The Kangyur

Action Tantras

བྱ་བའི་རྒྱུད།

Kriyātantra

Tantras of the Action class, mainly emphasizing external worship and ritual, and classified into six “families” of principal deities (Toh 502-808).

Toh
502
-
808
Overview
No items found.
Toh
545
Chapter
2
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Spoken by Mañjuśrī Himself
Karmavibhaṅga
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འཇམ་དཔལ་གྱི་ཞལ་ནས་གསུངས་པ།
Spoken by Mañjuśrī Himself provides an incantatory practice taught by Mañjuśrī. The dhāraṇī has two sections: the first extols Mañjuśrī as a tathāgata, an arhat, and a perfectly awakened buddha, and the second invokes a bhagavatī who is praised as an illuminator and supplicated for protection.
By:
Toh
546
Chapter
2
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Mañjuśrī’s Sworn Oath
Jñānavajrasamuccaya
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འཇམ་དཔལ་གྱིས་དམོད་བཙུགས་པ།
Mañjuśrī’s Sworn Oath provides instruction in an incantatory practice focused on Mañjuśrī, in the form of a vidyā that Mañjuśrī himself pronounces. The vidyā unfolds in a series of forceful imperatives suggestive of battle, conquest, and celebration, and after enunciating it, Mañjuśrī explains that its recitation will lead to virtuosity in the memorization of scriptural verses. The benefits of recitation are then enumerated in more detail, relative to the number of times it is recited and whether the recitation is accompanied by ritual performance. As indicated by the title, Mañjuśrī then swears an oath to assure the vidyā’s efficacy, pledging to take on the karmic burden of the five misdeeds with immediate retribution should its promised benefits fail to ensue.
By:
Toh
547
Chapter
2
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Mañjuśrī’s Promise
Sarvaduḥkhapraśamanakaradhāraṇī
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འཇམ་དཔལ་གྱིས་དམ་བཅས་པ།
Mañjuśrī’s Promise begins without preamble with a Sanskrit praise text in the form of a dhāraṇī that resembles other traditional encomiums that exult in the purity, grace, and triumph of bodhisattvas. The scripture then enumerates the benefits accrued by a single recitation of this dhāraṇī, which include the purification of evil deeds accumulated over eons, and the many rewards for its extensive recitation, namely erudition, exceptional powers of memorization, and finally the sight of the body of Mañjuśrī himself.
By:
Toh
548
Chapter
1
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Epithets of Mañjuśrī
Vajrāmṛtatantra
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འཇམ་དཔལ་གྱི་མཚན།
The Epithets of Mañjuśrī is a concise scripture consisting of a salutation to Mañjuśrī that highlights the qualities of his speech, a thirty-six-syllable Sanskrit dhāraṇī, and a one-sentence statement of the benefit accrued by twenty-one recitations thereof.
By:
Toh
549
Chapter
1
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Noble Lord Mañjuśrī’s Dḥāraṇī for Increasing Insight and Intelligence
[no Sanskrit title]
|
རྗེ་བཙུན་འཕགས་པ་འཇམ་དཔལ་གྱི་ཤེས་རབ་དང་བློ་འཕེལ་བ་ཞེས་བྱ་བའི་གཟུངས།
Mañjuśrī’s Increasing of Insight and Intelligence is a short dhāraṇī scripture centered on the figure of Mañjuśrī. It opens with a salutation to the Three Jewels, followed by the Sanskrit dhāraṇī proper, and concludes with an enumeration of the benefits accrued by its memorization. These include the swift attainment of intelligence, a melodious voice, and a beautiful appearance. It also extols physical contact with the material text, which is said to enable recollection of one’s former lives. The scripture concludes with a brief statement of the benefits accrued by extensive recitation, which culminate in beholding the very face of Mañjuśrī.
By:
Toh
550
Chapter
2
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Procedure for Mañjuśrī’s Single-Syllable Mantra
Avalokinīsūtra
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འཇམ་དཔལ་གྱི་སྔགས་ཡི་གེ་འབྲུ་གཅིག་པའི་ཆོ་ག།
The Procedure for Mañjuśrī's Single-Syllable Mantra is a pithy text extolling an exceedingly secret and potent single-syllable mantra. Following a note regarding its universal efficacy, the remaining portion of the text outlines ritual applications for the remediation of specific ailments through the consecration of common items as sacral implements in rites of healing.
