The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines
Chapter 76: Entrustment
Toh 9
Degé Kangyur, vol. 26 (shes phyin, nyi khri, ka), folios 1.b–382.a; vol. 27 (shes phyin, nyi khri, kha), folios 1.b–393.a; and vol. 28 (shes phyin, nyi khri, ga), folios 1.b–381.a
Imprint
Translated by the Padmakara Translation Group
under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha
First published 2023
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Table of Contents
Summary
The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines is among the most important scriptures underlying both the “vast” and the “profound” approaches to Buddhist thought and practice. Known as the “middle-length” version, being the second longest of the three long Perfection of Wisdom sūtras, it fills three volumes of the Kangyur. Like the two other long sūtras, it records the major teaching on the perfection of wisdom given by the Buddha Śākyamuni on Vulture Peak, detailing all aspects of the path to enlightenment while at the same time emphasizing how bodhisattvas must put them into practice without taking them—or any aspects of enlightenment itself—as having even the slightest true existence.
Acknowledgements
Translation by the Padmakara Translation Group. A complete draft by Gyurme Dorje was first edited by Charles Hastings, then revised and further edited by John Canti. The introduction was written by John Canti. We are grateful for the advice and help received from Gareth Sparham, Greg Seton, and Nathaniel Rich.
This translation is dedicated to the memory of our late colleague, long-time friend, and vajra brother Gyurme Dorje (1950–2020), who worked assiduously on this translation in his final years and into the very last months of his life. We would also like to express our gratitude to his wife, Xiaohong, for the extraordinary support she gave him on so many levels.
The translation was completed under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha.
The generous sponsorship of Kris Yao and Xiang-Jen Yao, which helped make the work on this translation possible, is most gratefully acknowledged.
Text Body
Chapter 76: Entrustment
“Subhūti, immediately after the bodhisattva great being Sadāprarudita had attained those six million gateways of meditative stability, he saw the lord buddhas accompanied by hosts of bodhisattvas and surrounded by the community of monks, teaching this same perfection of wisdom, in these very ways, in these very terms, in these very words, and in these very letters, in the world systems of the great trichiliocosm of the ten directions—east, south, west, north, the intermediate directions, the zenith, and the nadir—numerous as the grains of sand of the river Gaṅgā, just as I, accompanied by hosts of bodhisattvas and surrounded by the community of monks, am now teaching the Dharma of the perfection of wisdom in these very ways, in these very terms, in these very words, and in these very letters, in this world system of the great trichiliocosm. By attaining inconceivable dhāraṇīs, he acquired learning as vast as the oceans. In all his lives he was never again separated from the buddhas. In all his lives, he was reborn in those world systems where the lord buddhas were present, and he listened to the Dharma in the actual presence of the lord buddhas. At the very least, even in his dreams [F.379.a] he was never separated from the vision of the buddhas. He would hear the Dharma and was never separated from the sight of bodhisattvas. He abandoned all states lacking freedom, and possessed the freedoms and opportunities.”
Then the Blessed One said to the venerable Ānanda, “You should know, Ānanda, as this formulation explains, that the perfection of wisdom facilitates the attainment of omniscient gnosis. Therefore, Ānanda, all bodhisattva great beings who want to attain omniscient gnosis should practice this perfection of wisdom.”
Then he said to Ānanda, “In order to benefit bodhisattva great beings, you, Ānanda, should take up this perfection of wisdom. Uphold it, recite it, master it, and teach it extensively to others. Ānanda, this perfection of wisdom should be heard, taken up, upheld, recited, mastered, chanted, taught, explained, repeated, and cultivated by bodhisattva great beings. Through the blessing of the tathāgatas, at the very least, it should be clearly written down, and offerings should be made to it with flowers, incense, perfume, garlands, unguents, powders, clothing, parasols, victory banners, ribbons, and many rows of butter lamps on all sides. It should be served, honored, venerated, worshiped, revered, and respected. This is my admonition. If you ask why, Ānanda, [F.379.b] it is because the unsurpassed, complete enlightenment of bodhisattva great beings depends on the perfection of wisdom. Ānanda, do you think that your teacher is the Tathāgata?”
“Blessed Lord, he is my teacher!” replied Ānanda.
