Ngedon Shedrub Phuntsok Ling Monastery

Ngedon Shedrub Phuntsok Ling Monastery Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Ngedon Shedrub Phuntsok Ling Monastery, Buddhist Temple, Narayanthan/Baaghdwar Road, Budhanilkantha, Kathmandu.

Our Monastery is a Gompa form the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism founded by Lama Orgyen Chokyi Dorje following the instructions of the most venerable Kyabje Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche.

Os nossos jovens monges na prática da recitação de preces aspirativas, Monlam, e na aprendizagem da arte de fazer Formas...
29/01/2023

Os nossos jovens monges na prática da recitação de preces aspirativas, Monlam, e na aprendizagem da arte de fazer Formas com Lama Urgyen, o professor e especialista.

Um progresso constante e a passos largos... Excelente 🙏🏼

The Dalai Lama | New Year Message 2021
01/01/2021

The Dalai Lama | New Year Message 2021

His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s New Year Greeting for 2021 from his residence in Dharamsala, HP, India on January 1, 2021.

His Eminence the fourth Chokgyur Lingpa, Kyabje Tsikey Chokling Mingyur Dewey Dorje Rinpoche passed gently into parinirv...
19/12/2020

His Eminence the fourth Chokgyur Lingpa, Kyabje Tsikey Chokling Mingyur Dewey Dorje Rinpoche passed gently into parinirvana. Rinpoche was 68 years old. When Rinpoche passed away, all of his brothers and family were gathered around him. Rinpoche remains in tukdam. For the benefit of all beings, we earnestly and steadfastly pray for Rinpoche's rebirth.

Dharma Practice Dates: August 2020 Auspicious and non-auspicious days
01/08/2020

Dharma Practice Dates: August 2020

Auspicious and non-auspicious days

TODAY we celebrate Chökhor Düchen, the Festival of the First Turning of the Wheel of Dharma"Homage to you, who, in your ...
24/07/2020

TODAY we celebrate Chökhor Düchen, the Festival of the First Turning of the Wheel of Dharma

"Homage to you, who, in your compassion,
Gazed at once upon living beings, then
Turned the Wheel of Dharma in sacred places like Vārāṇasī,
And established disciples in the three vehicles."
- from `In Praise of the Twelve Deeds´ by Ārya Nāgārjuna

The Celebration of the Buddha's First Teaching is one of the four main Buddhist holidays. It occurs on the fourth day of the sixth Tibetan lunar month. For seven weeks after his enlightenment, Buddha did not teach. Finally, encouraged by the gods Indra and Brahma, the Buddha turned the Wheel of Dharma for the first time and taught the "Four Noble Truths" at the Deer Park in Sarnath, India on the full moon of July.

The Four Noble Truths are:
1. The truth of suffering;
2. The truth of the cause of suffering;
3. The truth of the cessation of suffering and
4. The truth of the path to the end of suffering.

Teaching and Prayer from Dzogchen Rinpoche:"This Corona disease crushes our mountain of pride.This disease kills our wil...
16/07/2020

Teaching and Prayer from Dzogchen Rinpoche:

"This Corona disease crushes our mountain of pride.
This disease kills our wild desires.
This disease is a wake-up call
from our deep sleep of ignorance.
This disease makes us sorrowful
and remorseful from life.
This disease reminds us of death and impermanence.
This disease makes us understand
virtuous deeds and sinful deeds.
This disease makes us do retreat and recite mantras.
This disease inspires us to develop a love for others
with compassion.
This disease is like our spiritual teacher.
This disease is like holy Dharma itself.
This disease is like our persecutor.
This disease makes you very clean and sanitary.
This disease reminds you of your Doctor’s kindness
while you were sick.
This disease gave the kind volunteers a brave name.
This disease taught you careful living and traveling.
This disease made you aware
of healthy foods and drinks.
This disease made you recognize
the cause of happiness and suffering.
This disease brings people together.
This disease opened the door of Freedom.
This disease stopped fighting
and made peace in the world.
This disease can bring all wealth
by transforming negative forces.
May this disease become the cause of enlightenment.
May it pacify all the diseases,
negative causes, and obstacles.
May it purify the bad karmas and defilement of sins."

Photo: Statue in Ngedon Monastery of Shakyamuni, the Buddha of the present. On his right is Dipamkara, the Buddha of the past, and on his left Maitreya, the Buddha of the future.

Today we celebrate the 85th birthday of His Holiness the Dalai Lama. Because of the covid-19 situation, there will not b...
06/07/2020

Today we celebrate the 85th birthday of His Holiness the Dalai Lama. Because of the covid-19 situation, there will not be any public celebrations, but His Holiness encourages everyone who wishes him happy birthday to develop kindness, bodhichitta mind, and to recite Om Mani Padme Hum 1.000 times. Happy Birthday to His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama! We offer our heartfelt wishes to his long life and may compassion and wisdom pervade throughout the world systems!

