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KANGYUR

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Discourses

The Buddha's discourses: ranging from detailed presentations of doctrine to brief summaries

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Vajrayāna scriptures intended for experienced practitioners, often cryptic and hard to understand without commentary

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Degé Kangyur Catalog

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Eulogy
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The Buddha's Previous Lives
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Tengyur Catalog

Featured Translations

The Kangyur
Toh 358

The Exemplary Tale of Śārdūlakarṇa

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The Kangyur
Toh 224

The Episode of Dṛḍhādhyāśaya

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Old Tantras

Seventeen works representing a small selection of the many “inner” class tantras of the Ngagyur Nyingma (“earlier translation”) tradition.
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Tantra

The scriptures of the Vajrayāna intended for experienced practitioners, often cryptic and hard to understand without commentary.
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Sūtras about Karma

Uncover the principles of karma through our curated collection of sutras. These scriptures explain the law of cause and effect, offering guidance on ethical conduct and the impact of our actions on future experiences.

Toh 47
Chapter
207
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
Heap of Jewels
The Secrets of the Realized Ones
[No Sanskrit title]
Tathāgataguhya
|
[No Tibetan title]
དེ་བཞིན་གཤེགས་པའི་གསང་བ།

In this sūtra, the narrative largely revolves around the figures of Vajrapāṇi, the yakṣa lord and constant companion of the Buddha, and the Buddha himself. In the first half of the sūtra, Vajrapāṇi gives a series of teachings on the mysteries or secrets of the body, speech, and mind of bodhisattvas and the realized ones. In the second half of the sūtra, Vajrapāṇi describes several events in the Buddha’s life: his practice of severe asceticism, his approach to the seat of awakening, his defeat of Māra, his awakening, and his turning of the wheel of Dharma. Following this, the Buddha gives a prediction of Vajrapāṇi’s future awakening as a buddha and travels to Vajrapāṇi’s abode for a meal. Interspersed throughout the sūtra are sermons, dialogues, and marvelous tales exploring a large number of topics and featuring an extensive cast of characters, including several narratives about past lives of Vajrapāṇi, Brahmā Sahāṃpati, and the Buddha himself. The sūtra concludes with the performance of two long dhāraṇīs, one by Vajrapāṇi and one by the Buddha, for the protection and preservation of the Dharma.

By:
Theme:
Sūtras About Death
Buddha Nature Sūtras
The Buddha's Life
Sūtras about Karma
Texts on Other Buddhas
Read Text
Toh 57
Chapter
63
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
Heap of Jewels
The Teaching to the Venerable Nanda on Dwelling in the Womb
[No Sanskrit title]
Āyuṣmannanda­garbhāva­krānti­nirdeśa
|
[No Tibetan title]
ཚེ་དང་ལྡན་པ་དགའ་བོ་ལ་མངལ་ན་གནས་པ་བསྟན་པ།

In the context of one of the most famous stories in all of Buddhist literature‍—the story of the Buddha’s half-brother Nanda‍—The Teaching to the Venerable Nanda on Dwelling in the Womb offers the Buddha’s detailed account of the thirty-eight weeks of human gestation. The Buddha gives this teaching to Nanda after taking him to visit other realms, as the final method to break Nanda of his infatuation with his beautiful wife and settle him in the monastic life and its result. The sūtra explains conception in terms of how the antarābhava (the being in the state between death in one life and birth in the next) enters the womb, and it details the physical composition of the embryo, the suffering of the newborn being, and the miseries experienced over the course of a lifetime. After the concluding verses, there is also an account of Nanda’s past lives. Including as it does the most comprehensive ancient Indian account of gestation, this sūtra was an important source for embryology in Tibetan medicine.

By:
Theme:
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 71
Chapter
26
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
Heap of Jewels
Surata’s Questions
[No Sanskrit title]
Surataparipṛcchāsūtra
|
[No Tibetan title]
དེས་པས་ཞུས་པའི་མདོ།

Surata’s Questions follows Surata, a seemingly poor vagabond endowed with a wealth of ethical virtue. The juxtaposition of Surata’s poverty with the abundance of his moral merits forms a central theme of the sūtra. After being tested by the god Śakra, Surata finds a precious gem that he decides to give to the poorest person in the city. The narrative’s irony ensues when Surata decides that King Prasenajit should receive the gem, since his ethical depravity vitiates his material wealth. The shock of Surata’s decision occasions a valuable lesson on true wealth lying in moral integrity, to which the Buddha himself attests upon his arrival midway through the sūtra. The sūtra concludes with King Prasenajit’s recognition of the error of his ways and the Buddha’s prophecy of Surata’s coming awakening.

