Alexander Berzin. Brief History of Dzogchen
Alexander Berzin. Brief History of Dzogchen
Alexander Berzin. Brief History of Dzogchen
Introduction
Dzogchen (rdzogs-chen), the great completeness, is a Mahayana system of practice leading to enlightenment and involves a view of reality, way of meditating, and way of behaving (lta-sgom-spyod gsum). It is found earliest in the Nyingma and Bon (preBuddhist) traditions. Bon, according to its own description, was founded in Tazig (sTag-gzig), an Iranian cultural area of Central Asia, by Shenrab Miwo (gShen-rab mi-bo) and was brought to Zhang-zhung (Western Tibet) in the eleventh century BC There is no way to validate this scientifically. Buddha lived in the sixth century BC in India.
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then invited Guru Rinpoche (Padmasambhava) from Swat (northwestern Pakistan), who drove out the demons who had caused the smallpox. The Emperor then reinvited Shantarakshita. Guru Rinpoche left in 774, without having completed the full transmission of dzogchen. Seeing that the times were not ripe, he buried some texts as buried treasure texts (gterma, "terma"). They were exclusively texts on dzogchen.
Shortly afterwards, the Tibetan Vairochana was exiled after Indian abbots slandered him for revealing too much, so he buried more dzogchen texts, as did the Indian Vimalamitra.
From the treasure texts buried by Vairochana and Vimalamitra and those buried earlier by Guru Rinpoche, the dzogchen teachings were later divided into three divisions. 1. semdey (sems-sde, mind division), emphasizing pure awareness (rig-pa) as the basis for all (kun-shes, Skt alaya), 2. longdey (klong-sde, open sphere division), emphasizing the open sphere aspect (klong) of pure awareness as the basis for all, 3. menngag-dey (man-ngag sde, oral guideline division), also called nyingtig (snyingthig, heart essence division), emphasizing pure awareness being primally pure (ka-dag). The first two derive from the treasure texts buried by the Tibetan monk Vairochana and are not practiced much today. The mind division comes from Indian texts that Vairochana translated; the open sphere division from his oral teachings. The oral guideline division has two sections from the two Indian teachers, one from Guru Rinpoche: Kadro Nyingtig (mKha'-'gro snying-thig, Dakini Heart Essence Teachings) and one from Vimalamitra: Vima Nyingtig (Bi-ma snying-thig, Vimalamitra's Heart Essence Teachings).
traditions developed as the Sarma (gSar-ma, New Transmission, New Tantra) Schools. In contrast, Nyingma is the Old Transmission or Old Tantra School. Bon also revived at this time, but now its contents are very Buddhist. Bon texts were codified in 1017 - mostly non-dzogchen texts in the main categories of the Buddhist literature. Later in the eleventh century, Nyingma and more Bon dzogchen texts were found, often by the same person.
wrote Guideline Instructions from My Totally Excellent (Samantabhadra) Spiritual Mentor (Kun-bzang bla-ma'i zhal-lung, Perfect Words of My Excellent Teacher, Kunzang Lamey Zhellung). This is the most elaborate Nyingma text on the equivalent of lam-rim (graded stages of the path) and on the preliminaries for the Longchen Nyingtig. Peltrul and Jamyang kyentsey-wangpo's disciple, the Third Dodrubchen (rDo-grub-chen 'Jigs-pa'i bstan-pa'i nyi-ma), wrote the clearest commentaries on dzogchen - Dzogchen Cycles (rDzogs-chen skor) and Miscellaneous Writings on Dzogchen (rDzogs-chen thorbu) - putting dzogchen in the context of the other traditions of Tibetan Buddhism. These are the commentaries that His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama strongly relies on as a source for his explanations of a unified theory of all four Tibetan traditions.
compiled them into Bearing the Seal of Secrecy (gSang-ba rgya-can) and introduced these dzogchen practices to his Namgyal Monastery, which otherwise mostly practices Gelug. Guru Rinpoche prophesied that if the line from the early Tibetan kings - whose descendants, the line of Rigdzin-chenpos, were the heads of the Northern Treasure Text Lineage - discontinued, it would be detrimental to Tibet. Thus, the Fifth Dalai Lama transmitted his dzogchen lineages also to the Rigdzin-chenpo of his times. Consequently, the Northern Treasure Text Lineage also practices the Fifth Dalai Lama's dzogchen teachings. The next Rigdzin-chenpo transmitted the Fifth Dalai Lama's dzogchen teachings to Nechung Monastery, the monastery of the state oracle, Nechung (gNas-chung). The Nechung oracle was appointed at Samyay by Guru Rinpoche to protect Tibet. There has been a personal connection between the Dalai Lamas and the Nechung oracle since the time of the Second Dalai Lama, when he moved from Tashilhunpo Monastery to Drepung Monastery. The Fifth Dalai Lama also appointed the throneholder of the Nyingma Mindroling monastery (sMin-gling khri-can, "Minling Trichen") the head of the Southern Treasure Text Lineage. Thus, the Fifth Dalai Lama supported both major Nyingma lineages. There has been a close connection between the line of Dalai Lamas and the Nyingma tradition ever since.
[For a schematic presentation of the major points, see: Brief History of Dzogchen in Chart Form.]
Section Contents
Source of Inspiration Introduction to Buddhism History of Buddhism and Bon Modern Adaptation of Buddhism Vows and Commitments Sutra Teachings Tantra Teachings Prayers and Tantra Practices Tibetan Astrology e-Books Bibliographies
Comparison of Buddhist Traditions Kalachakra Buddhism in the World Today Buddhism and Islam Dzogchen Mahamudra
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Introduction The Introduction of Pre-Nyingma Buddhism and Zhang-zhung Rites to Central Tibet Guru Rinpoche and the Introduction of Nyingma Dzogchen Samyay Monastery and the Bonpo Exile Vairochana, Vimalamitra, and the Samyay Debate The Three Divisions of Nyingma Treasure Texts The New Transmission Schools The Southern and Northern Treasure Text Lineages Compilation of the Nyingma Canon and Major Texts The Rimey Nonsectarian Movement Is Dzogchen Buddhist or Bon? Dzogchen in the Kagyu Traditions Dzogchen and the Dalai Lamas
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