The Blessed One then said to the venerable Ānanda, “The Tathāgata is your teacher, Ānanda! You have conducted yourself, Ānanda, with physical acts of loving kindness that are pleasant and never unpleasant, with verbal acts of loving kindness that are pleasant and never unpleasant, and with mental acts of loving kindness that are pleasant and never unpleasant. Therefore, Ānanda, just as you have acted with loving kindness, empathetic joy, and reverence toward me while I am alive in this present incarnation, after I have passed away, you should similarly act toward this perfection of wisdom. Ānanda, I entrust and transmit this to you for the second time and for the third time. Come what may, you should ensure that this perfection of wisdom does not vanish. Ānanda, as long as this perfection of wisdom remains in the world, you should know that for that long the tathāgatas will also be present. You should know that for that long the tathāgatas will teach the Dharma. Ānanda, you should know that those beings {Va.261} who listen to this perfection of wisdom, and who take up, uphold, recite, master, chant, teach, repeat, question, serve, honor, respect, worship, revere, and venerate it, presenting it with diverse offerings—flowers, incense, perfume, [F.380.a] garlands, unguents, clothing, powders, parasols, victory banners, ribbons, and rows of butter lamps on all sides—will never be separated from the sight of the buddhas. They will never be separated from hearing the Dharma.
“Ānanda, you should know that those beings will be the servants of the tathāgatas!”
When the Blessed One had joyfully spoken these words, the venerable Ānanda, the venerable Śāradvatīputra, the venerable Mahāmaudgalyāyana, the venerable Mahākāśyapa, the venerable Pūrṇa Maitrāyaṇīputra, the venerable Mahākātyāyana, the venerable Aniruddha, the venerable Revata, the venerable Rāhula, and all four assemblies, along with mundane beings including gods, humans, and asuras, rejoiced in the words spoken by the Blessed One.
This completes the seventy-sixth chapter, “Entrustment,” from “The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines.”
This completes “The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines,” which is the mother of the past, future, and present buddhas, bodhisattvas, śrāvakas, and pratyekabuddhas, in all the limitless world systems of the ten directions.
Colophon
It is said in the original Jangpa manuscript:
This [Tibetan translation of] The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines has been edited twice on the basis of the original “gold manuscript,” which had been [commissioned as] a commitment of the spiritual mentor Nyanggom Chobar, and it has also been edited on the basis of the manuscript kept at Yerpa. Since it is extant, scribes of posterity should copy [the text] according to this version alone.
In the [recast] version of The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines [Toh 3790] that was edited by master Haribhadra, and in some [other] manuscripts, the text ends with the seventy-first chapter entitled “Unchanging Reality.” In certain [other] manuscripts, including the original (phyi mo) [Toh 9], there are seventy-six chapters, with [F.380.b] the addition of the [seventy-second] chapter entitled “Distinctions in the Training of a Bodhisattva,” the [seventy-third] chapter entitled “The Attainment of the Manifold Gateways of Meditative Stability by the Bodhisattva Sadāprarudita,” the [seventy-fourth] chapter entitled “Sadāprarudita,” the [seventy-fifth] chapter entitled “Dharmodgata,” and the [seventy-sixth] chapter entitled “Entrustment.” This accords with earlier accounts and the authentic records of teachings received. Insofar as there are distinctions in the translation of these five later chapters, I have seen a few manuscripts where the terminology is slightly dissimilar, although there are no differences in meaning.
In general, throughout the present text there are all sorts of unique allusions and variations in the elaboration of the points that are expressed. In particular, in the chapter entitled “The Introductory Narrative,” there are some passages where the text corresponds to The Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred Thousand Lines.
At the time when the carving of the xylographs of this very text, along with those of the Multitude of the Buddhas (Buddhāvataṃsaka), was completed, in the presence of King Tenpa Tsering, the ruler of Degé, the beggar monk Tashi Wangchuk composed these verses at Sharkha Dzongsar Palace, where the wood-carving workshop was based. May they be victorious!
ye dharmā hetuprabhavā hetun teṣāṃ tathāgato bhavat āha teṣāṃ ca yo nirodho evaṃ vādī mahāśramaṇaḥ [ye svāhā]
“Whatever events arise from causes, the Tathāgata has told of their causes, and the great ascetic has also taught their cessation.”
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