Guru Shakya Sengé Lion of the Shakyas 
The  fifth emanation is Guru Shakya Sengé, the form of Guru Rinpoche  demonstrating the means of awakening within this lifetime through  discipline and detachment.
This is a very simple and gentle  approach, the gradual way of enlightenment. Shakya Sengé wears monk's  robes and embodies the principle of realization through the monastic  path.
After Buddha Shakyamuni's mahaparinirvana, there were  seven generations of regents, the first being Mahakashyapa and the  second, Ananda. The third and fourth lineage holders, Sanavasika (T.  Nimakungwa) and Upagupta, were originally Ananda's students. Guru Shakya  Sengé was ordained along with both of them by the Venerable Ananda on a  small island in the Ganges River. There is a tradition of performing  ordinations on such islands, which continues even today in Sri Lanka.  Some schools don't ever give the full ordination on land. They'll go out  on a river, a lake or the ocean and do it in a boat. It is said that  when Guru Shakya Sengé was ordained, the earth goddess offered him  monk's robes and a begging bowl in the presence of the buddhas of the  ten directions.
After his ordination, Shakya Sengé practiced  according to the traditional system which involves study,  contemplation, and meditation. For more than twenty years he studied  with Ananda, primarily focusing on the Tripitaka, or the Three Baskets  of teachings; the vinaya, sutra and abhidharma. Guru Shakya Sengé  mastered the Tripitaka as well as the outer and inner tantras and  realized enlightenment.
After studying with Ananda, Guru  Shakya Sengé spent many years in Bodhgaya. He practiced and taught the  vinaya, sutra and abhidharma, serving many who were particularly suited  to these teachings. Then he went to Rajagrha or Vulture Peak, one of the  most famous places in the world of Buddhism. Here he meditated on the  Prajnaparamita Sutras. The Buddha said that Vulture Peak has a special  power to pacify the mind so as to reveal its true nature. Shakya Sengé  went to meditate and contemplate the Prajnaparamita in all the places  Buddha had originally given these teachings.
In Nepal, Guru  Shakya Sengé took up the Vajrayana. In particular, he practiced on  Vajrakilaya, which is one of the eight heruka teachings. These are very  secret transmissions, the innermost of the tantric sadhanas. He  practiced and meditated on Yangdag Heruka and Vajrakilaya for about  three years. With this combination, he reached the highest Heruka level  which is known as Mahamudra. Mahamudra is the understanding of great  emptiness in which the entire universe is seen as great emptiness-bliss,  within which everything manifests. According to historical accounts,  Guru Rinpoche came to this realization in Nepal during the emanation  time of Guru Shakya Sengé.
Vajrakilaya is a very important  deity of the inner tantras. He represents the power and activities of  all the Buddhas of the three times and ten directions. So by achieving  the same realization as Vajrakilaya, Guru Rinpoche gained the ability to  subdue negative forces all over the world. He used his ability to heal  an eruption of the dark forces of the earth and sky that was taking  place in Nepal at the time. These were among the activities of Guru  Shakya Sengé, although he is mainly associated with discipline and  gentleness.
In spite of his high realization, Guru Shakya  Sengé follows the simplest ways and skillfully makes use of ordinary  forms. He represents authentic spiritual development which proceeds from  the ground level. He is not passively absorbed in a high state but is  working from the grassroots. Even though Guru Shakya Sengé is fully  realized, he makes appropriate use of worldly conventions. To be well  aware of the law of karmic causation and to apply this knowledge in  practice is the essential teaching of Guru Shakya Sengé.
Guru  Shakya Sengé's activities had a profound influence on King Ashoka, the  most famous and powerful monarch in all of Indian history. Ashoka was  predicted by Buddha Shakyamuni in the following way; one day the Buddha  was going to the city to beg for lunch. On the way, he passed a beach  where a group of children were playing. They were building sand castles  complete with structures for the king's court and treasure house. The  children had even taken on positions such as king, queen, and ministers.
