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Passages similar to: The Tibetan Book of the Dead — Book I: The Fourteenth Day
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Tibetan Buddhist
The Tibetan Book of the Dead
Book I: The Fourteenth Day (18.14)
O nobly-born, if one recognize not one's own thought-forms, however learned one may be in the Scriptures — both Sutras and Tantras — although practicing religion for a kalpa, one obtaineth not Buddhahood. If one recognize one's own thought-forms, by one important art and by one word, Buddhahood is obtained.
Buddhist
Chapter 1: The Praise of the Thought of Enlightenment (2)
This brief estate, which once gotten is a means to all the aims of mankind, is exceeding hard to win; if one use it not for wholesome reflection, how...
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Buddhist
Chapter 27 (1)
The Lord Buddha said unto Subhuti: “If you think thus within yourself ‘The Lord Buddha did not, by means of his perfect bodily distinctions, obtain...
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Buddhist
Chapter 5: Watchfulness (1)
HE who would keep the rules must diligently guard his thought; the rules cannot be kept by him who guards not the fickle thought. Untamed elephants...
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Buddhist
Chapter 9: Initiation Into the Non-Dual Dharma (20)
The Bodhisattva “Deep Thought” said: “Eyes and form are a duality (but) if the underlying nature of the eye is known with neither desire nor anger...
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Buddhist
Chapter 6 (3)
“Subhuti, the Lord Buddha by his prescience, is perfectly cognisant of all such potential disciples, and for these also there is reserved an...
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Buddhist
Chapter XIX: The Just (271-272)
Not only by discipline and vows, not only by much learning, not by entering into a trance, not by sleeping alone, do I earn the happiness of release...
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