Short Biography of Je Tsongkhapa, Losang Drakpa (1357 - 1419)
Prophecies
Tsong Khapa,
popularly known as Je Rinpoche, was born in 1357, in the Tsong
Kha region of Amdo, in eastern Tibet. During the time of Buddha
Shakyamuni, Tsong Khapa, in a previous incarnation, was a young
boy who offered the Buddha a clear crystal rosary and received a
conch shell in return. The Buddha then called his disciple Ananda
to him and prophesied that the boy would be pocket option born in Tibet, would
found a great monastery between the areas of Dri and Den, present
a crown to the statue of the Buddha in Lhasa, and be instrumental
in the flourishing of the Doctrine in Tibet. The Buddha gave the
young boy the future name of Sumati Kirti, or, in Tibetan, Losang
Drakpa.
All this occurred exactly as the Buddha had prophesied. The conch
shell that the Buddha had given the boy was unearthed during the
building of Ganden and, in 1959, could still be seen in Drepung,
the largest monastery in Tibet. The crown still rests on the head
of the Buddha in Lhasa.
Over a thousand years after the passing of Shakyamuni Buddha,
further prophesies relating to Je Rinpoche, were given by the
Lotus-born Guru, Padma Sambhava. He predicted that a fully
ordained Buddhist monk named Losang Drakpa would appear in the
east near the land of China. He said that this monk would be
regarded as being an emanation of a Bodhisattva of the greatest
renown and would attain the Complete Enjoyment Body of a Buddha.
Early years
At three years old,
Tsong Khapa took the layman's vows from the fourth Karmapa,
Rolpay Dorje, and received the name Kunga Nyingpo. When the Choje
Dondrub Rinchen visited the parents' home and requested the
father to part with his son, the father was delighted at the
prospect of his child being with such a great teacher and allowed
him to leave with the Lama.
Before taking the novice vows, Tsong Khapa, received many tantric
initiations and teachings, including https://pocketoption.com.ph the Heruka empowerment, and
was given the secret name of Donyo Dorje. When he was seven, he
fulfilled his yearning to take the novice vows; receiving them
from his teacher. It is here that he was given the name of Losang
Drakpa. Tsong Khapa attached greater importance to guarding his
vows than his eyes or his own life. He had entered the mandalas
of Heruka, Hevajra, Yamantaka an other deities before receiving
ordination and was even performing self-initiation meditations
upon Heruka when he was only seven.
His eminent teacher took care of him until he went to central
Tibet at the age of sixteen. Traveling with Denma Rinchen Pel,
Tsong Khapa arrived at Drikung where he met the head Lama of the
Drikung Karguy monastery, Chennga Chokyi Gyalpo. This great lama
was his first teacher after leaving his original Master, and
tutored him on various topics such as the Altruistic Mind
(bodhichitta), and five sections of the Great seal (Mahamudra)
during his stay at the monastery. He also met the great doctor
Konchog Kyab who taught him the major medical treatises and, by
the time he was seventeen, he had become an excellent doctor.
Thus his fame was already spreading even in the early years of
his study.
Studies at Young Age for Scholarship
From Drikung, Tsong
Khapa went to the Chodra Chenpo Dewachen monastery in Nyetang
where he studied with Tashi Sengi and Densapa Gekong. Furthermore
Yonten Gyatso taught him how to read the great treatises and
continually helped him with the Ornament for the Realizations.
Within eighteen days he had memorized and assimilated both the
root text and all its commentaries and soon mastered all the
works of Maitreya Buddha. He then gained a complete understanding
of the Perfection of Wisdom (Prajnaparamita) at great speed and
with little effort. His teachers and fellow students with whom he
debated were astonished at his knowledge and, after two years of
studying the Perfection of Wisdom, he was recognized at the age
of nineteen, as a great scholar.
That year Je Rinpoche debated at the two biggest monasteries of
the day in Tibet: Chodra Chenpo Dewachen and Samye. He now became
very famous in U-Tsang, the central providence of Tibet. He
visited many other monasteries engaging in debate.
Meeting Rendawa
Tsong Khapa then went
to visit Nyapon Kunga Pel at Tzechen requesting instructions on
the Perfection of Wisdom. However, this master was unwell and
referred him to his disciple, Venerable Rendawa. Je Rinpoche
developed tremendous respect for Rendawa's method of teaching the
Treasury of Knowledge and its auto-commentary. This master had
innumerable spiritual qualities and Tsong Khapa later came to
regard him as his principal teacher. Their relationship became
such that simultaneously they were each other's Master and
disciple. He also received teachings on the Middle Way
(Madhyamika) philosophy from Rendawa.
Tsong Khapa composed a verse in honor of Rendawa and would often
recite it. However, Rendawa replied that this was more applicable
to Tsong Khapa than to himself and so adapted the verse as
follows. This is now regarded as Tsong Khapa's Mantra (mig me
tse)
Avalokiteshvara, mighty treasure of immaculate love,
Manjushri, Lord of stainless knowledge,
Vajrapani, destroyer of all demonic forces,
O Je Tsong Khapa, Losang Drakpa,
Crown jewel of the sages of the Land of Snow,
Humbly I request your blessing!
Further Studies and His First Teachings
During the autumn and
winter he received many teachings on the Entrance to the Middle
Way by Chandrakirti. He then returned to Nyetang to become the
student of the great scholar of Monastic Discipline (Vinaya),
abbot Kazhiwa Losal, at whose feet he studied the root texts of
Discipline and of the Treasury of Knowledge. By the time he left,
his depth of understanding surpassed that of his teacher. He
memorized a commentary on the extensive root text of the
Discipline at the daily rate of seventeen pocket option bonus Tibetan folios which is
thirty-four pages!
While reciting prayers with the other monks, he had complete and
effortless single-pointed concentration on insight meditation.
However, he remained dissatisfied and continued to search for
further teachings and teachers. During that winter a troublesome
back pain developed and he thought of returning to Rendawa but
the bitterly cold weather forced him to stay at Nanying where he
gave his first teachings. Scholars had asked for teachings on
Knowledge (Abhidharma), and in particular Asanga's Compendium of
Knowledge which composes the Mahayana Abhidharma. Tsong Khapa
studied the higher tenets and even if it was his initial
encounter with this text, he mastered it on first reading and
gave perfect teachings.
From there he went to Rendawa, who was at Sakya, and for eleven
months taught the Compendium of Knowledge. At this time he
himself received teachings on Dharmakirti's Commentary on the
Compendium of Valid Cognition, as well as various texts such as
the Entrance to the Middle Way and the transmission of the Sutra
on Discipline. While at Sakya he also received an explanation on
the Root Tantra of Hevajra from Dorje Rinchen. This lama also
taught him a method by which to cure his painful back. In the
company of master Rendawa, he left for northern Tibet and spent
the spring and summer at the monastery of Ngamring Choday.
Source: Life and
Teachings of Tsong Khapa, Edited by Professor R. Thurman.