Tsongkhapa Lobzang Drakpa
b.1357 – d.1419
Tradition: Geluk དགེ་ལུགས།
Geography: U དབུས།
Historical Period: 14th Century ༡༤ དུས་རབས། / 15th Century ༡༥ དུས་རབས།
Institution: Ganden དགའ་ལྡན་།; Sera Monastery སེ་ར།; Drepung Monastery འབྲས་སྤུངས་།; Kumbum Jampa Ling སྐུ་འབུམ་བྱམས་པ་གླིང་།; Sangpu Neutok གསང་ཕུ་ནེའུ་ཐོག།; Rakadrak Hermitage ར་ཁ་བྲག་རི་ཁྲོད།; Reting Monastery རྭ་སྒྲེང་།; Pabongkha Hermitage ཕ་བོང་ཁ་རི་ཁྲོད།; Sera Choding སེ་ར་ཆོས་སྡིངས།; Gadong དགའ་གདོང་དགོན།; Olkha Cholung འོལ་ཁ་ཆོས་ལུང།; Lhasa Tsuklakhang ལྷ་ས་གཙུག་ལག་ཁང་།; Olkha Samling Monastery འོལ་ཁ་བསམ་གླིང་དགོན།
Offices Held: First Ganden Tripa of Ganden
Name Variants: Ganden Tripa 01 Lobzang Drakpa Pel དགའ་ལྡན་ཁྲི་པ ༠༡ བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པ།; Lobzang Drakpa Pel བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པའི་དཔལ།; Je Rinpoche Lobzang Drakpa རྗེ་རིན་པོ་ཆེ་བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པ།; Sumati Kirti སུ་མ་ཏི་ཀཱིར་རྟི།; Tsongkhapa Lobzang Drakpa ཙོང་ཁ་པ་བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པ།
Tsongkhapa Lobzang Drakpa (tsong kha pa blo bzang grags pa) was born in the Tsongkha (tsong kha) region of Amdo in 1357. His mother was Shingza Acho (shing bza’ a chos, d.u.) and his father was Lubum Ge (klu ‘bum dge, d.u.). Among the numerous miraculous incidents and omens believed to have taken place surrounding his birth, perhaps the most famous is that of a drop of blood from Tsongkhapa’s umbilical cord that is said to have fallen on to the ground, giving rise to a sandalwood tree whose leaves bore symbols related to the Simhanada manifestation of the Bodhisattva Manjushri, a deity with whom Tsongkhapa would later be identified. His mother later built a stupa on this spot and over time further structures and temples were added. Today the location of Tsongkhapa’s birth is marked by Kumbum Monastery (sku ‘bum dgon pa), founded in 1583 by the Third Dalai Lama Sonam Gyatso (ta la’i bla ma 03 bsod nams rgya mtsho, 1543-1588) on the spot of the original stupa.
At the age of three, Tsongkhapa took lay upasaka vows from the Fourth Karmapa Rolpai Dorje (karma pa 04 rol pa’i rdo rje, 1340-1383) and received the name Kunga Nyingpo (kun dga’ snying po). Then at the age of eight he received the novice ordination of a sramanera, together with the name Lobzang Drakpa (blo bzang grags pa), from the Kadam master Choje Dondrub Rinchen (chos rje don grub rin chen, b. 1309). Dondrub Rinchen, a great practitioner of Vajrabhairava, had been in contact with Tsongkhapa and his family since the boy’s birth, and is said to have received prophecies of the child’s importance from his own teacher and deity.
Tsongkhapa spent much of his youth studying with Dondrub Rinchen; he is said to have been so sharp that he easily understood and memorized even the most complicated texts. From Dondrub Rinchen he received numerous tantric empowerments, most importantly that of Vajrabhairava. According to his secret biography, at the age of seven he experienced visions of Atisa Dipamkara (c.982-1054) and the deity Vajrapani. Communication with various historical masters and deities would eventually become particularly central in the development of Tsongkhapa‘s understanding of Buddhism.
At the age of sixteen Lobzang Drakpa travelled to U-Tsang, never to return to his homeland. In U-Tsang he studied with more than fifty different Buddhist scholars. As noted in his autobiography, Fulfilled Aims (rtogs brjod mdun legs ma), he studied at length texts and topics such as the “Five Treatises of Maitreya” (byams chos sde lnga) and related works by Asanga (4th century), the Abhidharma of Vasubhandu (4th century), the logic systems of Dignaga and Dharmakirti (6th century) and the Madhyamaka system of Nagarjuna (c.150-250) and his followers such as Aryadeva (3rd century). Following figures such as Sakya Pandita Kunga Gyeltsen (sa skya paN Di ta kun dga’ rgyal mtshan, 1182-1251) and Buton Rinchen Drub (bu ston rin chen grub, 1290-1364), it was Tsongkhapa’s emphasis on philosophical study and logic that would eventually become some of the defining characteristics of the Geluk tradition.
