The Kangyur

Yoga tantras

རྣལ་འབྱོར་གྱི་རྒྱུད།

Yogatantra

Tantras of the Yoga class based mainly on meditational practices, including those emphasizing skillful means followed by those emphasizing wisdom.

Toh
479
-
493
Overview
No items found.
Toh 479
Chapter
282
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Compendium of Realities
[No Sanskrit title]
Tattvasaṃgraha
|
[No Tibetan title]
དེ་ཁོ་ན་ཉིད་བསྡུས་པ།
|
de kho na nyid bsdus pa/

This text introduces in a full form the tantric practice of the five enlightenments. All the buddhas gather and guide the bodhisattva to experience the nature of his own mind, and develop that realization through a series of visualizations combined with the repetition of mantra, and they bestow initiation on him. This five-step practice culminates in the bodhisattva’s perfect enlightenment in the form of a fully awakened buddha-body. The text goes on to describe multiple sets of maṇḍalas, rituals, achievements, and the activities. In addition, this text presents the seminal Buddhist tantric narrative of the bodhisattva Vajrapāṇi’s subjugation of Maheśvara (aka Śiva).

By:
Toh 480
Chapter
264
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Great Secret Yogatantra, the Tip of the Vajra
[No Sanskrit title]
Vajraśekharamahāguhyayogatantra
|
[No Tibetan title]
གསང་བ་རྣལ་འབྱོར་ཆེན་པོའི་རྒྱུད་རྡོ་རྗེ་རྩེ་མོ།
|
gsang ba rnal 'byor chen po'i rgyud rdo rje rtse mo/
By:
Toh 481
Chapter
18
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Tantra, the Universal Secret
[No Sanskrit title]
Sarvarahasyatantra
|
[No Tibetan title]
ཐམས་ཅད་གསང་བའི་རྒྱུད།
|
thams cad gsang ba'i rgyud/
By:
Toh 482
Chapter
97
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Great Sovereign of Practices, the Victory Over the Three Worlds
[No Sanskrit title]
Trailokyavijayakalpa
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[No Tibetan title]
འཇིག་རྟེན་གསུམ་ལས་རྒྱལ་བའི་རྟོག་པའི་རྒྱལ་པོ་ཆེན་པོ།
|
'jig rten gsum las rgyal ba'i rtog pa'i rgyal po chen po/
By:
Toh 483
Chapter
76
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Tantra Purifying Evil Destinies
[No Sanskrit title]
Sarvadurgatipariśodhanatejorāja
|
[No Tibetan title]
ངན་སོང་སྦྱོང་རྒྱུད།
|
ngan song sbyong rgyud/

The Tantra Purifying Evil Destinies is a Yogatantra oriented towards the performance of funerary rituals, translated in the eighth century and currently extant only in Tibetan. Of the two translations in the Kangyur, this is the earlier one. It is notable for its frame story involving a god who has fallen into hell unexpectedly. After a request from Indra and other gods, the Buddha reveals that the god can be saved if rituals are performed on his behalf. The text then teaches numerous maṇḍala rites, homa sacrifices, and other rituals. With their help, the god is finally restored to heaven and the Buddha reveals the reason for his downfall, namely, severe transgressions from an earlier lifetime. The tantra employs ritual techniques common to the Yogatantra class but is distinct in its emphasis on rituals to benefit others—such as the dead—rather than sādhana practices for self-cultivation. Despite the similarity in purpose and structure of the two translations, there are substantial differences between them. In particular, this version features the maṇḍala for which the tantra is best known, a five-buddha array centering on Sarvavid Vairocana, a form of Vairocana unique to this tantra.

By:
Toh 484
Chapter
1
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Coercive Activities
[No Sanskrit title]
[no Sanskrit title]
|
[No Tibetan title]
མངོན་སྤྱོད་ཀྱི་ལས།
|
mngon spyod kyi las/
By:
Toh 485
Chapter
100
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
A Portion of the Practice of the Sovereign Tantra Purifying Evil Destinies
[No Sanskrit title]
Sarvadurgati­pariśodhanatejorājasya kalpaikadeśaḥ
|
[No Tibetan title]
ངན་སོང་ཡོངས་སུ་སྦྱོང་བ་རྒྱལ་པོའི་བརྟག་པ་ཕྱོགས་གཅིག་པ།
|
ngan song yongs su sbyong ba rgyal po'i brtag pa phyogs gcig pa/

This Tantra is oriented towards the performance of funerary rituals. The tantra opens with an account of a god who has died and fallen into hell. Indra and the other gods in the Heaven of the Thirty-Three—his former abode—learn of his fate and ask the Buddha for some means to save him. The Buddha teaches that the god can be saved if rituals are performed on his behalf. Through the efficacy of the rituals done, the god is released from hell and returns to his former dwelling in heaven. This text is distinct in its emphasis on rituals to benefit others, such as the dead.

By:
Toh 486
Chapter
8
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Tantra Summarizing Consecration
[No Sanskrit title]
Supratiṣṭhatantra
|
[No Tibetan title]
རབ་གནས་མདོར་བསྡུས་པའི་རྒྱུད།
|
rab gnas mdor bsdus pa'i rgyud/
By:
Application Pending
Toh 487
Chapter
46
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Supreme
[No Sanskrit title]
Paramādikalpa
|
[No Tibetan title]
དཔལ་མཆོག་དང་པོ།
|
dpal mchog dang po/

This text is classified as a Yogatantra. In India, this tantra was originally united with the following text in the Kangyur (Toh 488) as a single text. But in the Tibetan Kangyur they are represented as two individual texts, since different teams of translators rendered the two parts into Tibetan at different times. The teacher of the tantra is Vairocana. In this text the Buddha Vairocana first teaches seventeen pure states observed by bodhisattvas as they accomplish the perfection of insight. Next, over twelve chapters, Vairocana emanates a large number of maṇḍalas and he reveals the rituals and practices associated with these awakened environments.

By:
Toh 488
Chapter
186
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
A Section of the Chapter on Mantras of “The Supreme”
[No Sanskrit title]
Paramādyamantrakalpakhaṇḍa
|
[No Tibetan title]
རྟོག་པའི་དུམ་བུ།
|
rtog pa'i dum bu/

This text is classified as a Yogatantra. The teacher of this tantra is Vairocana but the rituals also focus on the Buddha Vajrasattva. This latter part of the tantra is longer and consists of 44 chapters that together comprise the second, third, and fourth sections of the larger work. As such, although it is called the “Chapter on Mantras” it covers many additional instructions. First, a lengthy description is given of the benefits that arise from the practice of the perfection of wisdom as taught in the first part of the tantra. In the remainder of the tantra, the Buddha Vajrasattva emanates the maṇḍalas taught earlier in the text and he teaches in great detail about their connected rituals.

By:
Toh 489 / 17
Chapter
13
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Principles of the Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred and Fifty Lines
[No Sanskrit title]
Prajñāpāramitānayaśatapañcaśatikā
|
[No Tibetan title]
ཤེས་རབ་ཀྱི་ཕ་རོལ་ཏུ་ཕྱིན་པའི་ཚུལ་བརྒྱ་ལྔ་བཅུ་པ།
|
shes rab kyi pha rol tu phyin pa'i tshul brgya lnga bcu pa/
By:
Toh 490
Chapter
162
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Tantra, the Ornament of the Vajra Essence
[No Sanskrit title]
Vajramaṇḍālaṃkāratantra
|
[No Tibetan title]
རྡོ་རྗེ་སྙིང་པོ་རྒྱན་གྱི་རྒྱུད།
|
rdo rje snying po rgyan gyi rgyud/

This text is among the 15 Yogatantras preserved in the Tibetan Kangyur. Yoga Tantras are an important class of tantras that, historically speaking, had a tremendous impact on the later developments in tantric doctrine and practice, making their study important both in their own right and also as a vehicle for understanding other tantras, as well. This particular text brings important elements from the Prajñāpāramitā literature into a tantric context. It includes a description of empowerment rituals as well as many short sādhanas for the buddhas and bodhisattvas in its maṇḍala. As this tantra contains passages similar to a number of other texts in the Kangyur, it exhibits an exciting instance of intertexuality among canonical texts.

By:
Toh 491 / 20
Chapter
2
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Twenty-five Entrances to the Perfection of Wisdom
[No Sanskrit title]
Pañcaviṃśatikāprajñāpāramitāmukha
|
[No Tibetan title]
ཤེར་ཕྱིན་སྒོ་ཉི་ཤུ་རྩ་ལྔ་པ།
|
sher phyin sgo nyi shu rtsa lnga pa/
By:
Toh 492
Chapter
75
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Tantra of the Array of Secret Ornaments
[No Sanskrit title]
Guhyālaṃkāravyūhatantra
|
[No Tibetan title]
གསང་བ་རྒྱན་བཀོད་ཀྱི་རྒྱུད།
|
gsang ba rgyan bkod kyi rgyud/

These two texts are classified as Yoga Tantras and are said to focus on wisdom, rather than skillful means. They represent an important period in the development of Vajrayāna Buddhism, when the mahāsiddha or “great adept,” was beginning to have greater impact on the development of Buddhist meditation, ritual, art, culture, and institutions throughout India and the broader Buddhist world. The seeds of the most advanced and most important meditation traditions in Tibetan Buddhism are present in these texts. Nurtured through early Buddhist mahāsiddhas and enhanced through the direct instructions of their gurus and teachers, these texts eventually grew and blossomed into the complete Vajrayāna tradition.

By:
Toh 493
Chapter
65
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Yoga tantras
The Sūtra of the Secret Jewel Ornament
[No Sanskrit title]
Guhyamaṇitilakasūtra
|
[No Tibetan title]
གསང་བ་ནོར་བུ་ཐིག་ལེའི་མདོ།
|
gsang ba nor bu thig le'i mdo/

These two texts are classified as Yoga Tantras and are said to focus on wisdom, rather than skillful means. They represent an important period in the development of Vajrayāna Buddhism, when the mahāsiddha or “great adept,” was beginning to have greater impact on the development of Buddhist meditation, ritual, art, culture, and institutions throughout India and the broader Buddhist world. The seeds of the most advanced and most important meditation traditions in Tibetan Buddhism are present in these texts. Nurtured through early Buddhist mahāsiddhas and enhanced through the direct instructions of their gurus and teachers, these texts eventually grew and blossomed into the complete Vajrayāna tradition.

By: