enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Vajrakilaya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vajrakilaya

    Vajrakilaya is a significant Vajrayana deity who transmutes and transcends obstacles and obscurations. Padmasambhava achieved realisation through practicing Yangdag Heruka (Tibetan: yang dag he ru ka), [2] but only after combining it with the practice of Vajrakilaya to clean and clear obstacles and obscurations.

  3. Phurba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phurba

    The phurba as an iconographical implement is also directly related to Vajrakilaya, a wrathful deity of Tibetan Buddhism who is often seen with his consort Diptacakra (Tib. 'khor lo rgyas 'debs ma). He is embodied in the phurba as a means of destroying (in the sense of finalising and then freeing) violence, hatred, and aggression by tying them ...

  4. Yamantaka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamantaka

    Yamantaka is the "destroyer of death" deity in Vajrayana Buddhism, above riding a water buffalo. Carved cliff relief of Yamāntaka, one out of a set depicting the Ten Wisdom Kings, at the Dazu Rock Carvings in Chongqing, China. 7th century.

  5. Atsara Sale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atsara_Sale

    From the biographies of other well known practitioners of the time, such as Langlab Jangchub Dorje, [13] a student of Atsara Salé, it is clear that Atsara Salé was also a practitioner of Vajrakilaya. Yeshe Tsogyal was a renowned Vajrakilaya practitioner [3] and it is likely that he received these teachings from her or directly from Padmasambhava.

  6. Tibetan tantric practice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibetan_tantric_practice

    His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama holds a vajra offering mudra while preparing the Kalachakra mandala during a Kalachakra initiation ceremony in Washington D.C., US A torma and mandala offering for a Vajrakilaya empowerment ceremony. To practice tantric yoga, it is considered necessary to receive a tantric empowerment or initiation (Skt ...

  7. Wrathful deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wrathful_deities

    Mahakala statue, holding a flaying knife (kartika) and skullcup (kapala). In Buddhism, wrathful deities or fierce deities are the fierce, wrathful or forceful (Tibetan: trowo, Sanskrit: krodha) forms (or "aspects", "manifestations") of enlightened Buddhas, Bodhisattvas or Devas (divine beings); normally the same figure has other, peaceful, aspects as well.

  8. Mahakala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahakala

    Mahākāla (Sanskrit: महाकाल, pronounced [mɐɦaːˈkaːlɐ]) is a deity common to Hinduism and Buddhism. [1]In Buddhism, Mahākāla is regarded as a Dharmapāla ("Protector of the Dharma") and a wrathful manifestation of a Buddha, while in Hinduism, Mahākāla is a fierce manifestation of the Hindu god Shiva and the consort of the goddess Mahākālī; [1] he most prominently ...

  9. Abhiṣeka (Buddhism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abhiṣeka_(Buddhism)

    His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama holds a vajra offering mudra while preparing the Kalachakra mandala during a Kalachakra empowerment ceremony in Washington D.C., USA A torma and mandala offering for a Vajrakilaya empowerment ceremony. To practice tantric yoga, it is considered necessary to receive a tantric empowerment (Skt. abhiṣeka; Tib.