By:
Theme:
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 73
Chapter
23
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
Heap of Jewels
King Udayana of Vatsa’s Questions
[No Sanskrit title]
Udayanavatsa­rājapari­pṛcchā
|
[No Tibetan title]
བད་སའི་རྒྱལ་པོ་འཆར་བྱེད་ཀྱིས་ཞུས་པ།

Manipulated into a murderous rage by the jealous Queen Anupamā, King Udayana launches a barrage of arrows at Queen Śyāmāvatī. King Udayana is terrified when Queen Śyāmāvatī pays homage to the Buddha, cultivates loving kindness, and the arrows are repelled. Awestruck by such a spectacle and inspired by Queen Śyāmāvatī’s words of praise for the Buddha, King Udayana approaches the Buddha and requests a teaching on the inadequacies of women. The Buddha tells King Udayana that he must first understand his own faults and proceeds to deliver a discourse on the four faults of men, such as attachment to sense pleasures and failure to take care of elderly parents. The teaching is delivered with a plethora of analogies and striking imagery to turn the mind away from sensual desires. The work concludes with King Udayana giving up his weapons and going for refuge in the Three Jewels, filled with love for all beings.

By:
Theme:
Sūtras About Death
Sūtras About Women
Sūtras about Karma
Sūtras for Well-Being
The Buddha's Life
Read Text
Toh 93
Chapter
43
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
Heap of Jewels
The Seer Vyāsa’s Questions
[No Sanskrit title]
Ṛṣivyāsa­paripṛcchā
|
[No Tibetan title]
དྲང་སྲོང་རྒྱས་པས་ཞུས་པ།

In The Seer Vyāsa’s Questions, a great seer named Vyāsa, a non-Buddhist mendicant, approaches the Buddha with a large group of followers to inquire about the karmic results of giving. Some of the key points taught in this sūtra are such karmic results and the distinction between pure and impure giving. A final long passage describes the life in the god realms that is experienced as the fruit of particular acts of giving, and it explains the signs received by gods of their own impending death and subsequent human birth.

By:
Theme:
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 189
Chapter
4
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Prediction for Brahmaśrī
[No Sanskrit title]
Brahma­śrīvyākaraṇa
|
[No Tibetan title]
ཚངས་པའི་དཔལ་ལུང་བསྟན་པ།

The Prediction for Brahmaśrī features a brief encounter between the Buddha, out on his daily alms round, and a group of children playing on the outskirts of Śrāvastī. A boy named Brahmaśrī offers the Buddha the pavilion he has made of sand or dirt. The Blessed One accepts it and transforms it into one made of precious metals and jewels. Seeing this wonder, Brahmaśrī makes a vow to become a buddha himself in the future. This prompts the Buddha to smile and predict Brahmaśrī’s future awakening.

By:
Theme:
Quick Reads
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 206
Chapter
3
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
Pure Sustenance of Food
[No Sanskrit title]
|
[No Tibetan title]
ཟས་ཀྱི་འཚོ་བ་རྣམ་པར་དག་པ།

While the Buddha is staying at the Bamboo Grove with a diverse retinue, the monk Maudgalyāyana asks him about some unusual beings he saw during an alms round. The Buddha informs Maudgalyāyana that these beings are starving spirits. The Buddha gives a discourse explaining how these starving spirits were once humans yet committed misdeeds related to food that led them to their current dismal state. The misdeeds connected with food described by the Buddha present a picture of food-related prohibitions for the monastic saṅgha, such as failing to eat only a single meal a day, improperly partaking of meals, carrying away leftovers, and other forms of abusing food offerings. Food-related ethics are also given for lay people, mainly concerning how to prepare food for the saṅgha in a hygienic manner.

By:
Theme:
Quick Reads
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 218
Chapter
28
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
Purification of Karmic Obscurations
[No Sanskrit title]
Karmāvaraṇa­viśuddhi
|
[No Tibetan title]
ལས་ཀྱི་སྒྲིབ་པ་རྣམ་པར་དག་པ།

The Buddha is residing at Āmrapālī’s Grove in Vaiśālī when Mañjuśrī brings before him the monk Stainless Light, who had been seduced by a prostitute and feels strong remorse for having violated his vows. After the monk confesses his wrongdoing, the Buddha explains the lack of inherent nature of all phenomena and the luminous nature of mind, and the monk Stainless Light gives rise to the mind of enlightenment. At Mañjuśrī’s request, the Buddha then explains how bodhisattvas purify obscurations by generating an altruistic mind and realizing the empty nature of all phenomena. He asks Mañjuśrī about his own attainment of patient forbearance in seeing all phenomena as nonarising, and recounts the tale of the monk Vīradatta, who, many eons in the past, had engaged in a sexual affair with a girl and even killed a jealous rival before feeling strong remorse. Despite these negative actions, once the empty, nonexistent nature of all phenomena had been explained to him by the bodhisattva Liberator from Fear, he was able to generate bodhicitta and attain patient forbearance in seeing all phenomena as nonarising. The Buddha explains that even a person who had enjoyed pleasures and murdered someone would be able to attain patient forbearance in seeing all phenomena as nonarising through practicing this sūtra, which he calls “the Dharma mirror of all phenomena.”

By:
Theme:
Quick Reads
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 220
Chapter
153
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Buddha’s Collected Teachings Repudiating Those Who Violate the Discipline
[No Sanskrit title]
Buddha­piṭaka­duḥśīla­nigraha
|
[No Tibetan title]
སངས་རྒྱས་ཀྱི་སྡེ་སྣོད་ཚུལ་ཁྲིམས་འཆལ་པ་ཚར་གཅོད་པ།

When Śāriputra voices amazement at how the Buddha uses words to point out the inexpressible ways in which nothing has true existence, the Buddha responds with an uncompromising teaching on how the lack of true existence and the absence of a self are indeed not simply philosophical views but the very cornerstone of the Dharma. To have understood, realized, and applied them fully is the main quality by which someone may be considered a member of the saṅgha and authorized to teach others and to receive offerings. Those who persist in perceiving anything‍—even elements of the path and its results‍—as having any kind of true existence are committing the most serious of all violations of discipline (śīla), and since they fail to follow the Buddha’s core teaching in this way they should not even be considered his followers. The Buddha’s dialogue with Śāriputra continues on the consequences of monks’ violating their discipline more broadly, and he gives several prophecies about the future decline of the Dharma that will be caused by the misbehavior of such monks.

By:
Theme:
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 249
Chapter
2
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Sūtra Teaching the Four Factors
[No Sanskrit title]
Catur­dharma­nirdeśa­sūtra
|
[No Tibetan title]
ཆོས་བཞི་བསྟན་པའི་མདོ།

While Buddha Śākyamuni is residing in the Sudharmā assembly hall in the Heaven of the Thirty-Three, he explains to the great bodhisattva Maitreya four factors that make it possible to overcome the effects of any negative deeds one has committed. These four are: the action of repentance, which involves feeling remorse; antidotal action, which is to practice virtue as a remedy to non-virtue; the power of restraint, which involves vowing not to repeat a negative act; and the power of support, which means taking refuge in the Buddha, Dharma, and Saṅgha, and never forsaking the mind of awakening. The Buddha concludes by recommending that bodhisattvas regularly recite this sūtra and reflect on its meaning as an antidote to any further wrongdoing.

By:
Theme:
Quick Reads
Sūtras for Beginners
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 257
Chapter
309
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Quintessence of the Sun
[No Sanskrit title]
Sūryagarbha
|
[No Tibetan title]
ཉི་མའི་སྙིང་པོ།

The Quintessence of the Sun is a long and heterogeneous sūtra in eleven chapters. At the Veṇuvana in the Kalandakanivāpa on the outskirts of Rājagṛha, the Buddha Śākyamuni first explains to a great assembly the severe consequences of stealing what has been offered to monks and the importance of protecting those who abide by the Dharma. The next section tells of bodhisattvas sent from buddha realms in the four directions to bring various dhāraṇīs as a way of protecting and benefitting this world. While explaining those dhāraṇīs, the Buddha Śākyamuni presents various meditations on repulsiveness and instructions on the empty nature of phenomena. On the basis of another long narrative involving Māra and groups of nāgas, detailed teachings on astrology are also introduced, as are a number of additional dhāraṇīs and a list of sacred locations blessed by the presence of holy beings.