Tsongkhapa’s studies were mainly focused on the existing scholarly currents at that time, of which the most important were the Sakya tradition and the tradition of Sangpu (gsang phu), an important Kadam monastery. One of Tsongkhapa’s main teachers was the Sakya master Rendawa Zhonnu Lodro (red mda ba gzhon nu blo gros, 1349-1412) who was a strong proponent of the Prasangika view of Madhyamaka. Tsongkhapa’s devotion to Rendawa was so great that he composed the famous Miktsema (dmigs brtse ma) verse in praise of him. According to tradition, Rendawa felt that the verse was more applicable and descriptive of Tsongkhapa’s qualities and thus offered the prayer back to him. Today this verse is still considered by the Geluk faithful as the principal method to invoke the blessings of Tsongkhapa.
In addition to Dondrub Rinchen, some of Tsongkhapa’s main tantric gurus included Chennga Sonam Gyeltsen (spyan snga bsod nams rgyal mtshan, 1378-1466), a Drigung lama from whom he received the Six Dharmas of Naropa (na ro’i chos drug); the Jonang lama Chokle Namgyel (phyogs las rnam rgyal, 1306-1386), from whom he received the Kalacakra cycle; and the Sakya master Rinchen Dorje (rin chen rdo rje, d.u.), from whom he received the Lamdre teachings (lam ‘bras) and the Hevajra Tantra.
Perhaps most importantly, he received the Guhyasamaja cycle from Khyungpo Lepa Zhonnu Sonam (khyung po lhas pa gzhon nu bsod nams, d.u.) a student of Buton Rinchen Drub, and the cycle of the body mandala (lus dkyil) of Heruka Cakrasamvara from the Sakya master Lama Dampa Sonam Gyeltsen Pelzangpo (bla ma dam pa bsod nams rgyal mtshan dpal bzang po, 1312-1375). Tsongkhapa’s studies on tantra were not limited to the anuttarayoga tantras; he extensively studied the kriya, carya and yoga tantras as well, noting the importance of a gradual approach to the Vajrayana in his brief autobiography. Furthermore, although it would not become a doctrine of the later Geluk tradition, Tsongkhapa also studied the Dzogchen teachings with Lodrak Drubchen Namkha Gyeltsen (lho brag grub chen nam mkha’ rgyal mtshan, 1326-1401).
Through his studies Tsongkhapa‘s understanding of Madhyamaka philosophy became more concrete and experiential. By his early twenties he had begun composing his most important early work, The Golden Garland (legs bshad gser phreng), which deals with Prajnaparamita. Tsongkhapa would continue to write throughout his life, producing an eighteen volume collection of texts.
Although Tsongkhapa is credited with being the author of his writings, it is believed that many were composed through the instruction and inspiration of deities that he saw in visions, particularly Manjushri, as described in his secret biography. Tsongkhapa is said to have initially relied on his teachers to communicate with various deities on his behalf. His Nyingma teacher Namkha Gyeltsen, for example, was believed to be able to communicate with Vajrapani and to have acted as an intermediary between the deity and Tsongkhapa. Later in his life Tsongkhapa was interested in travelling to India but was dissuaded to do so by Vajrapani through this medium.
In the same way Tsongkhapa initially relied on his teacher Umapa Pawo Dorje (dbu ma pa dpa’ bo rdo rje, d.u.), to act as an intermediary with Manjushri. Tsongkhapa had met this Kagyu lama when he was thirty-three. By this time Tsongkhapa had completed his work on The Golden Garland and was, with Pawo Dorje, studying Candrakirti’s (seventh century) Madhyamakavatara. Pawo Dorje and Tsongkhapa undertook a retreat together during this period and Tsongkhapa is said to have posed numerous questions to Manjushri through Pawo Dorje. Eventually, however, Tsongkhapa himself began to experience visions and was able to communicate with Manjushri directly, receiving instructions and tantric empowerments, most importantly those related to Manjushri and Vajrabhairava. Over the course of his life Tsongkhapa continued to receive visions of Manjushri as well as a host of other deities and masters such as Asanga and Nagarjuna. Although Tsongkhapa is widely regarded as being a manifestation of Manjushri, the nature of his visions has nevertheless been contested by some non-Geluk masters, especially the Sakya scholar Gorampa Sonam Sengge (go rams pa bsod nams seng ge, 1429-1489), who was critical of Tsongkhapa and his approach to Madhyamaka.
Apart from a short period of teaching, Tsongkhapa continued to engage in intensive retreats. He and a community of eight disciples began a long retreat at Chadrel (bya bral) Hermitage in 1392, moving to Olkha Cholung (‘ol kha chos lung) several years later. During this retreat they famously completed extensive preliminary practices, for example completing 3,500,000 prostrations in conjunction with the practice of the Triskandhadharmasutra.
Following the retreat, Tsongkhapa travelled to Dzingji (‘dzing ji) where he performed his first out of four great deeds: the restoration of a famous statue of Maitreya. During this period, in 1398, Tsongkhapa is believed to have attained realization and a perfect understanding of the Madhyamaka due to a vision of an assembly of the great Indian Prasangika masters. Immediately following this experience he composed the Praise to Dependent Origination (rten ‘brel bstod pa). This experience began a new epoch in Tsongkhapa’s life, one which shifted more towards composing and teaching to others what he had discovered. Thus in 1402, at the age of forty-six, while at Reting Monastery (rwa sgreng), he composed the Lamrim Chenmo (lam rim chen mo), known in English as The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, undoubtedly his most famous work. Based on Atisa Dipamkara’s Bodhipathapradipa, it described in detail the gradual path to enlightenment from the perspective of the Sutrayana. Echoing the doubt the Buddha felt after his Enlightenment that people would understand his teaching, it is said that Tsongkhapa was initially disheartened by the thought that most readers would be unable to comprehend his explanations of emptiness which form the latter part of the work. A vision of Manjushri, however, inspired Tsongkhapa to complete the composition.
In 1402 Tsongkhapa performed his second great deed. While staying at Namtsedeng (rnam rtsed ldeng) during the rainy season with his teacher Rendawa and Kyabchok Pelzangpo (skyabs mchog dpal bzang po, d.u.), he gave a detailed commentary on the Vinaya to a large assembly of monks. Apart from his emphasis on study, Tsongkhapa is perhaps best known for the importance he places on the monastic discipline of the Vinaya.
Following the composition of the Lamrim Chenmo he composed several other works around 1407 and 1408, specifically his commentary on Nagarjuna’s Fundamental Verses on the Middle Way (Mulamadhyamakakarika) called The Ocean of Reasoning (rigs pa’i rgya mtsho) and The Essence of Eloquence (legs bshad snying po). In 1415 he composed the Lamrim Dring (lam rim ‘bring), known in English as The Medium-Length Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, which is a condensed version of the Lamrim Chenmo.
Tsongkhapa was a prolific author of tantric literature. As a companion volume to the Lamrim Chenmo, Tsongkhapa wrote the Ngakrim Chenmo (sngags rim chen mo), The Great Treatise on the Tantric Stages of the Path to Enlightenment, in 1405, covering all the four classes of tantra according to the sarma traditions, with a detailed explanation of the two stages of anuttarayoga tantra. Other important tantric works include his works on Guhyasamaja, especially his 1401 Commentary on the Vajrajnanasamuccayanama Tantra (ye shes rdo rje kun las btus pa zhes bya ba’i rgyud) and the 1411 Exposition of the Five Stages of Guhyasamaja (gsang ‘dus rim lnga gsal sgron). Texts on the Guhyasamaja Tantra feature prominently in Tsongkhapa’s collected works, making up the majority of his eighteen volumes of writings.
By this time Tsongkhapa’s fame as a great scholar and realized practitioner had grown all over Tibet and even China. In 1408 the Yongle Emperor (r. 1402-1424) of the Chinese Ming Dynasty sent an invitation to Tsongkhapa to visit his court and capital in Nanjing. Tsongkhapa refused, and a second invitation was sent in 1413. Although Tsongkhapa again refused he delegated his student Shakya Yeshes (shakya ye shes, 1354-1435) to go in his stead. Shakya Yeshe had a successful trip to China, receiving his title of Jamchen Choje (byams chen chos rje) from the emperor. The materials he received as offerings enabled him to establish Sera Monastery in 1419. Following the death of the Yongle Emperor in 1424, Shakya Yeshe visited the Xuande Emperor’s (r. 1425-1435) new capital of Beijing. Through these visits the first links between Tsongkhapa’s tradition and the emperors of China were established and would last until the fall of the Manchu Qing Dynasty in 1911.
