Vajrasamadhi-sutra

The Vajrasamadhi-sutra (lit. sutra of the vajra samadhi) is one of the supreme teachings given by Vairocana-shakyamuni Buddha. Over the centuries the Sanskrit manuscript of the Vajrasamadhi-sutra has vanished and today, many scholars deny that the sutra was spoken by the Buddha, believing it to have been the work of a Korean monk.[1][2] (Vide Robert E. Buswell, "Cultivating Original Enlightenment: Wonhyo's Exposition of the 'Vajrasamadhi-Sutra', U. of Hawaii Press, 2007; as well as Buswell's, "The Formation of Ch'an Ideology in China and Korea: The 'Vajrasamadhi-Sutra', a Buddhist Apocryphon," Princeton U. Press, 1989).

In the Vajrasamadhi-sutra, the Buddha lectures to an assembly of bodhisattvas, shravakas, arhats and all the various classes of beings which exist in the universe, on the subtlest doctrines concerning existence, nonexistence and perfect enlightenment. The overall tone of the sutra is of repentance in order to purify karma and become a perfect buddha. The leading intercolutors in the sutra are shravaka ananda, bodhisattva kshitigarbha, arhat shariputra and the bodhisattva cittaraja (mind-king).

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