Trilogy of Natural Ease

Dzogchen book trilogy
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The Trilogy of Finding Comfort and Ease (ngal gso skor gsum, Sanskrit Mahāsaṃdhi viśrānta trayāya nāma, literally "The Trilogy called Reposing (viśrānta) in the Great Perfection") is a trilogy of Dzogchen writings by Longchen Rabjam:

Intent of the Trilogy, and the logic of their sequence

Regarding the intent of the Trilogy as a whole, Jigme Khyentse Rinpoche, in the introduction to Finding Rest in the Nature of Mind, comments:

At the conclusion of the great autocommentary (The Great Chariot) to his long and beautiful poem Finding Rest in the Nature of the Mind, Gyalwa Longchenpa gave the reason for his massive composition. He began by lamenting the fact that the great masters of the past, whose works were clear, comprehensive, and utterly trustworthy, had passed away. Their place had been taken by scholars of incomplete learning and understanding...

It was to correct this misunderstanding that Longchenpa composed his Trilogy of Rest and in particular its first section, Finding Rest in the Nature of the Mind, which is an exposition of the stages of the path. Here, the sūtras and tantras are explained progressively—from the preliminary reflections that cause the mind to take an interest in spiritual values, to the view and practice of the Great Perfection—in order to show how the earlier teachings are enlarged and completed by those that follow.[1]

Padmakara Translation Group comments:

Longchenpa generally adopted two methods of discourse in relation to the teachings of the Great Perfection: the extensive, expository method of the paṇḍitas, and the profound and direct method of pith instructions intended for yogis engaged in the practice. The former approach is abundantly exemplified in the Seven Treasures, while the latter is the chosen method for the three quintessential commentaries in the Four Parts of Nyingthig.

These two methods are combined in the Trilogy of Rest... Longchenpa says in his general outline, An Ocean of Elegant Explanations, “These three works show unerringly (a) the ground that is the view, (b) the path that is the meditation, and (c) the associated conduct that is their ancillary.”[1]

Longchenpa's commentary on the trilogy as a whole, entitled An Ocean of Fine Explanation: An Overview of the Trilogy of Comfort and Ease (ngal gso skor gsum gyi spyi don Legs bshad rgya mtsho) says:[citation needed]

English translations

The root text

The three parts translated in

Volume One also translates passages from Longchenpa's autocommentary to Part One; each of Volume Two and Volume Three contains the whole of Longchenpa's respective autocommentary to Part Two and to Part Three.

Guenther makes reference to Longchenpa's autocommentaries in his introductions to the chapters and in his notes.

His distinctive rendering of the trilogy's title is borrowed from Jonathan Swift's Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift, D.S.P.D.: "[. . .] This maxim more than all the rest / Is thought too base for human breast: / 'In all distresses of our friends, / We first consult our private ends; / While Nature, kindly bent to ease us, / Points out some circumstance to please us.'" (written November 1731; published 1739)

Part Two (bsam gtan ngal gso) is also translated in

Part Three (sgyu ma ngal gso) is also translated in

References

  1. ^ a b Longchen Rabjam (2017). Finding Rest in the Nature of Mind. Shambhala Publications (Padmakara Translation Group). ISBN 9781611805161.

Further reading