In 1409 Tsongkhapa instituted the Monlam Chenmo (smon lam chen mo), or Great Prayer Festival, in Lhasa, which is celebrated around the time of the Tibetan New Year, Losar (lo gsar). This celebration is traditionally centered on the Jokhang Temple in Lhasa and is counted as being Tsongkhapa’s third great deed. At this time he also offered jeweled ornaments and a crown to the statue of the Jowo Sakyamuni, the most sacred statue in the Jokhang and the whole of Tibet. By offering these ornaments the statue was transformed from being a nirmanakaya representation of the Buddha Sakyamuni to one representing his sambhogakaya manifestation.
At his students’ request Tsongkhapa established a monastery which was consecrated in 1410, the year following the inauguration of the Monlam Chenmo. The monastery was given the name of Ganden (dga’ ldan), the Tibetan translation of Tusita, the pure land of the future buddha Maitreya. The monastery would eventually become the largest monastery in Tibet, perhaps the world, and is considered the principal monastery of the Geluk tradition. It was Tsongkhapa’s wish to construct three-dimensional representations of the mandalas of his main three anuttarayoga tantra deities: Guhyasamaja, Vajrabhairava and Cakrasamvara. Temples for these constructions were completed in 1415 and the mandalas and deities were installed in 1417. These acts are counted as Tsongkhapa’s fourth great deed. He is counted as the first throne-holder of Ganden, or Ganden Tripa (dga’ ldan khri pa), a title held by successive abbots of the monastery.
Tsongkhapa died in 1419 at Ganden Monastery, the year after he completed his composition of The Elucidation of the Thought (dbu ma dgongs pa rab gsal) in 1418. He was 62 years old, and is believed to have attained enlightenment through yogic practices during the death process, attaining the illusory body (sgyu lus). His body was entombed inside a jeweled stupa at Ganden. Tsongkhapa’s death is commemorated with the annual festival of Ganden Ngacho (dga’ ldan lnga mchod), which translates as “The Ganden Offering of the Twenty-Fifth”, during which devotees light butter lamps on their roofs and windowsills. Tsongkhapa designated Gyeltsabje Darma Rinchen (rgyal tshab rje dar ma rin chen, 1364-1432) as his successor, who in turn appointed Khedrubje Gelek Pelzang (mkhas grub rje dge legs dpal bzang, 1385–1438) as the next throne-holder of Ganden.
Apart from his own teachers, many of whom Tsongkhapa also taught in turn, Tsongkhapa had a number of other illustrious students. These include Gyeltsab, Khedrub and Shakya Yeshe. His other students include the Gendun Drub, who was posthumously identified as the First Dalai Lama (ta la’i bla ma 01 ge ‘dun grub, 1391-1474) and Jamyang Choje Tashi Pelden (‘jam dbyangs chos rje bkra shis dpal ldan, 139-1449), the founder of Drepung Monastery in 1416. Today Khedrubje and Gyeltsabje are considered to have been Tsongkhapa’s foremost disciples, although whether or not this is actually true has been contested by modern scholarship. Duldzin Drakpa Gyeltsen (‘dul ‘dzin grags pa rgyal mtshan, 1374-1434), a close disciple, for example, was relegated to a lesser status by later tradition. Nevertheless all of these students continued to spread Tsongkhapa’s doctrine through their own teachings and writings as well as other means such as the establishment of monasteries, allowing for the Geluk tradition to take shape.
ཙོང་ཁ་པ་བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པ།
རྗེ་ཙོང་ཁ་པ་བློ་བཟང་གྲགས་པ་ནི་ཉེ་བའི་ལོ་ངོ་སྟོང་གི་རིང་གི་བོད་བརྒྱུད་ནང་བསྟན་གྱི་མཁས་པའི་ནང་ནས་ཤུགས་རྐྱེན་ཆེ་ཤོས་ཤིག་ཡིན། ཁོང་མདོ་སྨད་ཙོང་ཁའི་ཡུལ་དུ་སྐུ་འཁྲུངས། དགུང་ན་ཤིན་ཏུ་གཞོན་པའི་སྐབས་ནས་བོད་ཡུལ་དབུས་སུ་བྱོན། སྐུ་ཚེ་གང་པོར་འཁྲུངས་ཡུལ་དུ་ལོག་པར་དབུས་གཙང་ཀུན་ཏུ་ཆོས་བརྒྱུད་རིས་མེད་ཀྱི་སློབ་དཔོན་མང་པོའི་དྲུང་ནས་ཐོས་པ་མང་དུ་བཙལ་ཞིང་ མཚམས་བཅད་ཉམས་ལེན་ཡང་མང་དུ་མཛད་མཐར། མགོན་པོ་ཀླུ་སྒྲུབ་ཀྱི་ཟབ་མོ་དབུ་མའི་ལྟ་བ་ཐུགས་ལ་གསལ་བར་འཁྲུངས་ཤིང་ དགོན་སྡེའི་འདུལ་ཁྲིམས་ལ་ཡང་དག་ཐེར་ལེགས་པར་མཛད། ཡོངས་གྲགས་སུ་འཇམ་དཔལ་དབྱངས་ཀྱི་རྣམ་སྤྲུལ་དུ་བཞེད་ཅིང་། ཁོང་གིས་གསུང་རྩོམ་པོད་བཅོ་བརྒྱད་མཛད་ཡོད་པའང་བརྗོད་བྱ་གཙོ་བོ་ནི་གསང་སྔགས་རྡོ་རྗེ་ཐེག་པའི་སྐོར་ཡིན། དེ་བཞིན་དགའ་ལྡན་དགོན་པ་ཕྱག་བཏབ་ཡོད་པའང་། རྗེ་འདིའི་ཁྲིད་རྒྱུན་དང་གསུང་རྩོམ་ལ་གཞི་བཅོལ་བའི་རི་བོ་དགེ་ལྡན་པའི་ལུགས་ཀྱི་གདན་ས་ལྟེ་བ་ཞིག་ཏུ་གྱུར་ཡོད་དོ།།
Teachers
- Lama Dampa Sonam Gyeltsen བླ་མ་དམ་པ་བསོད་ནམས་རྒྱལ་མཚན། b.1312 – d.1375
- kun dga’ rgyal mtshan ཀུན་དགའ་རྒྱལ་མཚན། b.1338 – d.1401
- Drubchen Namkha Gyeltsen གྲུབ་ཆེན་ནམ་མཁའ་རྒྱལ་མཚན། b.1326 – d.1401
- The Fourth Karmapa, Rolpai Dorje ཀརྨ་པ ༠༤ རོལ་པའི་རྡོ་རྗེ། b.1340 – d.1383
- Chokyi Gyelpo ཆོས་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་པོ། b.1335 – d.1407
- Chokle Namgyel ཕྱོགས་ལས་རྣམ་རྒྱལ། b.1306 – d.1386
- rin chen rnam rgyal རིན་ཆེན་རྣམ་རྒྱལ། b.1318 – d.1388
- gzhon nu byang chub ‘od zer གཞོན་ནུ་བྱང་ཆུབ་འོད་ཟེར།
- Dondrub Rinchen དོན་གྲུབ་རིན་ཆེན། b.1309 – d.1385
- chos skyabs bzang po ཆོས་སྐྱབས་བཟང་པོ།
- Nyawon Kunga Pel ཉ་དབོན་ཀུན་དགའ་དཔལ། b.1285 – d.1379
- gzhon nu bsod nams གཞོན་ནུ་བསོད་ནམས།
- chos kyi dpal ba ཆོས་ཀྱི་དཔལ་བ། b.1316 – d.1397
- chos dpal bzang po ཆོས་དཔལ་བཟང་པོ།
- don grub bzang po དོན་གྲུབ་བཟང་པོ།
- dpa’ bo rdo rje དཔའ་བོ་རྡོ་རྗེ།
- Rendawa Zhonnu Lodro རེད་མདའ་བ་གཞོན་ནུ་བློ་གྲོས། b.1349 – d.1412
- chos skyabs dpal bzang po ཆོས་སྐྱབས་དཔལ་བཟང་པོ།
- tshul khrims rin chen ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས་རིན་ཆེན།
- rol pa’i rdo rje རོལ་པའི་རྡོ་རྗེ། b.1340 – d.1383
Students
- bkra shis seng+ge བཀྲ་ཤིས་སེངྒེ།
- The First Kirti, Gendun Gyeltsen ཀིརྟི ༠༡ དགེ་འདུན་རྒྱལ་མཚན། b.1374 – d.1450
- shAkya dpal bzang ཤཱཀྱ་དཔལ་བཟང།
- Samlo Sanggye Tashi བསམ་བློ་སངས་རྒྱས་བཀྲ་ཤིས། d.1413
