. The discourse presents fifty-one categories of actions, followed by explanations of the negative consequences of transgressing the five precepts observed by all Buddhists, the advantages gained through caitya worship, and the meritorious results of specific acts of generosity.
By:
Toh
340
Chapter
871
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Hundred Deeds
Sarva­buddhāṅgavatī­dhāraṇī
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ལས་བརྒྱ་པ།
The sūtra The Hundred Deeds, whose title could also be translated as The Hundred Karmas, is a collection of stories known as avadāna—a narrative genre widely represented in the Sanskrit Buddhist literature and its derivatives—comprising more than 120 individual texts. It includes narratives of Buddha Śākyamuni’s notable deeds and foundational teachings, the stories of other well-known Buddhist figures, and a variety of other tales featuring people from all walks of ancient Indian life and beings from all six realms of existence. The texts sometimes include stretches of verse. In the majority of the stories the Buddha’s purpose in recounting the past lives of one or more individuals is to make definitive statements about the karmic ripening of actions across multiple lifetimes, and the sūtra is perhaps the best known of the many works in the Kangyur on this theme.
By:
Toh
341
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Sūtra of the Wise and Foolish
Maitreya­paripṛcchā­dharmāṣṭa
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མཛངས་བླུན་གྱི་མདོ།
By:
Toh
342
Chapter
4
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Questions of Dīrghanakha the Wandering Mendicant
Uṣṇīṣaprabhāsasarva­tathāgatahṛdaya­samayavilokitadhāraṇī
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ཀུན་ཏུ་རྒྱུ་བ་སེན་རིངས་ཀྱིས་ཞུས་པ།
As the Buddha teaches the Dharma to the fourfold saṅgha on Vulture Peak Mountain, the brahmin and wandering mendicant Dīrghanakha approaches and questions the Buddha about his doctrine concerning the incontrovertible relationship between karma and its effects in the world. He then poses a series of ten questions regarding the karmic causes of certain attributes of the Buddha, from his vajra body to the raised uṣṇīṣa on his crown. The Buddha responds to each question with the cause for each attribute, roughly summing up the eight poṣadha vows and the ways he observed them in the past. Dīrghanakha drops his staff and bows to the Buddha, pledging to take refuge in the Three Jewels and maintain the eight poṣadha vows.
By:
Toh
343
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Hundred Exemplary Tales, Beginning with That of Pūrṇa
Samādhicakra
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གང་པོ་ལ་སོགས་པའི་རྟོགས་པ་བརྗོད་པ་བརྒྱ་པ།
By: