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TIBETAN BUDDHIST CANON

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Explore and search all the published translations from the Kangyur and Tengyur

Introduction

A brief introduction to the Tibetan Buddhist canon

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KANGYUR

The Kangyur Sections

The divisions and the scriptures they contain making up the Kangyur, the words of the Buddha

Discipline

The monastic rules and their background, with a wealth of historical, biographical, and cultural material

Discourses

The Buddha's discourses: ranging from detailed presentations of doctrine to brief summaries

Tantra

Vajrayāna scriptures intended for experienced practitioners, often cryptic and hard to understand without commentary

Dhāraṇī

Works about dhāraṇī formulas recited for spiritual progress, protection, healing, or power over adversity

Degé Kangyur Catalog

TENGYUR

The Tengyur Sections

The divisions and the texts they contain making up the Tengyur, the works of the great Indian masters

Eulogy
Tantra Treatises
Sūtra Commentary and Philosophy
Abhidharma
Discipline Treatises
The Buddha's Previous Lives
Epistles
Epistemology and Logic
Traditional Sciences and Arts
Tengyur Catalog

Featured Translations

The Kangyur
Toh 224

The Episode of Dṛḍhādhyāśaya

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The Kangyur
Toh 862

The Essence Dhāraṇī of the Tathāgata Bhaiṣajya­guru

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Resources

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84000 in Conversation

Ongoing weekend series with special guests dropping in to share stories, histories, initiatives, and inspiration, to help us map the sūtras for modern life.

Teachings on Sūtra

Buddhist teachers teaching from the sūtras using the 84000 Library as guide material for their students

Knowledge Base Articles

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Resources for SPECIALISTS

Glossary Search

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84000 guidelines and templates for translators

Featured Knowledge Base Articles

Old Tantras

Seventeen works representing a small selection of the many “inner” class tantras of the Ngagyur Nyingma (“earlier translation”) tradition.
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Tantra

The scriptures of the Vajrayāna intended for experienced practitioners, often cryptic and hard to understand without commentary.
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100 Years Vision

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Sūtras about Karma

Uncover the principles of karma through our curated collection of sutras. These scriptures explain the law of cause and effect, offering guidance on ethical conduct and the impact of our actions on future experiences.

Toh
218
Chapter
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Toh 218
28
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
Purification of Karmic Obscurations
[No Sanskrit title]
Karmāvaraṇa­viśuddhi
|
[No Tibetan title]
ལས་ཀྱི་སྒྲིབ་པ་རྣམ་པར་དག་པ།
The Buddha is residing at Āmrapālī’s Grove in Vaiśālī when Mañjuśrī brings before him the monk Stainless Light, who had been seduced by a prostitute and feels strong remorse for having violated his vows. After the monk confesses his wrongdoing, the Buddha explains the lack of inherent nature of all phenomena and the luminous nature of mind, and the monk Stainless Light gives rise to the mind of enlightenment. At Mañjuśrī’s request, the Buddha then explains how bodhisattvas purify obscurations by generating an altruistic mind and realizing the empty nature of all phenomena. He asks Mañjuśrī about his own attainment of patient forbearance in seeing all phenomena as nonarising, and recounts the tale of the monk Vīradatta, who, many eons in the past, had engaged in a sexual affair with a girl and even killed a jealous rival before feeling strong remorse. Despite these negative actions, once the empty, nonexistent nature of all phenomena had been explained to him by the bodhisattva Liberator from Fear, he was able to generate bodhicitta and attain patient forbearance in seeing all phenomena as nonarising. The Buddha explains that even a person who had enjoyed pleasures and murdered someone would be able to attain patient forbearance in seeing all phenomena as nonarising through practicing this sūtra, which he calls “the Dharma mirror of all phenomena.”
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Theme:
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Sūtras about Karma
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Toh
249
Chapter
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Toh 249
2
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Sūtra Teaching the Four Factors
[No Sanskrit title]
Catur­dharma­nirdeśa­sūtra
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[No Tibetan title]
ཆོས་བཞི་བསྟན་པའི་མདོ།
While Buddha Śākyamuni is residing in the Sudharmā assembly hall in the Heaven of the Thirty-Three, he explains to the great bodhisattva Maitreya four factors that make it possible to overcome the effects of any negative deeds one has committed. These four are: the action of repentance, which involves feeling remorse; antidotal action, which is to practice virtue as a remedy to non-virtue; the power of restraint, which involves vowing not to repeat a negative act; and the power of support, which means taking refuge in the Buddha, Dharma, and Saṅgha, and never forsaking the mind of awakening. The Buddha concludes by recommending that bodhisattvas regularly recite this sūtra and reflect on its meaning as an antidote to any further wrongdoing.
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Theme:
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Sūtras for Beginners
Sūtras about Karma
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Toh
340
Chapter
Ref
Toh 340
871
Pages
Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Hundred Deeds
[No Sanskrit title]
Karmaśataka
|
[No Tibetan title]
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.
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Sūtras about Karma
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More Popular Themes

Our Popular Themes are curated lists of texts to meet the needs of our readers and learners.

Texts About Stūpas
Ten and Five Royal Sūtras
Sūtras About Women
Texts on Other Buddhas
Buddha Nature Sūtras
Sūtras About Death
Sūtras for Beginners
The Buddha's Life
Texts for Recitation
Quick Reads
Sūtras for Well-Being
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