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Bring the wisdom, compassion and power of the Three Great Bodhisattvas, into your life with the blended medley chant of the mantras of the Three Lords in Sanskrit. Buddha Weekly chants the Sanskrit mantras of Manjushri 7 times, Avalokiteshvara Guan Shi Yin 7 times, Vajrapani times, then repeats the medley twice! A beautiful meditation on the wisdom, compassion and power of all the Buddhas. For an "about" the Three Lords video, see • 3 great Bodhisattvas Manjushri, Avalo... MUSIC AVAILABLE FOR STREAMING on BUDDHA WEEKLY's MANTRA COLLECTION 1: Spotify, Apple Music, iTunes, Instagram/Facebook, TikTok & other ByteDance stores, YouTube Music, Amazon, Pandora, Deezer, Tidal, iHeartRadio, Claro Música, Saavn, Boomplay, Anghami, KKBox, NetEase, Tencent, Qobuz, Joox, Kuack Media, Yandex Music (beta), Adaptr, Flo, MediaNet ON SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/album/0tvJoE... APPLE MUSIC: / mantra-collection-1 DEEZER: https://www.deezer.com/us/album/45123... The three Lords represent the Mahayana Bodhisattva aspiration to benefit all sentient beings with their wisdom, compassionate means, and power. The three most powerful Bodhisattvas are also known as the Three Lords of the World, since they remained in our relative samsaric existence to help suffering beings — yet they are full Enlightened. Manjushri embodies the Wisdom of All the Buddhas of the Three Times. Avalokiteshvara Guanyin embodies the Compassionate methods and means of All the Buddhas of the Three Times Vajrapani — also known as the "hand of the Buddha" — wields the great Vajra thunderbolt of power, representing the Power of All the Buddhas. By reciting all three daily, you bring these most important aspects of Buddhist practice into your daily life — Wisdom, Compassion, and Power. Their mantras, chanted here 7 times each in a medley, are: Manjushri: Om Ah Ra Pa Cha Nha Dhi Avalokiteshvara Guanyin: Om Mani Padme Hum Vajrapani: Om Vajrapani Hum Cultivating Wisdom, Compassion and Activity are the key aspects of Buddhist Practice. These are represented by the "Three Lords of the World" — the three great Bodhisattva heroes who promised to remain in Samsara until all sentient beings are rescued. The Three Lords of the World are Manjushri, Bodhisattva of Wisdom; Avalokiteshvara, Bodhisattva of Compassion; and Vajrapani, Bodhisattva of Power and activities. These great Bodhisattvas appear often in Sutra (Sutta, Pali), usually with folded hands, baring their shoulder to ask the Buddha an important question. Sometimes, they are the focus, as with Avalokiteshvara speaking (with Shakyamuni Buddha listening) to the Heart Sutra — one of the most important sutras in Mahayana Buddhism. Or, with Vajrapahni as the inquirer in the Maha Vairochana Sutra. Why these Three Out of the Eight Great Ones In Buddhism, especially Mahayana, the three great Bodhisattvas, called the Three Lords of the World, are the most important practice. Why? Because they remain in our world, working to help us, and their focus is to empower wisdom and compassion. There are Eight Great Bodhisattvas, traditionally, in Buddhism, but, in many temples and practices, the Three Lords of the World are preeminent. COMMENTS and COMMUNITY: Please be respectful in your comments, guided by kindness and Bodhichitta. We do appreciate corrections, however, we will not approve comments with corrections that are unsupported. If you wish to state "this is not correct" (bearing in mind it may be correct in one tradition and not in another) then it is important to INCLUDE YOUR CITATION (Which teacher or Sutra are you quoting.) Simply saying "This isn't true" is not a publishable comment. Why isn't it true? Or why do you disagree? We will also not approve comments with disparaging comments, regardless of the context. We will not approve any political comments, as we strive for a positive, spiritual community. Thank you for understanding!