As  the Buddha and his students approached, the little boy who was acting  as the king saw them coming and was very happy. He picked up a handful  of the sand and gravel which symbolized the royal treasure and ran  toward the Buddha. When Ananda saw that the child was going to put sand  in the Buddha's begging bowl, he was ready to turn the boy away, but the  Buddha said, "Let me accept his offering. This is special." The Buddha  lowered his bowl, but the child could not reach it. So the boy called  for one of his little ministers. The boy king asked his friend to get  down on all fours and then stood on his back to put the offering in  Buddha's begging bowl.
Ananda and the other students saw all  this and were very amazed. They asked, "Who is this child?" And Buddha  replied, "This boy is uncommon. Through his aspirations and this  connection with me here today, he will become a very great king about  two hundred and fifty years after my mahaparinirvana. He will help  spread my Dharma and support the sangha. He will create as many  monuments to the Buddha throughout the world as the grains of sand which  he carries on his palms. This is a very special child and his  companions who helped him today will continue to support this boy's  activities in the future." Then the Buddha did a special dedication  prayer and continued on into the city. That was his prophesy about King  Ashoka.
As predicted, Ashoka appeared about two hundred  years after Buddha's mahaparinirvana. He was the son of a very famous  monarch, but he was not considered a prince because he wasn't born in  the palace. The King had been with another woman outside the palace and  Ashoka was her son. Everybody knew of this. Most of Ashoka's  half-brothers lived within the palace walls. When the king died, the  brothers all started fighting for the throne. It seems the only thing  that they all agreed on was that Ashoka should not be king. But Ashoka  wanted to be king, and in any case, he had to defend himself against the  anger and jealousy of his half-brothers. The situation culminated in a  terrible fight one day which involved many of the sons but finally,  Ashoka emerged victorious. He had killed all the others to become king.
Soon  he moved the palace from the original site to Pataliputra. Today this  place is known as Patna. Having re-established his capital at  Pataliputra, Ashoka, a very powerful and vigorous fighter, started  conquering other kingdoms and became ruler of nearly all of central  India.
Ashoka pursued military conquest for years and killed  many people. He was a very violent and cruel king. In some accounts, it  is said that he wouldn't even eat lunch before he killed someone. In  those times there was a school centering on a wrathful female goddess.  Ashoka was a follower of this sect and his master told him that if he  executed 10,100 human beings and offered them to the goddess, his power  would increase, but since this was a ritual, he was not to do it in the  ordinary, military way.
So Ashoka had a ceremonial house  built right at the central junction of Pataliputra. It had four doors,  one in each of the four directions and whoever was unfortunate enough to  step inside would be executed, according to the king's orders.
As  Buddha Shakyamuni stated, Ashoka had a good, strong foundation for the  Dharma but for the moment, his great motivations were obscured. In order  to help dispel those obscurations, Guru Rinpoche came in the form of a  simple monk and stepped inside the house of sacrifice. The executioner  asked him to come forward and drew his sword.
The monk  asked, "Why are you going to kill me?" The executioner replied, "Because  these are the king's orders. It is part of a special ceremony." So the  monk said, "Let me stay here for one week and after that you can kill  me." The butcher agreed to this and the monk immediately started telling  him about the six realms of existence, describing each one in detail.  At the end, he pointed out that if he had already been killed, the  butcher would never have heard this profound teaching. The monk  meditated awhile and then gave more extensive teachings on the hell  realms. He told the butcher about the karma of killing and hurting  sentient beings, saying that this would lead to birth in various hell  realms. He explained how certain negative thoughts and actions relate to  specific forms of suffering.
Well, as it happened, the  butcher thought, "Until now I only knew one way of killing, but this  monk has taught me many more. When the week is over, I am going to boil  him in a big pot and then roast him!" By the end of the week, the  executioner had prepared everything just the way he wanted it. He had  the monk thrown alive into a huge cauldron of boiling soup. Then he  pulled out and roasted him for awhile, But then, in the midst of the  fire, he saw Guru Shakya Sengé sitting cross legged on a lotus. Thinking  this rather extraordinary, he informed the king. Ashoka had to come see  this for himself.
