The Mirror of the Heart of Vajrasattva
The Mirror of the Heart of Vajrasattva (Tibetan: རྡོ་རྗེ་སེམས་དཔའ་སྙིང་གི་མེ་ལོང, Wylie: rdo rje sems dpa' snying gi me long) is numbered amongst the Seventeen Tantras of Menngagde (Tibetan: མན་ངག་སྡེའི་རྒྱུད་བཅུ་བདུན, Wylie: man ngag sde'i rgyud bcu bdun) within Dzogchen discourse and is part of the textual support for the Vima Nyingtik. The Mirror of the Heart of Vajrasattva conveys how the lamps (Tibetan: སྒྲོན་མ, Wylie: sgron ma) are the self-display of awareness. It furthermore lists twenty-one pointing-out instructions appropriate for people with different propensities and proclivities along with four key points and practice instructions. These Seventeen Tantras are to be found in the Canon of the Ancient School, the Nyingma Gyubum (Tibetan: རྙིང་མ་རྒྱུད་འབུམ, Wylie: rnying ma rgyud 'bum), volumes 9 and 10, folio numbers 143-159 of the edition edited by Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche commonly known as Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche (Thimpu, Bhutan, 1973), reproduced from the manuscript preserved at Tingkye Gonpa Jang (Tibetan: གཏིང་སྐྱེས་དགོན་པ་བྱང, Wylie: gting skyes dgon pa byang) Monastery in Tibet.[1] Symbolism of the mirrorThe melong ("mirror") is an important polyvalent symbol and potent teaching tool in Dzogchen.[2] English translationsThis tantra has not as yet has been completely rendered into English nor made generally available. The Seventeen Tantras are quoted extensively throughout Longchenpa's (1308 - 1364?) The Precious Treasury of the Way of Abiding (Tibetan: གནས་ལུགས་རིན་པོ་ཆེའི་མཛོད, Wylie: gnas lugs rin po che'i mdzod) rendered in English by Barron (1998).[3] This work is one of Longchenpa's Seven Treasuries and the Tibetan text in poor reproduction of the pecha has been made available online by Dowman and Smith.[4] Richard Barron renders an embedded quotation of this tantra within their translation of Longchenpa's 'Way of Abiding' (Wylie: gnas lugs):
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