- bsam gtan blo gros བསམ་གཏན་བློ་གྲོས།
- Drubchen Namkha Gyeltsen གྲུབ་ཆེན་ནམ་མཁའ་རྒྱལ་མཚན། b.1326 – d.1401
- rin chen bsam ‘grub རིན་ཆེན་བསམ་འགྲུབ།
- Duldzin Drakpa Gyeltsen འདུལ་འཛིན་གྲགས་པ་རྒྱལ་མཚན། b.1374 – d.1434
- Jampel Gyatso འཇམ་དཔལ་རྒྱ་མཚོ། b.1356 – d.1428
- Sherab Sengge ཤེས་རབ་སེངྒེ། b.1383 – d.1445
- mdzes pa dpal ldan bzang po མཛེས་པ་དཔལ་ལྡན་བཟང་པོ།
- don yod rgyal mtshan དོན་ཡོད་རྒྱལ་མཚན།
- The Fourth Ganden Tripa, Lekpa Gyeltsen དགའ་ལྡན་ཁྲི་པ ༠༤ ལེགས་པ་རྒྱལ་མཚན། b.1375 – d.1450
- nor bzang rin chen dpal bzang ནོར་བཟང་རིན་ཆེན་དཔལ་བཟང།
- rin chen rgyal mtshan རིན་ཆེན་རྒྱལ་མཚན།
- Go Lotsawa Zhonnu Pel འགོས་ལོ་ཙཱ་བ་གཞོན་ནུ་དཔལ། b.1392 – d.1481
- Shakya Yeshe ཤཱཀྱ་ཡེ་ཤེས། b.1354 – d.1435
- ngag dbang grags pa ངག་དབང་གྲགས་པ།
- ‘jam dpal chos bzang འཇམ་དཔལ་ཆོས་བཟང།
- bzang skyong ba བཟང་སྐྱོང་བ།
- byang chub seng+ge བྱང་ཆུབ་སེངྒེ།
- shes rab grags ཤེས་རབ་གྲགས།
- ‘jam dpal bkra shis འཇམ་དཔལ་བཀྲ་ཤིས།
- dpal skyong དཔལ་སྐྱོང།
- nam mkha’ dpal ba ནམ་མཁའ་དཔལ་བ། b.1373 – d.1447
- Jamyang Choje Tashi Pelden འཇམ་དབྱངས་ཆོས་རྗེ་བཀྲ་ཤིས་དཔལ་ལྡན། b.1379 – d.1449
- dpal ldan don grub དཔལ་ལྡན་དོན་གྲུབ། b.1382 – d.1466
- sangs rgyas rin chen rgyal mtshan སངས་རྒྱས་རིན་ཆེན་རྒྱལ་མཚན། b.1350 – d.1431
- Baso Chokyi Gyeltsen བ་སོ་ཆོས་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་མཚན། b.1402 – d.1473
- rgyal mtshan bzang po རྒྱལ་མཚན་བཟང་པོ། b.1383 – d.1450
- The Seventh Ganden Tripa, Lodro Tenpa དགའ་ལྡན་ཁྲི་པ ༠༧ བློ་གྲོས་བརྟན་པ། b.1402 – d.1476
- rgyal ba Dka’ bcu pa རྒྱལ་བ་ཌཀའ་བཅུ་པ།
- bsod nams lhun grub བསོད་ནམས་ལྷུན་གྲུབ།
- Khedrubje Gelek Pelzang མཁས་གྲུབ་རྗེ་དགེ་ལེགས་དཔལ་བཟང། b.1385 – d.1438
- Gyeltsabje Darma Rinchen རྒྱལ་ཚབ་རྗེ་དར་མ་རིན་ཆེན། b.1364 – d.1432
- chos ‘phags ཆོས་འཕགས།
- chos ‘phags rgyal mtshan ཆོས་འཕགས་རྒྱལ་མཚན།
- yon tan dpal ཡོན་ཏན་དཔལ།
- blo gros rgyal mtshan བློ་གྲོས་རྒྱལ་མཚན། b.1402 – d.1472
- Chowang Drakpa ཆོས་དབང་གྲགས་པ། b.1404 – d.1469
- Chennga Sonam Zangpo སྤྱན་ང་བསོད་ནམས་བཟང་པོ། b.1380 – d.1416
- sangs rgyas ye shes སངས་རྒྱས་ཡེ་ཤེས།
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- Thurman, Robert. 1989. The Speech of Gold: Reason and Enlightenment in Tibetan Buddhism. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidas.
