У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно ༡༠༽ ༼རས་ཆུང་རྡོ་རྗེ་གྲགས་པའི་མཛད་རྣམ༽ BIOGRAPHY OF RECHUNG DORJI DRAKPA 🇧🇹 BhutaneseDharmaTeachings👇 или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
BIOGRAPHY OF RECHUNG DORJE DRAKPA Rechungpa (1084-1161 ) was with Gampopa chief disciple of the great Tibetan yogi Milarepa, one of the forefathers of the Kagyu school tradition of Tibetan Buddhism. He was one of the two most important students of the 11th century yogi and founder of the Shangpa Kagyu lineage or Rechung lineage of the Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism. When Rechung was twelve years old he was herding oxen in a meadow. In so doing he came close to a cave where the great yogi Milarepa was sitting, singing. Rechung heard the singing and followed the voice. As soon as he cast eyes on the yogi a state of great joy and trust came over him, and he remained with Milarepa to receive teachings and to practice. Rechung probably was orphaned and was adopted and brought up by the wandering yogi Milarepa. When he was fifteen he got leprosy. Therefore he withdrew to practice alone. Some Indian yogis who passed by him one day, told him about a guru, Balacandra, who might help him. Milarepa permitted Rechung to go to India with the yogis and meet Balacandra, who initiated him into a certain practice. After some time of practice Rechung was wholly cured from his disease. He returned to Tibet and Milarepa and kept on practicing right next to the yogi recluse. In order to thank Balacandra, he bartered his inheritance and all that he could get from others for gold; went to India and gave all of it to him. Balacandra now sent Rechung to a very special teacher, Tipupa, who was a student of Naropa and treated Rechung as an old friend. Rechung got teachings from Tipupa and then returned to Balacandra, and then he went to Tibet again. On his way he met another teacher, Mirti, who gave him teachings about "how to move fast". Rechung mastered this practice and was able to travel from India to Tibet in only six days.The other student was Gampopa, founder of the Dagpo Kagyu. Rechungpa was head of the student body Milarepa and Gampopa, he is mentioned as the second most important of Milarepa's students, the 'moon-like' disciple, with Gampopa being the foremost, and compared to the sun. Rechungpa, as his name suggests, was a cotton-clad yogin, unlike Gampopa who was a monk. While a monk Gampopa put significantly more weight on the monastic tradition of Buddhism, which is characteristic of the stimuli it Kagyu schools that emanating from Rechungpa transmission line is much stronger in the yogi tradition of the Indian master. Therefore Rechungpa also bears the nickname " younger Milarepa ". He was also Terton ( treasure finder of spiritual treasures ) and was transmitted in Pure Vision after the tradition teachings of Guru Rinpoche.Rechungpa traveled several times to India and brought back special tantric teachings that went into its very own transmission line. Rechungpa was particularly important in the transmission of the cycle of esoteric teachings of the Cakrasaṃvara Tantra known as the Demchok. Tibetan Buddhists believe Rechungpa compiled The Six Equal Tastes from Indian sources. The text was hidden by Rechungpa, later recovered as a terma by Tsangpa Gyare, who founded the Drukpa Lineage. According to tradition Rechungpa realized the so-called rainbow body at his death. This is considered the highest result of the realization of the teachings of Dzogchen, in which the late Master dissolves his body over a period of one week in light phenomena as the essence of the elements of his body. Usually, only hair and nails are left behind as a remnant. Rechungpas students Gyalwa Kyang Tsangpa sent emanating from Rechungpa transmission line to the Yogini Machik Ongyo (12th century ). This transmission is continuously up to the present time. Among other things, keeps Changling Tulku Rinpoche, who passes on the transfer of the Northern Treasures of the Nyingma school, the line of Rechungpa. Changling Tulku teaches in the West. #རསཆུངརྡོརྗེགྲགསཔའིམཛདརྣམ #BiographyOfRechungDorjeDrakpa #BhutaneseDharmaTeachings_SUBSCRIBE