Tibetan Chan and a lineage of Chan masters

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Leo Rivers
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Tibetan Chan and a lineage of Chan masters

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From: earlyTibet.com
Notes, thoughts and fragments of research on the history of Tibet

http://earlytibet.com/2010/03/31/tibetan-chan-iv/

2. A Tibetan manuscript from Dunhuang (Pelliot tibétain 996) gives us an account of a lineage of Chan masters. It begins with an Indian master who travelled to the Silk Road city of Anxi.* Here’s a translation of the beginning, which gives an idea of the tone of the work:

The master Artenhwer, an instructor who knew the path of the sameness of all phenomena travelled to Anxi from India, for the sake of sentient beings. There he gathered three hundred students, and taught them how to enter the Mahāyāna. He received divine food offerings from the sky, which satiated his three hundred students. At over a hundred years old he passed away in the posture of nirvana. Then the king of Anxi struck the body and said “If the master came to explain the dharma to multitudes of sentient beings, why did he only teach a few words?” And, having died, the master rose again for three days and taught the dharma to the king of Anxi and the Chinese prince of Gazhou.

The lineage of this Artenhwer gets passed down to a Chinese monk called Man Heshang.


perhaps it could it be academic Buddhism does not weaken Buddhism but make a ground of reconciliation and stimulation for diverse Buddhists?
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