When Ashoka was entering the room, the  executioner suddenly recalled his mandate to kill whoever came through  the door. So he drew his sword, and the King, who never travelled  without a weapon, drew his own and asked, "Why are you trying to kill  me?" "Those were your orders," the executioner answered.
And  the king said, "I don't remember giving you any orders to kill me!" The  butcher reminded him, "You ordered me to kill the first ten thousand  people who come into this room. I still have a ways to go. Therefore I  am under orders to kill you." So Ashoka said, "Well, if that is the  case, you were in here first, so maybe I should kill you!" At that  point, the monk effortlessly levitated up into the sky. After performing  the four activities of sitting, standing, laying down and walking in  space, he began giving teachings. They were still having quite an  argument while the monk was performing these miraculous activities in  the sky above them.
Soon, Guru Shakya Sengé began to talk to  them about how bad the karma is for taking the lives of other sentient  beings. "These are terrible actions," he said. "This is not the Dharma,  which is a positive path. Stop all this violence. Since the king is  unwilling to give his own life in this ceremony, how can he take the  lives of others? You have been told about the evils of killing, so you  should not take the lives of others anymore." The monk warned, "By  taking advantage of your power and using it for selfish ends, you will  end up suffering far more than your victims." Upon hearing this, both  King andexecutioner dropped their swords and became blissfully aware of  the Guru who continued giving teachings. Ashoka himself destroyed the  sacrificial house and then took refuge in the Three Jewels.
Historical  records relate that after this episode, Ashoka vowed that he would  never again touch a sword with violent or negative thoughts. It is said  that he became the most gentle and peaceful king of all time. Even  without making war, Ashoka's loving-kindness and compassionate attitude  insured that his domain grew even bigger and more prosperous until his  kingdom covered a large part of southern Asia. It spread from  Afghanistan on the west to Burma and Cambodia in the east and south to  Sri Lanka. Ashoka visited the pilgrimage places of the Buddha and  erected many stone pillars, inscription stelae, pyramid-shaped monuments  and one million stupas containing Buddha relics throughout these lands.  In Nepal, there are four or five stupas near Kathmandu that were built  by Ashoka and there are many others all over India.
Previously,  he had been known as Ashoka the Cruel, but since he'd become a follower  of Dharma his name was changed to Dharmashoka. He is one of the  greatest examples of a religious monarch in the history of the world. In  the guise of a simple monk, Guru Padmasambhava helped bring Ashoka to  the Dharma.
That was the external version of the story  concerning Guru Shakya Sengé's activities in Pataliputra. The inner  meaning is that bodhicitta is the absolute state of Guru Shakya Sengé.  This supremely beneficial thought arising from the expanse of infinite  love and immeasurable compassion is always coemergent with wisdom.  Wisdom matures the expression of love and compassion so that they become  pure and true. These qualities are not externally existing, as if you  would have to acquire them from anywhere outside yourself. They are all  naturally inherent within you. Love and compassion are already yours to  share. Look into your mind and discover that it has a wondrous array of  original attributes. Loving-kindness and compassion are supreme among  these primordial qualities.
The precious bodhicitta is  radiating all the time, guiding us through all our difficulties even  though we are hardly aware of it. Love and compassion inspire us to  communicate and make friends with each other. They are completely based  in primordial wisdom and inseparable from the nature of ordinary  awareness. Therefore, when we start to actively develop bodhicitta,  negative emotions, such as anger, hatred, jealousy, and violent  thoughts, naturally dissolve and vanish. When you begin to cultivate  genuine loving-kindness and compassion, ego-clinging and obstructions  naturally disappear. At the same time, you feel great joy, peace and  happiness which can be shared and appreciated by your friends and  others. We should grow strong in the practice of friendliness and  compassion toward all beings.
The absolute way to understand  Guru Shakya Sengé is as detachment and simplicity; to find  satisfaction, joy and happiness in following the middle path between  asceticism and luxury. This principle is well represented in the serene  mood and transcendent discipline expressed in artistic representations  of Guru Shakya Sengé.