By:
Toh
551
Chapter
2
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Blessed One’s Praise of Sharp Mañjuśrī
[no Sanskrit title]
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བཅོམ་ལྡན་འདས་ཀྱིས་འཇམ་དཔལ་རྣོན་པོ་ལ་བསྟོད་པ།
The Blessed One’s Praise of Sharp Mañjuśrī is a praise in twelve verses that describes in detail the physiognomy, ornamentation, vestments, and general splendor of Mañjuśrī’s various manifestations as a bodhisattva and as a tathāgata.
By:
Toh
552
Chapter
2
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Eight Maidens’ Praise of Mañjuśrī, Lord of Speech
Tārādhāraṇī
|
འཇམ་དཔལ་ངག་གི་དབང་ཕྱུག་ལ་བུ་མོ་བརྒྱད་ཀྱིས་བསྟོད་པ།
This scripture is a praise to the bodhisattva Mañjuśrī. The eight maidens indicated by the title may be inferred as each speaking a different verse, together providing a range of perspectives.
By:
Toh
553
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Hundred and Eight Names of the Perfection of Wisdom
Kāñcanavatī dhāraṇī
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ཤེར་ཕྱིན་མཚན་བརྒྱ་རྩ་བརྒྱད་པ་
By:
Toh
554
Chapter
3
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Perfection of Wisdom “Kauśika”
[no Sanskrit title]
|
ཤེར་ཕྱིན་ཀཽ་ཤི་ཀ
The Perfection of Wisdom “Kauśika” is a condensed prajñāpāramitā sūtra in which the Buddha summarizes the various meanings of the perfection of wisdom. In particular, the Buddha equates the characteristics of the perfection of wisdom with the characteristics of all phenomena, the five aggregates, the five elements, and the ten perfections. In this way, the sūtra places particular emphasis on the nonduality of conventional phenomena and emptiness.
By:
Toh
555
Chapter
264
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Sūtra of the Sublime Golden Light
Gaṇḍīsūtra
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གསེར་འོད་དམ་པའི་མདོ།
The Sūtra of the Sublime Golden Light has held great importance in Buddhism for its instructions on the purification of karma. In particular, much of the sūtra is specifically addressed to monarchs and thus has been significant for rulers—not only in India but also in China, Japan, Mongolia, and elsewhere—who wished to ensure the well-being of their nations through such purification. Reciting and internalizing this sūtra is understood to be efficacious for personal purification and also for the welfare of a state and the world. In this sūtra, the bodhisattva Ruciraketu has a dream in which a prayer of confession emanates from a shining golden drum. He relates the prayer to the Buddha, and a number of deities then vow to protect it and its adherents. The ruler’s devotion to the sūtra is emphasized as important if the nation is to benefit. Toward the end of the sūtra are two well-known narratives of the Buddha’s previous lives: the account of the physician Jalavāhana, who saves and blesses numerous fish, and that of Prince Mahāsattva, who gives his body to a hungry tigress and her cubs.
By:
Toh
556
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Sūtra of the Sublime Golden Light
[no Sanskrit title]
|
གསེར་འོད་དམ་པའི་མདོ།
The Sūtra of the Sublime Golden Light has held great importance in Buddhism for its instructions on the purification of karma. In particular, much of the sūtra is specifically addressed to monarchs and thus has been significant for rulers—not only in India but also in China, Japan, Mongolia, and elsewhere—who wished to ensure the well-being of their nations through such purification. Reciting and internalizing this sūtra is understood to be efficacious for personal purification and also for the welfare of a state and the world.In this sūtra, the bodhisattva Ruciraketu has a dream in which a prayer of confession emanates from a shining golden drum. He relates the prayer to the Buddha, and a number of deities then vow to protect it and its adherents. The ruler’s devotion to the sūtra is emphasized as important if the nation is to benefit. Toward the end of the sūtra are two well-known narratives of the Buddha’s previous lives: the account of the physician Jalavāhana, who saves and blesses numerous fish, and that of Prince Mahāsattva, who gives his body to a hungry tigress and her cubs.