- Thurman, Robert (ed.). 2001. Life and Teachings of Tsongkhapa. Dharamsala: Library of Tibetan Works & Archives
- Tshe ‘phel. 1993. ‘Jam mgon rgyal ba gnyis pa tsong kha pa’i rnam thar. In Chen po hor gyi yul du dam pa’i chos ji ltar byung ba’i bshad pa rgyal ba’i bstan pa rin po che gsal bar byed pa’i sgron me, vol. 1, pp. 151-163. Xining: Mtsho sngon mi rigs dpe skrun khang. TBRC W21994.
- Tsong kha pa. 1975. Rtogs brjod mdun legs ma. In Zhal ‘dun nyer mtho phyogs bsdebs. Varanasi: mtho slob dge ldan spyi las khang.
- Ye shes rgyal mtshan. 1990. Rgyal ba tsong kha pa chen po’i rnam thar. In Lam rim bla ma brgyud pa’i rnam thar, vol. 1, pp. 319-398. Lhasa: Bod ljongs mi dmangs dpe skrun khang. TBRC W1CZ2730. See also TBRC W2DB4613.
Source: Joona Repo, “Tsongkhapa Lobzang Drakpa,” Treasury of Lives, accessed July 12, 2018, http://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Tsongkhapa-Lobzang-Drakpa/8986.
Joona Repo is currently a researcher at the Department of World Cultures, University of Helsinki.
Published August 2011
Disclaimer: All rights are reserved by the author. The article is reproduced here for educational purposes only.
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Interesting article indeed tells us a thousand words of a Great Lama . When Lama Tsongkhapa Lobzang Drakpa was born many people witnessed numerous auspicious sign. He could understand and memorized complicated texts at a very young age proving that he was someone very special. He received many teachings and tantric initiations from many great masters of different lineages. Many of Lama Tshongkhapa’s teachings were composed through the instructions and inspiration of deities and masters appearing in pure vision. Tsongkhapa was a prolific author of tantric literature, composing and gave teaching to many of what he had discovered. Tsongkhapa’s fame as a great scholar and realized practitioner was well known and respected by many all over Tibet and China. Even the Yongle Emperor of the Chinese Ming Dynasty invited him to give teachings. Interesting article to understand better of this Great Lama.
Thank you Rinpoche for this sharing
Tsongkhapa learned from many teachers and I found they are from different lineage too. Which this help him to founded Gelug lineage afterwards.
I remember I had goose bumps when the first time I heard Miktsema verse. I was started to feel like need to cry like no reason. Maybe it was because of Panirvana of Tsem Rinpoche, or affected by the sadness of his disciples, perhaps it also came from the blessings of Tsongkhapa. I’m glad to know the history of this verse now, which it came from Tsongkhapa’s devotion to one of his main teachers, Rendawa. Miktsema felt easy to recite and memorize too!
His practices with the eight disciples, for example completing 3,500,000 prostrations shows the efforts to attained full enlightenment.
Interesting short biography of Lama Tsongkhapa Lobzang Drakpa. Wow…. Very auspicious as when he was born , numerous sign appeared , witnessed by many people. So much so his birthplace is marked by the famous Kubum Monastery. At a young age, he is said to have been so sharp that he easily understood and memorized even the most complicated texts. He received numerous teachings and tantric initiations from a number of important masters of different lineages. It is believed that many of Lama Tshongkhapa’s works were composed through the instructions and inspiration of deities and masters appearing in pure vision. Amazing… truly he could able to communicate with them especially Manjushri received direct instructions and tantric initiations as well as described in his secret biography.
He’s devotion to his teacher Rendawa Zhonnu Lodro a highly distinguished Sakya scholar was so great that he composed the famous Migtsema verse in praise of him which been used till to this very day. It has an extremely significant impact on the development of Buddhism in Tibet and his influence extended to Mongolia and China. Thanks to Lama Tsongkhapa’s un-biased, thorough style, masterpieces and great teachings that will remain inspiring and unparalleled as today.
