The 8 Great Bodhisattvas and the 8 Great Qualities of Buddha; 8 Great Mantras and Why We Need These Qualities
Feature Contents
Eight Great Bodhisattvas surrounding the Buddha, 17th century Chinese painting.
Who are the Eight Great Bodhisattvas and why are they so important to Mahayana Buddhist practice? Why are they also called the Eight Great Siblings or Eight Great Heros? In what way to they represent the Eight Great Qualities of Buddha? How do the Eight Bodhisattvas relate to the Eightfold Path taught by Buddha? We answer these questions and more, and present the mantras of the Eight Great Bodhisattvas in this introduction to the Eight Great Ones.
The 8 Great Bodhisattvas — also known as the Eight Great Siblings or the Eight Great Heroes — represent the eight great ideals of the Mahayana Path. They also represent the Eightfold Path as taught by Buddha in his very first teaching, through the compassionate lens of Mahayana Buddhism, the Bodhisattva Path.
They are integral to the Great Vehicle Path of Buddhism, a philosophy that embraces compassion and wisdom for all beings. The Eight Great Bodhisattvas represent the Eight Great qualities of Shakyamuni Buddha — and are most often shown surrounding Buddha in older paintings.
More than Eight Symbols and Qualities
The Eight Great Ones appear in many Sutras, asking questions of the Buddha, probing with deeper and more profound questions. For this reason, they are called the Eight Great Siblings. They are the Buddha’s children of knowledge and Enlightenment, who remain in Samsara to help all beings in eight different ways.
They are more than just symbols, yet they embody the eight great qualities of the Buddha. They are the saviors and heroes of Mahayana Buddhism. Iconic of the Bodhisattvas is the great Lord of Compassion, Avalokiteshvara (Chenrezig) — yet he is one of eight great heroes and champions of Compassion and Wisdom, the Mahayana Path.
The most famous of these are the Three Great Bodhisattvas, who each represent one of the most important aspects of Buddha qualities: Wisdom, represented by Manjushri, Compassion, represented by Avalokiteshvara (Chenrezig) and Power represented by Vajrapani. Yet the remaining five are key aspects of Enlightenment. Together, the eight, represent qualities we desperately need in our tumultuous world.
The Three Great Bodhisattvas, from left to right: Manjushri (Wisdom of Buddha), Avalokiteshvara (Chenrezig, Compassion of Buddha), Vajrapani (Power of Buddha.)
The Compassion and Wisdom of the Bodhisattvas are reassuring in times of crisis. Today, with war, sickness, and economic devastation — and the inevitable hunger and suffering that follow such disasters — we take refuge in our compassionate Bodhisattva saviors. The Bodhisattvas are the “saviors” — the champions or heroes.
Each Bodhisattva tends to be narrowly “focused”: Avalokiteshvara (Chenrezig, Kuanyin) for Compassion, Manjushri for Wisdom, Vajrapani for Power, (fierce activity), and so on. They are known as the Eight Great Siblings of the Buddha because they are the “offspring” of Buddha’s Wisdom and Compassion and Activity. Thought of another way, they are emanations of Buddha’s Eight Great Qualities.
Shakyamuni Buddha (center) surrounded by the Eight Great Bodhisattva.
Although it can be beneficial to focus on “the specialist” manifestations of Buddha’s qualities — at times when we specifically need that quality in our lives (such as protection, healing, wisdom) — it is important to understand that all Bodhisattvas and Buddha’s embody fully all the Enlightened Qualities.
Vajrapani, though known as the fierce wrathful activity of Buddha, is equally compassionate and wise. It’s a matter of focus. It is also, sometimes, a matter of teaching lineage or cultural emphasis. Some traditions emphasize Avalokiteshvara, while others focus on Manjushri.
The Bodhisattvas surrounding Buddha.
Sutras of the Various Bodhisattvas
Where do we find these Bodhisattvas in the Sutras?
Eight Great Bodhisattvas:
– Akashagarbha: Womb of Space Sutra
– Avalokiteshvara: Heart Sutra, Lotus of the Good Law Sutra
– Kshitigarbha: Earth Store Sutra
– Maitreya: mentioned in the Pali Sutras as the next buddha, Mahayana Sutras
– Manjushri: Vimalakirti-nirdesha Sutra, Flower Garland Sutra, Prajnaparamita Sutras
– Samantabhadra: Lotus of the Good Law Sutra, Flower Garland Sutra
– Vajrapani: Many early Pali Sutras, Maha Vairochana Sutra
All of them, together with at total of twenty-five, appear in the Sūtra on Ten Methods of Rebirth in Amitābha Buddha’s Land (十往生阿彌陀佛國經).
8 Bodhisattvas Embody 8 Qualities of Buddha
The full list of the eight from Maitreya’s Uttaratantra Shastra. These first three qualities and Bodhisattvas are known as the Buddha’s Qualities that Benefit Others. The remaining five embody Buddha’s merits and activities:
Manjushri — embodies Buddha’s wisdom or Prajñā in Sanskrit.
Avalokiteshvara — embodies Buddha’s compassion or karuna in Sanskrit
Vajrapani — embodies Buddha’s power or satki in Sanskrit
Maitreya — embodies Buddha’s activity or “karma.” This is because Buddha predicted Maitreya would be the next or “Future Buddha”.
Kshitigarbha — embodies Buddha’s merits and the “richness” derived from merits
Samantabhadra — embodies the conduct of Buddha and the practice of prayers and offerings.
Sarvanivarana-Vishkambhin — embodies Buddha’s practices and qualities, and in this way purifies obstructions
Akashagarbha — embodies Buddha’s blessings and thereby purifies negativities.
Relating to the Eighfold Path
Although the practice of the 8 Great Bodhisattvas encompasses the Noble Eightfold Path within the scope of each of their practices, they represent a particular emphasis. For example, Manjushri embodies “right understanding” or Samma Ditthi.
Manjushri — exemplifies Right Understanding (samma ditthi), as he embodies Buddha’s wisdom (prajna).
Avalokiteshvara — exemplifies right speech, as he teaches compassion and embodies the virtues of the Padma (Lotus) family of Compassion and Buddha Speech through speaking the Dharma for our benefit.
Vajrapani — exemplifies “Right Action” as he demonstrated in the Sutta when he appeared over Buddha’s head to protect him from the spiteful Brahman.
Maitreya — exemplifies “Right Effort” as demonstrated by his heroic mission to be the next manifested Buddha in our worlds.
Kshitigarbha — exemplifies “Right Livelihood” through his association with auspicious earth element.
Samantabhadra — embodies “Right Thought” through his glorious Bodhisattva Aspiration Vow
Eight Bodhisattvas embody Eight Qualities of Buddha
The Eight Great Sons of the Buddha — not to be thought of as physical offspring, but as spiritual children — are born from the Eight Great Qualities of Shakyamuni Buddha: wisdom, compassion, power, activity, merit, qualities, blessings and aspirations. [See Khenpo Choga’s definition below.]
We might think of Manjushri as the embodiment of wisdom, and Avalokiteshvara as the very face of compassion, but all of the Eight Great Bodhisattvas embody both Karuna (Compassion) and Prajna (Wisdom.)
Vajrapani (right of Buddha), the protector of Buddha was associated with Zeus by the Ancient Greeks, because he held the thunderbolt (Vajra) in hand. A Greco Buddhist sculpture of the 2nd century.
When you hear the name Vaprapani, you might think of a ferocious Bodhisattva hurling a vajra to protect Shakyamuni Buddha [story below] — but he, equally, embodies both “wings” of Enlightenment. The name Kshitigarbha (Earth Store Bodhisattva) conjures an image of a kind monk rescuing those suffering in the hells (either literal or psychological) — yet it is through both wisdom and compassion he can accomplish his savior mission. He is also strongly associated with the earth.
The Bodhisattvas surrounding Buddha.
Manjushri, Avalokiteshvara (Guanyin), Vajrapani and Maitreya (the Future Buddha) are the “Superstars” of the “Eight Great Bodhisattvas” — often translated as the “Eight Great Siblings” (Skt. aṣṭa utaputra; Tib. ཉེ་བའི་སྲས་བརྒྱད་, nyewé sé gyé, Wyl. nye ba’i sras brgyad). Less well known are Kshitigarbha, Ākāśagarbha, Samantabhadra, and Sarvanivarana-Vishkambhin. This is not a matter or rank — all of the Eight Great Ones are equally meritorious — it’s more a matter of lineage and tradition.
The Three Great Bodhisattvas, from left to right: Manjushri (Wisdom of Buddha), Avalokiteshvara (Chenrezig, Compassion of Buddha), Vajrapani (Power of Buddha.)
Three great ones — Speech, Mind, Body
In Vajrayana tradition, the “mind” of the Buddha manifests as Manjushri, Lord of Wisdom, while the “speech” of the Buddha — his compassion in delivering the sacred Dharma — is Avalokiteshvara. Vajrapani represents the “Body” of the Buddha — the activities of the Buddha in multiple worlds (not just our world!) Just as Om Ah Hum mantra syllables stand for Body Speech and Mind, the Bodhisattvas Vajrapani, Avalokiteshvara, and Manjushri similar represent these important concepts.
The quality of Compassion is embodied in Guanyin (Kuan Shi Yin, Avalokiteshvara, Chenrezig)
Specialist Bodhisattvas — is a matter of focus
When we describe Avalokiteshvara (Kuan Yin, Guanyin, Chenrezig) as the Bodhisattva of Compassion, this does not mean that he is the “most compassionate” of the Bodhisattvas. Karuna or Compassion is his “teaching focus.”
Today, with so many people asking about healing, a lot of people are re-focusing on visualizations, mantras, and meditations for Medicine Buddha, Tara, and other “healing” or “protective” emanations. There are benefits in terms of the visual symbols and mantras, but it is important to know that all Buddhas or Bodhisattvas embody the same energies. If you practice Avalokiteshvara, famous for Compassion (Karuna) you also practice with the universal healing energies.
The Great Eight
Maitreya Buddha, the Future Buddha.
To break down the “specialties” of the Eight Great Bodhisattvas — remembering that all embody the same universal qualities — you could summarize their characters this way:
Maitreya — embodies Buddha’s activity (He is also the “Future Buddha”)
Kshitigarbha — embodies Buddha’s merits and the “richness” derived from merits
Samantabhadra — embodies the aspirations of Buddha and the practice of prayers and offerings.
Sarvanivarana-Vishkambhin — embodies Buddha’s qualities and thereby purifies obstructions. His name means “He who blocks (viṣkambhin) all of the hindrances (sarva nivāraṇa).
Akashagarbha — embodies Buddha’s blessings and thereby purifies negativities.
Yet, Kshitigarbha fully embodies all of the others. To practice one Bodhisattva is to practice them all. All Bodhisattvas fully realize and exemplify: Wisdom, Compassion, Power, Activity, Merits, Aspirations, Qualities, and Blessings.
Video: Chanting the Three Great Bodhisattvas:
Khenpo Chöga: the 8 Immeasurable Qualities
According to Khenpo Chöga:
“Among the immeasurable qualities of the Buddha, eight of his foremost qualities manifest as the eight bodhisattvas:
1) the personification of the Buddha’s wisdom (Tib. ཡེ་ཤེས་ཀྱི་རང་གཟུགས་, Wyl. ye shes kyi rang gzugs) is Bodhisattva Mañjuśrī;
2) the personification of the Buddha’s compassion (Tib. སྙིང་རྗེའི་རང་གཟུགས་, Wyl. snying rje’i rang gzugs) appears as Bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara;
3) the personification of the Buddha’s power or capacity (Tib. ནུས་པའི་རང་གཟུགས་, Wyl. nus pa’i rang gzugs) is Bodhisattva Vajrapāṇi;
4) the personification of the Buddha’s activity (Tib. ཕྲིན་ལས་, Wyl. phrin las) is Bodhisattva Maitreya;
5) the personification of the Buddha’s merit (Tib. བསོད་ནམས་རང་གཟུགས་, Wyl. bsod nams rang gzugs) arises as Bodhisattva Kṣitigarbha;
6) the personification of the Buddha’s qualities (Tib. ཡོན་ཏན་གྱི་རང་གཟུགས་, Wyl. yon tan gyi rang gzugs) appears as Bodhisattva Sarvanīvaraṇaviṣkambhī;
7) the personification of the Buddha’s blessings (Tib. བྱིན་རླབས་ཀྱི་རང་གཟུགས་, Wyl. byin rlabs kyi rang gzugs) arises as Bodhisattva Ākāśagarbha; and
8) the personification of the Buddha’s aspirations (Tib. སྨོན་ལམ་གྱི་རང་གཟུགས་, Wyl. smon lam gyi rang gzugs) is manifest as Bodhisattva Samantabhadra.”
Mantras — no permission needed
Manjushri’s mantra. (From VisibleMantra.com)
Practicing the Eight Bodhisattvas
Practicing the Eight Great Bodhisattvas brings these qualities into your life. We can say we are practicing Samantabhadra’s quality when we aspire to practice the great Bodhisattvas. The practice can be as s imple as Taking Refuge and making offerings, visualized or real. You don’t have to have a shrine to practice, but as your enthusiasm and faith grows, it’s helpful. You can simply visualize eight beautiful Bodhisattvas in front of you.
Although they are visualized in particular ways, which symbolize their qualities and powers, it is important to remember that the Eight Great Bodhisattvas are not limited in form. For instance, we see Avalokiteshvara in countless forms of compassion: male, female, 1000-armed, peaceful, wrathful and. so on. This is because compassion has many faces.
It is no different for all the Bodhisattvas. In temples you may see male and female aspects of all of them. What is improtant is to remember their name, their unlimited qualities, and to emulate those in your own life. We do this by following the Eightfold Path and aspiring to the Eight Qualities of the Buddha and the Eight Bodhisattvas.
Mantras of the Eight Bodhisattvas
The mantras of the Eight Great Bodhisattvas can be practiced by anyone. No permission or special transmission is required for the Great Ones (although it is always beneficial to receive transmission and instruction.) A very quick practice is to chant the mantras of whichever Bodhisattva you feel closest to — or the one who focuses on what you need most right now: wisdom, compassion, activity, and so on:
[For more on each Bodhisattva see the end of this feature.]
Dhyani Bodhisattvas
The fearsome power of great Vajrapani, who is always ready to “beat down” the obstacles to our practice.
Three of the Great Bodhisattvas are also “Dhyani Bodhisattvas) — meaning they are the spiritual sons specifically of one of the Dhyani Buddhas. [For a feature on the Five Buddhas, see>>]
The spiritual son of Amitabha Padma (Lotus) Buddha in the West is Avalokiteshvara (Chenrezig in Tibetan, Kuanyin or Kanon in other traditions). Samantabhadra is the Dhyani Bodhisattva (son) of Vairochana. The spiritual son of Akshobya is Vajrapani, exemplified in the Vajra. This is beautifully highlighted in the story of Vajrapani and his thunderbolt, hovering over the head of the prideful Brahmin: [For a full feature on Vajprani, see>> ]
“And at that moment Vajrapani holding up a huge vajra, flaming, ablaze and glowing, up in the sky just above Ambattha was thinking, “If this young man does not answer a proper question put to him by the Blessed Lord by the third time of asking, I’ll split his head into seven pieces!” The Lord saw Vajrapani, and so did Ambattha. And at the sight, Ambattha was terrified and unnerved, his hairs stood on end, and he sought protection, shelter, and safety from the Lord. Crouching down close to the Lord.”
Clearly, Vajrapani exemplifies ferocious, wrathful activity. He is famously known as the “protector of Shakyamuni Buddha.”
Although in times of crisis, we may turn to the “specialists” — for instance, protection from Vajrapani — generally we meditate and honor the Bodhisattvas from our teaching lineage. If you have no teacher, of course, you can do no wrong — all of the Bodhisattvas are Enlightened examples for our practice and require no permission or transmissions.
You might choose to focus on Manjushri if you seek Wisdom, or Vajrapani if you need “energy and power” for protection, but practicing One of these is the same as practicing All. A key understanding of Shunyata is the concept of Oneness. [For a feature on Shunyata or Oneness/Emptiness, see>>]
We may visualize various emanations of Buddha Enlightenment, and — provided they are fully Enlightened manifestations — take refuge in them. Taking refuge and focusing on Vajrapani is already a complete practice, but, with an emphasis on “activity.” However, someone who practices Manjushri daily, taps into the very same “active principle. It is a matter of your own emphasis.
Aspects within aspects
In Vajrayana, when you choose a Yidam as “heart deity” for practice, you understand that all Yidams are One and all Yidams are fully Enlightened. You choose a heart deity as a skillful means. You choose the aspect you most need to “work on.” For instance, if I have anger issues, I might choose to work with Vajrapani — to learn how to use my fierceness in a meritorious way. If I lack compassion, I might choose to work with Avalokiteshvara.
Just to make things a little more interesting — again a practice of skillful means — each of the Bodhisattvas has many, many emanations. Vajrapani isn’t the only wrathful one. Avalokiteshvara manifests in many fierce forms, including great Black Mahakala. Manjushri manifests as, arguably, the most wrathful of all Yidams, Yamantaka (the foe of Death itself!) [For a feature on Yamantaka, see>>] He also manifests as the healer in Black Manjushri. [For a feature on Black Manjushri, see>>] This is because wisdom can be found in anger and fierceness, as much as in gentle contemplation.
It’s again a matter of focus. Yamantaka is none other than Manjushri. Black Mahakala is none other than Avalokiteshvara.
Manjushri — personifying wisdom (Prajna)
Orange Manjushri with his sword of wisdom that “cuts through delusions.”
One of the “superstars” of the Eight Great Bodhisattvas, Manjushri personifies one of the two wings of Enlightenment: wisdom. [The two wings are Prajna and Karuna: wisdom and compassion.] His name literally translates as “Gentle Glory.”Sometimes he is called Manjughosha, which means “Gentle Voice.”
He is found in numerous Sutras, notably: Vimalakirti-nirdesha Sutra, Flower Garland Sutra, Prajnaparamita Sutras.
There are many types of wisdom (also known as the “cognitions”) — specifically five, as indicated by the Five Great Buddha Families — although Manjushri is the spiritual son of Akshobya — with the family focus of “ with a focus on the wisdom of “mirror-like pristine awareness” or Ādarśa-jñāna in Sanskrit. This “family” focuses on the “Skanda” of Consciousness and the “Poison” of Anger. [For more on this, see>> ]
Manjushri’s special position
Manjushri is also considered the male aspect of Prajnaparamita — the glorious Goddess emanation of Wisdom (in the same way that Tara is sometimes considered an emanation of Avalokiteshvara). He holds in his left hand, on a lotus, the sacred Prajnaparamita Sutra, distilling the ultimate wisdom of Shunyata. In his right hand is the famous “sword of Wisdom.”
Manjushri appears in numerous sutras, at the feet of Buddha as a disciple, Yet, at the same time, he appears as a fully Enlightened Buddha himself. He is considered an aspect of both Akshobya and Prajnaparamita. He has numerous emanations, too many to list, but including the Vajra Terrifier Vajrabhairava (Yamantaka), Black Manjushri, and dozens more. Each skillful emanation represents a different aspect or practice of wisdom. [For more on Manjushri, see >>]
His main mantra
Manjushri’s great mantra is nicknamed Arapachana Mantra. as it contains the Sanskrit syllables A Ra Pa Cha Na. By adding the Om and the seed syllable of Manjushri — Dhi — you have the full mantra. Anyone may chant.
Om Ah Ra Pa Cha Na Dhi
Avalokiteshvara
Some of the many faces of compassion. From top left to right then bottom left to right: Hayagriva Vajrayogini (Vajra Varahi); 4-armed Chenrezig; Guanyin; Red Chenrezig Yabyum; White Mahakala; Black Mahakala; 1000-armed Chenrezig.
The Compassionate One, “He who hears the cries of the world” is known by many names, and is universally popular. In Tibet, he is Chenrezig. In some traditions, She is Guan Yin (Kuanyin) or Kanon. Avalokiteshvara’s mantra is arguably the most famous mantra in the world: Om Mani Padme Hum.
Sutra references
Avalokiteshvara is found in many sutras, including Heart Sutra, Lotus of the Good Law Sutra
Avalokiteshvara, like Manjushri, has countless emanations, representing various aspects of compassion. In legend, again symbolic, Tara rose from the tears of Chenrezig when He despaired of saving all the suffering sentient beings. Like an action-hero, she swept into action and became the “activity of compassion.”
Mantra
Om Mani Padme Hum
Tibetan Pronunciation: Om Mani Peme Hung
Many forms and faces
Compassion can have many “flavors”, reflected in the many aspects of Chenrezig: the ferocious protective compassion of an angry mother or father, the gentle hand-holding friend, or even the heroic action hero saving lives. He emanates in ferocious forms, such as Mahakala, and esoteric forms, such as 1000-armed Avalokiteshvara. He, is the spiritual “son” of Amitabha Buddha, Lord of the West, whose Pureland is open to any who call out His name. [For a full feature on “The Many Faces of Avalokiteshvara” see>>]
Vajrapani
Wrathful Vajrapani surrounded by wisdom flames. In both wrathful and peaceful forms he is irresistibly powerful.
The “Powerful One” makes his appearance even in the early Pali Suttas, notably as the protector of Shakyamuni Buddha. He is one of the eight great “heart sons” of the Buddha. (Tibetan: chag na dor je. English: the Vajra Holder.) [For a full story on Vajrapani, see>>]
In Tibetan practice he is normally wrathful, known as Guhyapati – ‘the Lord of Secrets.’ (Sangdag Chagna Dorje g.sang bdag phyag na rdo rje.) It is Vajrapani who protects and guards the sacred texts.
Mantra
Om Vajrapani Hum
Tibetan pronunciation: Om Benza Pani Hung
Tantric forms
According to Himilayan Art: “The two wrathful forms of Vajrapani known as the Sutra Tradition (do lug) and the Nilambhara (dro zang lug), each with one face and two hands, do not have skull crowns or wrathful ornaments such as the fifty freshly severed heads. They do however wear the eight races of nagas depicted as snakes – bracelets, anklets, etc. Mahachakra Vajrapani is sometimes depicted with a skull crown and at other times shown with a jeweled crown. Almost all of the other wrathful forms of Vajrapani have the same fearsome regalia as typical of wrathful Tantric deities such as Vajrabhairava, Vajrakila, Mahakala and the like. The various forms of Vajrapani as a meditational deity are derived from the textual sources of the early Tantras.” [1]
Maitreya — the Future Buddha
Maitreya is the bodhisattva of loving kindness — his name translates as “love” in English, cham pa in Tibetan. He currently resides in Tushita Heaven, ready to be born into the earthly realms as the next Buddha.
Tibetan: རྒྱལ་བ་བྱམས་པ། Chinese: 弥勒佛
Mantra
Oṃ maitri mahāmaitri maitriye svāhā
Kshitigarbha
Kshitigarbha has been saving sentient beings — including beings suffering in the “hell realms” — for countless years.
The “Earth Store Bodhisattva” (Jizo, Gizo) appears in the sutra of the same name. Kshitigarbha is held in high reverence especially all over Asia, known for the famous story of his heroic rescues of suffering beings in the hell realms.
His main sutra, Kshitigarbha Bodhisattva Purvapravidhana Sutra. In Tantra he appears in the Kalachakra mandala of 634 deities, along with the Guhyasamaja mandala (in the east, standing beside Maitreya.) He is also part of the Vajrasattva mandala, Vajradhatu mandala and many more.
Precious thangka of Kshitigarbha and the “ten kings of hell.” Kshitigarbha (Jizo) saved countless beings from suffering.
“…Kshitigarbha is yellow with a yellow upper garment, peaceful eyes, red at the sides, [and] a headdress garland of blue flowers. The right hand holds a fruit and the left a jewel above a lotus [flower].” (Jonang Taranata, yi dam rgya mtsho’i sgrub thabs rin chen ‘byung gnas, folio 506-507).
He also appears white in colour: “…Arya Kshitigarbha, white in colour, with one face, peaceful in appearance. With two hands the right holds to the heart a precious seed. The left [hand holds] a bell turned up [at the waist], resplendent and seated in a relaxed posture.” (Loter Wangpo, sgrub thabs kun tus, volume 11, folio 71). [3]
Practice and mantra
His practice is considered to be effective against “natural disasters” as he is associated with the earth. His mantras are:
Oṃ Kṣitigarbha bodhisattva yaḥ
(prounce the “ku” on the k as in: Ku-shi-tee-gar-bah)
Or
Om Kshitigarbha T-haleng Hum
Samantabhadra
Samantabhadra’s name literally translates as “Universal Worthy”), is famous for his ten great vows.
Sutra references
Samantabhadra appears in several sutras, including: Lotus of the Good Law Sutra, Flower Garland Sutra.
In the Āvataṃsaka-sūtra, Samantabhadra Bodhisattva made ten great vows in his path to full Buddhahood:
To pay homage and respect to all Buddhas.
To praise the Thus Come One-Tathagata.
To make abundant offerings. (e.g. give generously)
To repent misdeeds and evil karmas.
To rejoice in others’ merits and virtues.
To request the Buddhas to continue teaching.
To request the Buddhas to remain in the world.
To follow the teachings of the Buddhas at all times.
To accommodate and benefit all living beings.
To transfer all merits and virtues to benefit all beings.
Vows of the Bodhisattva Samantabhadra video:
Akashagarbha
Akashagarbha
Most prominently mentioned in the Womb of Space Sutra, the Akashagarbha Sutra, Akashagarbha typically appears as Blue, with his attendant holding a sword. [See inset.] From Himilayan Art:
“His name means ‘nucleus of space’ and he is associated with wisdom and knowledge similar to Manjushri. Akashagarbha and Manjushri also share the same sword attribute. He is always depicted in peaceful (bodhisattva, deva) for and either blue or green in colour.” [2]
Nivarana-vishkambhin
Tibetan: སྒྲིབ་པ་རྣམ་པར་སེལ་བ། Chinese: 除诸障菩萨
Vajra and Bell and the Eight Great Ones
The Ghanta or Bell is never separated from its Vajra or Dorje. Both the Bell (shown) and Vajra contain endless symbolism. Holding the Dorje in the right hand symbolically connects us to our the Buddhas (and especially our own Yidam). Holding the Bell (Ghanta) is like cradling the entire mandala of the Yidam. The Bell is wisdom and emptiness. The Dorje represents means and compassion. For more detail (larger pictures) and a full feature on Bell and Dorje, see>>
We carry the eight great Bodhisattvas with us everywhere if we practice Vajrayana. The best-known symbol of Vajrayana Buddhism is the Bell and Dorje (Ghanta and Vajra). Vajrayana practitioners are never to be separated from their bell and Dorje — although many teachers explain this means your “internal” bell and Dorje. Regardless of physical or internal spiritual, the bell and vajra contain the entire mandala of Buddha Aspects. [For more on the Bell and Dorje, see>>]
The Eight petals on the lotus (found on both Dorje and bell) represent the eight great Bodhisattvas:
Kshitigarbha (East petal — east, the front petal of the lotus)
Maitreya (southeast)
Akashagarba (south)
Samantabhadra (southwest)
Avalokiteshvara (Chenrezig) (west)
Manjushri (northwest)
Vajrapani (north)
Sarva-nivarana-vishkambhim (northeast)
In addition, most bells have the wondrous arc and loops of jewels and pearls, which are also the symbols of the Eight Great Ones, and specifically stand for:
Wheel (east or front)
Uptala lotus (south east)
Wish Fulfilling Jewel or Ratna (south)
Wheel (south west)
Lotus (west)
Vajra (north west)
Wisdom sword (north)
Lotus (northeast)
Buddhist Tantra’s most iconic symbols Bell (representing Wisdom) and Vajra (Dorje, representing Compassion and Means.) The hanging pearls and the lotus leaves are symbols of the Great Bodhisattvas.
Avalokiteshvara’s Renunciation Day! Guan Shi Yin Avalokiteshvara’s 3 Sacred Days Are Birthday, Renunciation and Enlightenment: “Most Widely Beloved Buddhist Divinity”
The 8 Great Bodhisattvas and the 8 Great Qualities of Buddha; 8 Great Mantras and Why We Need These Qualities
4 Practices on Lunar Days: 5 Buddha’s Vow and Practicing Activity, Merit, Reflection, Renewal
Ultimate Purity as a Practice: Vajrasattva – the only practice most people need and the most powerful healing and purification method in Vajrayana Buddhism
Ushnisha Vijaya Dharani Overcomes Six Types of Suffering, Conquering the Lord of Death: Supreme in Six Realms
Tara Teaching from His Holiness the Sakya Trichen: Interview Q & A: Do you have a Tara Question? Chances are His Holiness Already Answered…
The power of Dharma to help sentient beings, in part, lies in ensuring access to Buddha’s precious Dharma — the mission of Buddha Weekly. We can’t do it without you!
A non-profit association since 2007, Buddha Weekly published many feature articles, videos, and, podcasts. Please consider supporting the mission to preserve and “Spread the Dharma." Your support as either a patron or a supporting member helps defray the high costs of producing quality Dharma content. Thank you! Learn more here, or become one of our super karma heroes on Patreon.
Lee Kane
Author | Buddha Weekly
Lee Kane is the editor of Buddha Weekly, since 2007. His main focuses as a writer are mindfulness techniques, meditation, Dharma and Sutra commentaries, Buddhist practices, international perspectives and traditions, Vajrayana, Mahayana, Zen. He also covers various events.
Lee also contributes as a writer to various other online magazines and blogs.
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