By:
Toh
557
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Sūtra of the Sublime Golden Light
Buddha­piṭaka­duḥśīla­nigraha
|
གསེར་འོད་དམ་པའི་མདོ།
The Sūtra of the Sublime Golden Light has held great importance in Buddhism for its instructions on the purification of karma. In particular, much of the sūtra is specifically addressed to monarchs and thus has been significant for rulers—not only in India but also in China, Japan, Mongolia, and elsewhere—who wished to ensure the well-being of their nations through such purification. Reciting and internalizing this sūtra is understood to be efficacious for personal purification and also for the welfare of a state and the world.In this sūtra, the bodhisattva Ruciraketu has a dream in which a prayer of confession emanates from a shining golden drum. He relates the prayer to the Buddha, and a number of deities then vow to protect it and its adherents. The ruler’s devotion to the sūtra is emphasized as important if the nation is to benefit. Toward the end of the sūtra are two well-known narratives of the Buddha’s previous lives: the account of the physician Jalavāhana, who saves and blesses numerous fish, and that of Prince Mahāsattva, who gives his body to a hungry tigress and her cubs.
By:
Toh
558
Chapter
49
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Destroyer of the Great Trichiliocosm
Pañcapāramitānirdeśa
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སྟོང་ཆེན་མོ་རབ་ཏུ་འཇོམས་པ།
Destroyer of the Great Trichiliocosm is one of five texts that together constitute the Pañcarakṣā scriptural collection, popular for centuries as an important facet of Mahāyāna-Vajrayāna Buddhism’s traditional approach to personal and communal misfortunes of all kinds. Destroyer of the Great Trichiliocosm primarily addresses illnesses caused by spirit entities thought to devour the vitality of humans and animals. The text describes them as belonging to four different subspecies, presided over by the four great kings, guardians of the world, who hold sovereignty over the spirit beings in the four cardinal directions. The text also includes ritual prescriptions for the monastic community to purify its consumption of alms tainted by the “five impure foods.” This refers generally to alms that contain meat, the consumption of which is expressly prohibited for successful implementation of the Pañcarakṣā’s dhāraṇī incantations.
By:
Toh
559
Chapter
60
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Queen of Incantations: The Great Peahen
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རིག་སྔགས་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་མོ་རྨ་བྱ་ཆེན་མོ།
The Queen of Incantations: The Great Peahen is one of five texts that together constitute the Pañcarakṣā scriptural collection and has been among the most popular texts used for pragmatic purposes throughout the Mahāyāna Buddhist world. Although its incantations (vidyā) are framed specifically to counteract the deadly effects of poisonous snakebites, it also aims to address the entire range of possible human ailments and diseases contracted through the interference of animals, nonhuman beings, and humoral and environmental imbalances, along with a range of other misfortunes, such as sorcery, losing one’s way, robbery, natural disaster, and criminal punishment, to name but a few. In the text the Buddha Śākyamuni advocates for the invocation of a number of deities within the pantheon of Indian gods and goddesses, including numerous local deities who dwell throughout the subcontinent. He stipulates that just “upholding” or intoning these names along with the mantra formula that accompanies each grouping will hasten the deities to the service of saṅgha members administering to the pragmatic medical needs of their own and surrounding communities.
By:
Toh
560
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Essence of the Peahen, Queen of Spells
Vajra­maṇḍa­dhāraṇī
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རིག་སྔགས་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་མོ་རྨ་བྱའི་ཡང་སྙིང།
By:
Toh
561
Chapter
43
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Great Amulet
Kṛṣṇāyauṣṭha
|
སོ་སོར་འབྲང་བ་ཆེན་མོ།
The Noble Queen of Incantations: The Great Amulet, one of five texts that constitute the Pañcarakṣā scriptural collection, has been among the most popular texts used for pragmatic purposes throughout the Mahāyāna Buddhist world. As its title suggests, The Great Amulet prescribes the use of amulets into which the incantation is physically incorporated. These devices are then worn around the neck or arm, attached to flags, interred in stūpas and funeral pyres, or otherwise used anywhere their presence is deemed beneficial. Wearing or encountering the incantation promises a range of effects, including the prevention and healing of illness, the conception and birth of male offspring, and control over the world of nonhuman spirit entities. The text also protects against consequences of negative deeds, delivering evildoers from negative rebirths and ensuring their place among the gods. The promise of augmenting merit even extends in one passage to an increase of mindfulness and liberation from saṃsāra.