པའི་ཞབས་བརྟན་གསོལ་འདེབས་ནི།
Prayer for the Long Life of His Holiness the Dalai Lama
གངས་རི་རྭ་བས་བསྐོར་བའི་ཞིང་ཁམས་སུ། །
gangri rawé korwé shyingkham su
In the heavenly realm of Tibet, surrounded by a chain of snow mountains,
ཕན་དང་བདེ་བ་མ་ལུས་འབྱུང་བའི་གནས། །
pen dang dewa malü jungwé né
The source of all happiness and help for beings
སྤྱན་རས་གཟིགས་དབང་བསྟན༵་འཛི༵ན་རྒྱ༵་མཚོ༵་ཡི། །
chenrezik wang tenzin gyatso yi
Is Tenzin Gyatso—Chenrezik in person—
ཞབས་པད་བསྐལ་བརྒྱའི་བར་དུ་བརྟན་གྱུར་ཅིག །
shyabpé kal gyé bardu ten gyur chik
May his life be secure for hundreds of kalpas!

Dharma Practice Dates: July 2020Auspicious and non-auspicious days
02/07/2020

Dharma Practice Dates: July 2020

Auspicious and non-auspicious days

24/06/2020

GLOBAL VIRTUAL PREMIERE
Join us in wishing His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama a long and joyful life and a very Happy Birthday. To celebrate His Holiness’ 85th Birthday, Frame of Mind Films will offer the Global Virtual Premiere of the award-winning film The Great 14th at no cost to global audiences June 27th through June 28th.

🎥 During this unprecedented opportunity, tune in any time during the 48 hour viewing window to stream on a computer, mobile device, or Cast to your Smart TV.

To register, please visit -> bit.ly/TheGreat14th

Dharma Practice Dates: June 2020Auspicious and non-auspicious days
24/06/2020

Dharma Practice Dates: June 2020

Auspicious and non-auspicious days

His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s Message on Vesak Celebration around the world:It gives me great pleasure to offer greeting...
07/05/2020

His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s Message on Vesak Celebration around the world:

It gives me great pleasure to offer greetings to Buddhist brothers and sisters across the world celebrating Vesak (Buddha Purnima) today.

Shakyamuni Buddha was born in Lumbini, attained enlightenment in Bodhgaya and passed away in Kushinagar 2600 years ago, yet I believe his teaching is universal and continues to be relevant today. Moved by a deep sense of concern to help others, following his enlightenment the Buddha spent the rest of his life as a monk, sharing his experience with everyone who wished to listen. Both his view of dependent arising and his advice not to harm anyone, but to help whoever you can, emphasize the practice of non-violence. This remains one of the most potent forces for good in the world today, for non-violence, motivated by compassion, is to be of service to our fellow beings.

In an increasingly interdependent world, our own welfare and happiness depend on many other people. Today, the challenges we face require us to accept the oneness of humanity. Despite superficial differences between us, people are equal in their basic wish for peace and happiness. Part of Buddhist practice involves training our minds through meditation. For our training in calming our minds, developing qualities such as love, compassion, generosity and patience, to be effective, we must put them into practice in day-to-day life.

Until relatively recently, the world’s diverse Buddhist communities had only a distant understanding of each other’s existence and no opportunity to appreciate how much we share in common. Today, almost the entire array of Buddhist traditions that evolved in different lands is accessible to anyone who is interested. What’s more, those of us who practise and teach these various Buddhist traditions are now able to meet and learn from one another.

As a Tibetan Buddhist monk, I consider myself an heir to the Nalanda tradition. The way Buddhism was taught and studied at Nalanda University, rooted in reason and logic, represents the zenith of its development in India. If we are to be 21st century Buddhists, it is important that we engage in the study and analysis of Buddha’s teachings, as so many did there, instead of simply relying on faith.

The world has changed substantially since the time of the Buddha. Modern science has developed a sophisticated understanding of the physical realm. Buddhist science on the other hand, has achieved a detailed, first-person understanding of the workings of the mind and emotions, areas still relatively new to modern science. Each therefore has crucial knowledge with which to complement the other. I believe that combining these two approaches has great potential to lead to discoveries that will enrich our physical, emotional and social well-being.

While as Buddhists we are the one’s upholding the Buddha’s teaching, but his message is relevant in our broader interaction with the rest of humanity. We need to promote inter-religious understanding by underlying the fact that all religions promote happiness of all people. Also, in this time of serious crisis confronting the world, when we face threats to our health and we feel saddened for the family and friends we have lost, we must focus on what unites us as members of one human family. Accordingly, we need to reach out to each other with compassion, for it is only by coming together in a coordinated, global effort that we will meet the unprecedented challenges we face.

Dalai Lama

Dharma Practice Dates: May 2020Auspicious and non-auspicious days
03/05/2020

Dharma Practice Dates: May 2020

Auspicious and non-auspicious days

Address

Narayanthan/Baaghdwar Road, Budhanilkantha
Kathmandu
44600

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Ngedon Shedrub Phuntsok Ling Monastery posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Place Of Worship

Send a message to Ngedon Shedrub Phuntsok Ling Monastery:

Share