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Ngagpa : ウィキペディア英語版
Ngagpa

In Tibetan Buddhism and Bon, a Ngakpa (; Sanskrit ''mantrī'') is a person who has received mantrayana vows and devoted their life to practices based on the Buddhist or Bonpo, tantras or on terma revelations. The term is specifically used to refer to lamas and practitioners (male or female) who are “tantric specialists” and may technically be applied to both married householder tantric priests (''khyim pa sngags pa'') and to those ordained monastics whose principal focus and specialization is vajrayana practice. However, in common parlance (and many western books on Tibetan Buddhism), “ngakpa” is often used only in reference to non monastic Vajrayana priests, especially those in the Nyingma and Bonpo traditions.
In Bhutan, and some other parts of the Himalayas, the term ''gomchen'' is the term most often used to refer to this type of Vajrayana priest, with ''ngakpa'' being reserved only for the most accomplished adepts amongst them who have become renowned for their mantras being particularly efficacious.
Traditionally, many Nyingma ngakpas wear uncut hair and white robes and these are sometimes called "the white-robed and uncut-hair group" (Wylie: gos dkar lcang lo'i sde).
==Description and definitions==
Matthieu Ricard defines Ngagpa simply as "a practitioner of the Secret Mantrayana" . Gyurme Dorje defines ngakpa (mantrin) as "a practitioner of the mantras, who may live as a householder rather than a renunciate monk."
Tibetan Buddhism contains two systems of ordination, the familiar monastic ordinations and the less well known Ngagpa or Tantric ordinations. Ngagpa ordination is non-monastic and non-celibate, but not "lay." It entails its own extensive system of vows, distinct from the monastic vows.
Ngakpas often marry and have children. Some work in the world, though they are required to devote significant time to retreat and practice and in enacting rituals when requested by, or on behalf of, members of the community.
There are family lineages of Ngakpas, with the practice of a particular Yidam being passed through family lineages. However, a ngakpa may also be deemed as anyone thoroughly immersed and engaged in the practice of the teachings and under the guidance of a lineage-holder and who has taken the appropriate vows or samaya and had the associated empowerments and transmissions. Significant lineage transmission is through oral lore.
As scholar Sam van Schaik describes, "the lay tantric practitioner (''sngags pa'', Skt. ''māntrin'') became a common figure in Tibet, and would remain so throughout the history of Tibetan Buddhism."
Kunga Gyaltsen, the father of the 2nd Dalai Lama, was a non-monastic ngakpa, a famous Nyingma tantric master.〔Thubten Samphel and Tendar, (2004) ''The Dalai Lamas of Tibet'', p. 79. Roli & Janssen, New Delhi. ISBN 81-7436-085-9.〕 His mother was Machik Kunga Pemo; they were a farming family. Their lineage transmission was by birth.〔(Gedun Gyatso )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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