By:
Toh
562
Chapter
25
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Great Cool Grove
Mahāmaṅgalasūtra
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བསིལ་བའི་ཚལ་ཆེན་པོ།
The Sūtra of Great Cool Grove, one of five texts that constitute the Pañcarakṣā scriptural collection, has been among the most popular texts used for pragmatic purposes throughout the Mahāyāna Buddhist world. This sūtra promises protection for the Buddha’s “four communities”—monks, nuns, laymen, and laywomen—against a range of illnesses and obstacles originating from the hosts of spirit entities who reside in remote wilderness retreats. The text centers specifically on threats of illness posed by the capricious spirit world of “nonhumans,” known collectively as grahas or bhūtas, who feed off the vitality, flesh, and blood of members of the Buddhist spiritual community engaging in spiritual practice at those remote hermitages. The sūtra is proclaimed by the Four Great Kings, each of whom reigns over a host of bhūtas, with the goal of quelling the hostile forces who assail those diligently practicing the Buddha’s teachings. Also included are ritual prescriptions for properly performing the sūtra and descriptions of the many benefits that ensue.
By:
Toh
563
Chapter
12
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra
[no Sanskrit title]
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གསང་སྔགས་ཆེན་པོ་རྗེས་སུ་འཛིན་པ།
Great Upholder of the Secret Mantra is one of five texts that together constitute the Pañcarakṣā scriptural collection, popular for centuries as an important facet of Mahāyāna-Vajrayāna Buddhism’s traditional approach to personal and communal misfortunes of all kinds. It addresses a range of human ailments, as well as misfortunes such as robbery, natural disaster, and criminal punishment, thought to be brought on especially through the animosity of non-human spirit entities. The sūtra stipulates the invocation of these spirit entities, which it separates into hierarchically ordered groups and thus renders subordinate to the command of the Buddha and members of his saṅgha. The Buddha stipulates that just “upholding” or intoning their names and the mantra formula for each will quell the violent interventions of non-human entities and even hasten them to provide for the pragmatic needs of the saṅgha and its surrounding communities.
By:
Toh
564
Chapter
4
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Mārīcī Dhāraṇī
Nīlāmbaradharavajrapāṇi­kalpa­dhāraṇī
|
འོད་ཟེར་ཅན་གྱི་གཟུངས།
The Mārīcī Dhāraṇī opens at Prince Jeta’s Grove in Śrāvastī, where the Buddha Śākyamuni introduces a saṅgha of monks and bodhisattvas to the goddess Mārīcī by listing her unique qualities and powers. The Buddha then teaches the saṅgha six dhāraṇī mantras related to the goddess Mārīcī.
By:
Toh
565
Chapter
15
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The King of Ritual Manuals from the Tantra of Māyā Mārīcī’s Arising
Ratnolkādhāraṇī
|
སྒྱུ་མའི་འོད་ཟེར་ཅན་འབྱུང་བའི་རྒྱུད་ལས་ཕྱུང་བའི་རྟོག་པའི་རྒྱལ་པོ།
The King of Ritual Manuals from the Tantra of Māyā Mārīcī’s Arising contains instructions for the visualization and ritual propitiation of the goddess Mārīcī. The text covers rites for protecting oneself from perilous situations, rites for increasing wealth and intelligence, elaborate battlefield magic rites, and rites for protecting livestock from predators.
By:
Toh
566
Chapter
42
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Maṇḍala Rites of Noble Mārīcī
Khagarbhāṣṭottara­śatakanāma dhāraṇīmantrasahitam
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འཕགས་མ་འོད་ཟེར་ཅན་གྱི་དཀྱིལ་འཁོར་གྱི་ཆོ་ག
The Maṇḍala Rites of Noble Mārīcī contains a collection of elaborate instructions for the visualization and depiction of a number of maṇḍalas and forms of the goddess Mārīcī and her retinue of vidyā goddesses.