The Sambhoga Guru Shakya Sengé  portrayed on thangkas looks a lot like Buddha Shakyamuni in a monk's  robe with one face, two arms, two legs and a top knot or unishaka on his  crown chakra. In Tibetan, this feature is called tsupa which is nothing  other than a dark blue concentration of wisdom light. His skin is  golden and his robes are red. He holds a begging bowl in the palm of his  left hand while sitting on a lotus with sun and moon discs. Whereas  Buddha Shakyamuni stretches his right hand down in the earth touching  mudra, Guru Shakya Sengé holds a five-pointed vajra. Like all the other  emanations, his body is luminous and transparent, being completely of  the nature of a wisdom-rainbow body.
As in all the previous  meditations, begin with the supreme thought to benefit others. Visualize  a small sphere of golden light which transforms into Guru Shakya Sengé.
Recite  the Vajra Guru mantra for as long as you'd like before absorbing the  golden wisdom-essence into your heart. Remain in non-dual meditation for  a while and then dedicate the merit to all sentient beings.
Among  the six paramitas, Guru Shakya Sengé is associated with sila. By making  us more calm and peaceful, practice on Guru Shakya Sengé will naturally  develop moral strength, discipline and perfect conduct, which leads to  deeper concentration and contemplation. The middle path beyond  asceticism and indulgence leads to great equanimity and a profound  realization of the true nature. This is the main principle embodied in  the emanation of Guru Shakya Sengé.
Guru Sengé Dradok, The Lion's Roar 
The  sixth manifestation of Padmasambhava is Guru Sengé Dradok. Sengé Dradok  is the first of the two wrathful emanations of Guru Rinpoche, the other  being Dorje Drollo. Wrathful deities are particularly useful in  counteracting negative influences from black magic, curses and other  disturbances, such as people who malign you for no good reason. Guru  Sengé Dradok is very efficient in subduing or pacifying such obstacles.
Sengé  Dradok emanated in India. Orissa, which is not far from Calcutta, was  the site of a very famous stone lingam and yoni which symbolizes Shiva  in union with his consort. Every day people would slaughter and burn  many animals there in ceremonial sacrifices. Sengé Dradok went there and  pointed his finger at this lingam until it cracked and burst. People  took that as a sign and stopped making animal sacrifices in that area.
Another  story related to Guru Sengé Dradok took place north of Bodhgaya at  Nalanda, the largest monastery in the history of Buddhism as well as the  first great university on earth. As part of the contemplation practices  at Nalanda, practitioners engaged in debates so as to refine their  understanding of the Dharma. Everyday, there were lively exchanges  expressing the viewpoints of the various schools within Buddhism as well  as arguments in support of the tenets of some non-buddhist traditions.  These contests still go on at some of the bigger monasteries.
In  ancient times, it was expected that the loser of the debate would  convert to the winner's viewpoint. It happened that a group of 500  powerful, non-Buddhist scholars came to Nalanda. For the most part, they  were black magicians, so they requested a two-part competition, the  normal scholarly debate, followed by a contest of magic.
Nalanda  was full of scholars and it was easy to find five hundred qualified  debaters, but no one at Nalanda was skilled in magic. They knew that  this could cost them the debate and force them to convert, so they had a  meeting to figure out what to do.
Suddenly a black lady  appeared in the sky before them and said "Don't worry. My brother can  help you." "Who is your brother?" they asked.
"His name is Padmavajra," she replied.
"Where is he?" they asked.
"He  is now living in the darkness of the Frightful Charnel Ground. You must  call on him to come." And they said, "We don't have his number. How  should we invite him?" So the black lady taught them the secret hot-line  code: the Seven Line Prayer. She told them Padmavajra would appear if  they petitioned him in this way. As they chanted the prayer from the  rooftops of Nalanda, Guru Rinpoche immediately appeared and agreed to  help them.
Come the day of the debate, the Buddhists easily  won the first half of the contest. The non-buddhist school then  threatened them with by saying that after a week there would be plenty  of signs. So Guru Rinpoche practiced on Singhamukha, the Lion-faced  dakini, and she immediately gave him the appropriate teachings to  actualize the completion stage. When a week had passed, a host of  frightful omens like violent winds and thunder came. Guru Rinpoche  transformed into the wrathful Sengé Dradok and with the freedom and  power of the lion's roar, he made the subjugation mudra and threw the  thunderback at them. They also conjured other minor forms of disturbing  magic, like threatening entities hovering in the sky and other terrible  things. Guru Sengé Dradok pointed the subjugation mudra and the dark  shadows immediately fell to the ground. This was how he protected  Nalanda University and helped meditative and contemplative activity  continue flourishing there. All these extraordinary actions are  associated with the energy of Guru Sengé Dradok.
The form of  Guru Sengé Dradok is especially helpful in subduing the irrational  energies of black magic as well as at dispelling bad omens and  nightmares. If, unexpected obstacles suddenly arise, he has the power to  neutralize both visible and invisible beings and to avert natural  disasters. Guru Sengé Dradok can pacify all such threats. He is also a  strong buddha for overcoming jealousy. When you stop being jealous, your  attitude becomes one of love and compassion. There is nothing  obstructing the free radiation of beautiful qualities.
Sengé  Dradok is a wrathful emanation but his wrath is basically directed  toward the destruction of jealously and greed. It is not accompanied by  attachment and clinging; there is nothing to win or lose. Rather, this  wrath actively dispels lust and envy. There are many wrathful deities in  the Vajrayana, but none of them are angry or emotionally negative.  These forms express the intensity of true love and the fierceness of  genuine compassion involved in dispelling attachment, ignorance and  anger.
There is a line from a Vajrakilaya tantra which says,  "The vajra wrath of bodhicitta cuts through and destroys anger." This  is very important to understand. The wrathful nature of Guru Sengé  Dradok is totally based upon love and compassion for all sentient  beings.
The absolute way to meditate on Guru Sengé Dradok is  to transcend jealousy and greed. This will instantly overcome black  magic, curses, hexes, nightmares, and unexpected obstacles.
To  practice on Guru Sengé Dradok, begin by cultivating a feeling of loving  kindness and bodhicitta. Then visualize a dark blue sphere of light  within a churning black cloud which transforms into the wisdom rainbow  form of Guru Sengé Dradok. His skin color is dark blue and he has one  face, two arms and two legs. Wearing a tiger-skin and surrounded by  wisdom fire, he stands upon a demon who embodies negative habit energy  and black magic. All of this is happening above a lotus surmounted by  sun and moon disks. A crown of five skulls sits on his head and his long  reddish-yellow hair blows up into the sky. He has three glaring eyes  looking upward and four fangs. His right hand holds a flaming,  five-pointed vajra high in the air and his left hand makes the  subjugation mudra toward the earth. Lightning bolts fly from the tips of  his fingers and sometimes you will see eight-spoked iron wheels  spinning amidst the flames. Imagine he is chanting with great power, the  syllables HUM and PHAT! Like a lion's roar, the deep vibration of his  voice shakes the entire world.
Visualize Sengé Dradrog and  recite the Vajra Guru Mantra as much as you can while he radiates wisdom  lights which dissolve all negativity, black magic, bad omens,  nightmares, or anything in the environment that might seem a little  strange or unusual. Feel that these obstacles are completely removed by  his blessing. Finally, dissolve Sengé Dradok into a dark blue light  which merges with your heart center. Remain in meditation as long as you  can and then dedicate the merit to all beings.
This is a Five-Part Series. The links are as follows:
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: An Introduction
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Two (Padma Gyalpo, Loden Chokse)
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Three (Nyima Ozer, Padmasambhava)
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Four (Shakya Senge, Senge Dradok)
The Eight Manifestations of Padmasambhava: Part Five (Padma Jungne, Dorje Drollo)
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Thank you so much for posting all this! It has been a wonderful few days of reading and practice.
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting the "Manifestations of Padmasambhava." Excellent.
ReplyDeleteSome of us are worried about your well-being as there have been no entries on your blog for quite some time.
Hope all is well with you.