Buddhism : Critical Concepts in Religious Studies, Vol. VI

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TANTRIC BUDDHISM (INCLUDING CHINA AND JAPAN)

*Bhasmesvara, as the Buddha had predicted. Then, in order to demon-
strate their victory, Heruka and his retinue each took the cadaver of his
opposite number as a platform, which is why it is said that they reside
on a preta platform.^25
Yet all these distinctions of subjugater I subjugated or converter I
converted operate only in the realm of provisional meaning (neyiirtha);
according to the definitive meaning (nltiirtha), they are to be under-
stood as non-differentiated.^26 Thus the Guhyasamiija-tantra states:

As physically adamantine, he has become Brahma;
As the vocal teacher, he is Mahesvara;
As the mental teacher, he is Vi~;>l)u.^27

So all the bhairavas and everybody else are emanations of Mahe8vara,
whereas Mahesvara himself is an emanation ofVajradhara. All the con-
verting divinities are emanations of Sri Heruka, who is himself an ema-
nation of Vajradhara. Thus, according to the definitive meaning of this
story, all the characters are essentially (svabhiivatas) Mahavajradhara.

III. Finally, there is the teaching of the tantra-riija and the unlocking of
its intention by the lineage of exegetes. Having conquered Mahe8vara,
Vajradhara first preached to the five families of heroes and heroines a
version of the scripture in one hundred thousand chapters. But during
the time of the Kaliyuga, he summarized it into a version in one
hundred thousand verses. Finally, because these could not be accom-
plished during this Kaliyuga, he preached a version of one hundred
thousand letters, collected into fifty-one chapters. In addition there are
thirty-two explanatory tantras and innumerable ancillary scriptures. All
of these, Vajrapanj collected into texts and rendered into letters follow-
ing their preaching. Eventually, the teaching survived in the literature
of the four major systems of Cakrasarrzvara exegesis-those of
Luhipada, Ghantapada, Kal)hapada, and Savara. Each of them has uti-
lized the three principal scriptures of the system, the Tantrariija-
Laghusarrzvara (To. 368), the Abhidhiinottara-tantra (To. 369), and the
Yoginisaiicarya-tantra (To. 375). This elucidation of the birth of Sri
Heruka was culled from the speech of the teacher.

Grags-pa rgyal-mtshan's reporting of the myth in the Cakrasarrzvara arena is
reflective of a number of concerns which will be explored below (Interperative
Strategies) when the three applications of the myth will be discussed in conjunc-
tion with each oth.''". In his framing of the narrative, we notice the decided lack
of identified antecedents; it is simply "culled from the speech of the teacher. "^28
The only sense we get that his version follows a Buddhist textual format is in its
reference to the Bhadrakalpika-mahiiyiina-siitra. While the use of frame and
embedded story is similar to that in the classical versions, the plot structure

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