By:
Toh
567
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Jayavatī, the Great Queen of Spells
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རིག་སྔགས་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་མོ་ཆེན་མོ་རྒྱལ་བ་ཅན།
By:
Toh
568
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī of Jayavatī
Acintya­prabhāsa­nirdeśa
|
རྒྱལ་བ་ཅན་གྱི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
569
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī of Abhiṣecanī
Gaṅgottara­pari­pṛcchā
|
དབང་བསྐུར་བའི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
570
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī of Hiraṇyavatī
Subāhu­pari­pṛcchā­sūtra
|
དབྱིག་ལྡན་གྱི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
571
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Spell of Jāṅgulī
Vīradatta­gṛhapati­paripṛcchā
|
དུག་སེལ་བའི་རིག་སྔགས།
By:
Toh
572
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Queen of Spells, Aṅgulī
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སོར་མོ་ཅན་ཞེས་བྱ་བ་རིག་པའི་རྒྱལ་མོ།
By:
Toh
573
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī of the Mother of All Dharmas
[no Sanskrit title]
|
ཆོས་ཐམས་ཅད་ཀྱི་ཡུམ་གྱི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
574
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī of Cūḍāmaṇi
Sarvadharmamātṛkādhāraṇī
|
གཙུག་གི་ནོར་བུའི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
575
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Six Syllable Spell
Vajratuṇḍanāgasamaya
|
ཡི་གེ་དྲུག་པའི་རིག་སྔགས།
By:
Toh
576
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī of the Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred Thousand Lines
Vinayakṣudrakavastu
|
ཤེར་ཕྱིན་སྟོང་ཕྲག་བརྒྱ་པའི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
577
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī of the Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-five Thousand Lines
Brahma­śrīvyākaraṇa
|
ཤེར་ཕྱིན་སྟོང་ཕྲག་ཉི་ཤུ་ལྔ་པའི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
578
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Dhāraṇī of the Perfection of Wisdom in Eight Thousand Lines
Āyuṣpatti­yathākāra­paripṛcchā
|
བརྒྱད་སྟོང་པའི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
579
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī of the Essence of the Six Perfections
Samādhi­rāja­sūtra
|
ཕ་རོལ་ཏུ་ཕྱིན་པ་དྲུག་གི་སྙིང་པོའི་གཟུངས།
The text presents a simple dhāraṇī in the form of a mnemonic expression consisting of homages to the three bodies of a buddha, the six perfections, and their underlying philosophical understanding. The benefits of the dhāraṇī are also listed.
By:
Toh
580
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī for Retaining the Six Perfections
Aparimitāyur­jñāna­hṛdaya­dhāraṇī
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ཕ་རོལ་ཏུ་ཕྱིན་པ་དྲུག་གཟུང་བར་འགྱུར་བའི་གཟུངས།
The text presents a series of dhāraṇīs for the attainment of each of the perfections.
By:
Toh
581
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī for Obtaining the Ten Perfections
Adbhutadharmaparyāya
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ཕ་རོལ་ཏུ་ཕྱིན་པ་བཅུ་ཐོབ་པར་འགྱུར་བའི་གཟུངས།
The text presents a single dhāraṇī for the attainment of the ten perfections.
By:
Toh
582
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī of the Four Immeasurables
Gāthādvayadhāraṇī
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ཚད་མེད་བཞིའི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
583
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī for Retaining the Perfection of Wisdom in a Hundred Thousand Lines
Maitribhāvanāsūtra
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ཤེས་རབ་ཀྱི་ཕ་རོལ་ཏུ་ཕྱིན་པ་སྟོང་ཕྲག་བརྒྱ་པ་གཟུང་བར་འགྱུར་བའི་གཟུངས།
The text presents two dhāraṇīs for the retention of The Perfection of Wisdom Sūtra in One Hundred Thousand Lines.
By:
Toh
584
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī for Retaining the Noble Avataṃsaka
Dharmaskandha
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འཕགས་པ་ཕལ་པོ་ཆེ་གཟུང་བར་འགྱུར་བའི་གཟུངས།
The text presents a single dhāraṇī to enable the retention of the Avataṃsakasūtra.