By:
Theme:
Sūtras about Karma
Texts on Other Buddhas
Read Text
Toh 314
Chapter
12
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
Entry into the Gloomy Forest
[No Sanskrit title]
Tamovanamukha
|
[No Tibetan title]
མུན་གྱི་ནགས་ཚལ་གྱི་སྒོ།

Entry into the Gloomy Forest tells the story of the eminent brahmin Pradarśa, who is converted to Buddhism upon receiving teachings from the Buddha and goes on to establish a Buddhist community in the Gloomy Forest. The text describes the exceptional circumstances of Pradarśa’s birth, his going forth as a monk, and the miraculous founding of the monastic community in the Gloomy Forest. This is followed by the Buddha’s account of the deeds and aspirations undertaken by Pradarśa in his previous lives that have resulted in the auspicious circumstances of his present life.

By:
Theme:
Quick Reads
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 320
Chapter
4
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
Describing the Benefits of Producing Representations of the Thus-Gone One
[No Sanskrit title]
Tathāgata­pratibimba­pratiṣṭhānuśaṃsa­saṃvarṇana
|
[No Tibetan title]
དེ་བཞིན་གཤེགས་པའི་གཟུགས་བརྙན་བཞག་པའི་ཕན་ཡོན་ཡང་དག་པར་བརྗོད་པ།

In this sūtra, the Buddha Śākyamuni tells a group of monks how they should respond when asked about the karmic benefits accrued by patrons who create representations of the Buddha. He explains five kinds of benefits that such virtuous deeds bring.

By:
Theme:
Quick Reads
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 338
Chapter
44
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Exposition of Karma
[No Sanskrit title]
Karmavibhaṅga
|
[No Tibetan title]
ལས་རྣམ་པ་འབྱེད་པ།

In The Exposition of Karma, the Buddha presents to the brahmin youth Śuka Taudeyaputra a discourse on the workings of karma. This is enlivened by many examples drawn from the rich heritage of Buddhist narrative literature, providing a detailed analysis of how deeds lead to specific consequences in the future. For the Buddhist, this treatise answers many questions pertaining to moral causation, examining specific life situations and their underlying karmic causes and emphasizing the key role that intention plays in the Buddhist ethic of responsibility.

By:
Theme:
Sūtras about Karma
Sūtras for Beginners
Read Text
Toh 340
Chapter
871
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Hundred Deeds
[No Sanskrit title]
Karmaśataka
|
[No Tibetan title]
ལས་བརྒྱ་པ།

The sūtra The Hundred Deeds, whose title could also be translated as The Hundred Karmas, is a collection of stories known as avadāna‍—a narrative genre widely represented in the Sanskrit Buddhist literature and its derivatives‍—comprising more than 120 individual texts. It includes narratives of Buddha Śākyamuni’s notable deeds and foundational teachings, the stories of other well-known Buddhist figures, and a variety of other tales featuring people from all walks of ancient Indian life and beings from all six realms of existence. The texts sometimes include stretches of verse. In the majority of the stories the Buddha’s purpose in recounting the past lives of one or more individuals is to make definitive statements about the karmic ripening of actions across multiple lifetimes, and the sūtra is perhaps the best known of the many works in the Kangyur on this theme.

By:
Theme:
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 344
Chapter
6
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Sūtra of Jñānaka
[No Sanskrit title]
Jñānakasūtra
|
[No Tibetan title]
ཤེས་ལྡན་གྱི་མདོ།

In the Heaven of the Thirty-Three, a god has reached the end of his life. He foresees his rebirth as a pig and calls out to the Buddha to save him. The Buddha prompts him to seek refuge in the Three Jewels and, as a result, the god finds himself reborn into a wealthy family in Vaiśālī. In this life as a child named Jñānaka, he encounters the Buddha once more and invites him and his monks for a midday meal. The Buddha prophesies to Ānanda that the meritorious offering made by Jñānaka will eventually lead the child to awaken as the buddha known as King of Foremost Knowing.

By:
Theme:
Quick Reads
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 345
Chapter
4
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Exemplary Tale About a Sow
[No Sanskrit title]
Sūkarikāvadāna
|
[No Tibetan title]
ཕག་མོའི་རྟོགས་པ་བརྗོད་པ།

In The Exemplary Tale About a Sow, the Buddha recounts the earlier events surrounding a god in Trāyastriṃśa heaven who foresaw that he would be reborn as a pig in Rājagṛha. At the encouragement of Śakra, this god, in the final moments of agony before his death, took refuge in the Three Jewels and thereby attained rebirth in the even higher Tuṣita heaven. The story thus illustrates the liberative power of taking refuge in the Three Jewels, as befittingly expressed in the concluding verses of this short avadāna.

By:
Theme:
Quick Reads
Sūtras About Death
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 350
Chapter
12
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
The Past Endeavor of Kanakavarṇa
[No Sanskrit title]
Kanakavarṇa­pūrvayoga
|
[No Tibetan title]
གསེར་མདོག་གི་སྔོན་གྱི་སྦྱོར་བ།

In The Past Endeavor of Kanakavarṇa the Buddha Śākyamuni illustrates the power of generosity by narrating a distant past life as a magnanimous king named Kanakavarṇa, who ruled over the entire continent of Jambudvīpa. While faced with a devastating famine, this bodhisattva king decided to offer the last bit of food left in Jambudvīpa‍—which had been kept especially for him‍—to a pratyekabuddha who had come to his palace begging for alms. As a result of King Kanakavarṇa’s selfless gift, the whole continent was miraculously showered with all possible foods and goods, and the people of Jambudvīpa were saved. In addition to this immediate fruit of the king’s meritorious deed, a further fruit of the king’s good deed is implied when the Buddha discloses King Kanakavarṇa’s identity at the end of the story. The king’s generosity would reach full karmic fruition in his perfect awakening in a future life as the Buddha Śākyamuni.

By:
Theme:
Sūtras about Karma
Read Text
Toh 354
Chapter
22
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
Teaching the Causes and Results of Good and Ill
[No Sanskrit title]
|
[No Tibetan title]
ལེགས་ཉེས་ཀྱི་རྒྱུ་དང་འབྲས་བུ་བསྟན་པ།

Teaching the Causes and Results of Good and Ill describes karmic cause and effect. The discussion begins with Ānanda, who asks the Buddha why beings‍—particularly human beings‍—undergo such a wide range of experiences. The Buddha replies that one’s past actions, whether good or ill, bring about a variety of positive and negative experiences. To this effect, he offers numerous vivid examples in which results in this current lifetime parallel actions from a past life. Emphasis is placed on the object of one’s actions, such as the Saṅgha or the Three Jewels. The discourse concludes with the Buddha describing the benefits associated with the sūtra and listing its alternative titles, while the surrounding audience reaps a host of miraculous benefits.

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Quick Reads
Sūtras about Karma
Sūtras for Beginners
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Toh 355
Chapter
15
Pages
The Kangyur
Discourses
General Sūtra Section
Teaching the Ripening of Virtuous and Nonvirtuous Actions
[No Sanskrit title]
|
[No Tibetan title]
དགེ་བ་དང་མི་དགེ་བའི་ལས་ཀྱི་རྣམ་པར་སྨིན་པ་བསྟན་པ།

Teaching the Ripening of Virtuous and Nonvirtuous Actions begins with Nanda asking the Buddha why beings living in this world experience different ranges of conditions. This leads the Buddha to explain how all experiences are brought about by the ripening of a variety of virtuous and nonvirtuous actions. The results of nonvirtuous actions are detailed first, prompting Nanda to ask about people, such as benefactors, who, conversely, are committed to performing virtuous actions. The Buddha’s discourse then details the workings of karma by making use of a plethora of examples before concluding with a description of virtuous actions and the benefits they bring.

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Quick Reads
Sūtras about Karma
Sūtras for Beginners
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Toh 743 / 1009
Chapter
2
Pages
The Kangyur
Tantra
Action tantras
The Dhāraṇī “Purifying All Karmic Obscurations”
[No Sanskrit title]
Sarva­karmāvaraṇaviśodhanī­nāma­dhāraṇī
|
[No Tibetan title]
ལས་ཀྱི་སྒྲིབ་པ་ཐམས་ཅད་རྣམ་པར་སྦྱོང་བའི་གཟུངས།

The Dhāraṇī “Purifying All Karmic Obscurations” is a relatively brief text consisting of a short dhāraṇī and a passage about its applications and benefits. Most applications have to do with death and funerary rituals, as the text provides many methods to aid the departed toward a favorable rebirth.

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Sūtras about Karma
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