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All enlightened beings are worthy of homage and worship. They are the best beings to take refuge in and we should offer them our prayers as we can put our full confidence in them. Of all the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas, I personally find that Manjushri is extremely important. This is because what keeps us in samsara (cyclic rebirth) is our total ignorance and misunderstanding of the reality of existence. What is necessary to penetrate this deep ignorance that keeps us bound in a perpetual state of reincarnation is wisdom. We need many types of wisdom which can be acquired by relying on Manjushri as our yidam (meditational deity). By focusing on his meditation, practice, mantra and path we can gain wisdom in order to have the tool to penetrate the reality of existence. Therefore, Manjushri is an extremely important Buddha for us to focus on and take refuge in.
Tsem Rinpoche
(Photograph: this is the beautiful outdoor Manjushri statue who is in a teaching pose. He is floating above a koi fish pond nestled among lush greenery in Kechara Forest Retreat, Malaysia)
每一位觉者都能成为我们朝拜、膜拜的对象。他们是我们至高、至好的皈依,我们应该向他们做祈请,并且对他们生起全然的信念。在众佛菩萨之中,我个人认为文殊菩萨极为重要。这是因为使我们身陷娑婆(轮回)的是我们自身的无明,以及对实相的曲解。智慧是一种必要,它能穿透我们深不见底的无明,那个使我们受困于无止境投生的无明。我们需要多种智慧,而依止文殊菩萨作为我们的本尊,即能使我们成就多种智慧。透过文殊菩萨的观想、修持法门、心咒及修行道路,我们能成就智慧,拥有了知实相的“器具”。故此,专注于文殊菩萨的修持法门、皈依他,对我们而言都极为重要。
詹杜固仁波切
(相片:这尊户外文殊菩萨像呈转法轮姿。他被茂密的草木环绕,安坐在马来西亚克切拉禅修林的鱼池之上。)
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Tsongkhapa Lobzang Drakpa was born in the region of Amdo. He was a famous teacher of Tibetan Buddhism. Regarded as the living embodiment of Manjushri, and of Guru Rinpoche. At the time of birth ,there many auspicious sign appeared and numerous miraculous incidents happened. As a young man he could mastered all the teachings and he received numerous tantric empowerments. Amazing at the age of seven he experienced visions of Manjushri , where he received secret Tantric teachings , met and studied under many great masters. Throughout his life, Tsongkhapa placed great emphasis on the need for study and practice whose activities led to the formation of the Gelug school of Tibetan. He has dedicated his whole life to teaching, writing, founding monasteries. There have been many well known accounts of miracles related to Tsongkhapa. Interesting life story of a great Master.
Thank you Rinpoche for this great sharing.
Tsongkhapa Lobzang Drakpa was born in the Tsongkha region of Amdo in 1357. At the age of three, Tsongkhapa took lay upasaka vows from the Fourth Karmapa Rolpai Dorje.Tsongkhapa’s studies were mainly focused on the existing scholarly currents at that time, of which the most important were the Sakya tradition and the tradition of Sangpu an important Kadam monastery. Tsongkhapa died in 1419 at Ganden Monastery, the year after he completed his composition of The Elucidation of the Thoughtin 1418. He was 62 years old, and is believed to have attained enlightenment through yogic practices during the death process, attaining the illusory body . His body was entombed inside a jeweled stupa at Ganden. Thank you Rinpoche and blog team for this short history of Lama Tsongkhapa. ??
Medicine Buddha puja encourages healing of all levels – physical, mental and emotional healing for those in need.
High resolution file of this thangka is available for download for all dharma practitioners around the world and for those who just want sacred images in their environment. Enjoy, be blessed and share this with others.
Here is the link to free download of this image and many other images: https://www.tsemrinpoche.com/tsem-tulku-rinpoche/downloads/buddha-images.html?nggpage=7
Nice short video of a new LED signage reminding us of who we can go to for blessings in case of need: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EBwrkaKUoH0
Listening to the chanting of sacred words, melodies, mantras, sutras and prayers has a very powerful healing effect on our outer and inner environments. It clears the chakras, spiritual toxins, the paths where our ‘chi’ travels within our bodies for health as well as for clearing the mind. It is soothing and relaxing but at the same time invigorates us with positive energy. The sacred sounds invite positive beings to inhabit our environment, expels negative beings and brings the sound of growth to the land, animals, water and plants. Sacred chants bless all living beings on our land as well as inanimate objects. Do download and play while in traffic to relax, when you are about to sleep, during meditation, during stress or just anytime. Great to play for animals and children. Share with friends the blessing of a full Dorje Shugden puja performed at Kechara Forest Retreat by our puja department for the benefit of others. Tsem Rinpoche
Listen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbzgskLKxT8&t=5821s