By:
Toh
585
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Essence of the Gaṇḍavyūha
Mañjuśrī­nirdeśa
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སྡོང་པོ་བཀོད་པའི་སྙིང་པོ།
By:
Toh
586
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī that Captures the Samādhirājasūtra
Nīlāmbaradharavajrapāṇi­yakṣamahārudra­vajrānalajihvatantra
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ཏིང་ངེ་འཛིན་རྒྱལ་པོའི་མདོ་བཟུང་བའི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
587
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Essence of the Great Peahen
[no Sanskrit title]
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རྨ་བྱ་ཆེན་མོའི་སྙིང་པོ།
By:
Toh
588
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī that Captures the Great Amulet
Karuṇāgradhāraṇī
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སོ་སོར་འབྲང་ཆེན་བཟུང་བའི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
589
Chapter
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Dhāraṇī of the Descent to Laṅkā Sūtra
Pañca­viṃśati­sāhasrikā­prajñā­pāramitā
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ལང་ཀར་གཤེགས་པའི་མདོའི་གཟུངས།
By:
Toh
590
Chapter
16
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
Sitātapatrā Born from the Uṣṇīṣa of All Tathāgatas
Amṛtakuṇḍalyai namaḥ
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དེ་བཞིན་གཤེགས་པ་ཐམས་ཅད་ཀྱི་གཙུག་ཏོར་ནས་བྱུང་བ་གདུགས་དཀར་པོ་ཅན།
This text presents a spell (vidyā) featuring the female deity Sitātapatrā (White Umbrella Goddess), which issues from the uṣṇīṣa of the Buddha Śākyamuni as he rests in samādhi among the gods of the Heaven of the Thirty-Three. The text details a litany of dangers, illness, and threats and provides spell formulas that can be recited to avert them. Sitātapatrā and her spell have enjoyed a long history and sustained popularity as a source of security against illness and misfortune, and her spell is widely used in contemporary Buddhist communities to this day.
By:
Toh
591
Chapter
14
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Supreme Accomplishment of Invincible Averting, Sitātapatrā Born from the Uṣṇīṣa of the Tathāgata
Mahālakṣmīsūtra
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དེ་བཞིན་གཤེགས་པའི་གཙུག་ཏོར་ནས་བྱུང་བའི་གདུགས་དཀར་པོ་ཅན་གཞན་གྱིས་མི་ཐུབ་པ་ཕྱིར་ཟློག་པ་ཆེན་མོ་མཆོག་ཏུ་གྲུབ་པ།
This text presents a spell (vidyā) featuring the female deity Sitātapatrā (White Umbrella Goddess), which issues from the uṣṇīṣa of the Buddha Śākyamuni as he rests in samādhi among the gods of the Heaven of the Thirty-Three. The text details a litany of dangers, illness, and threats and provides a spell formula that can be recited to avert them. Sitātapatrā and her spell have enjoyed a long history and sustained popularity as a source of security against illness and misfortune, and her spell is widely used in contemporary Buddhist communities to this day.
By:
Toh
592
Chapter
12
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Invincible Sitātapatrā (1)
Surūpānāma­dhāraṇī
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གདུགས་དཀར་གཞན་གྱིས་མི་ཐུབ་པ།
This text presents a dhāraṇī featuring the female deity Sitātapatrā (White Umbrella Goddess) that provides a magical means to avert a litany of dangers, illness, and threats. Sitātapatrā and her spell have enjoyed a long history and sustained popularity as a source of security against illness and misfortune, and her spell is widely used in contemporary Buddhist communities to this day.
By:
Toh
593
Chapter
11
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Invincible Sitātapatrā (2)
Anityatāsūtra
|
གདུགས་དཀར་གཞན་གྱིས་མི་ཐུབ་པ།
This text presents a dhāraṇī featuring the female deity Sitātapatrā (White Umbrella Goddess), which issues from the uṣṇīṣa of the Buddha Śākyamuni as he rests in samādhi among the gods of the Heaven of the Thirty-Three. The text details a litany of dangers, illness, and threats and provides a spell formula that can be recited to avert them. Sitātapatrā and her spell have enjoyed a long history and sustained popularity as a source of security against illness and misfortune, and her spell is widely used in contemporary Buddhist communities to this day.
By:
Toh
594
Chapter
16
Pages
Kangyur
Tantra
Action Tantras
The Uṣṇīṣavijayā Dhāraṇī with Its Ritual Manual (1)
[no Sanskrit title]
|
གཙུག་ཏོར་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་གྱི་གཟུངས་རྟོག་པ་དང་བཅས་པ།
The Uṣṇīṣavijayā Dhāraṇī with Its Ritual Manual is a short work in which the Buddha Amitāyus teaches the uṣṇīṣavijayā dhāraṇī along with its benefits and a number of short rites for its recitation.
By: