3. Praise of the Buddha's Qualities

Source Text (Translated from Chinese)

Overall Teaching

The Buddha explains to Candraprabha the qualities of a tathāgata attainable through this sūtra, his past generosity, and the sūtra's benefits while condemning unpracticed teaching. Candraprabha vows to uphold this teaching.

Summary

Commentary

Thrangu Rinpoche writes that the third chapter of the King of Samadhis Sutra highlights the virtues of samadhi, emphasizing the importance of cultivating faith and devotion towards one's root and lineage teachers to receive and apply the teachings of samadhi effectively. By practising samadhi diligently, practitioners can achieve the ultimate fruition—manifesting the extensive enlightened qualities of the Buddha in body, speech, and mind, which include major and minor marks of excellence, the melodious voice of Brahma, fearlessness, and profound wisdom. The chapter also underscores the necessity of having complete trust in the teachings, illustrated through Milarepa's life story. Milarepa clarifies that his enlightenment was not due to being an incarnation of a buddha or bodhisattva but rather the result of his dedicated practice of the Dharma, emphasizing that enlightenment is attainable in a single lifetime through sincere practice rather than through numerous reincarnations. This narrative reinforces the power of authentic teachings and the transformative impact of genuine spiritual practice.

Discussion